MAD MAX
GQ US
|December 2022 - January 2023
How Max Verstappen, the reigning two-time Fi champion, went from being a young boy with preternatural talent to becoming one of the most cold-blooded winners in racing history.
TOWARD THE END of Max Verstappen’s first season in Formula 1—a season in which he’d become, at 17, the youngest-ever driver to compete in racing’s top series—he returned home to the north of Belgium to take his road test for his driver’s license. Despite winning in every racing category from seven years old onward, he hadn’t been in much of a hurry to drive normal cars, but it was getting to be a little silly. There was a break in the 2015 schedule, and a tight window to take the test before jetting off to a stretch of races in Asia. The driving instructor was actually very strict,” he told me recently, before clarifying, which is very good—it should be like that! And I wasn’t nervous but just a bit like: I really need to pass this test. There was a bit of pressure on it.”
Verstappen ultimately passed but nearly received a fatal infraction when he failed to cede the road. Yeah, I didn’t give way twice,” he confessed, laughing knowingly.
Verstappen, from earliest racing days, has been known for an aggressiveness that lives— mesmerizingly or maddeningly, depending on where along the paddock one sits—right on the limit. Max’s best form of defense is attack,’ the Red Bull Racing team principal, Christian Horner, likes to say. Verstappen’s lead rival over the past few seasons, the seventime world champion Lewis Hamilton, has put it slightly differently: Max is kind of do-ordie. It’s like you're either crashing or you're not going by.’ In other words: Max is not giving way. Ever. I think he pushes it to the limit and probably beyond,’ Hamilton added.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der December 2022 - January 2023-Ausgabe von GQ US.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON GQ US
GQ US
TRANSFORMATION OF THE YEAR CHARLIE HUNNAM
EARLIER THIS YEAR, Charlie Hunnam had “a divinely architected” ayahuasca trip.
4 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
ROCK & ROLLER OF THE YEAR MJ LENDERMAN
BACK IN LATE February, less than six months after MJ Lenderman released Manning Fireworks, his 2024 deadpan-sophisticate ringer of a breakthrough album, he told me that maybe it was time for his tour to end.
4 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
LEADING MAN OF THE YEAR OSCAR ISAAC
IN ANY GIVEN Frankenstein movie (there have been hundreds of them since the first film based on Mary Shelley's novel opened in 1910) the plum role is usually the creature.
9 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
HOLLYWOOD MOGUL OF THE YEAR
TWO DAYS AGO, Seth Rogen won so many Emmys that today his wrists are actually a little sore.
12 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
BON VIVANT OF THE YEAR WALTON GOGGINS
IT has been the most blissful, circuitous kind of path,\" Walton Goggins is saying.
4 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
THE 2025 GQ FASHION AWARDS
STARTING WITH...DESIGNER OF THE YEAR
13 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
OBSESSION OF THE YEAR: SYDNEY SWEENEY
powers as an actor are indisputable.
10 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
MIC DROP OF THE YEAR STEPHEN COLBERT
STEPHEN COLBERT IS by the pool at the Chateau Marmont in West Hollywood wearing bathing trunks, a robe, and nothing else.
16 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
TYCOON OF THE YEAR HAILEY BIEBER
IN September, I landed at LAX and found myself unmistakably in Hailey Bieber's Los Angeles.
10 mins
December 2025-January 2026
GQ US
GROWN-UP OF THE YEAR YUNG LEAN
YUNG LEAN IS describing a weeklong silent retreat he went on about three years ago, at a facility in a forest in his home country of Sweden.
5 mins
December 2025-January 2026
Translate
Change font size

