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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.

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 in 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 Doohan 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 team-mate 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,” Doohan 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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Alpine rookie Jack Doohan has collected four penalty points in a single weekend in China.

Doohan, who picked up two places in the sprint race yesterday, was given two more after the grand prix. The stewards ruled he forced Isack Hadjar off the track at turn 14 while the pair were fighting for position.

“Car seven [Doohan] was overtaken by car six [Hadjar] in the run-up to turn 14 and in trying to take the position back on the inside, Doohan lost control, locked up and forced Hadjar off the track.

“We accordingly imposed a 10-second time penalty with two penalty points which is in keeping with the guidelines for forcing a driver off the track.”

The penalty dropped Doohan from 14th place to 16th. He told his team: “Apologies about the penalty,” after taking the chequered flag.

The stewards looked into another incident between Doohan and Hadjar during the race, when the Alpine driver made a late move to defend his position. Having originally looked into whether he changed his line too late in the braking zone, they decided no investigation was necessary.

Penalty box

Did you agree with the stewards’ penalty for Doohan?

Doohan’s penalty for forcing Hadjar off was:

  • No opinion (0%)
  • Far too lenient (0%)
  • Slightly too lenient (0%)
  • Correct (43%)
  • Slightly too harsh (30%)
  • Far too harsh (26%)

Total Voters: 23

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2025 Chinese Grand Prix

Browse all 2025 Chinese Grand Prix articles

Start, Shanghai International Circuit, 2025


Which Formula 1 driver made the most of the Chinese Grand Prix weekend?

It’s time to give your verdict on which driver did the best with the equipment at their disposal over the last three days.

Review how each driver got on below and vote for who impressed you the most at Shanghai International Circuit.

Driver performance summary

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Vote for your driver of the weekend

Which driver do you think did the best job throughout the race weekend?

Who got the most out of their car in qualifying and the race? Who put their team mate in the shade?

Cast your vote below and explain why you chose the driver you picked in the comments.

Who was the best driver of the 2025 Chinese Grand Prix weekend?

  • No opinion (0%)
  • Gabriel Bortoleto (0%)
  • Nico Hulkenberg (0%)
  • Carlos Sainz Jnr (0%)
  • Alexander Albon (1%)
  • Yuki Tsunoda (0%)
  • Isack Hadjar (2%)
  • Oliver Bearman (11%)
  • Esteban Ocon (8%)
  • Pierre Gasly (0%)
  • Jack Doohan (1%)
  • Fernando Alonso (0%)
  • Lance Stroll (0%)
  • George Russell (11%)
  • Andrea Kimi Antonelli (1%)
  • Liam Lawson (0%)
  • Max Verstappen (12%)
  • Lewis Hamilton (4%)
  • Charles Leclerc (1%)
  • Oscar Piastri (47%)
  • Lando Norris (1%)

Total Voters: 85

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When this poll is closed the result will be displayed instead of the voting form.

2025 Chinese Grand Prix

Browse all 2025 Chinese Grand Prix articles

Debates and polls

Browse all debates and polls


Jack Doohan has collected the first penalty points of his Formula 1 career for a last-lap crash in today’s sprint race.

The Alpine driver lunged down the inside of Gabriel Bortoleto at turn 14 and made contact with the Sauber driver. The stewards ruled him wholly responsible for the incident.

“I think he locked up and hit me,” said Bortoleto after the race. Doohan said he “went for a move, it didn’t exactly go to plan, I need to look into it and see what happened.”

The stewards spoke to both drivers before issuing the penalty. Doohan told them the Haas cars ahead when he tried to pass Doohan compromised his attempt to overtake. The stewards did not accept his explanation and held him responsible.

Liam Lawson, Red Bull, Shanghai International Circuit, 2025
Doohan also tangled with Lawson

“[Doohan] attempted to overtake [Bortoleto] on the inside of turn 14 but locked up at the apex of
the corner and collided with Bortoleto,” they noted. “Doohan suggested that he was in control of the
overtake but the presence of the two Haas cars and the line they took compromised his overtake attempt.

“First, as the car attempting to overtake, the responsibility was on Doohan to ensure that it was done in a safe manner and in line with the regulations and the guidelines.

