Thứ Sáu, 4 tháng 12, 2015

Alonso questions 2016 prospects

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Former world champion Fernando Alonso is not entirely certain on McLaren-Honda's prospects ahead of the 2016 Formula One season.
McLaren's 2015 campaign was littered with retirements, no-point finishes and even a failure to start a race on one occasion.
Reliability is not a word that was bandied about too often, if at all and there are hopes that there will be a reversal of fortunes when drivers return next year.
"At the moment there's a question mark, I guess, where McLaren-Honda can be next year," Alonso told ESPN.
"There are a lot of expectations in the team. I think we worked really all season, being united in some difficult moments and always moving forward, so I think for 2016 the main goal for the team is to come back to where we belong, we think, and being competitive, fighting for the top positions," added Alonso.
It is not so much the prospect of failure that concerns Alonso but rather it is the considerable uncertainty which exists, ahead of the 2016 season. There are simply too many questions that still need to be answered.
"I don't know if that means fighting for the championship, I don't know if that means fighting for victories of just being on the podium sometimes, that's always difficult to know in a very complex sport like Formula One," he said.
Naturally there has been tremendous speculation about Alonso's future at the team, fuelled by comments which implied he might take a sabbatical. The one thing Alonso does appear to be certain about is that he wants to be a part of the new chapter being written at McLaren next season, and that he believes in the work that is being done.
"There are definitely some big challenges ahead in this winter and I see all the things that the team has done in the last couple of months and these seem very logical, very positive and I'm confident that it's going to be a completely different season next year and I'm happy with the progress."

Rosberg beats Hamilton in season-finale Abu Dhabi Grand Prix

Paul Hembery, Pirelli motorsport director said, "As usual, Abu Dhabi delivered another very tactical race, during which Mercedes and Nico Rosberg in particular controlled the strategy perfectly".
Leading in the U.S. GP, it was his mistake which allowed Hamilton to wrap up his second straight title and he has been determined to make amends.
Pirelli had predicted that the most likely fastest strategy for the 55 laps of Abu Dhabi was a two-stopper, starting on the supersoft and then changing to the soft on laps 10 and 31.
"I'm feeling very happy", beamed Rosberg, whose recent performances have belied those he gave earlier in the season, suddenly giving voice to the suggestion that he may provide a much sterner challenge in 2016.
"I'm really excited about how the season went", Rosberg, who started from the pole, said. "I don't need any holidays". This team has done a remarkable job, so a big thank you to everyone back at the factories. It's great to end the season like this.
"Let's leave that", he said.
This announcement clarified the issues and closed a possible loophole, leaving the paddock to focus on the final contest in ideal sunset conditions with a track temperature of 29 degrees Celsius and the two Mercedes together again on the front row.
"Firstly, it has been an awesome year". We could have been closer but I think we have a reasonably good speed and at certain points, we have been catching our competitors. In hindsight, once Nico had pitted today I probably would have backed off a bit and gone a bit longer. "As that didn't work out, going long probably wasn't the best thing to do".
Kimi Raikkonen took to the final step of the podium for Ferrari, while Raikkonen's team-mate Sebastian Vettel, who started the race from 14th after a tactical gaffe in qualifying, finished fourth. At least it looks like we will have a good fight within the pacesetting team.
"But it's not been an ideal year".
"This is the flawless ending to the season for me - something I hoped for so much after a tough year", Rosberg said.
Hamilton finished on 381 points, with Rosberg on 322.
"(It's) too late for the championship of course, but so great now to have it (the win) and that's it. I can't tell you about next year unfortunately, but I'll give it everything". I'll try and keep the current form going next year.
Behind the Ferraris it was Sergio Perez in fifth pace for Force India followed by Daniel Ricciardo in the Red Bull, Nico Hulkenberg in the Force India, Felipe Massa in the Williams, Romain Grosjean in the Lotus and Daniil Kvyat rounding out the top ten in the second Red Bull.
Hamilton's former team-mate Fernando Alonso has been forced to fend off suggestions from his McLaren boss Ron Dennis that he will take a sabbatical next year.

Thứ Năm, 24 tháng 9, 2015

Fernando Alonso: McLaren-Honda deserves to be criticised for 2015

Fernando Alonso says he still has a "fantastic feeling" about life at McLaren but admits he and everyone else at the team deserve criticism for falling short of expectations this year.
McLaren has endured a terrible first season with Honda and arrives at the manufacturer's home grand prix at Suzuka having not scored a point since July's Hungarian Grand Prix. Alonso joined McLaren from Ferrari, a team which has now moved into the position behind Mercedes in the pecking order, with his replacement Sebastian Vettel claiming three wins this season.
Alonso understands the frustration of McLaren fans but says the team is doing all it can to make progress.
"It's difficult to take from the fan point of view, I understand, and we should be criticised for our performance because we are not delivering what people are expecting from us," Alonso told reporters in Suzuka. "But from the team point of view it's a little bit different because we cannot do much more than what we do, everyone is doing 100% of their ability.
"We need to learn lessons from everything we do. Last weekend in Singapore we had two retirements because of gearboxes overheating; we studied, we went deep into the problems, made those solutions and test them tomorrow in free practice. If we arrive at the home grand prix with a more or less competitive car is out of our hands."
With big changes to Honda's power unit not possible until the winter, Alonso says the everyone in the team - including himself - can improve to ensure McLaren goes into 2016 in the strongest shape possible.
"Everyone is doing what they can, everyone is working 24 hours a day to improve the situation in all areas because we need to improve the performance, the reliability, some of the procedures we do in the weekend, some free practice philosophies, the pit stops, as we saw in Singapore, some driver areas that we do sometimes.
"We've had some difficult free practices with minimal laps, so we go to qualifying and we have only one lap because in Q2 we don't manage to drive, so that lap is not perfect. We all need to improve - from the first mechanic to the drivers. We are in that part of the process and I will be happy at the end of the year if we keep growing that aspect here at trackside and if we keep making progress in the developing of next year's power unit and chassis."
Asked if it was difficult to process the fact McLaren was arriving at Honda's home race knowing it might not make Q2, Alonso replied: "It is not a surprise any more - this has been processed in February!"

