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Alpine team boss Oliver Oakes has explained Jack Doohan’s heavy crash in Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix practice was caused by the Australian erroneously leaving DRS open.

Doohan spun off the road entering the high-speed Turn 1 in the opening stages of the one-hour session, smashing heavily into the barriers. Due to the severity of the impact, Doohan was checked at the medical centre, but the Australian escaped injury.

Doohan’s crash was caused by him entering Turn 1 without manually closing his DRS mechanism, which meant he turned into the flat-out section with his rear wing still open. That aerodynamical imbalance caused his Alpine to spin as soon as he turned into the corner.

The DRS overtaking device is deactivated automatically as soon as a driver hits the brakes, which wasn’t the case in that particular corner.

“We are all relieved to see Jack walk away from his incident in free practice 2 and glad to see he is OK after his precautionary checks,” Oakes said.

“It was a misjudgement of not closing the DRS into Turn 1. It is something to learn from and I know Jack and the team will be ready for tomorrow. His crew will work hard to have the car prepared after the damage.”

Jack Doohan, Alpine

Jack Doohan, Alpine

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

Doohan said the incident caught him off guard. “It was a heavy one, something that caught me by surprise, and I will learn from it,” he stated.

“I know the team has a lot of work ahead to repair the car going into tomorrow, so thanks in advance to them for their efforts.

“My focus is on tomorrow where we will have free practice 3 to get ready for qualifying.”

Doohan had ceded his spot in FP1 to Alpine test driver Ryo Hirakawa, which means the rookie heads into Saturday with just four laps of Suzuka under his belt.

In the other car, Pierre Gasly tentatively appeared to confirm Alpine’s place in the pecking order in the middle of the pack, fighting with the likes of Williams and Aston Martin.

“From a performance point of view today, there are some things for us to work on,” Oakes explained.

“Pierre had a good run in free practice 2, which bodes well for tomorrow, as did Ryo, who did a great job to run through the programme this morning.

“We tried some set-up options between cars and we have a good direction to go in ahead of qualifying.”

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Jack Doohan

Alpine

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The FIA is attempting to prevent a repeat of the grass fires that derailed second practice at Formula 1’s Japanese Grand Prix.

Friday’s session was thrown into disarray by four red flags, two for offs by Jack Doohan and Fernando Alonso and another two for grass patches lining the Suzuka track catching fire.

The dry grass approaching Turn 8 first caught fire with 13 minutes left to run and was quickly extinguished by the Suzuka marshals.

In the dying seconds the grass was set ablaze again, this time much more dramatically and it curtailed the final push laps for many drivers.

The FIA is still investigating the cause of the incidents, but thus far the most plausible explanation is sparks coming off the cars’ titanium skid blocks.

The governing body has announced it is taking preventative measures to avoid a repeat on Saturday for final practice and qualifying, with certain patches being watered and the driest sections being removed altogether.

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Nico Hulkenberg, Sauber

Photo by: Peter Fox – Getty Images

“While we continue to look into the fires that occurred during FP2, our focus before tomorrow will be on taking pre-emptive measures,” an FIA statement read.

“The grass has been cut as short as possible, and loose, dried grass has been removed from affected areas. Prior to tomorrow’s sessions, the grass will be dampened, and specific response teams will be stationed around the track.”

A similar incident occurred at last year’s Chinese Grand Prix, when the sole practice session in Shanghai was halted for two separate grass fires and the FIA took similar measures at the time.

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The FIA is attempting to prevent a repeat of the grass fires that derailed the second practice outing at Formula 1’s Japanese Grand Prix.

Friday’s session was thrown into disarray by four red flags, two for offs by Jack Doohan and Fernando Alonso and another two for grass patches lining the Suzuka track catching fire.

The dry grass approaching Turn 8 first caught fire with 13 minutes left to run and was quickly extinguished by the Suzuka marshals.

In the dying seconds the grass was set ablaze again, this time much more dramatically and it curtailed the final push laps for many drivers.

The FIA is still investigating the cause of the incidents, but thus far the most plausible explanation is sparks coming off the cars’ titanium skid blocks.