“Secondly, applying the Driving Standards Guidelines, Doohan did not have the right to the corner at the apex and should have backed off – here, because of the speed at which he approached the corner for the overtake and the resulting lockup and understeer, a collision was caused, for which Doohan was predominantly to blame. We therefore imposed the standard 10-second penalty with two penalty points.”

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The stewards also explained why they chose not to penalise Doohan or Liam Lawson for a minor collision between the pair at the same corner earlier in the race.

“Car 30 [Lawson] overtook car seven [Doohan] at turn 14 and there was a minor collision at the exit.” they noted.

“We applied the Driving Standards Guidelines as a guide to determine who had the right to the corner. Applying those guidelines, it is clear that Lawson was well ahead of Doohan at the apex of the corner and was entitled to use the full track at the exit.

“Doohan should therefore have given Lawson sufficient room to overtake and his failure to do so resulted in a minor collision. As the resulting collision was minor, we took no further action.”

This article will be updated.

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Six drivers began their first full Formula 1 seasons in today’s Australian Grand Prix but four of them failed to see the chequered flag in the tricky conditions.

Two of them were out before the first lap was over. Unquestionably the most dejected was Isack Hadjar, who spun into a barrier at turn two on the formation lap, causing a delay to the start of the race.

The Racing Bulls driver said he was focused on tyre preparation when his car got away from him. “Usually I take it step-by-step,” he told the official F1 channel. “We were keen on having the best out-lap possible for the race start.

“Early in the lap you try to warm those tyres and I over-did it. The tiniest mistake you can do, and the car is unsave-able. You’re just a passenger, and it feels terrible.”

The original race start was aborted so Hadjar’s car could be recovered and the grand prix eventually began a quarter of an hour behind schedule. Soon after it started, Jack Doohan’s Alpine snapped out of control at turn six.

The Alpine driver, making his second start in a grand prix, said his crash was “the result of a combination of factors which we will go over together as a team to learn from and ensure it does not happen again.”

“It is a tough way to learn but I have digested what happened and put it behind me to focus on what is ahead.”

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Gabriel Bortoleto’s grand prix debut ended after the rain returned on lap 46. He had just switched to a set of intermediates at the time. “Unfortunately I touched the kerb and ended up in the wall,” he admitted.

On the next lap Liam Lawson spun into a barrier. The most experience of the rookies had tried to brave out the shower on his 14-lap-old set of medium slicks.

“We took a chance, to be honest, hoping at least half the track would stay dry,” he said. “We knew that sector three was bad, but we thought that sector one would stay a little bit drier, so we carried on.

“Unfortunately it was bucketing down with rain. At that point, to be honest, I’d backed out of pushing at that point because it was so wet. I was just trying to stay on track, but obviously not ideal.”

One the six-strong rookie contingent, two made it to the chequered flag in a gruelling race. Andrea Kimi Antonelli was the only one to score points, claiming a fine fourth for Mercedes having started 16th. Oliver Bearman redeemed himself somewhat after making two serious errors in practice by getting his Haas to the chequered flag.

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Despite the majority having previous Formula 1 experience, history will reflect that six rookies started the 2025 season at the Australian Grand Prix – and it was a chastening experience for all but one of them.

While the changeable conditions saw four crash out, plus one endure a tough weekend and finish last, Andrea Kimi Antonelli gave a glimpse of his huge potential by taking fifth place for Mercedes.

Motorsport.com looked at how the sextet fared around Albert Park on what was a memorable start to the campaign.

High-five for Antonelli

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

Whether you see Antonelli as Lewis Hamilton’s direct replacement or not, he stood out head and shoulders above the other five rookies with a fine performance.

Starting down in 16th, the 18-year-old showed maturity to move up through the pack, making notable overtakes – including twice passing Nico Hulkenberg in near carbon copy moves, having let the experienced Sauber man back through after a spin.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff called the drive “mega” as Antonelli crossed the line fourth but was ultimately dropped to fifth following a five-second penalty for an unsafe pitstop release into the path of Hulkenberg.

“I think today we got all the possible worst conditions for a first race,” he said. “We got wet, slicks on damp, slicks on wet, and then back to wet. So definitely a really, really eventful race, but I’m really happy how it was managed from my side and from the team.

“Of course, I did a couple of mistakes, especially the spin, but the conditions were super, super tricky. Also those white lines were a killer.

“The team really helped me throughout the whole race and made all the right calls, and [I] definitely cannot complain about today.”

