BARCELONA, Spain — What a difference a year can make in Formula 1.
Yes, Max Verstappen is still on pace for yet another world title – it will be No. 4 in a row for the Dutchman unless Red Bull self-implodes.
But no longer is it a foregone conclusion that Verstappen will dominate the competition and, let's face it, bore many fans looking for him to at least be made to sweat.
F1 instead has been lit up this summer as Red Bull's speed advantage has evaporated thanks to huge improvements from more than one rival.
The four cars fielded by Mercedes and McLaren have emerged as threats to Verstappen, while Ferrari's Prancing Horses are also right there. That has produced thrillingly unpredictable races like Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix where Verstappen finished fourth.
A week before that, McLaren's Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris made it a one-two at Budapest, while Verstappen finished fifth. The seven winners in 13 races after the Hungarian GP had already made this season the most competitive since 2012.
''It's great. It's really fantastic, I think, for the sport to be having such close teams and drivers,'' said Lewis Hamilton, who was declared the winner in Belgium after Mercedes teammate George Russell was disqualified for his car being underweight.
''The pedigree of drivers at the top today are really elite and amazing,'' the former seven-time world champion said.