Alonso looking backwards rather than at win chance

Fernando Alonso says Aston Martin needs to focus on keeping the likes of Mercedes and Ferrari at bay rather than dreaming of victory from the front row at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix. Max Verstappen’s reliability issue opened the door for a more …

Fernando Alonso says Aston Martin needs to focus on keeping the likes of Mercedes and Ferrari at bay rather than dreaming of victory from the front row at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

Max Verstappen’s reliability issue opened the door for a more competitive qualifying session than was expected, with the early championship leader starting 15th. Sergio Perez took pole position from Charles Leclerc, but a grid penalty for the Ferrari driver means Alonso will start second as Aston Martin backed up its performance from Bahrain, but the Spaniard believes a win is unlikely.

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“I think we are not in that position yet,” Alonso said. “I think on pure pace, Red Bull is in another league. And I think we have to concentrate more on the teams behind. So Ferrari will be very strong. Mercedes, they are strong, and also Alpine, they are fast here.

“So I think our race is just behind us. But we saw today, Max probably was in his league today in qualifying and he could not complete the qualifying with a mechanical issue apparently, so we will try to take the opportunity for sure.”

Alonso has made a number of impressive starts throughout his career and feels that is his only hope to get ahead of Perez, given the pace Red Bull has shown all weekend.

“I don’t want to sound pessimistic but if we see the pace the whole weekend in free practice, we see the Bahrain race, we have to be honest with ourselves and know that Red Bull is a little bit ahead of everyone. So that’s not, let’s say, the target tomorrow, to fight for the win with Checo.

“But as I said before, Formula 1 is not exact mathematics, you know — anything can happen and today no one of us will put Verstappen P15, but these things happen sometimes. So, for us, the most important thing is to score points. We are starting both cars in the top five. We try to finish both cars in the top five and keep accumulating points for the Constructors’ Championship. That’s the main goal for Aston Martin this year.”

Alonso is also wary of a Verstappen fightback on Sunday, but says the progress Aston Martin has made over the winter to be speaking in such terms should not be overlooked.

“I think Max will come eventually in the race, you know. They have this advantage. I don’t know which race it was last year that he started last, so he changed the power unit and still finished P2 or even won the race. So, I think tomorrow, there is no doubt that he will be in the podium, probably, minimum. So as I said, this is not our goal.

“When we launched the car on the 13th of February, I remember very well a conversation with (team principal) Mike Krack, with Lance (Stroll), with the senior management of the team, setting the goals for this year, and the goals were not fighting Red Bull for the win tomorrow. So let’s keep it simple. Let’s keep the feet on the ground, and don’t make any mistakes.

“Even if we are competitive we cannot leave these kinds of weekends that they are so good for us with no points, that would be our biggest mistake. So whatever is available tomorrow, I’m sure we will take.”

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Race wins “definitely on the table” for Alonso – Verstappen

Max Verstappen believes victories for Fernando Alonso this season “are definitely on the table” given where Aston Martin has started the year. Alonso finished third to the two Red Bulls in Bahrain and heads to this weekend’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix …

Max Verstappen believes victories for Fernando Alonso this season “are definitely on the table” given where Aston Martin has started the year.

Alonso finished third to the two Red Bulls in Bahrain and heads to this weekend’s Saudi Arabian Grand Prix with a car that appears capable of fighting to be best of the rest ahead of Ferrari and Mercedes. With the strong starting point offering the potential for further development and Alonso himself saying “there is more to come from our side”, Verstappen believes the Spaniard is likely to add to his tally of 32 victories this season.

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“I hope so for Fernando as well because he has had a few years where there was not really a possibility to fight at the front, so I’m happy to see him (on the podium) already in race one,” Verstappen said. “I think at Aston Martin they really have the spirit and drive, they want to win and they’ve hired a lot of good people. So I guess it can only get better for them.

“For this year, difficult to say if they’re going to challenge for the championship, but race wins are definitely on the table. I’ve been in the same position where some races I’m finishing 20 to 40 seconds behind the winners and you still win two or three races a year because sometimes there are some tracks which really suit your car and everything just comes together and you can win a race with maybe sometimes a bit of help or luck.

“But for sure they have a really strong package. And now of course it’s all about developing it further.”

Although Aston Martin has made a major step forward after revising its car concept and now is in the mix with the previous top three, Verstappen doesn’t believe it’s a sign of the 2022 technical regulations helping to level the playing field and provide more opportunities to other teams.

