Current Fernando Alonso

Suprised there's no thread (although I had one for his blogs), so i'll start off:

A double world championship vs Raikkonen and then Schumacher in 2005 and 2006 respectively elevated Alonso's status but, apparently, no one told his rookie teammate at his brand new team of a theoretical 'pecking order' the following season ... and the Spaniard was 'seen off' by the young Englishman, Hamilton, into two years of Wilderness while both Hamilton and an even younger Vettel began to make their mark through '08 and '09.

Arguably, Alonso was in the Top 3 of all the Formula One 'Aces' in the 2000s following Hakkinen's retirement - up there with either Schumacher/Raikkonen and, then, Raikkonen/Hamilton - and remains so in the early 2010s along with Hamilton/Vettel...with only Kubica knocking on the door until the Pole's horrible Rallying accident.

A question mark initially over 2004 during which Trulli lead him in the standing until the Italian fell out with ex-manager and team boss Flavio Briatore (Alonso's then business manager) under dubious circumstances after the French Grand Prix.

Another question mark is...Who has progressed more since the end of 2007: Hamilton or Alonso?

A fan. Then came the unfortunate blackmail allegations against McLaren boss Ron Dennis on the morning of the 2007 Hungarian GP which came to light at the highly costly FIA 'Spy-Gate' hearings before Spa...followed by the odour of the deliberate crashing of the Number 2 Renault car at Singapore in 2008 which lead to Alonso finishing 1st in the event and ended in the banning of Briatore and Pat Symmonds a year later.

2009 was a poor year with 'Nando's' mind likely on the prospect of Santander paving the way to better prospects at Maranello one year earlier.

2010 was a fresh start at Ferrari (who no longer had Schumacher walking through the premises regularly) but first half season mistakes ultimately cost him a title inspite of being infamously aided by a Team Orders switch w Massa at Hockenheim (which lead to more world-wide criticism).

Relatively fast, relatively consistent but prone to mistakes and a possible insecurity complex (*) based on wanting sole focus from a team and being only happy with a Number 2 in the other car running behind him. Anything else and it seemingly rattles him.

(*) This is my own personal opinion.

..and so to 2011...

He's underperformed only at Malaysia (hit Hamilton) and China (invisible while Massa challenged McLarens and Red Bulls) and, arguably, Canada...but has maximized his chances in the other 6 races culminating in the British GP win.

He said in his post-Monaco blog that 'Silverstone would be the WDC cut-off'...and so, after some major upgrades, the Ferrari looks a winner again. It might be too late for 2011 given Vettel's finishing rate...but the 2012 regs means they should keep the hammer down at Maranello.

He's signed on through to 2016...So hopes are high of a WDC at some juncture...but not yet.
 
Mr Briatore went on to add: "I hope he will continue racing for another 5 years so I can keep taking my 10%"

-----------------------------------

Or maybe Garcia is in charge of the boring stuff such as marketing, contract negotiations, finance, security etc while Briatore is in charge of getting paid for the former's work?... ;)
 
Last edited:
Apparently he didn't but I always wondered, if McLaren's simulator really is as realistic as they say, is it possible to sustain an injury while "driving" it?

What happens when you crash "virtually" on a simulator, does something pop out of somewhere and smacks you to simulate a crash impact too?... :twisted:
 
Oddly there was an article on 5th Gear last night where one of the presenters had a go in an F1 style simulator at a University and you can pull up to 2G in the thing.
 
If I were him I'd make a nice BBQ from this years Mclaren and cook me up some sausages.

How sad it will be to see two great world champions at the back of the grid in Malaysia.

Still Perez and Maldonado are racing so they won't finish last.
 
I read on twitter somewhere that the offcial F1 website cornering data shows Button's cornering speed 3rd only to the two Mercedes. Very loose translation - the Mclaren chassis and overall design is pretty good but the engine is hideously underpowered and lacking driveablity.
 
Alonso says he didn't loose consciousness and he didn't wake up thinking it was 1995 or speaking Italian as some reports will have it, he also says that the steering on the McLaren locked up turning right although the telemetry cannot confirm this.....
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom