Nikita Mazepin
Nikita Igorevich Mazepin (Russian: Никита Игоревич Мазепин; born 2 March 1999) is a Russian racing driver who competed in the Formula One World Championship for the Haas F1 Team during the 2021 season.[1][2][3] The son of Russian businessman Dmitry Mazepin, whose fertilizer company Uralkali sponsored Haas, Nikita progressed through karting and single-seater series, achieving runner-up position in the 2018 GP3 Series with four race victories.[4][5] In Formula 2, he secured two wins en route to fifth place in the 2020 standings, earning promotion to Formula One.[6][7] Mazepin's Haas tenure was marked by no points scored and frequent on-track incidents, including crashes and aggressive maneuvers that drew criticism from peers and officials.[8][9] His contract, initially extended into 2022, was terminated in March 2022 following Russia's invasion of Ukraine, amid sanctions targeting Uralkali and geopolitical pressures on teams to sever Russian ties.[10][11][12] Since then, personal sanctions have barred him from FIA-sanctioned events, limiting his racing to non-international series.[13]Early life
Family background and upbringing
Nikita Mazepin was born on 2 March 1999 in Moscow, Russia, the son of Dmitry Mazepin, a Belarusian-born Russian businessman who serves as chairman and majority shareholder of Uralchem, a major fertilizer producer.[14][15] Dmitry Mazepin, born on 18 April 1968 in Minsk, Belarus, graduated from the Minsk Suvorov Military School before building his career in the chemical and fertilizer sectors, amassing significant wealth through acquisitions and management of industrial assets. The family resided in Moscow, where Nikita was raised amid his father's business success, which provided substantial financial resources supporting early interests in motorsport.[16][1] Dmitry Mazepin is divorced and has at least two children with Nikita, including a daughter named Anastasia.[17] The family's affluence stemmed from Dmitry's control over Uralchem, which reported revenues exceeding $3 billion in recent years, positioning the household among Russia's elite industrial circles.[14] Nikita's upbringing reflected this privileged environment, with access to international opportunities from a young age, though specific details on his early home life remain limited in public records.[16]Education and initial interests
Mazepin was born on March 2, 1999, and raised in Moscow, where he completed the initial years of his schooling under Russia's standard 11-year system. For his ninth through eleventh years, equivalent to the final secondary stage, he relocated to Oxford, England, and attended Oxford International College to continue his education while pursuing racing opportunities in Europe.[18] Following secondary school, Mazepin enrolled at Moscow State University, studying at the Faculty of Global Processes, where he was a fourth-year student by 2021.[19] He completed a bachelor's degree there, alongside racing commitments, and pursued further studies including economics and languages as part of an initial master's program, with enrollment in a three-year course aimed at qualifying as a reserve officer.[20][21][22] Prior to his focus on motorsport, Mazepin's initial interests included sports gymnastics during his school years in Moscow, which he practiced before transitioning to karting as a primary pursuit around age six or seven.[23] This shift aligned with early exposure to competitive driving, supported by his family's resources, marking the onset of his dedication to racing over other athletic endeavors.[24]Personal life and controversies
2020 social media incident
On December 8, 2020, shortly after the Formula 2 season finale in Abu Dhabi, Mazepin posted a video to his Instagram story depicting himself reaching out to touch a woman's breast while seated on a private jet with fellow drivers, including Robert Shwartzman.[25][26] The footage, captured in a celebratory context among friends, showed the act without evident consent from the woman, prompting immediate backlash after screenshots circulated online following Mazepin's quick deletion of the post.[27][28] Haas F1 Team, which had signed Mazepin for the 2021 Formula One season just two months prior, issued a statement on December 9 condemning the "abhorrent" behavior and clarifying that it did not align with the team's values or those of its partners.[27][29] The FIA and Formula One Management followed with a joint statement supporting Haas's response and emphasizing expectations of professional conduct from all personnel.[29] Mazepin issued a public apology on December 9 via Instagram, stating, "I would like to apologise for my inappropriate behaviour towards a female which I captured in a video I posted on my instagram story," and acknowledging that while intended as a private joke among friends, the action was unacceptable and he took full responsibility.[25][26] The incident drew criticism from figures in the F1 paddock, including McLaren driver Lando Norris, who called it "disrespectful," but no formal sanctions were imposed beyond the condemnations, and Mazepin retained his seat for the 2021 season.[30]2022 sanctions and legal challenges
