Lola Yamaha Abt recruit Maloney eager to make most of new opportunity in Formula E

By rights, Zane Maloney should be well on his way to Formula 1. A rising star in the single seater world with multiple wins in Formula 2 and F3, the Barbadian has what it takes to reach the top. But like so many highly rated youngsters, he’s faced …

By rights, Zane Maloney should be well on his way to Formula 1. A rising star in the single seater world with multiple wins in Formula 2 and F3, the Barbadian has what it takes to reach the top. But like so many highly rated youngsters, he’s faced with there being no room at the inn when he’s knocked on the door.

But F1’s loss is Formula E’s gain, with Maloney making the switch to the all-electric series this season with Lola Yamaha Abt. For him, it’s not a backwards or sideways step by any means, but indicative of the talent backlog faced by the entire open-wheel world.

“I always say, first I’m a racing driver, so I take whatever the best opportunity I can get,” Maloney tells RACER. “There’s not many seats in general in IndyCar, Formula E, F1. I mean, it’s just me and Taylor (Barnard, who’s moved from Formula 2 to NEOM McLaren) this year in Formula E. So that just shows there’s not many seats.

“There’s too many good drivers for the amount of seats available. I saw this opportunity as an amazing one. What people don’t quite understand is coming towards Formula E, it’s a world championship — it’s a step up from anything else.”

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1394]

And while Maloney is happy with his new home in Formula E, he insists it doesn’t close doors to other categories either.

“It also doesn’t stop any other opportunities in the future,” he says. “We saw with Nyck (de Vries), he moved to F1 from Formula E. I’m just trying to be in a race car. I love racing, and this was a new project, an amazing project, I was looking forward to, so I didn’t really think twice.”

It’s a fresh start both for Maloney and his Lola Yamaha Abt team. Sam Bagnall/Motorsport Images

Maloney moves to the new Lola project after a stint as Andretti’s reserve and development driver, where he got first-hand experience working with a championship-winning team and driving a championship-winning car, the Porsche 99X Electric. Abt, too, is a title-winning outfit, but under the skin of the striking yellow and blue car, it’s all new, with Lola returning from a lengthy hiatus to provide the powertrains as part of its new partnership with Japanese giant Yamaha.

“In terms of the environment in the team, and in terms of how the teams are moving forwards, I think that it’s clear to see that Lola Yamaha Abt is a championship winning team as well, straight out the box,” Maloney says. “So we just need to see where we stand in Brazil (at the season opener in Sao Paulo on Dec. 7) and how long we will take to get to that stage. But I’m confident that in the future, at some point, we can be there.

“When you start two or three or four or five years behind, then you’re always playing catch-up. But Abt has been around for a long time, they have a good idea of things. And it’s not a completely 100 percent new team, it’s got some new smart people with some — they call them ‘OGs’ — like Lucas (di Grassi) and some of the engineers within the team. I think we’re in a good place to start with. The development rate is going how we expect and what we want. It’s a team that can clearly win things in terms of the mindset, how motivated everyone is.”

Maloney finished the first day of Formula E’s pre-season test at Jarama on Tuesday in 16th with 13 laps in the bag. Teammate di Grassi was 10th with twice the number of laps under his belt. Maloney says the first day of running was “more of a shakedown” for his side of the garage, and there will be more to come.

“I think (on Tuesday), with the lack of tires and mileage that were allowed, in terms of performance it wasn’t much. The next two days will be a lot more,” he says. “Every day we can get in this car is a step forward, and the development rate is massive.”

That development rate means that the other 10 teams will have made gains from their already solid foundations. Naturally, that makes figuring out the competitive order a near-impossible task.

“From my side, neither the team nor me know where we’re going to stand when we come to Brazil,” Maloney says. “So you can’t really have expectations when you don’t know anything really. So my goal and my expectation for myself is just to maximize the car every time I go out.

“Of course, I have Lucas to compare to, which is a very good comparison, and how I’m doing will be based on where I am compared to him. Having said that, obviously, if we’re P19 and P20, we’re not going to be happy. We want to just keep moving forward.”

Another thing clouding the competitive picture is that every team has come into the test somewhat hindered by the late location change. Teams were deep into their preparation for four days of running at Circuit Ricardo Tormo in Valencia when the decision was made to move the test to Jarama near Madrid late last week in light of the floods that have blighted much of Spain. But Maloney sees positives for his team in the switch as it gets to grips with its all-new hardware.

