Ricciardo breaks hand, Lawson to make debut for AlphaTauri

X-rays have confirmed Daniel Ricciardo broke a bone in his hand during a crash in Friday’s second practice for the Dutch Grand Prix, and the Australian has been ruled out of action. AlphaTauri reserve driver Liam Lawson has been called up to replace …

X-rays have confirmed Daniel Ricciardo broke a bone in his hand during a crash in Friday’s second practice for the Dutch Grand Prix, and the Australian has been ruled out of action. AlphaTauri reserve driver Liam Lawson has been called up to replace him for the rest of the Zandvoort weekend.

Ricciardo hit the wall at Turn 3 after coming across a stricken McLaren after Oscar Piastri had also had crashed just ahead of him, with the AlphaTauri driver holding onto the steering wheel until impact. Although seemingly innocuous in terms of the speed of the crash, the kickback of the wheel left Ricciardo complaining of pain in his hand, and he was subsequently taken to a local hospital for X-rays.

Those have now confirmed a broken metacarpal for the Australian that will rule him out for an indefinite period of time, with Red Bull opting to put its reserve driver Lawson in the AlphaTauri for the rest of the race weekend, starting with FP3 on Saturday.

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“After today’s incident during Free Practice 2 in Zandvoort, in which Daniel Ricciardo hit the barrier at Turn 3, he was brought to the local hospital and further examinations were carried out,” an AlphaTauri statement read. “An X-ray confirmed he sustained a break to a metacarpal on his left hand, and this injury will not allow him to continue his duties, so he will be replaced by the team’s reserve driver Liam Lawson for the remainder of this weekend. The team wishes him all the best for the quickest possible recovery.”

Liam Lawson’s FP3 appearance will be his first laps in the current AlphaTauri. Yasushi Ishihara/Motorsport Images

Lawson has yet to drive this year’s AlphaTauri but has carried out simulator duties this year, as well as FP1s and young driver test outings in the past.

Red Bull could have called upon former driver Nyck de Vries as the Dutchman is still understood to be under contract despite losing his race seat, but has instead opted for Lawson who was already at Zandvoort in his reserve driver role.

Lawson is currently racing in Super Formula in Japan, and sits second in the championship after three victories in seven races, with only a doubleheader at Suzuka remaining. The New Zealander raced at Zandvoort in Formula 2 last year.

Ricciardo hospitalized with possible hand injury following crash in practice

Daniel Ricciardo has been taken to a local hospital for checks on his hand after crashing during practice for the Dutch Grand Prix. The AlphaTauri driver went straight on into the wall at the banked Turn 3 corner, appearing to be distracted by Oscar …

Daniel Ricciardo has been taken to a local hospital for checks on his hand after crashing during practice for the Dutch Grand Prix.

The AlphaTauri driver went straight on into the wall at the banked Turn 3 corner, appearing to be distracted by Oscar Piastri’s crash at the same corner just ahead of him that left the McLaren partly on the racing line. Ricciardo took to team radio to say that he had hurt his hand, and immediately took his left glove off before gingerly climbing out.

Ricciardo also signaled to a marshal that he had a problem with his left hand as he sat on the side of his car, shaking his head in frustration before being taken to the medical center.

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The Australian was then pictured leaving the medical center with his arm in a sling, and the FIA confirmed he has been taken to a local hospital for checks.

Should Ricciardo be unfit to race, Red Bull reserve driver Liam Lawson is on-site at Zandvoort and would need to take part in at least qualifying to be able to start Sunday’s grand prix. AlphaTauri can also still call on Nyck de Vries if required, having replaced the Dutchman with Ricciardo ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Ricciardo feeling ‘set to attack’ in second half of F1 season

Daniel Ricciardo says he is ready to attack the second part of the Formula 1 season after using the summer break to “feel the way I want to feel” following his recent return with AlphaTauri. Nyck de Vries was dropped after the British Grand Prix, …

Daniel Ricciardo says he is ready to attack the second part of the Formula 1 season after using the summer break to “feel the way I want to feel” following his recent return with AlphaTauri.

Nyck de Vries was dropped after the British Grand Prix, with Red Bull offering Ricciardo a route back onto the grid having taken up a reserve driver role after leaving McLaren. With the races in Hungary and Belgium under his belt before the summer shutdown, Ricciardo says he’s used the past few weeks to get himself into a position where he’s physically prepared for the rest of the year.

