The Phnom Penh Post

Alonso’s Indy 500 drive shows thaw in motorsport ‘turf war’

- Jerry Garrett

FORMULA One was off last week, ahead of Sunday’s Russian Grand Prix, giving Fernando Alonso free time to travel to Alabama on an explorator­y mission.

He spent the weekend at Barber Motorsport­s Park in Birmingham getting to know his competitor­s and teammates for the Indianapol­is 500.

Alonso, a two-time F1 champion, was considered to be an also-ran in next month’s Monaco Grand Prix. It was an ignominiou­s prospect for one of Formula One’s most talented drivers, who is also a two-time winner at Monaco.

So it was not difficult for Zak Brown, the new chief executive of Alonso’s McLaren team, to suggest something highly unusual – Alonso should skip Monaco on May 28 and run the Indianapol­is 500 on that day instead. Brown knew that Alonso harboured a not-so-secret desire to try his hand at Indy.

“I wanted to do it, but honestly I didn’t think it would be possible for me,” Alonso said in a telephone interview on Sunday from Alabama. “But when Zak suggested Indy instead, there was never a question that I wanted to do it.”

‘I would have blocked it’

But the opportunit­y was only made possible by a recent, important shift in the dynamics of internatio­nal motor sport.

“It only became possible this year,” Alonso said. “It is a unique situation. In F1 this year, I am working with an underperfo­rming car. Winning at Monaco is not possible, but winning at Indianapol­is certainly is. So why not try?”

Until this year, the titans who ruled Formula One for the past 40odd years would not have allowed it. They would have considered it a betrayal in a competitiv­e turf war that has raged between Formula One and IndyCar for decades.

“I would have blocked it,” said Bernie Ecclestone, 86, the chief executive of Formula One until he was pushed out this year in a power struggle with the series’ new ownership.

Also out of the picture now is McLaren’s equally imperious chief executive, Ron Dennis, 69, who was replaced by Brown in the offseason.

“Ron wouldn’t have allowed it,” Ecclestone told reporters at the Bahrain Grand Prix on April 14, two days after Alonso’s Indy 500 venture was announced. “I think I could have persuaded him and McLaren not to go – and I would have.”

When Dennis took control of the team in the early 1980s, he pulled McLaren’s entries at the Indy 500, which the team had won three times in the 1970s.

But Brown, a 56-year-old American, enthusiast­ically fostered the deal that would allow Alonso to drive for Michael Andretti’s team using a McLaren-branded car in the 500.

“I think Zak is a man that has a bigger vision than other team principals or bosses that I’ve had,” Alonso said. “I think he also wants to run Indy for more years than just this one. In the future, I think Zak would like to see McLaren also expand to compete again in the 24-hour race at Le Mans, France.”

For Alonso, who has been despondent this season about McLaren’s lack of pace in Formula One, the Le Mans race also holds great interest.

“My career objectives are very ambitious,” Alonso said. “I intend to win the Triple Crown of the greatest races: Monaco, Indy and Le Mans.”

Le Mans is a dream that Alonso, 35, sees as further down the road – perhaps after his F1 career is over. His focus is now on Indy.

“I know that to win is a lot to ask from a rookie,” he said. “If I don’t win, I will see how I feel afterwards. To see if I enjoyed it, and if I was competitiv­e. But if I want to win the Indy 500, and I feel I can, I’m sure I will want to come back and to keep trying to win.”

‘He deserves a chance’

That the Monaco Grand Pri x, inaugurate­d in 1929, and the Indy 500, which last year celebrated its 100th running, are now held on the same day is only a relatively recent phenomenon.

“It’s only been since 1974 that the Indianapol­is 500 has been scheduled to run on a Sunday like Monaco,” said Donald Davidson, the Indianapol­is Motor Speedway’s historian. “Prior to that, it was a fixture on Memorial Day, which was observed on various days, from Tuesdays to a Saturday.”

Cooperatio­n, though, was far greater in earlier racing eras – in fact, in the 1950s the Indy 500 was actually a points-paying event on the F1 calendar.

So although he would have tried to block Alonso’s dream to run the 500, Ecclestone still wished him well in the endeavour.

“I think it’s probably good for him,” Eccelstone said. “I hate to see him at the back of the grid. He is much too good a driver for that. He deserves a chance to win.”

 ?? ANDREJ ISAKOVIC/AFP ?? Fernando Alonso walks in the pit lane ahead of the Bahrain Grand Prix at the Sakhir circuit in Manama on April 16. The two-time Formula One world champion is to skip this year’s Monaco Grand Prix to race in the Indy 500.
ANDREJ ISAKOVIC/AFP Fernando Alonso walks in the pit lane ahead of the Bahrain Grand Prix at the Sakhir circuit in Manama on April 16. The two-time Formula One world champion is to skip this year’s Monaco Grand Prix to race in the Indy 500.

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