MPH: Will Red Bull try to re-sign Albon for 2025?

F1

Red Bull is still agonising over whether to keep or ditch Sergio Perez for 2025 – will it look to one of its old drivers for help?

Max Verstappen Alex Albon Red Bull Williams 2024

Verstappen and Albon to be reunited again? Red Bull still rates the Thai driver highly

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Mark Hughes

In what has been a quite wild and wonderful driver silly-season, kicked off all those months ago by Lewis Hamilton announcing he would be joining Ferrari in 2025, there are still a couple of loose ends to tidy up – and they are related. Who will be in the Red Bull seat next to Max Verstappen and what will the RB driver line-up be?

Although RB’s Yuki Tsunoda is set to be given a Red Bull test in Abu Dhabi after the season finale, thanks to a bit of support from Honda, he is not believed to be a serious contender for promotion to the main team. Despite his starring P3 qualifying in the wet of Interlagos. It’s not even certain that Sergio Perez will definitely be vacating his Red Bull seat – he is contracted for another year – but Christian Horner has admitted that there are potentially two ’25 seats up for grabs between the two teams.

Releasing Perez from Red Bull would not be straightforward or cheap but that doesn’t mean it won’t be done. He’s had a terrible season, though it took a big upward turn at Baku where he was right with Oscar Piastri and Charles Leclerc’s lead battle. Upon getting that particular chassis back in Brazil, his pace looked very respectable again but he lost out to poor timing of his release in both sprint and grand prix qualifying and so under-qualified. If he can maintain the improved pace and it can be combined with better operations in the pitlane for the remaining three races he could rescue his seat yet.

Christian Horner James Vowles Red Bull Williams 2024

It remains to be seen what Horner and Vowles were discussing in their meeting

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But if he doesn’t? Liam Lawson is the obvious contender, having done a great job in his RB return replacing Daniel Ricciardo. He’s generally out-paced Tsunoda (though not in Brazil) and has shown fearlessly aggressive racecraft, even against Fernando Alonso. Given that Red Bull isn’t looking for someone who can match Verstappen, but merely a driver who can support him in the team’s quest for the constructors title, he’s made a very strong case for himself. If Perez were to be replaced, it would seem relatively straightforward to slot Lawson into that seat and then promote Red Bull’s F2 driver Isack Hadjar (still in contention for the F2 crown, against newly-signed Sauber driver Gabriel Bortoleto) to RB.

But what was Horner’s Mexico visit to James Vowles at Williams all about? That and some comments from Helmut Marko sparked speculation that Red Bull was trying to buy Franco Colapinto out of his Williams contract. The Argentinean rookie has been something of a sensation since standing in at almost no notice for Logan Sargeant. Colapinto went to Monza expecting to be racing his F2 car and made his grand prix debut instead. Since when he hasn’t looked back and has become a hot property. Ostensibly he’ll continue as Williams’ third driver next year. But if Red Bull is interested and is prepared to pay for buying out both his contract and that of Perez, is he being considered for the seat at RB or Red Bull?

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2025 F1 driver line-ups: latest rumours, confirmed seats & contract news

Gabriel Bortoleto will be another new name on the F1 grid next year, while Franco Colapinto has forced his way into the reckoning for F1 2025 driver line-ups. What next in the F1 transfer market? Here are the contracts in place, the rumoured silly season deals, and who could end up where

By Cambridge Kisby

But what if Vowles and Horner were not discussing only Colapinto? What if there were other options? The obvious best seat for Carlos Sainz after finding out he was being replaced at Ferrari by Hamilton was always Red Bull. But there seemed to be no real appetite there to recruit him, despite Horner volunteering after his victory in Melbourne that he was an obvious candidate (this was before Perez’s contract had been extended). At a time when Jos Verstappen was making noises about Max leaving Red Bull, there was a concern not to do anything which might precipitate that. Such as recruiting Sainz, for example, potentially re-igniting the friction between the Verstappen and Sainz camps last seen when they were rookies at Toro Rosso. So Sainz went ahead and signed for Williams. But why would Horner be trying to sign Sainz now that he would have to buy him out of a very expensive Williams contract, when he didn’t sign him when he was free? It makes no obvious sense.

But what if the discussion wasn’t about Sainz or Colapinto? What if it was about Alex Albon? What if Horner’s whole pitch to Vowles was: “Look, you now have the guaranteed performance of Sainz and a greatly promising rookie in Colapinto. Why don’t you release Alex to us. It would be seamless and you’d receive a good payment?”

Albon remained highly-rated by Red Bull even after it released him at the end of 2020. He just wasn’t experienced enough to be put alongside Verstappen and in a highly demanding car. It remained totally convinced of his potential – something which has been vindicated with his performances at Williams since. He’s still considered part of the Red Bull family despite there no longer being any formal ties.

Could the guy who was replaced by Perez be the guy who replaces Perez? There could be a sting in the tale yet.