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Alfa Romeo announces launch date for 2023 F1 car

Alfa Romeo has become the latest team to announce its launch plans, with its new Formula 1 car to be unveiled on February 7.

Alfa Romeo C42

Photo by: Alfa Romeo

The Swiss squad, which is embarking on its last season under the moniker of the Italian car manufacturer, plans to reveal its C43 in Zurich on that day.

The launch will then likely be followed soon after by a filming day at Barcelona to iron out any early teething problems before the only pre-season test takes place in Bahrain from February 23.

Alfa Romeo made some encouraging progress last year, as both Valtteri Bottas and Guanyu Zhou produced some very strong performances – especially in the opening phase of the campaign.

However, poor reliability throughout the season compromised its chances of scoring better points and it eventually finished sixth in the constructors' championship – tied with Aston Martin behind it but taking the place thanks to countback.

Bottas and Zhou have been retained for the 2023 season but the squad will have changes elsewhere, with team principal Fred Vasseur having left to join Ferrari as a replacement for Mattia Binotto.

No new boss has yet been announced, but it was revealed over the winter that former McLaren team principal Andreas Seidl was joining the parent Sauber company as its new CEO ahead of its transition to Audi.

 

The team is well aware of the areas that it needs to improve this season, with the second-half slump of 2022 something that has highlighted weaknesses within the organisation.

Speaking over the winter, Bottas felt that, as well as improving its reliability, Alfa Romeo needed to lift its rate of car development if it was to stay competitive in the midfield.

"It's a fact one of our weaknesses was the speed of bringing the upgrades," Bottas told Motorsport.com.

"That was quite a lot down to production, just not having enough human power to produce the parts. While some other teams, for example Mercedes, at this moment, they definitely have more people and more power to produce things quicker.

"And also all the reliability issues we had, a lot of the focus and energy was focused on trying to fix those instead of trying to develop the car. So that distracted us quite a bit in the middle part of the year.

"Now that we've got the reliability, let's say, at a good level, we again can just purely focus on the performance."

F1 2023 – Confirmed launch dates

3 February Red Bull
6 February Williams (livery)
7 February Alfa Romeo
11 February AlphaTauri (livery)
13 February McLaren and Aston Martin
14 February Ferrari
15 February Mercedes
16 February Alpine

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