“Everything that’s happening in Valencia, obviously it’s not great. We’re praying for everyone there,” he says “But for us, in terms of racing, it’s a good thing because it throws us in the deep end. We don’t have any data from this track, and every problem that we have will be magnified at this track versus what we would have known at Valencia.

“Everyone up and down the grid is in the same position. It’s just that we’re coming in with no data from any track. We’re always going to be learning.”

Maloney joins Abt Lola Formula E team

Abt Lola has completed its Formula E line-up with the signing of Zane Maloney. The Barbadian will join Lucas di Grassi at the team. Maloney has been serving as the Andretti Formula E team’s test and reserve driver this year, having taken part in the …

Abt Lola has completed its Formula E line-up with the signing of Zane Maloney. The Barbadian will join Lucas di Grassi at the team.

Maloney has been serving as the Andretti Formula E team’s test and reserve driver this year, having taken part in the 2023 rookie test with the team. He’s dovetailed his Formula E commitments with a Formula 2 campaign, where he won both the sprint and feature races in Bahrain and currently sits third in the standings. He’s also been Stake F1 Team Kick Sauber’s reserve driver this season.

“I am delighted to be part of the Lola Yamaha ABT team and looking forward to this exciting challenge,” said Maloney. “Although I already know the championship well, this is a completely new chapter for me, so working with such an experienced team, and alongside such a successful driver, is the perfect next step. I’ve followed and admired Lucas’s battles over the past seasons, including when he became champion. I’m sure that I will learn a lot from him and together we will push both ourselves and the
development of the car forward.”

Championship-winning team Abt has partnered with Lola for the upcoming season, in what will be Lola’s return to motorsport after a lengthy absence. The legendary British marque has aligned with Yamaha to produce a drivetrain package for the series’ new GEN3 Evo ruleset which comes into force this season.

“We’re delighted to welcome Zane to the team for the upcoming Formula E season, completing our driver pairing as one of the most exciting on next season’s grid,” said Lola chairman Till Bechtolsheimer. “Zane is a hugely talented young driver with an abundance of speed and potential and, alongside Lucas, we have an ideal combination of youth and experience.

“Zane has demonstrated his abilities in a variety of junior categories and proven himself as a race winner, and we’re looking forward to seeing him get behind the wheel in testing, and then at round one in São Paulo.”

In partnering with di Grassi, Abt Lola has a blend of youth and experience on its side, with di Grassi among Formula E’s most experienced drivers. The Brazilian has 13 wins — including the very first race of the category in Beijing in 2014 — as well as the Season 3 championship title.

“We are very much looking forward to having Zane as part of the team for Season 11, and he has already brought a breath of fresh air during our first days working together,” added ABT CEO Thomas Biermaier. “Giving young talent a chance and supporting them has been a strong tradition at ABT for many decades and that’s why it was clear to us that we would also follow this path in Formula E.”

Maloney has already testing for Abt Cupra in Varano, Italy, and will be driving again in Spain this week. The 11th season of Formula E starts in earnest with the official pre-season test in Valencia in the first week of November before racing kicks off in São Paulo on Dec. 7.

“We won’t know how good our package is until São Paulo,” admitted Maloney. “I am confident that I have the raw speed to be competitive, but experience is key in Formula E, so I will do everything I can to catch up here as quickly as possible.”

Maloney hungry for more after RLL IndyCar test

Zane Maloney completed his first NTT IndyCar Series test and wants more. Presently fourth in the F2 championship on the strength of two wins and six podiums, Maloney is charting the path for his career when the F2 season ends. Meetings with several …

Zane Maloney completed his first NTT IndyCar Series test and wants more.

Presently fourth in the F2 championship on the strength of two wins and six podiums, Maloney is charting the path for his career when the F2 season ends. Meetings with several IndyCar teams have gone well, and in the test arranged with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing on Aug. 1, the F2 title contender spent the day in mixed conditions at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway on its road course and completed approximately 100 laps in an RLL Dallara DW12-Honda.

As the only car on the track, Maloney didn’t have the luxury of other drivers to use as a benchmark in the hybrid IndyCar, but he’s said to have been fast and efficient, which shouldn’t come as a surprise as other Formula 2 drivers — including RLL’s outgoing Christian Lundgaard, Juri Vips and reigning champion Theo Pourchaire — have been quick upon arrival in the American open-wheel series.