F1 driver Fernando Alonso calls Mercedes' Singapore performance a 'mystery'

F1 driver Fernando Alonso says Mercedes Singapore performance a mystery

Driver says reasons for team's drop may never come to light

Mercedes' faltering performance last weekend in Singapore had many Formula One fans and insiders scratching their heads.
 
Fernando Alonso included.
 
While the McLaren driver stopped short of mentioning a conspiracy, he did offer his thoughts about the most dominant team of the last two years falling behind the pace.
 
"We have all been here many years," Alonso said Thursday in the weekly press conference. "And we have never saw (any team) being one second faster all year long and being 1.5 seconds slower for another race.
 
"This is a mystery that we will probably never understand. But this is F1. You take it or you leave it."
 
Despite the "mystery" in Singapore, Alonso said he thinks Mercedes will rebound in Japan.
 
"I think I will be surprised if this (Singapore performance) will be the normal performance of Mercedes."
 
Mercedes officials said the lack of speed was due to a tire temperature issue. 

Thứ Sáu, 4 tháng 9, 2015

Hamilton sets Monza pace

Lewis Hamilton retained his sizzling form to complete a practice double over Nico Rosberg ahead of Sunday's Italian Grand Prix.


Lewis Hamilton: Set the pace at Monza
Lewis Hamilton: Set the pace at Monza
Hamilton, 28 points ahead of Rosberg in the race for the championship, finished the opening session almost half-a-second clear of his Mercedes team-mate.
But the German, who became a father for the first time on Monday, will draw confidence from the fact that he was only 0.021 seconds shy of Hamilton's best lap of one minute 24.279 secs on Friday afternoon.
Mercedes have brought an upgraded engine with them to the high-speed Monza circuit and Hamilton and Rosberg were in a league of their own.
Indeed Sebastian Vettel, competing in his first Italian Grand Prix weekend for Ferrari in front of the partisan Tifosi, was three-quarters of a second slower than the Mercedes duo.
Force India, powered by Mercedes engines, appeared strong in opening practice and followed that up with Sergio Perez fourth and Nico Hulkenberg, who penned a new two-year contract with the team earlier this week, in fifth.
Pirelli, Formula One's sole tyre supplier, was under the spotlight in Monza after two high-profile blow-outs at the Belgian Grand Prix.
Vettel claimed he could have been killed following his penultimate lap puncture, whilst Rosberg was fortunate to emerge unscathed from a 190mph blow-out during practice.
Pirelli urged the teams to run higher tyre pressures - a concept which Hamilton claimed could have disastrous repercussions.
But Hamilton's fears did not come to fruition which will have come as great relief to the under-fire Italian tyre manufacturer.
McLaren's already difficult day took a turn for the worst during the second session when Jenson Button's running was restricted to just three laps.
After finishing ahead of only the Manor pair of Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi on Friday morning, the 2009 world champion, who will serve a five-place grid penalty, was called into the garage with a technical glitch and failed to re-emerge.
He finished over four seconds adrift of Hamilton in 19th and his team-mate Fernando Alonso fared little better. The Spaniard, slapped with a 10-place grid drop after taking on his ninth engine of the campaign here, was only 16th, albeit 2.6 sec slower than Hamilton.
McLaren will be joined at the back of the field for Sunday's race by Red Bull. Daniel Ricciardo has been penalised 25 places following an engine change and raft of new components. His team-mate Daniil Kvyat, who propped up the timings in the second session, has been hit with a 15-place grid drop.
Kimi Raikkonen was sixth for Ferrari with the Lotus pair of Romain Grosjean and Pastor Maldonado, Williams duo Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa rounding out the top 10.
Max Verstappen survived a trip into the gravel after he lost control of his Toro Rosso under breaking for the Ascari chicane.

Mercedes develop powerful benefit after spending final engine tokens

Hamilton and Rosberg fastest through speed traps after Mercedes introduce new engines at Monza.