“I think it doesn’t matter if it was the previous generation or this one. I think if you have the right people in charge, and they really want to win and they hire the right people, anything is possible.”

INSIGHT: How Aston Martin made the leap from F1’s midfield

Aston Martin is ahead of schedule. The team has never hidden its ambition, with owner Lawrence Stroll recently stating the objective is to become “one of the greatest Formula 1 teams there will be,” but in season three of a five-year plan to emerge …

Aston Martin is ahead of schedule. The team has never hidden its ambition, with owner Lawrence Stroll recently stating the objective is to become “one of the greatest Formula 1 teams there will be,” but in season three of a five-year plan to emerge as a front-runner it has, based on the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend, the second-best car in F1.

Realistically, it’s going to struggle to stay in second place given the Ferrari did look quicker on a weekend where its performance was contained by tire degradation troubles. That proved to be one of the many strengths of the Aston Martin AMR23 in Bahrain, allowing Fernando Alonso to climb from seventh after a difficult first lap to third.

Although Charles Leclerc’s Ferrari power unit letting him down promoted Alonso to the podium, had the Spaniard not lost ground early one — partly thanks to a clout from teammate Lance Stroll at Turn 4 — there’s every chance he could have taken that position on merit. It will require more races to judge Aston Martin’s true performance given the abrasive Bahrain surface means race pace is dramatically contained and even qualifying pace is more compromised than usual in terms of setup. But what is clear is that it has broken free of the midfield and joined the lead group.

Vast resources have been poured into Aston Martin since a consortium led by Stroll Sr. bought the Force India team after it fell into administration in the summer of 2018. While a “new” entrant for paperwork reasons, it’s exactly the same team that consistently produced giant-killing feats in both its Jordan and Force India guises. After an interregnum as Racing Point, during which Sergio Perez won the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix driving the infamous “Pink Mercedes,” largely a clone — and a legal one — of the previous-year’s title-winning car, it became Aston Martin in 2021.

Roy Salvadori’s troubles with the Aston Martin DBR4 back in 1959 paralleled those involved at the start of the latest incarnation of the works team. Motorsport Images

Results were patchy in the first two years of Aston Martin, which is broadly in keeping with the history of the marque in F1. Its short-lived works team in 1959-60 achieved little with a car, the DBR4, that could have been competitive were it raced when first built in 1957 but that was a front-engined relic when it finally debuted. Sebastian Vettel took a podium finish in Baku in ’21, but last season was a difficult one after getting the initial car concept wrong. But there were signs of what the team was capable of as it surged to the brink of recovering to sixth place in the constructors’ championship after major car revisions.

During recent years, the team has grown from 400 to over 700 and recruited high-quality personnel from every corner of the F1 paddock. That includes technical director Dan Fallows, who worked under Adrian Newey in key aero roles at Red Bull previously, and his deputy Eric Blandin, formerly Mercedes head of aero. This increased the team’s performance potential significantly, so why is it a surprise it has become so good, so soon?

Dan Fallows (left) alongside Group CEO of Aston Martin Performance Technologies Martin Whitmarsh during the Bahrain GP weekend. Zak Mauger/Motorsport Images

It’s partly because the team still occupies the bursting-at-the-seams Silverstone facility that Jordan established back in 1992. That is being corrected with a purpose-built factory close to completion adjacent to it that the team is due to move into in May. It’s touted as F1’s first “smart factory” and “a game changer” and has been optimized around the team size and structure permitted by F1’s cost cap. The main building is one of three being constructed, but the one containing the new state-of-the-art wind tunnel is still a work in progress. That will be operational next year.

Even though Aston Martin currently shares the Mercedes wind tunnel, along with the same power unit, gearbox, rear suspension and hydraulics, all of this puts a ceiling on its ultimate potential. Aston Martin is still a team evolving, but what is most remarkable is that it appears to have retained its historical knack for overachieving even while growing. The ability to fuse that greater resource in terms of people and budget with that tendency is one of the reasons Fallows cites for expectations being high internally heading into this season.

“I’m fortunate enough to have relatively recent experience of a top team and how that operates,” said Fallows during the Bahrain GP weekend. “But it’s sometimes very difficult for the midfield teams to compete on every level that the top teams have, particularly in things like facilities and tools.

“So it is incredibly important to try to focus on the strengths that you have and try to make the differences where those are. In the case of Aston Martin, I think (that’s) the people that have been there for quite a long time, but (also) the team that’s developed over that is a big strength of ours.

