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.”
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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You may be wondering why Alpine has just signed a fourth Formula 1 reserve driver. There may be tens or even hundreds of thousands of reasons, if not millions.
Alpine has already been rebuilding its young-driver programme under new leadership after the embarrassingly disastrous loss of Oscar Piastri in 2022.
And stuffing the ranks with young hopefuls is very much in keeping with the return of Flavio Briatore to this team’s top table: back in the early 2000s, when it was running as Renault, its ‘Driver Academy’ had a fascinating mix of individuals. Some of them were clearly F1 material, others were obviously paying for the privilege.
The man who recruited them, oversaw training camps as far afield as Kenya, and who often had a finger in the pie of managing the most promising, was Briatore.
Taking 2001-2002 as a snapshot, the scheme would have the likes of Renault’s F1 drivers Giancarlo Fisichella and Jenson Button training alongside Fernando Alonso (who Briatore was grooming to replace Button), Heikki Kovalainen, Robert Kubica, Tiago Monteiro, Fabio Carbone, Eric Salignon and Carlo van Dam. The latter five were net contributors to the corporate coffers via personal sponsorship – yes, even Kubica, who was part of Renault/Briatore’s programme for just one year.
With that in mind it’s easy to see why the Briatore-era Alpine should have four young drivers in full kit cluttering up the garage on race weekends, while most other teams get by with one – or even none.
Second place Kush Maini, Invicta Racing
Photo by: Shameem Fahath
Maini will be busier than most since he will also be contesting his third full season in Formula 2, changing teams again after a largely disappointing 2024 with Invicta as team-mate to eventual champion Gabriel Bortoleto.
Part of the Alpine Academy setup since 2023, Maini shares a manager (Guillaume le Goff) with Alpine driver Pierre Gasly and has a mentoring arrangement with double world champion Mika Hakkinen.
He brings substantial corporate backing from India, where there is a significant push to get an Indian driver onto the F1 grid for the first time since Karun Chandhok’s outings with the moribund HRT outfit and Lotus/Caterham in 2010-11.
It’s still far from clear what Maini will actually do beyond simulator work and track testing of older F1 machinery via the Testing of Previous Cars (TPC) protocols. Only Hirakawa – currently racing for Toyota in the WEC – has been confirmed for a grand prix weekend FP1 (Japan) slot so far; that leaves three others up for grabs.
“Kush has impressed the team across his TPC performances and Formula 2 results whilst we have been working with him and we expect he will continue to do so in 2025,” said Julian Rouse, who superintends the Alpine Academy as well as acting as the F1 team’s sporting director.
“His wider role allows us to further expand our pool of driving talent who can provide support and resources to the whole team during the busy season.”
Ryo Hirakawa, Alpine
Photo by: Pirelli
This level of vagueness is in keeping with team principal Oliver Oakes’ response to a question at the recent Bahrain test about how Alpine proposed to organise its reserve drivers – at that point of course, there were just three of them.
“They’re all going to share a room,” he joked, before saying that the amount of F1 testing they’ll actually get has yet to be decided.
“I think there’s a little bit of a split, because obviously Franco has done a load of grands prix, Paul Aron hasn’t done anything and Ryo’s done probably a bit of everything, so there is a bit of a balance there.”
Aron, a former Mercedes junior, is the only one of the four whose job title is ‘reserve driver’ rather than ‘test and reserve driver’.
Alpine announced him in the wake of Jack Doohan’s elevation to an F1 seat and he drove in the post-season test at Yas Marina – displacing Victor Martins, who has recently left the Alpine setup ‘by mutual consent’, as has F1 Academy champion Abbi Pulling. Those exits have cleared the way for new faces in Alpine’s young-driver programme – Nina Gademan in F1 Academy and karters Ilie Tristan Crisan and Sukhmani Kaur Khera.
Managing up-and-coming drivers is always a juggling act – one in which the key challenge is not just to identify the best young talent and develop them, but also to keep them in play until an opportunity comes up in F1.
Franco Colapinto, Alpine F1 Team
Photo by: Alpine
That’s where the previous Alpine Academy management failed with Piastri.
