
F1 star reveals he was BURGLED by thief who 'stole everything' after breaking into his car - and nearly missed the Canadian Grand Prix after passport was nicked
Formula 1 star Gabriel Bortoleto almost missed out this weekend's Canadian Grand Prix after a thief shockingly broke into his car and stole his passport.
The Brazilian, who was in Zurich near his Sauber team's headquarters, also had his computer taken while he was eating dinner and was forced to use a different passport and replacement travel documents as he scrambled to get to Montreal on time.
The 20-year-old joined Sauber ahead of this season after winning last year's Formula 2 title and is yet to earn a point in his maiden season in the F1 circuit.
A 12th place finish in the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona represented his best result so far.
And his preparations for the Canadian Grand Prix were dealt a heavy blow as he looks to improve on a challenging campaign, with the thiefs causing 'chaos'.
'I had gone to dinner one day in Switzerland and they ended up opening the car and taking my backpack,' the Sauber driver told Brazilian media.
'I had my passports, everything inside, my computer, all my running gear.
'It was chaos, but we managed to find the guy.
'Everything worked out in the end, I have my passports. We didn't find everything, but we did find some things.'
Bortoleto is the 14th highest paid driver, earning around £1.5m a year.
The F1 rookie, who replaced former Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas this season, is not the first star to be targeted by thieves.
Two years ago, then-Ferrari driver Carlos Sainz chased down thieves and retrieved his £500,000 watch just hours after competing in the Italian Grand Prix in Milan.
While Bortoleto is still looking to pick up his first point of the season, team-mate Nico Hulkenburg sits in 11th on 16.
Despite Sauber's car being one of the slowest on the grid, the German impressively raced to a fifth-place finish in Spain.
Much attention will be fixed of Max Verstappen as the F1 season continues at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal this weekend.
The Red Bull driver is in third place but is a single error away from a race ban after his shocking collision with George Russell in Spain.
Meanwhile, Brit Lando Norris will be aiming to return to the top of the leaderboard by besting McLaren team-mate and championship rival Oscar Piastri.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
BREAKING NEWS Max Verstappen snaps at 'childish' reporters and claims talk of potential race ban is a 'waste of time': 'It's p***ing me off'
A 'p***ed off' Max Verstappen snapped at reporters and claimed more talk of a potential Formula 1 race ban is a 'waste of time' after he qualified second behind George Russell at the Canadian Grand Prix. In a fiery press conference in Montreal, Verstappen was in no mood for conversation and risked the wrath of the FIA's no-swearing rules once again. As F1's Tom Clarkson began a question about Verstappen's penalty points and rivalry with Russell, the world champion interrupted to insist: 'I don't need to hear it again.' He then added: It's really p***ing me off. You speaking about it, on Thursday, it's such a waste of time. It's childish. It's really annoying.' Verstappen currently has 11 penalty points on his license, one away from a race ban, after he tangled with Russell last time out in Spain, an incident which saw him demoted from P5 at the flag to P10. The looming possibility of a suspension has seen Verstappen field questions all weekend about his driving style, and he reached breaking point after qualifying on Saturday.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Max Verstappen fumes at 'CHILDISH' George Russell after Mercedes star snatched pole and issued savage challenge to Red Bull rival ahead of Canadian Grand Prix - after pair came to blows following chaos in Spain
George Russell took a dazzling pole position for Mercedes in Montreal – and showed Lando Norris how to do it. Norris, who qualified seventh, was a woeful seven-tenths behind Russell, the McLaren man's recent errors resurfacing. He was skating on ice on track and, alas, his world championship hopes are none too sure-footed in general going into Sunday's race, which Oscar Piastri starts from third place. Intriguingly, Russell – so impressive here – lines up on the front row alongside Max Verstappen, setting up a potential explosion between the two men who clashed in Barcelona a fortnight ago. The pair shook hands after qualifying. 'We're mates,' said Russell, smiling. He had driven fabulously to his career fifth pole with the 'most exhilarating lap of my lap, I had goosebumps.' First corner potential of a clash with Verstappen? 'I have a few more points on my licence,' explained Russell, referring to Verstappen going to 11 points, and one short of a race ban, by biffing him in Spain. 