Alex Albon

Alexander Albon Ansusinha (Thai: อเล็กซานเดอร์ อัลบอน อังศุสิงห์, born 23 March 1996) is a British-Thai racing driver set to race in the 2021 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters alongside Liam Lawson. He is also the current reserve and development driver for Red Bull Racing in Formula One having raced for the team from the middle of the 2019 season to the end of the 2020 season. Albon had previously raced in Formula One for Scuderia Toro Rosso throughout the first half of 2019, before being promoted to Red Bull. He was replaced as a race driver by Sergio Pérez at Red Bull for the 2021 season and was subsequently demoted to his current role.

Alex Albon
Albon at the Barcelona pre-season test in 2019
BornAlexander Albon Ansusinha
(1996-03-23) 23 March 1996
London, England, United Kingdom
Formula One World Championship career
Nationality Thai
Active years20192020
TeamsToro Rosso, Red Bull
Car number23
Entries38 (38 starts)
Championships0
Wins0
Podiums2
Career points197
Pole positions0
Fastest laps0
First entry2019 Australian Grand Prix
Last entry2020 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
2020 position7th (105 pts)
Previous series
WebsiteOfficial website

After becoming part of the Red Bull Junior Team in 2012 he was promoted to open-wheel cars in the form of a seat with EPIC Racing during the 2012 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season, finishing 38th out of 49 in his debut year.[1] He stayed in Formula Renault 2.0 for two more seasons having secured a seat with KTR, finishing 16th in the 2013 championship and 3rd in 2014 championship. In 2015 Albon switched to European Formula 3, finishing 7th overall. A year later, ART signed Albon to race alongside Charles Leclerc in the GP3 Series,[2] finishing second in the drivers championship only to his teammate. Albon was given a seat once again by ART in 2017[3] to race in the FIA Formula 2 Championship where he finished his maiden year in 10th position.[4] After making his 2019 Formula One début with Toro Rosso alongside experienced Russian Daniil Kvyat, Albon replaced Pierre Gasly at Red Bull Racing with Gasly taking Albon’s place at Toro Rosso effective from the 2019 Belgian Grand Prix.[5] He took his first podium, and the first podium for a Thai driver, at the 2020 Tuscan Grand Prix.

Personal life

Albon was born at the Portland Hospital in London, England on 23 March 1996. His father, Nigel Albon is a former British racing driver who participated in the British Touring Car Championship and Porsche Carrera Cup.[6] His mother Kankamol, is from Thailand.

Growing up in Bures, Suffolk alongside a younger brother and three sisters,[7] Albon attended Ipswich School before leaving to pursue his professional racing career,[8][9] citing Michael Schumacher and Valentino Rossi as being inspirational figures when he was younger.[7] Albon holds dual British and Thai nationality, but races under the Thai flag.[10] Albon is known to practice Buddhism[11] and currently resides in both Monaco and Milton Keynes in close proximity to Red Bull Racing's headquarters.[12] He is currently in a relationship with Ladies Professional Golf Association player "Lily" Muni He.[13]

Early career

Karting

Albon started competitively racing karts in 2005 at the age of 8, competing locally and winning his local Hoddesdon Championship. In 2006 Albon started racing in the cadet class, finishing 1st at the Kartmasters British Grand Prix and participating in the Super 1 National Honda Cadet Championship finishing 1st in 2006 and 2nd in 2007. In 2008 he moved up to the KF3 class where he stayed until 2010. During this time Albon won the Kartmasters British Grand Prix, Formula Kart Stars Championship, KF Winter Series, Super 1 National KF3 Championship, CIK-FIA World Cup and CIK-FIA European Championship. In 2011 Albon graduated to KF1 placing 2nd in the WSK Euro Series and 2nd at the CIK-FIA World Championship.

EPIC Racing (2012)

From karting Albon graduated to the Formula Renault 2.0 Eurocup series where he drove for EPIC Racing in 2012 alongside Kevin Giovesi, Konstantin Tereschenko, Kevin Jörg, Dennis Wusthoff and Christof von Grunigen and finished 38th out of 49 in the championship after having a tough year and being unable to score points.