Lewis Hamilton set an astonishing pace in Friday morning practice at MonzaLewis Hamilton set an astonishing pace in Friday morning practice at Monza

Mercedes appear to have reaped a powerful benefit from their upgraded engines after setting a shattering pace in Friday morning practice for the Italian GP.
After comprehensively dominating the first half of the campaign while using just two engines – Honda, by most glaring contrast, have already deployed nine different units – Mercedes have elected to spend their seven remaining engine development tokens at Monza, recognised as the most power-dependent circuit on the F1 calendar.
While the team have described the outlay as a 'tactical' move designed to fast-forward development for 2016, Friday morning's lap charts indicate that their new V6 engines have provided an instant and substantial boost that threatens to propel the Silvers Arrows even ahead of the field.
Not only was Lewis Hamilton, heading another Mercedes one-two and topping a timesheet for the 44th occasion this year, in excess of 1.5 seconds faster than the third-placed Sebastian Vettel, but both Mercedes cars were recorded as boasting a substantial pace advantage through Monza's all-important speed traps.
While Rosberg, powered by Mercedes' new engine, set a top speed of 352 kph, the Force India cars which were quickest through the Spa speed traps two weeks ago, but which are believed to be running the older specification Mercedes engines this weekend, were six kph slower.
Vettel, meanwhile, was 10 kph slower than Rosberg's benchmark in his Ferrari car – a vast deficit at a circuit where the majority of a lap is run at full throttle.
For the beleaguered McLaren-Honda outfit, Fernando Alonso was recorded setting a top speed of just 337.2 kph despite the introduction of new unit which has triggered yet another grid demotion for the Spaniard and his team-mate Jenson Button.
Although Honda motorsport boss Yasuhisa Arai was quoted saying before the weekend that his team's engines are now producing more horsepower than Renault's, both of the Renault-powered Red Bulls set a faster straightline speed than the McLarens on Friday morning even as they remained 15 kph shy of Mercedes' new benchmark figure.
 Once again, McLaren-Honda lacked speed during practice
Once again, McLaren-Honda lacked speed during practice
Unofficial top speeds during Italian GP Practice One
Rosberg, Mercedes-Mercedes, 352 kph.
Hamilton, Mercedes-Mercedes, 351.1 kph.
Perez, Force India-Mercedes, 346.4 kph.
Hulkenberg, Force India-Mercedes, 345.1 kph.
Vettel, Ferrari-Ferrari, 341.8 kph.
Maldonado, Lotus-Mercedes, 341.5 kph.
Raikkonen, Ferrari-Ferrari, 339.9 kph.
Kvyat, Red Bull-Renault, 339.0 kph.
Palmer, Lotus-Mercedes, 338.9 kph.
Ricciardo, Red Bull-Renault, 338.7 kph.
Alonso, McLaren-Honda, 337.2 kph.
Verstappen, Toro Rosso-Renault, 336.6 kph.
Button, McLaren-Honda, 336.4 kph.
Sainz, Toro Rosso-Renault, 335.9 kph.
Nasr, Sauber-Ferrari, 334.8 kph.
Massa, Williams-Mercedes 334.4 kph.
Ericsson, Sauber-Ferrari 334.3 kph.
Stevens, Manor-Ferrari, 320.5 kph.
Merhi, Manor-Ferrari, 319.7 kph.

Thứ Hai, 10 tháng 8, 2015

McLaren "impatient" in quest to be competitive again in Formula 1

Fernando Alonso, Hungarian GP 2015

Honda's desire to win in Formula 1 "sometime" can cause friction with a McLaren team that is "impatient" to return to the front, admits the squad's racing director Eric Boullier.
McLaren-Honda reunited for the 2015 F1 season, a quarter of a century after dominating grand prix racing in their first partnership.
But it took five grands prix before the reformed alliance scored a point this year, and McLaren remains only ninth in the constructors' championship despite Fernando Alonso's fifth place in the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Honda started its F1 programme from the ground up and it has tried to avoid hiring experienced personnel from rival manufacturers, something Boullier concedes is a barrier to short-term success.

"Renault, Mercedes and Ferrari switched their resources to the new hybrid technology but their people working there had knowledge of current F1 technology," he told AUTOSPORT.
"Honda decided to recreate an Formula 1 programme for the long term, but starting from scratch.
"Most of the people in Sakura didn't have the experience or even the knowledge of the current F1 technology.
"There is a long process to go through - first get the knowledge, get the experience and build the organisation and the operations, because they started from literally nothing."
Boullier said that meant "discussions" between the two parties over the timescale for getting to the front.
"Sometimes we have to pressure, sometimes we have some frustration, but in the end both wanted to be together," he said.
"We are impatient and we definitely hate to be in this position today.
"But every other Formula 1 team - except Mercedes and Ferrari of course - would dream to have such a partnership when they see how committed Honda is to Formula 1.
Eric Boullier, McLaren, British Grand Prix 2015
"The only discussion point we have today is the timing.
"We want to win tomorrow, they want to win sometime."
He reiterated that too long in the midfield would have a wider commercial impact on McLaren.
"In the end, we have to respect Honda's road map," Boullier said. "But obviously Honda has to respect our needs.
"We are a Formula 1 team and our business model is based on our success.
"We need to be successful and we can't be out of success too long. Honda knows that.
"They have their own reasons and their own road map to go back to Formula 1 which we have to accept.
"The only thing we need to do is make sure the communication channels are open enough that everyone is listening to the others and can adjust a bit to help or to suit each one's strategy."

Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 8, 2015

Mystified by moralisers gunning for Hamilton

Expect rivals to close gap on Mercedes when campaign resumes



A few journalists in the British press appear to have it in for Lewis Hamilton following his race in Hungary
A few journalists in the British press appear to have it in for Lewis Hamilton following his race in Hungary
Racing will resume in under three weeks; in the meantime it's holiday time for the Formula One troupe. Now is a good time to take stock of the momentum that is building at this hiatus in the calendar.
Aficionados were buoyed up by Ferrari's resurgent form as they took the battle to Mercedes in Hungary. Whoever you support, the prospect of the Italian marque being right up there in the second half of the season is a tantalising one. Mercedes lost out to Ferrari in the second race of this season and again last weekend, Sebastian Vettel winning both. When the Maranello team hit the beach with their buckets and spades, building sandcastles in the sky won't seem so delirious after all.
Curiously, a few journalists in the British press appear to have it in for Lewis Hamilton following his race in Hungary, with one suggesting he was driving like someone who was "on their way back from the pub after eight pints". As I understand it, alcohol dulls the senses, whereas Hamilton was in full battle mode, trying to win vital points. Maybe an exciting race is foreign to a moralising eye.
I know who I'd rather be driven by after a visit to the local and it wouldn't be the naysayer who went on to describe Hamilton's driving as "self-destructive, a danger to others and weaving willy-nilly". Another hack questioned whether Hamilton was worthy of being called one of the greats. Let's not forget the guy is aiming to become a triple World Champion, which would put him up there with acknowledged greats like Brabham, Stewart, Lauda, Piquet and Senna.
Six drivers have stepped onto various steps on the podium this season: Hamilton, Nico Rosberg, Vettel, Valtteri Bottas, Felipe Massa and Daniel Ricciardo. Three drivers have won races: Hamilton, Rosberg and Vettel, while two teams shared the spoils: Mercedes and Ferrari. King of pole positions has been Hamilton, with nine to Rosberg's one. Hamilton and Rosberg shared the glut of fastest laps, with Ricciardo and Kimi Raikkonen taking two apiece. There are nine races to go after the recess, with the addition of the new venue in Mexico. In 2014, Rosberg dominated the post-summer races, with a pole position ratio of six to one, but it was the title winner, Hamilton, who won the majority of the races, five to three.
Star of Hungary was Ricciardo. He or Rosberg could have won the race, save for a tangle. The 2014 Hungaroring winner also won the opening race of the second half of last season in Spa. The Aussie has been highly impressive this year and a win must surely be imminent. His team-mate, Daniil Kyat, drove a stormer to finish second, vindicating Red Bull's employment of the Russian.
McLaren celebrated a double points score in Hungary, with Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button fifth and ninth respectively. The new Honda collaboration is taking time, but there's no reason why they can't do a Mercedes and be at the front in due course. Patience is in short supply in F1, but you can be sure that Honda are working overtime to fulfil the potential they undoubtedly have. For sure, Alonso didn't envisage this struggle and he's a man without superfluous years to play with in his quest for a third world title.
In a straight exchange of Finns, Bottas will surely replace Raikkonen at Ferrari. However, Williams are asking a king's ransom for handing over their talent and Ferrari are playing hardball. But the Prancing Horse will have to stop their shenanigans if they don't want to lose him to another team, so they better get the chequebook out quick and practise writing 12 million.
Renault will decide this week whether to stay with Red Bull, buy the Lotus team or get out of F1 completely. Ironically, this comes just when they've experienced their best result with RB. I'd wager they will buy Lotus.
Jules Bianchi was buried last week. His unnecessary and tragic death nine months after his accident in the Japanese Grand Prix is a stark reminder of how dangerous the sport is. It was a decent gesture of Bernie Ecclestone to fly his family to Hungary for the Grand Prix, an event that must have filled them with the sadness of what might have been for their talented son. Condolences to his family, friends and the Manor F1 team.
Speaking of the Manor F1 team, Belfast-born Stephen Fitzpatrick helped to rescue the team at the end of 2014, when Marussia owner Andrey Cheglakov pulled the plug. When Fitzpatrick is not busy looking for backers, his day job involves being boss of Ovo Energy. The team's chairman is former Sainsbury's CEO Justin King, whose son currently races in GP2 and is reserve driver for the team.
They've done a lot better than predicted and although they still qualify at the back, their drivers Will Stevens and Robert Merhi have had fewer retirements than Raikkonen. Team chief John Booth has a wealth of experience, as well as the tenacity to drag it up the grid. They've taken on former McLaren/Mercedes Bob Bell as technical consultant. Toro Rosso's Luca Furbatto is head of design and Gianluca Pisanello is chief engineer. But all that costs money.
Like a lot teams struggling to balance the books in this ludicrously expensive sport, the real race is getting sponsors on board. Hopefully they will survive and F1 budget cuts, if they happen, will play into their future plans.
Who will be ready to spring into action at the ultimate racers' track, Spa, after the break? No longer is it exclusively the Hamilton/Rosberg show. It's taken half the season, but the interlopers are closing in. Ferrari, Red Bull, Williams will be all ready to pounce. They'll be sharpening their pencils and their swords for an assault in part two of the season. It will be no holiday for some.

Alonso: Pit-lane push underlines love for F1

Alonso: Pit-lane push underlines love for F1

Fernando Alonso insists that he is still in love with F1, despite rumours that he may be looking elsewhere for his motorsport fix. 

Despite being boosted by an unexpected fifth place in last weekend's Hungarian Grand Prix – a race that always seems to suit the Spaniard – Alonso admitted during the week that F1 was not as exciting to him as it was previously. The goal of dragging the McLaren-Honda combination back to competitiveness continues to drive him on, however, and if anyone needed any proof of his desire, Alonso says they need look no further than his attempts to return his MP4-30 to the pit-lane during qualifying. 

