Max Verstappen walked into the São Paulo paddock with the calm of a man who had done all he could. He had started from the pitlane, sliced through the field and, puncture notwithstanding, stood on the Interlagos podium. The points gap to Lando Norris widened, the title looks distant, yet the mood at Red Bull was not of resignation but of resolve. “We will go all out until the end,” Verstappen said, a line that sounded less like defiance and more like doctrine at a team that refuses to coast.
A weekend saved by aggression and clarity
The weekend could hardly have begun worse. Verstappen’s Friday was flat, the sprint yielded damage limitation at best, and qualifying delivered a lowly P16 after he complained of no grip and no clear avenue for improvement. Red Bull responded decisively, switching power unit elements and making set-up changes that necessitated a pitlane start for Sunday. It was a bold reset, the kind that can backfire, but here it became the basis for one of Verstappen’s tidiest recovery drives of the year.
On race day the car came alive. Cooler air suited the RB, the rear stayed under him in the long sweepers, and tyre life stabilised after the early puncture. He cleared traffic with minimal time loss, then after the second stop launched after the front group and wrested third from George Russell. He could not reach second, yet the quality of the climb mattered as much as the colour of the trophy. “The team never gives up, we are not satisfied with second best,” Verstappen told television afterwards, praising the decision to change the car rather than accept a compromised baseline after the sprint.
A title that moves further away
Norris’s double in Brazil, sprint and grand prix, has reshaped the calendar’s closing act. The McLaren driver now leads Oscar Piastri by 24 points and Verstappen by 49, a buffer that rewards relentless execution. Verstappen did not hide from the arithmetic. “We lost far too many points in the first half of the season. To still be in it is a surprise, but over the year we have not been good enough,” he admitted. That blend of honesty and competitiveness is familiar to anyone who has followed his rise; it is also a reminder that the standards at Red Bull are set by Verstappen’s own habit of perfection.
Why the fight still matters
There is a practical reason to keep swinging. One sprint and three full races remain, and Sundays like Interlagos still shape the off-season story. Momentum influences factory energy, validates design hunches, and keeps a garage sharp under pressure. Interlagos also
offered something more subtle. The updated set-up direction gave Verstappen back a front end he could trust on turn-in and a traction window that responded to his throttle cues. That is the sort of feedback loop that outlives a single result.
There is also identity. Verstappen has never been a points manager by instinct. He hunts. Even a year in which he is not the lead protagonist for the title becomes a test of will, a sequence of chances to impose himself on a grid that knows how small his margins of mercy are when he feels a car move with him rather than against him.
Red Bull’s vow
“Go all in” can sound like sloganeering; at Red Bull it tends to be operational. The team gambled on changes after the sprint, then doubled down with calm race craft, aggressive undercuts, and clean releases. It will do so again, because that is how it has been built. Verstappen’s words, delivered with a half-smile in Brazil, fit neatly into that culture. “We will push to the end, take the highlights we can, and try to win races. That is what we are here for.”
The championship may be slipping away, but the chase is not. In a season that has asked for patience, Verstappen and Red Bull answered with audacity. There are still weekends to bend to their will.
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