“I’m very excited about racing at Zandvoort, mainly to get the second half of the season going,” Ricciardo said. “I only got to do the two races before the break, so even if I enjoyed a bit of time off, I spent most of the past few weeks training and enjoying the chance to keep building up my fitness, to be all set to attack the second half of the season.

“I’ve really enjoyed being back, and the two races with the team have been awesome. Now, I’m very hungry and motivated and feel the way I want to feel. That’s why I’m looking forward to kicking off in Zandvoort, which is a very fast track with an awesome atmosphere.”

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While Ricciardo impressed upon his return, his teammate Yuki Tsunoda once again delivered an eye-catching result with points in the final race before the break, although the Japanese driver is wary of expecting a repeat in Zandvoort.

“I was happy with how the first part of the season ended in Belgium, as it had been a long time since we scored any points,” Tsunoda said. “It meant I could go into the summer break in a positive mood, and I’m carrying that motivation as we start the second half of the season this weekend.

“I also fitted in some time in the simulator earlier this week to prepare for the next two races. We’ve had two races in Zandvoort in the past, and I even made it to Q3 last year, but I’ve never finished, so that’s something I want to put right this weekend.

“I like the track because it’s technical with some unique features, such as the steeply banked corners and the mix of slow and fast turns. It’s physically quite demanding.

“I’m not sure how we will perform here because even if Spa went well, much of that was down to the specific nature of the track and even the weather, while Zandvoort is very different — a medium- to high-downforce circuit — but hopefully we can have another good race there. Because the track is very narrow, our main focus will be on qualifying well, which is something we have struggled with a bit so far this season.”

Alonso helped Ricciardo reset for F1 return

Daniel Ricciardo says a conversation with Fernando Alonso helped him reset for his return to Formula 1 after struggling at McLaren. Alonso left McLaren at the end of the 2018 season and took a break from F1 but returned in 2021 with Alpine, …

Daniel Ricciardo says a conversation with Fernando Alonso helped him reset for his return to Formula 1 after struggling at McLaren.

Alonso left McLaren at the end of the 2018 season and took a break from F1 but returned in 2021 with Alpine, completing two seasons with the team before joining Aston Martin this year. Ricciardo took a similar path after losing his McLaren drive last year, but was given the chance to return with AlphaTauri at the Hungarian Grand Prix. After an encouraging first weekend during which he outqualified and outraced teammate Yuki Tsunoda, the Australian said Alonso’s advice helped his decision-making.

“I really feel, just having this half year off, even if it wasn’t the year I expected off, half a year still gave me a kind of reset,” Ricciardo said. “I feel energized again. Actually I remember having a conversation with Alonso, maybe two years ago now. We were just having a chat and he said the break for him was one of the best things he ever did.

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“That got me thinking that if I ever feel I need it, don’t be so scared of it. Then seeing the year he’s had filled me with some confidence. Really glad to have been put in this position and come back feeling everything normal again. The grid, the start, the adrenaline, the emotion… I enjoyed it all.”

Ricciardo admitted that the biggest positive he took from his first race back was the progress he made with an uncompetitive AlphaTauri car in Budapest after two years of difficulties alongside Lando Norris at McLaren.

“That’s really the most encouraging thing,” he said. “Obviously for whatever reasons the McLaren was normally not speaking my language. It certainly speaks Lando’s language! He certainly knows how to get the most out of that thing.

“I felt like last year it kind of just was a stalemate and it was hard to get out of that. That’s why the time off and the fresh team, environment, have been the best thing for me. That’s all I can ask for – progress – and I think being open to learn again. That’s important as well.”

Having not raced in eight months, Ricciardo was pleased with his fitness levels but said he also made a point of soaking up the general feeling of being an F1 driver again.

“For sure there’s nerves, excitement – there’s a lot of these things – but sometimes we probably forget to remind ourselves to take it in and smile in the moment,” he said. “I was really just trying to enjoy it, and of course you still make sure you stay focused, but just enjoying it. The crowd was pretty cool. I heard a lot of cheers, so it was fun.”

Ricciardo keeping expectations in check despite strong qualifying performance

Daniel Ricciardo outqualified teammate Yuki Tsunoda at the Hungarian Grand Prix, his first race back in Formula 1, but is keeping expectations in check for what he expects to be a grand prix of difficult lessons. Ricciardo recorded AlphaTauri’s best …

Daniel Ricciardo outqualified teammate Yuki Tsunoda at the Hungarian Grand Prix, his first race back in Formula 1, but is keeping expectations in check for what he expects to be a grand prix of difficult lessons.