KTR (2013–2014)

In 2013 Albon joined KTR to race in the 2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 season alongside Yu Kanamaru and Ignazio D'Agosto finishing 16th out of 36 in the championship. Albon managed to secure one fastest lap and one pole position in the 2013 season, both of them coming at the Red Bull Ring in Austria. He finished the 2013 season with 22 points. In 2014 Albon raced alongside Gregor Ramsay, Jules Gounon and Callan O'Keefe and enjoyed a much more successful year. He was once again unable to find a win at any of the 14 races but managed to get one pole position at the Nürburgring and finished 3rd in the drivers championship with 117 points.

European Formula 3

Albon at Spa in 2015, European Formula 3 Championship

In 2015, Albon switched to European Formula 3, racing at Signature with teammate Dorian Boccolacci. He finished seventh overall, with two pole positions (scored at the Norisring), 5 podiums (including four rookie wins) and 187 points overall.

GP3 Series

In December 2015, Albon partook in post season testing with ART Grand Prix. In 2016, Albon raced for ART in the GP3.[14] Albon claimed four wins and finished as runner up in the championship to teammate Charles Leclerc.

ART Grand Prix (2017)

In 2017, Albon graduated to the FIA Formula 2 Championship, with ART.[15] His teammate for the season would be Nobuharu Matsushita, who at the time was also signed as a development driver for McLaren. He made his debut in Bahrain, where he started in 9th place on the starting grid for the feature race and finished 6th. For the sprint race Albon qualified 3rd on the grid, behind Luca Ghiotto and his teammate, Matsushita. However, mechanical problems forced Matsushita to start from the pitlane promoting Albon to second. Albon struggled for grip for the majority of the race and finished in 7th position.[16]

At the Spanish round Albon placed 3rd on the provisional starting grid for the feature race. Charles Leclerc led into turn one, but found himself under fire from Ghiotto and Albon after locking up. Leclerc began to pull away from Ghiotto, who began to fall into the clutches of Albon, who subsequently made a move into turn one and took second place from Ghiotto. Leclerc pitted on lap seven, along with Matsushita, leaving Albon with the lead of the race. Sergio Canamasas ground to a halt on lap 10 owing to problems with the car. Despite this, he did not pull off the track to retire – instead remaining on the track and gesturing to the marshals asking for a push-start. The dangerous position of the car initially brought out the virtual safety car and eventually, the safety car itself. As the race resumed, Leclerc and Ghiotto began to scythe through the pack. Oliver Rowland eventually pressured Albon into a mistake to take the lead of the race, although both still had an impending pitstop to make. With the fresh rubber, Albon and Rowland were staging a comeback with both drivers challenging for the podium toward the latter stages of the race, Albon later finished the race in 5th position. In the sprint race, Albon started 4th on the grid and enjoyed a well fought battle with Leclerc for the majority of the race and after battling for a number of laps, Leclerc finally passed Albon for fifth place. Later in the race however Albon dropped back, finishing the race in 8th position.

At the Monaco round, Albon qualified second on the grid with a time of 1:19.321 seconds. In qualifying, the grid was separated into two Groups due to safety concerns over the short and tight nature of the circuit. Albon was part of the 'Group B' qualifying and managed to gain the fastest time in that group, only qualifying 12 hundredths of a second behind Leclerc who qualified in Group A. After an aborted start due to Antonio Fuoco and Sean Gelael's engines stalling on the grid, Leclerc led into the first corner, followed by Albon. A concertina effect occurred at the Grand Hotel Hairpin as Canamasas was spun, causing Gelael to lose his front wing and bringing out a local yellow. Later in the race, Albon found himself stuck behind the slower moving Norman Nato and Jordan King, which eventually caused him to lose places, finishing the race in a disappointing 4th position. In the Sprint Race, Albon started 5th on the grid, and after a very tight race he dropped back to finish in 6th position. Albon missed the Baku round of the Championship due to injury. Albon had sustained a broken collarbone whilst out on a mountain biking training ride, and was unable to compete due to the over-the-shoulder seat belts used in Formula 2.[17][18]