Motor racing’s governing body has announced it is taking preventative measures to avoid a repeat on Saturday for final practice and qualifying, with certain patches being watered and the driest sections being removed altogether.

“While we continue to look into the fires that occurred during FP2, our focus before tomorrow will be on taking pre-emptive measures,” an FIA statement read.

“The grass has been cut as short as possible, and loose, dried grass has been removed from affected areas. Prior to tomorrow’s sessions, the grass will be dampened, and specific response teams will be stationed around the track.”

A similar incident occurred at last year’s Chinese Grand Prix, when the sole practice session in Shanghai was halted for two separate grass fires and the FIA took similar measures at the time.

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Liam Lawson said he has enjoyed his return to Racing Bulls at Suzuka despite his harsh demotion from Red Bull, feeling at ease in the team’s vastly different Formula 1 car.

After two difficult race weekends Lawson’s Red Bull stint was cut short by the team’s management, which opted to try his former Racing Bulls team-mate Yuki Tsunoda instead.

Having felt he needed more time to get used to Red Bull’s tricky to drive RB21, which he ultimately wasn’t afforded, Lawson got up to speed much quicker in the VCARB 02, taking fifth in an admittedly disjointed Suzuka FP2, less than half a tenth behind new team-mate Isack Hadjar.

“It felt good. It is definitely a different feeling to drive,” Lawson said about his first day in his new car. “I think the window that the guys have at the moment is very, very good. And the car has been fast so far this season, so hopefully we can replicate that tomorrow as well.

“It’s a very cool track. With the resurfacing sector one is even faster now, so it just feels like it’s tearing your head off, which is quite exciting.”

At Racing Bulls Lawson has found a warmer environment to regain his confidence, with team principal Laurent Mekies adamant that his priority was to help the 23-year-old New Zealander find his feet again.

Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls

Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls

Photo by: Rudy Carezzevoli / Motorsport Images

“He knows he has an important role to play with us in the battle we have in the midfield,” Mekies said. “He knows he has a point to prove out there, so we are all very conscious that his talent is there and it’s about finding the right conditions to extract it back out of him.”

Lawson said he had received the right support from the Anglo-Italian team to make the transition as smooth as possible: “Yeah, it’s been nice. Everybody’s been very, very positive, even from last week.

“Laurent was straight on the phone and very, very positive and saying all the things I needed to hear, going to see everyone at the factory, and obviously yesterday coming to the paddock as well.

“I’ve spent a lot of time with this team, they’re a great bunch of people. It is nice to feel that welcome back again, so hopefully we can go and have some good races together.”

Photos from Japanese GP – Practice

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Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Liam Lawson

Racing Bulls

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Liam Lawson says he has enjoyed his return to Racing Bulls at Suzuka despite his harsh demotion from Red Bull, feeling at ease in the team’s vastly different Formula 1 car.

After two difficult race weekends Lawson’s Red Bull stint was cut short by the team’s management, which opted to try his former Racing Bulls team-mate Yuki Tsunoda instead.

Having felt he needed more time to get used to Red Bull’s tricky to drive RB21 car, which he ultimately wasn’t afforded, Lawson got up to speed much quicker in the VCARB 02, taking fifth in an admittedly disjointed Suzuka FP2, less than half a tenth behind new team-mate Isack Hadjar.

“It felt good. It is definitely a different feeling to drive,” Lawson said about his first day in his new car. “I think the window that the guys have at the moment is very, very good. And the car has been fast so far this season, so hopefully we can replicate that tomorrow as well.

“It’s a very cool track. With the resurfacing sector one is even faster now, so it just feels like it’s tearing your head off, which is quite exciting.”

At Racing Bulls Lawson has found a warmer environment to regain his confidence, with team principal Laurent Mekies adamant that his priority was to help the 23-year-old New Zealander find his feet again.

Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls

Liam Lawson, Racing Bulls, Laurent Mekies, Racing Bulls

Photo by: Rudy Carezzevoli / Motorsport Images

“He knows he has an important role to play with us in the battle we have in the midfield,” Mekies said. “He knows he has a point to prove out there, so we are all very conscious that his talent is there and it’s about finding the right conditions to extract it back out of him.”

