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Magnussen: Perez “squeezed me into the wall”

The RB19 of Sergio Perez sustained huge damage after contact with Magnussen

Haas Formula 1 driver Kevin Magnussen says that Sergio Perez “squeezed me into the wall” when the pair clashed on the run up to Casino on the first lap of the Monaco GP.

Magnussen looked for a gap on the right of the Red Bull driver, and the cars touched and speared into the barriers.

Magnussen’s team mate Nico Hulkenberg almost squeezed through on the left, but was clipped by Perez, ensuring that both Haas cars were eliminated.

The FIA stewards looked at the incident but neither Magnussen not Perez was penalised, much to the Mexican’s frustration.

“I think the move was unnecessary, we sustained a lot of damage, and it was a very dangerous incident,” said Perez. “I was disappointed it didn’t get investigated, it was an immense crash and my car is completely destroyed.”

Asked by this writer about the collision Magnussen was adamant that Perez was at fault.

“Well, he clearly wasn’t leaving space, but I thought he would,” he said. “I had a good part of my front – my whole front wheel was ahead of his rear wheel – so I did expect him to be leaving room for one car on his right, especially since he didn’t have anyone on his inside.

“On his left there was a completely clear track. He just went and squeezed me into the wall. It’s not good to see both cars in one crash. It sucks. I mean, it’s a shitty situation.”

A frustrated Hulkenberg indicated that both drivers were to blame.

“Well, I saw them racing up the hill, I saw a very sharp, narrow gap,” said the German when asked by this writer about the contact.

“And I saw that Kevin stayed and that Checo also didn’t move. I don’t know if Checo saw him or not. I think unnecessary from both really, it could have been avoided easily. Obviously, for me, who wasn’t directly involved, it’s even the shittiest from all.

“I missed it probably by two-tenths. If I would have been two-tenths further up the road, he would have missed me. But as it was, he hit me with a small margin of his car, but enough to end my race as well.

“Nobody has won Monaco Grand Prix on lap one. You have to take calculated risk and risks that make sense. And it’s always that risk reward question that you have to question yourself.

Regarding the lack of penalties he added: “To some extent, it is definitely a racing incident, lap one, street circuit, narrow, visibility poor, drivers not always exactly knowing where the other car is. And these things happen, unfortunately.”

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Verstappen: Red Bull “found out” as F1 rivals catch up

Max Verstappen that the Red Bull team has been “found out” as an increasingly strong threat from Ferrari and McLaren has highlighted the weaknesses of the RB20.

Verstappen said that the car felt like it was running without suspension and acting like a go-kart on Monaco’s bumps and kerbs.

He struggled throughout qualifying and could not better P6, having touched the wall on his final run. His team mate Sergio Perez failed to get out of Q1 and was left stranded in 18th place.

Verstappen admitted that it has been a difficult day, with changes failing to improve the situation.

“We tried a lot of things on the car,” he said. “Literally, nothing made it better. So then you’re just stuck. There’s not much you can do. We really tried to optimise it.

“You can see it in the second sector, we are so bad, just because I can’t touch any kerbs, because it just upsets the car way too much. You just lose a lot of lap time. And it’s just incredibly difficult.

“We went softer, stiffer, everything. But the car is like a go-kart, it’s like I’m running without suspension.

“So it’s just jumping around a lot. Not absorbing any kerb strikes or bumps or camber changes. The last corner, I think the amount of times that I just jumped almost into the wall, just pretty incredible.

“It’s also not something new. I mean, we have had this problem since 2022. Of course, for the last two years, I think we had a car advantage, so then it gets it gets masked a little bit, because we gain into corners where the kerbs and the bumps are not that much of a limitation.

“But with everyone catching up naturally, when you are not improving your weakest point you get found out. That’s what happened this weekend.”

Verstappen admitted that life has become tougher for Red Bull as rival teams have caught up and pushed the world champions harder.

“It’s been different problems,” he said. “Probably in Miami we didn’t get the balance correct. And maybe also with the tyres.