Speaking to Sky Sports F1, Wolff gave a glowing review of Antonelli’s debut display: “He just reeled them in one by one, showed the pace when he had no traffic, and then eventually ended up P4 on the road and P5 from a result, and that’s really impressive.

“Even very good drivers spun or hit the wall, and it’s easier to not finish than to finish. He kept his cool and it was just very impressive to see, and it shows that he has a good future as long as the trajectory keeps being like it is.”

Ollie has to grin and bear it

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

For Oliver Bearman, it could be seen as a positive that the 19-year-old finished the race for Haas, given he had crashed out in free practice one and three – sitting out the second session due to the damage to his car.

He also struggled in wet weather as a stand-in for Haas at last year’s Brazilian Grand Prix but brought the car home in Melbourne, even if he was last of the runners to take the chequered flag.

Starting from the pitlane, Bearman was pleased with his performance although he conceded Haas would need to find improvements moving forward.

“It’s an achievement just to finish a race like this because they’re incredibly difficult,” said the British racer.

“Of course, I don’t want to dwell on the past. I want to get rid of it and move on to the next one. I’m not pleased with my mistakes, but to finish the race in a good way on my side gives me confidence going to China.

“This inter tyre is very tough when it starts to rain again and I was happy with my performance and execution, even if as a team we’re still missing pace.

“[It is] incredibly, incredibly tough to drive the car in these conditions. It’s the toughest you’ll find and even if in Brazil I was fighting for the points and now I’m fighting to really catch or stay on the pack, it’s a different type of race compared to the one I was in in Brazil.

“But same push and drive, and I’m glad that I’ve learned from the mistakes I made in Brazil and had a relatively error-free race.”

A-Borted start

Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

Gabriel Bortoleto outqualified team-mate Hulkenberg, not bad for a man starting his first F1 race to a wizened campaigner of 228 grand prix.

The Brazilian has been batting away questions surrounding remarks from Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko, who labelled the 20-year-old a “B” grade driver.

He ultimately crashed out in the latter stages in Australia but had looked in good shape, all things considered, until that point – although he was hit with a five-second penalty for an unsafe release.

“Obviously not an easy start. I would say it was a good weekend overall for all the learning we got there,” said the back-to-back F3 and F2 champion.

“Unfortunately, it didn’t finish as we expected. Luckily for the team, Nico scored some good points and I’m very happy for them. I’m sorry for my mistake there. I tried to recover a bit what we lost in the safety car and I’m looking forward to China now.

“We take some positives from this weekend. We learn from the negatives, and heads up. It’s just the beginning of a long season.

“I was very close to Nico the whole race on inters. Then we went to pit and then we double-stacked. I lost a lot of time there with the safety car as well, with the unsafe release.”

Aussie curse strikes Doohan

Jack Doohan, Alpine 
crash

Jack Doohan, Alpine crash

Photo by: James Sutton / Motorsport Images

Ask most people in the F1 paddock and they will tell you that Jack Doohan was already under pressure before a wheel had been turned this season.

Having raced for Alpine in the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the end of 2024, the Australian came into this year with speculation he was already driving for his seat after Franco Colapinto joined the team as a reserve driver.

Crashing out of his home race on the opening lap will do little to silence those rumours, but the 22-year-old was determined to take positives away from a tough weekend.

“In this sport, things happen very quickly, as we’ve just seen, and the next round is already almost upon us,” he said, already turning an eye to the Chinese Grand Prix next weekend.

“So it was an unfortunate way [to go out], but a lesson is learned. I’ve digested it. There’s a lot of positives that we have to take away from this weekend, and for me they outweigh this negative, and I’m looking forward to bouncing back for next weekend.

“It seemed I lost it on the third to fourth gear upshift. As soon as I went into fourth, I lost the car.

“I think maybe a combination of the white line, but it seems that we had a spike in RPM when I’ve upshifted to fourth so we’re just double-checking to make sure that everything’s behaving itself and maybe a little bit less right foot, a little bit more left, and it won’t happen again.

“So some things that I’m going to need to understand because, for me, that wasn’t out of the normal, but a constant learning process. Unfortunately, this one has big consequences.

“But I’ve definitely learned, and I’m going to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.”

