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via Reuters

via Reuters

F1 is a growingly ruthless world for its drivers and Carlos Sainz has experienced this firsthand. Getting axed from Ferrari was never on his radar, yet, the 3-time Grand Prix winner is still from the lucky lot that sneaked into F1 in the first place. Worthy prodigies like VCARB’s Liam Lawson, Aston Martin’s Felipe Drugovich, Mercedes’ Frederik Vesti, and many others live in uncertainty, praying for a break. Using his authority for good, Sainz has voiced their concerns.

All F1 teams have junior driver programs that cultivate younger talent, readying them for the pinnacle of motorsport. Red Bull, Mercedes, McLaren, and Ferrari lead the way in this aspect too, scouting and recruiting the crème de la crème. Carlos Sainz, who was a junior Red Bull driver, knows the ins and outs of F1’s seemingly elitist operations.

“If you are not part of a team of young Red Bull, Ferrari, Mercedes, or McLaren drivers, your chances of making it to Formula 1 are remote,” Sainz admitted on the Nude Project podcast, continuing, “Or you (need to) have a parent with a lot of money, otherwise you don’t get there. From the formulas, the categories cost 300,000 to 400,000 Euros. Formula 2, we are talking about 1 million. Then you need a very strong sponsor.” [translated via Google]

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Ironically, Lawson, Drugovich, and Vesti were part of the top teams’ junior programs. However, they haven’t found a seat, with prospects still scarce. Meanwhile, Sainz faces a similar issue but is in a privileged position.

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Carlos Sainz’s Williams-Audi dilemma worries Valtteri Bottas

Without Alpine as an option, Audi and Williams are the only teams left for Carlos Sainz in 2025. Fortunately, his exemplary performance with Ferrari has given him leverage to keep both teams waiting. Though Williams’ reported contract offer is better than Audi’s, the waiting game continues. And this has affected other contract-less drivers’ psyche, with Sauber’s Valtteri Bottas conceding his fate in Sainz’s hands.

via Reuters

“Yes, it pretty much depends on what Sainz does,” Bottas said about his F1 team prospects, as quoted by Sports Mole. “After that, many pieces of the driver market will fall into place. That (Sainz) is what teams are waiting for, and that’s why they haven’t made any decisions,” he added. This delay from Sainz also keeps young driver prospects’ futures in the balance. Ah! More irony.

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Moreover, the increasing longevity of a driver’s career, like Fernando Alonso’s and Lewis Hamilton’s, is another factor that convolutes the driver development web that F1 needs to untangle. Hopefully, the ball that Sainz has now gotten rolling will make the sport’s bosses look up and notice. What’s your take on Sainz’s Williams-Audi dilemma? Share your thoughts below.