It would be hard to find a bigger contrast in moods than that between the two Red Bull drivers after qualifying at the Monaco Grand Prix.
Daniel Ricciardo's neon grin was even bigger than usual after taking a pole position that, all things being equal, he ought to convert into an overdue first win around the streets of the Principality.
On the other side of the garage, Max Verstappen, who had been nip and tuck with Ricciardo throughout a weekend the team have dominated, looked like a child who had been told the dog had chewed his favourite toy.
Verstappen had not been able to take part in qualifying after a crash late in final practice. The team had got the car ready just in time, but then discovered a crack in the gearbox - presumably a result of the accident.
And now he starts from the back at a track on which, as Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel put it, "it's nearly impossible to overtake".
The concern for Verstappen is not so much that the crash happened at all - as he said himself, it's "very easily done" in Monaco - it's more that he keeps doing it so often.
Monaco is the sixth race of the season and Verstappen has had a crash or other similar sort of incident at all of them. Sometimes more than one.
The team are not happy about it.
Red Bull motorsport boss Helmut Marko told BBC Sport after qualifying that the Monaco crash was "unnecessary" and that Verstappen "is not patient enough".
The Austrian will be having a word with his brilliant but flawed driver once the weekend is over, in an attempt to try to get to the bottom of why he is making so many mistakes - and more importantly, how to stop it happening.
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