The team has brought on board Andy Cowell who led development of Mercedes’ dominant hybrid F1 engine and is now CEO and team principal of Aston Martin’s F1 team.
It has also recruited Ferrari‘s former chassis and aerodynamics chief, Enrico Cardile, Red Bull’s previous head of aerodynamics Dan Fallows, and former Mercedes aerodynamicist Eric Blandin. Aston Martin has also secured a Honda engine deal from 2026, as well as F1’s superstar designer, Adrian Newey.
Significantly the latter two have been two critical pillars of Max Verstappen’s success at Red Bull. All four titles and 58 of his 63 F1 race wins have been in cars overseen by Newey and powered by Honda.
Look at it that way, and Verstappen moving to Aston Martin would be less of a new challenge and more of a homecoming. One that would undoubtedly be sweetened with a deal worth hundreds of millions of pounds. As with Newey’s contract, hefty win bonuses — and potentially equity in the team itself — could give Verstappen the potential to earn an eye-catching $1bn (£816m) — depending on performances and the length of the contract.
When asked about the prospect of a move last year, Verstappen carefully avoided ruling it out. “I have other worries at the moment that I’m paying a lot of attention to and working on,” he said. “So that is something maybe for the future that I think about, not now.
“I know that Lawrence is pushing flat out for it to be a success and I hope for them that it can be a success.”
Just as significantly, Marko also spoke of the team’s potential making it an obvious destination for his protege. “Max drives where he can win,” he told Austrian publication Kleine Zeitung last year. “Aston Martin has the most modern factory, the wind tunnel will be operational [in 2025] and Honda engines will be added to that. Everything fits. And if you look at history, it is clear: wherever Newey has gone, there has been an upward trend. I don’t know why it should be any different at Aston Martin.”