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Rebirth of a champion


Alan Henry

There were definite signs of improvement in the form of McLaren-Honda in Malaysia, and while 17th and 18th on the grid is not where anyone in the team wants to be, the important thing was that the time gap to the opposition had closed. The drivers continue to say good things about the MP4-30 chassis, and it’s clear that the cars will move up the grid as Honda extracts more performance from the hybrid V6.

Sepang was of course the first of the new generation of Tilke tracks, and as such the first to open up the sport to a whole new market. I enjoyed the place on my first visit in 1999, although I can’t say I’ve ever been a fan of the stifling humidity that hits you as soon as you step out of the plane.

As such it has always been a tough test of man and machine, and for Honda the weekend was something of a step into the unknown in terms of the ambient temperatures – and bear in mind that we were told in Australia that the power units had been turned down in large part because of heat issues. Sepang was a much greater challenge, and while both cars retired in the race, the overall lap total achieved over the weekend was respectable, especially given the struggles faced in testing just a few weeks ago.

For the moment, everyone admits that there’s still a mountain to climb. The good news in Malaysia was that Fernando Alonso was back, and showing no ill signs of the Barcelona test incident after his extended spell of recuperation. With due respect to Kevin Magnussen – I’m sure that the young Dane will be winning races with McLaren at some point in the future – both McLaren and F1 need Alonso to be present and at the top of his game.

His appearance meant that in tandem with Jenson Button the Spaniard set a new record for the most experienced driver pairing the sport has ever seen. And that is of course why McLaren ended up with a 2015 line-up compromised of a pair of world champions. Heading into what was always going to be a challenging year it was deemed essential to have two guys on board who have seen it all before, and endured the sort of ups and downs that inevitably accompany a long career at the top.

Reading what they both had to say in Malaysia it was obvious that both men recognise that they have a key role to play in keeping up morale in the camp, and quite rightly they regularly refer to the potential of the McLaren Honda marriage, which is what it’s all about.

The resurgence of Scuderia Ferrari is a source of motivation for everyone chasing Mercedes, including McLaren. No one expected Sebastian Vettel to win in only his second race with his new team, and yet in the past we’ve often seen big name drivers who have made major career moves find success pretty quickly. Indeed Seb’s own current team-mate Kimi Raikkonen won on his very first start with Ferrari in Australia in 2007, after he moved from McLaren to Maranello.

In fact, in winning on his second outing with his new team, Vettel matched what Alonso achieved when he joined McLaren in that same 2007 season. And given that that Fernando’s maiden victory came in Malaysia, there’s also a nice synergy with his return to the cockpit last weekend.

The parallels between the Vettel and Alonso situations are clear. Brought up through the ranks by Red Bull, Vettel achieved huge success with the team, winning four titles. Some observers thought he would probably never leave. However, he decided that the time was right to find a new home and a new challenge – and you might also say it was a good idea to leave the nest and prove that he could win elsewhere.

When he joined McLaren in 2007 Alonso had been with Benetton/Renault for five seasons (one of them as test driver supporting none other than J Button!). He’d won two titles, and like Michael Schumacher before him, he seemed to be an integral part of the team. But he too decided it was time to move on and break away. And McLaren was his destination of choice.

Some thought that he’d got his timing wrong, given that McLaren had finished a distant third in the 2006 constructors’ championship, and the departing Raikkonen only fifth in the drivers’ version. But Alonso had faith in the team, and with rookie Lewis Hamilton in the other car, it was a fresh start in every respect.

As noted, the man Alonso replaced – Raikkonen – won the opening race of the 2007 season for Ferrari. But there have been many Melbourne races where the advantage of the dominant team has for some reason been exaggerated (as we saw this season!). An interval of two weekends, and the chance to test in Malaysia, allowed McLaren to haul in Ferrari.

Specifically, the team was able to come to terms with the tyres, having made the switch from Michelin to Bridgestone during the winter. Everyone had been running on the same spec tyres since November, but Ferrari still had a huge amount of previous Bridgestone knowledge upon which it could call, and the others were still catching up.

In addition, Raikkonen now had to protect his engine, which was potentially damaged by a loss of water in Australia. His team-mate Felipe Massa made up for disappointment in Melbourne with pole at Sepang, while Kimi had to settle for third, with Alonso inbetween. Fuelled more heavily than his team-mate in qualifying, Lewis took fourth.

The start was a nightmare for Massa, who was beaten by both McLaren drivers in the run through the first two turns. Suddenly stuck in third, he panicked, and in his desperation to get back past on lap six he ran wide t Turn Four after Lewis brilliantly outfoxed him. He dropped behind Raikkonen and the BMW Sauber of Nick Heidfeld – and his race was ruined.

