logo
Liam Lawson Yuki Tsunoda replacement will be given 'time and support'

Liam Lawson Yuki Tsunoda replacement will be given 'time and support'

RNZ News2 days ago

Yuki Tsunoda of Red Bull Racing, 2025.
Photo:
Eric Alonso / PHOTOSPORT
Red Bull say they will give Yuki Tsunoda time to settle into his F1 seat.
The Japanese driver replaced Liam Lawson after just two races of the 2025 season after the New Zealander struggled in Australia and China.
Christian Horner has insisted that Red Bull will give Tsunoda "time and support" in order to increase his confidence in the car.
The team boss told F1 that he is backing the Japanese driver to deliver after displaying "flashes of performance".
Tsunoda has picked up points in three of the seven races since taking over, but he has struggled to give team-mate Max Verstappen the support he needs with the team fourth in the constructors' championship.
Tsunoda failed to reach the last phase of qualifying in the last two rounds in Monaco and Spain.
He is 15th in the Drivers' Championship with 10 points, while Verstappen is third with 137 points.
"I think the only thing that we can do is give him time and support and try and get a set-up that he's got confidence in," Horner explained after Barcelona.
"Driving these cars is all about confidence, and that's what he needs to find. I think he'll get there."
Yuki Tsunoda's Red Bull car after crash during qualifying for 2025 Emilio Romagna Grand Prix.
Photo:
AFP
Horner had said something similar about Lawson before he was relegated to the junior Racing Bulls team.
Meanwhile, Autosport.com is reporting that Red Bull has asked the FIA to give Arvid Lindblad an exemption to get an F1 Superlicence before he turns 18 so that he could participate in F1 sessions.
Lindblad, who won the Formula Regional Oceania Championship in New Zealand last summer, is being considered as a reserve driver.
Red Bull already have reserve drivers, but their concern is that Verstappen is facing suspension and they may need to promote a driver from Racing Bulls into his seat, leaving the team short on drivers.
A driver needs a superlicence to be involved in any F1 activities.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

All Blacks 2025: NZ rugby coach Scott Robertson's revolution enters decisive stage
All Blacks 2025: NZ rugby coach Scott Robertson's revolution enters decisive stage

NZ Herald

time20 hours ago

  • NZ Herald

All Blacks 2025: NZ rugby coach Scott Robertson's revolution enters decisive stage

