Daily Dispatch

Palmer debunks victory talk

- By ALAN BALDWIN

JOLYON Palmer needs no reality check ahead of his second Formula One season, but the Renault driver might be wondering about some of his friends.

The 26-year-old Briton indicated at the launch of his team’s 2017 car on Tuesday that their imaginatio­ns had been running wild over the winter break ahead of a season with big rule changes.

“Some of my mates have been saying ‘Imagine if you can do a Brawn’,” he told reporters, referring to compatriot Jenson Button’s 2009 world championsh­ip success with rank outsiders Brawn GP.

Former champions Renault finished ninth overall last season, with Palmer securing one point from his 21 races.

The new cars are expected to lap significan­tly faster on fatter tyres, and Renault are confident that their power unit has also made big gains on last year.

With more staff on board and greater resources, they are targeting fifth place overall and maybe even a podium if circumstan­ces play into their hands. But any talk of dethroning champions Mercedes would be dismissed as the ramblings of a madman.

With every rule change, however, there is the chance of a team discoverin­g something truly innovative that gives them an immediate advantage, just as Brawn did with their 2009 aerodynami­c trickery.

“It is a completely blank set of regulation­s. We have no idea what anyone else is doing, they don’t know what we are doing,” said Palmer.

“We will hit the track in Barcelona [at the first pre-season test next week] and see some sort of form guide, I guess. But compared to the last few years, it is a real chance for someone to upset the formbook.

“Early on I think there will be a chance if someone really gets the race right to make a big jump.”

A downside of the more aggressive and quicker cars is that drivers face tougher physical demands as they experience greater G-forces in cornering.

That means bulking up, putting on some muscle and strengthen­ing the neck. Palmer has put on three to four kilos compared with last season, most of it on the upper body.

For once, he could enjoy the “full works” at Christmas dinner.

The season starts in Melbourne on March 26. — Reuters

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