Ricciardo recorded AlphaTauri’s best qualifying result in five races when he put his car 13th on the grid in Budapest, a result that eclipsed all but one of predecessor Nyck de Vries’s Saturday performances.

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It also put him four places ahead of new teammate Tsunoda, who was knocked out of qualifying in Q1, albeit with a time just 0.013s slower than the Australian in a super-tight session.

Ricciardo wasn’t reading too much into the result but admitted the overall picture was positive after just two days back in the car.

“I had no idea where to expect to be on the grid, so the 13th place in a way feel somewhat irrelevant,” he said.

“Of course my reference is Yuki for now, and I think he’s also – watching from the outside – a good reference, not only this year but I think already the second half of last year I could see with Pierre (Gasly) he was starting to be a lot more competitive.

“Whether I’m ahead or behind, I think just to be there is positive for me.”

The Australian said he had developed a clear picture of where he needed to pick up his game after a disrupted Friday practice session and rated himself at 98 per cent of his potential by Saturday afternoon.

“I felt pretty comfortable,” he said. “Yesterday we only really got one session. I was a bit off the pace, but I kind of knew where I was missing, and it was quite self-explanatory where I could find the pace.

“I improved those today. I think everything I had to improve last night I was able to improve.

“We can probably all of us get to 95 per cent quite easily at this level. It’s then those last few per cent. I think I found a little bit in quali, but for sure there’s still a little bit more.

“I got it close to 100 per cent – maybe 98 – so I took a nice step.”

But the Perth native’s 10-race absence from the grid is likely to tell on Sunday, when he completes his first grand prix distance in almost eight months in a car he drove for the first time only on Friday.

Though he wasn’t willing to set a formal target for the race, he said he was anticipating a more difficult afternoon focused on learning rather than pushing forwards towards the points.

“I’ve done probably only an eight-lap run or something at the moment,” he said of his limited race experience in the AlphaTauri. “I think tomorrow there’s going to be a lot of things for me to learn in terms of tire management but also the car with fuel, as the tires go off.

“I’ll start to probably discover a bit more about the car and obviously then in those conditions the weaknesses. I think there’ll probably be laps where I’m maybe not doing too great but then there’ll be laps where I’ll be doing better because I’m learning as I go.

“I don’t want to say that negatively, but inevitably there’s going to be still a handful of things to pick up on. Hopefully I can be a fast learner.

“If we can find our way into the points, that would be huge. I think for now obviously as a team we need to get points, but it’s really just making sure that I’m on top of the car, at one with the car, and then that’s the first box I need to tick.”

Sunday result pending, there’s already a sense that Ricciardo has rediscovered his old mojo and that his AlphaTauri stint is likely to restore at least some of his pre-McLaren reputation.

The Aussie credited his solid comeback showing to his half-year sabbatical, which he said helped him to rediscover his confidence after two bruising seasons at Woking.

“If we even forget the result today, just the way I feel, I just feel a bit lighter and a bit more bubbly, kind of like myself,” he said. “I was driving a bit more with a smile.

“[The break] was very, very good for me. Maybe not everyone needs it, but for me I felt like it was really good at that time of my career.

“Of course I’m a race car driver, so I’m always going to expect something out of myself, but truthfully I was really trying to remove as much of that as I could and make sure that this is the place that makes me feel like myself again.

“Jumping in the car in qualifying, I felt actually really relaxed. Not to take it lightly, but just happy – happy to be back and happy to be able to push the car on the limit again.

“I felt like I had enough time to fall back in love.”

Ricciardo mindful of avoiding ‘trap’ that ended McLaren run

Daniel Ricciardo is confident he can avoid the same mistakes that almost ended his career at McLaren in his 12-race stint with AlphaTauri. Ricciardo arrived at McLaren as one of Formula 1’s most highly rated drivers but was mystifyingly incapable of …

Daniel Ricciardo is confident he can avoid the same mistakes that almost ended his career at McLaren in his 12-race stint with AlphaTauri.

Ricciardo arrived at McLaren as one of Formula 1’s most highly rated drivers but was mystifyingly incapable of coming to terms with Woking’s cars across two different rule sets. The eight-time race winner’s problem stemmed from the McLaren’s particular demands on corner entry, with its comparatively weak front axle needing to be loaded up on braking in a way that didn’t mesh with his driving style. Efforts to adjust his method behind the wheel generated little joy, and he was released from the team last year, with a year still to run on his contract.

AlphaTauri has known issues with its corner-entry characteristics, leading to speculation Ricciardo could be set for another demoralizing stint in the sport. But the Australian said his mental approach was at least partly to blame for his failed McLaren switch and that a new outlook would help him avoid the same outcome.

