It is fair to
say that Fernando Alonso is currently experiencing his worst run in Formula 1
since re-joining McLaren in 2015. When I say worst run, I am talking purely in
results form not his own personal performance. At the Spanish GP, Alonso pulled
out the best qualifying performance seen by anybody in a long time, getting his
McLaren-Honda into Q3. Even more amazingly, he ended up starting in 7th.
Although the race pace was still not there for Alonso, his performance in
qualifying showed just how good the double World Champion still is.
It has not just
been this race weekend that has showed his unquestioned talent, he has shown
this dating back to the end of his Ferrari career, when that car was not as
good as it should have been. Even during his second stint at Renault between
2008 and 2009, where the car was not on the same level as McLaren and Ferrari,
he still managed to score two victories.
When Alonso
debuted with Minardi in 2001, everyone could see how special a driver he was.
Though not scoring any points that year, he was constantly quicker than team
mates Tarso Marques, and then Alex Yoong, recording a best finish of 10th
at the German GP. Getting more out of his car than people would have expected
saw the Renault team sign him up for 2002 as a test driver, before promoting
him to a race seat for 2003. Though the team were on the up, they were no match
for the power of McLaren, Ferrari and Williams. This did not stop Alonso
becoming the youngest driver to score a pole position at the Malaysian GP. He
then became the youngest driver to win a race the following year at the
Hungarian GP, again in a car that was improving along with its star driver.
This progression was complete with his two World Championships in 2005 and
2006. A third title should have followed at McLaren, unfortunately, inter-team
politics and a bad attitude cost Alonso and the team that year.
That was the
last year that Alonso had a genuine front running car. Two backwards years at
Renault saw him more to Ferrari in 2010, which should have been a match made in
heaven, with multiple titles for the Spaniard. 2010 should have been the first
had it not been for Red Bull’s Vettel storming through at the end of the
season. After that, the Alonso that we see now was born, the man that could get
more out of a car than anybody else. The 2012 Ferrari was not a title fighter
by any stretch of the imagination, yet Alonso not only won races in that car,
but kept the title fight going to the final race of the year. As at McLaren
previously, the relationship between team and driver went sour, and Alonso
re-joined McLaren, who had teamed up with once again with Honda.
This current
spell that Alonso is going through with McLaren-Honda however, is the one that
is showing that he is the best on the current grid. Yes, you have Lewis
Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel who are battling at the front and providing some
fantastic racing for the fans. Their talent is undeniable, but neither driver
has performed in Formula 1 quite like Alonso. In a poor car, he still manages
to score points and put himself in positions that other drivers would not be
able too. What proves he is the best however is that, this season, despite
having the second slowest car, he is still averaging 12th on the
grid, an achievement that nobody else on that grid would be able to achieve in
that car. The upcoming Indy 500 race that he will contest, will provide further
proof if needed that Fernando Alonso is not only the best in F1, but one of the
best in the world right now.
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