Albon was back in action for the fifth round of the championship, stating that his initial feeling on returning to action after breaking his collarbone was "a lot better" than he expected. He confirmed that the bone was still "clearly broken" following an x-ray on the Tuesday before the race weekend, and explained that the main issue he is having in the car is a "numb feeling" from the scar he received during successful surgery after the crash.[19] Albon finished the practice session in 8th, which showed that despite the injury, the chance for his first podium in Formula 2 was a possibility. Albon qualified in 4th for the Feature Race, however was later promoted to third on the provisional starting grid after Sérgio Sette Câmara was disqualified after the qualifying session after failing to provide the required 1 litre fuel sample.[20] Albon finished the Feature Race in 5th position, after losing places to Oliver Rowland and Nicholas Latifi (both racing for DAMS) whose car proved to have a lot of pace. For the Sprint Race, Albon started the race 4th on the grid and managed to move up the grid to clinch his first podium in Formula 2, finishing behind Artem Markelov. He would later score another podium at the sprint race at the season finale in Abu Dhabi, finishing in second after being overtaken by Leclerc on the final lap. He finished 10th in the drivers' championship in his first F2 season, scoring 86 points.

DAMS (2018)

Albon at Red Bull Ring in 2018
Albon on the podium after winning the 2018 Silverstone Formula 2 round

In April 2018, DAMS announced that they signed Albon for the 2018 season to partner Nicholas Latifi. While initially only confirmed for the opening round, he was later confirmed as full time driver for the team the following month. He started the season with a fourth place in the feature race in Bahrain before finishing thirteenth in the sprint race.

For the next round in Baku, Albon started from pole for the feature race and followed it up with his first win in F2, while in the sprint race he finished thirteenth again.

At the next two rounds in Barcelona and Monaco, Albon took two more pole positions but finished fifth in the feature race in Spain after getting away slowly while in the sprint he finished second behind Jack Aitken. In Monaco, however, it was a weekend to forget for the Thai driver, as in the feature race, he collided with Nyck de Vries as he was entering the pitlane, spinning him around in the pitlane entrance, while in the sprint race he collided with Campos' Roy Nissany approaching the Nouvelle Chicane.

Another retirement would follow in the feature race at Le Castellet after he suffered an engine failure. In the sprint race, he finished seventh, one place ahead of Latifi. After finishing fifth in both races at the Red Bull Ring, Albon won the feature race at Silverstone, before collecting two more wins at the sprint race at the Hungaroring, and the feature race at Sochi. A stall on the grid in the feature race at Abu Dhabi ended his title chances; he finished fourteenth in the feature race and eighth in the sprint race, leaving him third in the drivers' championship behind fellow future F1 drivers George Russell and Lando Norris.

Albon during the Formula E testing in Marrakech, December 2017

Formula E

Albon was signed by Nissan e.dams alongside Sébastien Buemi as one of its drivers for the 2018–19 Formula E season, but he was released before the start of the season to instead drive in the 2019 Formula One season for Toro Rosso.[21][22] His place was taken by former F2 colleague Oliver Rowland, who previously competed in the 2015 Punta del Este ePrix as an injury replacement for Mahindra Racing's Nick Heidfeld.