“We’ve got an incredibly talented and passionate team around us that has shown over the previous years that it can punch above its weight. So we need to lean on that. That’s something that we can hopefully stand out with.”

By producing such a strong car, Aston Martin has shattered perceptions of what a midfield team can achieve. In recent times, the chasm between the “big three” teams and the rest appeared to have become ossified. While measures such as the cost cap, aerodynamic testing regulations that give more wind tunnel and CFD time to lower-ranked teams and the more equitable distribution of the share of F1’s revenue split between the teams have made a difference, this was felt to be a slow-burn in terms of impact.

Aston Martin is one of a strong group of midfield teams of recent times that is aspiring to get to the front, but its timescale seems to be different. Alpine is satisfied still to be at the front of the midfield group this year, while McLaren has always talked of waiting for its new wind tunnel coming online and having time to make an impact, along with other major infrastructure upgrades, before it can hope to thrust forward. Alfa Romeo, too, is one of these teams but one coming from the lowest base and in the process of transitioning into being the works Audi team.

So how has Aston Martin achieved this? Well, it hasn’t done it simply by copying Red Bull. There have been plenty of jibes about it producing a “green Red Bull,” with Sergio Perez joking there were three Red Bulls on the podium in Bahrain. It’s true that the car is very much similar to last year’s Red Bull concept, and therefore this year’s evolutionary version, but that’s true of many cars on the F1 grid. But it’s not a direct attempt to recreate a rival’s car, as the 2020 Racing Point was. A glance at the detail of the car shows plenty of differences. The idea Fallows turned up with a Red Bull design in his head and has made Aston Martin build it is a fatuous one.

A green Red Bull? Actually there’a a lot more to the Aston Martin AMR23 than that. Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

One advantage Aston Martin does have is that it uses the full Mercedes rear end. This comes at a price, not only in terms of design opportunity (your rear suspension geometry is fixed by another team) but also the cost. That’s not just what Aston Martin actually pays Mercedes but also the high notional value under the cost cap. Fallows has been equivocal on this, but there’s little doubt Aston Martin will eventually switch to produce its own such parts down the line simply because it is more efficient cost-cap and freer-design wise. McLaren and Alpine already do this, while Alfa Romeo uses Ferrari gearbox internals but designs its own casing primarily for cost cap reasons.

But that’s not enough to explain the difference in performance as it’s absurd to suppose when Aston Martin does eventually make its own gearbox and rear suspension that it will flatline performance wise. That hints that this is a team that, even when crammed into an obsolete factory, is working very well in terms of its design and development programs.

Under the most restrictive set of regulations in F1 history, the key to producing such a strong car is in understanding the key drivers of performance and where the potential is to maximize them. This is something Newey has always excelled at and is perhaps a trait Fallows shares thanks to his Red Bull years. It’s obvious that the underfloor is the key performance driver, but it’s the details around it — the floor fences, the way airflow is distributed between the venturi tunnels and the exterior of the car, the way this all interacts with the rest of the airflow regime of the car — that makes the difference. What Aston Martin has proved is that it has taken a leap in terms of understanding how to make the most of all of this.

Aston Martin’s rapidly evolving team appears to have gained on the sport’s power players faster than anticipated. Zak Mauger/Motorsport Images

However, there is one question mark that hangs over Aston Martin. The current car is the product of a melange of individuals who have come in from multiple teams. They can’t bring designs with them, but collectively they offer a vast amount of knowledge and ideas, meaning that you could argue the current Aston Martin is a Red Bull concept with the knowledge from other teams sprinkled over it. It will have to prove it can come up with such prolific ideas independently in future. But that’s something the team likely will achieve.

What it does show is that upwardly-mobile midfield teams can close on the deep knowledge built by the big-spending top squads over the past decade a little more quickly than they thought. And perhaps this is something that the team has taken wholesale from Red Bull, an ambition level that reflects not only the desire to match the biggest teams, but raise the bar for what is possible. That’s a key quality of genuine top F1 teams. Perhaps the most ominous warning came from Fallows late last year when he stressed the need to do things differently.

“The important thing for us is to make sure that we don’t just replicate what our competitors are doing,” said Fallows. “We don’t believe that’s going to help us overtake the likes of Mercedes, Red Bull, Ferrari. So we have to develop our own way of doing things. That does take time, but we’ve got a hugely ambitious group of people.”

