Max Verstappen's race wrecking Nurburgring 24 Hours problem explained

Originally published by Crash.net
View original →
17 May 2026, 15:07
Max Verstappen's race wrecking Nurburgring 24 Hours problem explained

Max Verstappen's hopes of victory at the Nurburgring 24 Hours shattered with little over three hours remaining

Verstappen at the Nurburgring

Verstappen at the Nurburgring

© Red Bull Content Pool

Daniel Juncadella has described the race-destroying technical problem at the Nurburgring 24 Hours as "just bad luck", after the car he shared with Max Verstappen was forced out of the lead with a three-hour pit stop.

The #3 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 had made steady progress after starting from fourth on the grid, assuming the lead as the sun began to set on Saturday evening, and holding the position for most of the morning. 

But three laps after Verstappen had completed his final double-stint and handed the car back over to Juncadella, the Mercedes was brought back into the pits for an unscheduled stop, with mechanics scrambling around the right rear corner. 

“I was driving without ABS, but actually it was not that bad. I could somehow manage it," said Juncadella. "I adjusted the brake balance a little bit to avoid locking the front tyres.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Nürburgring (@nuerburgring)

Loading this video will expose you to potential cookies and tracking by the provider

“The car was still drivable. I felt like they wanted me to box to investigate the issue, but I thought it was better to continue and see what we could do. Then I started hearing noises and, in the end, the car became undrivable. I felt like something was eventually going to break, so I drove slowly back to the pits.”

While this damage would have taken long enough to repair, Juncadella revealed further complications, adding: “That probably also created the electronic issue that confused the ABS systems and caused them to switch off.”

The car would eventually return to the track for a handful of laps prior to the chequered flag falling, but finished in 38th place - 18 laps back on the race winner. 

The #3 car's misfortune worked in favour of the sister Winward Racing #80 entry, with Maro Engel, Luca Stolz, Fabian Schiller, and Maxime Martin scoring Mercedes' first victory in a decade at the Nurburgring 24 Hours.