Dura lex, sed lex at Swiss National Championship

At the opening round of the Swiss Championship in Franciacorta, I went through a key learning phase—especially when it comes to the regulations. I fully grasped how demanding the technical framework is and how every single detail matters at this level. That experience pushed me to embrace the rules completely, not as constraints, but as part of the performance itself.

At 7 Laghi in April, I was able to turn that learning into pure pace. I delivered my strongest performance so far in the CSK autobau, establishing myself as one of the fastest drivers on the grid. In the first race, I secured a solid 4th place, confirming the potential we had seen since the start of the season.

In the second race, I crossed the line in 5th position. Unfortunately, a spoiler penalty (following contact with another driver that I couldn’t avoid after a false start from the pack) dropped me down to 12th in the official results. Frustrating, of course—but fully accepted. It’s part of the same lesson I took from Franciacorta: mastering the regulations is inseparable from delivering results.

Beyond the raw standings, what matters most is the trajectory. The speed is there. The understanding is there. Now it’s about putting everything together and converting that pace into top results in the next rounds.

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