Four into one – or even two – doesn’t stack up mathematically. The likelihood is that only Colapinto will move forward in the near future while Alpine’s other reserve drivers are, in effect, ‘pay and display’. It certainly helps with the bottom line – and even though Colapinto is highly rated at the moment, Briatore will have at least one eye on sponsorship from Latin America.
So far only Mercado Libre has appeared on the Alpine roster, while Globant has chosen to partner with F1 itself, but there’s talk of other Argentine businesses being interested – along with other Latam corporates such as Telmex. It’s a tantalising set of possibilities for Briatore, who is understood to have enjoyed a healthy payday for brokering the MSC Cruises deal with F1.
So as far as young drivers these days are concerned – to paraphrase John F Kennedy, ask not what your team can do for you, but what you can do for your team (and its bottom line).
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In this article
Stuart Codling
Formula 1
Ryo Hirakawa
Kush Maini
Franco Colapinto
Paul Aron
Alpine
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Alpine has signed Kush Maini as a test and reserve driver for the 2025 Formula 1 season.
Maini has been part of the Alpine Academy since October 2023 and completed his second Formula 2 campaign with the Invicta outfit in 2024, taking one victory – his first in any series since the 2020 British F3 campaign – on his way to 13th in the standings. He has moved to DAMS for the 2025 season.
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As part of his new deal with the Enstone-based squad, the Indian driver will partake in simulator work while conducting track testing with older cars to gain F1 experience himself, via the Testing of Previous Cars rules.
“I am looking forward to getting more track time in Formula 1 machinery in this role and to build on what I have already learned with the team in 2024,” Maini said. “I’m very excited to begin the role as soon as possible but for now my focus is on my third season in Formula 2 kicking off this weekend in Australia.”
Alpine Academy director Julian Rouse added: “Kush has impressed the team across his TPC performances and Formula 2 results whilst we have been working with him and we expect he will continue to do so in 2025. His wider role allows us to further expand our pool of driving talent who can provide support and resource to the whole team during the busy season.”
Kush Maini on the podium in Jeddah, alongside Enzo Fittipaldi and Dennis Hauger
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
Alpine certainly enjoys much depth in terms of ‘third drivers’, should any ill befall regulars Pierre Gasly and Jack Doohan.
The team has signed three drivers to “test and reserve driver” deals, which includes Maini, current Toyota Hypercar racer Ryo Hirakawa, and Franco Colapinto, who is widely rumored to be an immediate threat to Doohan’s seat. Meanwhile, former Mercedes junior Paul Aron has been hired as merely a “reserve driver”.
All four drivers are set to participate in Alpine’s Testing of Previous Cars programme, with Hirakawa already announced as a Free Practice 1 driver at the Japanese Grand Prix, helping the team fulfill the regulatory rookie requirements.
Previously asked how the outfit was going to organise things around its first three reserve drivers, team principal Oliver Oakes replied: “They’re all going to share a room. No, I’m joking!
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“They’ve got a pretty busy year. All three of them are doing TPC testing, all three are doing a bit of operations support, and they’re all attending a race.”
As to how much F1 testing each of them will get, Oakes said: “I don’t know off my head. I think there’s a little bit of a split, because obviously Franco has done a load of grands prix, Paul Aron hasn’t done anything and Ryo’s done probably a bit of everything, so there is a bit of a balance there.”
Additional reporting by Oleg Karpov
In this article
Ben Vinel
Formula 1
FIA F2
Ryo Hirakawa
Kush Maini
Franco Colapinto
Paul Aron
Alpine
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There will be fresh blood aplenty in Free Practice 1 sessions this Formula 1 season, with teams required to run rookies twice in each of their cars (or entries, to be precise).
To be frank, a rookie’s FP1 outing is usually not the headliner of an F1 grand prix. Teams often leave it until the very last second to tick that box, leaving young drivers with what are effectively the most ‘perfunctory’ sessions of the year: something like FP1 in Abu Dhabi, in conditions well detached from those of the actual grand prix, or in Canada, on a street track with oft-suboptimal weather.
These rookie outings rarely include performance runs, with engineers preferring to steer young drivers away from any tasks that carry high damage risks. Which, as Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s outing in Monza showed last year, isn’t the worst idea, given how motivated youngsters are to catch the eye.
