Toronto Star

Stroll position

Canadian racing prodigy is proving his place in Formula One

- VAWN HIMMELSBAC­H

Most families wouldn’t pick up and move across the pond because their 12-year-old wants to become a race car driver. But that’s exactly what Lance Stroll’s family did, uprooting their life in Montreal and relocating to Switzerlan­d in 2011 so he could get the experience he needed to make it from karting champ all the way to Formula One.

But this wasn’t a flippant decision, nor an indulgence. Stroll was scouted when he was just 11 years old by the Ferrari Driver Academy, which was developing young drivers for Formula One. At the time, Stroll was the youngest driver to enter the academy’s Maranello program.

“I grew up as a bit of an adrenaline junkie my whole life,” said Stroll from his home in Switzerlan­d via Zoom. “I was introduced to racing through my dad and I caught the bug through him. He was very passionate about racing — he had a racetrack just outside of Montreal.”

When Stroll turned five, his dad, Lawrence Stroll, gave him a go-kart, which he would race around traffic cones in the racetrack’s parking lot. By the time he turned eight, he was competing in — and winning — karting competitio­ns across North America, including the championsh­ip at the Tag/Cadet Florida Winter Tour in 2010. It was during this time he was scouted for the Maranello program.

“It was really thanks to my mom, my dad and my sister — they supported me through that time and they really committed to my racing career and moved over to Europe with me. We all just jumped on a plane and moved,” Stroll said. “One thing led to the next and here I am in Formula One.”

But it wasn’t always an easy ride. Stroll was still a kid, and it wasn’t until he was 16 or 17 that he saw Formula One as a real possibilit­y for his career. He also initially faced criticism, particular­ly from the media, who suggested Stroll’s billionair­e father was simply indulging him in a very expensive hobby.

Those critics, however, would soon eat their words. After winning a trio of back-to-back titles in the junior single-seater categories (the proving grounds of world motorsport), Stroll set the bar during the 2017 Azerbaijan Grand Prix by becoming the youngest driver in Formula One history to make the podium in their rookie season. He then went on to achieve first pole position and two podium finishes in the Formula One Drivers’ Championsh­ip in 2020.

Now, the 22-year-old is a rising star on the Formula One grid. And this year, as he enters his fifth year of Formula One competitio­n, he’s part of the newly minted Aston Martin Cognizant Formula One Team (AMCF1), representi­ng the brand as it returns to Formula One after more than 60 years. His teammate is veteran Sebastian Vettel, a four-time world champion.

Stroll’s dad also happens to be their boss. He took over the Aston Martin team two years ago in a bid to rebuild it. Of course, that was interrupte­d by a global pandemic, which shook up last year’s season — and sets high expectatio­ns for the season ahead.

This isn’t lost on Stroll. Last year, about halfway through the season, he was sitting in fourth place, but then he had a few bad races and contracted COVID-19. “It really fell away from me,” said Stroll. “[This year] I want to get more out of myself, build on some of my strengths and weaknesses, and be a better driver.”

Stroll has already been noted for his ability to drive in wet weather conditions. It’s something he demonstrat­ed when he took the first pole position of his Formula One career at the rain-soaked Turkish Grand Prix last November — the first Canadian to do so since Jacques Villeneuve. “That was a really great achievemen­t in wet, difficult conditions,” he said.

While the high-speed sport does carry risk, for Stroll — who likes to ski and surf in his downtime — it’s all about taking calculated risks, especially when driving in difficult conditions. Not that it makes it any easier for his mom, Claire-Anne. “I mean, my mom, I need to give her a hug [before every race],” Stroll said. “And there are a few more gray hairs on my dad’s head.”

Stroll has long since proven he’s a bona fide Formula One driver — one who this year is expected to hit his stride. For Canadians who haven’t heard the name Lance Stroll, they can expect to start hearing it a whole lot more.

“I grew up as a bit of an adrenaline junkie my whole life. I was introduced to racing through my dad and I caught the bug through him.”

LANCE STROLL

 ?? MARK THOMPSON GETTY IMAGES ?? Lance Stroll has gone from racing go-karts outside Montreal to driving some of the world’s fastest vehicles on the Formula One circuit.
MARK THOMPSON GETTY IMAGES Lance Stroll has gone from racing go-karts outside Montreal to driving some of the world’s fastest vehicles on the Formula One circuit.
 ?? GIUSEPPE CACACE GETTY IMAGES ?? Stroll’s last F1 Grand Prix was for BWT Racing Point at Abu Dhabi.
GIUSEPPE CACACE GETTY IMAGES Stroll’s last F1 Grand Prix was for BWT Racing Point at Abu Dhabi.

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