MPH: Next F1 megastar could emerge in days thanks to season start in Melbourne

F1

Years after Melbourne lost its opening slot, it's back as the first F1 race of the 2025 season. It gives this year's rookies the chance to follow in the footsteps of GP winners who shone on their debut amid the formidable challenge of Albert Park

Drivers who made their F1 debut at Australian Grand Prix

Left to right: Kimi Räikkönen, Jacques Villeneuve, Fernando Alonso, Mark Webber, Lewis Hamilton and Lando Norris made impressions on their F1 debuts in Melbourne

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Mark Hughes

Next week in Melbourne we’ll see the F1 debuts of Kimi Antonelli, Gabriel Bortoleto and Isack Hadjar, all fresh from race-winning F2 seasons (and in Bortoleto’s case, the title).

The Albert Park track is a more formidable place to be doing that than might be imagined. Unlike Sakhir (the other common season-opener of the last few years), there’s plenty to hit when you get it wrong. Which is quite easy to do on the low-grip public road with its big difference in grip on line to off and the thread-the-needle element to some of the faster corners. It requires confidence and commitment. With three one-hour sessions to build up to it before you’re into qualifying.

Looking at some of the notable Melbourne rookies of the past just underlines how critical are the competitive circumstances in determining the driver’s impact. Jacques Villeneuve’s grand prix debut here in 1996 with Williams must stand as the most impressive, at least superficially: pole position, leading the race until the late stages when a broken oil pipe forced him to back off, handing the victory to team-mate Damon Hill. That cannot be argued as anything other than a sensational performance. Yes, he was well prepared with many thousands of testing miles, he was in what was by a considerable margin F1’s fastest car and this was everyone else’s first time at Albert Park too. OK, but it’s no small thing to perform in that manner under the spotlight of a debut and team-mate Hill was by then an established, multiple grand prix-winning driver.

By 2000 Williams was nowhere near the force it had been in ’96, but Jenson Button, 20 years old and off just a single season of F3 and very little testing mileage, was making waves. Infamously clinching the drive after a late showdown test, which he’d got off the back of out-pacing Jean Alesi in a Prost test, there was a buzz around him. Just as there had been on his way up, with notables in the karting world proclaiming him as ‘the best since Senna’. Everything was going well in Melbourne until he dropped it in a big way in practice, just underlying how the circuit can bite. Thus compromised, he started a long way back, made good progress in the race before a mechanical problem intervened.

A year later Kimi Räikkönen, with just a season of British Formula Renault under his belt, made his debut with a sort of provisional superlicence, the FIA saying it would withdraw it if after a few races he was not deemed to be ready. So it was important he just kept his nose clean in Melbourne and demonstrated competence. Which he duly did. He qualified the Sauber a few tenths slower than sophomore Nick Heidfeld, ran comfortably in the pack and finished in sixth place (seventh on the road) a couple of places behind Heidfeld. The team had needed to wake him up from a nap to take part in the warm-up.

Williams of Jenson Button in 2000 Australian Grand Prix

Jenson Button had mixed fortunes on his F1 debut at Melbourne

Mark Thompson /Allsport

Räikkönen’s debut made for an interesting contrast with that at the same race of Juan Pablo Montoya, the Indy 500 winner and CART champion arriving at Williams full of confidence and gung-ho but getting involved in two first lap skirmishes which dropped him down the field before retirement. Fernando Alonso was also making his debut but in a hopelessly outclassed Minardi. He was 3.8sec adrift of pole (and 1.7sec off Räikkönen’s Sauber) but still around at the end, having imbued the team with the absolute certainty he was a future champion.

It was another Minardi rookie making the headlines a year later as Mark Webber took a massively attrition-aided fifth place in what would come to be his typical gritty style, putting not a foot wrong and maximising his opportunity.

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Moving onto 2007 Lewis Hamilton arrived with McLaren as a well-prepared rookie and GP2 champion in a super-fast car. A third place finish was the outcome but the way he’d out-fumbled team-mate Alonso into the first corner certainly created some attention. Alonso later got ahead through the better pit strategy he’d been given as the McLaren driver who’d qualified ahead. But even that carried some controversy, foreshadowing difficulties to come. In order to ensure he was the quicker McLaren driver in Q2 (which determined the team’s pit stop order) Hamilton’s pace on a second set of tyres had forced Alonso to also use up a second set — which he had wanted to keep for the race. He was angry he’d been forced to surrender an advantage over rival teams just to get priority over a team-mate. Those were the waves Hamilton’s speed created.

Fast-forward another eight years to 2015 and the debut of Toro Rosso’s Max Verstappen, 17 years old and with just one season of F3 as his only previous car racing experience. Although the car was nowhere near as competitive, there was a parallel here with Hamilton in the internal stresses his debut caused. Fellow rookie team-mate Carlos Sainz out-qualified him, getting through to Q3. Verstappen — who’d been fourth-quickest in Q1 — had fallen out at the Q2 hurdle when he got out of shape on his last run. The team had made that final run as late as possible, trying to get the best of the track. But a watching Jos Verstappen reckoned this had placed unnecessary pressure on him, with the seconds counting down and that he’d comfortably had the pace to have been sent out earlier. Changes were made to the autonomy of Max’s crew subsequently.

Paul Stoddart of Minardi and Mark Webber on Melbourne podium after finishing fifth in the 2002 Australian Grand Prix

Officals decided Mark Webber’s fifth-place finish for Minardi on his debut, in his home grand prix, merited a podium appearance

Mark Thompson/Allsport via Getty

Nineteen-year-old Lando Norris produced arguably the lap of qualifying here in making his debut in 2019, taking the unfancied McLaren-Renault (the team fresh off the back of an awful 2018) into Q3.

As we can see, there isn’t a default debut for a future megastar. But Albert Park certainly applies the stress which makes the great qualities very visible. A lot of eyes will be upon Antonelli, Hadjar and Bortoleto next week. We wish them well.