The Borneo Post

McLaren dump misfiring Honda for Renault

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SINGAPORE: McLaren on Friday said they would drop Honda engines in favour of Renault at the end of this season, ending a troubled partnershi­p with the Japanese manufactur­er as they bid to return to the top of Formula One.

The celebrated British marque announced a three- year deal covering 2018, 2019 and 2020 with France’s Renault, who simultaneo­usly unveiled a split with Toro Rosso – who will now be powered by Honda.

The related moves, which had been widely f lagged, could ultimately herald a shake-up in the pecking order of Formula One, which is currently dominated by Mercedes and Ferrari.

Honda’s exit is likely to convince two - t ime world champion Fernando Alonso, who has repeatedly threatened to quit over the misfiring Honda engines, to stay at McLaren next year.

As part of the deal, Toro Rosso loaned highly rated Spaniard Carlos Sainz to Renault for 2018, where he wi l l partner Nico Hulkenberg – with Britain’s Jolyon Palmer elbowed out.

“Today’s announceme­nt gives us the stability we need to move ahead with our chassis and technical programme for 2018 without any further hesitation,” said McLaren executive director Zak Brown.

Britain’s most successful Formula One team have failed to win a race since 2012 and are a long way from challengin­g Mercedes, Ferrari or Red Bull.

The vexed collaborat­ion with Honda came to a head this month in Italy as Alonso and Stoffel Vandoorne both collected grid penalties and failed to finish.

Vandoorne was penalised before the race after being fitted with a brand- new engine – and still suffered a power failure.

Honda have been a part of Formula One as a constructo­r and engine supplier – on and off – since 1964, but they have struggled with current regulation­s which require a hybrid, part- electric power unit. There was no word from Renault or Red Bull on their future together, following reports that the French manufactur­er will walk away from their partnershi­p after 2018.

Red Bull and Renault have also been at odds over the complex hybrid technology, whose introducti­on in 2014 coincided with the end of their four-year hold on the drivers’ and constructo­rs’ world championsh­ips.

Honda’s best f inish in the constructo­rs’ standings was fourth, in 1967 and 2006, but they powered McLaren and Williams to a string of titles in the late 1980s and early 1990s when Alain Prost and the late Ayrton Senna dominated F1.

The Japanese car-making giant pulled its team out of the sport in 2008 to cut costs to combat the global economic crisis before being saved by a management buy- out led by team principal Ross Brawn.

Since Honda teamed up with McLaren in 2015, the best finish by one of their drivers has been sixth, a woeful sequence that has dealt a serious blow to their reputation.

They will now try their luck with Toro Rosso, Red Bul l’s junior partner who admitted the timing of the announceme­nt, late in the season, was far from ideal. — AFP

 ??  ?? (From left) Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and Renault’s British driver Jolyon Palmer address a press conference ahead of the Formula One Singapore Grand Prix night race. — AFP photo
(From left) Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and Renault’s British driver Jolyon Palmer address a press conference ahead of the Formula One Singapore Grand Prix night race. — AFP photo

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