As a result, rookie drivers are often delegated with aero rake running, which will sometimes come with an instruction to avoid the kerbs at all cost and stay below a certain speed on the straights.
Despite all this, the architects of the rule have enough evidence to deem it a success already. Take Franco Colapinto as an example – James Vowles has repeatedly acknowledged that it was the Argentine’s performance during first practice at Silverstone that had given him the confidence to promote the youngster into a race seat. Without the rule in place, there’s good reason to believe it would have been Mick Schumacher, not Colapinto, stepping into the Williams.
And while Oliver Bearman may have announced himself to the outside world in Saudi Arabia, he’d crucially impressed his current team boss Ayao Komatsu about half a year prior, when he’d carried out a perfect, mistake-free FP1 programme on a dusty track in Mexico. His Jeddah heroics needed only to reinforce Komatsu’s already held view of Bearman – and even a troubled F2 campaign wasn’t a meaningful obstacle to the Briton’s 2025 Haas contract.
Ayao Komatsu and Oliver Bearman
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
While the rookie rule may be a burden for some teams – in most cases they would naturally prefer to maximise their race drivers’ time behind the wheel – it does work. There is a case to be made that it’s a significant factor behind a nearly one-third refresh of the F1 grid this year.
Rookie pass
It’s worth remembering that not every team will have to sideline one of its regulars on all four occasions this year, as some regular race drivers qualify as rookies. As per the rules, rookies are those with “not more than two championship races in their career”. So the likes of Antonelli, Gabriel Bortoleto and Isack Hadjar won’t have to cede their cars to anyone – they will keep the status until the Bahrain Grand Prix, so will tick off their car’s two rookie FP1s in Australia and China.
The same is true for Jack Doohan, even though he already raced in Abu Dhabi last year. His rookie status will expire after the Chinese Grand Prix – but the first two FP1 sessions will still take place before that, fulfilling the requirement. As a result, only their team-mates – Pierre Gasly, George Russell, Yuki Tsunoda and Nico Hulkenberg – will have to give up their cars during the season.
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Another relevant detail is that F1 has retained the ‘Free Practice Super Licence’ rule, widening the scope of drivers eligible to participate beyond the current pool of superlicence holders.
A practice-only licence requires just 25 points rather than 40 – though a previous 300km in an F1 car is needed, for instance through a team’s TPC (Testing of Previous Cars) programme.
Who will drive for the top teams?
Rookie FP1s are most relevant for those teams with highly regarded prospects, and Red Bull almost always falls in that category. It’s easy to imagine that Christian Horner and Helmut Marko will want to evaluate Arvid Lindblad as much as possible, now that he has already amassed the requisite superlicence points and given that, with a successful F2 season, he could well end up on the grid in 2026 – if not earlier. Good FP1 outings would help fast-track him – and a runout in the spring could be logical. At the same time, Red Bull also has two other potentially relevant juniors in F2, Oliver Goethe and Pepe Marti.
Arvid Lindblad
Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool
On Ferrari’s end, the success of the Bearman experiment means, ironically, that there’s no obvious candidate this time. You’d expect Arthur Leclerc, Charles’s brother, to get another practice outing or two, but it looks as if Ferrari Driver Academy’s Dino Beganovic is being readied as next in line, having already secured 40 superlicence points. The team ran him in its private Bracelona test earlier this year, though it kept largely quiet about it.
Antonelli’s promotion means rookie sessions are less obvious to fill for Mercedes again – especially as its new reserve driver Valtteri Bottas exceeds the rookie criterion by 250 starts or so. Frederik Vesti will probably get the nod.
McLaren is in a similar situation. Last year, IndyCar driver Pato O’Ward popped up in practice – as did Ryo Hirakawa, whose outing in Abu Dhabi was a surprise to many. Hirakawa is no longer an option, having aligned with Alpine instead, whereas O’Ward will surely get another session or two. There’s also surely a possibility McLaren would want to see what it’s got in junior Ugo Ugochukwu, whose win in Macau last year pushed him past the required points threshold.
What about the rest?
Aston Martin is likely to give all four of its rookie practice outings to Felipe Drugovich, who’s re-signed as the team’s reserve driver.