In March 2022, following Russia's invasion of Ukraine on February 24, the European Union imposed asset freezes and travel bans on Nikita Mazepin as part of broader sanctions targeting individuals linked to the Russian government.[31] The EU justified the measures by citing Mazepin's status as the son of Dmitry Mazepin, a billionaire ally of President Vladimir Putin who controls Uralkali—a major potash producer and former title sponsor of the Haas F1 Team—and alleging that Nikita had benefited economically from this relationship through racing sponsorships.[32] Similar sanctions were enacted by the United Kingdom and Canada later that month, prohibiting Mazepin from entering those countries and freezing any assets held there.[33] These sanctions compounded immediate professional repercussions for Mazepin, who had debuted in Formula One with Haas in 2021 under Uralkali backing. On March 5, 2022—prior to his personal listing but amid escalating geopolitical tensions and Uralkali's designation—Haas terminated Mazepin's multi-year contract, stating it could no longer employ him due to the Russian invasion's fallout and sponsorship uncertainties.[34] Uralkali's partnership with Haas unraveled into litigation, with the Russian firm suing the team for breach of contract over unpaid fees exceeding €10 million, while Haas countersued, alleging Uralkali's actions violated neutrality clauses.[35] Mazepin mounted legal challenges against the personal sanctions. In a case before the EU General Court (T-258/22), he argued that the measures lacked evidence of his direct involvement in undermining Ukraine's territorial integrity or economic gain tied to the invasion, relying instead on familial association. On March 20, 2024, the court annulled the EU sanctions, ruling that the Council failed to substantiate claims of Mazepin's support for Russian policy or undue benefits, deeming guilt by association legally insufficient under EU criteria.[36] [37] The EU formally removed him from the sanctions list in September 2024 following ambassadorial approval.[38] Challenges to UK and Canadian sanctions persist as of 2024, with Mazepin contesting their evidentiary basis.[33] Dmitry Mazepin's parallel EU appeal was rejected in November 2023, upholding sanctions against him for direct Kremlin ties.[39]Karting career
Key achievements and records
Mazepin won the Russian Karting Championship prior to launching his international career in 2011.[40][41] In karting competition, he recorded 12 wins, 31 podium finishes, 6 pole positions, and 4 fastest laps over 126 races.[42] His strongest international result came in 2014, when he finished second overall in the FIA Karting World Championship KF category for Tony Kart Racing Team.[42][43]CIK-FIA European and World Championships
Mazepin entered the CIK-FIA Karting European Championship in 2012, competing in the KF3 class during his second year of international karting.[42] His results in the European series remained modest, with a 34th-place finish in the 2012 KF3 category and no points scored.[42] In 2013, racing in the KF-Junior class for Tony Kart-Vortex, he finished 38th overall with zero points across the season's rounds.[44][42] Advancing to the KF category in 2014, Mazepin achieved his best European result that year, placing 23rd with five points.[42] However, his standout performance came in the corresponding CIK-FIA World Championship at the Essay event, where he secured second place overall in the KF final, trailing winner Lando Norris by a narrow margin while driving a Tony Kart-Vortex-Dunlop machine.[45][42] This runner-up finish marked the pinnacle of his karting career before transitioning to single-seaters.[43]Junior single-seater career
Lower formulae (2014–2015)
Mazepin made his single-seater racing debut in late 2014, competing in the opening round of the 2014–15 MRF Challenge Formula 2000 championship at the Losail International Circuit in Qatar. Driving for the series' entrant, he secured a podium finish—third place—in his second race, marking his first top-three result in car racing.[41][46] In 2015, Mazepin entered his first full single-seater season in the Formula Renault 2.0 Northern European Cup (NEC), racing for Josef Kaufmann Racing in the Tatuus FR2.0/13 chassis. The 16-year-old Russian participated in all seven rounds, comprising 24 races across circuits including Assen, Spa-Francorchamps, and the Red Bull Ring. He achieved two podium finishes—one third place at the Red Bull Ring—and no victories, accumulating 125.5 points to end the year 12th in the drivers' standings behind champion Dennis Olsen.[47][42][48]Formula 3 European Championship
2016 season
Mazepin made his debut in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship with the newly formed Hitech Grand Prix team, contesting all 30 races across the season.[49] His best results were eighth-place finishes at Spa-Francorchamps and the Hockenheimring, yielding a total of 10 points and 20th position in the drivers' standings.[50][42]2017 season
