Third title would be fitting send-off for Alonso – de la Rosa

A third drivers’ championship more than 15 years after his second would be a fitting way for Fernando Alonso to round off his Formula 1 career, according to Aston Martin’s Pedro de la Rosa. Alonso is currently third in the drivers’ standings after …

A third drivers’ championship more than 15 years after his second would be a fitting way for Fernando Alonso to round off his Formula 1 career, according to Aston Martin’s Pedro de la Rosa.

Alonso is currently third in the drivers’ standings after two consecutive podium finishes – the second being his 100th in F1 – and 14 points behind early leader Max Verstappen. The Spaniard won the second of his two championships in 2006, but former driver de la Rosa, who is now an ambassador for Aston Martin, believes the progress made by Aston Martin this season gives Alonso the most competitive car he has had in years.

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“There are many world champions who lose their edge when they no longer have a competitive car,” de la Rosa said. “Fernando is not like that. He’s maintained his level and his motivation. To have achieved as many F1 podiums as he has and to still have that same hunger as when he first started, despite not having a competitive car for so many years, is something I really admire about him.

“It would be a dream come true to see Fernando crowned world champion again. He deserves it. Anything you do in life, if you give your best, sooner or later you will be rewarded – and Fernando has given his best for decades. When you consider the journey he’s been on, everything he’s put in and everything he’s been through, winning the world championship again would be a fitting finale to a remarkable F1 career.”

Although Alonso has often been labelled a fiery character to work with, de la Rosa believes his approach is more relaxed than he gets credit for.

“People don’t know who the real Fernando is,” he said. “They see that he’s extremely committed and focused, but what they don’t see, what they don’t realize, is how easy-going he is. He has a huge sense of humor and doesn’t take himself too seriously. It’s one of his strengths – he doesn’t feel pressure.

“When other drivers are nervous about what’s to come, Fernando isn’t. You’ll be with him moments before he’s about to race and he’ll be smiling, laughing and joking. He’s like a kid about to go to the park with his mates to play football – you wouldn’t think he’s about to drive an F1 car. He stays relaxed and that’s partly why, after all these years, he’s still able to compete at such a high level.”

MEDLAND: F1 race result confusion…again

Three hours and 50 minutes after the checkered flag fell on the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, the final race classification was officially published. Put another way, it took nearly three times as long to finalize the result as it did to run the race …

Three hours and 50 minutes after the checkered flag fell on the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, the final race classification was officially published.

Put another way, it took nearly three times as long to finalize the result as it did to run the race itself. And once again it’s the FIA that is coming in for criticism.

If you need a refresher, Fernando Alonso lined up too far to the left of his grid slot, earning a five-second time penalty soon after the race started. The rule exists to ensure drivers are in the right position for jump starts to be registered, as sensors play a major part in detecting early movement as long as the car is in the correct spot.

No qualms there, and Aston Martin actually got a bit of a bonus from a bittersweet moment when the safety car was needed due to Lance Stroll’s retirement. Alonso could take his penalty during a pit stop under safety car conditions, losing less race time to his competitors.

The rear jack was touching the car ready to lift it once the five-second time penalty was served, and the FIA — through a combination of Race Control and the recently-added Remote Operations Centre (ROC) in Geneva — confirmed to the stewards that it was happy with how the penalty had been served, so the stewards looked into it no further.

“Subsequently, at the last lap of the race, the stewards received a report from Race Control that they considered that the penalty was not properly served by Car 14 and they asked the stewards to investigate the matter,” an FIA document later explained. “The matter was reported to Race Control by ROC.”

This begs the question, given the fact the ROC had already approved the way the penalty was taken, were members in Geneva bored late in the race and took another look at the penalty? Or more likely, was it contacted by another team that was taking issue with the way it had been served?

“The stewards were shown video evidence of how Car 14 served the penalty by the Race Director and the Sporting Director. They stated that what was agreed at the Sporting Advisory Committee (SAC) meetings with the teams was that no part of the car could be touched while a penalty was being served as this would constitute working on the car.

“In this case, it was clear, that the car was touched by the rear jack. Based on the representation made to the stewards that there was an agreed position that touching the car would amount to ‘working’ on the car, the stewards decided to impose a penalty.”