“For a first test, I don’t think it could have gone too much better,” Maloney told RACER. “I came straight from the last round of
Formula 2 in Belgium, did the seat fit, a little bit of simulator and then straight onto the track. The team were very welcoming and went through everything that we needed to be prepared for the test. There was quite a lot of weather, so it was just two hours of running being lost because of the rain. Otherwise, we got some good running in, lots of push laps.

“With the IndyCar tires, compared to Formula 2, there’s a lot more push laps, so you do a lot less warming and cooling and you do a lot more pushing, and that’s always fun as a driver. I felt comfortable straight away with the car, with the team, with the tires. The pace there straight away in the in the dry, and also the few laps that I did in the wet, felt confident straight away. Generally, I think it was a very well-executed day. Of course, there’s still the few hundredth here and there, but with more time in an IndyCar, that I can get.”

Maloney enjoyed the similarities and differences of an IndyCar compared to his regular ride, Rodin Motorsport’s Dallara F2. Andy Hone/Motorsport Images

The 20-year-old Barbados native found a lot of similarities between the heavier, hybrid Dallara IndyCar and the Dallara F2 2024 he races for Rodin Motorsport, the former Carlin Racing team he joined in 2023.

“In Formula 2, the car is already quite heavy, so it’s a similar style of driving,” Maloney said. “Of course, the street circuits are a bit different over in the in the U.S., a bit more bumpy, a bit more going on, so that’s exciting. But in general, it was quite similar to a Formula 2 car.

“I think the biggest thing was the tires that are just very different to the Pirellis. Had to adapt to that. You can definitely feel that it’s a heavy car and it takes a bit more time to stop, a bit more time to turn and to really get settled, but I think that there’s a certain driving style for that which Formula 2 has helped me learn.

“I just loved pushing every lap and really getting the most out of every lap, learning as much as I could, giving the team as much information as I could. And I think we got to a stage at the end of the day where we all learned quite a lot. So, a lot of things to a lot of positive things to move forward with, and that’s all you can ask for in a test.”

With more than half of IndyCar’s teams looking to fill vacant seats or upgrade talent, Maloney is pressing to create opportunities for himself throughout the paddock.

“In Formula 2, there are four rounds left, so I’m really looking to do the best job possible and try to win the championship; full focus on that,” he said. “Of course, everyone’s dream as a kid growing up is Formula 1, but there’s so many things outside of my control, and IndyCar is an amazing championship. So if I had an opportunity in IndyCar, I’d be very grateful, for sure.

“The drivers throughout IndyCar, the teams as well, they’re all top-level teams and drivers. So I think there’s a very good field outside of Formula 1 still. And of course, there’s a lot of street circuits, a lot of ovals, a lot of road courses. IndyCar has a bit of everything. As a driver, that’s very exciting.

“I’m excited to continue my journey in IndyCar for sure, see what is available, what is possible, and see where the future takes me. I’m looking for a very good career in motorsports and I’m just trying to improve myself every day and trying to work with whichever team is best so I can to get the most out of myself.”

F2’s Maloney to test RLL IndyCar on IMS road course

Formula 2 championship contender Zane Maloney will conduct his first NTT IndyCar Series on Thursday. The test will take place with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, the team has confirmed to RACER. The …

Formula 2 championship contender Zane Maloney will conduct his first NTT IndyCar Series on Thursday. The test will take place with Rahal Letterman Lanigan Racing at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway road course, the team has confirmed to RACER.

The native of Barbados, who holds fourth in the F2 standings with two wins this season, has been actively pursuing opportunities in IndyCar. He will test for an RLL team in search of a replacement for its top performer Christian Lundgaard, who is departing for Arrow McLaren at the end of the season.

[lawrence-auto-related count=3 category=1408]

Like Maloney, Lundgaard arrived at RLL with multiple years of F2 experience, and with the Dane’s rerouting to IndyCar, he proved to be a revelation for the Honda-powered squad.

The three-car team owned by Bobby Rahal, David Letterman and Mike Lanigan entered the Olympic break with Lundgaard sitting 11th in the drivers’ standings, Graham Rahal in 17th and Pietro Fittipaldi in 19th.