Thereafter it was a relative straightforward afternoon for McLaren, and Alonso and Hamilton ran around with no pressure from behind. Lewis rightly received the plaudits for a solid performance in his second GP, after his debut third place in Australia.

But Alonso was the man of the moment, and he’d proved to the world that he could win in a different team, just as Vettel did last weekend. He was delighted to get his first McLaren victory out of the way so early.

“When I was leading after the first corner and saw Lewis second, well that opened a little bit the dream to win the race,” he said. “We knew our chance was to overtake the Ferraris at the start and we were lucky to do it and, for sure, [it was] even better to have your team-mate second.

“But I was not confident until the final stint, to be honest, even in lap 40 or something like that, the team kept telling me to push because we thought Kimi was going very long for the second stint. So I was not confident until Kimi pitted for the second time and we realised the victory was in our hands.”

“I’m proud for the team, above all else,” said Ron Dennis, who was delighted to join his guys on the podium. “Both drivers did an excellent job. We had a good strategy. Lewis was very controlled at the end, very cool, and did what was necessary to come second, which was his objective.

“I’m still basically letting it sink in. It was a great result. It was a good strategic race, and I think we showed we had the pace to beat the Ferraris, and I’m very pleased with the outcome, obviously. Inevitably you go through peaks and troughs of competitiveness, and hopefully this will be a trend that we can continue into the future.”

That day Dennis looked every inch the proud father figure as Alonso and Hamilton took the plaudits. He neatly ducked away before the champagne started flowing, and came down the stairs just in time to see Hamilton’s half empty bottle slip through the fingers of a mechanic after Lewis passed it down from the podium.

The unfortunate fellow caught it on the first bounce, and yet the Mumm bottle didn’t break. Ron joked about it with his guys, perhaps aware that here was further confirmation that this was a day when nothing could go wrong.

That hot and humid Sunday afternoon in Malaysia was certainly a time for celebration. It might not happen any time soon, but I’m sure that Fernando will one day enjoy a few more wins with McLaren.

 

McLaren to debut innovative wearable tech


Team

After concluding an intensive hot-weather performance study, with immediate effect McLaren will supply each member of its Formula 1 pit crew with an innovative piece of high-tech apparel.

Every mechanic will be supplied with a novel item of team kit that supplies a constant stream of humidified cooling air to the wearer: a telemetric, fireproof sarong (#McLarenSarong) that will be permitted for use in all hot-weather environments.

McLaren believes that the new garment will once again return it to the vanguard of apparel technology innovation in Formula 1, a position it most recently occupied when it introduced the famous ‘Formula Onesie’ mechanic’s costume at the start of the millennium.

“We’re always looking at ways to apply Formula 1 telemetry to random things,” explained Kim Ono, head of McLaren Applied and Fitted Operational Outfits Ltd. “So the idea of creating a sarong that utilises telemetric heat sensors to regulate body temperature seemed like a sensible idea.”

The #McLarenSarong has been weaved from a unique blend of proprietary triple-layer fireproof material, and can withstand temperatures of more than 300 degrees Celsius – far greater than the average mechanic can sweat up while burning the midnight oil in a Formula 1 pit garage.

If the roll-out should prove successful, the team is looking to introduce a number of additional items of apparel at forthcoming grands prix. They will include a traditional kimono-style anti-precipitation jacket for the Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka, titanium-plated cowboy spurs for the United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas, and a revolutionary uncured soft-weave carbonfibre sombrero, to be introduced for the resurrected Mexican Grand Prix later this year.

For the forthcoming Martian Grand Prix, which Formula 1 commercial rights holder Bernie Ecclestone is currently in negotiations on Mars with a view to inclusion on the 2075 Formula 1 calendar, McLaren’s pit crew will wear as yet unspecified ‘Space spec’ sarongs, which are expected to be designed by Mads Magnussen, the team’s current test and reserve driver Kevin Magnussen’s future grandson.

 

The Malaysian Grand Prix, by Darren Heath


Malaysian Grand Prix 2015

Multi award winning F1 Photographer Darren Heath joins us for another Formula 1 season, delivering a stunning collection of images for each race in the 2015 calendar. View the Malaysian Grand Prix Gallery above.

 

Mobil 1 The Grid


Mobil1

Mobil 1 The Grid brings motorsport fans the best insights, videos and access to the top personalities in the 4-wheel world. The motorsport magazine TV show runs from February to November in 2015 and features everything the world of motorsports has to offer.

From the Formula 1 world championship to the top US race series including NASCAR, IndyCar and United Spostscars, Mobil 1 The Grid has got unprecedented access and all the race news that matters.