“I want to be out there and I want to race,” the double world champion claimed, having pushed the powerless car back to the McLaren garage, “This shows how much I love my sport. It doesn't matter if you are last, if you are 15th or if you are on pole position, you want to drive the car and you want to enjoy it out there.” 

Ultimately, Alonso's efforts proved in vain, as he was prevented from resuming his pursuit of a place in the top ten shoot-out. 

“I understood when I arrived in the garage it was not possible [to rejoin] as, by the regulations, the car needs to arrive by itself with the engine on,” he acknowledged, a little sheepishly, “I didn't know that or I would have parked the car a little bit before…” 

Despite having to come from row seven of the grid, however, Alonso was able to claim McLaren's best finish of the season, as incidents further up the order allowed him to rise to fifth at the chequered flag. 

“Some opportunities arrived in our hands, we took it and it's fantastic for the team,” he admitted, before reflecting on the fact that many of his most significant results have come in Budapest, “It was always special to me, this place. I got my first victory here and, last year, I nearly fought for the victory, arriving second. That was my last podium, so to arrive this year and be fifth is a nice memory I will have.” 

The jumbled order meant that Alonso had to overcome his likely successor as Spain's F1 favourite, passing Carlos Sainz shortly before the Toro Rosso rookie retired. 

“Every time that I'm with Carlos on the track, I'm a little bit worried because, if we touch each other, that will show very bad!” he smiled, “It was important to pass him, because we knew [Lewis] Hamilton and some other people will arrive very strong from behind us at the end of the race, so we needed every second available to maintain position.” 

Alonso eventually came home three seconds ahead of his former McLaren team-mate, who admitted to having 'a bad day at the office', and the ten points boosted both his season's tally and championship position. 

“It feels great,” Alonso admitted, “We are here to compete, to win, but we are not in that position right now. Every race is a test for us - we need to keep improving and we need to keep growing. I think we know that we are going in the right direction, but it's always better if you score points. We were a little bit lucky with some of the things that have happened but, in some of other races, we have been unlucky, so we need take every opportunity. The team works 24 hours a day in the factories and so this is a day that we need to feel proud of.”a

Chủ Nhật, 26 tháng 7, 2015

Fernando Alonso's enthusiasm for F1 has not been dampened

Fernando Alonso's enthusiasm for F1 has not been dampened
Fernando Alonso says his desperate solo attempt to push his broken-down McLaren back to the pits is proof that his enthusiasm for the sport has not been dampened.
Alonso’s McLaren stopped on track in the second phase of qualifying after he suffered a battery failure within his Honda power unit.
The Spaniard leapt out of his McLaren and began pushing his car back to the garage in a bid to post a time with just seven minutes of the session remaining.
In sizzling heat approaching 35 degrees on the thermometer, Alonso was joined by a handful of marshals to assist his one-man mission.
But his heroic efforts were in vain, with the regulations dictating that a driver can take no further part in qualifying if his car stops on the circuit.
Alonso, who will now start Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix in 15th, one place ahead of his team-mate Jenson Button, said: ‘I want to be out there, I want to race and this shows how much I love my sport.
“It doesn’t matter if you are last or you are 15th or in pole position. They told me when I arrived at the garage that it wasn’t possible because of the regulations and I didn’t know that.”
The image of Alonso single-handedly wheeling his McLaren back to the pits was a depressing sight, but one that may come to define the British team’s troubled campaign.
Hopes had been high heading into qualifying after Alonso posted the eighth quickest lap on Saturday morning, with Button only two tenths adrift of his team-mate.
But the Briton also fell foul of McLaren’s lack of reliability after an ERS failing left him short of power and he fell at the first qualifying hurdle.
Yet both drivers, whose spirits have not been deterred despite a trying season, were in jovial form once more here.
When Alonso was asked where he may have qualified had he enjoyed a reliability-free session, he shrugged his shoulders and said: “13th.”
Button was then asked the same question. With a smile on his face, he joked: “12th” to which Alonso hastily changed his answer to “11th”. Button had the final say. “Maybe Q3,” he said.“

