Marko calls Hadjar’s tears ‘embarrassing’ after Melbourne blunder
Helmut Marko is known for shaping Red Bull’s burgeoning young talent with an iron hand, but the Austrian cast a harsh spotlight on Isack Hadjar’s F1 debut at the Australian Grand Prix.
For the 20-year-old Frenchman, who’d clawed his way through the brutal proving grounds of Red Bull’s junior program, Melbourne was the long-awaited dawn of his F1 dream, a chance to prove he belonged among the elite.
Instead, it turned into a nightmare on the formation lap, when a slick track and a treacherous white line sent his Racing Bulls car spinning into the barriers, snuffing out his race before the lights could flash green.
As he trudged back to the paddock, tears streaking his face beneath his helmet, the weight of that failure crushed him – visible for all to see.
What followed was a collision of perspectives: Anthony Hamilton, father of seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton, offered a tender lifeline to the broken rookie, while Marko delivered a scathing verdict that left little room for sympathy.
“Isack Hadjar did a little bit of crying after his crash,” Marko bluntly said in an interview with ORF. “That was a bit embarrassing.”
In the shadow of a wrecked debut, two opposing reactions framed Hadjar’s heartbreak, revealing the fine line between vulnerability and resilience in F1’s unforgiving arena.
A Rookie’s Ruin
“I just lost the rear end of the car and in these conditions they just snap so fast and it’s unsaveable,” Hadjar explained, once the dust and tears had settled.
“I couldn’t get the grip back, I tried to save it but it was just…” The sentence hung unfinished, a testament to the chaos that swallowed his debut.
“I knew it was going to be tricky,” he admitted. “Even on the laps to the grid I was like ‘ok this is tricky’ but it was definitely drivable.”
Yet, knowledge couldn’t outpace fate. As his car slammed into the barriers, Hadjar’s race ended in silence, leaving him to face the paddock with nothing but regret.
“I’m just sorry for the team right now and my close ones watching the race,” he said, the weight of letting down those who’d backed him cutting deeper than the crash itself.
A Father’s Compassion: Anthony Hamilton Steps In
While Marko’s critique reflected the Red Bull chief’s tough-love philosophy, Anthony Hamilton immediately approached Hadjar in the aftermath of his crash.
As a man who has been instrumental in guiding his own son through the relentless challenges of F1, the Briton felt compelled to offer support to the heartbroken rookie.
“I was just trying to give him some encouragement,” Hamilton told Viaplay after the race.
“I basically said ‘hold your head up high, man, because you’ve worked since you were eight years of age to get to this position’.
“This is one of the most devastating things, obviously, that can happen to a driver. But there’s more to come and you’ve already shown that you deserve to be here on the grid. So just hold your head up high, hold your shoulders back, and walk tall.”
Hamilton’s gesture did not go unnoticed, and it highlighted a more human side to the sport that often demands steely resolve.
“It was tough for him. But eventually, he lifted his head and he started to walk tall. And he’ll remember that, I hope.
“But it’s one of those moments in time when all parents will, I’m sure, have a feeling for him. He needed a hug and I just felt I needed to do it.”
Hadjar’s parents later approached Hamilton to express their gratitude, thanking him for his thoughtful intervention during such a vulnerable moment.
Rising From the Rubble: Racing Bulls’ Support
Despite the set-back, Racing Bulls team principal Laurent Mekies voiced his belief that Hadjar would bounce back stronger from the ordeal.
Determined not to let one mistake overshadow the positives from the weekend, Mekies expressed confidence in his young driver’s resilience.
“He will learn from this and turn his frustration into good energy for the next race,” Mekies said.
“We will be here to support him over the next few days before Shanghai and not let this cloud all the positives we can take from this weekend.”
As Melbourne’s echoes faded, Hadjar faced a fork in the road. Hamilton’s call—“hold your head up high, walk tall”—met Marko’s lash—“a bit embarrassing”—two forces pulling at his core. Shanghai beckons, a canvas to rewrite the narrative, to prove he’s more than a tearful rookie.
In F1, every crash is a forge, and for Hadjar, this one might temper a resolve stronger than the steel Marko demands. The tears have fallen; now the climb begins.
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