Hamilton hugs for Hadjar

Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Anthony Hamilton

Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Anthony Hamilton

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

For Isack Hadjar, qualifying 11th for his debut race would have been seen as a fine start to life at Racing Bulls.

However, he did not even make the start of the race as the tricky track surface caught him out on the formation lap when a spin ended with the Frenchman breaking his rear wing in the wall.

Visibly upset, the 20-year-old was consoled on his return to the paddock by Anthony Hamilton, father of seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

“I’m just embarrassed and sorry for the team,” Hadjar said, his accident having caused an aborted start to the 2025 season.

“I overdid it, I just over-slipped the rears and once I lost the car, I tried to save it but I was just a passenger, it just snapped so fast and I didn’t expect it.

“I’m just mad that these mistakes can happen. Breaking the car so early in the season really breaks my heart. I’m really sorry for the team. I’m missing out on more experience. My first grand prix, missing out on a wet track.”

Asked about Anthony Hamilton’s input, he added: “It means a lot, knowing that he knew where I was, how bad I felt, to go and see me in the worst moment ever.

“I think it’s nice gesture from him. I really appreciate that. [He told me to] just keep my head high and be proud of myself. I did well yesterday. Nice stuff.”

Lowly Lawson

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: James Sutton / Motorsport Images

Being across the Red Bull garage from Max Verstappen is a pressured place to be in F1 and Liam Lawson is the latest to try and match the flying Dutchman.

Having been preferred over Yuki Tsunoda to be promoted from Racing Bulls for 2025, Lawson is arguably the furthest away from a rookie having already competed in 11 grand prix before this season.

The New Zealander, though, found his first weekend in the senior Red Bull team to be a difficult one as he started from the pitlane following changes to his rear wing, having only qualified down in 18th.

It was a calculated risk that did not pay off as Lawson found himself running at the back of the field with the Haas duo while Verstappen competed at the business end against the McLarens.

A poor race was summed up with a late crash into the barriers as the rain returned.

“We wanted to take a risk so that was a shared gamble together, but I was just apologising for putting the car on the wall,” Lawson said.

“We were hoping for a majority-wet race and it basically dried up more than we thought, and we struggled a lot with the fronts in the first stint, just overheating.”

Asked what positives he would take from the day, Lawson replied: “Not much honestly, I’m just looking forward to going to China and resetting.”

In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Liam Lawson

Jack Doohan

Isack Hadjar

Oliver Bearman

Gabriel Bortoleto

Andrea Kimi Antonelli

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Despite the majority having previous Formula 1 experience, history will reflect that six rookies started the 2025 season at the Australian Grand Prix – and it was a chastening experience for all but one of them.

While the changeable conditions saw four crash out, plus one endured a tough weekend and finished last, Andrea Kimi Antonelli gave a glimpse of his huge potential by taking fifth place for Mercedes.

Autosport looked at how the sextet fared around Albert Park on what was a memorable start to the campaign.

High-five for Antonelli

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, Mercedes

Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images

Whether you see Antonelli as Lewis Hamilton’s direct replacement or not, he stood out head and shoulders above the other five rookies with a fine performance.

Starting down in 16th, the 18-year-old showed maturity to move up through the pack, making notable overtakes – including twice passing Nico Hulkenberg in near-carbon copy moves having let the experienced Sauber man back through after a spin.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff called the drive “mega” as Antonelli crossed the line fourth but was ultimately dropped to fifth following a five-second penalty for an unsafe pitstop release into the path of Hulkenberg.

“I think today we got all the possible worst conditions for a first race,” he said. “We got wet, slicks on damp, slicks on wet, and then back to wet. So definitely a really, really eventful race but I’m really happy how it was managed from my side and from the team.

“Of course, I did a couple of mistakes, especially the spin, but the conditions were super, super tricky. Also those white lines were a killer.

“The team really helped me throughout the whole race and made all the right calls and definitely cannot complain about today.”

Speaking to Sky Sports F1, Wolff gave a glowing review of Antonelli’s debut display: “He just reeled them in one by one, showed the pace when he had no traffic, and then eventually ended up P4 on the road and P5 from a result, and that’s really impressive.

“Even very good drivers spun or hit the wall and it’s easier to not finish than to finish, and he kept his cool and it was just very impressive to see and it shows that he has a good future as long as the trajectory keeps being like it is.”