Qualifying - Hamilton eases to Budapest pole

Lewis Hamilton made it a clean sweep of practice and qualifying sessions by taking a comfortable pole position in Hungary on Saturday, finishing over half a second ahead of Mercedes team mate Nico Rosberg. It's Hamilton's fifth Budapest pole and his ninth P1 start from ten races this season.
Behind the Silver Arrows, Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel edged Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo for third on the grid, with Kimi Raikkonen fifth in the second SF15-T. Williams' Valtteri Bottas completed the top six.
Hamilton, already fastest in FP1, FP2 and FP3, maintained his superiority in the opening Q1 session as, in sweltering conditions, he lapped at the last moment in 1m 22.890s on the soft tyres to edge out Rosberg’s 1m 22.979s by 0.089s. Vettel chased them with 1m 23.312s for Ferrari.
Further back there was brutal disappointment for McLaren’s Jenson Button, who had been third on the soft tyres but suffered an ERS deployment problem when it mattered. His lap of 1m 24.739s on softs was a tenth off Carlos Sainz’s, which meant the Toro Rosso driver got through but the Englishman didn’t.
Marcus Ericsson just edged out Sauber team mate Felipe Nasr for 16th, with 1m 24.843s to 1m 24.997s, as Roberto Merhi outqualified Marussia team mate Will Stevens, 1m 27.416s to 1m 27.949s with a stellar final effort.
McLaren’s joy at getting Fernando Alonso safely through to Q2 evaporated immediately as the Spaniard, 14th in Q1, rolled to a halt close to the pit entry on his out lap at the start of Q2. The session was red flagged as he energetically pushed the car back down the pit lane, and marshals then helped him get it back to the garage. Sadly Alonso's efforts were in vain as the rules dictated that he was unable to continue, his car having not returned to the garage under its own steam.
Hamilton again went fastest in Q2 despite losing one of his runs because of that incident, with 1m 22.285s to Rosberg’s 1m 22.775s, the German complaining bitterly of understeer throughout. Vettel also did only one run, and was third with 1m 23.168s.
As Romain Grosjean jumped up to 10th for Lotus, Nico Hulkenberg got bumped after posting 1m 23.826s for Force India in the extremely tight midfield. Behind him Sainz also failed to make it for Toro Rosso, with 1m 23.869s. Sergio Perez was 13th with 1m 24.461s in the other Force India, as Lotus’s Pastor Maldonado completed those with a time in 14th on 1m 24.609s.
Hamilton continued to set a blistering pace in Q3, going comfortably fastest on both runs. His first was slightly slower at 1m 22.408s than his Q2 time, but his second was the fastest lap of the weekend in 1m 22.020s. Rosberg improved on his first run time of 1m 22.766s with 1m 22.595s, but it was far from enough and was surprisingly only just out of reach of both Vettel and Ricciardo. The German just held on to third with 1m 22.739s as Ricciardo got his RB11 round in an impressive 1m 22.774s.
Kimi Raikkonen, who was unable to do a soft tyre run in FP3 because of a water leak, had to settle for fifth with 1m 23.020s, and had fellow Finn Bottas for company on the third row after the Williams pilot lapped in 1m 23.222s. Daniil Kvyat in the second Red Bull will line up on row four with Felipe Massa in the other Williams, going round in 1m 23.332s to the Brazilian’s 1m 23.537s. Completing the top 10, Max Verstappen lapped his Toro Rosso in 1m 23.679s for ninth as Grosjean couldn’t better 1m 24.181s in his E23 Hybrid.
Thus the provisional grid will line up: Hamilton, Rosberg; Vettel, Ricciardo; Raikkonen, Bottas; Kvyat, Massa; Verstappen, Grosjean; Hulkenberg, Sainz; Perez, Maldonado; Alonso, Button; Ericsson, Nasr; Merhi, Stevens.

Fernando Alonso: Formula 1 not as exciting anymore

Budapest, July 26:  Spanish racing driver Fernando Alonso does not find Formula 1 as exciting as earlier and is tempted to join other forms of motor racing.
The McLaren driver on Saturday said the speed of F1 cars and change of rules have diminished the appeal of the sport, reports BBC.”I love motorsport, all categories, and F1 is not as exciting as it was in the past, at least to me. Right now, there is huge motivation and a fantastic project that I am in with McLaren-Honda,” said the 33-year-old, who won the 2005 and 2006 world titles.
“My first go-kart was a McLaren-Honda replica and I am in a real McLaren-Honda so I am enjoying this process of getting competitive starting from zero. But with no testing, with these tyres, with these limitations, with the calendar for example of next year, there is the temptation for other categories, that is true.”

Hungarian GP: Fernando Alonso hints at future switch away from F1

Fernando Alonso says Formula 1 is not as challenging as it once was and admits he is tempted by a switch to other categories in the future.
Fernando Alonso
The double world champion says the speed of the cars and the limitations of F1's rules have reduced its appeal.
"I love motorsport, all categories, and F1 is not as exciting as it was in the past - at least to me," Alonso said.
The 33-year-old Spaniard revealed he was unhappy with many aspects of F1, including plans for a 21-race calendar.
But he said he was enjoying his work with McLaren-Honda, with whom he has a contract until the end of 2017.
"Right now, there is huge motivation and a fantastic project that I am in with McLaren-Honda," said Alonso, winner of the 2005 and 2006 world titles and 32 grands prix in a career that stretches back to 2001.
"My first go-kart was a McLaren-Honda replica and I am in a real McLaren-Honda, so I am enjoying this process of getting competitive starting from zero.
"But with no testing, with these tyres, with these limitations, with the calendar for example of next year, there is the temptation for other categories, that is true."
Many drivers do not like the fact they can rarely push to the limit during races, but Alonso has been the most outspoken about it.Alonso has long made it clear he does not like the tyres that have been used in F1 since Pirelli became the sole supplier in 2011 and responded to a remit to produce a design that degrades quickly, in order to promote more pit stops.
He was also referring to limitations on in-season testing, on the extension of the calendar to a record 21 races next year and to the severe limitations in the rules with regard to the design and operation of the cars.
He also referred to the fact the cars are only "two or three seconds a lap faster" than a car from the GP2 feeder category.
F1 has plans to make the cars five to six seconds a lap faster in 2017 with a raft of rule changes.
Alonso has indicated he approves of these changes, saying in May that they proved F1 had gone in the "wrong direction" in the last few years.
Pirelli is facing opposition from Michelin to be the sport's next tyre supplier from 2017 - a decision is to be made by September by F1's commercial rights holder, Bernie Ecclestone.

