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Alpine

Two things: Jack needs to manage his tires better as whoever calls the shots on that one needs to really help him out.

He did make up a few positions with Pierre already out unfortunately first lap thanks to Yuki, just couldn’t see him finish any better when Jeddah is much as difficult of reaching Top 10 from the back like Suzuka – same with everyone else in the midfield.

My two cents at the end of the day and don’t at Jack and even New Zealand’s Liam Lawson in the Racing Bulls when he has the European races to hopefully redeem himself & will continue to support him the best possible until then. End of.

And good on now championship leader Oscar once again with the win for McLaren over Max (2nd) & Leclerc (3rd).

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Jack is not happy me included and so does everyone else working at Alpine including the fans cheering for the team itself other than Pierre Gasly who continues to keep in check with the Top 10 zone.

As said, that Saudi street track in Jeddah is extremely tricky in a risk v reward situation – good for some but not so much for others even if he’s a rookie at F1 level.

So far it didn’t go Jack’s way with his tire management and discipline for the wrong reasons but at least he didn’t crash though and isn’t the slowest out either.

Again, he will have to work harder from 17th on the grid and be in sync with his crew upstairs that will hopefully take 50 laps to get past his best result 13th or even better with points for the first time.

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Looks like Jack Doohan will be given more chances now in that Renault-powered Alpine A525, so good news there following a huge past few days – especially with the European leg set to start later next month.

What he has to do now is finish those next races strong where he has to stay there the whole way through like he did for 2/3rds of last week’s Bahrain round.

Although his engineers do need to be in sync but at the end of the day, Jack is the one responsible to post results and needs to turn up there without any risk of punishing penalties in each and every post-race right after the checkered flag.

Hope he can reach that next elusive step as long as he knows what to do including tire management (very crucial!) and how he can get out of these tricky situations every time the safety car comes around and not crash considering the next two rounds are also tricky street circuits too.

Top 7-8 along with more decent qualifying runs is the go from here….

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Happy with Pierre with 7th that finally puts Alpine into the points for the first time of 2025 at Bahrain under lights – brilliant stuff.

He did a great job keeping up even though that A525 may not have the best fight with thanks to that okay Renault engine but at least Alpine are good to go at least in the midfield for now.

For Jack, sad from many people just to criticise him so easily when it comes to the result because he finished 14th, even if it was for the track limits penalty.

But on paper, he was actually fighting in the points zone for the first time at least 8th to 10th – shame that last part didn’t quite work out (seen that before with Racing Bulls) due to poor tire control + a yellow flag was out at one time also.

So that’s on Alpine then…

They better continue to support whatever they can just for Jack’s sake so he can fight all along with track spots, that’s all.

And amazing to see Aussie Oscar win that race again for McLaren-Mercedes, no doubt he could be World Champion if he continues to push himself & hold off Lando & even Max against the very best.

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Must say that this weekend has been promising so far not just from Pierre but also Jack too in both Alpine-Renault cars.

Hats off to Pierre being the team leader out of this including his amazing Q3 performance & his FP1 lap times too that puts him in 4th ahead of tomorrow.

Even though Jack made a bit of mistakes here and there, his run ain’t bad either where he also had some sound practice times including his extended run into Q2 and almost got into Q3 just by a hairline or two. But starting 11th tomorrow? It’s a good time to chase up now & go for the best possible Top 7-8 points as he can.

Not holding my breath just yet…

But as long as he does not crash (please!) and as long as he does not make up more some silly mistakes and as long as he is being careful while fighting like a dog, happy for JD7 to go all in and leave Sakhir, Bahrain from there filled with confidence. 

Nothing more he could ask other than points, points, points…over to you Jack.

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Jordan King is a 31-year-old British driver who has competed in several racing series throughout his career. Since 2020, he has been a development and simulator driver for Alpine and also analyzes for F1TV in the F1 Academy Women’s series. 

He is also currently a reserve driver for the Mahindra Formula E team, for which he made his debut last May in Berlin when Nyck De Vries had to fulfill his WEC commitments with Toyota in Spa-Francochamps.

Previously, he was the champion of the British F3 International Series (2013). King has also won races in the GP2 Series (2016) and the LMP2 class of the WEC and raced in the IndyCar Series – a huge representation for overseas drivers there with former F1TV presenter Will Buxton now calling races including the upcoming Indianapolis 500 in May for Fox Sports in the United States.

He also competed in Formula 2. While in Formula 1, in addition to Alpine, he was once part of Manor Racing, for which he made his debut in free practice at the 2016 United States Grand Prix and made another appearance at the 2016 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

King has also been well acquainted with Jeremy Clarkson on several occasions, including when he was Top Gear host and in the US when he was racing IndyCars for The Grand Tour.

