Ferrari: Antonio Giovinazzi and Robert Shwartzman will share reserve driver role in 2023

Formula 1

Products You May Like

Antonio Giovinazzi and Robert Shwartzman

Italian Antonio Giovinazzi and Russian-Israeli Robert Shwartzman will share the reserve driver role at Ferrari this year.

Former Alfa Romeo race driver Giovinazzi continues in the role for a second season while Shwartzman steps up from a position as development driver.

One of them will attend every grand prix this season as well as helping car development in Ferrari’s new simulator.

Italians Antonio Fuoco and Davide Rigon will be development drivers.

The quartet will assist race drivers Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz as the team seek to improve on a 2022 season that started with great promise after Ferrari produced their first competitive car for four years, but which saw Leclerc’s title challenge fade as a result of strategic errors and reliability failures.

Ferrari has a new team principal this year, with former Alfa Romeo and Renault boss Frederic Vasseur replacing Mattia Binotto, who was said by the team to have resigned in December.

Ferrari said Fuoco and Rigon had “proved their worth in terms of providing the engineers with precise and reliable feedback, a skill that’s even more important given that actual track testing is extremely limited, so simulation is now a vital tool, not just in preparing for each race but also in terms of car development”.

Giovinazzi and Fuoco will also compete for Ferrari in the world endurance championship in the new 499P Hypercar.

Shwartzman and Rigon will race in the GT endurance category in the 296 GT3.

Products You May Like

Articles You May Like

Sabalenka wins at Miami Open after death of former partner
FanDuel NC promo code unlocks Bet $5, Get $250 bonus for today’s March Madness odds: Bet on Duke vs. JMU and more
Shohei Ohtani interpreter scandal: 4 remaining questions after Dodgers star tells his side of the story
Best PA Sportsbook Promos: Claim thousands of dollars in betting offers
Forget Ohtani and MLB: NBA may have its own gambling problem