Why Oliver Bearman was so much faster than Franco Colapinto when he crashed
Haas team boss Komatsu has explained the ins and outs of Bearman’s scary Suzuka crash in detail
Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team, Franco Colapinto, Alpine
Photo by: Mark Thompson / Getty Images
Haas Formula 1 team principal Ayao Komatsu has absolved Franco Colapinto of any blame after Oliver Bearman crashed out of the Japanese Grand Prix.
After qualifying a lowly 18th and making an earlier pitstop than most, Bearman was battling Colapinto for 17th when he lost control at 308km/h coming into Spoon, crashing his Haas car with a 50G impact. The young Briton hobbled out of his car and was diagnosed with a right knee contusion.
The incident was triggered by a 45km/h speed difference with the Alpine, which Komatsu has explained was down to different energy management tactics.
“Leading up to that Turn 13, Colapinto, he was always doing something consistent, it's not his fault at all,” Komatsu said. “The lap before, his speed was exactly the same, so we knew what we were dealing with.
“It's just that we are deploying more through there, so even with normal laps, we had a 20km/h advantage. That's why he wanted to go for that. Then he used the boost button, but then that meant speed [difference] there is 50km/h,” he added – the FIA confirmed the exact figure to be 45km/h.
“So I'm sure you guys saw on the onboard, the closing speed was massive, and he just misjudged it. So it's one of the things I think we talked about, you know, with this regulation – closing speed could become an issue. So unfortunately, that was one of those incidents.
“Of course, he's kicking himself, he's saying like, ‘I should have done better, no excuse’. But, you know, you look at it, that 50km/h difference in closing speed is massive. So it's a lesson, so I'm sure, you know, we talk about it in terms of our future, how we can improve, so it's part of it.
“I'm just glad that he didn't have a big injury. He hit his knee hard, but he's okay.”
Oliver Bearman, Haas F1 Team car after his crash
Photo by: Kym Illman / Getty Images
While he made it clear that Colapinto wasn’t responsible for the incident, Komatsu also refused to put the blame on Bearman.
Asked if the incident was caused by a mixture of driver error and F1’s new rules, the Japanese replied: “‘Error’ is a big strong word, to be honest. You could say ‘small misjudgement’, but it's scary though, that closing speed. When I look on the GPS lap before, it's totally understandable and the correct decision to go for it there, but it's just huge.
“This is only the third race in this regulation, so that's something he's never experienced. So I don't even call it ‘error’, you know. It's just something I think we should be aware as an F1 community and maybe see what we can improve to mitigate that, because it could have been a lot worse, right? So I'm really glad that he didn't break anything. His knee has been thrown up, but it's nothing bad.”
Photos from Japanese GP - Sunday
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
Japanese GP - Sunday, in photos
We want your opinion!
What would you like to see on Motorsport.com?
Take our 5 minute survey.- The Motorsport.com Team
Share Or Save This Story
Cadillac details new F1 upgrade package for Canadian GP
Honda reveals “important target” for F1 Canadian GP
How Colton Herta is chasing his F1 dream
Lewis Hamilton and Franco Colapinto share “wholesome” moment after Miami GP contact: “Good sportsmanship”
Alpine wants more after Colapinto's "most perfect weekend" at Miami GP
Forget the terrible luck; Colapinto's tenacious Shanghai drive deserves credit
Ollie Bearman admits F2 did not prepare him for brutal reality of Ferrari F1 debut
Ollie Bearman reveals biggest lesson from rookie F1 season
Exclusive: Ahead of Red Bull – is Haas the unsung hero of the early F1 races?
Latest news
Kevin Harvick on Natalie Decker: "I don't like to see a mockery made out of what our sport is"
The milk of choice for every 2026 Indy 500 driver
Enter the simulation - How GM tech accelerated Cadillac's F1 entry
NASCAR on Prime trackside coverage to feature several Cup Series legends
Feature
The F1 power unit formula solution that could suit all parties
How F1's ADUO system works
How Colton Herta is chasing his F1 dream
How Formula 1 driving has changed – and stayed the same
Subscribe and access Motorsport.com with your ad-blocker.
From Formula 1 to MotoGP we report straight from the paddock because we love our sport, just like you. In order to keep delivering our expert journalism, our website uses advertising. Still, we want to give you the opportunity to enjoy an ad-free and tracker-free website and to continue using your adblocker.
You have 2 options:
- Become a subscriber.
- Disable your adblocker.
Top Comments