Max Verstappen sees breakthrough in Miami: Red Bull progress sparks optimism despite P5
Max Verstappen may have finished fifth in sprint qualifying at the Miami Grand Prix, but the bigger story is whatās happening beneath the surfaceāRed Bull are finally finding their rhythm again.
š§ A result that means more than it looks
On paper, P5 doesnāt scream dominance. But for Verstappen and Red Bull Racing, this was one of their most encouraging sessions of the season so far.
After weeks of battling an unpredictable car, Verstappen reported a much stronger feeling behind the wheelāsomething he hasnāt consistently had in 2026. The upgrades introduced in Miami appear to have restored a level of confidence and control that had been missing.
š āA really positive stepā
Verstappenās own words tell the story. Instead of frustration, there was calm belief.
He described the session as a āreally positive step,ā highlighting improved balance and drivability. Thatās crucial, because earlier this season, Red Bullās biggest issue wasnāt outright paceāit was inconsistency.
Now, that gap seems to be closing.
āļø A tighter fight at the top
While Lando Norris secured sprint pole for McLaren, the midfield-to-front battle is now incredibly tight.
Verstappen sitting fifth isnāt a sign of weaknessāitās proof that Formula 1 in 2026 has evolved into a multi-team fight, with McLaren, Mercedes, Ferrari, and Red Bull all in contention.
š Why this matters for the race
Starting P5 in a sprint race is far from a dead endāespecially for a driver like Verstappen.
Improved car confidence = more aggressive racing
Miami circuit offers overtaking chances
Sprint format increases unpredictability
If Red Bullās upgrades hold up over race pace, Verstappen could quickly turn this into a podiumāor even more.