Ollie has to grin and bear it

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

For Oliver Bearman, it could be seen as a positive that the 19-year-old finished the race for Haas, given he had crashed out in free practice one and three – sitting out the second session due to the damage to his car.

He also struggled in wet weather as a stand-in for Haas at last year’s Brazilian Grand Prix but brought the car home in Melbourne, even if he was last of the runners to take the chequered flag.

Starting from the pitlane, Bearman was pleased with his performance although he conceded Haas will need to find improvements moving forward.

“It’s an achievement just to finish a race like this because they’re incredibly difficult,” said the British racer.

“Of course, I don’t want to dwell on the past. I want to get rid of it and move on to the next one. I’m not pleased with my mistakes but to finish the race in a good way on my side gives me confidence going to China.

“This inter tyre is very tough when it starts to rain again and I was happy with my performance and execution, even if as a team we’re still missing pace.

“[It is] incredibly, incredibly tough to drive the car in these conditions. It’s the toughest you’ll find and even if in Brazil I was fighting for the points and now I’m fighting to really catch or stay on the pack, it’s a different type of race compared to the one I was in in Brazil.

“But same push and drive and I’m glad that I’ve learned from the mistakes I made in Brazil and had a relatively error-free race.”

A-Borted start

Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Gabriel Bortoleto, Sauber

Photo by: Sam Bagnall / Motorsport Images

Gabriel Bortoleto outqualified team-mate Hulkenberg, not bad for a man starting his first F1 race to a wizened campaigner of 228 grand prix.

The Brazilian has been batting away questions surrounding remarks from Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko, who labelled the 20-year-old a “B” grade driver.

He ultimately crashed out in the latter stages in Australia but had looked in good shape, all things considered, until that point – although he was hit with a five-second penalty for an unsafe release.

“Obviously not an easy start. I would say it was a good weekend overall for all the learning we got there,” said the back-to-back F3 and F2 champion.

“Unfortunately, it didn’t finish as we expected. Luckily for the team, Nico scored some good points and I’m very happy for them. I’m sorry for my mistake there. I tried to recover a bit what we lost in the safety car and I’m looking forward to China now.

“We take some positives from this weekend. We learn from the negatives and heads up. It’s just the beginning of a long season.

“I was very close to Nico the whole race in inters. Then we went to pit and then we double-stacked. I lost a lot of time there with the safety car as well, with the unsafe release.”

Aussie curse strikes Doohan

Jack Doohan, Alpine 
crash

Jack Doohan, Alpine crash

Photo by: James Sutton / Motorsport Images

Ask most people in the F1 paddock and they will tell you that Jack Doohan was already under pressure before a wheel had been turned this season.

Having raced for Alpine in the Abu Dhabi GP at the end of 2024, the Australian came into this year with speculation he was already driving for his seat after Franco Colapinto joined the team as a reserve driver.

Crashing out of his home race on the opening lap will do little to silence those rumours but the 22-year-old was determined to take positives away from a tough weekend.

“In this sport, things happen very quickly, as we’ve just seen, and the next round is already almost upon us,” he said, already turning an eye to the Chinese Grand Prix next weekend.

“So it was an unfortunate way [to go out], but a lesson is learned. I’ve digested it. There’s a lot of positives that we have to take away from this weekend and for me, they outweigh this negative and I’m looking forward to bouncing back for next weekend.

“It seemed I lost it on the third to fourth gear upshift. As soon as I went into fourth, I lost the car.

“I think maybe a combination of the white line but it seems that we had a spike in RPM when I’ve upshifted to fourth so we’re just double-checking to make sure that everything’s behaving itself and maybe a little bit less right foot, a little bit more left, and it won’t happen again.

“So some things that I’m going to need to understand because, for me, that wasn’t out of the normal, but a constant learning process. Unfortunately, this one has big consequences.

“But I’ve definitely learned, and I’m going to ensure that it doesn’t happen again.”

Hamilton hugs for Hadjar

Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Anthony Hamilton

Isack Hadjar, RB F1 Team, Anthony Hamilton

Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool

For Isack Hadjar, qualifying 11th for his debut race would have been seen as a fine start to life at Racing Bulls.

However, he did not even make the start of the race as the tricky track surface caught him out on the formation lap when a spin ended with the Frenchman breaking his rear wing in the wall.

