Rookie Piastri follows Mark Webber and Daniel Ricciardo in a line of Australian drivers in Formula 1.
I think we’ve all seen session after session the opportunities he identifies himself or with his engineers, the next session he goes and he capitalizes, so this has been a repeated characteristic so far.” This will be the first time that I've raced at Albert Park and I’m sure it will be an experience that I remember.” “I grew up in the suburbs of the city and it is a special feeling to be returning as an F1 driver. Last year, Piastri had to watch the race from the sidelines, as Alpine’s reserve driver, a few days after celebrating his 21st birthday at a beachfront bar in Brighton. However, Piastri has never before raced at Albert Park, or even in any single-seater category in Australia, having left for England as a teenager to pursue his Formula 1 dream. Formula 1 rolls back into the sports-mad city of Melbourne for the Australian Grand Prix and Round 3 of the 2023 season.
Australian Formula One driver Oscar Piastri will race at his home-based Grand Prix for the first time this weekend and will do so as the only local on the ...
I think he won everything in his junior career in F2 and F3 so I think he can do a good job,” he told Sky News Australia host Peter Stefanovic on Friday ahead of the first practice session. “But obviously we are growing and hopefully we can get into the points. Hopefully we finish sixth or seventh.” “Our aim is always to get better year after year. Australian Formula One driver Oscar Piastri will race at his home-based Grand Prix for the first time this weekend and will do so as the only local on the grid. McLaren's Oscar Piastri to take on Albert Park in an F1 car for the first time as the lone Australian and fan favourite
Melbourne-born driver can barely contain his excitement ahead of taking to the Albert Park track at the Australian F1 Grand Prix.
"But then when I jumped in the car in (practice one) ... I was physically limited, and that's really frustrating when you're out in the car. about 10 kilometres from the track," said Piastri of his family home in Oakleigh in Melbourne's inner-south. "I'm sure this year is going to be no different." His McLaren teammate Lando Norris fared similar, placing 17th twice as Red Bull's Max Verstappen and Sergio Perez logged one-two finishes with a win each. "I grew up ...
Oscar Piastri needs to be aware of exhausting himself with PR demands in the build-up to his home race warned Damon Hill.
“I grew up in the suburbs of the city and it is a special feeling to be returning as an F1 driver. I’m really looking forward to seeing all of the home crowd and all of the papaya fans. The weather is usually changeable here so it could be an interesting one.” “It can be exhausting,” the 1996 World Champion told AAP. But if you don’t deliver it can be quite hard to take. “It’s set to be a fantastic atmosphere and I can’t wait to get there and be a part of it.
The McLaren rookie is only a few races into his F1 career, but he's not stranger to the spotlight — or to controversy.
“It’s easy for me to go in and work on the sim and work with the engineers, but also to get to know the team better,” he said. “The reception I had and the experience of being there was nuts,” he said, explaining that he “got asked to sign a few weird things,” including a packet of crackers. Piastri gave the team its brightest point of the opening two rounds in Saudi Arabia, qualifying ninth, only for damage on the opening lap to force him to pit very early, leaving him with a P15 finish. Still, Piastri is hardly a like-for-like replacement for Ricciardo, much of whose popularity has been built on being a life-of-the-party character, a big talker made for “Drive to Survive.” But as it focused on retaining Fernando Alonso, who was out of contract at the end of 2022, it tried to loan Piastri to the backmarker Williams squad for a couple of years, similar to how Mercedes placed George Russell at the team from 2019 to 2021. Piastri and McLaren didn’t rise to the war of words but were also left open to paddock speculation over their actions: Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said he thought “some of the kids should be wary on Twitter.” F2 — the final stop before the big time — is where drivers have to deal with mid-race pit stops and different compounds of tires for the first time and do it in a car that needs to be driven on a knife-edge to deliver peak performance. It hastily issued a press release claiming Piastri would partner Esteban Ocon in 2023, even though Piastri had made clear privately he would not be racing for the team next year. Alpine made Piastri its reserve driver and gave him an extensive private testing program that promised, in an era of limited track time, to make him one of the best-prepared rookies by the time he eventually got the chance to make the step to F1. He managed that at 13 years old, as a grid kid for the pre-race ceremony in 2015, tasked with holding a flag in front of Red Bull driver Daniil Kvyat’s grid spot. He would watch on TV as drivers like Fernando Alonso and Mark Webber put in laps before running outside to listen to the tones of the V8 engines. Oscar Piastri already knows what it’s like to be the talk of the paddock.
Oscar Piastri has opened up about his previous visits to the Australian Grand Prix ahead of his debut Formula 1 race at his home track.
