Max Verstappen’s Teammate Just Screwed Him Out of History

For most of the weekend, it looked like Max Verstappen was about to add another legendary performance to his growing motorsports résumé at the 24 Hours Nürburgring.

Then everything unraveled in a hurry.

With just over three hours remaining, Verstappen’s teammate damaged what had been a race-winning Red Bull No. 3 car, instantly turning a likely victory into a desperate fight just to salvage a result. In endurance racing, fortunes can change in seconds — and that brutal reality hit Verstappen’s team at the worst possible moment.

One minute, they were controlling the race.

The next, the win was gone. Then the podium disappeared too.

That is what makes endurance racing so unforgiving. Twenty-plus hours of perfect execution can be erased by one mistake in traffic, one bad decision or one moment of overaggression. It is cruel, especially after how brilliantly Verstappen drove throughout the race.

And honestly, he still stole the show anyway.

Verstappen looked like the fastest and most complete driver in the field for much of the event. His pace through traffic was unreal. His confidence attacking the Nürburgring’s most dangerous sections stood out even among elite endurance racers. Every stint seemed to reinforce the same point: this guy can drive absolutely anything.

Fans came away disappointed for him because the performance deserved a trophy.

Instead, Verstappen leaves with tough luck and another painful reminder of how endurance racing works. Individual brilliance alone cannot guarantee victory when four drivers share the same car over 24 exhausting hours.

Still, even without the result, Verstappen’s reputation somehow grew stronger this weekend.

He did not just look like an F1 superstar trying endurance racing for fun. He looked like a genuine Nürburgring ace — calm, fearless and impossibly fast.

A wheelman in every sense of the word.

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Jackson Fryburger