The litmus test for Lindblad after his rapid rise to F1 Arvid Lindblad’s ascent to Formula 1 has seemed almost inevitable, even before former Red Bull team principal Christian Horner mentioned him in dispatches during that fraught period in late 2024 when Sergio Perez’s future hung in the balance. His rise up the career ladder has been electrifyingly quick: this year will be only his fourth full season of single-seater racing. Over the past quarter-century, just a handful of other drivers have reached the top tier with this kind of rapidity: think Kimi Raikkonen, Jenson Button, Sebastian Vettel, Max Verstappen. Lindblad was born just a couple of months after Vettel became the youngest-ever driver to score a point in F1, when he stood in for the injured Robert Kubica at the 2007 US Grand Prix at Indianapolis, aged just 19. Red Bull pounced and Vettel duly became a full-time F1 driver at the Hungarian GP that August with Toro Rosso, forerunner of the Racing Bulls squad in which Lindblad is making his debut. Arvid grew up in leafy Surrey and went to school in Guildford, the son of a Swedish father and a mother of Indian heritage. His father had done some motocross in his youth, but four-wheeled sport became Lindblad Jr’s metier after some early arrive-and-drive experiences at nearby Sandown Park, the kart track that nestles incongruously within the horse racing course. He proved quick enough to catch the eye of professionals and soon joined the Zip team founded by the late Martin Hines, mentor to the likes of David Coulthard and Lewis Hamilton. One of his coaches was Oliver Rowland, then an up-and-coming GP2 racer, now a Formula E champion.#red_bull #max_verstappen #arvid_lindblad #formula_1 #christian_horner