“At Imola I think we managed to turn it around quite well. But because of all the problems, we were probably not on top of the hard tyre.

“But overall, the performance was quite okay. But I knew that this was going to be one of our most difficult weekends, and for sure it showed that as well with naturally everyone catching up as well.

“I’m just aware we are not perfect, and we need to work, we need to really understand our limitations more, and try to work on that.”

Verstappen indicated that the issues seen in Monaco will not be addressed in the short-term: “It’s a fundamental problem. So it’s not something that will be fixed within weeks.

“Already the last two or three races, of course, it has been incredibly difficult. But yeah, this is worst case scenario, I would say, this this kind of track.”

Verstappen said that the car felt Ok at some points around the lap.

“I felt quite comfortable in terms of, let’s say, medium-to-high speed, the car is quite quick, but everywhere where there are bumps, it was just jumping around a lot.

“So I’m just driving around that, and trying to optimise everything, but everything was just really difficult to control. So I was surprised for most of qualifying that we were actually that close.

“I guess some didn’t nail the lap yet or whatever. But it’s always if, if, if. You can always do better. I’m not disappointed with my laps, or trying to even improve more, because just look at where we are, we are P18 and P6. Normally Checo is always very good around a street circuit and he really comes alive there.

“I think that already says enough that he is in that position. So I cannot be disappointed with P6 in that sense.”

Asked about the title battle he said: “I don’t even think about that. You know, it’s so long. So many things that can happen and one bad race won’t define the championship. But I know that to win a title, you need to be consistent, and that’s what we have to try and be.”

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FIA to clamp down on chicane cutting in Monaco F1 race

Drivers missing the chicane on Sunday have to give back the time gained by Tabac

The FIA is set to clamp down on Formula 1 drivers potentially gaining an advantage by cutting the Monaco chicane in Sunday’s race.

The subject of going off track has become a talking point at several venues this year.

In Jeddah Kevin Magnussen did to make a pass on Yuki Tsunoda in Jeddah, accepted a penalty, and then defended his Haas team mate Nico Hulkenberg up ahead.

Magnussen was again in the news in the Miami sprint after going off track on several occasions during his battle to keep Lewis Hamilton behind, again protecting Hulkenberg. He received multiple penalties for the various offences, further ramping up the debate about such strategic moves, with McLaren boss Andrea Stella calling his tactics “completely unacceptable.”

However Magnussen was himself upset with Hulkenberg after the German jumped the chicane, got himself out of the Dane’s DRS range, and was able to pull away.

Although he didn’t reference the incident on the radio at the time he was part of a discussion on the matter in the Imola drivers’ briefing.

In Monaco the issue is not so much breaking the DRS but gaps between drivers ahead of pit stops, which are so critical in a race that sees little on-track overtaking.

In the past drivers have cut the chicane a lap or two before their stops either to open up a gap to the car behind, or close it to the car in front, thus potentially gaining an advantage that could earn them a place in the pits.

After a discussion in Friday’s briefing in Monaco it was agreed that the FIA would monitor the situation carefully on Sunday.

A driver who does cut the chicane has to give back any advantage gained by Tabac, the following corner, or face an investigation.

They thus just have a few seconds in which to make that call effectively on their own, as there will be barely any time for their engineers to intervene and ask them to cede any advantage. 

They would also potentially lose some momentum heading into Tabac and the fast Swimming Pool section that follows.

The standard penalty for gaining an advantage by going off track is 10 seconds, with a drive through to potentially follow.

Gaining an advantage remains a major talking point in briefings, with the Magnussen/Hulkenberg incident in Miami providing an interesting case study.

“I couldn’t talk about that on the radio because I didn’t want Nico to get a penalty,” said Magnussen when asked it by this writer. “I was pissed off that he cut the chicane and I missed out on DRS, but I couldn’t really talk about it.

“But then I did exactly the same thing. And in fact, I lost time. I gained time to Lewis, but I lost time to my best sector. Nico gained, he did a green sector. So I think his case was even a little worse than mine.