How Formula E’s rookie test preps drivers and teams for what’s next

Formula E’s rookie test at Tempelhof Airport this week was a crucial day on many fronts. For inexperienced drivers – as the name suggests – it was an opportunity to get some valuable seat time, but as the only in-season testing at all, it was a …

Formula E’s rookie test at Tempelhof Airport this week was a crucial day on many fronts.

For inexperienced drivers — as the name suggests — it was an opportunity to get some valuable seat time, but as the only in-season testing at all, it was a vital day for all teams as they ran through on- and off-track items. RACER was on the ground in Berlin to learn just what goes into a Formula E test day — and by “day” we mean only six hours spread over two sessions.

The term rookie, of course, means a driver who’s yet to do a race, but looking at the test lineup, it actually brought in a wide variety of drivers, from experienced racers from other categories to up-and-coming youngsters, seasoned testers, and those getting their first-ever experience of Formula E cars.

Andretti was a team with a mix of both, fielding its regular test and reserve driver Zane Maloney — who’s been a constant presence with the team all season — and Jak Crawford, who drove a Formula E car for the first time at the test.

James Sutton/Motorsport Images

“As a team we get zero in season testing — it’s not like we can go off and do stuff — so that for us means that this day is critically important,” Andretti team principal Roger Griffiths tells RACER. “We don’t come here to just let a couple of young guys have a taste of Formula E and have some fun and see how quick they are.

“We’ve got a lot of things for (Zane) to work through, particularly with the big turnaround we had over the course of the weekend from last to first (in qualifying). So we’re trying to dig deeper into that because it’s one thing to bolt it all on and go quick, but if you don’t understand why you’ve suddenly gone quick, if you find yourself in a difficult situation in the future, you don’t know which knob to turn.”

But while Maloney’s job on once side of the garage is clear, Crawford on the other side is just as vital. Griffiths says having a fresh perspective, even from a true rookie, is very important for the team — as evidenced by the team’s experienced with Maloney when he jumped in the car for the first time last year and was already outperforming last year’s champion Jake Dennis in certain areas.

“I think it’s always interesting to bring in somebody fresh and listen to what they have to say,” he says. “I remember this time last year, we put Zane in the car for the very first time and he was able to do things on certain aspects of the corners that Jake couldn’t do. He was quicker than Jake in certain aspects, and Jake had just come off a podium finish here.

“So I think it is really interesting to get a new opinion. For me, it’s the perfect combination of someone who has been in the car a few times on a few different tracks, and then having Jak in the car as a new person coming at it from a new perspective.”

For rookies, though, it can be a big step, with the biggest adjustment being to come into a much bigger team than they’re accustomed to rather than getting to grips with the car itself.

“Working with such big teams, big organizations, you take a lot of how people work on to the things that you’re doing outside,” says F2 points leader Maloney. “I think how Andretti works, for example, there’s so many people at the racetrack, some amazing engineers so you learn something from each one of them that you can take on to — for me — Formula 2.

“In terms of the driving style, (there’s) nothing. But driving a race car as fast as you can around a circuit, it doesn’t change. Going from car to car, you always try to maximize everything and every small detail. Driving every day is really the goal for us drivers, so being out here today is just a benefit.”

Reigning F1 Academy champion Marta Garcia, who tested with ERT in Berlin agrees.

“For me the driving, you cannot learn a lot from it,” she says. “Of course, when you’re driving you always learn something, but I think it’s also the environment you work with, because at the moment I’m racing in Formula Regional with Iron Dames and that’s two engineers, two drivers, and the debrief is basically just four of us and the team manager.

“Here, we did our debrief and there’s a lot of people compared to what we’re used to, so obviously you learn a lot from the feedback that they give. So I think it’s more about learning about the organization of the team, learning about all the people that they have, and I think that’s a lot that you can gain for your racing.”

The chance to work with a wider circle of engineers at ERT was eye-opening for F1 Academy champ Marta Garcia. Simon Galloway/Motorsport Images

Coming into such an environment might sound intimidating but NEOM McLaren’s Ugo Ugochukwu points out that it can be advantageous for a young driver to be thrust into such a setting.

“The team has a program set out that we try to complete as best we can, and within that also from a driver’s point of view, there’s so much data to look at with the engineers between each run,” he says. “There’s so much to learn, so many different people that you can get info and knowledge from, which is good.