Thứ Tư, 15 tháng 7, 2015

McLaren will make strides forward once Honda reliable, insists Boullier

Eric Boullier says energy recovery as main area of weakness; racing director still not ruling out becoming Q3 regulars by the end of 2015

McLaren remain confident over the MP4-30's underlying potential
McLaren remain confident over the MP4-30's underlying potential
Eric Boullier has shed fresh light on the problems which he believes are holding McLaren-Honda back by “seconds” of lap time.
Despite expectations that McLaren’s early reliability with their new Honda power unit would be cured by mid-season, the former world champions remain ahead of only point-less Manor in the Constructors’ Championship and have got both their cars to the finish in the same race just once in nine attempts in 2015.
Honda motorsport chief Yasuhisa Arai claimed after the British GP, when Fernando Alonso scored the final point in a race of only 13 finishers, that their reliability problems were “almost fixed” and they could now turn their attention more to improving performance over the second half of the season.
But Boullier, McLaren’s racing director, has suggested that more fundamental problems with the hybrid power unit’s energy-recovery system remain.
“It [the engine] is not completely down to only power – it has also to do with the driveability of the engine, which has proved very difficult and complex to manage so far,” the Frenchman told F1’s official website.
“Let me give you an example: we all have the same power in terms of electrical power, but some engines are doing a better job in recovering the energy. That is why you see a difference in qualifying and the race.
“We are not able today to unlock the full recovery potential because if we do it creates reliability issues – and that hurts us in terms of performance. But it is there! We just have to find the right remedies to unlock it.”
McLaren's team bosses debrief on the pitwall
McLaren's team bosses debrief on the pitwall
He added that the electrical issues were costing the team’s cars chunks of lap time on straights in particular.
“I am repeating myself: if we can unlock the potential we will maybe be fighting – with some luck – for a podium. If you can deploy your MGU-K power on the straights on every lap, that is worth a lot of time. Today we can't do that.”
Having conceded in recent seasons that their aerodynamics were not up to scratch, McLaren have been more positive about the performance of the MP4-30 chassis so far this season and Ron Dennis told Sky Sports F1 at Silverstone that “our car performance is actually extremely good here“ around the circuit’s sweeping corners.
Indeed, Boullier believes that once reliability is solved McLaren can make big and immediate strides forward.
“We all know the level of commitment from McLaren - that doesn't need to be discussed. But the positive is the level of commitment of Honda, and the fact we know that our cars have not tenths but seconds of potential that can be unlocked,” he insisted.
“We cannot physically use that because we have reliability issues, but if we overcome those we will be able to make major steps forward, believe me.”
While Boullier admitted the MP4-30 could also do with more downforce to be more competitive, he still isn’t ruling out regular Q3 appearances by season’s end in November.
McLaren CEO Ron Dennis says the team are battling through the pain in their search for a competitive car alongside engine supplier Honda
McLaren CEO Ron Dennis says the team are battling through the pain in their search for a competitive car alongside engine supplier Honda
“We will feel competitive if we can be in Q3 all the time and fighting for top six,” he said.
“That would be a major achievement even if it doesn't sound very exciting, as we are here to win. We still target being competitive by the end of the season.”
But, even if McLaren fail to close the two-second gap to the front by Abu Dhabi, Boullier insists it doesn’t mean 2016 will be a write-off too.
“No, because we have seen that Ferrari and Mercedes were able to do major steps between their first and second years. We also expect that in our case,” he added.

Fernando Alonso revels in Daytona Sandown Park go-karting

The Spanish star set an impressive time around the Esher circuit as he overtook some big names in the Daytona site's superstars leaderboard

Formula 1 superstar Fernando Alonso tried his luck around the Daytona Sandown Park go-karting track in Esher last Wednesday (July 8), speeding into third place on the all-time superstars leaderboard.
The Spanish two-time F1 world champion - now driving for the Woking-based McLaren-Honda team - first visited the track two days before for an 'Arrive-and-Drive' session in one of Daytona’s high-performance DMax karts.
And so taken with the experience was he, that Alonso reappeared at the track with a dozen friends and colleagues for a couple of exclusive races around the challenging circuit.
Despite the jovial nature of the session, the 33-year-old Spaniard soon set his sights firmly on adding his name to the track’s Top Gear-style superstars leaderboard.
After a few practice laps this was achieved, and his 45.627s effort placed him third on the board – ahead of motorsport luminaries such as Timo Glock, Julian Bailey and Tom Kristensen, and global megastars Brad Pitt, Hugh Grant and Guy Ritchie.
Alonso was only marginally adrift of FIA Formula E Championship ace Sam Bird, who began his racing career at Sandown Park.
Jim Graham, Daytona motorsport director, said the fact Alonso returned two days after the original session proved the star "must have enjoyed himself".
“Fernando told us he wanted to get himself onto our superstars board after seeing it on Monday, and his best lap was a highly respectable effort, especially bearing in mind that the track was not at its grippiest at the time,” Mr Graham said.
“To be pretty much immediately within half-a-second of local expert Sam Bird – who grew up driving go-karts around Sandown – was impressive stuff, and he was chuffed to bits to finish on the podium.
“He was really relaxed throughout, just hanging out with the staff and having his photo taken. I think he had a great time.”
After a few practice laps the star was soon making inroads
After a few practice laps, the star was soon making inroads

How Long Will Fernando Alonso Realistically Accept Mediocrity at McLaren?