“I’m happy he didn’t get a penalty, because he went on to score points. But what’s the difference? I mean, why did I get it? Lewis complained on radio, as he should.

“I had DRS. And then I lost DRS. He cut the chicane and opened the gap. Is that not an advantage?”

Hulkenberg downplayed the incident and said that he had tried to minimise the advantage gained.

“I didn’t intentionally cut the chicane, I locked up and I would have jumped the kerb like Max [Verstappen] did on Sunday,” said the German. “And that actually gave me DRS from the car in front.

“But on the next straight I didn’t use DRS for that very reason, because I got it without properly earning it. So I kind of neglected the gain that I got from it, but obviously Kevin behind he lost it probably for a tenth, and it just shows that very fine margins can have a very big impact.”

He added: “For missing a chicane, you don’t usually get a penalty. It’s at most track limits or something. 

“I think if you leave the track and you gain an advantage, if I would have then used DRS and overtaken the guy, I think that’s a different story but how it went, it’s racing. Twenty drivers, 18 different opinions. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose.”

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Wolff: Mercedes may compromise Monaco qualifying pace for race

Lewis Hamilton was fast on Friday but the team may make compromises

Mercedes Formula 1 boss Toto Wolff admits that team will probably have to compromise qualifying pace in Monaco in order to make the W15 a more raceable car on Sunday.

The Brackley outfit had a good Friday in the principality, with Lewis Hamilton topping FP1, when the team used new softs as it feared rain in the afternoon, and taking second place to Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in FP2.

Meanwhile his team-mate George Russell was third in the first session and 10th in the second after suffering a steering issue.

However while Hamilton’s one-lap pace was encouraging for a team that has endured a difficult season thus far the performance quickly fell away over a longer run, and that will probably mean overnight set-up changes that could impact the car’s potential in qualifying.

“On a single lap it was good, the car is good,” Wolff told this writer. “On a long run, it was less so. I think after lap six, seven we really lost the front.

“And then if you can’t get the car into the corner any more, then the Sunday could be pretty grim. So we need to find a compromise.”

Asked if potentially dialling out one-lap performance would be frustrating he said: “It could be, but we’ve got to see. Single lap is better than we thought. But you always need to obviously find a compromise.”

Hamilton said it had been a positive day, while conceding that the team had to do work to reduce graining.

“It’s been a good day, probably the best we’ve had so far this year, and the car is feeling very positive,” he said. This track is just amazing in an F1 car, and I’ve been enjoying my driving today – I was pleasantly surprised by the grip level and the way the car was responding, which made it a much more enjoyable ride than the last two years. 

“In the second session, it felt a bit less comfortable, and we’ve got lots of work to do overnight to improve the long runs and the front graining. It was a feeling positive on the lower fuel, and we don’t want to lose that, but our focus now is to improve on the long run.”

Trackside engineering director Andrew Shovlin noted: “Our long run needs some work as we’ve got to be a bit kinder on the front tyres on Sunday but we’ve got some options for that.”

Meanwhile Red Bull Racing also had issues that will require overnight changes, with Max Verstappen complaining of poor performance over the bumps and saying that he had a headache, and Sergio Perez noting that he couldn’t see at some points on the circuit.

Verstappen was still fourth in FP2, albeit 0.535s off pacesetter Leclerc, while Perez was eighth. Red Bull advisor Helmut Marko admitted that the team has work to do.

“It shows that we are too stiff,” he told this writer. “To identify it is simple, but to cure it is not so simple.

“We had very good long run times, which doesn’t help here if you cannot start in the front. But we get an idea where we have to make our changes.”

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Allison: Mercedes F1 factory on “war footing”

James Allison says that the Mercedes factory in Brackley is working flat out

Mercedes Formula 1 technical director James Allison says that the team’s Brackley factory  is on a “war footing” as it rushes upgrades through the system.

