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Since its inception, female drivers have largely existed on the periphery of Formula racing. Rarely considered serious contenders, apart from the few who made headlines, their presence was often treated as the exception rather than the rule. That picture is shifting, with a new generation of female racers determined to compete at the highest level and redefine long-held perceptions of the sport.

 

Across global junior series, participation numbers are telling a clear story. The 2026 French F4 Championship, for example, opened its season with a record number of female entries – a signal that the pipeline is no longer theoretical, but real. From Lisa Billard (16), Jade Jacquet (16), Annabell Brian (18), Angelina Proença, to Moroccan driver Sofia Zanfari (19), a cohort of young female racers is on the grid, challenging the status quo and competing on equal footing.

 

At the grassroots level, initiatives aimed at getting more girls into karting are expanding access, while structured development programmes are beginning to close the gap between potential and progress. Previously, the assumption that motorsport was not a natural space for women has determined who entered, who stayed, and who excelled.

 

This perception is now being challenged by visibility, investment, and a growing body of results. Crucially, these drivers are no longer racing in isolation. The momentum is building, and Gianna Pascoal is part of it.

 

Only 15, Pascoal’s transition from karting into single-seater racing comes at a time when the sport is recalibrating what talent looks like – and who gets to pursue it. Her recent selection for the globally recognised “More Than Equal Driver Development Programme” places her among a small group of young female drivers being actively prepared for Formula-level competition, reinforcing that female talent is no longer waiting in the wings to be noticed.

 

Her career reflects exactly what that system can produce. Starting karting at the age of 11, notably later than many of her peers, she established herself within a few seasons as a front-runner across national ROK and Rotax competitions. Her progression into international events, including the FIA Academy and Champions of the Future series, has been marked by consistency rather than novelty. She is not competing because she is different. She is competing because she is passionate, quick, and dedicated.

 

“I’ve always wanted to be judged as a driver first,” Pascoal says. “For me, it’s about performance – finding time, improving, and competing at the highest level.” Her move into the Investchem MSA Formula 4 series this season reflects that mindset. Formula 4 has long been the proving ground where potential is either converted into progress or left behind. It has also become an arena where female drivers are no longer exceptions, but part of the field.

 

For South Africa, the significance runs deep. The country has a proud, if under-acknowledged, history of female motorsport success. In 1980, Desiré Wilson became the only woman to win a Formula One category race. For decades, that achievement stood largely in isolation. Today, a new generation of drivers is beginning to build around it, adding depth where there was once only an exception.

 

Pascoal represents that next layer. Her recent training block in Vienna is part of a new standard of preparation for young drivers entering single-seater racing. It is structured and data-driven, designed to remove as many variables as possible from performance. It also reflects a broader shift: female drivers are no longer being developed differently but are developed with the same level of rigour and expectation as their peers. There is little ambiguity – she belongs in this space.

 

For young girls watching from the sidelines, what Gianna has achieved marks a meaningful shift. It changes what they can imagine. It shows that motorsport is not a closed world – that they can enter, compete, and be taken seriously. For the sport itself, it signals something equally important: talent was never the issue – opportunity was. That, now, is beginning to change. It is an exciting time in the world of motorsport – especially if you are a woman.