FIA will not bend F1 rules to make Colton Herta debut possible
Sep.11 - Colton Herta's Formula 1 dream may have to wait for now.
It appears increasingly unlikely that rival teams, Formula 1 and the FIA will intervene to allow the Indycar star to secure an AlphaTauri seat next year with a super license exemption.
Nyck de Vries, a favourite to step up to F1 next year who is getting his chance at Monza this weekend while Williams' Alex Albon has appendix surgery, agrees that allowing Herta to sidestep the rules would be unfair.
"It will give an incorrect precedent and would be a shame if we jeopardise our system," said the Mercedes-backed Dutchman.
Ferrari boss Mattia Binotto agrees."I think force majeure cannot be used for Herta," he said at Monza. "Regulations are in place in order to protect our sport. He may participate in the championship when he's got what are the requirements to do so."
Red Bull's Dr Helmut Marko, however, is continuing to push the issue, as it would allow AlphaTauri to secure an exciting prospect from the key American market.
He says the FIA should take a retrospective look at one of Herta's formative seasons in the Indy Lights series and allocate a few more super license 'points'.
"The FIA needs to respond to this, as the driver had no control over the amount of drivers were in that championship," said the Austrian.
"He can therefore get a super license without violating any regulations."
It now emerges that Alpine - who want Herta to get the green light so that Pierre Gasly is released from his Red Bull commitments - is being lined up to give the 22-year-old American a test in the coming days in Hungary.
"Pierre Gasly is a very good candidate for us," the Renault-owned team's CEO Laurent Rossi is quoted by L'Equipe.
However, Alpine appears to already looking beyond the Gasly option - like immediately promoting the increasingly impressive son of MotoGP legend Mick Doohan.
"My future?" said the Alpine-backed 19-year-old Australian Jack Doohan at Monza.
"It motivates me more to be talked about for that seat, but I am only focused on F2," he insisted. "We'll talk at the end of the year if the F1 team wants me."
Doohan may indeed be called up by Alpine, as an FIA spokesman said ahead of the Italian GP that it is unlikely to intervene in the Colton Herta case.
"The FIA president has put in place a reliable mechanism that we will comply with," the spokesman said.
For his part, Herta says he can "understand" why drivers like de Vries are arguing that the precise letter of the law regarding F1 super licenses must be followed.
"I'd rather not get an exemption," he said at this weekend's Laguna Seca finale of the 2022 Indycar series. "I'm not sure that's really the way I'd like to do it.
"I understand both sides of the argument. In one sense, they want guys to go over there and race the ladder series. It also seems a little disrespectful to Indycar to give so few points for us.
"But I can understand both sides of the argument."
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& rightly so.
Yes, both sides can agree that the process should be followed. If there is a way to Herta in legally, then it must be pursued. Having a strict qualifying system is good up until it prohibits anyone from joining just because they didn't come through F3 or F2
It is kind of ridiculous to treat a competing series to F1 as less valuable to feeder series into F1.
For instance, in F2 there are no drivers with nearly 20 years of open wheel experience. It's all kids. In Indycar you're up against Dixon, Power, Newgarden who are all 10+ year guys in the series. Not to mention the former F1 drivers in the series.
I think Scott McLaughlin said it well when he pointed out that how absurd it is that he earned a super license from winning Australian Supercars, but had no experience in open wheel at the time.
The root problem is that F1 doesn't want to create an incentives for drivers to go to a competing series in search of the points.
*With McLaughlin's point being that Herta is far more experienced in open wheel than he was when he qualified for a super license
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