Daniel Ricciardo will lea🔯d the rebranded Visa Cash App RB team into th𒈔eir new era in 2024.
Daniel Ricciardo will lead the rebranded Visa Cash App RB team into their new era in 2024𓆏.
Fresh from his success in Formula Renault 3.5, Ricciardo began a busy 2011 season combining racing with Friday Free Practice sessions with Toro Rosso, where he regularly impressed relative to ra💦ce drivers Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari.
Though always expected to get his F1 shot in 2012 with Toro Rosso, Ricciardo instead made a surprise debut with Hispania during Round 9 of the season at the British Grand Prix after Red Bull ‘loaned’ him to replace Narain Karthikeyan for t𒀰he remainder of the season.
One of the three new entries that joined the fray in 2010 (together with Lotus and Virgin/Manor), while the Spanish flagged car was considered to the slowest on a grid of 13 teams, Ricciardo grasped the opportunity to impress withꦓ what he had and by the end of the year had the regul💟ar measure of Vitantonio Liuzzi.
With Red Bull agonising over whether to promote one or both of Ricciardo and fellow Red Bull Junior starlet Jean-Eric Vergne, it was decided both would get to join the sister Scuderia Toro Rosso outfit for 2012, replacing Buemi and Alguersuari, setting up a fascinating premise between two drivers clearly primed for a plum spot at Red Bull Racing♏ in future.
Though Ricciardo realised a lifelong ambition on his Toro Rosso debut by scoring in his home Australian Grand Prix - the opening round of the year - with a🍌 run to ninth having also cracked Q3 for the first time, it was Vergne that largely had the edge in terms of rac🍒e results over the course of the year.
However, while Vergne scored 16 points to Ricciardo’s ten and scored the team’s best result of the year with an eighth, it was the Aussie that dominated his team-mate over a singl♒e lap, out-qualifying the Frenchman 16 to 5, peaking with a sixth place start in the Bahrain Gꩵrand Prix.
In the final season for the V8 architecture, Ricciardo was once more pair🎃ed with Vergne at Toro Rosso with their bubbling rivalry taking on fresh impetus when it was confirmed mid-season Mark Webber would retire, opening up a berth at Red Bull Racing for 2014.
Yet again Ricciardo and Vergne were evenly mat🧔ched in a car that was only mid-field at best, but this time it was the Australian getting the better of his team-mate and rival with seven trips to the top ten, peaking with a seventh place finish in China and Italy.
While Vergne achieved the best result 𒈔of Toro Rosso’s season with ඣa sixth place in Canada, he’d fall seven points shy of Ricciardo’s total (20 vs 13), while the Australian was again comfortably the quicker of the pair over a single lap (15 v 5), which included cracking Q3 on eight occasions, including a top five start in the British Grand Prix.
It was this Saturday strength over Vergane - which saw a qualifying disparity of 31 to 10 over two seasons - that ultimately told when Red Bull announced it would choose Ricciardo to replace countryman Webber in the 🀅‘A-Team’ alongside four-time champion Sebastian Vettel.
Coming up alongside Vettel, so dominant in the Red Bull in the final four years of the V8 era, R🐻icciardo faced an immense challenge in 2014 to both meet the pressures of having a record-breaking compatriot in a team now very used to winning.
However, with engine supplier Renault failing to grasp the complexities of the V6 Hybrid era as quickly as rivals Mercedes, Red Bull found itself playing catch up from the start. Nevertheless, while Red Bull scrambled around for answers, Ricciardo swiftly found his groove in the RB11 and instantly had the measureꦐ of a struggling Vettel, even if a disqualification from second place on home soil in Australia scuppered his fairytale team debut.
While Vettel proved a rarity on the podium, Ricciardo became a regular, breaking his duck at the Spa🤡nish Grand Prix with a run to third, which was promptly followed with another in Monaco.
A popular maiden victory followed during Round 7 at the Canadian Grand Prix, where despite Renault’s struggle to keep up with Mercedes’ engine left Red Bull on the back foot, over-exertion on the cars of Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg around the๊ power-hungry Gilles Villeneuve Circuit allowed Ricciardo - who only passed Sergio Perez for second with four laps to go - to snatch the lead on the penultimate revolution.
Growi𝓀ng in confidence, Ricciardo was on the podium again at Silverstone before reeling off a pair of astute victories on the trot in the Hungarian Grand Prix - where he demonstrated superb car control to slice his way to the front in slippery conditions - and the Belgian Grand Prix after the dominant Mercedes pair damaged their cars with contact.
