Red Bull not considering Hulkenberg after Haas snub

Nico Hulkenberg is looking for a new Formula One team for next season but, according to Christian Horner, it will not be Red Bull Racing.

Published : Sep 20, 2019 23:16 IST

Nico Hulkenberg will not be moving to Red Bulls next season.

Red Bull Racing boss Christian Horner has confirmed Nico Hulkenberg is not being considered for a seat alongside Max Verstappen in the 2020 Formula One season.

Hulkenberg is without a team for next year after Renault signed Esteban Ocon, while a mooted move to Haas did not come to pass as Romain Grosjean's services were retained this week.

Haas boss Guenther Steiner explained on Friday: "We talked with [Hulkenberg] and, in the end, decided to go with Romain."

RELATED | Singapore air ‘unhealthy’ ahead of F1 race

Appearing alongside Steiner at a news conference at the Singapore Grand Prix, Alfa Romeo's Frederic Vasseur and Red Bull chief Horner were also asked about the possibility of bringing in Hulkenberg.

"We are focused with Antonio [Giovinazzi]," said Vasseur.

Red Bull's second driver for next season remains uncertain. However, Horner insisted it will choose between Alex Albon, who holds the seat, and Toro Rosso duo Daniil Kyvat and Pierre Gasly.

"We don't need to be in any rush," Horner said. "All the drivers that are under consideration are under contract, so we're in a unique position where we don't need to rush anything.

"So we'll take the fullness of time to look and evaluate the progress of Alex and measure it against Dany and Pierre. Nico isn't on our list. He's a great driver and it would be a great shame not to see him continue in Formula One next year.

"He's a professional driver that arguably hasn't achieved his potential in Formula One. I very much hope for him that he does find a seat because he's better than some other drivers that are on the grid and he should be in Formula One."

RELATED | In-form Leclerc prepared for Singapore challenge

Red Bull was primed to challenge in Singapore with Verstappen performing well in practice on Friday. The Dutchman was fastest in FP1 with a time of one minute, 40.259 seconds, just ahead of Sebastian Vettel.

Charles Leclerc and Valtteri Bottas retired early from that session, with the latter crashing into the barrier at turn 19. Lewis Hamilton then edged out Verstappen by 0.184secs in FP2, running a best time of 1:38.773.