Mazepin remained with Hitech Grand Prix for the 2017 campaign, participating in all 30 races and demonstrating marked progress by scoring 108 points to finish tenth overall.[51][52] He achieved his maiden podium—a second-place finish—in the opening race at Spa-Francorchamps after starting fifth and capitalizing on an early incident ahead.[53][54] An additional podium came with third place at the Red Bull Ring.[55]2016 season
Mazepin entered the 2016 FIA Formula 3 European Championship as a rookie with Hitech Grand Prix, announced on December 20, 2015, stepping up from Formula Renault 2.0 where he had finished 12th in the NEC series.[56] He drove the Dallara F315 chassis equipped with a Mercedes engine and Hankook tires across all 10 rounds, comprising 30 races held from May 6 at Paul Ricard to October 16 at the Nürburgring.[42] His season yielded four points-scoring finishes in the top 10, as the series awarded points to the first 10 positions per race. Notable results included an 8th-place finish in the second race at Spa-Francorchamps on May 15, starting from 11th on the grid, and a 10th-place in the third race at Paul Ricard on May 8, from 12th. Additional points came from two races at Hockenheimring in July, securing modest scores amid a field dominated by Prema Powerteam drivers like Lance Stroll and Maximilian Günther.[57][52] Mazepin accumulated 10 points overall, placing 20th in the drivers' championship behind teammates George Russell (3rd with 351 points) and Ben Barnicoat (14th). Hitech Grand Prix ranked competitively in the teams' standings, but Mazepin's results reflected adaptation challenges in his debut year against more experienced competitors.[58][42]2017 season
Mazepin continued in the FIA Formula 3 European Championship with Hitech Grand Prix for the 2017 season, piloting a Dallara F317 chassis equipped with a Mercedes-Benz engine.[59] Representing the Russian Automobile Federation, he participated in all 30 races across ten rounds, starting from Silverstone on April 14–16 and concluding at Hockenheim on October 13–15. [60] Marking a substantial improvement over his 2016 rookie campaign, Mazepin scored 108 points to secure tenth place in the drivers' standings, behind champions such as Lando Norris and Maximilian Günther.[51] He earned three podium finishes but recorded no race wins or pole positions.[61] His strongest result was second place in the second race at Spa-Francorchamps on June 17, marking his first podium in the series after starting from pole in wet qualifying conditions.[53] Other highlights included a career-best fourth place in the second race at Pau on May 21, where he capitalized on incidents ahead to advance from a mid-pack start.[62] Mazepin also podiumed at the Norisring and Nürburgring rounds, demonstrating consistency in qualifying and race pace on varied circuits.[61] In the season-ending Hockenheim double-header, he briefly gained a position on Pedro Piquet under full course yellow but complied with stewards' instructions to return it, finishing outside the points.[60] Hitech Grand Prix, bolstered by Mercedes support, finished fourth in the teams' championship, with Mazepin's results contributing alongside teammates Ralf Aron and Jake Hughes.[63] His season was characterized by aggressive overtaking and adaptation to tire management challenges in the Dallara-Mercedes package, though reliability issues and on-track contacts occasionally hampered higher finishes.[59]GP3 Series (2018)
 Nikita Mazepin competed in the 2018 GP3 Series as a rookie with ART Grand Prix, alongside teammates Anthoine Hubert, Callum Ilott, and Jake Hughes.[64] The team dominated the season, securing the teams' championship. Mazepin started strongly by winning the season-opening feature race at Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya on May 12, leading an ART 1-2-3 finish ahead of Hubert and Ilott.[65] He recorded four victories in total—the most of any driver—including the sprint race at Spa-Francorchamps on August 26, where he overtook teammates to head another ART podium, and the final sprint race at Yas Marina on November 25, capitalizing on a chaotic start to claim victory.[66][67][68] Despite these successes, Mazepin finished second in the drivers' standings with 198 points, 16 behind champion Hubert, who achieved greater consistency across the 18-race season.[69] ART's strength provided multiple podium opportunities, but Mazepin's results were marred by occasional retirements and lower finishes in non-winning rounds.[68]FIA Formula 2 Championship
Mazepin entered the FIA Formula 2 Championship in 2019 as a rookie with ART Grand Prix, partnering Formula 2 champion Nyck de Vries.[4] The season proved challenging, marked by adaptation issues to the car and limited results, culminating in an 18th-place finish in the drivers' standings with 11 points from 11 events.[42] He achieved no podiums or victories that year.[7]2019 season
