Christian Horner wants to narrow the performance gap to . It comes after the where upgrades gave a car in which the Dutchman could not only battle with but go faster.
The result was his second victory of the year ahead of , while championship leader had to settle for third. But McLaren still outscored Red Bull overall with Tsunoda 10th after a strong recovery drive following at Imola.
Red Bull trail McLaren by 148 points but Verstappen is only 22 behind Piastri in his hunt for a fifth consecutive drivers' title. And is pleased with the progress his staff have made in terms of making the car more driveable.
He said: "I think, definitely, we've managed to put some performance on the car and to get the car into a better window. As soon as you take away the sliding, you're able to manage the temperature a lot better. That was really encouraging.
READ MORE:
READ MORE:
"To have the pace that we did in the race, I would say it's probably since Brazil last year, which was obviously a wet race, is the first I can remember in a long time we've had the pace to really pull away and out-deg the McLaren.
"So that's very encouraging, and a great result for the effort that's gone in behind the scenes."
Horner has claimed the fact McLaren have two drivers going for the title puts them at a disadvantage, because they are taking points off each other while Verstappen is the undisputed top dog at Red Bull. But he also concedes that it would be helpful for the Dutchman to have his team-mate close by to help on track.
Asked by Mirror Sport if the onus is now on Tsunoda to get closer to Verstappen, Horner replied: "The constructors' is very much a long shot at the moment so all our focus is on the drivers', but having him in play is really important.
"It was a shame because he drove a good race today – had he started in position, he would have been much further up. Hopefully, that will come over the coming races."
Regarding Tsunoda's crash, which left him last on the grid before the team elected to give him new parts which led to a pit lane start, Horner added: "That was a nasty-looking accident. It's always important to bounce back and I thought he did that very well today.
"He raced hard, but fairly, under a lot of pressure from Fernando [Alonso] on better tyres and didn't make any mistakes. He passed well. I think he'll take a lot of confidence out of that, heading into one of the most confident-required races in Monaco next week."
Sign up to our free weekly F1 newsletter, Pit Lane Chronicle, by entering your email address below so that every new edition lands straight in your inbox!
You may also like
GBBO's Prue Leith shuts down husband's fear of being outlived with blunt response
"Pakistan's language": BJP targets Rahul Gandhi's remarks on Op Sindoor; INDIA Bloc says "LoP asking for facts"
First pictures of China's terrifying mothership with 100 'kamikaze drones'
Micky van de Ven explains why he ignored warnings about joining Tottenham and why Postecoglou is right
Rio Ferdinand sums up Man Utd's Europa League final reality with 'lunatic' comparison