Lawson said he had received the right support from the Anglo-Italian team to make the transition as smooth as possible: “Yeah, it’s been nice. Everybody’s been very, very positive, even from last week.

“Laurent was straight on the phone and very, very positive and saying all the things I needed to hear, going to see everyone at the factory, and obviously yesterday coming to the paddock as well.

“I’ve spent a lot of time with this team, they’re a great bunch of people. It is nice to feel that welcome back again, so hopefully we can go and have some good races together.”

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In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Liam Lawson

RB

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After the expectation comes the reality. Yuki Tsunoda’s first day actually driving Red Bull’s diva-ish RB21 Formula 1 machine, as opposed to piloting an ersatz version of it in a simulator, answered some questions while leaving others hanging.

Very few of those matters outstanding were Tsunoda’s fault, though, owing to the second practice session being punctuated by four red-flag periods. These not only cost him track time in a car whose performance peaks are notoriously difficult to access, they prevented him from performing a qualifying simulation on soft tyres.

As such, while a glance at the FP2 times suggests calamity – team-mate Max Verstappen posted the eighth fastest lap while Tsunoda was 18th, nearly two seconds slower – the reality is more nuanced.

In FP1 they had been much closer in terms of overall lap time: fifth and sixth with Tsunoda just 0.107s off Verstappen.

Veritably it was a day for those who regard themselves as F1’s bellwethers to perform what’s known in the trade as a ‘reverse ferret’. Having proclaimed Tsunoda the new messiah after FP1, they pivoted to derision – the new pariah? – as FP2 came to a close.

The real picture was always going to be challenging to decode, since part of the Suzuka track has been resurfaced and will therefore evolve differently over the course of the weekend, and Tsunoda was going to have to feel out those areas where the real RB21’s behaviour differs from the one he’s driven in the simulator. ‘Feel’ being the operative word here since even the most sophisticated simulator can only transmit some seat-of-the-pants sensation because it can’t recreate g-loadings other than those caused by major changes of direction.

Not only that, if Red Bull could recreate in the simulator the RB21’s rear-end twitchiness as the driver leans on the front axle, it would be well along the road to understanding how to fix that trait in the real car.

Also, Red Bull had introduced three minor aerodynamic changes with a view to cleaning up airflow around the rear end: a reprofiled engine cover and cooling exit, an enlarged rear brake duct outlet, and a new rear wishbone shroud. Teams now have to document such changes and Red Bull’s spiel claimed the engine cover and brake duct changes were principally for reliability reasons, but such amendments can and do have performance implications.

Disrupted FP2 gave Tsunoda little time in the Red Bull

Disrupted FP2 gave Tsunoda little time in the Red Bull

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

At the end of FP1 Tsunoda came on the radio to describe the car as “interesting”. He didn’t make the same observation as Verstappen, which was that he felt like his RB21 was “flexing” through sector two, the area that starts at the Degner curves and runs to midway along the back straight. 

Of course, the car may not actually have been flexing, but producing sensations analogous to that – the second Degner, the Hairpin and the Spoon are areas where the RB21’s tendency to lurch from understeer to oversteer will manifest themselves. Verstappen may just have been trying to express the feeling as viscerally as possible.

Tsunoda, as the new boy, won’t have been keen to denigrate the car on his first day. And, in any case, as Liam Lawson found to his cost, it is what it is. Still, there was a slightly hangdog quality to Tsunoda’s demeanour when F1 TV caught up with him after FP2.

“FP1 was better than expected – FP2, yeah, I didn’t set a lap time,” he said. “I think there’s lots of work to do, we slightly… struggled, something to look through in the data from FP2 more, but overall it’s OK.

“I just have to build up confidence more. It [the RB21] is a bit different to the simulator – what I felt. To be honest, a little more than I was expecting in terms of car feeling.

“But it’s always going to be a bit different in the real car. It [the car’s tendency towards snap oversteer] was just a little more exaggerated in the real car, feeling a bit more tricky.”

