x
Max Verstappen Just Saved Motorsports
Imagn Images

For years, Formula 1 operated under the assumption that its global boom would continue no matter what happened on track. Packed grandstands, Netflix popularity and massive sponsorship deals helped cover up a growing issue longtime racing fans noticed immediately: the racing product itself was slipping.

Then came Max Verstappen.

Ironically, the biggest star in Formula 1 may also be the person forcing the sport to confront its weaknesses. Verstappen’s growing passion for endurance racing, sim racing and pure “wheelman” competition has pulled fans toward forms of motorsport that feel more authentic and less manufactured.

For many American fans — especially frustrated NASCAR viewers tired of the limitations of the Next Gen era — Verstappen has become a gateway into a different world of racing. A fan who once spent weekends focused entirely on stock cars can now end up watching multiclass battles at the Nürburgring, GT3 racing or endurance events because Verstappen made it look cool again.

That matters.

Modern motorsports fans crave authenticity. They want to watch drivers wrestle difficult cars, survive traffic, manage tire wear and make daring passes that actually require risk. Endurance racing delivers that consistently. Whether it is the Nürburgring, Spa or Le Mans, the racing feels raw, unpredictable and earned.

Verstappen understands that appeal because he is a racer first. He talks openly about wanting to compete everywhere. He spends hours in sim racing. He studies racing outside the Formula 1 bubble. Fans notice the difference between someone protecting a brand and someone obsessed with driving anything with four wheels.

At the same time, Verstappen’s popularity indirectly pressures Formula 1 to improve its own product. The complaints surrounding dirty air, difficult passing, overly sensitive cars and predictable race flow are becoming harder to ignore when the sport’s biggest star openly praises other forms of racing that showcase more natural competition.

F1 still has incredible talent and prestige, but many fans have started comparing its racing product against what they see elsewhere. That comparison is healthy. Competition forces change.

The same thing is happening in NASCAR. Plenty of longtime fans remain frustrated with the current Next Gen package because the cars often prioritize parity and fuel-saving strategy over drivers manhandling difficult race cars. Watching Verstappen embrace endurance racing reminds fans what “real wheel” looks like — drivers attacking corners, fighting traffic and pushing machinery to the limit.

For some fans, that rediscovery has reignited a passion for motorsports altogether.

Verstappen is not singlehandedly saving racing. But he is helping steer fans back toward the parts of the sport that made people fall in love with it in the first place: raw speed, fearless driving and racers who genuinely want to race everything.

This article first appeared on EasySportz and was syndicated with permission.

More must-reads:

Customize Your Newsletter

Yardbarker +

Get the latest news and rumors, customized to your favorite sports and teams. Emailed daily. Always free!