If there’s one thing 2020 has done, it’s amplified nostalgia. So we’re throwing back to “that one time” all week.

First up? That one time those crazy folk at Red Bull put Formula One driver, Max Verstappen, behind the wheel of a Formula One car and threw him down the world’s wildest FIS World Cup ski course, the Hahnenkamm in Kitzbühel, Austria.

The Belgian Dutch Red Bull racing driver (the youngest to compete in Formula One at 17 years in 2015) took to the slopes at 1600 metres altitude in front of 3500 spectators to create more history.

In the build-up to the legendary World Cup alpine ski race in 2016, the Dutch driver travelled 1,600m up to the Streif run to unleash a Red Bull Racing world-championship winning car around a snow laden track.

 

Red Bull Racing technicians had to make specially made snow chains, which played a big part in ensuring the first F1 show run on an Alpine peak was possible.

Afterwards, the then Scuderia Toro Rosso driver revealed: “It was really cool and was so much fun. Keeping the car on the track was a real challenge.”


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