Visibly upset, the 20-year-old was consoled on his return to the paddock by Anthony Hamilton, father of seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton.

“I’m just embarrassed and sorry for the team,” Hadjar said, his accident having caused an aborted start to the 2025 season.

“I overdid it, I just over-slipped the rears and once I lost the car, I tried to save it but I was just a passenger it just snapped so fast and I didn’t expect it.

“I’m just mad that these mistakes can happen. Breaking the car so early in the season really breaks my heart. I’m really sorry for the team. I’m missing out on more experience. My first grand prix, missing out on a wet track.”

Asked about Anthony Hamilton’s input, he added: “It means a lot, knowing that he knew where I was, how bad I felt, to go and see me in the worst moment ever.

“I think it’s nice gesture from him. I really appreciate that. [He told me to] just keep my head high and be proud of myself. I did well yesterday. Nice stuff.”

Lowly Lawson

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Liam Lawson, Red Bull Racing

Photo by: James Sutton / Motorsport Images

Being across the Red Bull garage from Max Verstappen is a pressured place to be in F1 and Liam Lawson is the latest to try and match the flying Dutchman.

Having been preferred over Yuki Tsunoda to be promoted from Racing Bulls for 2025, Lawson is arguably the furthest away from a rookie having already competed in 11 grand prix before this season.

The New Zealander, though, found his first weekend in the senior Red Bull team to be a difficult one as he started from the pitlane following changes to his rear wing having only qualified down in 18th.

It was a calculated risk that did not pay off as Lawson found himself running at the back of the field with the Haas duo while Verstappen competed at the business end against the McLarens.

A poor race was summed up with a late crash into the barriers as the rain returned.

“We wanted to take a risk so that was a shared gamble together, but I was just apologising for putting the car on the wall,” Lawson said.

“We were hoping for a majority wet race and it basically dried up more than we thought and we struggled a lot with the fronts in the first stint, just overheating.”

Asked what positives he would take from the day, Lawson replied: “Not much honestly, I’m just looking forward to going to China and resetting.”

In this article

Mark Mann-Bryans

Formula 1

Jack Doohan

Liam Lawson

Isack Hadjar

Oliver Bearman

Gabriel Bortoleto

Andrea Kimi Antonelli

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Start, Albert Park, 2025


Which Formula 1 driver made the most of the Australian Grand Prix weekend?

It’s time to give your verdict on which driver did the best with the equipment at their disposal over the last three days.

Review how each driver got on below and vote for who impressed you the most at Albert Park.

Driver performance summary

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Vote for your driver of the weekend

Which driver do you think did the best job throughout the race weekend?

Who got the most out of their car in qualifying and the race? Who put their team mate in the shade?

Cast your vote below and explain why you chose the driver you picked in the comments.

Who was the best driver of the 2025 Australian Grand Prix weekend?

  • No opinion (0%)
  • Gabriel Bortoleto (1%)
  • Nico Hulkenberg (6%)
  • Carlos Sainz Jnr (0%)
  • Alexander Albon (10%)
  • Yuki Tsunoda (1%)
  • Isack Hadjar (4%)
  • Oliver Bearman (0%)
  • Esteban Ocon (0%)
  • Pierre Gasly (0%)
  • Jack Doohan (1%)
  • Fernando Alonso (0%)
  • Lance Stroll (1%)
  • George Russell (2%)
  • Andrea Kimi Antonelli (19%)
  • Liam Lawson (0%)
  • Max Verstappen (8%)
  • Lewis Hamilton (1%)
  • Charles Leclerc (0%)
  • Oscar Piastri (2%)
  • Lando Norris (42%)

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2025 Australian Grand Prix

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Alpine team principal Oliver Oakes has explained the team’s unusually large roster of reserve drivers.

Ahead of this weekend’s opening Formula 1 round in Australia, Alpine named Kush Maini as its fourth reserve driver for the 2025 season. He joins Paul Aron, Ryo Hirakawa and Franco Colapinto who were announced previously.

Oakes said the team is anticipating developments in the driver market. He noted McLaren’s recent decision to re-sign Oscar Piastri, whom the world champions controversially poached from Alpine three years ago when he was a member of their junior driver programme.

