Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Recommended for you

F1 Academy confirms first wild card entry of 2026 as 2025 driver returns

F1 Academy
F1 Academy
Shanghai
F1 Academy confirms first wild card entry of 2026 as 2025 driver returns

NASCAR smashes a Guinness World Record for loudest billboard in NYC

NASCAR Cup
NASCAR Cup
Daytona 500
NASCAR smashes a Guinness World Record for loudest billboard in NYC

Every open entry fighting to qualify for the 2026 Daytona 500

NASCAR Cup
NASCAR Cup
Daytona 500
Every open entry fighting to qualify for the 2026 Daytona 500

How Aston Martin and Honda's expectation management ties into Newey's F1 design

Formula 1
Aston Martin launch
How Aston Martin and Honda's expectation management ties into Newey's F1 design

How to watch the 2026 Daytona 500, full NASCAR Speedweek schedule

NASCAR Cup
NASCAR Cup
Daytona 500
How to watch the 2026 Daytona 500, full NASCAR Speedweek schedule

Mercedes announces 2026 F1 Academy driver to replace Doriane Pin

F1 Academy
F1 Academy
Shanghai
Mercedes announces 2026 F1 Academy driver to replace Doriane Pin

Ralf Schumacher announces engagement to partner Étienne Bousquet-Cassagne

Formula 1
Formula 1
McLaren launch
Ralf Schumacher announces engagement to partner Étienne Bousquet-Cassagne

Jacob Abel prioritizing IMSA effort but still desires IndyCar return

IndyCar
IndyCar
Jacob Abel prioritizing IMSA effort but still desires IndyCar return

F1 2025 recap: Franco Colapinto wins the fight for Alpine’s second seat

As widely predicted before the start, Doohan didn't last the 2025 F1 season as he was replaced by Colapinto, but the Argentinian also suffered as Alpine's lack of development left it on the back foot

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Franco Colapinto, Alpine

Photo by: Zak Mauger / LAT Images via Getty Images

As Alpine chief Flavio Briatore demonstrated in 2025, Red Bull isn't the only organisation in Formula 1 capable of making brutal driver decisions. Rookie Jack Doohan was still getting started when a brace of incidents was enough for him to face the axe, with a high-speed Suzuka crash the most high-profile mistake that saw the Australian demoted to a reserve role after round six in Miami.

It meant we never got to see Doohan's ultimate potential, as despite his crashes it did feel like he was starting to get the hang of the difficult Alpine A525 and get closer to team-mate Pierre Gasly on one-lap pace. At the conclusion of the season, Doohan is still on the outside looking in, expecting to head to Super Formula in 2026 after conducting testing in Suzuka.

The truths is that barring spectacular rookie form, Doohan's place on the grid had already been undermined by the off-season signing of former Williams man Franco Colapinto.

Colapinto was initially brought on as part of a suite of reserve drivers, and the affable Argentinian was able to bring significant backing from South American sponsors. That is no slight against Colapinto's driving qualities, but with all else being equal it's also not hard to see why Doohan was on a shorter leash than Colapinto has been since his promotion.

Stepping into a new car mid-season was not necessarily a great birthday gift for Colapinto, who turned 22 in May, and certainly not when the car in question is the recalcitrant Alpine A525. While highly experienced Gasly was similarly struggling to get a tune out of the car, Colapinto had a much smaller body of work to fall back on as he tried to cope with the different driving style that Enstone's car required compared with what he was used to at Williams.

Franco Colapinto had some rough moments for Alpine

Franco Colapinto had some rough moments for Alpine

Photo by: Peter Fox / Getty Images

Despite a public admonishment from Briatore mid-season, Colapinto did just about enough to keep his seat until the end of the year and managed to get closer to Gasly on pace to extend that stay for 2026.

Colapinto finished the season being comprehensively outqualified by Gasly at 17-5 and with zero points to his name, with the latter being understandable given Alpine was the first team to stop developing its 2025 car and put all its focus on 2026.

"It's disappointing," Colapinto summed up his toothless 2025 Alpine campaign. "It's sometimes tricky to keep the motivation, but I'm quite happy that the team kept pushing all the way until the end. We tried our best, but we just didn't really have the pace.

“Towards the end it was worse because everyone kept bringing some upgrades and we couldn't really work the car anymore. But next year next year should be a much better one and I'm excited for that one."

As Alpine aims to become a competitive midfield force with Mercedes customer power units, its second seat may well increase in value over the next 12 months. Colapinto will have to progress with the team to make it his own in the long term. And rather quickly, too, before the unpredictable Briatore changes his mind once more.

Read Also:
Previous article Steve Nielsen on Alpine’s rebuild: I don’t believe “in a 100-race plan”
Next article Gabriel Bortoleto explains how bruising Brazil GP was also "the most amazing experience"

Top Comments

Latest news