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Zhou’s arrival in Shanghai is set to make huge waves, with a movie-style documentary on his career released two days before the race. Photo: Xinhua

F1 Chinese Grand Prix: after watching for years as a ‘fan boy’, Zhou Guanyu hopes to finally make his debut in Shanghai

  • Shanghai-born Zhou was just 5 when he watched the first Chinese Grand Prix, where he caught the racing bug and became a fan of Fernando Alonso
  • Twenty years on, and after last year’s cancelled race, the Sauber driver hopes to line up alongside the Spaniard, who now drives for Aston Martin

Zhou Guanyu says it will be a “sensational moment” when he takes to the F1 grid at next month’s Chinese Grand Prix, 20 years after he first watched the inaugural event from the grandstands as a child.

Zhou was born and raised in Shanghai, and was taken to the first-ever Grand Prix in China in 2004 when he was just five, where he caught the racing bug and began to idolise Fernando Alonso who was then on the rise to two World Championships with Renault.

He went to each edition until he began racing internationally at 13.

Zhou was taken to the first-ever Grand Prix in Shanghai, China in 2004, aged just five. Photo: AFP

Now 24, Zhou will race for Swiss team Sauber on that same tarmac next month alongside his idol, now at Aston Martin, but memories of his first days as a “fan boy” remain vivid.

“I remember exactly where I was sitting every year,” he told the Post. “The first year I was actually very close to the entry of turn one, but most of the time has been in the main grandstand, because from there you can see turns one to three, and also turn five a little bit as well.

“When I was a kid I had binoculars, and I could zoom into the garage, and it was really exciting to see what was going on behind the scenes, and just dreaming [of being] an F1 driver one day.”

Zhou’s arrival in Shanghai, following next month’s Japanese Grand Prix, is set to make huge waves, with a movie-style documentary on his career, The First One, released on April 19, two days before the race.

But while he admits there’s more to be done in terms of F1 promotion in China, he says he has had good support from local racing fans and indeed the government.

Zhou hopes to race on the same tarmac as his idol, 2005 winner Fernando Alonso. Photo: K. Y. Cheng

“I had [government support] at Silverstone for my first year [in 2022],” Zhou said. “The government people, the President’s people, were able to reach out, making sure I was OK. I’m really proud to have that support, since that doesn’t normally happen often back home.

“And it’s just great that they know someone is racing in Formula One, and making sure they’re taking care of their countrymen.”

Zhou came close to enjoying his maiden home race last year, with the Chinese event included on the original 2023 calendar, but it was cancelled ahead of the season because of ongoing Covid-19 restrictions. It was a “tough” moment for the Zhou, who did not know how long his career would last.

Zhou (left) has faced a tough start to the season with his team, Sauber, still with no points. Photo: AFP

“I was following what was happening. Because of the [COVID-19] restrictions we still had in the country, I knew it was not going to be easy, but there was still a 20 per cent chance it would happen,” he said.

“It became tricky when I learned everyone would have to be in quarantine, and at that point I knew it was not going to happen. I was quite a bit upset [about] that just because obviously I had been in F1 for two years already, and I’m the only driver from China, the first driver, [and] would love to race at home.”

Zhou is enduring a tough start to the 2024 season, with the Sauber team without points from the first three races. The Chinese driver finished 15th in Australia, one place behind his veteran teammate Valtteri Bottas.

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