New Straits Times

McLaren look to virtual world for talent

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WOKING: McLaren’s next Formula One simulator driver could be a man who has never driven a car before, let alone competed on a real racetrack.

The 12-man shortlist for the job includes a Danish doctor who races on an iPad, a 41-year-old French father of two and a 23year-old employee of Britain’s Department of Work and Pensions — who holds only a provisiona­l licence

McLaren, the team of double world champion Fernando Alonso and past greats like Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, are looking to tap talent from virtual racing to go faster in the real world.

The finals of the “World’s Fastest Gamer” competitio­n are playing out at McLaren’s Woking headquarte­rs this week and the winner will get a one-year contract to work in one of the team’s state-of-the-art simulators.

Some, like Dutch 23-year-old Bono Huis who collected a US$200,000 (RM834,000 million) jackpot in January after winning a virtual race between gamers and drivers of the Formula E electric series, are known names.

Others, like Danish doctor Henrik Christian Drue or French dad David Le Garff, are not. And nor is British civil servant Harry Jacks, who has yet to drive a real car.

McLaren say this is a serious search for someone who can become a real asset to a team fighting their way back from troubled times. They also feel the appointmen­t will be good for business.

“We’re very committed to eSports,” says executive director Zak Brown, whose team recently became the first to appoint a director of eSports.

“For our entire marketing department, our technical team, it is another form of motorsport for McLaren. So we’re taking it very seriously. We’re very committed to it,” the American told reporters.

“We’re finding a lot of our partners...want to cross over and are very relevant to the eSport space. So we’re finding a lot of commercial interest in it.”

Formula One launched its own eSport world championsh­ip this year, with the finals scheduled for Abu Dhabi next week, but the McLaren competitio­n is multi-dimensiona­l.

Gamers are subjected to fitness and mental assessment­s as well as racing virtually on a variety of tracks from Indianapol­is to Interlagos.

The McLaren competitio­n has shown also that reality and the virtual world are not so far apart. Formula One drivers Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen would not be surprised to see Britons and Dutch racers making up five of the final 12. Reuters

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