Max Verstappen Sebastian Vettel Hungary formula 1 F1 red bull charlen raymond Max Verstappen Sebastian Vettel Hungary

Charlen Raymond | Don't hate but embrace Max Verstappen's dominance - we're part of history

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Max Verstappen and Red Bull Racing's impressive run of form dilutes Formula 1.That's the narrative many fans and non-fans are spewing now, labelling the sport as boring and predictable as the team and driver combination romp away to another championship double in as many years.In 2021, Verstappen won the F1 Drivers' title while Mercedes secured the Constructors' crown.

But last year, Red Bull and its star driver secured the championship double - a first for Red Bull since the Sebastian Vettel era in 2013.And this season, bar an Armageddon-like act of God, they are set to repeat it.However, though they are entitled to enjoy the spoils of their labour after producing a car head-and-shoulders above the rest of the grid, they are met with disdain and blame as if they are at fault for executing the technical regulations better than everyone else.YES BOYS! ??Another amazing achievement for the team @redbullracing ??

Thank you to everyone for your continuous hard work ?? Today was a perfect day ??Thank you Hungary for your support all weekend ????#HungarianGP pic.twitter.com/oTLVK3b4Ev A level playing field Thinking back to dominant eras before the Verstappen one, fans, experts, and pundits would always suggest that the sport needs equal machinery for every driver.

Admittedly, they were right, but F1 was never an affordable sport.Top teams with bottomless money pits could spend millions - if not billions - every season to make their cars as good as possible.

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Max Verstappen will not start Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix from pole position with the world champion set to serve a five-place grid penalty.
Max Verstappen cruised to another majestic victory on Sunday, reeling off a record 12th straight win for Red Bull as he dominated the Hungarian Grand Prix with a textbook drive from lights to flag. The defending double world champion grabbed the lead from pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton at the start and remained in control for his seventh successive victory, his ninth in 11 races this year and the 44th of his career. More significantly, it was Red Bull's 12th consecutive win, breaking a 35-year-old record they had shared with McLaren, who won 11 straight races in 1988 with Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna as their driver pair.

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