Mazepin's campaign began at the Bahrain round on April 12–14, where he struggled with consistency amid the series' competitive field.[70] Incidents and mechanical issues hampered progress, including retirements and low qualifying positions, reflecting the steep learning curve for the 3.4-liter V6-powered Dallara chassis.[4] His best results were a pair of ninth-place finishes in sprint races, contributing to his modest points total.[42]2020 season
Switching to Hitech Grand Prix for 2020, Mazepin delivered a markedly improved performance across an extended 24-race calendar influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic.[4] He secured two feature race victories—at Silverstone on August 1, leading from pole after a strong start, and at Mugello's Tuscan Grand Prix on September 12, benefiting from safety car periods.[71] [72] These triumphs, along with six podiums and two fastest laps, propelled him to fifth in the championship with 164 points.[73] His results earned sufficient superlicence points for a Formula One seat the following year.[7]2019 season
Nikita Mazepin entered the 2019 FIA Formula 2 Championship as a rookie with ART Grand Prix, partnering championship winner Nyck de Vries; the seat was confirmed on November 27, 2018.[64] The team, coming off a strong GP3 campaign with Mazepin, aimed to contend for titles in F2's more demanding environment featuring the Dallara F2 2018 chassis powered by Mecachrome engines.[7] Mazepin struggled to adapt to the series' technical and physical demands, enduring a challenging rookie year marked by inconsistent qualifying and race pace.[4] He scored his first points with a third-place finish in the Baku feature race on April 27, which positioned him on pole for the sprint race via the reverse grid for the top eight; however, a slow start dropped him back, though he recovered to another points-scoring position.[74] His second podium came with third in the Monaco sprint race, highlighting occasional strong racecraft amid broader difficulties.[75] Further incidents compounded the season's frustrations, including a collision in the Sochi sprint race on September 29 that resulted in multiple grid penalties for the subsequent round.[76] Mazepin contested all 11 rounds (22 races total), achieving no wins or pole positions, two podiums, and limited additional points finishes.[7] He concluded the championship in 18th place with 11 points.[70]2020 season
Mazepin entered the 2020 FIA Formula 2 Championship with Hitech Grand Prix, partnering experienced Italian driver Luca Ghiotto.[4] The season, delayed by the COVID-19 pandemic, comprised eight double-header rounds starting July 3–5 at the Red Bull Ring in Austria and concluding December 4–6 at the Bahrain International Circuit's outer loop, for a total of 24 races.[77] Mazepin secured his first F2 victory in the Silverstone feature race on August 1, capitalizing on strategic pit stops and retirements ahead to hold off Guanyu Zhou.[71] His second win came at Mugello on September 12, advancing from 14th on the grid through overtakes and a one-stop strategy in a Hitech one-two finish with Ghiotto.[78] He also claimed pole position at Spa-Francorchamps on August 28 but received a five-second time penalty after crossing the line first in the feature race for forcing Yuki Tsunoda off track during a late defense, demoting him to second; stewards additionally issued a suspended five-place grid drop for "potentially dangerous and unsportsmanlike" contact with a second-place board in parc fermé, attributed by Mazepin to brake issues.[79][80] In the Sakhir finale feature race on December 4, Mazepin dropped from third to ninth after two five-second penalties—one for forcing Tsunoda into the pit lane entry and another for contact with Dan Ticktum—adding four penalty points to his super license total of 11, narrowly avoiding a one-race ban threshold.[81][82] Mazepin concluded the championship fifth overall with 164 points, including six podiums and two fastest laps, behind champion Mick Schumacher and runner-up Callum Ilott.[4][83]Formula One career
Haas F1 Team (2021)
Nikita Mazepin signed with the Haas F1 Team for the 2021 Formula One season on a multi-year contract announced on November 30, 2020, partnering fellow rookie Mick Schumacher.[10] The arrangement was supported by substantial sponsorship from Uralkali, the Russian potash company chaired by Mazepin's father, Dmitry Mazepin, which served as Haas's title sponsor and provided financial backing estimated in tens of millions of dollars.[84] This funding was instrumental in securing Mazepin's seat, reflecting a pay-driver dynamic common in Formula One for backmarker teams facing budget constraints.[85] Mazepin competed in all 22 races of the 2021 season, debuting at the Bahrain Grand Prix on March 28, driving the Haas VF-21 powered by a Ferrari engine.[86] He selected racing number 9 and accumulated zero championship points, finishing 21st overall in the Drivers' Championship.[87] His best results were two 14th-place finishes, at the Austrian Grand Prix on July 4 and the Hungarian Grand Prix on August 1, while he recorded 12 retirements, often due to accidents or mechanical issues.