The timing was more than suspicious, given how it removed the ability for Alonso to react by trying to extend his advantage over George Russell beyond the 10 seconds he was penalized, something he insisted he would have been able to do with ease if informed during the race.

While Aston Martin’s sporting director Andy Stevenson was walking up and down the paddock with a laptop tucked under his arm — a clear indication of visits to the FIA where he had documents to show — a rival team manager told me it was extremely likely another team had provided footage, and the fact a penalty had been handed out based on that suggested any appeal was unlikely to succeed.

But that counts against what is a growing list of head-in-hands moments when it comes to Formula 1’s governing body.

The FIA has been trying to regain the trust of fans ever since the 2021 championship finale, and it hardly had a perfect record from before that, either. But there have been multiple incidents over the past 12 months that have proven frustrating to watch play out, and Jeddah provided another one.

Aston Martin was able to take exception to the claims from the race director Niels Wittich and sporting director Steve Nielsen that “there was an agreed position that touching the car would amount to ‘working’ on the car” from previous SAC meetings. Minutes of the meetings showed that no such agreement was in place, and precedents of cars being touched by jacks when serving penalties then stood.

It’s not a great look for the race director to be being proven wrong by teams and having to reverse a penalty decision, and it’s also slightly concerning to see the well-respected Nielsen — brought in partly to improve relations between the FIA and F1 and the teams — also named as a party who misunderstood the situation.

Curb your enthusiasm, please… Mark Sutton/Motorsport Images

But a lack of communication was also a major problem. Russell found out he was on the podium unexpectedly while doing post-race interviews, Alonso returned from the podium celebrations to be told he was now fourth, and then it was over three hours before the situation had been reversed. In that time, Aston Martin was able to request a right of review of the penalty, despite no other teams having received the penalty document to know what the reasoning was.

The document explaining the offense was published over four hours after the moment in question had taken place (and nearly three hours after the penalty had been handed out), and then 14 minutes later the summons for Aston Martin’s right of review hearing was published. Only that stated the hearing had taken place 40 minutes earlier.

By this point it had already become clear through sources at Aston Martin that the decision had been reversed, but none of the process had been communicated through the official channels as it took place. Rival teams were asking what was going on, and the word “shambles” cropped up regularly from multiple constructors, relating to the handling of the situation.

In the end, the right outcome was reached in the sense that jacks touching the car have been allowed in the past as long as they’re not yet lifting it, but by then even Alonso had left the track and millions of fans had long since moved on with their days, frustrated at the uncertainty surrounding the result. If you think I’m repeating myself, you’d be right.

The only area the FIA gets credit is by later explaining where the confusion over the penalty had been generated from, and confirming it would take action to prevent a repeat before the next race.

“The subsequent decision of the stewards to hear and grant the Right of Review by the Competitor was the result of new evidence regarding the definition of ‘working on the car,’ for which there were conflicting precedents, and this has been exposed by this specific circumstance,” an FIA spokesperson said.

“This topic will therefore be addressed at the next Sporting Advisory Committee taking place on Thursday, 23 March, and a clarification will be issued ahead of the 2023 FIA Formula 1 Australian Grand Prix.”

But after a scenario that had lacked transparency throughout, it added: “This open approach to the review and improvement of its processes is part of the FIA’s ongoing mission to regulate the sport in a fair and transparent way.”

This latest episode shows there’s still a long, long way to go on that front.

Russell bemused by ‘chaotic’ Alonso penalty confusion

George Russell faced a roller coaster of emotions both during and after the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, as he was unaware of the status of penalties for Fernando Alonso. Aston Martin took a five-second time penalty – given to Alonso for being out of …

George Russell faced a roller coaster of emotions both during and after the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, as he was unaware of the status of penalties for Fernando Alonso.

Aston Martin took a five-second time penalty — given to Alonso for being out of position on the grid — during his pit stop, but Russell thought it was still to be applied after the race when he was trying to chase down the Spaniard. Ultimately Alonso received a 10-second time penalty for not serving the original penalty correctly, promoting Russell to third place before the decision was overturned, something the Mercedes driver thinks is reflective of the pace that was seen.

