
6 January 2026motorsportDriver Ratings
Zhou Guanyu Opens Up on Mental Strain of Reserve Role and Eyes Full‑Time Return
Chinese driver Zhou Guanyu says being a reserve for Ferrari in 2025 tested his mental resilience but also gave him clear development insights. He’s now a reserve for Cadillac in 2026, with his ultimate aim a full‑time F1 seat.
Zhou Guanyu, the first Chinese driver in F1, admits the reserve‑driver stint has been a mental challenge, but also a learning curve that sharpened his focus on a full‑time comeback. After a three‑year contract with Alfa Romeo ended, he spent 2025 as Ferrari’s reserve before signing with Cadillac for 2026, where he hopes the experience will translate into a race seat.
Why it matters:
- Watching former rivals race from the sidelines adds psychological pressure, especially when you’ve battled them on track before.
- A reserve seat can provide a unique technical perspective, letting a driver study top‑team operations and driver habits without the distraction of race‑day performance.
- Zhou’s move to Cadillac signals the new team’s willingness to cultivate talent outside the traditional F1 driver pipeline.
The details:
- Zhou described the mental side as “hard” because you’re constantly observing competitors you’ve raced against, which fuels the desire to be back on the grid.
- He says the reserve role gave him “a clearer picture of how you should develop,” allowing him to watch how the sport’s elite handle pressure, adapt strategies, and execute pit stops.
- The position let him focus on personal improvement rather than race‑day stress, which he believes already makes him a better driver.
- For 2026 he will be a reserve for Cadillac, working alongside Valtteri Bottas, the team’s announced race driver, and contributing to the fledgling project’s development.
- Zhou’s timeline: concentrate on his current commitment, reassess options after the summer shutdown, and keep his ultimate goal of returning to a full‑time seat front‑and‑center.
What's next:
- In the coming weeks Zhou will integrate with Cadillac’s engineering team, offering feedback while staying race‑fit.
- He expects the “waiting game” to intensify after the summer break, when teams revisit driver line‑ups.
- If his performance and the team’s progress align, he could be positioned for a full‑time drive in 2027 or sooner, depending on openings.