[88] In qualifying, Schumacher outqualified him 20-0 in sessions where both posted times, highlighting Mazepin's struggles with car control and setup adaptation on a team that finished last in the Constructors' Championship with zero points.[89] Team dynamics were strained by sponsorship leverage and performance disparities, with Uralkali threatening to withdraw funding early in the season amid claims that Schumacher received preferential car treatment. Dmitry Mazepin reportedly intervened, demanding equal equipment parity, which Haas addressed to avoid losing the sponsorship critical to its operations.[90] Mazepin's on-track incidents, including collisions and qualifying errors, drew criticism from team principal Guenther Steiner for lacking experience and consistency, though the financial imperatives muted public rebukes during the year.[89] Despite these challenges, Haas retained Mazepin for 2022 planning until geopolitical events intervened.[91]Season performance and results
Mazepin participated in all 22 rounds of the 2021 Formula One World Championship with the Haas F1 Team, starting 21 races and scoring no championship points, which placed him 21st in the final Drivers' Championship standings.[87][88] His season was characterized by consistently low qualifying positions, with no advancement beyond Q1 in any event, and frequent battles at the rear of the field against the similarly underpowered Williams and Alfa Romeo cars.[88] His best result came at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix on June 6, 2021, where he finished 14th after starting 18th, capitalizing on retirements and incidents ahead.[92] Mazepin suffered five retirements: a first-lap accident in Bahrain due to losing control at Turn 3; a collision in Hungary; hydraulic failure in the Netherlands; power unit issues in Italy; and a crash into George Russell during a restart in Saudi Arabia.[93][88][94] He also did not start the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix after withdrawing.[88] The following table summarizes Mazepin's 2021 race results:| Grand Prix | Qualifying | Race Position |
|---|---|---|
| Bahrain | 20th | DNF (Accident) |
| Emilia Romagna | 19th | 17th |
| Portugal | 20th | 19th |
| Spain | 20th | 19th |
| Monaco | 19th | 17th |
| Azerbaijan | 18th | 14th |
| France | 18th | 20th |
| Styria | 20th | 18th |
| Austria | 20th | 19th |
| Great Britain | 20th | 17th |
| Hungary | 19th | DNF (Collision) |
| Belgium | 20th | 17th |
| Netherlands | 20th | DNF (Hydraulics) |
| Italy | 20th | DNF (Power unit) |
| Russia | 19th | 18th |
| Turkey | 20th | 20th |
| United States | 20th | 17th |
| Mexico | 19th | 18th |
| São Paulo | 19th | 17th |
| Qatar | 20th | 18th |
| Saudi Arabia | 20th | DNF (Accident) |
| Abu Dhabi | 20th | DNS |
Funding, team dynamics, and criticisms
Mazepin's participation in the 2021 Formula One season with Haas was enabled by substantial sponsorship from Uralkali, a Russian fertilizer company owned by his father, Dmitry Mazepin, which served as the team's title sponsor.[34] This arrangement provided Haas with critical financial support amid its budget constraints, reportedly including payments that helped sustain operations, though exact figures for the 2021 deal remain undisclosed; subsequent legal disputes revealed Uralkali had advanced around $13 million toward a multi-year commitment before its 2022 termination.[96] Critics labeled Mazepin a "pay-driver," arguing his seat was secured primarily through family wealth rather than merit, a characterization echoed in media analyses of Haas's driver selection process.[34] Within the team, dynamics between Mazepin and teammate Mick Schumacher were strained, with the pair—both Formula 2 graduates—frequently cited as an example of unproductive rookie tensions by team principal Günther Steiner in later reflections.[97] Schumacher consistently outperformed Mazepin, outqualifying him in the majority of sessions and scoring points while Mazepin recorded zero, exacerbating frustrations over resource allocation and development focus.[89] On-track incidents, including Mazepin's aggressive moves and errors like spins, contributed to intra-team discord, though Haas management emphasized data-driven feedback over public blame during the season.[98] Criticisms of Mazepin centered on his on-track inexperience and off-track conduct, with Haas publicly condemning a pre-season social media video from December 2020 showing him groping a woman in a car as "abhorrent," prompting widespread fan and media backlash.[99] His racing performance drew scrutiny for frequent qualifying struggles—averaging near the rear of the grid—and a series of crashes or retirements, such as spinning out on lap one of his Bahrain debut, leading peers and analysts to question his readiness for Formula One.[98] Despite some mid-season improvements in pace, detractors, including rival drivers in interviews, highlighted his aggressive style and perceived entitlement as factors alienating the paddock, though Steiner defended him against external pressure to prioritize internal growth.[100][98]2022 contract termination and dispute
