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Bottas relishes return to track with Cadillac

Veteran driver is eager to lead the new team's charge into Formula One

China Daily | Updated: 2025-10-09 00:00
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Valtteri Bottas has spent the past year watching Formula One from the inside without ever taking part. Officially, he has been Mercedes' reserve, sitting in on briefings, analyzing data and staying fit in case he was needed. Unofficially, he has been a man waiting for another chance.

That chance will come next season, when Bottas returns to the grid with Cadillac. The American manufacturer's arrival is an audacious bet from Detroit on F1's global stage, and for Bottas it represents a route back into a world he never wanted to leave.

"Getting this seat has been my target for a while," he says. "This opportunity opened up, and I feel good about it, 100 percent."

To understand the weight of this comeback, it helps to look back at Bottas' years at Mercedes. When he joined in 2017, it was to replace Nico Rosberg — the only man at that point to have beaten Lewis Hamilton in equal machinery. Bottas quickly learned the scale of that task.

For five seasons, he played the perfect lieutenant: quick enough to secure points, podiums and the occasional victory, but never so quick that he threatened Hamilton's authority. Between them, they delivered Constructors' titles in every one of Bottas' years there. The Finn won ten grands prix in that time, but always in the shadow of his illustrious teammate.

There were weekends when Bottas was untouchable — Melbourne 2019, Austria 2020 — but a sustained title challenge never materialized. When Mercedes chose George Russell as its long-term partner for Hamilton in 2022, Bottas was moved aside, his reputation for dependability intact.

His subsequent switch to Sauber was meant to be liberating. At last, he had a three-year contract and a chance to lead a team on his own terms after the uncertainty of annual renewals at Mercedes. But the optimism faded fast.

As Audi's takeover loomed, the team drifted and results dried up. Where Bottas once fought Hamilton and Max Verstappen for wins, he now found himself scrapping for 15th. By the end of 2024, he had gone a full season without scoring a point.

"My Sauber years weren't the most enjoyable," he says with characteristic understatement.

He later admitted the move had been a mistake.

When his contract expired, few expected him to return. "I got messages saying, 'congrats on a great career, enjoy retirement,'" he recalls with a grin. "I didn't reply to those people, because I wasn't done."

Learning on the sidelines

Returning to Mercedes for 2025 as the team's reserve driver has given Bottas perspective. "I've seen the sport differently," he says. "Normally, as a driver, your only contact is your race engineer. This year, I've sat in the garage, listened to the comms, understood more of what's happening behind the scenes in qualifying and the race, and what goes on in the factory. That will help me with building a new team."

He even came close to racing again when Russell fell ill in Baku. "They woke me up early on Friday just to get to the track and be ready," he recalls. "About an hour before the session, George said he'd try, and in the end he was fine."

Bottas shrugs. Routine, he says, after a dozen seasons. "Physically I stay ready, and with the engineers it's about going through the setup, looking at balance issues, figuring things out. That's normal for me."

Next year, Bottas will lead Cadillac's first steps into Formula One. Nobody inside the team is talking about podiums or even points just yet. Instead, the emphasis is on finishing races, learning fast and surviving the early blows.

"The first year with Cadillac will be tough," Bottas acknowledges. "We're not expecting big results. That's just the reality. But, I'd rather be here than anywhere else. Being on the sidelines reminded me how cool this sport is."

Though still under contract to Mercedes until the end of 2025, he has already begun early technical discussions with his new colleagues. "We've had online calls with some of the engineers. We can talk about things like steering wheel layouts and basic preferences."

Xinhua

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