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PUTTING BRAZIL BACK IN THE DRIVER'S SEAT

Gabriel Bortoleto is fueling renewed interest in Formula One in his home country

China Daily | Updated: 2026-04-04 00:00
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Audi driver Gabriel Bortoleto of Brazil finds himself juggling the dual role of promising F1 prospect and national standard bearer, following in the footsteps of greats like Ayrton Senna, Nelson Piquet and Rubens Barrichello. REUTERS

For a country that once treated Formula One like a second religion, Brazil's absence from the grid had begun to feel strangely normal.

Between the days of Ayrton Senna, Nelson Piquet, Rubens Barrichello and Felipe Massa, Brazil regularly churned out F1 champions and race winners. Grand Prix Sundays were national events, as Interlagos became a cathedral of noise and emotion. The idea that the country might one day have no driver on the grid seemed absurd.

Yet by 2018, for the first time since 1969, Brazil had disappeared from F1 entirely.

The drought lasted seven years, save for a couple of stand-in drives for Pietro Fittipaldi in 2020. Then Gabriel Bortoleto arrived.

Now in his second season in the sport, the young Brazilian finds himself juggling the dual role of promising prospect and national standard bearer.

That expectation is heightened by the path that brought him to F1. Bortoleto won the Formula Three and Formula Two titles in successive seasons, placing him in rarefied company and marking him out as one of the sport's most closely watched young drivers.

"It's a big responsibility," he said. "Brazil has had great drivers in F1. For me it's about starting my career now and hopefully fighting for wins and championships in the future, and making my country proud in a sport where they have been so successful in the past."

Bortoleto is realistic about where he stands today. An encouraging season-opener in Melbourne for the nascent Audi team led to a ninth-place finish, but the victories Brazil once expected every season are still a distant ambition.

Still, even the mere presence of a Brazilian driver on the grid carries symbolic weight. In a country where Senna remains a near-mythological figure three decades after his death, any new arrival inevitably becomes part of a story much larger than themselves. Bortoleto grew up in that shadow, even if he never saw Senna race.

"My idol was always Senna," he said. "Obviously, I wasn't lucky enough to watch him race, because I was born ten years after he died, but there are so many videos and interviews you can learn from."

Like many Brazilian drivers of his generation, his early inspirations came through a mixture of history and proximity. While Senna has long been written into legend, Barrichello and Massa were the drivers he could actually watch, and the examples that made the dream feel real.

"They were always references," Bortoleto said. "Any Formula One driver is a reference when you're in karting. You look at them and think, they're in the best series available and you want to be like them."

Massa in particular offered occasional advice during Bortoleto's junior career — an informal thread linking generations of Brazilian racers.

"Felipe and I have been in touch for a few years. He was very helpful at many moments of my career with advice."

The more puzzling question is, why the pipeline slowed down in the first place? Brazil has never lacked talent or enthusiasm for motorsport, yet the pathway to F1 narrowed dramatically in the past decade, in a state of affairs that Bortoleto struggles to explain.

"I don't really know," he shrugs. "I feel like there was just a gap of drivers trying to reach F1, or having the results to get there."

He points to Felipe Nasr, who spent two years in F1 for Audi's predecessor team Sauber, as one who might have prevented the drought had circumstances turned out differently.

"He was great. If he had stayed longer, he could have been very successful and maybe that gap wouldn't have happened."

Nasr left F1 after a difficult 2016 season and has since carved out a successful career in the American IMSA series. Once Massa retired at the end of the following year, the Brazilian absence remained until Bortoleto arrived.

His emergence has coincided with a subtle revival of Latin American representation in F1. The 2026 grid also features Sergio Perez of Mexico and Argentina's Franco Colapinto, showing that the region's long-standing connection to F1 may be stirring again.

Bortoleto hopes that such visibility translates into something more tangible.

"We have so many talented drivers in South America, especially in Brazil, who deserve the opportunity to grow in the sport and try to reach F1," he says.

The financial barriers to the sport remain steep, and young drivers from outside Europe often struggle to find the backing needed to climb through F3 and F2. Perez and Colapinto are both backed by a coterie of Latin American sponsors, and Bortoleto says greater opportunities could be in the offing.

"I think my arrival in F1 has already increased interest in Brazil. More interest brings more visibility, and sponsors become more willing to invest in young drivers."

While Bortoleto carries that broader responsibility for Brazil, his daily reality is more straightforward. He is still a young driver learning the demands of F1 while helping build a new project with Audi, one that will take time before it challenges at the front of the grid.

The process, he says, is about patience and steady progress.

"I'm not a rookie anymore, it's my second year in F1, so just keep progressing. I need to do the best I can on track. I don't need to prove anything to anyone," he says.

Xinhua

Gabriel Bortoleto is still learning the demands of F1 while trying to help build a new project with Audi, one that will take time before it challenges at the front of the grid. AFP

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