Aussie Doohan part of biggest F1 youth intake in years

AUSTRALIAN JACK DOOHAN IS JUST ONE OF A GROUP OF YOUNG DRIVERS HOPING TO HIT THEIR MARK IN FORMULA ONE THIS SEASON:-

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JACK DOOHAN:

The son of legendary motorcycle world champion Mick Doohan enters 2025 with his Formula One career under threat as soon as it has begun. Alpineā€™s decision to sign ex-Williams driver Franco Colapinto as a reserve means a would-be replacement is available if Doohan doesnā€™t impress team management. ā€œYouā€™re always going to have pressure on your shoulders because youā€™re in such a cut-throat sport,ā€ Doohan said. The Australian driver placed third in F2 in 2023 but didnā€™t race at all last year until a surprise entry for the season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Finishing 15th, he was far off the pace of teammate Pierre Gasly in seventh.

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ANDREA KIMI ANTONELLI:

Andrea Kimi Antonelli, an 18-year-old Italian, is Lewis Hamiltonā€™s successor at Mercedes. Stepping into a seven-time championā€™s shoes at Mercedes puts the spotlight on Antonelli, who is set to become the third-youngest F1 driver ever. The Italian wants to be known as just ā€œthe next Mercedes driverā€ because of Hamiltonā€™s legacy. The first time Antonelli visited an F1 paddock was age eight in 2014 when his father Marco, who ran a team in a support series, hid him in a stack of tyres under an umbrella to get past security and into the German Grand Prix. ā€œThat was a really cool experience,ā€ he said last month. Antonelli had a stellar record in junior series and was sixth in F2 last year but a heavy crash in practice for Mercedes at Monza in August was a tough introduction to F1.

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LIAM LAWSON:

The Red Bull driver is the odd man out in this list because heā€™s taken part in 11 F1 races since 2023, though never a full season. He says heā€™ll feel ā€œmore like a rookieā€ at the start of the season on tracks he hasnā€™t raced before. Partnering four-time champion Max Verstappen as the replacement for Sergio Perez is a daunting task for Lawson, who knocked Verstappen out of qualifying in only his third F1 race in Singapore in 2023. The New Zealander needs to justify Red Bullā€™s decision to elevate him over his 2024 teammate ā€“ and former roommate ā€“ Yuki Tsunoda, who outperformed Lawson over their six races together last year.

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OLIVER BEARMAN:

Itā€™s less than a year since Bearman burst onto the scene in F1 with a combative seventh-place finish for Ferrari in Saudi Arabia while Carlos Sainz Jr. was sidelined because of surgery. Heā€™d never previously raced in Jeddah and was racing with two daysā€™ notice. Bearman beat experienced teammate Nico HĆ¼lkenberg in two races for Haas later that year and is now a full-time Haas driver for 2025. Bearman remains part of Ferrariā€™s junior program but displacing regular Ferrari drivers Lewis Hamilton and Charles Leclerc is unlikely any time soon.

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ISACK HADJAR:

Lawsonā€™s promotion to Red Bull left an opening at their second team, now rebranded Racing Bulls, for F2 runner-up Hadjar. The French driver arrives at a team with a history of changing drivers mid-season if they donā€™t perform. Even Australiaā€™s eight-time Grand Prix winner Daniel Ricciardo didnā€™t last a full year there in 2024.

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GABRIEL BORTOLETO:

Despite winning the F2 title last season, beating Hadjar, Antonelli and Bearman, Bortoletoā€™s arrival in F1 has been overshadowed by his former rivals. Thatā€™s partly because his new team Sauber struggled last year and is marking time before a full rebrand as the Audi works team in 2026. With a helmet design paying tribute to three-time champion Ayrton Senna, Bortoleto is F1ā€™s first full-time Brazilian driver since 2017.

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(Australian Associated Press)

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