Alpine won’t have too much of an issue finding an appropriate candidate either. In addition to the aforementioned Hirakawa, it now has Paul Aron on its books – and already ran him in the post-season young driver test last year.
Racing Bulls only needs to check off two sessions, thanks to Hadjar’s promotion. Lindblad will likely be in the car, while – given the ongoing relationship with Honda – there’d be logic in deploying Ayumu Iwasa in Japan again, as the team did last year.
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There is considerably less clarity about the three remaining teams.
Ritomo Miyata
Photo by: Eric Le Galliot
At Haas you’d certainly expect Toyota protege Ritomo Miyata to drive, given he already had a TPC outing at Jerez in January and has the requisite licence points through his titles in Japan. Also in the picture here is Pietro Fittipaldi, who remains a rookie by regulation despite his two starts in 2020 – though his role at Haas for 2025 isn’t confirmed as it stands. Oliver Bearman, thanks to his three stand-in starts last year, no longer fulfills the quota.
Luke Browning is best-positioned to get some more FP1 sessions at Williams, especially given it’s a post-Colapinto Williams that has also split with another junior in Zak O’Sullivan.
At Sauber it looks like a clean slate. Long-time protege Theo Pourchaire has been released, but last year he was already watching from the sidelines as Robert Shwartzman, highly rated by Mattia Binotto, drove the car instead. The Russian-Israeli driver, however, is now starting his new racing life in the US as an IndyCar driver, so a surprise outside candidate would make sense here.
In this article
Oleg Karpov
Formula 1
Ryo Hirakawa
Frederik Vesti
Arthur Leclerc
Paul Aron
Dino Beganovic
Arvid Lindblad
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There will be fresh blood aplenty in Free Practice 1 sessions this Formula 1 season, with teams required to run rookies twice in each of their cars.
To be frank, a rookie’s FP1 outing is usually not the headliner of an F1 grand prix. Teams often leave it until the very last second to tick that box, leaving young drivers with what are effectively the most ‘perfunctory’ sessions of the year: something like FP1 in Abu Dhabi, in conditions well detached from those of the actual grand prix, or in Canada, on a street track with oft-suboptimal weather.
These rookie outings rarely include performance runs, with engineers preferring to steer young drivers away from any tasks that carry high damage risks. A notion that, as Andrea Kimi Antonelli’s outing in Monza showed last year, isn’t the worst idea, given how motivated youngsters are to catch the eye.
As a result, rookie drivers are often delegated with aero rake running, which will sometimes come with an instruction to avoid the kerbs at all cost and stay below a certain speed on the straights.
Despite all this, the architects of the rule have enough evidence to deem it a success already. Take Franco Colapinto as an example – James Vowles has repeatedly acknowledged that it was the Argentine’s performance during first practice at Silverstone that had given him the confidence to promote the youngster into a race seat. Without the rule in place, there’s good reason to believe it would have been Mick Schumacher, not Colapinto, stepping into the Williams.
And while Oliver Bearman may have announced himself to the outside world in Saudi Arabia, he’d crucially impressed his current team boss Ayao Komatsu about half a year prior, when he’d carried out a perfect, mistake-free FP1 programme on a dusty track in Mexico. His Jeddah heroics needed only to reinforce Komatsu’s already held view of Bearman – and even a troubled F2 campaign wasn’t a meaningful obstacle to the Briton’s 2025 Haas contract.
Ayao Komatsu and Oliver Bearman
Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images
While the rookie rule may be a burden for some teams – in most cases they would naturally prefer to maximise their race drivers’ time behind the wheel – it does work. There is a case to be made that it’s a significant factor behind a near one-third refresh of the F1 grid this year.
Rookie pass
It’s worth remembering that not every team will have to sideline one of its regulars on all four occasions this year, as some regular race drivers qualify as rookies. As per the rules, rookies are those with “not more than two championship races in their career”. So the likes of Antonelli, Gabriel Bortoleto and Isack Hadjar won’t have to cede their cars to anyone – they will keep the status until the Bahrain Grand Prix, so will tick off their car’s two rookie FP1s in Australia and China.
