πποΈ BWT Alpine Formula One Team — In the end, the unthinkable happened: for the first time, Franco Colapinto and the Alpine A526 completed 125 laps in Barcelona without… anything breaking
In a sport where every screw counts and every sensor can become a nightmare,Alpine lived a moment that bordered on the miraculous. There was no smoke billowing from the garage, no engineers running around with long faces, no desperate radio messages. In its place, there was something almost unknown to the team in recent times:a whole day without problems.

Yes, it really happened. In itDay 3 of the shakedown in Barcelona, heAlpine A526, piloted byFranco Colapinto, complete125 consecutive lapswithout mechanical failures, without forced interruptions and without that uncomfortable silence that usually announces the worst. An achievement that, on any other team, would be another technical note. At Alpine, it was little short of a subdued celebration.
A “milestone” with a taste of irony
The irony did not go unnoticed by anyone. In the paddock, more than one raised an eyebrow upon hearing the news. “125 laps in a row? No internal red flags?” some rivals joked. But behind the laughter there was a clear reality:Alpine urgently needed a day like this.
During the last few seasons, reliability had been a recurring theme, almost a ghost that appeared at the worst moments. So completing a full testing program without a hitch felt like breaking an unwritten curse.
Franco Colapinto, the unexpected protagonist
At the center of this great little story wasFranco Colapinto. The young Argentine pilot not only complied with the shooting plan, but he did so with a maturity that surprised even within the team. Without gestures of frustration, without tense radio messages, Colapinto limited himself to doing what he knows best:drive, give clear feedback and keep the car alive.
Inside sources acknowledge that his calm approach helped the day flow. “He didn’t come to prove anything with heroic laps,” commented an engineer. “He came to work, and that, today, was worth gold.”
The silence that said it all

Perhaps the most revealing moment of the day was not a fast lap or a technical data, but thesilence. That strange silence in which no one shouts into the radio, no one asks to turn off the car immediately and no one nervously looks at the temperature monitors.
At Alpine, that silence was almost suspicious. Some team members, laughing, even wondered if the telemetry systems were really working. “Everything okay? Are you sure?” was a phrase that was heard more than once in the garage.
125 laps that are worth more than what the numbers say
From the outside, 125 laps may seem like just a figure. But in context, they mean something deeper:trust. Confidence in the project, in the processes and, above all, that the A526 can be a solid foundation on which to build.
It wasn’t the fastest car. He didn’t seek headlines for pure performance. But he did something that, for Alpine, was just as important:finished the entire day working as it should.
A different atmosphere in the garage
As the afternoon fell in Barcelona, ββthe atmosphere in the box was different. Not euphoric, but relieved. Discreet smiles, pats on the back and that collective feeling of having passed an internal test.
“It’s just a shakedown,” the team repeated, almost like a mantra to not tempt fate. But no one could hide that, for Alpine, this day had enormous symbolic value.
A turning point or just a truce?
The big question is inevitable: does this mark a true turning point or was it simply a lucky day? In Formula 1, history teaches us to be cautious. A perfect day does not guarantee a quiet season.
However, what happened in Barcelonait does change the tone of the speech. For the first time in a long time, Alpine can talk about progress without immediately adding a list of technical problems.
Colapinto and the silent message

For Franco Colapinto, this day also left a clear message. Without big statements or exaggerated gestures, he showed that he can be part of the solution. His ability to fit in, work with the team and provide stability was as valuable as any lap time.
“It didn’t make any noise, and that was the best,” summed up someone from the paddock. In a team that needed calm more than spectacle, Colapinto fit in perfectly.
A small step, but necessary
No one in Alpine dares to talk about resurrection or miracles. But yes ofa small step in the right direction. In a championship where every detail matters, ensuring that “nothing happens” can be, paradoxically, one of the greatest victories.
At the end of the day, the Alpine A526 returned to the garage in its entirety. And although it sounds almost absurd to highlight it, that detail is the essence of the day.
Because in Barcelona, ββfor once,the unthinkable happened: Alpine finished a full day of testing…and the car justit worked.