©Alpine
The streets of Buenos Aires were painted Blue and Pink this past weekend as Alpine’s Franco Colapinto turned the Palermo neighborhood into a high-octane festival, proving that Argentina’s passion for Formula 1 is firing on all cylinders.
In an event that felt more like a national celebration than a simple show run, over 600,000 fans packed the Avenida del Libertador and Avenida Sarmiento to catch a glimpse of their local hero.
The event was a sensory overload, complete with a fly-by from the Argentine Air Force and a musical lineup that kept the energy peaking.
Colapinto, who is in the midst of his first full season in F1 after his mid-2024 debut with Williams and subsequent move to Alpine, didn't just bring the speed – he brought the soul.
While he wowed the masses in a 2012 Lotus E20 decked out in Alpine’s 2026 livery, he also paid homage to the past by driving a replica Mercedes W196, the legendary machine used by the great Juan Manuel Fangio.
For the 22-year-old, who recently secured his first point with Alpine in China, the high-pitch scream of the V8 engine against the backdrop of his home city was an emotional milestone.
Since becoming the first Argentine on the grid since 2001, Colapinto has carried the weight of a nation's expectations with a smile, and Sunday was his way of saying thank you.
©Alpine
"It was a great day. Honestly, I enjoyed it so much personally – it is a dream come true. I’m very happy with the day we had today, enjoying it with everyone, with all my people who have supported me for such a long time,” Colapinto beamed after the run.
Beyond the donuts and the tyre smoke, there was a clear, louder message: Argentina is ready once again for the world stage. It has been nearly three decades since the last Grand Prix in 1998, but the sheer scale of the 600,000-strong crowd sent a undeniable signal to the powers that be in Formula 1.
And Colapinto is leading that charge from the cockpit.
©Alpine
"I love Argentinians. We are the best fans in the world and it is great to show that, because we are showing Formula 1 that we deserve to return to the calendar and that we deserve to have a race again,” he said.
If the atmosphere in Palermo was any indication, the "Colapinto effect" might just be the catalyst needed to bring a permanent Grand Prix back to the heart of South America.
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