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.
 
Alonso is a frustrated champion.

In my book he is allowed to be arrogant and a bit of an arse, especially when you think what a stunning talent has been wasted so far. In his position, I would fight in any way I could, and would be inclined to believe him over Dennis.

Oh, and btw, I have met and spoken to Nando several times in his 'younger' days - which is one reason why I support him.
 
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Alonso is temperamental and not the cool calm methodical approach that Schumacher has but he has a burning desire to be the best and feels the best way to do that is to act as though the forces of nature are always against him to spur him on

The test crash issue - it is very bizarre and contradictory and lets hope it is not the start of cracks between him and Mclaren
 
The loony conspiracy theorist residing in me wondered briefly whether Fernando's retirement from the Malaysian race was really due to a car issue, or his health?
 
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Alonso's after championships, we still don't know whether Ferrari or McLaren will get there first so we can't say whether he's made the right decision or not yet. Also, there's no guarantee that Ferrari would be as competitive as they are now if he'd stayed. Alonso and Ferrari had been through so many bad years and their poor start to the V6 era seemed to be one step too far. I don't blame Alonso at all for what happened but if Ferrari hadn't wiped the slate completely clean there would not be the same good feeling around the team this year, the baggage would still have been there.
 
And McLaren are pretty much the Last Chance Saloon for Alonso. Where else could he go? Back to Ferrari to be teamed with Seb? I doubt that the latter would permit it. There are no openings at Mercedes. He simply has to make the best of where he is now, or consider retirement.
 
Brogan
RasputinLives

Its easy to say it was a bad career move for Alonso given he jumped from the Ferrari frying pan into the Mclaren fire.

It will not help that that Ferrari have found form and Vettel his most hated rival is taken the laudits for it whilst he was at the back

It takes time to make it work and Alonso knows basically this 3 year contract he has to commit to now its clear Mercedes will retain Hamilton

Lets give it the season to judge for now
 
I still can't help thinking Alonso was part of the problem at Ferrari and not the injured party prevented from winning by others problems.

We all know how long it can take any team to return to form when it's been on a long and consistent downer. For Ferrari to wipe out most of its senior staff and replace a world champion driver, you would expext them to need at least a season to get on top of things. They appear to have turned it around in 4 months.

We'll never know if they could have done the same thing with Alonso but as Coulthard said today, a team can't develop with a driver who doesn't want to be there.
 
cider_and_toast Could not the problem be Luca Di Montezemolo's way of thinking they had to do things the Italian way to make the team work

Well i do agree it does not help a team if their star driver is non committal - the same issue happened at Renault oddly enough in his second spell and team Enstone have not really recovered from it
 
I think it's safe to say that Vettel also ran out of steam at RBR and as far as development went over the year his interest went from 'win finger' to 'two fingers' so it's not exclusive to Alonso but every coin has two sides and while it's easy to blame the top of the tree at Ferrari, every machine needs each cog in working order regardless of size or a breakdown will always happen.
 
cider_and_toast Which is why Schumacher had great success at Ferrari because he had the right people in place to deal with all the various distractions... with Alonso you felt from mid 2013 he was getting frustrated that Ferrari could not get itself sorted out
 
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