Allison noted that the way part of the latest package was fast-tracked for Miami with the remainder seen at Imola as an example of how hard the team is pushing to improve the W15.

Mercedes also has new parts slated for this weekend’s race in Monaco, with more coming for the following event in Canada.

“It certainly has been a push,” said Allison in a team Q&A. “The factory is really on a war footing at the moment, and the reason that upgrade package came in two parts is originally it was slated to arrive in one slab, but we brought forward what we could to get it a little bit quicker.

“It has been a big old push, and our challenge now is just to keep that momentum coming. We have some more pieces for the car, aerodynamic and others parts that will arrive for Monaco, again for Canada and again in the races to follow.

“We will keep on slogging the assets back in the factory that find the lap time to design them, build them, get them out on the car and hopefully just force our way up the grid.”

Allison said that the updates seen at Imola, which included a revised floor and rear wing, had done what they were intended to.

“It is always hard to judge because you are comparing whether your stuff is working on a playing field that is continuously in motion,” he said.

“A lot of other teams were bringing new kit, Ferrari with their upgrade in Imola and McLaren with a load of stuff for the previous race.

“You measure what you measure on your car, but ultimately the truly telling thing about whether your stuff worked is did you move forwards? Because that is the purpose of upgrades, is it propelling you up the grid in any meaningful way?

“And I would say based on the race pace that we saw in Imola that we took a gentle step forward. We are several tenths of a second now nearer the front than we were at the start of the year and in Imola itself, we moved a tenth or two nearer to the front.

“We are pretty happy with that. Everyone at the factory has been working so hard to bring these upgrades.”

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Tsunoda admits poor starts are VCARB F1 team’s weakness

Poor starts have handicapped the VCARB F1 team in 2024

Yuki Tsunoda admits that his VCARB Formula 1 team still has to work on its starts after both the team’s drivers lost valuable places in the Emilia Romagna GP.

Starts have been an issue for the Faenza team this year, but the problem was very obvious at Imola as both Tsunoda and his team mate Daniel Ricciardo lost two positions each.

Having started seventh Tsunoda ran ninth for much of the race, but he lost a spot to Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll in the closing laps, with the latter helped by fresher tyres.

He felt that with a better start he would ultimately have enjoyed a better result than the 10th he ultimately earned.

“With a perfect race, probably I would have been able to end up a step higher position,” said the Japanese driver when asked about his race by this writer.

“For sure that start where I lost two positions hurt my race today, but I was still able to finish in the points. It wasn’t easy with the tyre management. Still, we take it.”

Tsunoda admitted that losing two places off the line proved to be expensive.

“Obviously, it’s not ideal, especially when you’re aiming for probably more fighting with Mercedes,” he said. “Today I even lost a position even to one of the Astons.

“For sure Aston had a good pace today. But still, we would have able to end up in front of him. So yeah, that start for sure hurts a lot.

“The positive thing is we’re still able to make it work with a 50-laps hard tyre, which wasn’t easy. And I think that’s positive for us at least.”

Tsunoda conceded that starts have been an ongoing issue for VCARB.

“It’s a kind of topic at our team,” he said. “We’re really working hard on the two starts throughout the races so far. We improved a little bit, but for sure, we need a step more, because I would say consistency is not enough there. So we have to look for the future.”

Asked what has to be improved he said: “I thought it was tyre preparation, and I think we’ve done a lot of preparation, but it’s not enough.

“I think it’s coming from consistency with the clutch. I will say Red Bull have the same engine, and they are able to have a consistent start.

“So for sure, there’s something that we are missing, or we have to improve. But obviously, we are individual team, so we have to think about our strategy to make it work.”

Tsunoda showed good pace from the start of the Imola weekend, and having been as high as fourth in Q1 and third in Q2 he was disappointed with his eventual seventh grid spot.

Asked if he anticipated that sort of form at other venues he said: “It depends on the track. I mean, to be honest, this week in Imola I didn’t expect this much performance, and obviously every track there’s always something like this car suits well to this track, or not.