On March 5, 2022, the Haas F1 Team announced the termination of Nikita Mazepin's multi-year driver contract with immediate effect, alongside ending its title sponsorship agreement with Uralkali, the potassium fertilizer company owned by Mazepin's father, Dmitry Mazepin.[101][102] The decision came in the wake of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24, 2022, which prompted international sanctions targeting Russian entities and individuals, including asset freezes that impaired Uralkali's ability to transfer funds to Haas.[103][12] Haas team principal Guenther Steiner indicated the move was necessitated by the practical and reputational fallout, stating that the team could no longer rely on the sponsorship payments that had underpinned Mazepin's seat since 2021.[34] Mazepin, who had been set to compete under a neutral flag per FIA regulations amid prior restrictions on Russian participation, publicly contested the termination's legality, asserting that Haas had ignored his offers to continue racing independently and that no contractual breach had occurred on his part.[104] He described the action as lacking legal justification, emphasizing his personal detachment from geopolitical events and framing the broader sports sanctions as a form of "cancel culture" targeting Russians indiscriminately.[105][106] Haas proceeded to reinstate Danish driver Kevin Magnussen as Mazepin's replacement for the 2022 season opener in Bahrain, citing the need for stability amid the uncertainty.[101] In response, Mazepin initiated legal proceedings against Haas in a Swiss court in June 2022, seeking recovery of unpaid salary arrears he claimed were owed for the 2022 season up to the point of termination.[107][108] He argued that the team had failed to meet its obligations under the contract, which reportedly included provisions for performance-based payments and funding tied to Uralkali's commitments.[109] By July 2022, Mazepin confirmed the suit was in "full swing," though no public resolution has been disclosed as of late 2024; parallel arbitration over the Uralkali sponsorship affirmed Haas's right to terminate for just cause but required partial repayment of approximately $10–13 million in advance fees, highlighting the intertwined financial dependencies.[110][111]Post-Formula One racing
Rally raid and endurance events (2022–2023)
Following his departure from Formula One, Mazepin made his rally raid debut at the Ladoga Trophy in June 2022, competing on a quad bike.[112] He then transitioned to a Can-Am Maverick X3 X RS Turbo RR side-by-side vehicle (SSV) for the subsequent Silk Way Rally, held from July 5 to 16, 2022, under the Snag Racing Team banner with co-driver Anton Vlasyuk in the T3 class.[113] [114] During the Silk Way Rally, Mazepin secured his first stage victory in the T3 class on the seventh leg, completed on July 14, 2022.[115] He ultimately clinched the T3 class overall, finishing second in the aggregated SSV standings behind only the leading crew.[116] This marked his participation in the Russian Rally-Raid Championship that year, though he expressed interest in events like the Dakar Rally without committing.[117] In December 2022, Mazepin co-founded the 99 Racing team, which entered endurance racing with planned appearances in two February 2023 events: the Dubai 24 Hours precursor race and the Abu Dhabi round.[118] These marked his initial foray into international endurance competition under a neutral flag, amid ongoing sanctions limiting Russian affiliations.[118] For rally raid in 2023, Mazepin opted against defending his Silk Way title due to scheduling conflicts and foundation commitments, though he made select one-off appearances in the discipline.[116][117]Asian Le Mans Series and Middle East Trophy (2023–2025)
In February 2023, Mazepin returned to international circuit racing after a hiatus, joining the Jordanian-licensed 99 Racing team to contest the Asian Le Mans Series in the LMP2 category with an Oreca 07-Gibson prototype, competing under a neutral flag due to international sanctions on Russian competitors.[119][120] His debut at the 4 Hours of Dubai yielded a podium finish in third place alongside teammates Ahmad Al Harthy and Louis Delétraz.[121] For the 2023–24 season, Mazepin continued with 99 Racing, securing victory in the rain-shortened 4 Hours of Sepang on December 2, 2023, leading the LMP2 class at the red-flag finish after maintaining position through challenging wet conditions.[122][123] The trio repeated success with a win in the 4 Hours of Dubai on February 4, 2024, holding off rivals in a tight final stint to claim their second triumph in three races.[124][125] Mazepin and his teammates entered the season finale double-header at Yas Marina as LMP2 points leaders but withdrew him from both events on February 8, 2024, due to illness, with Filipe Albuquerque substituting; the team finished fourth in the LMP2 drivers' standings.[126][127] In 2025, Mazepin shifted focus to the Middle East Trophy, a GT-focused endurance series under the Michelin 24H Series umbrella, partnering with Graff Racing in a Rossa LM GT sports prototype powered by an Audi 5.2-liter V10 engine for the GTX class.[42] He debuted in the category at the 24H Dubai on January 10–12, 2025, at Dubai Autodrome, sharing driving duties with Harrison Newey, Evgeny Kireev, and Roman Rusinov; the entry completed the 24-hour event but received a did-not-classify result amid mechanical or procedural issues, logging approximately 156 laps.[128]Diversification into triathlon (2025)