Throughout the series, Mobil 1 The Grid goes behind the scenes to reveal the technology and design that goes into creating and maintaining the world’s top cars at peak power. In addition to the TV show, Grid1.tv brings you great videos and features motorsport’s big hitters and some great competitions.

Check out the latest vids featuring Fernando, Jenson and the McLaren-Honda F1 team in our Mobil 1 The Grid playlist.

 

Malaysia Grand Prix Race Report


Malaysian Grand Prix 2015

“Able to mix it with the others”

Sepang International Circuit, Sunday March 29

Despite failing to get both cars to the flag, the Malaysian Grand Prix marked a significant step-up in performance for the whole McLaren-Honda team.

The two MP4-30s were the only cars to start the race on the Hard (Prime) tyres, but were able quickly to switch to the Medium (Option) when both boxed during an early Safety Car period. Jenson was delayed at his stop by an issue with the left-front, and was also hampered behind Manor’s Roberto Merhi, who failed to catch the cars in front ahead of the restart. 

During the race itself, both our cars ran more strongly than they had in Australia two weeks ago – Fernando ran as high as eighth before an ERS cooling problem required him to stop his car on lap 21. Jenson was able to latch onto a midfield battle but was also ordered to stop by the team. He retired on lap 41 with a turbo issue.

JENSON BUTTON, MP4-30-01

Started: 17th   
Finished: DNF – turbo (41 laps) 
Fastest Lap: 1m46.056s on lap 38 (+3.994s, 16th) 
Pitstops: Three: laps 4 (10.66s), 21 (3.80s) and 35 (4.11s) [Pri-Opt-Opt-Opt] 

“The start of the race was a bit of a mess for me: I’d had a longer-than-normal pit-stop under the Safety Car, and came out behind Roberto [Mehri], who didn’t close down the gap before the Safety Car came in. At the restart, I then started about four or five seconds behind the pack, had to get past him, then chased down the cars in front – which hurt my tyres.

“But I enjoyed it out there – we’re actually racing people. To be able to see one of the Red Bulls ahead of me – and so far into the race – was obviously a nice surprise. And we were able to mix it with the others a little bit more, too. Fighting in the pack is the most positive thing to take away from this weekend – hopefully, before too long, we can start to pick them off on a race-by-race basis.

“Today has been a useful day; it’s just a pity that both Fernando and I ended up finishing it early.”

FERNANDO ALONSO, MP4-30-03

Started: 18th  
Finished: DNF – ERS cooling (21 laps) 
Fastest Lap: 1m48.460s on lap 17 (+6.398s, 17th)
Pitstops: One: lap 4 (3.24s) [Pri-Opt] 

“This whole weekend has been better than I expected. 

“The main positive to take away from today is the fact that we were able to run with other cars – Jenson and I weren’t simply fighting with each other. That was the first step we needed to take, and we’ve taken it already.

“Indeed, our race pace was surprisingly good; I was running with the pack, and I was even able to catch the Red Bulls before the pit-stops. That was a nice surprise.

“We still need a little more time to investigate the exact cause of my retirement. The team came over the radio to tell me to back off a little, to save the car, so I brought it back to the pits. 

“For us, these are the sort of reliability problems you’d usually discover in pre-season testing, but, given our lack of running over the winter, unfortunately we’re likely to encounter such issues in the first few races of the year.

“Hopefully, we can take another step forward in China.”

ERIC BOULLIER – Racing director, McLaren-Honda

“The fact that neither Fernando nor Jenson finished today’s race is of course disappointing, but they both drove extremely well in arduous, challenging and frustrating conditions.

“Moreover, in line with the MP4-30’s improved qualifying pace of yesterday, its race pace today was also a significant improvement over what it showed in Melbourne two weeks ago.

“Furthermore, the 62 laps driven by Fernando and Jenson this afternoon have garnered us additional invaluable data that will inform the ongoing intense development programme in which we are relentlessly engaged.

“Last but far from least, I want to say ‘merci beaucoup’ to our mechanics, a mettlesome troupe who have been working with indefatigable tenacity, in severe heat and humidity, ever since we arrived in Sepang.”

YASUHISA ARAI Honda R&D senior managing officer – chief officer of motorsport

“Fernando was showing some good pace today until we had to pull his car out of the race with an ERS cooling issue. Obviously, that was a big disappointment for us.

“Jenson’s car then encountered a turbo issue, when we were just about to push to maintain his position within a busy, jostling pack.

“Both retirements were a result of the harsh use of the power unit within competitive race conditions, not the result of the high-temperature conditions encountered at this circuit.

“We’ll investigate the issues further and aim to improve things before Shanghai.”