“In Monaco historically I’m performing well, so I feeling more confident into the race week, but obviously we never know what’s going to happen. I’m feeling optimistic about Monaco. And we just keep pushing with the development as well.”

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Albon: No “doom and gloom” despite Williams F1 struggles

Albon endured a difficult weekend at Imola with the FW46

Alex Albon insists that it’s not “doom and gloom” for the Williams Formula 1 team despite a difficult weekend in Imola.

Albon was left with a loose front wheel after his tyre stop and lost a lot of time returning to the pits. He also received a 10-second penalty for an unsafe release.

After that his race turned into a test session, and the team eventually told him to retire the car in the closing laps.

Earlier in the weekend team boss James Vowles had admitted that the FW46 is significantly overweight, at the expense of valuable lap time. The Emilia Romagna race saw the first steps taken in a weight-saving programme for the car.

Williams has yet to score a point in 2024, but Albon has downplayed any concerns.

“What’s positive – it’s not really a positive – is that kind of midfield, they’re not scoring a tremendous amount of points, so it’s not like we’re falling away and we can’t catch up,” he said.

“I think if you look at last year, we were in the same position, we scored I think it was one point at this point last year. And then we came on strong, albeit we had a big upgrade package that was coming to the car.

“This year now it’s a bit more obvious, but it’s more about taking the weight out of the car, and while we’re taking out weight others are still upgrading and still performing.

“So yeah, let’s see how it how it goes down. I think this weekend we took a little bit out of the car, which showed a little bit more competitiveness in the car in qualifying.

“Honestly. I don’t know how my race pace was. But I was kind of okay, I was in no man’s land. I didn’t have any tyres left after the issue. But in my head it’s not doom and gloom. We have a plan, if we didn’t have a plan I would I would call it doom and gloom.”

Albon said he knew fairly quickly that one of his front tyres was not fully secure after the stop.

“I didn’t feel it coming down the pits,” he said. “But as soon as I took the pit limiter off there was like a vibration, and then I could tell something was wrong.

“It was still attached, and when I was turning around corners you can see if the tyre’s going to fall off, but it would only go to a point and stop, so I could see it was quite safe. There was only about 10mm of movement on the tyre.”

Albon admitted that the race turned into a test session: “We were just trying some stuff, trying to figure out some of our braking feelings with the car, and just trying to see if there any solutions on the long run with the car we’ve got, just playing around with the brakes, basically. I don’t know if there’s much to say really, just driving around, experimenting.”

Albon conceded that he is unsure of the FW46’s potential in Monaco this weekend.

“It’s never been a track we’ve gone well, it’s actually a track that we’ve always struggled at,” he said.

“I think it’s one of those ones where I feel excited to go to tracks where we were not good, and see if they’re much better.

“I’m hoping Monaco is going to be a good example of a step forward of our foundation of our car. And then I’m interested to go to Canada and see if the car is strong, like it was last year.”

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Horner: Perez Imola struggles “just a blip”

A tricky Imola race for Sergio Perez included a trip through the gravel

Red Bull Racing boss Christian Horner says that Sergio Perez’s struggles in the Emilia Romagna GP were “just a blip” and that the Mexican will return to form in Monaco.

Perez has had a generally stronger season thus far in 2024 than last year, but at Imola – where even Max Verstappen struggled to find the right set-up – he could manage only 11th place in qualifying.

The team took a gamble and he started on hard tyres and ran a long first stint that saw him re-passed by quicker cars that had pitted. 

He eventually claimed eighth place after surviving a trip through a gravel trap.

“Our simulations today were saying before the race that P7 was potentially optimal,” said Horner when asked by this writer about Perez’s race.

“Nothing happened, no safety cars or anything like that. He had one trip through the gravel that cost him about six seconds. But I think that was about the maximum that he could get from that grid position today.

“I think it’s just a blip. He’s always gone well at Monaco. So we’ll see. It’s a 24-race calendar. He’s had a great start to the year, his approach has been very strong.