In early 2025, Mazepin announced his intention to rebrand as a "hybrid athlete," planning to compete in five different sports amid restrictions on his motorsport participation due to international sanctions against Russia.[129][130] Triathlon formed a key part of this diversification, with Mazepin training specifically for endurance events as an alternative to circuit racing.[131] Mazepin's triathlon debut occurred at the inaugural Challenge Sir Bani Yas middle-distance event on April 5, 2025, held on Sir Bani Yas Island in the United Arab Emirates.[132] The race consisted of a 1.9 km swim, 96 km bike, and 21.1 km run, contested under extreme conditions including temperatures reaching 46°C and the presence of wildlife such as cheetahs on the course.[132] Competing in the 24-29 age group category under bib number 303 and a neutral flag, he recorded splits of 35:38 for the swim, 2:30:47 for the bike, and 1:46:30 for the run, finishing with a total time of 5:39:53 and placing fifth in his division.[133][132] Post-race, Mazepin described the experience as evoking "the coolest emotions since F1," while highlighting the heat as the primary physical challenge, which nearly led to overheating during the effort.[132] This participation marked his transition into multisport endurance racing, leveraging prior fitness from motorsport training but adapting to the demands of non-motorized disciplines.[132]Broader motorsport involvement
Executive roles and advocacy
In March 2022, Mazepin founded the "We Compete As One" foundation to assist athletes excluded from international competitions for non-sporting reasons, including political sanctions and nationality-based restrictions.[134] The organization, primarily funded by Uralkali—the chemical company owned by Mazepin's father, Dmitry Mazepin—offers legal aid, financial support, and advocacy to help beneficiaries challenge bans and resume careers.[135][136] In practice, the foundation has concentrated efforts on Russian athletes affected by post-2022 measures barring participation under national flags, providing resources for neutral-status competitions and legal disputes.[137][138] Through the foundation, Mazepin has publicly advocated for depoliticizing sports governance, arguing that exclusions based on geopolitical events undermine merit-based competition.[139] In April 2023, it issued a statement to International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach, calling for an end to what it described as discriminatory policies against Russian participants and urging adherence to principles of universality in athletics.[137] Mazepin has framed such bans as akin to "cancel culture," emphasizing support for athletes irrespective of nationality but highlighting cases tied to Russia's international isolation following the Ukraine invasion.[140] In December 2022, Mazepin co-founded 99 Racing, a Jordanian-United Kingdom-based team focused on endurance and rally-raid events, where he has held an executive role in operations and driver selection.[129] The team debuted in the 2023 Asian Le Mans Series with an Oreca chassis, fielding Mazepin alongside international teammates, and expanded to the Russian Rally-Raid Championship, reflecting his shift toward team management amid personal racing commitments.[120] This venture positions Mazepin as a team principal figure, leveraging partnerships to navigate geopolitical barriers in global motorsport.[129]Views on sanctions' impact and racing meritocracy
Mazepin has described international sporting sanctions against Russian athletes following Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine as "cancel culture" directed at his country, arguing that they unfairly penalize individuals uninvolved in geopolitics. In an April 6, 2022, BBC HARDtalk interview, he stated, "I don't agree with being in the sanctions" and affirmed his intent to challenge them legally, emphasizing that such measures extend beyond targeted oligarchs to indiscriminately affect competitors like himself.[141] [105] He contended that these restrictions disrupted his Formula One career, costing him "several million" in lost opportunities, as his termination from Haas on March 5, 2022, coincided with frozen sponsorship funds from his father's company, Uralkali, rendering contract fulfillment impossible.