Formula One career

Toro Rosso (January–August 2019)

Albon driving for Toro Rosso at the 2019 Austrian Grand Prix

On 26 November 2018, it was confirmed that Albon had been released from his Nissan e.dams Formula E contract after rumours he was to sign for Toro Rosso. On the same day, Toro Rosso announced Albon would join the team for 2019 alongside Daniil Kvyat and thus Albon's relationship with the Red Bull Junior Team was restored. He is the second Thai driver to compete in Formula One,[23] the first since Prince Bira competed in the 1954 season.[22]

At the Bahrain Grand Prix, the second race of Albon's Formula One career, he finished 9th to score his first points. At the following race in China, Albon started from the pit lane after a heavy crash in Free Practice 3 and being unable to compete in qualifying. Albon finished 10th and won the 'Driver Of The Day' award.[24] Another points finish came with an 8th-place finish in Monaco. After a retirement at the 2019 Canadian Grand Prix and three consecutive finishes outside of the points, Albon produced a strong drive to finish in 6th place at the chaotic rain-affected 2019 German Grand Prix, however he was bested by Kvyat, who scored Toro Rosso's second ever podium in their Formula One history. In the following Hungarian Grand Prix, Albon finished 10th, after notably having a fierce battle with his teammate Daniil Kvyat during the race.

2019

Albon driving for Red Bull at the 2019 Italian Grand Prix

On 12 August 2019, Red Bull announced that Albon would be replacing Pierre Gasly at the team from the Belgian Grand Prix onwards,[5] with Gasly returning to Toro Rosso. The change came after Gasly had struggled with Red Bull Racing RB15, having failed to keep on the same pace of now-former teammate Max Verstappen. Upon the shock mid-season announcement, the team at Red Bull said in a press release, ”The team will use the next nine races to evaluate Alex’s performance in order to make an informed decision as to who will drive alongside Max in 2020.”[25] On the dropping of Gasly, Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner said: "Pierre really needs to take some time out during the break, reflect, and take the lessons into the second part of the year. We desperately need him realising more of the potential of the car."[26]

At his first race with Red Bull at the Belgian Grand Prix, Albon was forced to start from 17th on the grid due to a power unit change. However, he produced a fine drive and after passing Sergio Pérez on the final lap Albon crossed the line in 5th place. A pair of 6th-place finishes followed in Italy and Singapore. After a crash in qualifying in Russia resulting in a pit lane start Albon came through the field to claim another 5th place. Albon and Verstappen set identical lap times in qualifying at the Japanese Grand Prix, and Albon finished a career-best 4th in the race. He finished 5th at both the Mexican and United States rounds and looked set for a 2nd-place finish in Brazil before a botched overtaking move by Lewis Hamilton scuttled his chances. Albon finished the race in 14th, ending a nine point-scoring streak. Hamilton later received a penalty for causing the collision. At the final race in Abu Dhabi, Albon was a contender to finish 6th in the standings, but by finishing 6th in the race, he was unable to outscore Carlos Sainz Jr. and Pierre Gasly and finished his debut season in Formula One 8th in the standings with 92 points. At the end of the season, Albon received the Rookie of the Year award at the FIA Prize Giving Ceremony.

2020

Albon driving for Red-Bull in Barcelona in 2020 during pre-season testing

Albon continued racing for Red Bull alongside Verstappen during the 2020 season.[27] At the opening race in Austria, Albon started in fourth place and spent much of the race in third after teammate Verstappen retired. Whilst attempting to overtake Lewis Hamilton for second place, the two cars collided, sending Albon into the gravel, an incident for which Hamilton received a penalty. Albon was able to continue but later retired from the race with an electrical failure likely caused by the clash.[28][29] Albon had an unspectacular weekend at the next race of the season, the Styrian Grand Prix. He qualified 5th in the wet, three places behind team mate Max Verstappen. In the race, Albon lacked pace compared to his teammate, finishing over 10 seconds behind despite making one less stop than the Dutch driver. At one stage he was coming under pressure from Sergio Pérez in his Racing Point RP20, before the Mexican fell back with front wing damage after contact with Albon following a failed overtake attempt, leaving Albon to finish 4th.[30] Red Bull said they are unsure why Albon lacked pace in the race.[31]

While lapping in qualifying at the Hungarian Grand Prix, Albon was held up in traffic, compromising his lap which meant he was knocked out in the second part of qualifying, ending up thirteenth fastest. He managed to recover to fifth. His fifth place finish came under threat as Red Bull were summoned to the stewards for artificially drying Albon's grid slot,[32] but he wasn't penalised.[33] Albon finished the Belgian Grand Prix in sixth position after being passed by Renault driver Esteban Ocon on the last lap.[34]

At the Italian GP, Albon qualified ninth, four places behind teammate Max Verstappen in P5. Afterwards he said he did not think the ban on qualifying engine modes hurt Red Bull despite the poor showing.[35] He ended the race in 15th position.[36] Albon took his maiden Formula One podium at the 2020 Tuscan Grand Prix, by overtaking Daniel Ricciardo on lap 51 after the second race restart. Albon's podium was the first podium for a Thai Formula One driver in the World Championship.[37] He took his second Formula One podium at the Bahrain GP after Sergio Pérez retired from third place due to engine failure.[38]

Albon finished the season in 7th with 105 points and 2 podium finishes.

2021

Albon was demoted to the role of reserve and development driver for 2021, his race seat being taken by Sergio Pérez.[39] Following his demotion, Albon said "it hurts" but insisted that he isn't giving up and hopes to soon return to F1 with Red Bull.[40]

DTM

Albon is due to participate in some rounds of the 2021 Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters.[41]

Racing record

Career summary

Season Series Team Races Wins Poles FLaps Podiums Points Position
2012 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 EPIC Racing 14 0 0 0 0 0 38th
Formula Renault 2.0 Alps 14 0 0 0 0 26 16th
2013 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 KTR 14 0 1 1 0 22 16th
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC 6 0 0 1 1 61 22nd
2014 Eurocup Formula Renault 2.0 KTR 14 0 1 0 3 117 3rd
Formula Renault 2.0 NEC 6 1 0 1 2 80 17th
2015 FIA Formula 3 European Championship Signature 33 0 2 1 5 187 7th
Macau Grand Prix 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 13th
2016 GP3 Series ART Grand Prix 18 4 3 3 7 177 2nd
Masters of Formula 3 Hitech GP 1 0 0 0 0 N/A 5th
2017 FIA Formula 2 Championship ART Grand Prix 20 0 1[lower-alpha 1] 1 2 86 10th
2018 FIA Formula 2 Championship DAMS 24 4 3[lower-alpha 2] 0 8 212 3rd
2019 Formula One Red Bull Toro Rosso Honda 12 0 0 0 0 92 8th
Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 9 0 0 0 0
2020 Formula One Aston Martin Red Bull Racing 17 0 0 0 2 105 7th
2021 Formula One Red Bull Racing Test-/Reserve driver

Complete FIA Formula 3 European Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 DC Points
2015 Signature Volkswagen SIL
1

4
SIL
2

6
SIL
3

6
HOC
1

13
HOC
2

8
HOC
3

9
PAU
1

5
PAU
2

7
PAU
3

NC
MNZ
1

21
MNZ
2

WD
MNZ
3

WD
SPA
1

3
SPA
2

16
SPA
3

9
NOR
1

5
NOR
2

2
NOR
3

3
ZAN
1

7
ZAN
2

4
ZAN
3

8
RBR
1

7
RBR
2

5
RBR
3

8
ALG
1

2
ALG
2

12
ALG
3

Ret
NÜR
1

12
NÜR
2

14
NÜR
3

11
HOC
1

11
HOC
2

Ret
HOC
3

2
7th 187

Complete GP3 Series results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Pos Points
2016 ART Grand Prix CAT
FEA

6
CAT
SPR

1
RBR
FEA

2
RBR
SPR

2
SIL
FEA

1
SIL
SPR

14
HUN
FEA

7
HUN
SPR

1
HOC
FEA

4
HOC
SPR

Ret
SPA
FEA

9
SPA
SPR

10
MNZ
FEA

6
MNZ
SPR

2
SEP
FEA

1
SEP
SPR

8
YMC
FEA

Ret
YMC
FEA

Ret
2nd 177

Complete FIA Formula 2 Championship results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate points for the fastest lap of top ten finishers)

Year Entrant 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 DC Points
2017 ART Grand Prix BHR
FEA

