Posted in

Max Verstappen sees Paul Monaghan leave Red Bull

Max Verstappen sees Paul Monaghan leave Red Bull

Paul Monaghan is leaving Red Bull Racing. The Chief Engineer had been with Red Bull since 2005, but has now decided to end his time with the team. It marks yet another departure from Red Bull Racing that Max Verstappen and his team have to deal with.

Paul Monaghan is leaving Red Bull Racing and is set to join Cadillac. At the new American team, Monaghan will take on a completely new challenge after having worked for Red Bull Racing since 2005.

Who is Paul Monaghan?

Monaghan was born on October 17, 1967, and began his Formula 1 career at McLaren, where he started in 1990 after a master’s in Mechanical Engineering. He worked there with Ayrton Senna, Gerhard Berger, and later with David Coulthard and Adrian Newey. After a decade at McLaren, an interim stint at Benetton (where he was Jenson Button’s race engineer), and a period at Jordan Grand Prix, he moved to Red Bull Racing at the end of 2005.

His job title upon arrival was Head of Race and Test Engineering. That role evolved into Chief Engineer, Car Engineering: responsible for maximizing car performance over a race weekend and translating race concepts into tangible performance on track.

Monaghan among a series of major departures

Monaghan is not the first big name to leave Red Bull. Adrian Newey now works at Aston Martin. Rob Marshall and Will Courtenay have moved to McLaren. Jonathan Wheatley previously departed to become team principal at Audi. Gianpiero Lambiase, Verstappen’s race engineer, will follow in 2028 to McLaren.

What does this mean for Verstappen’s future?

Monaghan’s departure once again puts Verstappen under the microscope. A few years ago, Verstappen said it was important to him that the key figures within the team would stay. In the meantime, nothing remains of the old guard. Only Pierre Waché can still be considered one of the men Verstappen has worked with for years.

It’s clear that Verstappen is weighing his options for 2027. The Dutchman has a contract through 2028, but reportedly has a clause allowing him to leave Red Bull if he’s not in the top two of the championship going into the summer break. Given Red Bull’s current performances, that clause appears likely to be triggered.

Schumacher set the rumor mill in motion

Ralf Schumacher was the first to suspect that Monaghan would be leaving. What stood out to Ralf Schumacher was a recent comment by Monaghan. Not against Verstappen, but as a counterbalance: “We know Max a bit, and the situation isn’t that bad. You have to put it in the right context.” Schumacher called that striking: it was the first time an official representative of Red Bull had dared to speak out even slightly against Max.

Schumacher sees Monaghan’s possible departure as a symptom of a bigger problem: the loss of Helmut Marko. “He fully stood behind the team, but also behind the drivers. He set boundaries, gave clear information, and provided direction. That made a big difference.” Marko also handled a lot behind the scenes: he solved problems, found the right people for key positions, and kept things running. “All of that is now gone.”

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *