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The Japanese Grand Prix is Jack Doohan’s fourth appearance as a Formula 1 race driver.

As opportunities to test and practice are so limited, it therefore came as a surprise when Alpine announced he would not take part in the first practice session this weekend. The team wanted to run its test driver Ryo Hirakawa at his home event, and chose to bench the rookie rather than his team mate Pierre Gasly, who will start his 156th grand prix on Sunday.

Asked on Thursday whether the team’s decision would put him at a disadvantage, Doohan diplomatically toed the PR line. “In China, a similar situation and I only had 40 minutes before that [power unit] issue in the end and then we still did a solid sprint quali and qualifying.”

This was true, but Shanghai’s circuit is a totally different prospect to Suzuka. The Chinese track is wide with vast run-offs, while Suzuka is narrow, has far more quick corners and the run-off is very limited in places.

Doohan admitted that “on paper, it looks more difficult and it sounds more difficult.” It certainly looked and sounded more difficult when he suffered a monumental crash early in the second practice session.

He was only on his second attempt at a flying lap when his car snapped out of control as he turned into Suzuka’s fearsomely fast and unimpressively named turn one, which he approached at around 330kph. He made a heavy impact with the six-deep tyre barrier on the outside, ripping the left-rear portion of his A525 to pieces.

Mercifully, Doohan emerged unscathed. Indeed, he was well enough to ask his race engineer three times before he got out of the car what had caused him to lose control. Sparing his blushes, his engineer Josh Peckett replied: “We’re just looking at everything on our side here.”

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But as the footage from his car showed, Doohan hadn’t deactivated his DRS as he headed into the corner. There was no way to put this down to anything besides driver error. “It was a misjudgement of not closing the DRS into turn one,” team principal Oliver Oakes confirmed in a statement hours after practice had finished.

Rookies are inevitably more susceptible to crashing than experienced drivers. All six drivers who embarked on their first full seasons this year have already bent an F1 car at least once.

At a track like Suzuka it makes sense to give them every chance possible to build up to the limit. Alpine was the only team who deprived their rookie of an hour’s running on one of F1’s most punishing courses.

It’s not hard to see why Alpine wanted to grab the opportunity to run their Japanese test driver at his home track. But this could just as easily have been achieved using Gasly’s car.

Moreover, had Alpine swapped Hirakawa with Gasly instead, it would have helped them meet the FIA-imposed requirement to give practice opportunities to inexperienced drivers. Each team must run “a driver who has not participated in more than two championship races in their career” twice in each of their cars during the season.

Alpine had already fulfilled this requirement on Doohan’s car before reaching Suzuka, as he had not yet started his third race when he took part in first practice in Shanghai. RaceFans has asked the team why it made this decision.

Long before Doohan started his first season of F1, rumours surfaced that he would not see it out, and be replaced by the likes of Franco Colapinto. This has frustrated Alpine, who claimed the speculation around its driver was “not fair.” But the strange decision they took at Suzuka is only going to add more fuel to that fire.

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Alpine driver Jack Doohan has said he was “caught by surprise” by his heavy crash in Formula 1’s Japanese Grand Prix second practice, with team boss Oliver Oakes labelling it a “misjudgement”.

The rookie spun off 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 two 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 three to get ready for qualifying.”

Doohan had ceded his spot in FP1 to Alpine test driver Ryo Hirakawa, meaning the 22-year-old 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 two, 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.”

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In this article

Filip Cleeren

Formula 1

Jack Doohan

Alpine

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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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Jach Doohan's crash at Suzuka


Jack Doohan was at a loss to explain his huge crash in the second practice session for the Japanese Grand Prix.

The Alpine driver spun into a barrier at turn one on his fifth lap of the session. Replays from the crash indicated his DRS may not have closed as he turned into the corner. As the corner is taken at such high speeds, drivers may not brake as they turn into it, and therefore have to deactivate DRS manually.

Doohan was able to climb out of his car afterwards. He was bemused by the crash and asked his race engineer “did something happen?” as soon as his car came to a rest.

Doohan asked his race engineer twice more for an explanation while reassuring him he was unhurt. “We’ll just come back to you, mate,” Doohan was told. “We’re just looking at everything on our side here.”

The crash leaves Doohan very short of mileage after the first day of running at Suzuka. He did not participate in the first practice session as Alpine chose to run Ryo Hirakawa in his car.

His car was heavily damaged in the crash, which caused the session to be stopped for over 20 minutes so the barriers he hit could be repaired. Cars typically approach Suzuka’s turn one at around 265kph.

This article will be updated

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2025 Japanese Grand Prix

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Alpine has confirmed the cause of Jack Doohan’s huge crash in the second practice session for the Japanese Grand Prix.

Team principal Oliver Oakes said Doohan failed to close his Drag Reduction System as he entered the first corner.

The Alpine driver spun into a barrier at turn one on his fifth lap of the session. As the corner is taken at such high speeds, drivers may not brake as they turn into it, and therefore have to deactivate DRS manually.

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

“It was a misjudgement of not closing the DRS into turn one. 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.”

Doohan was able to climb out of his car afterwards. He was bemused by the crash and asked his race engineer “did something happen?” as soon as his car came to a rest.

The driver asked his race engineer twice more for an explanation while reassuring him he was unhurt. “We’ll just come back to you, mate,” Doohan was told. “We’re just looking at everything on our side here.”

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Doohan said he was “okay” after the crash. “It was a heavy one, something that caught me by surprise, and I will learn from it.”

The crash leaves Doohan very short of mileage after the first day of running at Suzuka. He did not participate in the first practice session as Alpine chose to run Ryo Hirakawa in his car.

His car was heavily damaged in the crash, which caused the session to be stopped for over 20 minutes so the barriers he hit could be repaired. “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,” he said.

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Alpine rookie Jack Doohan will be sporting a new lid for the Miami Grand Prix, courtesy of Selling Sunset star Jason Oppenheim. The realtor-turned-reality star found fame when his Netflix smash hit debuted the same month as Drive To Survive, and he’s since become a Formula 1 obsessive. The Oppenheim Group owner started attending races in 2023 and quickly struck up a friendship with members of Alpine Racing, including 22-year-old Doohan. 

“Excited to announce a special collaboration between The Oppenheim Group and my friend Jack Doohan,” he captioned an Instagram video this week. “We are creating a custom racing helmet for Jack to wear as he competes in the Miami Grand Prix,” the luxury real estate mogul added, asking his 1.5 million followers for “ideas and suggestions to include in the final design.” The deal appears to have been struck between Oppenheim and Doohan’s team directly, rather than Alpine, although the broker has been a guest of the Enstone-based outfit on multiple occasions. 

 

He’s attended half a dozen races over the past two years, and presumably became pally with the Australian when he was a reserve driver with much more downtime to chat to VIP guests. Jason and his twin brother Brett have since become recurring figures in the paddock, along with fellow Selling Sunset cast members Mary Fitzgerald and Romain Bonnet. The foursome have been seen so regularly at American races that it’s clear their passion for the sport is genuine. 

While Jason’s deal with Doohan isn’t exactly breaking new ground, it’s a positive sign for Liberty Media. Formula 1 and its key sponsors have made a concerted effort to lure in high-profile figures from the worlds of music, fashion, sports and Hollywood, hoping to convert them into lifelong fans. But Jason isn’t just another paddock ornament, he’s become the blueprint for the ideal celebrity pipeline, and has even taken it a step further by meaningfully engaging with the sport. As F1’s popularity continues to rise, an A-lister simply showing up and posing for a snap is no longer fodder for a news story. Alpine is among the few teams that seem to realize that, and have used their proximity to celebrity to court relevance. 

Red Bull Racing receives a Pirelli Pole Position Award from Jason Oppenheim

Red Bull Racing receives a Pirelli Pole Position Award from Jason Oppenheim

Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

It’s a solid strategy for building goodwill, and if the team’s high-profile investors – including Ryan Reynolds, Michael B. Jordan, Travis Kelce, and Patrick Mahomes – have taught us anything, it’s that sometimes, the best way to stay relevant isn’t through championship points, but cultural capital. For Doohan, the collaboration with the Oppenheim Group won’t move the needle in his career (or save him from the possibility of Franco Colapinto taking his job), but it does boost his name recognition in front of a new audience that F1 has been eager to capture. And in a sport where sponsorships and visibility can be almost as important as raw talent, that’s never a bad thing.

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In this article

Emily Selleck

Formula 1

Culture

Jack Doohan

Alpine

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Ryo Hirakawa will drive Jack Doohan’s Alpine in opening practice for this weekend’s 2025 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka.

The Toyota World Endurance Championship champion has joined Alpine as a reserve driver for the season after fulfilling the same role at McLaren last year.

Hirakawa made his F1 weekend debut at the 2024 Abu Dhabi GP, replacing Oscar Piastri in a McLaren MCL38.

“I’m very excited, I can’t wait to drive the A525 in Free Practice 1 this weekend,” the Japanese driver said in an Alpine team statement, as he fulfills the first of four mandatory rookie outings in grands prix per team this year – two in each car.

“I’m looking back to 18 years ago to 2007, the first time I went to watch the Japanese Grand Prix, it was a different track, Fuji, but it was Formula 1 in Japan. Since then, I started my racing career and now to drive during the weekend is going to be a dream come true, I just can’t wait.

Ryo Hirakawa, Alpine

Ryo Hirakawa, Alpine

Photo by: Pirelli

“I have got everything prepared, we did simulator work in Enstone a few days ago and I’m going to enjoy the moment.

“Hopefully the weather is good, it will be a short session, but I will enjoy it and do my best for the team to hopefully input some direction on set-up. I just want to add my appreciation to everyone at the team for the opportunity and support.”

Doohan, who has started his rookie season under considerable pressure due to Alpine stockpiling reserve drivers, including ex-Williams racer Franco Colapinto, acknowledged that Hirakawa “has a lot of experience here so it will be good to take some of that knowledge for the weekend”.

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Hirakawa raced in Japan’s Super Formula between 2013 and 2023 – the national single-seater championship that hits F1 speeds and races multiple times a year at Suzuka.

Motorsport.com understands that Hirakawa left McLaren’s reserve driver fold to join Alpine because he was offered a better shot at one day making an F1 bow as Piastri and Lando Norris are locked up at McLaren for several years.

Hirakawa is a double WEC champion with Toyota, with which he won the 2022 Le Mans 24 Hours at the very start of the championship’s Hypercar era.

His Toyota deal also means he is an unofficial reserve driver for Haas, which has a technical partnership with the Japanese manufacturer, and has completed F1 end-of-season and Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) running for the American squad in recent months.

In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Ryo Hirakawa

Jack Doohan

Alpine

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Ryo Hirakawa will drive Jack Doohan’s Alpine in opening practice for this weekend’s 2025 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka.

The Toyota World Endurance Championship champion has joined Alpine as a reserve driver for the season after fulfilling the same role at McLaren last year.

This is being done because of FIA rules which state every F1 driver must skip an FP1 session during a campaign for somebody with no more than two grand prix starts. 

Hirakawa did something similar last year, making his F1 weekend debut at the 2024 Abu Dhabi GP replacing Oscar Piastri in a McLaren MCL38.

“I’m very excited, I can’t wait to drive the A525 in Free Practice 1 this weekend,” the Japanese driver said in an Alpine team statement.

“I’m looking back to 18 years ago to 2007, the first time I went to watch the Japanese Grand Prix, it was a different track, Fuji, but it was Formula 1 in Japan.

“Since then, I started my racing career and now to drive during the weekend is going to be a dream come true, I just can’t wait.

Jack Doohan, Alpine

Jack Doohan, Alpine

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

“I have got everything prepared, we did simulator work in Enstone [the team’s headquarters] a few days ago and I’m going to enjoy the moment.

“Hopefully the weather is good, it will be a short session, but I will enjoy it and do my best for the team to hopefully input some direction on set up. I just want to add my appreciation to everyone at the team for the opportunity and support.”

Doohan, who has started his rookie season under considerable pressure due to Alpine stockpiling reserve drivers, including ex-temporary Williams racer Franco Colapinto, acknowledged that Hirakawa “has a lot of experience here so it will be good to take some of that knowledge for the weekend”.

Hirakawa raced in Japan’s Super Formula between 2013 and 2023 – the national single-seater championship that hits F1 speeds and races multiple times a year at Suzuka.

Autosport understands that Hirakawa left McLaren’s reserve driver fold to join Alpine because he was offered a better shot at one day making an F1 bow as Piastri and Lando Norris are locked up at McLaren for several years.

Hirakawa is a double WEC champion with Toyota, with which he won the 2022 Le Mans 24 Hours at the very start of the championship’s Hypercar era.

His Toyota deal also means he is an unofficial reserve driver for Haas, which has a technical partnership with the Japanese manufacturer, and has completed F1 end-of-season and Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) running for the American squad in recent months.

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In this article

Alex Kalinauckas

Formula 1

Jack Doohan

Ryo Hirakawa

Alpine

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Jack Doohan will not take part in the first practice session for the Japanese Grand Prix.

Alpine has confirmed Ryo Hirakawa will take part in the session in his home event at Suzuka.

The team signed the two-times World Endurance Champion in January as a test and reserve driver. It announced at the time he would participate in a practice session at Suzuka.

It has now confirmed Doohan, who is making his fourth start in a grand prix this weekend, will sit out the session, rather than his more experienced team mate Pierre Gasly.

Ryo Hirakawa, Alpine, Bahrain International Circuit, 2025
Hirakawa tested for Alpine earlier this year

“I’ll be in the car from free practice two as Ryo drives in free practice one,” said Doohan in a statement issued by the team. “He has a lot of experience here so it will be good to take some of that knowledge for the weekend.”

It will be Doohan’s first visit to Suzuka for a race since his two wins in an Asian Formula 3 series event at the circuit in June 2019.

“The circuit is one I particularly love,” said Doohan. “I have raced there previously in Asian F3, but this will be my first time experiencing it in Formula 1 machinery which will provide a whole new challenge with its high speed and high-risk, high-reward nature.”

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Hirakawa said he “can’t wait” for his first appearance in an official F1 practice session at home. He previously drove for McLaren in the first practice session at last year’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

“I’m looking back 18 years ago to 2007, the first time I went to watch the Japanese Grand Prix,” he said. “It was a different track, Fuji, but it was Formula 1 in Japan.

“Since then, I started my racing career and now to drive during the weekend is going to be a dream come true, I just can’t wait. I have got everything prepared, we did simulator work in Enstone a few days ago and I’m going to enjoy the moment. Hopefully the weather is good, it will be a short session, but I will enjoy it and do my best for the team to hopefully input some direction on set-up.”

All F1 teams must give at least two opportunities to inexperienced F1 drivers in each of their two cars over the course of the season – twice as many as last year.

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Pre-season, those amenable to a wager would have thought the odds on Jack Doohan being fired before Liam Lawson insufficiently lucrative to justify placing a bet. It seemed to be a dead cert, what with Alpine lining up Franco Colapinto as a ‘test and reserve driver’ within a month of Doohan’s low-key first race outing in Abu Dhabi.

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In the run-up to Lawson’s demotion back to the Racing Bulls team, there was a good deal of Sturm und Drang about the possibility of Colapinto replacing him. Crucially, though, the source of the noise was Colapinto’s management, with the media acting as an amplifier over the rumours.

No, Colapinto has a three-year deal with Alpine, from which he can of course be extracted – but at a cost. His management are understandably keen to keep his name out there as a credible race driver, but an Alpine seat on an as-soon-as-possible basis remains the short-term goal.

While Doohan was among the first of this season’s rookies to be confirmed in a race seat – the announcement was late last summer – it’s widely believed a performance clause in his contract gives Alpine the option to replace him after six races. While the existence of such clauses for both parties to a contract is commonplace in F1, having the threshold so early is rather unusual.

So for a good three months before Doohan essayed his first laps as an Alpine race driver, his bosses were in the market for another eligible candidate. When Esteban Ocon was abruptly dumped after the Qatar GP so Doohan could take his place in Abu Dhabi, those members of the opinionati who were asleep at the wheel concluded that this was to enable Jack to ‘hit the ground running’ in what was expected to be a tightly contested 2025 season.

In fact, Alpine ‘executive advisor’ Flavio Briatore was already well down the road to signing Colapinto by this point. Given the importance of the Latin American market to Renault, Alpine’s parent company, and the supposed honey pot of big-ticket sponsors there just waiting to throw money at F1, what’s not to like about a driver who is already Argentina’s second most famous sports personality?

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

Signing off Abu Dhabi by finishing 15th, from 20th on the grid, while his (admittedly) more experienced teammate Pierre Gasly was seventh, was an inauspicious way to spend one of those six contractual ‘lives’. And while there have been some positives over the following two outings, they were accompanied by high-profile blunders.

Granted, Doohan qualified five places behind Gasly in Australia, but he had been quicker than Gasly in Q1 and was inconvenienced by a Lewis Hamilton-induced yellow flag in Q2, which skewed the picture somewhat. It seems unfair to lambast him too much for shunting in the race since he was neither the first nor the last to do so in difficult conditions.

In China he outqualified Gasly for the sprint race (albeit 16th vs 17th), then promptly lost two places on the opening lap and picked up a penalty for escorting Gabriel Bortoleto off track while trying a last-gasp pass for 17th on the final lap. The stewards handed Doohan a 10-second time penalty – irrelevant given his finishing position – and two penalty points.

There are those who would lament a penalty for attempting an overtake – “when you no longer go for a gap, you are no longer a racing driver” and all that – but such are F1’s closely prescribed regles de jeux these days. Doohan committed to outbraking Bortoleto at the Turn 14 hairpin, on the inside line, from so far back that the Sauber driver had clearly written off the possibility of an attack as he turned in on the usual line. To call Doohan’s move ‘optimistic’ would be charitable indeed.

“I need to have a look into it and see what happened so that it doesn’t happen again,” Jack said afterwards.

And yet the very next day… whoops, he did it again. The circumstances were slightly different, since it came at a point where Doohan had spent around a third of the grand prix fending off Isack Hadjar, owing to Racing Bulls having failed to receive the memo that this race required just one pitstop. But the conclusion was similar, in that Hadjar found himself exploring the hinterlands of the Turn 14 run-off area, and the stewards took a similarly dim view.

Jack Doohan, Alpine, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team

Jack Doohan, Alpine, Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Again, since Doohan finished 14th on the road, lost two places to the penalty, then gained three as a result of disqualifications ahead to be classified 13th, no points were squandered. The team did that itself, as Gasly was stripped of his ninth place after his car came up short on the weighbridge. And, given that Gasly had only recently been passed by Oliver Bearman’s Haas – a car with well-documented aero issues temporarily flattered by this circuit – this was not a weekend worthy of cracking open the champagne at Alpine’s Enstone HQ.

“I think, for me, there’s a lot of positives,” was Doohan’s take. “We haven’t had that result quite yet to really show it, but the inner circle understands that, and I think that’s what’s most important. The guys are super happy in the team, for sure.”

By ‘inner circle’ he means the likes of Briatore and team principal Oliver Oakes. When invited to comment on Doohan’s future, though, they are markedly less unequivocal about their happiness levels.

For the betting people out there, it seems to be a question of ‘when’ rather than ‘if’.

In this article

Stuart Codling

Formula 1

Jack Doohan

Franco Colapinto

Alpine

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