“I started probably just falling into a little bit of a trap where I was like, ‘Yeah, this car doesn’t suit me and I need to work around this and this and this,’” he said of his McLaren struggles. “You can probably be your own worst enemy as well. I go back to my first quali with McLaren. I did a great quali, and that was when I kind of didn’t know so much yet.

“So I’m not really thinking, ‘I know the car will have limitations.’ I’m sure it’s not going to feel as good as the [Red Bull] I drove a week ago, but I’ll just work with that.”

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Ricciardo said he had used his half-season off the grid to disconnect from the sport and recapture a blank-slate mindset, which he thinks will stand him in good stead wrangling the last-placed car in the constructors championship.

“I’ve driven the simulator, but [until] last week I hadn’t driven a car in eight months,” he said. “I haven’t really been doing anything driving-wise. I haven’t driven F3s or go-karts. I’ve just been really switching off from that.

“I appreciate the [Red Bull] is very good — it’s the best on the grid at the moment — but I just got in it and I drove. I didn’t really think about anything, I just drove and had fun. As a junior coming up you are pretty ignorant and you don’t know much. You just race cars because it’s what you love doing.

“There’s going to be a lot to learn, and I’m not going to solve everything this weekend, so it’s just really about focusing on using the things I do well. I think that will translate into some more positive outcomes.”

The target for the eight-time race winner is to return to Red Bull Racing in Sergio Perez’s seat by 2025 at the latest, but Ricciardo says he was pushing that objective out of his mind to make the most of his AlphaTauri opportunity to prove he’s back at his best.

“That’s the dream, so to speak, but there is no point in me thinking about that,” he said. “There is going to be a lot of work to do here.

“In terms of expectation, there is none. For me, everything I felt driving the car last week is what I want from racing — to be in the moment, enjoying it and not thinking too far ahead.

“I know the car is going to have some limitations, but I’ve got to do the best with what I’ve got. If it’s something I think I can work with, then that’s all I need to feel good behind the wheel again and use some of my experience to push the team.

“As far as this weekend goes, if you ask me where I want to finish, I couldn’t tell you. I just want to know I put everything into it and got a lap I can be proud of.”

Ricciardo ‘not scared’ of AlphaTauri challenge to impress Red Bull

Daniel Ricciardo says his recent struggles in Formula 1 mean he’s “not really scared of anything” as he gets ready to try and prove himself to Red Bull in an uncompetitive AlphaTauri. Nyck de Vries was dropped after just 10 races with the team, as …

Daniel Ricciardo says his recent struggles in Formula 1 mean he’s “not really scared of anything” as he gets ready to try and prove himself to Red Bull in an uncompetitive AlphaTauri.

Nyck de Vries was dropped after just 10 races with the team, as Red Bull is keen to evaluate Ricciardo’s potential following two tough seasons at McLaren. AlphaTauri has scored two points all year — both courtesy of Yuki Tsunoda — and sits at the bottom of the constructors’ championship, but the Australian says it’s the sort of environment that gives him the chance to show Red Bull he can handle adversity.

“I’m excited about it,” Ricciardo told Formula 1. “It’s a challenge for sure to jump in and try to hit the ground running, but I guess I feel like I’ve also been through a lot the last year — or the last few years — where I’m not really scared of anything that’s going to be thrown my way. So for that I actually really do like the challenge. And I say ‘challenge’ because yes, it will be a challenge, but I don’t know if I’d have it any other way.

“Going back to the start of the year, getting back into the Red Bull family, felt like full circle; now going back to AlphaTauri — which was once Toro Rosso — is all very full circle right now. But I understand this is my journey back, this is the process and the path and I’m ready to embrace it.

“The car will be what it is. I’m going to drive it and work from there. I don’t want to get too many preconceived ideas. I appreciate the car’s going to have its limitations. I’m sure they’re probably just lacking some overall downforce and things like this, but I think if it’s a car that feels balanced — it might not have as much grip as the Red Bull I drove a few days ago — that’s something I can work with.

“I’m looking forward to also developing it and using my experience. But ultimately, I think for Budapest, just go out and have fun, try and use more right foot than left and have a good time!”

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Ricciardo admits Red Bull will want to see him delivering in the car quickly but that it’s no different to when he was a younger driver at Toro Rosso and had to perform in the same manner to earn himself a promotion.