The Aston Martin AMR23 perhaps best embodies this. Yes, it follows Red Bull’s direction but it’s the team’s own take on that with plenty of differences and, the team hopes, some hidden secrets that will open up development potential over the coming three seasons. There’s also the extra edge of a team that is hinting that it’s not about staying where it is after this strong start, but actually closing the gap on Red Bull. That’s an aggressive mindset, one that stands the team in good stead.

Prior to this year, Aston Martin has talked the talk and Stroll Sr. has put his money where his mouth is, not least with the recruitment of Alonso. But this year it’s walking the walk, for the first time proving that this is not just a team with the potential to change F1, but one that is now starting to show that it really can do so.

“Good baseline” will aid Aston Martin development – Krack

Aston Martin has produced a car for the 2023 season that will be “much, much easier” to develop compared to its predecessor last year. Lawrence Stroll’s team entered the new era of technical regulations with optimism but struggled in the early part …

Aston Martin has produced a car for the 2023 season that will be “much, much easier” to develop compared to its predecessor last year.

Lawrence Stroll’s team entered the new era of technical regulations with optimism but struggled in the early part of 2022 and took four rounds to score its first point. From there Aston Martin developed its car impressively and finished the season level on points with sixth-placed Alfa Romeo, before radically overhauling its concept over the winter and starting this year with a car team principal Mike Krack is excited about.

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“In a cost cap environment, you need to start with a good baseline because you cannot afford to spend what you have available on just on developing,” Krack said. “I think this is something that is also why we went aggressive in the targets that we had for that car.

“Obviously it’s not always easy to achieve, but our team has managed to achieve great things there, and it’s much, much easier to develop from this base than to develop from the base we had last year.”

With Aston Martin starting the year second to Red Bull in terms of pace in Bahrain, and with the defending champions facing a cost cap penalty designed to limit development, Krack says there’s no point worrying about the potential to close the gap but wants his team to focus on its own progress.

“I think last year, we managed to get better over the season, but we saw also how hard that is in terms of, because of the intensity that you have with racing and cost cap, you are really tight. I think we have our development plan, and this is independent of Red Bull.

“We have a plan in place, but the others have a plan in place as well. It could well be that if you develop at the same rate, you stay where you are. Let’s see where we get to.”

Krack also says rivals should not underestimate Aston Martin’s potential to maximize its opportunities, given the way the team was lauded for being so effective in previous guises.

“We must not forget, we speak here about Team Silverstone. Team Silverstone is a very experienced team with a lot of fantastic people that have done that already. And we saw it, I think we clearly saw it with the race strategy (in Bahrain).

“The team did not get carried away by stopping early, trying to undercut. But by sticking to its plan, this tire advantage that was built at the end of the day was I think instrumental to help to pass. I think we continue to try to do our best there.”

¡Le salió caro! Multan a Sebastian Vettel por curioso paseo en scooter

El piloto alemán aseguró que recibió el permiso para circular en la moto pero la FIA opina lo contrario y no dudó en multar al piloto

Una de las imágenes más curiosas de la jornada de este viernes en el Gran Premio de Australia fue el paseo de Sebastian Vettel a bordo de un scooter por la pista del circuito de Albert Park.

La curiosa escena sucedió cuando el Aston Martin del ex campeón del mundo presentó problemas y para regresar al pitlane el alemán tomó prestada la motocicleta de un oficial de pista para conducir de regreso.

Los aficionados reconocieron al piloto y el alemán comenzó a levantar la mano y saludar a los asistentes algo que infringió el reglamento de la FIA y por lo que Vettel tendrá que desembolsar 5 mil euros por la jugada.

El piloto alemán aseguró que recibió el permiso para circular en la moto pero la FIA opina lo contrario y no dudó en multar al piloto que no ha tenido un buen comienzo de temporada pues se ausentó las dos primeras pruebas por contagiarse de covid-19.

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Aston Martin debuts new Formula 1 car, gets congrats from Tom Brady

A nice message from the GOAT for a sweet ride.

It’s been decades — six, to be exact — since Aston Martin has competed in Formula 1.

On Wednesday, we saw the car — the AMR21 — from the company revealed, which looks beautiful and will be driven by Sebastian Vettel (winner of four titles in his incredible career) in 2021.

It also got some congratulations from Tampa Bay Buccaneers quarterback Tom Brady, which Aston Martin shared on Twitter, along with a video from Daniel Craig, the man who’s played James Bond and driven an Aston Martin in many films over the years.

First off, here’s the car — I’m not an F1 fan, but it looks really cool.

And here’s Brady and Craig:

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