“It was very chaotic for us because I knew he had a five-second (penalty) for being out of his grid slot,” Russell said. “I didn’t realize that he served that during his pit stop in the safety car.

“So, after the restart, I had Lewis (Hamilton) right behind me, trying to overtake me, and I was like, ‘Guys, we need to not fight with one another yet, we need to make sure we save the tire and we have them at the end, so we can both finish ahead of Fernando with his penalty.’ They then told me that he’d already served this penalty, so I was a bit confused and frustrated with that news.

“It was only in the last five laps I found out that he might be getting a(another) penalty. That’s when I pushed like a madman trying to close that gap. But to be honest, I think Fernando and Aston just had pace in their pocket, and they look really solid at the moment.”

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Speaking before Alonso’s third place was reinstated, Russell felt both the original penalty for the grid slot infringement and the potential larger one post-race were unfair.

“I think it was very harsh what happened to Fernando, in all honesty, I feel like some of these penalties have been a little bit too extreme, what we’ve seen this weekend for some drivers that we saw in qualifying and for what happened to Fernando.”

As for Mercedes’ uptick in performance, Russell concluded, “We definitely made a step in the right direction. I think, above all, we just truly maximized the potential of the car. We had a really strong qualifying, which was really enjoyable. I’m really pleased to come home in P4 on the road because I felt like that was the maximum that was possible. I was having fun out there — the car was feeling good. And we know we’ve got some more performance in the locker, in some races to come.

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Alonso says late penalty shows ‘something wrong in the system’

Fernando Alonso says it is “sad” for the FIA that it took until after the race to hand him a penalty that demoted him from the podium in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, and shows the system needs addressing. Aston Martin had to perform a five-second …

Fernando Alonso says it is “sad” for the FIA that it took until after the race to hand him a penalty that demoted him from the podium in the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, and shows the system needs addressing.

Aston Martin had to perform a five-second time penalty when Alonso made his one and only pit stop after the Spaniard was deemed to be out of position on the grid, and did so under safety car conditions. However, like Alpine with Esteban Ocon’s car in Bahrain, the team was deemed to have started work on the car before the full five seconds were up, this time but no investigation was communicated during the race and it was only after the podium presentation had started that a 10-second time penalty was announced.

“Less than standard — today is not good for the fans,” Alonso said. “When you have 35 laps to apply the penalty and inform about the penalty and you wait after the podium there is something wrong in the system. It’s the way it is — I feel sorry for the fans, but I enjoyed the podium! I took the trophy, I have the pictures, I celebrate with the champagne and now 15 or 12 points doesn’t change much for me; but it is a little bit sad for the FIA, yes.”

George Russell was promoted to third place as a result and was informed of his result while he was doing interviews and far from the podium, something Alonso says also isn’t correct.

“No, it’s not fair for George as I guess the Mercedes sponsors will love to be on the podium. For us it’s good — we have Aramco, we have the picture, it’s not fair for George as if he was third in the race he should enjoy the podium and not me. I feel sorry for George, for Mercedes sponsors, for George’s fans.”

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Alonso also believes he would have been able to pull the required distance clear of Russell to finish third in the race — for what would have been his 100th podium — having responded in the closing stages to a call to try and open a five-second gap to be safe.

“I need to rewatch the race but apparently I was too much on the left so (the original penalty) was my mistake — I need to pay more attention to that. It’s also strange in two races that two cars — Esteban (Ocon) and myself — had similar things so maybe this year’s cars, the halo, whatever, is interrupting the vision of how we position the car.

“But anyway, that was my mistake. The thing is, they told me you have a five-second penalty so I pushed harder and opened a gap of seven seconds and I paid the penalty. In the second stint there was no investigation, no nothing, so if someone tells me I need 10 seconds I would open 11 seconds.”

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Perez leads dominant Red Bull one-two in Saudi Arabian GP

Sergio Perez beat teammate Max Verstappen to victory at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in another dominant one-two result for Red Bull Racing. Pole-getter Perez’s race was almost perfect but for his tardy launch off the line that handed an early lead …

Sergio Perez beat teammate Max Verstappen to victory at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in another dominant one-two result for Red Bull Racing.

