Skip to main content

Recommended for you

Denny Hamlin: NASCAR appeals hearing ‘not a fair fight’

NASCAR Cup
Watkins Glen
Denny Hamlin: NASCAR appeals hearing ‘not a fair fight’

McLaren unveils special Indy 500 liveries

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
McLaren unveils special Indy 500 liveries

Winners and losers from a split strategy NASCAR cup race at Watkins Glen

NASCAR Cup
Watkins Glen
Winners and losers from a split strategy NASCAR cup race at Watkins Glen

24 Hours of Nurburgring weekend tickets sell out for first time ahead of Max Verstappen debut

NLS
24 Hours of Nurburgring weekend tickets sell out for first time ahead of Max Verstappen debut

IndyCar alters qualifying format for 2026 Indianapolis 500

IndyCar
110th Running of the Indianapolis 500
IndyCar alters qualifying format for 2026 Indianapolis 500

It’s been one year since Kyle Larson’s last NASCAR Cup win

NASCAR Cup
Watkins Glen
It’s been one year since Kyle Larson’s last NASCAR Cup win

How Rally Portugal served up WRC redemption for Neuville 

Feature
WRC
Feature
Rally Portugal
How Rally Portugal served up WRC redemption for Neuville 

Mick Schumacher's top 12 run ends with a penalty after spinning Santino Ferrucci

IndyCar
Indianapolis Road Course
Mick Schumacher's top 12 run ends with a penalty after spinning Santino Ferrucci

Tsunoda pays tribute to “biggest supporter” Tost after AlphaTauri F1 exit

Yuki Tsunoda has paid tribute to “biggest supporter” Franz Tost, the outgoing AlphaTauri Formula 1 boss who stopped the driver from ‘getting lost’ during his formative seasons.

Franz Tost, Team Principal, Scuderia AlphaTauri, Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri

Tost has spent 18 years at the helm of the Faenza outfit formerly known as Toro Rosso. In its role as a Red Bull junior team, Tost has notably presided over Sebastian Vettel, Max Verstappen, Daniel Ricciardo, Carlos Sainz and Alex Albon.

He was also a big backer of Tsunoda, who in 2024 will contest his fourth season for the team. The current AlphaTauri racer reckons Tost’s “backup” was key to him remaining on the right path, saying: “Obviously, without Franz, I'm not here [in F1]. He is definitely giving me a lot of advice every race.

“Even in the bad moments, good moments, we share with each other the happiness or sadness. He is always the biggest supporter in the team.

“He always trusts my talent, my speed, everything. Even in the first half of the season when I was struggling in my first year, still he was believing that I can do it. Without that kind of good backup, I wouldn't have been able to develop as much as a driver.

“Probably I would rush much more and just lost the way I should have gone. How he treated in that time was really helpful.”

Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri AT04

Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri AT04

 

When there were periods of uncertainty regarding Tsunoda’s F1 future, Tost waded in to say that an F1 driver needs three seasons to prove they can compete at the top level.

Asked if this was a fair timeline, Tsunoda replied: “First year, there was multiple reasons, but I wasn’t able to really show a performance in the first half of the season especially.

“But from last year, I started to get better and my confidence getting better. Now I am just really focusing more to be complete driver, not just be fast.

“Also giving feedback for development or how mature you can be in a difficult situation, those are my targets.

“Every year I am able to find my weakness, which is good thing and I have been just working on that.”

During Tost’s tenure, the team won the 2008 (Vettel) and 2020 (Pierre Gasly) Italian Grands Prix.

But AlphaTauri came unstuck upon the arrival of the ground-effects regulations in 2022, falling from sixth to ninth in the constructors’ championship. It was then bottom throughout the middle part of this season before an aggressive string of upgrades paved the way for a late climb to eighth place.

Tost wrung out the changes to the aerodynamic department to arrest the dip but after the death of Red Bull co-owner Dietrich Mateschitz last year and a change of senior management, the long-serving boss’s exit was announced in late April. His replacement is Ferrari sporting director Laurent Mekies.

Read Also:
Previous article Perez opens up on F1 2023 slump - "I cannot be this bad, something's going on"
Next article How to be an ace engineer: Engine designer John Judd

Top Comments

Latest news