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Colton Herta makes his Formula 2 debut at the Miami International Autodrome this weekend. The American driver is seen as a potential future star in Formula One, currently serving as a developmental driver for the Cadillac team.
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MIAMI GARDENS â American driver Colton Herta may spend as much time doing interviews this weekend as he will turning laps in his stateside Formula 2 debut at the Miami International Autodrome.
And thatâs not a bad thing for the 26-year old who is widely considered to be the USAâs next best hope to land a seat in the Formula One Series, which headlines the weekendâs Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix (Sunday, 4 p.m. ET).
Herta, a nine-time winner and perpetual title contender in the NTT IndyCar Series, is a longtime open-wheel prodigy now tabbed by the new Cadillac Formula One team as their developmental driver â handling testing duties and sim work for the Cadillac team â in addition to getting his feet wet competing internationally for the Hitech Grand Prix team in racingâs version of a triple-A F2 series.
The goal for both Cadillac and Herta is putting him on the 22-car F1 grid as soon as heâs ready.
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And the Californian is clearly making a good case - fastest in Fridayâs opening F2 practice session in his first ever laps around the 3.363-mile, 19-turn course at Hard Rock Stadium. He finished seventh in the only F2 race of the season so far in Australia. His expectations, however, are to win â soon and often.
âI think thatâs the name of the game,ââ Herta said Thursday in the Cadillac paddock suite, where he did a long series of interviews for the primarily international press contingent. âI wouldnât be much of a race car driver if I was like, âwell, you know I hope we can finish seventh this weekend.â Especially in a stock series like F2.
âMy expectation, simply, is to win. Every time I get in the car I want my name to be on top of the charts at the end of it [session or race.]. Thatâs just the competitive nature and how I see myself going about my business. Of course, there are a lot of other minor things Iâm looking at, [techniques] wanting myself to be able to progress - marks I want to hit during the weekends.
âBut I want to win. Itâs as simple as that.ââ
Colton Herta is a developmental driver for the Cadillac Formula One team, handling testing duties and sim work.
Colton Herta's Formula 2 debut is this weekend at the Miami International Autodrome during the Crypto.com Miami Grand Prix.
Colton Herta has won nine races in the NTT IndyCar Series.
Colton Herta is competing for the Hitech Grand Prix team in Formula 2.

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Colton Herta with Cadillac Wayne Racing team poses for photographs during IMSA Media Day, Thursday, Jan. 15, 2026 in the Daytona 500 club at Daytona International Speedway.
Winning is certainly the quick way to earn respect in his first true international job after previously establishing himself in the formula ranks when he was only 15-16 years old and living in England. Heâs back now, primarily living in a hotel during the months-long break on the race schedule but planning to find an apartment near the Cadillac teamâs British headquarters. Itâs the kind of âall inâ he must show and live as he seizes upon this important career opportunity.
âF2 is a little bit strange in that you donât get a lot of track time so you need to be up to speed very quick,ââ Herta said. âThatâs like the most important thing. You do 40 mins of practice and probably four laps in that time, so you donât do a lot of driving during race weekend thatâs why everything beforehand is so important.
âI take that very seriously because you have to in this series. You have to learn on the fly, get up to speed very quick and thatâs the most important thing Iâm trying to transfer over to a car that Iâm not 100 percent comfortable in yet.ââ
Fortunately, Herta said he feels fully supported â both personally and professionally. Progress on track is what he expects. And the unexpected chance to race âat homeâ this weekend is something he clearly seizes. The series added the events here in Miami and then another at Montreal in May after the season schedule was initially released.
That Montreal race weekend, unfortunately conflicts with the Indianapolis 500 â the one IndyCar start Herta had hoped to make. He concedes it stings to miss Indy, but is also eager about the Montreal opportunity.
âItâs a little bit of a stab in the heart (to miss Indy),ââ Herta said putting his hand over his heart. âBut Iâm excited for Montreal. [The circuit] looks absolutely amazing and is one of those places that everyone always talks good about So Iâm excited that if itâs not Indy itâs being replaced with another amazing circuit.â
Itâs the kind of glass half-full attitude that has propelled Herta to this chance of a lifetime. He and Miami-native Sebastian Montoya â son of former F1 champion Juan Pablo Montoya - will make their American F2 debuts Saturday (10 a.m. ET) in the 23-lap Sprint Race and then will compete Sunday in a 32-lap Feature Race (12:30 p.m. ET).
âEverybody in the paddock has been super kind to me,ââ Herta said. âEverybody at Cadillac has been super kind. I really didnât know what to expect but itâs been a lot of fun and been over my expectations.
âI think thatâs what you need when youâre in a high stress environment in professional racing. Having the confidence in the people around you is just as important as having confidence in yourself.  You can only be as good as the people around you and luckily, we have some pretty good people here.ââ
Having this weekendâs race in the United States has been a welcome dose of support and allowed his whole family â his father, Bryan once a highly successful IndyCar veteran driver himself, mom, younger brother and longtime girlfriend â to see him race in F2 for the first time.
âItâs been an interesting shift in my career, some good and some bad but the support system that Iâve had around me has been very positive and everyone has put a lot of things on pause to see that I can succeed, so I feel very fortunate to have those types of people in my life,ââ Herta said.
âI want to get to Formula One as soon as possible. Thatâs my goal. But you know, while Iâm here and in this role, helping and understanding as much as I can before I get to Formula One is really the most important thing for me.â
âI want to be successful so it doesnât really matter what other people think or say about me. My ambitions are that whatever I get in, I want to be the quickest and I want to win.ââ
Formula One Grand Prix of Miami
Sunday, May 3, 4 p.m.
Miami International Autodrome, Miami Gardens
TV: Apple TV
This article originally appeared on Palm Beach Post: Exclusive: Colton Herta makes F2 debut in Miami, chasing F1 dream