
Red Bull reshuffles technical staff, promoting Andrea Landi and Ben Waterhouse
Red Bull, after a weak 2026 car, promoted Racing Bulls' former deputy technical director Andrea Landi to head of performance and elevated Ben Waterhouse to chief performance engineer, hoping to revive competitiveness.
Red Bull’s 2026 campaign has stumbled. A chassis that lagged in China and Japan left Max Verstappen and rookie Isack Hadjar frustrated, and the team has responded with a swift technical reshuffle during an unusual April break.
Why it matters:
Red Bull’s dominance has defined F1 for five seasons. A slump now opens the door for rivals like McLaren and Ferrari, threatens the team’s commercial clout, and makes the 2026 aero‑efficiency era a steep catch‑up race.
The details:
- Leadership reshuffle: Ben Waterhouse promoted to chief performance and design engineer; Andrea Landi, former deputy technical director at Racing Bulls, joins as head of performance.
- Car issues: Verstappen and Hadjar called the chassis ‘terrible’ after Japan, pointing to excess weight and weak aerodynamic load.
- Upgrade window: The April break, granted by the cancellation of Bahrain and Saudi races, lets Red Bull test aero parts, shed mass and exploit a competitive RB‑24 engine that’s still held back by the chassis.
What's next:
Red Bull will introduce aero upgrades to boost down‑force while staying within the 2026 weight limit, and will fast‑track a lighter chassis in the summer. A measurable lap‑time gain at Hungary could restore its front‑running status for the season.
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