How Long Will Fernando Alonso Realistically Accept Mediocrity at McLaren?
Fernando Alonso scored his first point of the 2015 Formula One season in the British Grand Prix, but far more significant was the point he made after the race.
Despite McLaren-Honda's lack of competitiveness this year, Alonso and team-mate Jenson Button have acted as the team's spokesmen in post-race interviews, channeling positivity and optimism, maintaining confidence and using the company's 2015 buzzword: progress.
But at Silverstone?
Mark Thompson/Getty Images
Alonso had a face like thunder. Curled lip. Forced smile. He rejected the notion that his first point could be a turning point in McLaren's season, telling Sky Sports' television coverage of the race how he would dedicate the result to the team for "the hard work of many months now."
He later elaborated on his comments to Autosport's Glenn Freeman, stating:
I'm not happy, but it's the first point of many, I hope.
It's not party time yet because it's only one point...
It's one point. It's not the best result and it's not what we want.
It's just good for the team especially—the point is more for them and to thank them for the job of these months.
Alonso, in truth, appeared more content with life when he almostmowed down his pit crew in front of his home crowd in Spain and climbed aboard Kimi Raikkonen's car on the opening lap in Austria.
His reaction to breaking his duck was in stark contrast to Button's joy at getting off the mark in Monaco, where the 2009 world champion told Autosport's Scott Mitchell how his eighth-placed finish was "a great stepping stone to winning in the future."
Alonso's reluctance to view his 10th-place finish as an achievement of any kind felt rehearsed—as, of course, many things are with Fernando—and it sent a strong message to the team.
Even their best, in this season of revised expectations, will not be good enough for a driver as ambitious, proud and talented as Fernando Alonso, and an outfit of McLaren-Honda's heritage should never settle for crumbs of comfort.
The two-time world champion's relatively cheery demeanour for much of this season, despite the limitations of McLaren's MP4-30, has surprised many, with Alonso's Canadian GP radio outburst the only sign of his frustration over the opening nine races.
Yet the longer the team are crippled by their Honda power unit, which remains powerless, thirsty and unreliable, the more Alonso—despite having a three-year contract with no "performance clauses," asMcLaren boss Ron Dennis told BBC Sport's Andrew Benson—will try to engineer a way out.
In a separate BBC Sport article, Benson claims it is a "near-certainty" that the Spaniard will be driving a McLaren in 2016.
This, in theory, will put Alonso in a position to capitalise on any improvements Honda make to their engine over the winter, preventing him from making the same mistake he made at Ferrari, which saw him flee the team just as they made a shock return to competitiveness.
Yet the ongoing problems suffered by Renault, whose 2015 powertrainis somehow worse than their 2014 effort, shows this approach carries no guarantees that Honda will make significant developments from this season to next, especially since the Japanese manufacturer's engine is far worse than any of those produced by Renault, Ferrari or Mercedes in the first year of the V6 turbo regulations.
With that in mind, it would be a surprise if Alonso has not already taken tentative steps toward identifying an exit route from McLaren for either 2016 or '17.
Kamran Jebreili/Associated Press
Alonso left Ferrari at the very moment the Prancing Horse returned to the front. He won't want to make the same mistake with McLaren-Honda.
Raikkonen's uncertain future at Ferrari means there could soon be vacancies at Red Bull Racing and Williams—whom Alonso should have regarded as a more serious option when devising his 2015 plans—depending on whether the Prancing Horse pick Daniel Ricciardo orValtteri Bottas to partner Sebastian Vettel.
Either team would be an upgrade on his current employers, yet the seat he—and, indeed, every driver on the grid—truly craves may come available at the end of next year, when, according to BBC Sport's Andrew Benson, Nico Rosberg's contract expires at Mercedes, who should remain at the front for 2017 despite the proposed rule changes.
Paul Gilham/Getty Images
A decade after partnering him at McLaren, could Alonso join Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes for 2017?
Alonso, who will be approaching his 36th birthday at that point, may be viewed as too old to be regarded a serious option for the Silver Arrows, yet the gamble, in his never-ending quest for a third world title, may be worth taking.
Whether he should persevere with McLaren-Honda or roll the dice one more time should become clear over the next few weeks. The unusually long summer, as a result of the cancellation of this year'sGerman Grand Prix, is a blessing in disguise for Honda, removing them from the burning spotlight of race weekends.
With the current three-week gap between the British and HungarianGPs, and a further four weeks—notwithstanding the traditional two-week summer shutdown—until the Belgian GP, both team and engine supplier will have plenty of time to resolve their problems.
Should McLaren return to action at Spa-Francorchamps with a significant improvement in form, running firmly inside the top 10 throughout the latter stages of the campaign, it should convince Alonso that the team are indeed on the right track.
If, however, their woes continue and McLaren's world-champion pairing continue to be humiliated, trundling at the rear of the grid before suffering the inevitable engine failure, the Spaniard must rediscover his ruthlessness and give up on the power of dreams.
Alonso is at the stage of his career where he has no time to waste. He needs prizes, not just points.