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How Bortoleto has learned lessons from his nightmare home GP in Brazil

The Sauber rookie had two costly crashes in front of his home crowd at Interlagos

To say that the Brazilian GP was a weekend of mixed emotions for new local Formula 1 hero Gabriel Bortoleto would be something of an understatement.

On the positive side he had a huge amount of support, as evidenced by the number of Sauber shirts in the crowd, and the reception he received when he was singled out for special treatment during the drivers’ parade, with his own car and interview slot.

On the downside he had a huge crash in the sprint race while racing Alex Albon, and trying to make up for it after missing qualifying, he crashed again on the first lap of the main race while battling Lance Stroll.

Given how few mistakes he’s made in his rookie year it’s hard not to draw the conclusion that he tried a little too hard to impress in front of his home crowd, and simply overdid it.

To his credit he readily admitted that he took too many risks, and that he has learned some lessons – not least to be a little more cautious in a sprint, given that his team lost the race to build up the spare car for him for main qualifying.

“First of all, I need to congratulate the team, because they rebuilt a car from zero, and they almost made it work for qualifying,” he said when I asked him about missing the session. “So that’s not easy. They did an amazing job.

“And from what happened from my side, I tried the first lap of the move on Alex, and I managed to succeed, but then he overtook me back with DRS. And then on the second lap, I think was a combination of things. I went for the move, I divebombed him again. And DRS was on.

“I braked probably a little bit in the wet patches, and ended up that the car pointed completely to the left in the wall, and after that, I was just a passenger. You cannot control it. Just terrible.”

A local journalist likened the incident to one in China, when Bortoleto was taken out by Jack Doohan in the sprint, and then suggested that it was avoidable given they were “fighting for P19.”

Having considered the comparison, and given that he and Albon were actually racing just outside the points, Bortoleto came up with a sensible and logical answer.

“I’ve been used to fight always in the front in my previous series, and now in F1, I don’t have quite there the car yet,” he said. “So I need to fight at some point. And the whole year, I think I’ve been backing out and not being able to fight.

“But I think I need to learn and to test things as well, because the day that I hopefully will get a car to fight for championships, I cannot make such mistakes. And I believe things like today create better drivers – like everyone did, if you see Max Verstappen at the beginning of his career.”

Regarding the Shanghai comparison he said: “And coming back to China, I think I was upset with Jack, yes, because he literally locked up everything and ended up hitting me. But we talked after, and it was fine. Obviously, in the moment I was very upset.

“Today I made the move the lap before that ended up quite well. We didn’t crash into each other. And today, I don’t know, it was wet, I hit the wall. It was not even Alex, I ended up in the wall.

“So I am sorry for him, because I saw my front wing ended up hitting his car. I don’t know if had damage from that or not. But life moves on, and I hope I will learn from my mistakes in the future as well.”

It was always going to be tough from P20 on the grid, and thus it was a useful bonus that with Verstappen and Esteban Ocon in the pitlane, he actually started from P18.

After a good getaway he passed the delayed Lewis Hamilton and Franco Colapinto before he came across Stroll – and found himself in the barrier for the second time.

At the time he blamed the Aston Martin driver, but having reviewed a replay, by the time I asked him about it he’d changed his mind.

“It was a good start,” he said. “I overtook two cars, Lewis and Colapinto in the outside of Turn 6. It was a nice move. And then Lance, I was just side-by-side with him out of Turn 9.

“There’s no pointing fingers here, just lap one, and I was in the outside, he opened a little bit more than than what there was space there. He clipped my front tyre, and I ended up in the wall. I think it’s a racing incident.

“Obviously, if he had given a bit more space, I would have done the corner, probably overtaken him because he had worse tyres than I had, because I was on soft. But again, it’s a racing incident, he didn’t do it on purpose, I’m sure. Every time I fight with him, he’s fair with me. So just racing.”

Bortoleto is a very smart guy, and despite the obvious frustration he was able to rationalise what had happened over the previous couple of days. He had no one else to blame.

