When we are sure that DtS 7 is actually happening now, the first episode gets off to a flying start by combining a couple of bombshells – Lewis Hamilton going to Ferrari, and Christian Horner’s (since dismissed) workplace misconduct allegations.
Series bosses have waxed lyrical about Daniel Ricciardo’s contribution in the past, but really it’s Horner who has made the series so far, so omnipresent has he been to any dastardly DtS storyline which doesn’t involve Haas or Alpine. It’s proven more than ever in S7.
Cameras catch the Red Bull boss perched on the pitwall during the 2024 Bahrain GP’s FP2, at the exact moment a flurry of Whatsapp messages related to his misconduct were leaked to F1 journalists. Horner sits there (and later narrates) as his phone lights up, head in hands and swearing to himself while grim-faced technical director Adrian Newey is sat next to him. Looking at his colleague from corner of his eye, grand prix racing’s greatest boffin gives off a strong ‘I’m-too-old-for-this-nonsense’ impression.
Netflix shots show McLaren boss Zak Brown and his Mercedes counterpart Toto Wolff clearly loving it – but Horner hangs on despite the best efforts of others to stir the pot.
And DtS could well have breathed a sigh of relief. Horner – almost always as the bad guy – is compelling in this series, central to also the Norris vs Verstappen storyline and downfall-of-Perez-promotion-of-Lawson episodes. DtS would be lost without him: people love having someone to hate, and he’s a good pundit.
Horner hangs on, somehow
Netflix
This is emphasised once more by Verstappen barely appearing as a talking head, and Perez’s absence of anything interesting to say.
The episode centred around the beleaguered Mexican’s demise is one of the best, but Perez appears to have no answer off-track just as he doesn’t on-track.
“You have to give full credit to DtS for squeezing all the editorial juice out of 2024’s most boring story line”
Amongst several revealing moments are just how ready Red Bull was ready to dump Perez mid-season for Ricciardo, but for the Australian’s own abject form making him an unacceptable choice.
You also have to give full credit to DtS for squeezing all the editorial juice out of 2024’s most boring story line: which lower midfield team will Carlos Sainz sign for?
Williams team boss James Vowles pens love letter after love letter to the Spaniard: “It would be a complete transformation of Williams to have Carlos by my side. I go to sleep and wake up thinking of nothing else.” Blimey! To quote George Russell.
Sainz hilariously stands up Vowles when he’s supposed to arrive to sign a contract, but why? Because of Flavio Briatore, that’s why.