
Isack Hadjar Disqualified from Miami Qualifying Over Technical Breach
Isack Hadjar loses his P9 qualifying spot for the Miami GP after his Red Bull was found with illegal floor dimensions. He will start from the pit lane, while Red Bull accepted the breach and apologized for the error.
Red Bull junior driver Isack Hadjar has been disqualified from his ninth-place qualifying result for the Miami Grand Prix after his car was found to be in breach of Formula 1's technical regulations. The 21-year-old will now start Sunday's race from the pit lane, a major setback that reshuffles the grid and compounds a difficult weekend for the Frenchman.
Why it matters:
Technical disqualifications are a stark reminder of the precision required in Formula 1 and the severe, immediate consequences for even minor infractions. For Hadjar, losing a top-ten starting position severely compromises his race strategy and any hope of a strong points finish, turning a weekend of potential into one of damage limitation.
The details:
- The FIA technical delegate found that portions of the left and right-hand side floorboards on Hadjar's RB22 were protruding 2mm outside the permitted reference volume, a breach of Article C3.5.5 of the technical regulations.
- Red Bull Racing accepted the findings and did not dispute the stewards' decision, with Team Principal Laurent Mekies stating, "We made a mistake and we respect the decision of the stewards. No performance advantage was intended nor gained from the error."
- The ruling promotes Pierre Gasly to ninth on the grid and Nico Hülkenberg to tenth, altering the strategic landscape for the midfield battle.
- This incident follows a disappointing Sprint race for Hadjar, where he also failed to score points after starting from a similar position.
What's next:
Hadjar faces a monumental challenge in the Grand Prix, starting from the pit lane with the entire field ahead of him. The focus for him and the team shifts entirely to recovery and learning from the procedural error. For Red Bull, the team's hopes for a strong constructor points haul in Miami now rest more heavily on Max Verstappen, who starts from the front row. The team has pledged to review its processes to prevent a recurrence.
Don't miss the next lap
Get the deep dives and technical analysis from the world of F1 delivered to your inbox twice a week.
Zero spam. Only high-octane analysis. Unsubscribe anytime.
Join the inner circle
Get the deep dives and technical analysis from the world of F1 delivered to your inbox twice a week.
Zero spam. Only high-octane analysis. Unsubscribe anytime.



