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Reality Check: What Verstappen’s ‘Nothing Works’ Critique Actually Exposes About F1

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When Max Verstappen says “nothing works” at the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix, he is not just complaining about his Red Bull. He is exposing the gap between Liberty Media’s polished product and the on-the-ground reality for drivers and teams. The sport’s governance and the new technical rules are the real failure.

Verstappen’s Outburst Is About More Than the Car

At the 2026 Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai, Verstappen qualified eighth, 1.7 seconds off pole, and described his Red Bull as “completely undriveable” and declared “nothing works.” According to ESPN and Formula1.com, Red Bull had completely overhauled the car between the sprint race and qualifying; Verstappen said the changes made “zero difference.” He reported no grip, no balance, and that he was “losing massive amounts of time in the corners.” The Guardian quoted him saying “every lap is survival” and that the car was “all over the place” with no consistent reference. PlanetF1 reported that he felt he could not push because the car did not let him and that he did not feel in control. As a four-time world champion, he said he had “never had anything this bad” and was “not enjoying it at all.” Nine, the source for the original headline, had already reported him doubling down on F1 criticism with the “nothing works” declaration. The quote is not a one-off; it is part of a pattern of public frustration with the state of the sport and the car.

That pattern extends beyond one weekend. In early 2026, Verstappen had already slammed the new 2026 F1 technical regulations, calling the cars “anti-racing” and “Formula E on steroids,” as reported by ESPN and Crash.net. He argued that the complex energy management and multiple driving modes would be “complicated to follow and explain” for fans and that the rules were not a lot of fun to drive. F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali hit back, as ESPN reported, saying it was “wrong” for drivers to speak negatively about the sport’s new direction. So when Verstappen says “nothing works” in China, he is speaking in the same key: the official narrative (new rules, evolution, the best driver will win) does not match the experience in the cockpit or the consistency of the product.

The Gap Between the Polished Narrative and the Reality

Liberty Media has run Formula 1’s commercial operations since 2017 and has emphasised growth, sprint weekends, and new markets. The 2026 regulatory overhaul—50:50 hybrid power, much higher electrical deployment—was sold as evolution. But the drivers and teams live with the consequences: cars that are harder to set up, more sensitive, and in Red Bull’s case, repeatedly described as undriveable. Verstappen’s “nothing works” is a direct challenge to the idea that the product is in good shape. RacingNews365 reported that Anthony Davidson had told Verstappen he was “factually incorrect” on the Formula E comparison; George Russell, in RaceFans, said Verstappen’s criticism was “valid” but urged not judging the rules too quickly. So even the pushback acknowledges that there is something to criticise. The gap is between Liberty’s story (evolution, best driver wins) and the on-the-ground experience (survival laps, zero difference from set-up changes, no control).

Governance is part of the picture. The BBC has reported on questions about whether F1 can be “liberated from its dysfunction” under Liberty. The AP and NBC News have reported a U.S. Department of Justice investigation into Liberty Media over the decision to block Andretti Global’s entry, with senators raising antitrust concerns. So the “nothing works” moment sits in a wider context: technical rules that drivers publicly question, and governance that is under regulatory scrutiny. Verstappen’s outburst reveals that the sport’s leadership is not aligned with the reality faced by its top competitors.

What This Actually Means

Verstappen’s “nothing works” is a reality check. It forces the sport to confront the gap between the polished narrative and the facts: a reigning world champion in an undriveable car, after a major set-up change that made zero difference, at a marquee race. The failure is not only Red Bull’s; it is the failure of a regulatory and commercial framework that has produced cars and a calendar that the sport’s biggest star is willing to criticise in the bluntest terms. Until the governance and the technical direction close that gap, the official story will keep colliding with the drivers’ experience.

Who Is Max Verstappen?

Max Emilian Verstappen is a Dutch and Belgian racing driver who competes under the Dutch flag in Formula One for Red Bull Racing. He has won four Formula One World Drivers’ Championship titles consecutively from 2021 to 2024 and has won 71 Grands Prix across 12 seasons. He is the sport’s dominant driver of the current era and has been outspoken in 2026 about the new technical regulations and the performance of his car.

Sources

Nine, ESPN, The Guardian, Formula1.com, ESPN, BBC Sport

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