Tsunoda admitted to finding a larger-than-expected difference between sim and reality

Tsunoda admitted to finding a larger-than-expected difference between sim and reality

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

The four red flags in FP2 were disruptive to everyone but the stoppage prompted by Fernando Alonso’s off-track excursion was the one that cost Tsunoda, who had only just gone out on soft tyres to attempt a performance run. Following that, the team adjusted its run plan and sent him out on a race simulation.

While that will have been useful in terms of learning how the car balance changes over the race, missing the push-laps could prove to be damaging. Suzuka, for all that fans and drivers venerate its brilliance, is a tough track on which to overtake.

Qualifying is (almost) everything here given the challenge of passing on track, which leaves FP3 as Tsunoda’s last opportunity to feel his way towards the RB21’s limits before qualifying.

At the moment his loudest fan is former Racing Bulls boss Franz Tost, a guest pundit this weekend on the Austrian TV channel ORF. 

“Yuki has incredible natural speed,” thundered Tost. “I’ve been saying that for years. Now, he just needs to put it all together properly.”

If he doesn’t, will Tost be the next pundit to pivot?

Photos from Japanese GP – Practice

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

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After the expectation, the reality. Yuki Tsunoda’s first day actually driving Red Bull’s diva-ish RB21 Formula 1 machine, as opposed to piloting an ersatz version of it in a simulator, answered some questions while leaving others hanging.

Very few of those matters outstanding were Tsunoda’s fault, though, owing to the second practice session being punctuated by four red-flag periods. These not only cost him track time in a car whose performance peaks are notoriously difficult to access, they prevented him from performing a qualifying simulation on soft tyres.

As such, while a glance at the FP2 times suggests calamity – team-mate Max Verstappen posted the eighth fastest lap while Tsunoda was 18th, nearly two seconds slower – the reality is more nuanced.

In FP1 they had been much closer in terms of overall lap time: fifth and sixth with Tsunoda just 0.107s off Verstappen.

Veritably it was a day for those who regard themselves as F1’s bellwethers to perform what’s known in the trade as a ‘reverse ferret’. Having proclaimed Tsunoda the new messiah after FP1, they pivoted to derision – the new pariah? – as FP2 came to a close.

The real picture was always going to be challenging to decode, since part of the Suzuka track has been resurfaced and will therefore evolve differently over the course of the weekend, and Tsunoda was going to have to feel out those areas where the real RB21’s behaviour differs from the one he’s driven in the simulator. ‘Feel’ being the operative word here since even the most sophisticated simulator can only transmit some seat-of-the-pants sensation because it can’t recreate g-loadings other than those caused by major changes of direction.

Not only that, if Red Bull could recreate in the simulator the RB21’s rear-end twitchiness as the driver leans on the front axle, it would be well along the road to understanding how to fix that trait in the real car.

Also, Red Bull had introduced three minor aerodynamic changes with a view to cleaning up airflow around the rear end: a reprofiled engine cover and cooling exit, an enlarged rear brake duct outlet, and a new rear wishbone shroud. Teams now have to document such changes and Red Bull’s spiel claimed the engine cover and brake duct changes were principally for reliability reasons, but such amendments can and do have performance implications.

Disrupted FP2 gave Tsunoda little time in the Red Bull

Disrupted FP2 gave Tsunoda little time in the Red Bull

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

At the end of FP1 Tsunoda came on the radio to describe the car as “interesting”. He didn’t make the same observation as Verstappen, which was that he felt like his RB21 was “flexing” through sector two, the area that starts at the Degner curves and runs to midway along the back straight.

Of course, the car may not actually have been flexing, but producing sensations analogous to that – the second Degner, the Hairpin and the Spoon are areas where the RB21’s tendency to lurch from understeer to oversteer will manifest themselves. Verstappen may just have been trying to express the feeling as viscerally as possible.

Tsunoda, as the new boy, won’t have been keen to denigrate the car on his first day. And, in any case, as Liam Lawson found to his cost, it is what it is.

Still, there was a slightly hangdog quality to Tsunoda’s demeanour when F1 TV caught up with him after FP2.

