Red Bull Racing

Full Team Name
Oracle Red Bull Racing
Base
Milton Keynes, United Kingdom
Team Chief
Christian Horner
Technical Chief
Pierre Waché
Chassis
RB20
Power Unit
Honda RBPT
First Team Entry
1997
World Championships
6
Highest Race Finish
1 (x122)
Pole Positions
103
Fastest Laps
99

In profile

In profile

Red Bull were no strangers to F1 - as sponsors - prior to formally entering as a works team in 2004. Nonetheless, the scale of their success over the following decade was staggering. After a first podium in 2006, the team hit their stride in 2009, claiming six victories and second in the constructors' standings. Over the next four seasons they were a tour de force, claiming consecutive title doubles between 2010 and 2013, with Sebastian Vettel emerging as the sport's youngest quadruple champion. Now their hopes of recapturing that glory lie with an equally exciting talent – one named Max Verstappen…

2020

A lonely second in the standings, consistently clear of the midfield but rarely able to match the pace of champions Mercedes. Max Verstappen stars – with two wins and another nine podiums – but Alex Albon is dropped for 2021 after just two top-three appearances.

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2019

Transition from Renault to Honda power is remarkably smooth, and Max Verstappen’s four wins ensure an almost identical points tally to 2018. Drop Pierre Gasly mid-year in favour of rookie Alex Albon, and late-season progress raises hopes of a genuine title challenge in 2020.

2018

A lack of performance and reliability from their Renault power units means that only on occasions are they in genuine contention for victories – Daniel Ricciardo wins in China and Monaco, Max Verstappen in Austria and Mexico. The result is a very lonely third place in the final standings.

Read Red Bull Racing's full year-by-year profile