“They expect results, performances… Until I get back into a car it’s hard to define what that is. Is it a P8? Is it a P14? I don’t think there’s pressure until the summer break — obviously there’s two races and the summer break — I don’t think there’s a ‘you have to do this before August’ but I also don’t expect to get off to a slow start. I want to hit the ground running and try to use what I’ve learned in this time off, to put it to use.

“That’s why it feels a bit like back when I was working my way up through it, in the Red Bull family. It was like, ‘If you get results, we’ll keep pushing you.’ That’s really the mindset.

“I know (for) the team it’s been tough to get a points finish this year, a top 10, so to push this car and try to get it inside the top 10, I think that would get everyone pretty fulfilled and excited.”

Hard on de Vries, hard for Ricciardo

Well, that escalated quickly… You might have seen our story on Daniel Ricciardo’s desire to get back into a race seat yesterday, after I spoke to him live on air on Sunday ahead of the British Grand Prix. There appeared to be a real desire to return …

Well, that escalated quickly…

You might have seen our story on Daniel Ricciardo’s desire to get back into a race seat yesterday, after I spoke to him live on air on Sunday ahead of the British Grand Prix. There appeared to be a real desire to return that hadn’t been as sharp at any point since he left McLaren. I put to him the idea of an AlphaTauri seat in 2024, to which he replied with a smile: “Never know, mate, never know…”

At the time I took it as the first official confirmation he wanted that seat, and thought that was a mini-scoop in itself. How wrong I was.

Fast-forward 48 hours and Ricciardo is back on the Formula 1 grid in place of Nyck de Vries. The official press release from Red Bull states it is “following a strong performance in today’s tire test at Silverstone,” with Christian Horner adding that “it is great to see Daniel hasn’t lost any form while away from racing and that the strides he has been making in his sim sessions translate on track. His times during the tire test were extremely competitive.”

The slip is that the original release stated Wednesday’s tire test, betraying the fact that this was already in place before the tire test even began, ready to go once it was over. Sure, Red Bull might have wanted to see a little bit of proof from Ricciardo in a real car, but it had made its mind up on de Vries. The Dutch media finding out he’d been cut loose on Tuesday morning confirmed it.

That’s harsh, because the Dutchman has been handed a poor car from AlphaTauri this year. Yuki Tsunoda has been praised for great performances just by being able to drag it to 10th place on two occasions; those two points the only score of the season, and leaving the team at the bottom of the constructors’ championship.

De Vries has certainly not had a fair crack at F1 this year, but at the same time, he was brought in by Helmut Marko — despite opposition from Horner — to judge if he was the real deal right away. His performance for Williams in Monza last year suggested he could be, and Red Bull was looking for a driver who could keep Sergio Perez on his toes.

It turned out the Williams was just hugely competitive in Italy, where Alex Albon was gutted to miss out on the race after suffering from appendicitis. Replicating such stunning results was always going to be tough for de Vries, but he hadn’t managed to deliver even a flash of his potential up to now and that’s what’s cost him. 1-0 to Horner.

And it’s with that ruthlessness that Ricciardo’s return needs to be viewed.

This year’s AlphaTauri did not give rookie Nyck de Vries much opportunity to shine, and now Ricciardo has to use it to prove his worth to Red Bull. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

The Australian wasn’t planning on racing this year, partly because he knew the car and the situation would hardly give him a chance to shine. Next year, when the collaboration with Red Bull is going to be even closer, he would be keen to get back in the cockpit full-time. But Marko and Red Bull don’t work that way.

Horner wanted Ricciardo to get a chance to show what he’s got in the AlphaTauri, while Marko remained unconvinced. The latter canvassed opinions in the paddock, but was never going to let anyone else dictate the timing. If Ricciardo really still has what it takes, he has to show it immediately.

It must have become clear to the 34-year-old that if he didn’t take the seat now he wouldn’t get another shot at it. Red Bull has been impressed with Tsunoda this year, but not to the extent he would be considered for Perez’s seat (when Perez was ill in Austria it would have been de Vries who was promoted, as Tsunoda hasn’t had a seat fitting with the constructors’ champions), so Ricciardo has to show he’s a better option.

Marko wants Perez to sort out his Saturday woes, and Perez knows he needs to improve but didn’t have to fear either of the drivers at AlphaTauri coming for his seat. If Ricciardo performs, then he becomes a future candidate for a remarkable return alongside Max Verstappen at some stage.

If he doesn’t, Marko can tell Horner it’s 1-1 and Ricciardo’s time with Red Bull will likely be over. 