Pole-getter Perez’s race was almost perfect but for his tardy launch off the line that handed an early lead to second-place starter Fernando Alonso — who didn’t need to be asked twice to take the straighter line through the first chicane and take first place.

But it became quickly obvious that the Aston Martin was no match for the Red Bull Racing car. Perez bided his time until lap four, when he blasted back into the lead with the help of a super-effective DRS, and never looked back, with his way being eased by a lap-17 safety car that gifted him an easy pit stop.

Perez’s only threat came from teammate Verstappen, who started 15th on the grid after a failed driveshaft in qualifying. The Dutchman took just eight laps to rise into the top 10 and was still within Perez’s pit stop window when the safety car was deployed.

He shook out from the caution pit stops in fourth but was rapidly up to third ahead of George Russell, and within five laps of the restart Verstappen was into second place ahead of Alonso to begin his pursuit of the lead.

Verstappen was given a lap time target of 1m33s, but regularly appeared to ignore the instruction, diving easily into the 1m32s to slice the gap to his teammate. Even worries for his driveshaft, about which he radioed his team that he could feel vibrations at high speed, weren’t enough to deter him from his goal.

Perez was eventually told that Verstappen was ignoring instruction to manage his pace and reluctantly sped up, asking rhetorically whether both cars should be risking problems by pushing so hard, but he had enough in hand to break Verstappen’s challenge to win by 5.3s.

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“It turned out to be tougher than I expected,” he said. “The team did a fantastic job.

“We will keep pushing hard. The important thing I think is we were the fastest car out there today, so I’m very pleased with that.”

Verstappen consoled himself with a bonus point for fastest lap, set on the final tour of the race against instruction from his pit wall, to retain the title lead over Perez by a single point.

“It wasn’t very easy to get through the field,” he said. “Once I cleared them one by one we got into a good rhythm, and of course I’m very happy to be here on the podium.”

Alonso’s glorious start didn’t last long, but the Aston Martin driver again comfortably outdistanced all but the Red Bulls…at least on the track. Zak Mauger/Motorsport Images

Alonso finished third at the flag for his 100th podium but was stripped of the place in the aftermath for incorrectly serving a 5s penalty during his sole pit stop.

Alonso had been penalized for starting too far left in his grid box, but his rear jack was engaged before the five seconds had expired, which is against the rules. The stewards handed him a post-race 10s penalty, demoting him to fourth behind Mercedes driver George Russell.

Russell had been told to push late in the race to capitalize on the possible penalty, finishing 5.1s behind the Spaniard. Teammate Lewis Hamilton, however, couldn’t bridge the gap. He finished fifth and 10.3s behind Alonso, leaving him in his position at the flag.

Although the penalty made that podium appearance illusory, Alonso remained delighted by his Aston Martin car’s level of performance.

“What a start of a season,” he said. “Probably unthinkable one month ago when we launched the car, but these guys made a fantastic car.

“I pushed all the way through like qualifying laps. Red Bull is maybe a little bit out of reach, but the rest were behind, so I’m happy with that.”

Alonso came under late scrutiny from the stewards room for incorrectly serving a five-second penalty at his sole stop, earned for starting too far left in his grid box. His rear jack appeared to be engaged at the back of the car before the five seconds had been served, which would be a breach of the rules. The resulting 10-second penalty — the same handed Esteban Ocon for a similar offense last time out in Bahrain — promoted Mercedes’ Russell into third, though teammate Lewis Hamilton remained fifth after a straightforward race for the seven-time champion.

Both Mercedes cars had more than enough pace in hand to keep Ferrari covered. Neither Carlos Sainz nor Charles Leclerc was competitive on the hard tire, with Leclerc’s recovery from 12th with an engine penalty all thanks to his opening stint on softs.

Alpine teammates Esteban Ocon and Pierre Gasly battled among themselves for eighth and ninth, with Kevin Magnussen beating Yuki Tsunoda to the final point of the race in 10th despite a very early first pit stop on lap eight.

