Lando Norris fears Max Verstappen's "boring" dominance of Formula One is forcing fans away.
Verstappen became the first driver this century to start the season with five consecutive pole positions after a crushing performance in qualifying for Sunday's Chinese Grand Prix.
The Dutchman, 26, saw off Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez by 0.322 seconds at the Shanghai International Circuit to take top spot, after he earlier raced from fourth to first in the 19-lap sprint race.
Remarkably, since Verstappen beat Lewis Hamilton to the 2021 world championship in Abu Dhabi, the Red Bull driver has won 37 of the 48 races staged, and he is firmly on course to wrap up his fourth title in as many seasons.
Mercedes boss Toto Wolff has already said that Verstappen will not be caught - despite there being 20 races of this record-breaking 24-race season left.
And speaking ahead of the fifth round of the campaign in China, Norris, considered to be Verstappen's best friend on the grid, said: "It is frustrating for people watching but it has always been like this.
"Now, we are seeing more dominance than ever, so it is never going to be the best to watch and the only exciting races have been the ones that Max is not in."
Asked if he was concerned Verstappen's stranglehold on the sport could be a turn-off for fans, Norris replied: "Of course it is going to be. Of course it is going be. There is no way you can say it won't be.
"If you see the same driver winning every single time without a fight then of course it does start to become boring and that is obvious.
"You have got one of the best drivers ever in Formula One, in one of the most dominant cars and it is a combination that is deadly. If Max wasn't there and you had two (Sergio) Perezs it wouldn't be the case."
Verstappen struggled for speed in the early stages of Saturday's sprint race but he caught, and overtook, Lewis Hamilton on the ninth lap and then pulled out an eye-watering two seconds on the Mercedes driver in just one lap. He took the chequered flag 13 sec clear.
Fernando Alonso was the closest non-Red Bull finisher to Verstappen in qualifying but the Spaniard was almost half-a-second back.
Norris, 24, continued: "Am I surprised how far Red Bull is ahead? No. When you know how tricky it is to get it right, then it makes sense. They are just smart people.
"You hope teams plateau and we are starting to get there but at the same time to suddenly jump and catch them (Red Bull), it just doesn't work like that."
Mercedes, behind Red Bull, Ferrari and Norris' McLaren in the constructors' standings, are a team far removed from the one which dominated the sport.
Hamilton will start 18th in China on Sunday, with team-mate George Russell only eighth on the grid.
Norris, who qualified fourth, added: "If you look at how dominant Mercedes have been in the past, you would have expected more from them. I did, especially how much over the last few years they have said: 'ah, now we have got it', and they never seem to.
"We have had that, where we have hit another roadblock, so it is tricky. But they were almost more competitive last year than they are now and you just wouldn't expect that from them. But it shows how complicated this sport can be."
Disclaimer: The copyright of this article belongs to the original author. Reposting this article is solely for the purpose of information dissemination and does not constitute any investment advice. If there is any infringement, please contact us immediately. We will make corrections or deletions as necessary. Thank you.