The same is true for Jack Doohan, even though he already raced in Abu Dhabi last year. His rookie status will expire after the Chinese Grand Prix – but the first two FP1 sessions will still take place before that, fulfilling the requirement. As a result, only their team-mates – Pierre Gasly, George Russell, Yuki Tsunoda and Nico Hulkenberg – will have to give up their cars on two outings during the season.
Read Also:
Another relevant detail is that F1 has retained the ‘Free Practice Superlicence’ rule, widening the scope of drivers eligible to participate beyond the current pool of superlicence holders.
A practice-only licence requires just 25 points rather than 40 – though a previous 300km in an F1 car is needed, for instance through a team’s TPC (Testing of Previous Cars) programme.
Who will drive for the top teams?
Rookie FP1s are most relevant for those teams with highly regarded prospects, and Red Bull almost always falls in that category. It’s easy to imagine that Christian Horner and Helmut Marko will want to evaluate Arvid Lindblad as much as possible, now that he has already amassed the requisite superlicence points and given that, with a successful F2 season, he could well end up on the grid in 2026 – if not earlier. Good FP1 outings would help fast-track him – and a runout in the spring could be logical. At the same time, Red Bull also has two other potentially relevant juniors in F2, Oliver Goethe and Pepe Marti.
Arvid Lindblad
Photo by: Red Bull Content Pool
On Ferrari’s end, the success of the Bearman experiment means, ironically, that there’s no obvious candidate this time. You’d expect Arthur Leclerc, Charles’s brother, to get another practice outing or two, but it looks as if Ferrari Driver Academy’s Dino Beganovic is being readied as next in line, having already secured 40 superlicence points. The team ran him in its private Barcelona test earlier this year, though it kept largely quiet about it.
Antonelli’s promotion means rookie sessions are less obvious to fill for Mercedes again – especially as its new reserve driver Valtteri Bottas exceeds the rookie criterion by 250 starts or so. Frederik Vesti will probably get the nod.
McLaren is in a similar situation. Last year, IndyCar driver Pato O’Ward popped up in practice – as did Ryo Hirakawa, whose outing in Abu Dhabi was a surprise to many. Hirakawa is no longer an option, having aligned with Alpine instead, whereas O’Ward will surely get another session or two. There’s also surely a possibility McLaren would want to see what it’s got in junior Ugo Ugochukwu, whose win in Macau last year pushed him past the required points threshold.
What about the rest?
Aston Martin is likely to give all four of its rookie practice outings to Felipe Drugovich, who’s re-signed as the team’s reserve driver.
Alpine won’t have too much of an issue finding an appropriate candidate either. In addition to the aforementioned Hirakawa, it now has Paul Aron on its books – and already ran him in the post-season young driver test last year.
Racing Bulls only needs to check off two sessions, thanks to Hadjar’s promotion. Lindblad will likely be in the car, while – given the ongoing relationship with Honda – there’d be logic in deploying Ayumu Iwasa in Japan again, as the team did last year.
There is considerably less clarity about the three remaining teams.
#37 Cool Racing Oreca 07 – Gibson: Ritomo Miyata
Photo by: Eric Le Galliot
At Haas you’d certainly expect Toyota protege Ritomo Miyata to drive, given he already had a TPC outing at Jerez in January and has the requisite licence points through his titles in Japan. Also in the picture here is Pietro Fittipaldi, who remains a rookie by regulation despite his two starts in 2020 – though his role at Haas for 2025 isn’t confirmed as it stands. Bearman, thanks to his three stand-in starts last year, no longer fulfils the quota.
Luke Browning is best-positioned to get some more FP1 sessions at Williams, especially given it’s a post-Colapinto Williams that has also split with another junior in Zak O’Sullivan.
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At Sauber it looks like a clean slate. Long-time protege Theo Pourchaire has been released, but last year he was already watching from the sidelines as Robert Shwartzman, highly rated by boss Mattia Binotto, drove the car instead. The Russian-Israeli driver, however, is now starting his new racing life in the US as an IndyCar driver, so a surprise outside candidate would make sense here.
In this article
Oleg Karpov
Formula 1
Frederik Vesti
Ryo Hirakawa
Arthur Leclerc
Paul Aron
Dino Beganovic
Arvid Lindblad
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