“‘I AM SPEED — THIS IS HOW I RACE’” — MAX VERSTAPPEN DESTROYS NORDSCHLEIFE FIELD WITH POLE LAP THAT LEAVES RIVALS STUNNED

The Nürburgring Nordschleife, the legendary 20.8-kilometer “Green Hell,” witnessed yet another masterclass from Max Verstappen on March 21, 2026, during qualifying for the second round of the Nürburgring Langstrecken-Serie (NLS2). The four-time Formula 1 world champion, driving the No. 3 Winward Racing Mercedes-AMG GT3 Evo alongside teammates Dani Juncadella and Jules Gounon, delivered a stunning pole-position lap that left the entire field in awe and stunned silence.

Verstappen’s benchmark time of 7:51.751 shattered expectations in a session plagued by interruptions, traffic chaos, and code-60 slowdowns. The lap was nearly two seconds quicker than the next best effort from Christopher Haase in the Scherer Sport PHX Audi R8 LMS GT3, who clocked 7:53.725. Raffaele Marciello’s ROWE Racing BMW M4 GT3 rounded out the top three, but the gap to Verstappen was a gaping 1.974 seconds—equivalent to half a second on a typical 5-kilometer circuit. In the unforgiving Nordschleife, where a single mistake can end a session, such a margin is nothing short of dominant.

Post-qualifying, Verstappen posted a simple yet iconic message on social media: “I AM SPEED — THIS IS HOW I RACE.” The caption, paired with onboard footage of his flawless push lap, went viral instantly, racking up millions of views and cementing his reputation as one of the most versatile drivers in modern motorsport. The Dutchman’s confidence was palpable; he had navigated heavy traffic from a 129-car grid, dodged a late code-60 zone caused by a crash at Hohenrain, and still extracted every tenth from the Mercedes.

“I was a bit lucky with the traffic,” he admitted in interviews, downplaying the achievement. “It was also the only lap without a code 60. But the car felt good, and we put it together when it mattered.”

Rivals were left speechless. Haase, a seasoned Nordschleife veteran with years of experience in endurance GT racing, could only shake his head in the garage. “Two seconds? On this track? That’s not normal,” he told reporters. “Max drove like he owns the place. We pushed hard, but he was in another league today.” Other drivers echoed the sentiment, with some privately admitting the lap had redefined what was possible in a GT3 car under current regulations.

The time placed Verstappen just over two seconds off the unofficial GT3 benchmarks from previous years, edging close to records set in ideal conditions without the disruptions of a full qualifying session.

This was no fluke. Verstappen has been building toward this moment since dipping his toes into GT3 racing in 2025. Last year, he made his Nordschleife debut in a Ferrari 296 GT3, impressing with rapid adaptation and strong pace during practice sessions. Switching to Mercedes machinery for 2026, he arrived with a clear goal: gain experience ahead of the iconic 24 Hours of Nürburgring in May. The NLS2 weekend served as perfect preparation—four hours of racing, mandatory pit stops, tire management, and the relentless demands of the 154-turn monster that has humbled legends for decades.

The session itself unfolded like a thriller. Early laps saw times in the low 8-minute range as drivers shook off rust and traffic. Verstappen’s first push lap clocked around 8:01, holding the top spot for much of the session. As the clock ticked down, he unleashed a final flyer, slicing through sectors with surgical precision. Sector times flashed purple across screens: blistering through the Flugplatz jumps, threading the needle at Schwedenkreuz, and carrying massive speed onto the Döttinger Höhe straight. The onboard showed a driver in complete command—no corrections, no hesitation, just pure flow.

Pundits compared the performance to his F1 dominance, where he routinely turns qualifying into a demolition derby. “This is Max being Max,” one commentator noted. “Whether it’s an F1 car at Monza or a GT3 at the ‘Ring, he finds limits others don’t even see.” The lap not only secured pole but also boosted morale in the Verstappen Racing camp, a team branded under his personal umbrella and focused on endurance challenges outside F1.

Yet the weekend carried extra weight. Verstappen’s participation comes amid a packed F1 schedule, but with a rare free weekend, he chose the Nordschleife over rest. Teammates Juncadella and Gounon praised his input during setup, noting how his feedback sharpened the Mercedes’ balance for the bumpy, high-speed sections. The car, painted in Verstappen.com livery, became a fan favorite as it prowled the pits.

In the broader context, Verstappen’s exploits highlight his insatiable hunger for racing. While many F1 stars limit extracurricular activities due to risk or fatigue, he embraces them—sim-racing, GT events, even rallycross in the past. The Nordschleife, with its raw danger and prestige, suits his style perfectly. A pole like this silences doubters who question his versatility beyond single-seaters.

As the grid formed for the four-hour race, anticipation built. Verstappen started from pole, lost the lead briefly to Haase on lap two due to straight-line speed differences, but clawed it back before the first stops. His early-race pace, including a personal best of 7:53.552, kept the pressure on. The victory seemed inevitable—until post-race scrutineering revealed the team had used seven tire sets instead of the allowed six, leading to disqualification. The win went to a BMW squad, but the headlines remained dominated by Verstappen’s qualifying heroics.

The disqualification stung, but it did little to diminish the spectacle. Verstappen gained invaluable seat time, refined his GT3 craft, and reminded the world why he’s considered one of the all-time greats. “I AM SPEED — THIS IS HOW I RACE” wasn’t just a caption; it was a statement. On the toughest track on earth, Max Verstappen had once again proven untouchable.

The Green Hell had been tamed, if only for one blistering lap. Rivals left stunned, fans electrified, and the motorsport world buzzing: when Verstappen says he’s speed, the stopwatch agrees.

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