Oscar Piastri says it would be a ‘big loss’ for F1 if Max Verstappen walked away from sport

An image of three F1 drivers speaking during an interview in pit lane.

Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri (middle and right) say it would be a major loss to F1 if Max Verstappen (left) walked away from the sport. (Getty Images: Peter Fox)

Oscar Piastri believes it will be a “big loss” and “not a great look” for Formula 1 if four-time champion Max Verstappen walks away disillusioned from the sport.

Both the Australian ace and his McLaren world champion teammate, Lando Norris, spoke of their admiration and respect for the Red Bull pilot whom Piastri called the benchmark for all drivers in F1.

But the 28-year-old Dutchman has been the most outspoken critic of F1’s total revamp for 2026, adamant that he has lost his enjoyment of a sport that he is now comparing to Mario Kart.

“I think it would be a shame for the sport to lose Max, especially at this point in his career as well,” Piastri said.

“It would be a big loss for the sport as a whole.

“As drivers, we want to race against and try to prove ourselves against the best. Max has shown his calibre in the last 10 years. Especially the last five or six, he’s been the benchmark.

“So I think for everyone, it would be a pretty big shame, and obviously not a great look.”

Norris agreed that it would be a loss for the sport.

“Max has earned the right to go and do whatever he wants. He’s won four world championships. He’s always been the guy,” he said.

“So it will be a shame for the sport, it will be a loss for the sport if that does happen, because he probably is one of the best drivers you’ll see in Formula 1 ever.

“And I think it’ll be a shame for us, because as much as he makes our lives incredibly tough at times, he’s always good fun to race against.

“But hopefully things get better. And he said he wants to win a fifth world championship at the moment, so I’m sure he’ll stay longer than people say.”

During the break in the F1 program due to cancelled grands prix in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia because of the Middle East conflict, changes have been introduced to appease drivers and improve racing for the next round in Miami on May 3, where Mercedes teen ace Kimi Antonelli and teammate George Russell will start as pacesetters.

The changes include allowing drivers to go flat-out for longer in qualifying, and a boost-button cap to mitigate the impact of dangerous closing speeds.

“I need to go through all the details of the rules and [get] someone smarter than me to explain what has changed,” Piastri said.

“But it is a step in the right direction for sure. How far it goes in addressing the problems, we will have to wait and see until we get on track.”