[142] To counter the exclusion of athletes due to political factors, Mazepin announced the "We Compete As One" foundation on March 9, 2022, aimed at supporting competitors barred from events for non-sporting reasons, explicitly not limited to Russians or Belarusians. The initiative reflects his position that sports governance should prioritize athletic qualification over nationality or extraneous affiliations, a stance he reiterated amid his own legal battles against sanctions imposed by the EU, UK, and Canada. In March 2024, the EU General Court ruled in his favor, determining that mere familial ties to his sanctioned father, Dmitry Mazepin, did not justify Nikita's inclusion on restrictive lists, leading to the removal of asset freezes and travel bans across EU states; Switzerland followed suit in September 2024.[143] [37] [144] However, a UK High Court rejected his appeal in June 2023, upholding sanctions there.[145] Mazepin has advocated for motorsport's meritocratic principles, asserting that driver selection and participation ought to hinge on performance and compliance with neutral protocols rather than blanket geopolitical reprisals. Following his Haas dismissal, he claimed to have proactively endorsed FIA proposals for racing under a neutral flag and rebranding efforts, which he alleged were disregarded by the team in favor of abrupt severance. In a TASS interview, he expressed hope for a Russian return to Formula One, describing the country's involvement as "needed" for the series' global appeal, while underscoring that individual merit—not political stigma—should dictate grid access. Despite sanction reliefs, Mazepin ruled out an F1 comeback as of October 2024, citing shifted priorities toward endurance racing, but maintained that sanctions exemplified how external pressures erode racing's competitive integrity.[146] [117]Racing record summary
Career statistics overview
Nikita Mazepin's professional racing career began in karting, where he achieved second place in the 2014 CIK-FIA Karting World Championship behind Lando Norris.[147] Progressing to single-seaters, he competed in Formula Renault 2.0 and other junior formulae before entering the GP3 Series in 2018 with ART Grand Prix, securing four race wins and finishing as runner-up in the drivers' standings.[148] In the FIA Formula 2 Championship, Mazepin raced for ART Grand Prix in 2019, ending 18th overall in his rookie season, before improving with Hitech Grand Prix in 2020 to fifth in the standings with two victories—at Spa-Francorchamps and Bahrain—and six podiums across 46 starts in the series.[4][7] His Formula One debut came in 2021 with Haas, where he started 22 Grands Prix, achieved a best finish of 14th, scored zero points, and retired five times, concluding 21st in the drivers' championship.[86][88] Following his F1 exit, Mazepin ventured into rally raid, winning the SSV class at the 2022 Silk Way Rally.[116] In endurance racing, he joined 99 Racing's LMP2 program in the Asian Le Mans Series for 2023–24, contributing to overall victories at Sepang in December 2023 and Dubai in February 2024, alongside podiums including third at Abu Dhabi in February 2023.[122][125][121] He participated in the 2025 Michelin 24H Series Middle East Trophy GTX class at Dubai in January.[42]| Series | Years Active | Race Starts | Wins | Podiums | Best Championship Finish |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP3 Series | 2018 | 18 | 4 | 5 | 2nd (2018) |
| FIA Formula 2 | 2019–2020 | 46 | 2 | 6 | 5th (2020) |
| Formula One | 2021 | 22 | 0 | 0 | 21st (2021) |
| Asian Le Mans (LMP2) | 2023–2024 | 8 | 2* | 4* | N/A (team results) |
Complete results in key series
Mazepin achieved his strongest results in junior open-wheel categories prior to Formula One. In the 2018 GP3 Series with ART Grand Prix, he competed in all 18 races, winning four (Barcelona, Hungaroring, Spa-Francorchamps, and Yas Marina), achieving eight podiums, one pole position, and five fastest laps to finish second in the drivers' championship with 198 points.[42][150] In Formula 2, Mazepin raced full-time for ART Grand Prix in 2019 across 22 events, scoring 11 points with no wins or podiums to end 18th overall.[42] The following year with Hitech Grand Prix, he improved markedly in the shortened 24-race season due to the COVID-19 pandemic, securing two feature race victories (Monaco and Bahrain), six podiums, and two fastest laps for 164 points and fifth place in the standings.[42][73] His single Formula One season in 2021 with the Uralkali Haas F1 Team consisted of 21 starts (missing the Abu Dhabi finale due to COVID-19), yielding no points, no podiums, and one fastest lap (Saudi Arabia), resulting in 21st in the drivers' championship.[42][87]| Year | Series | Team | Races | Wins | Podiums | Poles | Fastest Laps | Points | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | GP3 Series | ART Grand Prix | 18 | 4 | 8 | 1 | 5 | 198 | 2nd |
| 2019 | FIA Formula 2 | ART Grand Prix | 22 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 11 | 18th |
| 2020 | FIA Formula 2 | Hitech Grand Prix | 24 | 2 | 6 | 0 | 2 | 164 | 5th |
| 2021 | Formula One | Haas F1 Team | 21 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 21st |