Two more podiums followed allowing Ricciard♍o to comfortably wrap up third in the drivers’ standings, some 52 points clear of fourth place Valtteri Bottas and 71 points ahead of an out-of-favour Vettel, who by this stage had already confirmed he would be bound for Ferrari for 2015.
Promoted to team leader status, Ricc🐈iardo welcomed Toro Rosso graduate Daniil Kvyat alongside him for the 2015 F1 World Championship season, who would prove a solid match for the Australian in a year defined by ongoing issues with t💃he Renault power unit.
With Williams and Ferra﷽ri developing a superior machine, while the RB11 showcased the chassis’ evident abilities by proving competitive at high downforces venues as Monaco, the Hungaroring and the Marina Bay Circuit, high-speꦇed venues as the Gilles Villeneuve Circuit, Silverstone, Monza and Austin betrayed a lack of straight line performance and wavering reliability that in turn led to numerous grid penalties for component changes.
As such, while Ricciardo was large🅠ly more competitive than Kvyat, he suffered the lion’s share of the issues, leaving him behind the Russian in the overall classification, ending up eighth, three points behind the sophomore racer.
Despite this, Ricciardo was the onl♛y Red Bull on the podium in 2015, taking💖 a third in Hungary and second in Singapore.
A step forward by Renault with its power unit - now badged TAG-Heuer - set Ricciardo up for a more competitive turn in 2016, with Red 🌞Bull finding itself in the mix with Ferrari and at times Mercꦦedes for much of the year.
Scoring in all but a single race - an 11th in Russia - Ricciardo collected a fourth career victory in 🌺Malaysia as part of a Red Bull 1-2, the legacy of Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes dramatically expiring shortly before the end.
Though fortuitous in circumstance, the win came amid a strong run of form for Ricciardo during whi♌ch he stepped on the podium in seven of the latter 11 races.
However, despite fInishing third in the standings, the headlines betrayed a year of other frustrations, most keenl🍸y a painful lost victory🌠 in the Monaco Grand Prix, a race Ricciardo dominated from an exceptiona✤l maiden pole position until Red Bull fluffed his pit-stop to put him behind Hamilton when he rejoined the circ🎃uit. Despite applying immense pressure on the Briton, Ricciardo couldn’t find a way through, forcing him to settle for second.
He was also wary of the feverish attention surrounding new teenage team-mate Max Verstappen, who was pr𒉰omoted in place of Kvyat from Round 5 onwards in what was only hi💖s 25th GP start.
With the🔯 young Dutchman going on to sensationally win on his Red Bull debut - a race Ricciardo could have won but for a strategic error a week before his Monaco fracas - while the more experienced driver still had the measure of the upstart for the most part, the closing gap between them was demonstrated by a tense battle between the pair in Sepang that was only decided in the Aussie’s favour under team orders when Hamilton retiౠred.
With Red Bull’s progress stalling again over the winter, Ricciardo couldn’t live with the Hamilton (Mercedes) or ex-tღeam-mate Vettel (Ferrari) but showcased his enduring consistency to begin making podium headway early on, reeling off five-in-a-row between Round 4 and 9, a run that included a surprise win in a chaotic, incident-filled Azerbaijan Grand Prix.
Famously p𒅌assinglℱe three cars at once to move into podium contention, Ri♐cciardo then inherited the lead when Hamilton was black/orange flagged and Vettel penalised for clashing with the former under the safety car.
Four more podiums followed as Ricciardo saw off the challenge posed by Verstappen on paper en route to fifth overall, even if the Dutchman su💮ccessfully put a troubled first-half of the year behind him to exceed his te﷽am-mate’s winning record with two late season successes in Malaysia and Mexico.
With Ricciardo sensing a shift in priorit❀y from Red Bull towards Verstappen - who was making friends and enemies with his honest appraisals and aggressive on-track conduct - the inter-team battle between the two drivers marked one of the attention-grabbing stories of the 2018 F1 campaign.
Driving a car that while competitive was once again hampered by frustrating technical issues - which led to more restrictive grid penalties later in th🤡e year as PU component quotas were exceeded - Ricciardo battled on to claim two satisfying victories in the opening six events in China and Monaco.
Making the most of a savvy strategy arou🦩nd safety car periods to pick off Verstappen, Kimi Raikkonen and Hamilton to notch up his sixth career F1 victory in China, he then righted the wrongs of 2016 wi♊th a superior display in Monaco, topping all three practice sessions, qualifying on pole position and claiming a lights-to-flag victory.
However, the simmering rivalry with Verstappe🧔n boiled over in spectacular circumstances during the Azerbai൩jan Grand Prix when Ricciardo - unde🍷r pressure from his team-mate - changed lines to defend, but instead caught the close-following Verstappen unawares leading to a damaging high-speed clash and some choice words expressed in its wake.
