Doohan explains ‘strange’ shootout test with friend Schumacher before landing Alpine seat

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Jack Doohan has admitted that it was a “strange” feeling to share a test day with Mick Schumacher earlier this year when Alpine were mulling over their driver line-up options for the 2025 campaign.

Doohan and Schumacher both took to the Paul Ricard Circuit ahead of the British Grand Prix weekend in Alpine’s 2022-spec A522, as permitted under the sport’s current TPC (Testing of Previous Cars) regulations.

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A couple of months after the test, it was announced that reserve driver Doohan – who has also completed several FP1 runs – will step up to a race seat with the outfit next season, replacing Esteban Ocon as Pierre Gasly’s team mate.

Fresh from signing his contract, Doohan was asked about the so-called ‘shootout’ with Schumacher and how it felt to be part of such a day – the pair having initially bonded through the friendship between their fathers Mick and Michael.

MONZA, ITALY - AUGUST 31: Jack Doohan of Australia and Alpine F1 in the Paddock during final

Doohan will replace Ocon as Gasly’s team mate at Alpine in 2025

“It was strange,” said Doohan, whose dad is a former 500cc motorcycle world champion. “For me, I kept it business. I didn’t think of it in any other way than, at the end of the day, I’m just going to hop into the car and drive as fast as I can.

“It doesn’t matter who’s next to me. It doesn’t mean I’m going to be any different outside the car. But when I hop in, I have that the mindset to be as fast as I can.

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“Whatever the outcome was of that, I think I positioned myself to make sure that I was first in line to get this this seat, regardless of who it was next to me.”

That test aside, the 2021 F3 runner-up and 2023 F2 third-place finisher opened up on when he first believed there was a realistic shot of turning his reserve duties into a full-time seat.

ZANDVOORT, NETHERLANDS - AUGUST 23: Mick Schumacher of Germany, Reserve Driver of Mercedes looks on

Schumacher contested a pair of F1 seasons with Haas in 2021 and 2022

“After the first quarter of the year, I knew there was… let’s say, a rabbit to chase, a possibility that I can fight for this,” the 21-year-old Australian commented.

“There was no given task. There was obviously a lot of people [drivers] that were still out of contract and so much going on, so I had to be very patient and bide my time and really feed my case, make sure I maximised every time I got behind the wheel.

READ MORE: Doohan ‘hungry and determined’ for F1 opportunity as he admits Alpine exploring Sainz option was ‘no-brainer’

“I’m grateful that the patience paid off, as well as not racing, because that is a risk. But potentially, if I didn’t take that risk, this wouldn’t have happened.”

Doohan will continue in his reserve driver role through 2024, conducting simulator duties and further real-life tests with the A522 F1 car, while Schumacher contests the remainder of the World Endurance Championship for Alpine.

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