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Juan Pablo Montoya Not All That Impressed with Max Verstappen's F1 Dominance

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Montoya Not That Impressed with Verstappen's RunNurPhoto - Getty Images

Maybe what Max Verstappen is doing—he's won 10 of 12 Formula 1 races this season—isn't all that special.

Two-time Indianapolis 500 winner and six-year F1 veteran Juan Pablo Montoya is not as impressed as you might think. Montoya says there are "seven or eight drivers" who could also win the world championship at the wheel of Verstappen's Red Bull.

Montoya was asked about Verstappen's utter dominance this year, which includes dominance over his his own Red Bull teammate Sergio Perez.

"In Belgium he put 22 seconds on Perez who races with the same car," said former F1 team owner and boss Gian Carlo Minardi. "He is easily beating Checo (Perez), as he did with all those other poor guys who found themselves in his team," he told La Repubblica newspaper.

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Juan Pablo Montoya won seven races during his own F1 career.Rudy Carezzevoli - Formula 1 - Getty Images

"Yes, the Red Bull is very powerful, but it's his ability to drive it that makes it unbeatable. There's him and then all the others who share the crumbs. If Max didn't exist, F1 would be a more balanced and spectacular fight."

Montoya, however, is less convinced that Verstappen is any more dominant at present than Lewis Hamilton was during Mercedes' recent reign.

"Right now, Max is doing a very good job," Montoya, a seven-time winner in F1, told the Colombian weekly Semana. "But he looks just as invincible as when Hamilton was winning everything. That's the reality.

"Max is a very good driver, but he's in the best car. His speed right now is no better than his speed two years ago. It's probably the same. It's the car that is much better. If you take Max out of that car, there are seven or eight drivers who could be world champion in that car. If he wasn't there, Checo, Hamilton, Sainz, Leclerc, Norris— they'd be World Champion.

"In motorsport, it's about timing. With these rules, the Red Bull is the best car. If the rules then change suddenly, it might not be."

Montoya poked fun at seven-time world champion Hamilton's recent suggestion that F1 should indeed change the rules in order to stop the current one-sided competition.

"Very cool," Montoya said sarcastically. "Complaining when you're not winning, but when he was winning, he said that the car had no advantage. But the advantage that Mercedes had was just as great.

"I don't want to say that Hamilton isn't good—he's a great driver—but the reality of this sport is that you have to be in the best car."