Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

Could Max Verstappen mount a title challenge? "We still have too many issues"

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Could Max Verstappen mount a title challenge? "We still have too many issues"

"Slowed down overnight": Rivals show sympathy for AMG frustration

DTM
Lausitzring
"Slowed down overnight": Rivals show sympathy for AMG frustration

Video: Noah Gragson retaliates against Cody Ware; Todd Gilliland vs. 23XI at Sonoma

NASCAR Cup
Sonoma
Video: Noah Gragson retaliates against Cody Ware; Todd Gilliland vs. 23XI at Sonoma

Trackhouse crew chief says they were 'lucky' to have Van Gisbergen against faster JGR car

NASCAR Cup
Sonoma
Trackhouse crew chief says they were 'lucky' to have Van Gisbergen against faster JGR car

Susie Wolff explains why F1 Academy cannot be a "charity project" as series grows

F1 Academy
Silverstone
Susie Wolff explains why F1 Academy cannot be a "charity project" as series grows

Red Bull's Austrian GP upgrade package compared to "B-spec" F1 car by former mechanic

Formula 1
Austrian GP
Red Bull's Austrian GP upgrade package compared to "B-spec" F1 car by former mechanic

Watkins Glen win “feels a bit surreal” as Jack Aitken extends podium streak

IMSA
Watkins Glen
Watkins Glen win “feels a bit surreal” as Jack Aitken extends podium streak

Winners and losers from a close NASCAR Cup race at Sonoma

NASCAR Cup
Sonoma
Winners and losers from a close NASCAR Cup race at Sonoma

Red Bull confirms Max Verstappen's F1 race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase will leave in 2028

Amid doubts over Verstappen's long-term Formula 1 future, his trusted race engineer will leave Red Bull ahead of a potential move to McLaren

Oracle Red Bull Racing Team Race Engineer Gianpiero Lambiase walks in the paddock

Oracle Red Bull Racing Team Race Engineer Gianpiero Lambiase walks in the paddock

Photo by: Kym Illman / Getty Images

Red Bull has confirmed that Max Verstappen's long-time race engineer Gianpiero Lambiase will leave at the end of the 2027 Formula 1 campaign.

Lambiase has long been the subject of intense interest across the paddock, as the 45-year-old weighed up his options last winter. Amid links with Aston Martin and Williams, Lambiase ultimately chose to remain in place at Red Bull, where he not only performs the job of Verstappen's race engineer but also a more overarching trackside role as head of racing.

But then it emerged on Thursday morning, first reported by Dutch newspaper De Telegraaf, that he was set to leave the Austrian outfit when his contract expires at the end of the 2027 season. Red Bull has since confirmed that will take place. 

Its short statement read: "Oracle Red Bull Racing confirms that Gianpiero Lambiase will leave the team in 2028, when his current contract expires. “GP” is a valued member of the team, which he joined in 2015. 

"Until his planned departure, “GP" continues in his roles as head of racing and as race engineer to Max Verstappen. The team and he are fully committed to add more success to our strong track record together."

It is understood that he has agreed a deal to join rival McLaren for the 2028 campaign in a senior trackside role that would support team principal Andrea Stella. 

With Stella part of the new generation of engineering-first team principals with a wide remit both across a race weekend and at the factory, Lambiase's arrival would help take some load off the Italian's plate as he looks after a team well north of 1000 staff.

However, speculation that Lambiase's move is part of a long-term plan to succeed Stella, amid alleged Ferrari interest in its former engineer, is understood to be wide of the mark.

Andrea Stella

Andrea Stella

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Formula 1 via Getty Images

The switch would follow a similar playbook as the one made by Red Bull's former head of strategy Will Courtenay, who was also made to wait until the start of this season to join McLaren.

Lambiase could still join McLaren before 2028 if the two teams agree a deal for an early release.

Previously, Red Bull also lost chief designer Rob Marshall to the papaya squad. Other senior figures to move on from the Austrian outfit in recent years include tech chief Adrian Newey, sporting director Jonathan Wheatley, CEO Christian Horner and adviser Helmut Marko.

Lambiase's impending Red Bull exit comes against the backdrop of four-time world champion Verstappen mulling over his own future in the series, having been disillusioned with 2026's all-new technical regulations.

Verstappen's current Red Bull deal expires at the end of 2028, but the Dutchman is known to have various exit clauses that can be triggered as early as this summer if he wanted to get out sooner.

Read Also:
Previous article Ex-Mercedes engineer Dan Milner joins Williams
Next article Gianpiero Lambiase's Red Bull exit leaves F1 fans with one question

Top Comments

Latest news