“It’s a different experience. There’s more people involved throughout the day, more people you can get knowledge from, guiding you throughout the day. It’s something you can use to your advantage and get things from different people in their areas of expertise and gain as much knowledge as possible and try to use that while you’re on track.”

For those a little more accustomed to the Formula E environment, the test is a perfect setting to tie together what the team does away from the track with what it’s doing at it. Alice Powell has been a long-time test driver for reigning champion team Envision Racing, and her job in Berlin was to make sure that the work she’s been doing in the team’s simulator correlated with what it was doing in the real world.

“Obviously, simulators are a massive part of pretty much any racing series — certainly in single seaters — so making sure that we have the best sim possible, using the simulator to make sure that it’s as accurate to the car as possible so we can test items on the simulator, etc., is really important,” she says. “Because I’ve spent time with the team in the sim (and) I’ve driven the GEN2 car, that is the most important thing for me — to get a feel of the car, get used to the car, so when I hop back in the sim, I can be like, ‘This needs to be different, this needs to change.’

“We’ll do lots of different runs,” she adds. “We’ll do some race runs, some 300 (kilowatt) and 350 runs, so there’s a variety of things.”

Jordan King is a driver who’s held a similar role to Powell, but didn’t take part in the Berlin test — he raced on the two days beforehand for Mahindra instead, taking away his status as a rookie and consequently his ability to take part in the test.

“You end up becoming very much a vessel with the team,” he says of a tester’s job. “You’ve got set items that you want to try, or you’re running through that program. Longer term, there might be a two-year plan, a three-year plan, maybe a six-month plan, and you know you’re going through that, and you’re heading down an avenue.

“The difference between being the race driver and the test driver is that you don’t have an agenda as the test driver. You become quite impartial, and I suppose that’s where the role can be very invaluable — that you just say it as you see it, and that you’re removed slightly from what’s happening on the race team.”

Simon Galloway/Motorsport Images

While you’d think being a race driver would bring with it a huge weight of expectation, King adds that testing, being relied on by those race drivers, can bring its own pressures.

“In truth, this week I’ve felt really quite relaxed,” he says of his switch from tester to racer. “I’ve felt more pressure when I’ve done some of the test days. We’ve had two, three weeks worth of preparation, and the pressure builds as the weekend goes. But it all feels controllable, and I feel that we’ve done everything we can and I’ve controlled everything I can.

“Testing, I suppose, is a different side of the pressure. You need to get it right, but then I’m always a believer that I will put more pressure on myself than what other people will.”

Throughout the year teams had racked up a to-do list specifically for the Berlin test. There was also forward planning, too, with six races of the 16 race season to follow the weekend in the German capital.

“We had a quite a long list of items and it’s a case of something coming up during the course of the year and you’d really like to explore it a bit more, but you’re not prepared to do that on the race weekend, so you put it on the Berlin list, or the Valencia list coming out of here,” says Griffiths. “We’re gathering up test pieces, test points, through the course of the year, as the races unfold, as we learn more and more about the car, and because we’re always learning, every weekend there’s something new.

Some ideas gleaned by the Andretti team during the race weekend at Berlin could be more extensively tested at the ensuing rookie test. Sam Bagnall/Motorsport Images

“We’re also thinking ahead. The next two races are going to be very similar to this one. Shanghai and Portland have similar circuit characteristics, and then also thinking ahead to London. While it might not be something that’s going to make you quick round Berlin, it could actually make you quick round London.”

The test will have very little bearing on next season, however. With the arrival of GEN3 Evo for the next campaign, Formula E will be getting a new car with a new aerodynamic profile, new tires and all-wheel drive, and Griffiths says learnings from this test will have a “limited” use in terms of 2024-25 preparation. But that only highlights the importance of simulation, and the Berlin test’s relation to that.

“Valencia (next year’s pre-season test) for us is going to be the real opportunity to get that first look at it,” he says. “It’s going to be simulator work to really understand. A lot of what we do is always looking at the simulator, and the simulator is only as good as the correlation back to the real world.

“So the more that we can do to compare the results we get out and simulators and the results that we get on the car — even if it’s not absolute numbers, but directionally correct — that gives us confidence that when we see the simulator showing a particular trend we’ve got, then we go to the racetrack with reasonable degree of certainty that that’s actually going to translate to how the car behaves.”