F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Gasly in the points, but still puzzled by Alpine performance loss

Pierre Gasly left Montreal with another solid haul of points for Alpine, but the Frenchman’s smile barely concealed a growing concern simmering underneath the Frenchman’s season.

Eighth place at the Canadian Grand Prix marked Gasly’s fourth top-10 finish of the 2026 Formula 1 campaign and continued Alpine’s encouraging upward trajectory.

Yet behind the result lies a conundrum neither Gasly nor the Enstone squad can fully explain: somewhere inside the upgraded A526, performance has quietly slipped away.

And the more Alpine searches for answers, the stranger the problem appears to become.

A fast car that suddenly feels different

Gasly had been one of the standout performers of the early season before Alpine introduced upgrades in Miami. Since then, something has changed.

The 30-year-old has repeatedly complained that the car no longer behaves as it once did, particularly in low-speed traction zones where confidence on corner exit is everything. The issue has become painfully visible in qualifying, where Gasly has suddenly struggled to extract peak performance over one lap.

“It’s [been] the same thing since the first lap in practice in Miami,” Gasly said after last Sunday’s race.

“We see it on data, we're pretty clear on what's happening and we've just got to understand exactly where it comes from, and it's going to be part of the work we'll have to do ahead of Monaco.”

The situation became serious enough in Montreal that Alpine effectively turned Gasly’s car into a rolling laboratory experiment.

Following a disastrous sprint qualifying session in 19th, the team removed the car from parc fermé conditions and began aggressively testing setup changes and component combinations in search of the missing feeling.

At one point, Gasly even reverted to an older floor specification while team-mate Franco Colapinto continued running the latest package on his side of the garage.

Points on Sunday, questions still unanswered

The irony for Alpine is that the upgrades themselves do not appear fundamentally flawed. Colapinto has looked increasingly comfortable since Miami and delivered another impressive performance in Canada, suggesting the raw pace is there.

That only deepens the mystery surrounding Gasly’s struggles.

“We've made a few tweaks with our upgrades since Miami which make them work now, so I think we're pretty happy with that,” he said. “On my side we've tested quite a lot of things, parts-wise in the sprint, and also again today I was running the older floor.

“As a team, we've got a good understanding coming out of the weekend and we can exclude the parts, but they still will be important to analyse deeper and understand, once the car gets back at the factory, how to get that performance back.”

Montreal’s stop-start layout, packed with chicanes and traction-heavy exits, exposed the weakness brutally. Gasly struggled early in the race to generate tyre temperature and maintain pace with the cars ahead, especially in the cold conditions.

Still, Sunday offered at least partial relief.

Unlike over a single lap, race conditions allowed Gasly to manage around the issue more effectively, helping him salvage what he later viewed internally as damage limitation rather than a true reflection of the car’s potential.

But the underlying concern remains unresolved – and perhaps more worrying, Alpine still cannot isolate a definitive cause.

“I think it's not as straightforward,” Gasly admitted. “At the moment I can just feel what I feel and we can just see on the data what we see in terms of difference.

“Whether it's a component or whether it's something else set-up-wise, it's a very small difference which doesn't explain the difference we're seeing, so I don't think it's set-up.

"It can be many things, that's why I think we need more days and we need to get back to the factory, get the car back and just understand a bit more from it.

“There is performance but since Miami my traction potential has clearly changed, and we need to get it back to where it was.”

That final sentence may be the most revealing of all.

Because Alpine is no longer searching for outright speed. The speed exists. The problem is that one of its lead drivers can no longer consistently access it.

And until the team discovers why, Gasly’s points finishes may continue to feel more like survival missions than genuine breakthroughs.

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Phillip van Osten

Motor racing was a backdrop from the outset in Phillip van Osten's life. Born in Southern California, Phillip grew up with the sights and sounds of fast cars thanks to his father, Dick van Osten, an editor and writer for Auto Speed and Sport and Motor Trend. Phillip's passion for racing grew even more when his family moved to Europe and he became acquainted with the extraordinary world of Grand Prix racing. He was an early contributor to the monthly French F1i Magazine, often providing a historic or business perspective on Formula 1's affairs. In 2012, he co-authored along with fellow journalist Pierre Van Vliet the English-language adaptation of a limited edition book devoted to the great Belgian driver Jacky Ickx. He also authored "The American Legacy in Formula 1", a book which recounts the trials and tribulations of American drivers in Grand Prix racing. Phillip is also a commentator for Belgian broadcaster Be.TV for the US Indycar series.

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