"I think compared to the previous two tracks," Piastri continued, optimistically, "here should be more like Saudi, I hope. I was holding Daniil Kvyat’s flag and he broke down on the lap to the grid, so I never actually got to see him! "I was a Grid Kid, actually, for
Two-time world champion Max Verstappen had mixed results in the opening Formula 1 practice session on the Albert Park track, recording the quickest lap ...
You can’t really tell the difference between him here or at Saudi [Arabia] or at Bahrain, and I think that’s what’s going to make him a really good grand prix driver.” “They were both trying slightly different things. “If you look at Aston, they’ve done a fantastic job. “You can obviously clearly tell around the track that there’s Oscar-mania if you like. Piastri, who took the McLaren around Albert Park for the first time in his career, finished slightly off the pace of teammate Lando Norris, whose quickest lap was more than a quarter of a second faster than Piastri’s. “Neither of them were absolutely happy with the balance of the car,” Horner said.
The first-season driver, who grew up in a nearby suburb to the Albert Park circuit, was chosen as a flag holder for Toro Rosso Ferrari driver Daniil Kyvat in ...
“I think (in) the first lap, I probably could have done a few things differently and maybe kept myself out of trouble a bit better. Piastri impressed in qualifying for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in mid-March, finishing eighth. (It will be) nice to get out on the racetrack in Australia.” “I played Aussie rules football and cricket on some of the ovals that are now the paddock, so (it is) very special to be at home this weekend,” he said. Piastri retired in the opening race in Bahrain, while Norris finished 17th. “(It will be) pretty special to have someone holding my flag this time.”
Taking his place among the 20 drivers on the Formula 1 grid is a dream that could have easily never happened for Australian Oscar Piastri.
"If it got to that point, of having to do more and more seasons … Piastri admits his championship winning streak will not continue this year. adults and beating them," Piastri's junior karting coach James Sera said. "The first dream was getting to F1 and the second was becoming world champion," he said. "I think everyone else in the restaurant was looking at us," Sera said. "In the racing scene, it's a pretty big deal." in the world to ever do what he's done," Sera said. "I remember hitting the stopwatch or changing the stopwatch to another one because I thought, 'It can't be right, he can't be that fast already'," he said. "He used to stand on a milk crate to actually see over the railing to see his car driving around the track." what a racing line was, how to get around corners the best way," he said. "Getting closer to F1, it was more and more difficult [financially]," Piastri said, adding this was particularly the case in the Formula 2 category in 2021. "I started driving that around in the backyard or school oval at one point," Piastri said.
Oscar Piastri is an Australian racing driver who has been making a name for himself in various international motorsport events. Born in Melbourne in 2001,
The Melbourne F1 Grand Prix is an unforgettable event that’s not to be missed by any motorsport enthusiast visiting Melbourne. The Melbourne F1 Grand Prix is a true spectacle that’s not just limited to racing. Oscar Piastri is an Australian racing driver who has been making a name for himself in various international motorsport events.
Oscar is returning to his home city, also the home of Dubber's global headquarters, for the Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park on 2nd April 2023. Dubber and ...
Dubber enables Service Providers to unlock the potential of the network – turning every conversation into an exponential source of value for differentiated innovation, retention and revenue. “We are delighted to be partnering with Oscar as he embarks on the start of his F1 journey. Oscar Piastri, F1 driver, added: “I am massively grateful to Dubber for their backing and support. Oscar secured a record-breaking run of three consecutive championship titles in Formula Renault Eurocup, Formula 3 and Formula 2 before entering the first stage of his Formula 1 career with McLaren. We look forward to Oscar passing on some of those insights to our customers. Performance is heavily reliant on insights and data that can power critical competitive advancements.
McLaren fans at the 2023 Australian Grand Prix had complicated emotions: Some were excited by Oscar Piastri's potential, some were still grieving Daniel ...
“But I would choose Oscar because he’s at the beginning of his journey. Boyd added: “I was a bit unsure about it. He had two podium finishes at Renault (now Alpine), but struggled at McLaren, apart from one win, culminating in the Some saw the move as a way for Piastri to secure his place on the F1 grid for the 2023 season – something the 21-year-old said wasn’t guaranteed if he stayed with Alpine. That said, Arun is ready to let go of Ricciardo for the sake of the team’s success: “I really like [Ricciardo] being with McLaren, but I like McLaren performing well more.” Ricciardo, who is now a reserve driver with Red Bull, was the first driver Arun liked on Drive to Survive because of his happy-go-lucky personality, a trait that earned him the nickname of the “honey badger” – cute and cuddly, but savage when crossed.