In 2024, he ran the London Marathon, raising over £16,900 for Birmingham Children’s Hospital and completing the marathon in 2:58. King also manages the career of 2024 Euro 4 Champion Akshay Bohra. 

Although he didn’t exactly have the chance to be part of his Enstone party tour later that year following Alpine’s underdog double podium finish at Sao Paolo, that undoubtedly changed their fortunes in the constructors’ championship (9th to 6th).

Not only that, King has tremendous connections within the Alpine squad since he’s been part of the furniture long enough at the iconic walls of Team Enstone, which produced multiple championships under different team names from Benetton to Renault (first stint between 2002-2011).

He first knows the current Team Principal, Oliver Oakes, who he met as a driver-turned-agent and later team manager in the past and is cool, calm, and collected – we have seen him turn up at press conferences during each and every post-session.

He also has decent contacts in Jamie Campbell Walter, whom he knows well from his sports car driving days. Jamie is currently Franco Colapinto’s manager, while Jordan himself was also part of Franco’s earlier racing life when he was his driving coach back in 2021. But at the end of the day, he is here for all things Alpine, including when he drove a road going A110 in an episode on A League of Their Own.

We spoke with King about the new Formula 1 season particularly with Jack Doohan plus the excellent start of McLaren, whose drivers are expected to break the dominance of Max Verstappen.

What do you think about the start of the new F1 season (from Australian to Chinese GP as of the end of March 2025) and could Australia finally get a world champion in the form of Oscar Piastri?

– So the thing with F1 at the moment is the way the regulations are written, it was designed to try and bring the teams closer and closer together and I think it has done that. It’s stopped one team running away with it. Since these new regulations 3 years ago now, Red Bull were super strong. They then didn’t have it all their way last year and now this year we’re seeing that the field’s a bit more mixed up. OK, McLaren is the strongest for sure, they they look like they got the best car but you’ve still had Ferrari, Mercedes, Red Bull all in the mix, all racing up there and then even that midfield, you know, from first to last in in the field is not much more than a second so it’s a super tight field. So actually, it’s going to make the racing really good at least, that’s what I feel at the moment. 

I’m sure after a few races I’ll be wrong but it looks like it’s going to be a really tight championship with lots going on. Maybe first and second if Oscar and Lando run away with it a little bit, but it still feels like everything’s tangible and everything’s possible. 

I suppose for you are these you’ll be rooting for Oscar, for us Brits will be rooting for Lando but yeah I think early days you can’t rule out any possibility. Max is an incredible driver, Red Bull’s a good team so who knows what they have up their sleeve, and I think I read yesterday they’re bringing an upgrade package to the next round so yeah all bets off at the moment – King said.

How will Jack Doohan be able to improve over the next few races for Alpine? 

– I think Alpine have big problems at the moment. I work with Alpine and our performance is not good enough. I think we’re the only team that’s not scored a point and you can argue that there was a bit of this,  and a bit of that stopped it, but still we haven’t scored a point, performances aren’t good enough, anything other than winning isn’t good enough in this sport.

There’s bigger questions to be asked, but for Jack, you know, it’early days, he’s obviously a good driver, he’s a really nice guy, feels like there’s a lot of pressure. I’m not really sure where this pressure suddenly come from, you know he’s only just started, and it’s not like he’s underperformed particularly.

He’s matched Pierre for pace a few times and race results not great but it seems like a bit of a strange one even before the start of the season, I was starting to hear murmurings of, Jack this Jack that, so I don’t know why. Suddenly, he gets put in the race seat and then there’s talk of stuff happening before they’ve even rolled the dice. So yeah, again, again with that I would say kind of don’t hold your breath too much because, who knows what will happen, wait and see – King added.

So it’s best to ignore the critics like the Franco Colapinto fans, Ralf Schumacher, etc?

– He’s going to know more than you and I, and all those other people. So he actually knows what he has been told and I’m sure he’s had meetings with the right people. He knows what he’s got to do, he knows what he’s got to deliver to keep his job.

It’s still a performance-based sport and a performance-based job so that’s the short of it. If he doesn’t perform, he won’t be in the seat but what the actualmetrics are for that, who knows. Only, people that were in the meeting are privy to that information, so yeah whoever’s.

That’s why I try to actually stay out of the media and stay off the websites because you can read anything that you want to find and most of the time, people just say stuff with with no foundation, or maybe some foundation, but yeah Jack and probably five other people in the world actually know what he’s got to do and what he’s got to deliver and how that looks and what those metrics are – King concluded.

