Racing talent from the Philippines: Bianca Bustamante | Sports | DW

“When I won, it was like the whole world exploded,” Bianca Bustamante told DW. The President of the Philippines congratulated the 18-year-old on his victory in Valencia, a resolution was passed in the country’s Senate and her face was featured on a giant billboard on Manila’s busiest street.

“I honestly didn’t know how to react. I didn’t expect the impact to be so big. It was really a crazy moment for me. Experiencing all these things at 18 sometimes feels a bit too much. “

It would be easy to dismiss this reaction as a classic exaggeration that athletes like to use. But Bustamante’s story explains why tears shed and the country celebrated when the teenager took the podium.

Hard road to fame

Her motorsport-mad father bought Bustamante her first racing suit when she was just one year old. At the age of three she sat in a baby racing car, and at just six Bustamante knew what she wanted to do: become a racing driver!

“Financially it was definitely not easy for us. We are from the Philippines and our family is middle class here. My father is actually an overseas worker. He moved away when I was young just so he could earn money and support the family . Racing was really, really difficult for everyone. We made a lot of sacrifices, sometimes you could say too much. So I always felt like I had to pay them back.”

On the way to becoming a professional, Bustamante gave up a lot: she never went to a prom or stayed with friends. She was homeschooled for most of her life.

“A few years ago we had trouble paying the entry fee, the fuel and the tires. That was a difficult path,” she says. That’s also why she contested every race with the utmost concentration because she didn’t know if there would be a next one.

This tough school helped her. She has since risen from karting glory as a kid to the top rookie in the W Series. This year she competes for Prema Racing. The Italian racing team has already been a stepping stone for many Formula 1 talents such as Charles Leclerc and Mick Schumacher.

family support

To have made it this far is a testament to Bustamante’s determination. The distance from home is a challenge for her: “A race brings so much adrenaline. Other drivers have a home to go to afterwards, but for me home is a bit too far away, so I’m often alone. That is one of the challenges.”

Even from a distance, however, she feels the support of her family. The close connection to her brother gives her special support. “I have a brother and he has autism and Down syndrome. I think that through him I really learned not only to think about myself, but also to be very selfless about a lot of things. There were moments when I had to be very patient and forgive him when he threw tantrums,” says Bustamante. However, her brother was one of the first to call her after her win in Valencia.

“That’s why I’ve always been very patient with life and with difficulties. It brought me a certain maturity. It takes a lot of self-control and discipline.” Unsurprisingly, the premier class of motorsport is their declared goal. “I want to make it into Formula 1, that’s my Mount Everest,” Bustamante emphasized in an interview with DW. “Everything I do is aimed at hopefully getting there.”

Big dreams

Last year Bustamante got a taste of it at the Hungaroring when she met seven-time Formula World Champion Lewis Hamilton. The two have a number of things in common: their talent and their ambition as well as the fact that they look different from most of the drivers in the field. For the teenager, the meeting was “a moment I will never forget,” she says. Hamilton is also one of the first supporters of the F1 Academy.

“Lewis has always supported women in motorsport. He was one of the first people to really champion it. The fact is, it’s not just about us drivers, it’s also about engineers.” McLaren, for example, have started a MINT program to attract women to technical tasks in motorsport. Bustamante herself is studying in the STEM field and is about to graduate at the time of the interview.

The story of the 18-year-old can encourage women to find their way in motorsport. With the long-term goal of Formula 1 in mind, Bustamante’s main concern now is to win the next race and, as the winner, to call her brother even more.

(Adapted from English by Jens Krepela)

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