IndyCar star Colton Herta, targeting a Cadillac Formula 1 seat, emphasized his raw one-lap pace as his strongest asset following a challenging FIA Formula 2 debut in Melbourne. Amid expectations set earlier by Cadillac CEO Dan Towriss—including a top-10 F2 finish, simulator work, and FP1 sessions—Herta seeks to prove himself over the season's remaining rounds.
Having joined Hitech in F2 this season while serving as Cadillac's test and development driver, Herta brings 16 IndyCar pole positions—15 on road courses—to highlight his speed. Speaking to Motorsport, he said: “It’s probably just down to outright speed, right? That’s the most important thing, that’s what you get hired on, and then the rest follows.” His IndyCar record underscores this, though he stressed overall performance matters.
Cadillac's 2026 lineup of grand prix winners Sergio Perez and Valtteri Bottas raises the bar, with Towriss clear that Herta must earn a 2027 opportunity. Herta's Melbourne weekend started poorly: a crash eight laps into practice, 14th in qualifying, but a seventh-place feature race finish showed promise. “There were some good parts... but a lot of bad parts,” he admitted, citing adaptation to the new car, Pirelli tires, and unfamiliar track.
Despite solid race pace, qualifying issues limited points. With 13 F2 rounds left—including Miami and Montreal alongside F1 weekends—Herta faces a learning curve. Schedule overlaps rule out the Indy 500, prioritizing his F1 bid within Cadillac's development program.