“He’s changed his approach a bit this year. And today’s result was dictated by yesterday’s qualifying.”

Perez admitted that it had been a tough afternoon on the harder tyre.

“I think we sort of knew that that was the best we could get,” he said. “We obviously knew that the hard was going to be very difficult initially. But we were hoping for a safety car at the right point, to potentially put us back in the fight.

“It was very difficult first stint, I think it was compromised a lot with the traffic initially, the traffic at the end, people coming through.

“And I also had a lock-up going into Turn 16 so I went straight, and lost quite a bit of time. I also picked up some damage. So yeah, just a very, very tough race.”

Perez admitted it wasn’t easy not to get caught up in fights with drivers coming back past him on fresher tyres.

“I wanted to lose as little time as possible,” he said. “And unfortunately, at the same time you are at the end of your stint, temperatures are dropping, and the grip is just very miserable at that point.”

Perez believes that his Imola struggles were related to the characteristics of the venue.

“I think it’s a bit circuit specific,” he said. “I think we’ve got to keep our heads down, and keep working. I’m happy that Max got the victory for the team.

“We see that the McLaren and Ferrari have done a step forward, so we just have to keep our heads down. The season is long, we need to keep maximising the opportunities.”

Regarding Monaco he said: “I think we expect a very strong McLaren and Ferrari. So it will be a strong challenge there.”

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Piastri: Imola F1 race “pretty painful” after grid penalty

Oscar Piastri lost a brilliant P2 in Imola qualifying to a grid penalty

Oscar Piastri admits that he knew the Formula 1 Emilia Romagna GP would be “pretty painful” after he lost his front row grid spot to a penalty.

The Australian qualified second but was then demoted to fifth for impeding Kevin Magnussen during qualifying.

While his team mate Lando Norris inherited second spot and was able to chase winner Max Verstappen to the flag Piastri had to settle for fourth place, having got ahead of Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz at the pit stops.

“There’s always going to be ifs and buts,” he said when asked by this writer about the missed opportunity. “Yes, I knew after qualifying that it was going to be pretty painful. And today definitely proved it.

“There’s a lot of positive things and encouragement to take from this weekend. I think as a team clearly we’re there. And I think personally, the last two weekends, I feel like I’ve been really strong as well. Miami felt like a really strong weekend, here has felt really strong.

“And I think that was the most we could have got out of the race. For me personally, I’m very happy, I feel like I’ve built a bit of good momentum in the last two weekends, which is something I’ve been trying to aim for a bit more.

“And I think as a team we’re proving in different tracks, different conditions, which are generally conditions that we’ve struggled in in the past, that we’re in the fight for wins.”

Piastri said he had good pace during the race. and that the grid position was the key factor in the outcome.

“Starting further back, I think that was the biggest thing today,” he said. “I think the pace was honestly really good. I think in the first stint we were strong, just stuck behind Carlos. And then the second stint, pushed very hard at the start to undercut him, and then also try and get [Charles] Leclerc.

“And I think just with the tyres, they just don’t like being pushed. I just struggled a bit after that. It looked like Charles had a very similar thing, when he caught the back of Lando and then dropped off. Honestly, I was pretty happy with my race. I don’t think there was much more I could have done.”

Imola was Piastri’s first weekend with the full upgrade package used by Norris in Miami,

“It doesn’t feel that much different, just faster,” he said. “It’s definitely making the car a bit nicer to drive. But I think whenever the car is quicker, it’s always a bit nicer to drive.

“But we’re definitely tackling some of the things that we were trying to. Our strengths and weaknesses seem to be a little bit different now. Our high-speed is not as strong as it once was.

“But our low-speed is a lot stronger than it has been. I think we understand the majority of why that is. So I think we can be pretty confident where we go now.”

Asked to elaborate on how the car felt better he said: “”It just sticks a bit more. And the balance is a little bit nicer. I think with these regs and these tyres, there’s only a certain amount of niceness that you’re going to have. I think if you ask everyone, they probably have a similar balance, just some areas are a bit more exacerbated than others.