“FP1 was better than expected – FP2, yeah, I didn’t set a lap time,” he said. “I think there’s lots of work to do, we slightly… struggled, something to look through in the data from FP2 more, but overall it’s OK.

“I just have to build up confidence more. It [the RB21] is a bit different to the simulator – what I felt. To be honest, a little more than I was expecting in terms of car feeling.

“But it’s always going to be a bit different in the real car. It [the car’s tendency towards snap oversteer] was just a little more exaggerated in the real car, feeling a bit more tricky.”

Tsunoda admitted to finding a larger-than-expected difference between sim and reality

Tsunoda admitted to finding a larger-than-expected difference between sim and reality

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

The four red flags in FP2 were disruptive to everyone but the stoppage prompted by Fernando Alonso’s off-track excursion was the one that cost Tsunoda, who had only just gone out on soft tyres to attempt a performance run. Following that, the team adjusted its run plan and sent him out on a race simulation.

While that will have been useful in terms of learning how the car balance changes over the race, missing the push-laps could prove to be damaging. Suzuka, for all that fans and drivers venerate its brilliance, is a tough track on which to overtake.

Qualifying is (almost) everything here given the challenge of passing on track, which leaves FP3 as Tsunoda’s last opportunity to feel his way towards the RB21’s limits before qualifying.

At the moment his loudest fan is former Racing Bulls boss Franz Tost, a guest pundit this weekend on the Austrian TV channel ORF. Freed from the corporate yolk and manifestly keen to top up his pension fund with further appearance fees, Tost gave free vent to his opinions on how Red Bull blundered in choosing Lawson over Tsunoda in the first place.

“Yuki has incredible natural speed,” thundered Tost. “I’ve been saying that for years. Now, he just needs to put it all together properly.”

If he doesn’t, will Tost be the next pundit to pivot?

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Red Bull Racing

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McLaren Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri believe Mercedes will be their biggest opponent in this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka.

After winning one race apiece in Australia and China, Norris and Piastri are the favourites to win in Japan and Friday’s practice running did little to suggest otherwise – Norris topped FP1 and Piastri headed a disjointed FP2 punctuated by four red flags.

Although Norris felt McLaren was “still at the top”, he was impressed by George Russell’s pace in first practice as the Mercedes driver’s best lap was just 0.163s behind the McLaren.

Russell’s rookie team-mate Andrea Kimi Antonelli could not get a representative lap together, but looked competitive on long run pace.

“I still think we’re at the top, but George was very quick this morning, just as quick as us,” Norris said.

“So, I think Mercedes are in a good place. Maybe Red Bull looked a little bit further off, but they have looked further off into qualifying and then they get a bit closer again.

George Russell, Mercedes

George Russell, Mercedes

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“FP2 was just a messy session, so I don’t think this session was probably the best example of where everyone was. I think maybe FP1 was a better example that you kind of saw teams in order. But I still expect it to be close and a tough battle tomorrow.

“I hope it’s nice and easy for us, but I’m sure Mercedes at least – and definitely George from today’s showing – will be challenging us a bit tomorrow.

“We made some steps forward, but there are still some things to try and improve. It was tricky just because of the wind. You’re on such a fine limit for such a long time, like the first sector.

“The tiniest bit of wind can really upset the car quite a lot. I’m sure everyone is struggling with a similar thing.”

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Piastri echoed his team-mate’s comments when asked about F1’s pecking order in Japan: “It’s really hard to know. In FP1 it was difficult to get pace out of the car. In FP2 I was much more comfortable, but I think Mercedes looked very quick as well.

“I’m feeling confident that we’ve got good pace for the rest of the weekend, but it’s still a little bit tricky at this point, so I think we’ve still got to be on our toes.”

McLaren lead the constructors’ standings after the opening two weekends of the 2025 season and the British outfit is 21 points ahead of second-placed Mercedes.

In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

McLaren

Mercedes

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McLaren Formula 1 drivers Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri believe Mercedes will be their biggest opponent in this weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka.

After winning one race apiece in Australia and China, Norris and Piastri are the favourites to win in Japan and Friday’s practice running did little to suggest otherwise – Norris topped FP1 and Piastri headed a disjointed FP2 punctuated by four red flags.