“Obviously we had Paul already in the wings and I think the option with Franco that appeared there, that’s sort of with an eye to the future as well,” Oakes told Sky. “I think we’ve just seen it recently of McLaren tying down Oscar, the driver market is going to change and for us, we wanted to have options further down the line.”

Paul Aron, Alpine, Bahrain International Circuit, 2025
Aron has tested for Alpine this year

Alpine’s decision to sign Colapinto came amid speculation executive consultant Flavio Briatore was keen to promote him in place of Jack Doohan, who will start his second F1 race for the team this weekend. Oakes acknowledged there’s “been a lot of noise” around Doohan, as a member of a rival team publicly suggested Alpine will replace him before the end of the year, but said both his drivers have the team’s backing.

“Obviously we’ve got Franco there with a big following. Paul’s done a phenomenal job in F2 and he has been quick as well, jumping in the car testing. But I think that’s a nice option to have for the team.

“We need those reserve drivers. It’s a big programme with the TPC [testing of previous cars] testing, the simulator. Obviously as a race driver, you’d love to probably not have someone clipping at your heels. But also from our side, you know, we’ve been pretty open that Jack and Pierre [Gasly] both have our full support.”

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However Oakes admitted the team’s decision to hire so many reserve drivers had added to the speculation over Doohan.

“I think I was probably a little bit too supportive, maybe, saying people should just give him a bit of a break,” he said. “We put him in that situation by having a few reserve drivers, but that gave us options as a team.

“But he did a good job in Bahrain. He’s been very good here out of the blocks. And I think you can see he’s getting a bit of confidence because it isn’t easy for the rookies. We saw then on track that, you know, a couple of early mistakes can put you on the back foot.”

Speaking after final practice, Oakes said he was pleased with Doohan’s progress so far this year.

“We just said to him, keep your head down, also enjoy yourself, because at the end of the day, that opening weekend, everything’s going to come at you pretty fast,” he explained.

“But he’s just done a very, very solid start and that’s what you want to see. You want to see a young driver building up to it, doing the basics right. He’s done a good job against Pierre so far and you can only gauge yourself [against] your team mate.”

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Jack Doohan says he is paying no attention to rumours he won’t complete his first full season in Formula 1.

Red Bull motorsport consultant Helmut Marko named him the weakest rookie on the F1 grid this year and suggested his Alpine team will drop him before the end of the year.

Speaking to Red Bull-owned television channel Servus TV, Marko was invited to grade drivers who are starting their first full seasons this year. Marko, who is responsible for Red Bull’s junior team, rated Doohan the lowest, labelling him a “C driver.”

“I don’t think he’ll complete the full season,” Marko added.

Doohan moved up to Alpine’s race team at the final round of last season, having previously been their reserve driver. However the team’s consultant Flavio Briatore moved quickly to hire Williams’ Franco Colapinto and is thought to prefer him for Doohan’s seat.

“I haven’t been thinking about any of that,” said Doohan in today’s press conference ahead of his home race in Melbourne. “There’s no point thinking about rumours or commenting on them.

“I have a contract for at least this year, if not more. So I look forward to many home grands prix.”

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He pointed out Colapinto is one of four reserve drivers Alpine has appointed for the upcoming season. The team announced Kush Maini as its latest reserve just two days ago, joining Colapinto, Paul Aron and Ryo Hirakawa.

“I have to perform each and every time I’m in the car,” said Doohan. “I have one guy chasing my seat, but we actually have four now, if you didn’t realise, we have four reserves.

“It’s not just Franco who probably wants my seat and if not, Pierre [Gasly]’s as well. And I wanted their seats while I was reserve driver the last two years.

“So I’m going to enjoy, to be honest, every race as if it’s my last, because I want to enjoy each and every moment I’m in the car.”

Marko rated Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Oliver Bearman as ‘A’ and Gabriel Bortoleto as ‘B’, noting the latter won fewer Formula 2 races than Red Bull’s junior driver Isack Hadjar last year.

“He’s a very intelligent driver, won the Formula 3 championship but with only one victory. He always stays out of trouble in the races.

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“Similarly, in Formula 2, he only has two wins. Hadjar has four wins. So, he brings the car to the finish line, his strategy and tyre management is good, but I don’t think he’ll have that absolute final speed.”

Bortoleto beat Hadjar to the title by 22.5 points but Marko said “our simulation guy calculated that he lost 80 points through no fault of his own due to technical defects and the like.”

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