While Ricciardo has impressed in the simulator and back in an environment he achieved success in the past in, it will count for nothing if he can’t translate that into race performances. It’s make or break, and just as de Vries faced, the odds aren’t exactly stacked in his favor.

To use his own words, Ricciardo has been “hanging out” to get this opportunity again in recent weeks, as he regains his confidence and the desire to be back racing in F1. 

“I’m letting it all happen as it comes and I have confidence I’ll be back on the grid at some point,” he said on Sunday.

Well it has come to him all right, but now he has to go and grab what will almost certainly be his last opportunity to earn himself a front-running seat again.

Red Bull confirms Ricciardo’s F1 return with AlphaTauri

Red Bull has confirmed that Daniel Ricciardo will make an immediate return to Formula 1 as replacement for Nyck de Vries at AlphaTauri, as reported by RACER. “I am stoked to be back on track with the Red Bull family!” said Ricciardo, who is …

Red Bull has confirmed that Daniel Ricciardo will make an immediate return to Formula 1 as replacement for Nyck de Vries at AlphaTauri, as reported by RACER.

“I am stoked to be back on track with the Red Bull family!” said Ricciardo, who is officially on loan from Red Bull.

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Ricciardo left McLaren at the end of 2022 – a year before the end of his contract – after struggling for form alongside Lando Norris, and returned to Red Bull as a reserve driver this season. He drove a 2023 F1 car for the first time in a tire test at Silverstone today ahead of his return to the race seat at the Hungaroring next weekend.

“It is great to see Daniel hasn’t lost any form while away from racing and that the strides he has been making in his sim sessions translate on track,” Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said. “His times during the tire test were extremely competitive. It was a very impressive drive and we are excited to see what the rest of the season brings for Daniel on loan at Scuderia AlphaTauri.”

De Vries was only given his full debut this year after a one-off appearance for Williams at Monza last season, but has struggled to make an impact in an uncompetitive car.

Ricciardo raced for AlphaTauri in its previous guise of Toro Rosso from 2012 to 2013 before being promoted to Red Bull, where he won seven races over a five-year spell before departing for Renault in 2019.

“I’m very pleased to welcome Daniel back into the team,” AlphaTauri team principal Franz Tost said.

“There’s no doubt about his driving skill, and he already knows many of us, so his integration will be easy and straight-forward. The team will also profit a lot from his experience, as he is an eight-time Formula 1 Grand Prix winner. I would like to thank Nyck for his valuable contribution during his time with Scuderia AlphaTauri, and I wish him all the best for the future.”

Ricciardo has ‘had enough of a break now’ but tight-lipped on AlphaTauri

Daniel Ricciardo says he has had enough of a break from driving in Formula 1 ahead of his test for Red Bull this weekend, but remains tight-lipped on the potential of racing for AlphaTauri next year. Red Bull is one of three teams taking part in a …

Daniel Ricciardo says he has had enough of a break from driving in Formula 1 ahead of his test for Red Bull this weekend, but remains tight-lipped on the potential of racing for AlphaTauri next year.

Red Bull is one of three teams taking part in a Pirelli tire test on Tuesday and Wednesday at Silverstone, giving Ricciardo his first chance to drive the 2023 car since returning as one of its reserve drivers. Having last driven a current car in Abu Dhabi in November – his final race for McLaren – Ricciardo said he has enjoyed his time off but is ready to get back behind the wheel.

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“Very much so!” he told SpeedCity Broadcasting of his excitement. “I’m hanging out just to drive in general. I’ve had enough of a break now where I’ve got ants in my pants, in a positive way. But of course it’s a phenomenal car and I’m excited to feel it round here, and on such a high-speed circuit as well.”

Speaking to SpeedCity as part of its live pre-race show on SiriusXM, Ricciardo also admitted he is keen to get back on the grid rather than watching race build-up from the Red Bull garage.

“Yeah of course (I miss it), this is my favorite part of the race weekend – the build-up part to the race,” he said. “When you’re about 10-15 minutes out, it’s really awesome and the grid gets packed, it’s a bit of a zoo and it’s chaos but it’s kind of a fun chaos. So I do miss it, but it’s all good. I’m letting it all happen as it comes and I have confidence I’ll be back on the grid at some point. Obviously I’m not 100% sure of it, but I’m confident it will happen again one day.”

When an AlphaTauri seat for 2024 was suggested, Ricciardo replied: “Never know, never know… 

“So I’m staying ready. I sat on the couch for two months over Christmas but since then I’ve been getting back into my training and enjoying it.”