Although Norris felt McLaren was “still at the top”, he was impressed by George Russell’s pace in first practice as the Mercedes driver’s best lap was just 0.163s behind the McLaren.

Russell’s rookie team-mate Andrea Kimi Antonelli could not get a representative lap together, but looked competitive on long run pace.

“I still think we’re at the top, but George was very quick this morning, just as quick as us,” Norris said.

“So, I think Mercedes are in a good place. Maybe Red Bull looked a little bit further off, but they have looked further off into qualifying and then they get a bit closer again.

George Russell, Mercedes

George Russell, Mercedes

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

“FP2 was just a messy session, so I don’t think this session was probably the best example of where everyone was. I think maybe FP1 was a better example that you kind of saw teams in order. But I still expect it to be close and a tough battle tomorrow.

“I hope it’s nice and easy for us, but I’m sure Mercedes at least – and definitely George from today’s showing – will be challenging us a bit tomorrow.

“We made some steps forward, but there are still some things to try and improve. It was tricky just because of the wind. You’re on such a fine limit for such a long time, like the first sector.

“The tiniest bit of wind can really upset the car quite a lot. I’m sure everyone is struggling with a similar thing.”

Piastri echoed his team-mate’s comments when asked about F1’s pecking order in Japan: “It’s really hard to know. In FP1 it was difficult to get pace out of the car. In FP2 I was much more comfortable, but I think Mercedes looked very quick as well.

“I’m feeling confident that we’ve got good pace for the rest of the weekend, but it’s still a little bit tricky at this point, so I think we’ve still got to be on our toes.”

McLaren lead the constructors’ standings after the opening two weekends of the 2025 season and the British outfit is 21 points ahead of second-placed Mercedes.

Photos from Japanese GP – Practice

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In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Lando Norris

Oscar Piastri

Mercedes

McLaren

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Former Racing Bulls team principal Franz Tost has said Liam Lawson could have been given “100 years and he still wouldn’t be as fast” as Yuki Tsunoda, as he backed the decision to swap the pair by Red Bull.

The Milton Keynes outfit assessed the two drivers towards the end of 2024 as it became clear that they were going to replace Mexican driver Sergio Perez for the 2025 season. The team ultimately decided to promote rookie Lawson to the seat alongside Max Verstappen, but have now reversed this decision after two race weekends of the year. 

Now, Tsunoda takes the seat alongside the four-time champion in front of his home crowd in Japan. 

Tost, who held the role of team principal at Racing Bulls (previously Toro Rosso, AlphaTauri, and RB) from 2006 until the end of 2023, has given his thoughts on the driver moves during an interview on the Austrian ORF broadcast.

“I would have gone with Yuki Tsunoda from the start. I said that already – I made it clear last autumn. Why? Yuki is much faster than Lawson. You could give Lawson 100 years, and he still wouldn’t be as fast as Yuki. And Yuki is more experienced, so what’s the issue? It’s a very simple decision,” he explained.

“It’s definitely a confirmation that the right call was made. Yuki has incredible natural speed – I’ve been saying that for years. Now, he just needs to put it all together properly. He’s still too emotional in the car at times, and maybe that was one of the reasons they didn’t pick him over Lawson in the first place.

Franz Tost, Team Principal, Scuderia AlphaTauri

Franz Tost, Team Principal, Scuderia AlphaTauri

Photo by: Michael Potts / Motorsport Images

“But in terms of raw pace, Yuki absolutely belongs among the best Formula 1 drivers. And if he can now translate that into consistency, perform in the races, and keep his emotions more or less in check, then it’s going to be a very, very good season for Red Bull Racing and for Yuki Tsunoda.”

Lawson said Red Bull’s switch decision came as a surprise and he had hoped to show what he could do at a more familiar track in Suzuka, having raced their during his Super Formula days.

Tost concluded: “Knowing the track is one thing. Being fast is another. The decision to put Yuki in the car now was absolutely right, because Liam is simply too slow.”

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Lydia Mee

Formula 1

Yuki Tsunoda

Liam Lawson

Red Bull Racing

RB

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