SPORT / MISCELLANY
Alpine launch program to find women Formula 1 drivers by 2030
Published: Jun 30, 2022 07:51 PM
Formula One's Alpine team said on Wednesday physical ability is no barrier for women to compete in their sport as they launched a program to have a female driver in the next eight years.

Only two women have ever started a Grand Prix, the Italian pair of Maria Teresa de Filippis, who qualified in three in 1958, and Lella Lombardi, who raced in 12 between 1974 and 1976, picking up a point.

There has since been a belief that physical strength was a drawback to the progress of women in the sport. 

That was backed up on Tuesday by Jamie Chadwick, champion of the W series, an all-female championship, who said reaching Formula One via its feeder series Formula Two and Three is "extremely physical."

Alpine's CEO Laurent Rossi, however, rejected that notion, as the team launched a program to mentor women drivers.

"The no.1 criteria is not physical ability, far from it," Rossi told AFP.

"The proof is that Fernando Alonso continues to drive very well. 

"If a 40-year-old man can drive in Formula One then a woman on top form at 28 years old is as capable." 

Rossi said there were examples of women in other industries working in similar extreme conditions.

"There are women who fly fighter jets, who are astronauts, who are used to much more powerful G-forces," he said.

"It's something that society wanted to peddle for years, and is one of the cliches that need to be eradicated," he added.

In the coming weeks Alpine will search for up to five candidates aged between 10 and 12, with a view to having at least one of them racing by 2030.

"We really have to be able to detect potential from as young as possible so they can follow the training program," Alpine's director of human resources Claire Mesnier said.