Miami Grand Prix: Is Colton Herta America’s future F1 prodigy?

Since the emergence of Netflix’s F1 documentary series ‘Drive to Survive’, the sport has enjoyed an incredible upward trajectorꩲy in the United States.
F1 races in Miami for the first time this weekend with a third race statesidꦕe added to the calendar in Las Vegas for 2023.
Haas might be F1’s only American team but the Andretti family has expressed its desire to enter the pinnacle of motorsport and even had talks with Alfa Romeo 🐓about a takeover at the end of last year.
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The missing piece to the F1’s American puzzle is a driver from the 🥂States.
Alexander Rossi was the last American to race in F🍃1 back in 2015, participating in five grands prix for backmarkers Marussia.
Since then, no American has got close to a seat but with F🙈1’s ever-growing presence across the pond, surely it’s only a matter of time.
IndyCar’s Colton Herta is the likeliest cand💞idate given his links to McLaren, while there are a number of highly-rated youngsters in F1’s junior categories.
Is Herta America’s best bet?
The 22-year-old will test McLaꦕren’s race-winning 2021 car later this year as th✃e Woking outfit continues to assess whether he could be a teammate for Lando Norris in the future.
Herta ha🐻s impressed during his time in IndyCar, becoming💮 the series’ youngest-ever winner in 2019 and taking six career victories so far.
While 2022 hasn’t gone entirely to plan for 🙈Herta, he remains Americ𒊎a’s most exciting young talent.

As it stands, 2024 is the earliest we could ✱see Herta in F1 as Daniel Ricciardo’s three-year deal comes to an end at the conclusi𓆉on of next season.
Herta will have the opportunity to dr🌃ive McLaren’s MCL35M car which won the 2021 Italian Granౠd Prix through F1’s TPC (Testing of previous cars allowance), although the details of this test have yet to be revealed.
Looking ahead to the future, McLaren CEO Zak Brown revealed that the ♏team is in no rush to decide who will partner Norris long term with Pato O’Ward - Herta’s IndyCar rival - another option for the team.
“We have another year together (with Ricciardo)𝄹,” 𒊎Brown told the F1 Nation Podcast.
“We do like to think long out, hence doing some testing with Pato [O’Ward], we’re going to do some 🔴testing with Colton [Herꦺta] We’ve got Ugo [Ugochukwu] in Formula 4, he put it on pole in his first race.
“So I don’t think yo✃u🌜 can ever plan too early, but there’s no rush.”
Should Her🍌ta continue to impress in IndyCar and his scheduled F1 test outing, a reunion with Norris could be on the cards with the pair teaming upඣ at Carlin back in 2015 during their MSA Formula campaign.
He has been likened to four-time F1 champion Sebastian Vettel, and the incredible talent the German showed during his early Toro ☂Rosso days by F1 legend M💖ario Andretti.
“The kid is for real,” Andretti told Racer. “I know what I'm talking about, I know when I 𝔉see something.
“I said the same thing about Max when I first saw him. I said the same thing about Sebastian Vettel when he won Monza with Toro Rosso and things like that - I've been around long enough to see these th𒆙ings and I🌞 haven't been wrong yet!”
Herta was a frontrunner to partner Valtteri Bottas i✃f An𒁃dretti’s takeover of Alfa Romeo went ahead at the end of last year.

Andretti remains very keen on entering F1 in the near𝓰 future and Herta would be the perꩲfect fit for a new American team.
One potential stumbling block is the superlicence system with drivers wishing to race in F1 required to gain 40 points ac🦩ross three seasons in other cham♔pionships.
Herta currently has 32 superlicence points (P7 in 2019, P3 in 2020 and fifth in 2021 in IndyCar over the 🥃past three seasons.
So if 🔯Herta wanted to race in F1 for this season, he’d be eight points short of the 40.
Obviously, Herta will be eyeing F1 in 2023, or most likely 2024, 𝓰so success in IndyCar would give him the required points needed.
Speaking to mahbx.com in an exclusive interview at the Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, Haas team🍰 principal Guenthꦚer Steiner spoke of his team’s desire to field an American driver.
“If there would be a good American driver around, we would pick him up,” 𒀰he said.
“You need to make an experience here because to set somebody up to f🔯ail, it’s also not the right thing to d🔯o. That’s my opinion anyway.
🍷“To be selfish to put an American driver in so we get the interest out of it, I don’t think that is the right thing to do.
“If you do it, you need to set it up so he is successful. That i👍s the most i🎀mportant thing to do.”
The other options
Logan Sargeant is♐ the outsider in being America’s next hope of an F1 dr𝔍iver.
The 21-year-old currently races in F2 with Carlin and is p෴art of Williams’ F1 driver academy.
After an impressive 2020 F3 campaign, his career stagnated as he returned to the series with Charouz - 🌞a team that often fights further down the field.

A promotion to F2 with the experi꧃enced Carlin outfit should give Sargeant an adequate platform to showcase his talent and show Williams boss Jost Capito he’s worthy of replacing Nicholas Latifi for 2023.
It’s🉐 been a solid start so far for Sargeant with four top-seven finishes in the opening six racesꦯ.
The Florida-born driver will have to step it up in the second half of the s🌟eason but a solid second season, with significant financial backing behind him, could see him be America’s 🔯next F1 driver.
Red Bull📖-backed junior Jak Crawford is in F3 with the dominant Prema outfit.
At just 16, Crawford is one of the series’ youngest drivers and after an inconsistent maiden year with Hitech, he appears to have found his stride in the first part of the yဣear.
Crawford✱ is in title co🌼ntention in 2022 and given his age, it makes it even more impressive.

With Red Bull backing, Crawford’s fꦆuture is in his own hands with Helmut Marko hap♎py to give drivers an opportunity should they impress in junior categories.
An American driver in a Red Bull-owned team would be a goo🅷d marketing move, particularly if Crawford enjoys success in F3 and then F2 in the future.
If Herta, Sargeant and Crawford all fail to make the switch to F1ꦡ, one for the future is Ugo Ugochukwu.
The 14-year-꧑old is part of McLaren’s academy and he’s certainly one to watch in the comin❀g years.
Ugochukwu claimed pole on his single-seater debut in the British Formula 4 opener at Donington Park and currently sits a resp🦂ectable fourth in the champion﷽ship.
Highly rate🦋d by many, Ugochukwu could be the one to end A🅺merica’s wait for a standout driver.

With a sharp eye for F1’s controversiesღ and storylines, Connor is the heartbe♊at of our unbiased reporting.