P # DRIVER CAR LAPS TIME PTS
1 11 Sergio Perez RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 50 1:21:14.894 0
2 1 Max Verstappen RED BULL RACING HONDA RBPT 50 +5.355s 0
3 14 Fernando Alonso ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 50 +20.728s 0
4 63 George Russell MERCEDES 50 +25.866s 0
5 44 Lewis Hamilton MERCEDES 50 +31.065s 0
6 55 Carlos Sainz FERRARI 50 +35.876s 0
7 16 Charles Leclerc FERRARI 50 +43.162s 0
8 31 Esteban Ocon ALPINE RENAULT 50 +52.832s 0
9 10 Pierre Gasly ALPINE RENAULT 50 +54.747s 0
10 20 Kevin Magnussen HAAS FERRARI 50 +64.826s 0
11 22 Yuki Tsunoda ALPHATAURI HONDA RBPT 50 +67.494s 0
12 27 Nico Hulkenberg HAAS FERRARI 50 +70.588s 0
13 24 Zhou Guanyu ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 50 +76.060s 0
14 21 Nyck De Vries ALPHATAURI HONDA RBPT 50 +77.478s 0
15 81 Oscar Piastri MCLAREN MERCEDES 50 +85.021s 0
16 2 Logan Sargeant WILLIAMS MERCEDES 50 +86.293s 0
17 4 Lando Norris MCLAREN MERCEDES 50 +86.445s 0
18 77 Valtteri Bottas ALFA ROMEO FERRARI 49 +1 lap 0
NC 23 Alexander Albon WILLIAMS MERCEDES 27 DNF 0
NC 18 Lance Stroll ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO MERCEDES 16 DNF 0

* Provisional results. Note – Verstappen scored an additional point for setting the fastest lap of the race.

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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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Verstappen still on top but Aston and Alpine impress in second Saudi Arabian GP practice

Max Verstappen remained fastest in FP2 at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, but Fernando Alonso closed the gap while Alpine also impressed under the lights. Fresh from setting the pace comfortably in FP1, Verstappen saw his advantage reduced by Alonso …

Max Verstappen remained fastest in FP2 at the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, but Fernando Alonso closed the gap while Alpine also impressed under the lights.

Fresh from setting the pace comfortably in FP1, Verstappen saw his advantage reduced by Alonso in the only representative practice session of the weekend as FP2 took place at the same time as qualifying and the race. Verstappen led the way with a 1m29.603s, beating Alonso’s soft-tire time by 0.208s, with Sergio Perez less than 0.1s further back in third place.

When it came to the long runs that followed, Red Bull didn’t enjoy a massive advantage either with Perez the quickest car — on medium tires — ahead of Verstappen who was complaining of gear shift issues running on the softs, and Alonso comparable to the championship leader.

Fourth overall was Esteban Ocon as both Alpine drivers showed impressive pace on both low and high fuel, with Ocon and Pierre Gasly separated by George Russell but all three within 0.5s of Verstappen’s best lap. That was the same margin the Red Bull driver had enjoyed over the entire field in the heat of FP1.

Lance Stroll and Nico Hulkenberg were seventh and eighth respectively, the Haas driver with an eye-catching lap that was under 0.6s away from the latest time overall. Hulkenberg’s time also meant there were five different teams ahead of Ferrari, with Charles Leclerc in ninth and Carlos Sainz 10th.

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Leclerc was three quarters of a second off Verstappen on low fuel but Ferrari was closer on the long run pace, although Leclerc twice asked if everything was fine with his power unit during his race simulation. The Monegasque already has a power unit penalty this weekend, and was told that there was nothing amiss on the data, responding that he thought it was “a big surge” that had caught his attention.

Lewis Hamilton was only 11th fastest and the final car within a second of Verstappen, struggling in the first sector in particular where he lost 0.6s to the Dutchman and 0.4s to teammate Russell on his best lap. That was despite Russell saying Mercedes needed to make some changes after his low-fuel runs.

A sign of how tricky the circuit is was the lowly position of the three rookie drivers, with Nyck de Vries, Logan Sargeant and Oscar Piastri only kept off the bottom of the timing screens by Valtteri Bottas at the end of what appeared to be a challenging day for Alfa Romeo. Even so, all 10 teams were within 1.2s of each other, showing how relative performance currently is across the field.

A number of drivers found themselves caught out by traffic at certain stages of the session, with sight lines still challenging around the Jeddah Corniche Circuit despite changes to improve visibility at certain corners. There was a near-miss after the checkered flag, too, when Sainz overtook Perez through the first sector but the Red Bull driver hadn’t seen the Ferrari coming and nearly turned into the side of Sainz’s car.