The All Blacks' story has certainly followed a revolutionary path in that there was a seismic cleanout of personnel after the 2023 World Cup – a grand toppling of the previous regime that felt brutal and public in the way so many lost their jobs, and lost them while they were still in them. And then came the period of unrest, the uncertainty in the aftermath of the blood-letting that saw Robertson suffer upheaval in his own coaching team after assistant Leon MacDonald quit after five tests. It saw Robertson pick an unwinnable fight with his employer by regularly protesting existing All Blacks' eligibility policies and advocating for change. Then in the final test of the year there was TJ Perenara's politicised haka, which caused significant angst and upset among the senior playing group. There was also an at-times bitter and toxic battle between warring factions trying to amend New Zealand Rugby's constitution to change the way directors were appointed. Damian McKenzie was given sporadic opportunities at first five-eighths last year. Photo / Photosport Last year was turbulent, and there was an air of volatility about the All Blacks in their chop-and-change selections (Robertson was unable to commit to Damian McKenzie as chief playmaker), their up-and-down performances, and their failure to deliver a transformational brand of rugby that was cohesive and enlightened. If there was a revolutionary tactical blueprint, a bright new vision for how players are presented to the public, and an intent to unearth a cohort of emerging superstars, it never materialised amid the constant upheaval. But 2025 should be the year that stage two of the revolution begins. Robertson now has his coaching team set up how he wants, and with MacDonald gone there is no longer ambiguity about the axis of power and who is playing Trotsky to his Lenin. Scott Robertson and Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov. Photos / Getty Images; Supplied Graphic / Herald This is the Robertson-Scott Hansen regime and, despite the clamouring for the captaincy to be shifted to Ardie Savea, Scott Barrett is the third member of the inner sanctum. The power base has been established inside the team, and so too has it been fortified within NZR. In February, a significantly more competent and focused board of directors, led by former All Blacks captain David Kirk, took their seats. They made their presence immediately felt by getting chief executive Mark Robinson to publicly align Robertson with the eligibility policy. This effectively ended what was increasingly being seen as less of a broadly principled quest to update a no longer fit-for-purpose law regime, and more a thinly disguised attempt to bend the rules to select the Japan-based Richie Mo'unga. The greater stability in the wider rugby landscape and the confidence that may have grown within Robertson and his coaching team because of that greater stability could potentially see stage two of the revolution begin with a more radical lens applied to selection this year. Super Rugby has shifted into the playoffs to provide a more intense environment. Perhaps Robertson will be using these next few weeks to decide whether there is room in his 35-man squad for new players, and indeed whether there are some potential unexpected twists in the way some already identified talents could be utilised. Top of the list as a possible new cap will be Chiefs loose forward Simon Parker, whose work this season has been unmissable. He may well be the thundering big lump the All Blacks are constantly hunting for. At 1.97m and 117kg, he's a unique beast in New Zealand. Athletes of these dimensions roam all over Europe, but in New Zealand it is rare to find someone of this size capable of playing in the back-row and able to live with the high-paced, aerobic demands of Super Rugby. Parker may be the player the All Blacks can develop into becoming their version of South Africa's Pieter-Steph du Toit – a feat which would effectively be revolutionary in itself. As a positional twist, perhaps these next few weeks could provide reason for Robertson to double down on using Ruben Love as a wing in the test arena. The 24-year-old won his solitary cap playing on the right wing last year (after running at fullback for the Hurricanes) and has this season shown himself to be a more than capable first five-eighths. Is Love the sort of multi-skilled all-rounder the All Blacks could park in the No 14 jersey to replace the departing Mark Tele'a and give themselves three play-makers on the field at any one time? As revolutionary concepts go, having two natural No 10s in the back three is as radical as they come and would align strongly with Robertson's desire to have his All Blacks play a sweeping style of rugby based on the accuracy of their pass and catch. The revolution did begin last year, just not in the way everyone expected or wanted. But this year, the people need to see what they thought they were going to get in 2024 – a new-look All Blacks team that justified the decision to topple the previous regime. Gregor Paul is one of New Zealand's most respected rugby writers and columnists. He has won multiple awards for journalism and has written several books about sport.

F1: Liam Lawson Yuki Tsunoda replacement will be given 'time and support'
F1: Liam Lawson Yuki Tsunoda replacement will be given 'time and support'

RNZ News

time2 days ago

  • RNZ News

F1: Liam Lawson Yuki Tsunoda replacement will be given 'time and support'

Yuki Tsunoda of Red Bull Racing, 2025. Photo: Eric Alonso / PHOTOSPORT Red Bull say they will give Yuki Tsunoda time to settle into his F1 seat. The Japanese driver replaced Liam Lawson after just two races of the 2025 season after the New Zealander struggled in Australia and China. Christian Horner has insisted that Red Bull will give Tsunoda "time and support" in order to increase his confidence in the car. The team boss told F1 that he is backing the Japanese driver to deliver after displaying "flashes of performance". Tsunoda has picked up points in three of the seven races since taking over, but he has struggled to give team-mate Max Verstappen the support he needs with the team fourth in the constructors' championship. Tsunoda failed to reach the last phase of qualifying in the last two rounds in Monaco and Spain. He is 15th in the Drivers' Championship with 10 points, while Verstappen is third with 137 points. "I think the only thing that we can do is give him time and support and try and get a set-up that he's got confidence in," Horner explained after Barcelona. "Driving these cars is all about confidence, and that's what he needs to find. I think he'll get there." Yuki Tsunoda's Red Bull car after crash during qualifying for 2025 Emilio Romagna Grand Prix. Photo: AFP Horner had said something similar about Lawson before he was relegated to the junior Racing Bulls team. Meanwhile, is reporting that Red Bull has asked the FIA to give Arvid Lindblad an exemption to get an F1 Superlicence before he turns 18 so that he could participate in F1 sessions. Lindblad, who won the Formula Regional Oceania Championship in New Zealand last summer, is being considered as a reserve driver. Red Bull already have reserve drivers, but their concern is that Verstappen is facing suspension and they may need to promote a driver from Racing Bulls into his seat, leaving the team short on drivers. A driver needs a superlicence to be involved in any F1 activities.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store