“Yeah, a tough weekend,” he said. “We can forget and move on. I just take the positives that my whole country was here supporting me, the Brazilians, and just sad because I have not been able to race today and show a bit of the pace that I believe we had.

“It comes from me, from my incident in the sprint race that caused me not to do quali. So I’m going to be the first one harsh on myself here.

“I believe it’s a consequence of things that happened earlier in the weekend. But anyway, obviously it’s more painful because it’s my home race. But it’s just another weekend.

“We had so many good ones. We had bad ones as well, and there’s nothing I can do about it. I just need to move on, analyse things and learn from my mistakes and go for the next one.”

So what sort of lessons had he learned?

“I think just risk management, I think I’m happy that I’ve been trying to do different things this weekend, being more aggressive and trying things.

“But a sprint race, it’s probably not the best moment to try a risky thing when you can break your car and not do qualifying like I did. So that’s for sure learning.”

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Bortoleto’s Q3 debut shows that he’s learning fast at Sauber

The Brazilian will start the Austrian GP from an encouraging P8

While his fellow 2025 Formula 1 rookies Kimi Antonelli and Isack Hadjar have been in the spotlight Gabriel Bortoleto has been making quiet progress at Sauber.

He’s been overshadowed of late by strong race performances from team mate Nico Hulkenberg, but he has outqualified the German on several occasions, and he did so again in Austria.

Helped by another round of updates the Brazilian was quick from the start of the weekend at a track where he’d been successful in the junior categories.

Eighth in FP2 and 10th in FP3 suggested that he had a real shot at his first Q3 appearance, and he duly went through the three qualifying sessions in P8, P5 and P8.

On a day when Hulkenberg made a mistake and ended Q1 in 20th and last position it was a standout performance from the F3/F2 champion.

“I feel like the track is very special for me,” he said when I asked what had clicked for him. “But for sure I’m getting more and more experience with the car and the team and the series.

“It’s just the beginning. Is not even half of the season. I’ve been working very hard on understanding what I need from my side, from the car, and I feel like I’m getting more and more comfortable with it, and that I know what I need before even the weekend starts.

“And I feel like it’s the first weekend that I am that comfortable since FP1. And it feels like things are clicking for me, and I’m going in the right direction.”

What impressed was the way he was strong over all three qualifying sessions, rather than fading to P10 having made Q3.

“Well, it’s very promising, and hopefully we can achieve this type of qualifying every single time,” he said. “Obviously, it’s not easy.

“I feel like it’s a track that has been positive for the car and for me, but yeah, there’s a lot of to work still, and it’s not that we are comfortable in Q3 it has been a very tight quality and I’ve been putting some good laps together.

“The car was spot-on as well. And let’s see, let’s see how we go on to the end of the season.

“I feel like I’m getting more confident with the car, but not only from the upgrades, but also myself on understanding. At the beginning of the season, when you jump in the car, it’s basically a different feeling.

“It’s like every single FP1 is, you don’t know how the car is going to behave. But then when you get used to the car, more and more, you start putting it in the limits earlier in the weekend, and you work on more in yourself, on the driving and the setup. And I feel like we have been going in this direction this weekend.”

The target now has to be his points of the season. He’s got Ma Verstappen in front of him, and Kimi Antonelli in a potentially quicker Mercedes behind, so he’s going to have to pick his fights.

“It doesn’t change so much my approach in the start. I’m going to try to do the best start possible gain some positions. If I cannot gain, I’m going to try to keep there, and try to make the best race pace I can score points tomorrow.

“Obviously, it makes no sense fighting with people you cannot stay ahead of. But for sure, I’m a racer, I’m going to try to gain the positions early in the race and see what happens.

“But I’m not going to be focusing on overtaking people that I know probably have better pace than me, like Verstappen, because you probably just destroy your tyres doing this. So we need to focus racing with people that we actually know we can.”

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