Verstappen went on to shrug off the issues better to rack up a number of podiums thereafter, unlike Ricciardo 💫who didn’t bother the top three again after his Monaco su🅰ccess despite claiming a third career pole in Mexico.
That, coupled with a dismal finishing record - which featured 8 DNFs in 21 races - prompted Ricciardo to look elsewhere for the following season, catching Red Bull unawares by an🍷nouncing a deal with Renault for the 2019 F1 season despite his vocal grievances regarding th✨e firm’s power unit in the back of the RB14.
As one of the big moves over the winter, Ricciardo’s progress in the Renault was keenly followed, particularly relative to Red Bull which had just swapped 🍰out its power unit for the relatively unproven Honda V6.
With Renault actively shifting its focus from supplying the independent buജt more competitive Red Bull Racing team in favour of plunging resources into its factory effort, while Ricciardo’s signing was seen as a signal of intent, progress was meagre and the French outfit found itself bogged down in a busy mid-field with little to ൲choose between sixth to 17th on the timesheets.
To its credit, Ricciardo was a sharp weapon in Renault’s moderate armoury and was able to maximise the R.S.19 when necessary, notably at higher-speed events such as the Canadian Grand Prix, where ඣhe finished sixth from fourth on the grid, and then claimed his and the team’s best result of fourth in the Italian Grand Prix.
Despite the car’s fluctuating form - particularly at high downforce venu💟es - Ricciardo was judged to have proven his worth by comprehensively defeating team-mate Nico Hulkenberg by finishing ninth overall with 54 points, compared with his German counterpart in 14th on 37 points.
Evidently unhappy Renault hadn’t met its promise of providing him with a more competitive car, it was🐼ꦫ announced Ricciardo would make the surprise move to McLaren for the 2021 season, before the delayed 2020 F1 season had gotte༺n underway.
Though the May 2020 deal didn’t necessarily come ‘early’ in the context of the ‘silly season’, Renault was still unhappy he had chosen to defect🎶 before starting his second season with Renault, arguing he hadn’t given the French outfit enough time to prove itself to him.
Whether Ricciardo made the right decision will be seen in 2021 because while McLaren began 2020 with th🅰e superior car, by the close of the year it was Renault - in the Australian’s hands at least - that had the edg🅘e in the two cars powered by the same power unit.
Indeed, Renault enjoyed arguably the biggest growth in performance as the truncated season progressed and by mid-season Ricciardo was regularly finishing ‘best of the rest’ behind Mercedes and Red Bull. Finally breaking his Renault podium duck at the Nurburgring - also 🍌the team’s first rostrum as a factory team since 2011 - he promptly followed it up with another at Imola.
Though indifferent late season results s🥃aw him surrender fourth overall to a fast-finishing Sergio Perez, fifth still marked a sizeable improvement f⛄or the Australian that placed him ahead of both McLaren drivers, while Renault was only 21 points shy of a much-desired third in the constructors’ standings.
Much wꦯas expected of Ricciardo's switch to McLaren as he was expected to be its leader in 2021.
His inability to adapt to the McLaren was surprising. Whil♏e he struggled, teammate Norris flourished and made him look seemingly average. However, in typical Ricciardo-fashion, when there was an opportunity to win, he took it at Monz🌠a ahead of his teammate.
If Ricciardo can get back to his form of 2014 t⛦o 2020 then McLaren has a very tasty line up for F1's new era.
Things didn't get💜 better for Ricciardo in 2022 as he struggled immensely with the new generation of cars.
Ricciardo finished 85 points behind teammate Norris in the final standings⛦, but McLaren's decision to drop him in favour of fellow Australian Oscar Piastri was decided well before the cli🔥max of the season.
Ricciardo was announced as Red Bull's third driver for the 2023 F1 season after be꧑ing dropped by McLaren but he secured a shock return to the grid 11 races into the campaign, replacing Nyck de Vries at Red Bull's sister team AlphaTauri.
The Australian's surprise c🌄omeback was cut short, when, in just his second race back, he crashed and suffered a broken hand, an injury w🏅hich ruled Ricciardo out of five events.
Ricciardo bounced back from the setback in style and in Mexico, produced a standout performance across the weekend. First, he qualified fourth on the grid, outqualifing Perez's Re🅘d Bull, before going on to score AlphaTauri's best resu꧅lt of the season with seventh place.
The𒐪 result helped lift AlphaTauri to eighth place in the constructors' championship after a late seaso෴n surge.