The damage from Friday’s crash meant he had to make a power unit change and was unable to compete in FP2, with his woes continuing into qualifying where he reported gearbox issues and was forced back into the pits, unable to set a lap time in Q1.
Ollie Bearman has had a nightmare start to his F1 seasonHaas will start at the back of the grid in Melbourne
Bearman will now start the Australian GP in last place, but his first weekend of 2025 could have been much worse, with the FIA investigating whether he would be able to start the race at all.
The rulebook used by the sport's governing body states that a driver would be ‘unclassified’ for a grand prix if they fail to set a time in Q1, with the exception that a suitable lap time has been set in a practice session.
Following qualifying, the stewards received a request from Haas to allow Bearman to start the race despite being unable to set a lap time in Q1.
In an official ruling, the FIA have now granted Bearman the ability to start the race in accordance with Article 39.4 of the sporting regulations, as the British driver had already set what they deemed to be ‘satisfactory times’ in practice.
Speaking after qualifying, Bearman apologised to Haas for what he described as a 'messy' weekend, bemoaning his limited running throughout practice.
"It’s a bit disappointing, of course, to not be able to get a lap on the board, but it’s been a messy weekend so far," he said.
"I haven’t run all weekend. That’s made it tough for the guys to actually understand [what’s happening], as we’ve been running with one car all weekend. I can only apologise to the team for that."