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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.”

“Sólo quería que acabara la carrera”: Fernando Alonso tras su accidente en Austin

Desde las últimas veinte vueltas aún pensaba en el accidente, solo quería acabar la carrera hoy.

El Gran Premio de Austin estuvo marcado por un accidente que nos dejó los pelos de punta. En la recta del circuito, Fernando Alonso intentó rebasar a Lance Stroll de Aston Martin, quien le cerró el paso y lo mandó a volar, literalmente.

El neumático de Alonso tocó al de Stroll, lo que lo mandó a volar por el aire en lo que pudo convertirse en un terrible accidente. Para fortuna de Alonso, el monoplaza mantuvo la trayectoria sin girar en el aire, lo que permitió que regresara al suelo e incluso siguiera manejando hasta los pits.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CkEqVYLN8TG/?utm_source=ig_embed&ig_rid=73e7d823-d437-4580-b793-d318144aa323

Aunque el accidente no pasó a mayores, el joven piloto compartió que tuvo  miedo mientras su auto se elevó por el aire.

“Cuando estaba en el aire tenía un poco de miedo, porque cuando te vas hacia las vallas exteriores, pasa en la IndyCar muchas veces, haces 360 y puede ser peligroso”, detallo el español.

“Estoy contento de ya estar hablando con ustedes porque podría estar en el medical center. Desde las últimas veinte vueltas aún pensaba en el accidente, solo quería acabar la carrera hoy”, agregó.

Sabemos que en la Fórmula 1 el menor error puede terminar en catástrofe, por lo que, como Alonso, estamos aliviados de que no haya pasado a mayores el incidente.

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El nuevo récord que Fernando Alonso le rompió a Michael Schumacher

El nuevo récord que Alonso le batió a Schumacher fue el de mayor tiempo transcurrido entre la primera vez que lideró un premio y el último

La leyenda de la Fórmula 1 Fernando Alonso sigue rompiendo récords personales en la máxima categoría del automovilismo a nombres tan emblemáticos como Michael Schumacher.

El veterano piloto asturiano de 41 años de edad, dejará el volante al finalizar la temporada 2022 cumpliendo así 21 años desde su debut en la Fórmula 1 en 2001 y muchas marcas que serán difíciles de igualar.

El nuevo récord que Fernando Alonso le batió a Michael Schumacher fue el de mayor tiempo transcurrido entre la primera vez que lideró un Gran Premio de Fórmula 1 y el del pasado domingo en Japón, cuando el español se puso por instantes al frente de la carrera tras una ventana de cambio de neumáticos.

La primera vez que Alonso fue líder en un Gran Premio fue en el 2003 en Malasia y desde aquél entonces a el domingo pasado transcurrieron 19 años, seis meses y 16 días, toda una vida literalmente.

Fernando Alonso en el Gran Premio de Estados Unidos en 2005 / USA TODAY Sports

Es decir Yuki Tsunoda, el japonés de Alpha Tauri que es el piloto más joven de la temporada tenía apenas 3 años de edad cuando Fernando Alonso ya lideraba un Gran Prix en la Fórmula 1.

Alonso superó a Schumacher en el registro pues el alemán lo hizo en 19 años, un mes y nueve días desde Bélgica 1992 hasta Japón en 2011. Le sigue Kimi Räikkönen, el finlandés que apenas se retiró el año pasado mantenía el registro de 16 años y tres meses.

En cuarto sitio y aún en activo está Lewis Hamilton quien posee el registro de liderar un Gran Prix con una ventana de 15 años, cinco meses y 17 días, desde el GP de Australia en 2007 hasta el GP de Países Bajos en el 2022. Para superar a Alonso, el británico tendrá que permanecer al menos cuatro temporadas más en la Fórmula 1.

Finalmente otro piloto en activo como Sebastian Vettel se encuentra en el Top 8 con un registro de 13 años, ocho meses y siete días, desde Japón en 2007 hasta Azerbaiyán en 2021, sin embargo no podrá incrementar más su cuota pues se retirará igual que Alonso al finalizar la presente campaña.

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