Like the recently deceased legend, Eddie Jordan who was part owner of the London Irish club, King is a big rugby union fan. The Lions tour is a very special competition that takes place once every four years against the best of the Southern Hempisphere and to my joking remark that the Wallabies (Australia) would triumph led by the great Joseph Suaalii and head coach Joe Schmidt, he said he believed the Lions would be champions this year.

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F1 continues for another round, another consecutive weekend out of three this week in Sakhir, Bahrain, where all ten teams and 20 drivers were there two months ago with pre-season testing.

Hopefully this serves a good opportunity for Jack to come back better with four races under his belt as we always know he’s good with raw pace over one lap.

But there’s a few other things in mind he must fix in order to fight for points ASAP:

His cornering which scares me at times where Pierre is clearly better than him in that area – can’t see him slipping up a bit time and again when one little mistake can blow things up from there in an instant.

Okay, he’s great defensively with his defensive driving but must not commit those ill-disciplines like running people off the track like he did in China despite luck going his way in the end in 13th place.

And he must not make any more silly mistakes please! Yes, his Lap 1 crash back in Albert Park was the one where he only raced wets in an F1 for the very first time.

Also yes, his freak Suzuka crash at high speed going into Turn 1 in the afternoon practice session on Friday has divided opinion too, which took the whole overnight to get that A525 majorly repaired. Although he handled it brilliantly even with injured ribs through the very end from Saturday qualifying to Sunday race.

However, he must know that simulator work and real track work are two different things. So better err on the side of caution by sticking with the real track work where you must close DRS by yourself before you hit the breaks on the next corner.

If he can fix those three real-life mistakes, then we could see the very best of Jack after all from here – that’s what I want to see if Jack is reading this here, right now.

Don’t forget Alpine is still the only team out there without points so far in 2025, so Jack can be the first person to meet that target if he can really improve past with my three huge concerns as said above.

And Top 7-8 will do it…over to you Jack.

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It wasn’t a bad day for Jack Doohan in 15th thanks to his good start from 19th along with his scrambled defensive race moves & a well-timed long run strategy.

Alright he could’ve done anything a bit better especially without much use of the DRS had he not let Pierre pass him when it’s a team calling after Pierre lost his way in the pits.

Then Carlos Sainz did pass him with a few laps to go for 14th when his Williams car is powered by a Mercedes engine & not a Renault one + also his tires worked well in his favour unlike Jack on older hard sets.

But he has came from a long way though from a high speed crash into Turn 1 the other day Friday to getting the most out of a repaired A525 because at the end of the day, he’s just wanting to have a clean race like he always wanted from Round 1.

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Say what you want but Jack had to make the most out of himself from nothing when he didn’t get to run opening practice yesterday because Ryo Hirakawa was there and then he suddenly crashed at high speed going into Turn 1 when he forgot to turn off the DRS – glad to hear he was okay on what has been a scary one indeed.

Look at Pierre with his own if it wasn’t for Jack’s China PU replacement as well as the repaired chassis, then at least he would make Q2 again & sit in 12th-15th. 

It’s not easy work when his engineers had to race against the clock all night long just for Jack to get back in the car again the next day but now he has to be point from 19th so he can show some race pace for race day tomorrow. 

As long as he stays out of it and not crash again like it was with his unexpected debut at Abu Dhabi last year, you’ll see…

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This weekend is a non-Formula 1 race weekend after back-to-back early races of the new season but as we know now, Red Bull decided to promote Yuki and demote Liam between the senior and secondary teams going forward for next weekend’s Japanese GP at Suzuka Circuit.

While we wish Franco Colapinto could be right up there at least for their secondary team, we still need Jack Doohan to be at his absolute best so he can stay with Alpine-Renault for a little bit longer.

Yes, he has the raw pace who has the ability to match his team-mate Pierre Gasly across practice and qualifying.

However, his race form still needs a lot of work while cutting those ill-disciplines that alienated some fans along the way – me included to be honest. Although happy to take 13th based on the final race results from the previous one last week in China.

At the end of the day, it’s Alpine’s responsibility to get the best out of their own A525 cars, especially when the Renault engine is unfortunately is not on the same wavelength as other PU engine makers – and yet they’re the only team not scoring any points so far (10th in teams’ points at present).

No idea why their performances towards the back end of 2024 was oh so good at least fighting Top 5-7 to just going toe-to-toe at least against the Sauber & secondary Red Bull cars at the moment.

Fortunately, got Jordan King onboard who is also part of the Alpine squad as a development driver to talk through it with some words of optimism there to our Aussie JD7 O.K!

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