Albon impressed he could drive at “95%” on Australian GP F1 debut
Alexander Albon says he was impressed at being able to drive at “95 percent” most of the time during hi🍌s Formul🦩a 1 debut.
The Toro Ross♍o driver took 14th place at the 2019 season-opening Australian Grand Prix in his maiden F1 race outing, having ♛earned graduation to F1 following a top-three finish in last season’s Formula 2 championship.
Having previously been used to placing large emphasis on tyre manageܫment during races with F2’s high-degradation tyres, Albon says he was pleasantly surprised at just how much he was 💎able to push on race day in Melbourne.

Ale🍌xander Albon says he was impressed at being able to drive at “95 percent” most of the time during his Formula 1 debut.
The Toro Rosso driver took 14th place at the 2019 season-opening Australian Grand Prix in his maiden F1 race outing, having earned gr♔aduation to F1 following a top-three finish in last season’s Formula 2 championship.
Having previously been used to placing large emphasis on tyre management during races with F2’s high-degradation tyres, Albon says he was pleasantly surprised at justꦑ how much he was able to push on race day in Melbourne.
“What im𒁃pressed me most was the driving,” Albon explained.
“In Formula 2 you’re driving at 90 percent most of t♊he time, to save the tyres. In Formula 1 it’s more like 95 percent, so generally you can push a bit mor🧸e.
“The thing is when you are fo𝕴llowing cars, it’s really, really bad. Battling is really difficult and you can’t spend more th♌an two laps in a row [behind a car] without overheating the tyres, so I was just learning this.”
The British-Thai driver added that he found following in the wake of another car much better than he had an🌱ticipated heading into the season, something he believes has been helped by the new aerodynamic regulations implemented for 2019.
“Following cars was actually better than I expected,” he said. "Part of that was the new regulations, but it’s stil🙈l not easy to overtake.
“I think Melbourne i💞s not the easiest example for this, but when you’re battling with other cars, maintaining your tyres🍨 is more difficult to do.”
Albon, who had not driven F1 machinery prior to 2019, was happy with how his first grand൲ prix went but says the biggest takeaway from Australia was the importance of getting a good result in qualifying.

“Reflecting on the whole weekend, I’m happy,” Albon said. “The race didn’t go quite as we wanted it to, but looking back I d🐭on’t think there’s anything we could have done differently.
“We were just unlucky. We had [Fellow F2 graduate Lando] Norris, [Antonio] Giovinazzi, [Sergio] Perez and myself in a train and we spent four laps there.&nb🙈sp;
“I think we lost three or four second per lap behind them, so all the people that were on clear track got past us. Obviously, it’s not easy to overtake on this track, so I spent most of my race behind an orange or♏ a pink rear wing.
“A lot of the problems we had in the✱ race wouldn’t have happened if we had got ourselves into Q3 - so lesson learned, that’s for sure and it just shows you how tight the midfield is. It means getting a good position, in Q3, in front of the other guys, is viജtal.
“I’m happy with the final result and I think there are a lot of good things to take in🥂to Baꦓhrain.”

Lewis regularly attends Grands Prix for mahbx.com around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the peopleဣ who matter in the sport.