Fernando Alonso believes Max Verstappen’s record-equalling Formula One reign has been underestimated.
Verstappen matched Sebastian Vettel’s all-time streak of nine consecutive wins with a brilliant display in Sunday’s wet-dry-wet Dutch Grand Prix.
The Red Bull driver is 138 points clear at the summit of the world championship and could close out his third title as early as next month.
Nine successive wins 🏆 Max matches Seb’s record 🤘 pic.twitter.com/pAqRTolRgC
— Oracle Red Bull Racing (@redbullracing) August 27, 2023
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Earlier this season, Lewis Hamilton described Verstappen’s Red Bull machine as the fastest car he has ever seen.
But during Verstappen’s run of nine in a row, team-mate Sergio Perez – the only other driver to win a race in 2023 – has finished off the podium five times.
And double world champion Alonso, runner-up to Verstappen in Zandvoort, said: “It is underestimated what Max is achieving. To win in such a dominant way in any professional sport is so complicated.
“Today I felt connected with the car and that I was able to give 100 per cent of my abilities but perhaps at other races in Belgium or Austria, for example, I wasn’t able to do that.
Nine consecutive wins apiece, 10 years apart #DutchGP @redbullracing pic.twitter.com/0PtN77q34r
Advertisement— Formula 1 (@F1) August 27, 2023
“But Max is achieving 100 per cent more often than the rest of us at the moment, and that is why he is dominating.”
Since he claimed his maiden title at the controversial season-ending Abu Dhabi race in 2021, Verstappen has won 26 of the 35 races staged. In his last 24 appearances, Verstappen has failed to win just four times. He has triumphed at 11 of the 13 rounds so far this year.
On Sunday night, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner lauded his star driver as “simply untouchable”.
Hamilton’s Mercedes team secured eight consecutive constructors’ championships before Red Bull returned to the top.
Hamilton won six titles in seven seasons, but he was never able to win more than five races in a row. Michael Schumacher managed seven straight victories for Ferrari during his stranglehold of the sport at the turn of the century.
And Verstappen (25) said: “There have been more dominant cars in the past than we have at the moment, and they haven’t been able to win nine in a row.
“It is hard and, especially in the rain, it’s easy to make a wrong call or spin into the gravel. So, it’s never that straightforward.”
Verstappen will bid to secure his 10th consecutive win at this weekend’s Italian Grand Prix in Monza.