'So childish,' said an irritated Verstappen. 'I don't need to hear it again. It is really p***ing me off. You speaking about it, on Thursday, it is such a waste of time. It is childish and really annoying.' Lewis Hamilton qualified fifth for Ferrari, a place behind Mercedes' Kimi Antonelli. As for Norris, 10 points behind leader Piastri, he made a mess of his first run in Q3. He ran wide at the final left, right chicane. He had missed out on his banker lap and it appeared to play on his mind. 'Lando, let's reset and remember your braking references,' he was told by race engineer Will Joseph. 'Primacy focus this lap is line,' he was reminded. His father Adam grimaced in the garage. What the old man feared transpired. Norris, going again, was out of shape and never in contention, en route to seventh, a little faster than before but not by enough, by far. Qualifying was red flagged early on when the engine cover of Alex Albon's Williams flew off. He was travelling down the back straight when his car partly disintegrated. As a consequence, he nearly lost control at the final chicane but hung on. A delay followed while the track was cleared. The London-born Thai's involvement was not over. He returned to make it into Q2. Yuki Tsunoda will start at the back after a 10-place grid penalty for overtaking under a red flag in third practice. He had qualified 10th for Red Bull. Aston Martin's local boy Lance Stroll bombed out in Q1 – a fortnight after the Canadian sat out the Spanish Grand Prix with a damaged hand.


Daily Mirror
an hour ago
- Daily Mirror
George Russell mocks Max Verstappen after beating F1 rival to Canadian GP pole
Max Verstappen was denied pole for the Canadian Grand Prix by George Russell who made it clear he thinks he has an advantage over the Red Bull racer at the first corner on Sunday George Russell secured pole in Montreal for the second successive year with a mighty lap which denied Max Verstappen. And the Brit reacted by cracking a joke at the Dutchman's expense with Verstappen just one penalty point away from a race ban after their collision in Barcelona two weeks ago. Aware of that, Russell said he felt confident about going into the first corner wheel to wheel with the four-time Formula 1 champion tonight. "I've got a few more points on my licence to play with," he smirked, drawing some cheers but also audible boos from fans in the stands at the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Verstappen had knocked championship leader Oscar Piastri off the top of the leaderboard but then Russell snatched his sixth career pole. The Brit said: "To be honest that last lap was probably one of the most exhilarating laps of my life. "I got into the last corner and I was six tenths up and I was like, 'This lap is mighty'. Crossing the line and seeing we were P1 was a real surprise, but I was so chuffed with it." Russell had whooped with delight over the radio after his pole was confirmed and shouted: "What a f****** lap!" Speaking on Sky Sports, 2016 World champion with Mercedes Nico Rosberg said: "We just witnessed something very, very special. This is amazing. That car is not supposed to be that far in front. Hats off." Verstappen will have the advantage of starting on the cleaner side of the track but said: "I would always pick P1 because you start a little bit more forward, but it's fine. We'll see what we can do tomorrow. READ MORE: F1 stewards issue statement as Red Bull's Yuki Tsunoda handed massive Canadian GP penalty READ MORE: Nico Rosberg calls out Danica Patrick live on Sky Sports F1 – 'I have to disagree' "I'm already very happy with what we achieved today, to be on the front row and hopefully tomorrow we can have a solid race. I felt quite good all weekend and the car was in a good window. Overall, I'm very happy with qualifying. I think the car was again working quite well." Championship leader Piastri has four poles to his name this year but had to settle for third place on the grid. He was still pleased, though, no doubt made to feel better by the fact team-mate and title rival Lando Norris was way down in seventh having struggled throughout qualifying. The Aussie said: "To be honest, after how practice went I'm really happy with myself at the moment. It was a nice turnaround. I'm pretty happy with third, which is a bit different this year but I'll definitely take it here." But a glum Norris said: "Not ideal! Too many mistakes, and I hit the wall in the last lap. The car felt good today, I just made too many mistakes." Lewis Hamilton matched his best Grand Prix qualifying result of 2025 so far by going fifth fastest for Ferrari, behind rookie Kimi Antonelli. But team-mate Charles Leclerc got stuck in dirty air on his final lap having set the quickest first sector time and had to settle for just eighth.