“So I feel like we’re making improvements. And most importantly, we’re making the car faster. And when you make the car faster, especially in race trim, it just makes your life so much easier. So I think that’s a really encouraging sign.

“And we’ve come close over one lap in the past last year, but struggled a little bit more in the race, and this year we’re just as strong in the race, if not even stronger, which is really encouraging.”

Given the improved low-speed performance Piastri is upbeat about prospects for the Monaco GP.

“I think we can definitely be confident going there. Obviously Red Bull had a difficult start to the weekend. But, that’s two weekends in a row where they’ve looked not quite as strong as they once were, Miami and here. I think we’re definitely closing in, us and Ferrari are putting on the pressure.

“And I think as a team McLaren we can be very confident wherever we go. And I think Monaco will be hopefully a good weekend.”

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Alonso frustrated after Imola race turns into test

Fernando Alonso admits that the Emilia Romagna GP turned into a test session for his Aston Martin Formula 1 team after any chance of making progress failed to materialise.

Following a crash in FP3 and a difficult Q1 session Alonso qualified only 19th at Imola.

With little to lose the team then decided to drop him out of parc ferme and change his set-up, obliging him to start from the pitlane.

In a further gamble he started on the unfavourable soft tyre in the anticipation that he might benefit from an early safety car.

In fact the race ran uninterrupted and after an early stop to ditch the soft Alonso finished 19th and last of the cars that were still running.

“Our only hope to be honest was just a safety car, or a few safety cars, red flags or those kinds of things,” he said.

“That’s why we started with the red tyre, in case there is something going on. We still had the yellow and the hard tyre, the best race tyres for the race conditions. But we started at the back, nothing happened the whole race, so we just used the race as a test.”

He added: “It was as predicted. Unfortunately in this race, you only hope for a safety car or red flag or something that can mix a little bit the race.

“It didn’t happen, so it was a little bit boring from behind, always in traffic, trying different strategies, multiple pitstops, all these kinds of things, to get some data for the team. But for the driver himself, there’s not much you can do.”

He also had an interesting moment when his front left brake caught fire as he left the pits.

“I was convinced that the fire will stop as soon as I pick up the speed, and the ventilation plays its part,” he said. “But this is the longest pitlane until you release the pit limiter! So it felt long in the car, but I think everything was fine.”

Alonso reserved judgement about the upgrade package that the team ran for the first time at Imola.

“I think we experimented a lot in FP1, in FP2 with Lance’s car with different packages. FP3 was another experiment.

“Another one now in the race, taking the opportunity on my car to start from the pit lane. So I think it’s early days to make conclusions. And I think it’s a question for the team, with all the data they have they will give more precise information.”

He also said it was hard to judge if the set-up changes made for Sunday had actually improved the car.

“I’ve felt the car similar, to be honest, compared to the rest of the weekend,” he said. “But obviously, the team has all the sensors, all the all the tools to analyse better the car performance, so we have to wait and see what the numbers say, and if we find a direction for the next few races.”

Alonso admitted that recent weeks have been difficult for Aston Martin as rivals continue to improve.

“We are aware of the situation, and we see that the top three teams they are little bit far away at the moment,” he said. “And even VCARB, Daniel [Ricciardo] was P4 in the sprint race in Miami, Yuki [Tsunoda] was very fast this weekend.

“So we need to keep on working, because everything is so tight if you don’t improve those two or three tenths that you naturally have to improve every two or three Grands Prix when you are in the midfield.”

Regarding prospects for the next race he said: “It depends on the car. If the car doesn’t handle well in Monaco, it’s a torture going fast in that track. So I think first of all, we need to set up the car properly.

“We need to find the maximum performance, and we need to concentrate on Saturday. I think on Sunday it’s like here, no one will overtake. So all the effort will be on Saturday like everyone else, and yeah, hopefully that perfect lap comes next weekend.”

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