6
BHR
SPR

7
CAT
FEA

5
CAT
SPR

8
MON
FEA

4
MON
SPR

6
BAK
FEA
BAK
SPR
RBR
FEA

5
RBR
SPR

2
SIL
FEA

18
SIL
SPR

10
HUN
FEA

8
HUN
SPR

7
SPA
FEA

12
SPA
SPR

18
MNZ
FEA

14
MNZ
SPR

8
JER
FEA

12
JER
SPR

9
YMC
FEA

7
YMC
SPR

2
10th 86
2018 DAMS BHR
FEA

4
BHR
SPR

13
BAK
FEA

1
BAK
SPR

13
CAT
FEA

5
CAT
SPR

2
MON
FEA

Ret
MON
SPR

Ret
LEC
FEA

Ret
LEC
SPR

7
RBR
FEA

5
RBR
SPR

5
SIL
FEA

1
SIL
SPR

7
HUN
FEA

5
HUN
SPR

1
SPA
FEA

5
SPA
SPR

3
MNZ
FEA

3
MNZ
SPR

Ret
SOC
FEA

1
SOC
SPR

3
YMC
FEA

14
YMC
SPR

8
3rd 212

Complete Formula One results

(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position; races in italics indicate fastest lap)

Year Entrant Chassis Engine 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 WDC Points
2019 Red Bull Toro Rosso Honda Scuderia Toro Rosso STR14 Honda RA619H 1.6 V6 t AUS
14
BHR
9
CHN
10
AZE
11
ESP
11
MON
8
CAN
Ret
FRA
15
AUT
15
GBR
12
GER
6
HUN
10
8th 92
Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB15 BEL
5
ITA
6
SIN
6
RUS
5
JPN
4
MEX
5
USA
5
BRA
14
ABU
6
2020 Aston Martin Red Bull Racing Red Bull Racing RB16 Honda RA620H 1.6 V6 t AUT
13
STY
4
HUN
5
GBR
8
70A
5
ESP
8
BEL
6
ITA
15
TUS
3
RUS
10
EIF
Ret
POR
12
EMI
15
TUR
7
BHR
3
SKH
6
ABU
4
7th 105

Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.

