Verstappen weathers storm to equal winning record
The Guardian|August 28, 2023
Certainly, mother nature at least left nothing on the table in an attempt to bring a dramatic edge to the Dutch Grand Prix. Amid the sand dunes of Zandvoort over the course of two and a half hours the wind blew, the rain crashed in with two separate, sudden, pitch invasions and then disappeared. Yet amid it all the one certainty of Formula One in 2023 stood utterly imperturbable. Come rain or shine it is Max Verstappen who takes the chequered flag.
Giles Richards
Verstappen weathers storm to equal winning record

The Dutchman was roared home by an adoring home crowd of 105,000 who exuded a determination to enjoy every second of the afternoon even as they battened down the hatches under flimsy ponchos and the wind threatened to tear precarious plastic pint pots from their hands. They were rewarded as their man secured a remarkable record.

The victory, his ninth in a row this season, equals Sebastian Vettel's tally set for Red Bull in 2013. It is a run indicative of just how crushingly dominant he and Red Bull have been this season. His team remain unbeaten this year, from which Verstappen has taken 11 wins from 13 meetings. There was no guarantee the record would fall to Verstappen but if it was to be denied it was clear it would certainly not be through driver error or a lack of pace.

He admitted he was proud of the achievement on a complicated day for drivers and teams. "Even if you have the best car and there have been more dominant cars in the past than we have at the moment and they haven't been able to win nine in a row," he said. "So yes it is hard, especially like today it is easy to make a wrong call, even drop it yourself in the gravel, it's never straightforward."

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