MIAMI, May 2 — Max Verstappen felt Red Bull had closed ‌the gap to Formula One rivals at the Miami Grand Prix and he could trust his ‌car more. The four times world champion, a two times winner in Miami, qualified fifth yesterday for the Saturday sprint race.

Verstappen has been unhappy with Formula One’s new rules era, even mulling his future in the sport, and has yet to finish higher than sixth in three ‌races and a sprint so far this ⁠season.

“It feels a ⁠bit more normal, a bit ⁠more together,” the Dutch ⁠driver said ⁠of his upgraded car ahead of the first race in more than a ⁠month.

“There are still, of course, things we are working on, but it’s been a really positive step for us. The last few races, we were like over a ⁠second behind. I would say we have almost halved that gap now, so that’s ⁠very positive.”

Verstappen’s best lap time yesterday was ⁠0.592 ⁠slower than McLaren’s pole sitter Lando Norris, the champion who took Verstappen’s title last year.

His ‌French teammate Isack Hadjar qualified ninth, 1.553 off the pole lap. — Reuters