Notes

  1. Pole given as a result of the reverse grid in the sprint race.[42]
  2. All poles achieved during qualifying.[42]

References

  1. "Introducing Alex Albon..." Red Bull. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  2. "Albon enters GP3 with ART". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  3. "Alexander Albon completes ART 2017 line up – Formula 2". www.fiaformula2.com. Archived from the original on 15 June 2017. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  4. "Driver Standings - Formula 2". www.fiaformula2.com. Archived from the original on 17 May 2019. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  5. "Alex Joins the Team". redbullracing.redbull.com. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  6. "Nigel Albon". Driver Database. 30 August 2019.
  7. "Get To Know Your Driver: Alex Albon". Red Bull. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  8. Sandalls, Katy. "Former Suffolk schoolboy gets top F1 seat". East Anglian Daily Times. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  9. "5 things you didn't know about 2019 Scuderia Toro Rosso driver Alexander Albon". Red Bull. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  10. "Alex Albon hoping to earn new Red Bull deal and move out of parents' house". The Independent. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  11. "Albon reveals he is a 'practising Buddhist'". Sports Mole. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  12. "Alex Albon hoping to earn new Red Bull deal and move out of parents' house". The Independent. 23 October 2019. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  13. "10 Fun Things About Alex Albon". Red Bull. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
  14. "De Vries joins 2016 GP3 field with ART". 24 February 2016. Retrieved 24 February 2016. We have Charles Leclerc, Alexander Albon [neither confirmed yet], Jake Hughes, Jack Aitken and Kevin Jorg lining up on the grid and Antonio Fuoco is staying for another season. All these guys are capable of winning races
  15. "GP3 runner-up Albon confirmed for GP2 2017 promotion". 22 February 2017. Retrieved 22 February 2017.
  16. Kalinauckas, Alex. "Bahrain Formula 2: Ferrari junior Leclerc beats Ghiotto and Rowland". Autosport.com. Retrieved 22 January 2018.
  17. Kalinauckas, Alex. "ART F2 driver Alexander Albon explains injury behind Baku absence". Autosport.com. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  18. "Albon explains extent of cycling crash injuries". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  19. Kalinauckas, Alex. "F2 news: Injured Formula 2 racer Albon says return better than expected". AUTOSPORT.com. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  20. Kalinauckas, Alex. "Sergio Sette Camara loses Red Bull Ring Formula 2 front row start". Autosport.com. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  21. "Nissan signs Albon as Buemi's Formula E teammate". Motorsport.com. Retrieved 24 September 2018.
  22. "Albon to partner Kvyat at Toro Rosso in 2019". formula1.com. 26 November 2018. Retrieved 11 March 2019.
  23. "คนไทยคนที่2! อัลบอนเตรียมซิ่งF1ฤดูกาลหน้า" (in Thai). 18 October 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2019.
  24. "Driver Of The Day: Albon dedicates China point to mechanics after FP3 smash". Formula One. Retrieved 14 April 2019.
  25. "Red Bull drops Pierre Gasly for Alexander Albon". Motor Sport Magazine. 12 August 2019. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  26. "Red Bull: Alexander Albon to replace Pierre Gasly". 12 August 2019. Retrieved 12 August 2019.
  27. "Alex Albon to remain alongside Max Verstappen at Red Bull for 2020". formula1.com. 12 November 2019. Retrieved 12 November 2019.
  28. Smith, Luke (5 July 2020). "Albon: Hamilton clash denied me potential F1 race win at Austrian GP". autosport.com. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
  29. "Albon's DNF likely caused by Hamilton clash, not Honda fault". The Race. 10 July 2020. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  30. "Formula 1 Pirelli Grosser Preis der Steiermark 2020 – Race Result". Formula1.com. 12 July 2020. Retrieved 12 July 2020.
  31. "F1 news: Red Bull baffled by Albon's Styrian GP struggles". www.motorsport.com.
  32. "F1 Hungarian GP: Red Bull summoned by stewards for drying Albon's grid slot". www.autosport.com.
  33. "Albon's fifth place confirmed after Red Bull 'grid drying' investigation". www.racefans.net.
  34. "The Winners and Losers of the 2020 Belgian Grand Prix | Formula 1®". www.formula1.com. Retrieved 4 September 2020.
  35. "A tight Mercedes battle & an intriguing fight for the podium: What To Watch For in the 2020 Italian GP". formula1.com. 5 September 2020. Retrieved 5 September 2020.
  36. "Italian Grand Prix 2020 race report and highlights: Gasly beats Sainz to maiden win in Monza thriller, as Hamilton recovers to P7 after penalty | Formula 1®". www.formula1.com. Retrieved 6 September 2020.
  37. "Tuscan GP Facts & Stats: Hamilton just one win shy of Schumacher record". 13 September 2020. Retrieved 14 September 2020.
  38. Kalinauckas, Alex (29 November 2020). "F1 Bahrain GP: Hamilton wins following Grosjean's fireball crash". Autosport. Retrieved 29 November 2020.
  39. "Perez to partner Verstappen at Red Bull in 2021, as Albon becomes reserve driver". www.formula1.com. 18 December 2020. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  40. "'It hurts, but I'm not giving up' - Albon resolute as he breaks silence on losing Red Bull race seat". www.formula1.com. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  41. Thukral, Rachit (4 January 2021). "Albon to contest DTM in 2021 with Red Bull backing alongside Lawson". Autosport.com. Retrieved 4 January 2021.
  42. "Formula 2 poles". results.motorsportstats.com. Motorsport Stats. Retrieved 8 August 2020.
Awards
Preceded by
Charles Leclerc
Autosport Awards
Rookie of the Year

2019
Succeeded by
Oscar Piastri
Preceded by
Charles Leclerc
FIA Rookie of the Year
2019
Succeeded by
Incumbent
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