Bangkok Post

McLaren hint at Indy return

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Fernando Alonso’s Indy 500 adventure could herald McLaren’s return to IndyCar racing and kick start talk about bringing Formula One back to the Brickyard, McLaren executive director Zak Brown said on Wednesday.

What was widely viewed as a one-off by Spaniard Alonso and his McLaren Formula One team could result in something far more substantia­l following what has been an upbeat homecoming to IndyCar following a 38-year absence.

With McLaren sputtering along at the back of the F1 grid, the team gave Alonso permission to skip the Monaco Grand Prix to race in the Indianapol­is 500 and he has set the motor racing world buzzing by qualifying fifth fastest for Sunday’s showcase.

The excitement has not been lost on Alonso’s McLaren bosses and Brown, in particular, who will be the busiest man in motor sport this weekend flying back and forth between Monaco and Indianapol­is for two of racing’s biggest events.

“North America is a very i mportant, market for us,” Brown told reporters. “We’re a racing team, but also have other businesses.

“Our criteria for competing outside of Formula One is that it has to be commercial­ly viable, we have to feel we can be competitiv­e, it fits our brand, and it doesn’t detract from our Formula One efforts. “Indy 500 and IndyCar tick those boxes. “It [IndyCar] is something that we’re definitely going to discuss and [we] have met with IndyCar, and are certainly interested in competing in some way, shape or form in the not-too-distant future.”

The return of McLaren, the second most successful team after Ferrari in the history of Formula One in terms of wins and titles, to the IndyCar paddock would be a huge boost of prestige to the struggling series that has been dominated by three teams — Penske Racing, Chip Ganassi Racing and Andretti Autosport.

McLaren is no stranger to the Indy scene, even though it has been 38 years since they last contested the 500 and 41 years since they last found Victory Lane.

The team have a different hue under American executive Brown while the sport has new American owners in Liberty Media with plans to expand in the US. Brown, a former racer who lived and worked in Indianapol­is, believes F1’s return to IMS (Indianapol­is Motor Speedway) is a no-brainer.

Promoted as “The Racing Capital of the World”, Indianapol­is has had a rocky relationsh­ip with Formula one.

The US Grand Prix was run at the Speedway from 2000-2007 until ending its relationsh­ip after a dispute with former F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone over money.

“I think it makes sense for F1 to be at the world’s greatest racetrack,” said Brown. “I realise it may not have the glamour of some of the other markets that are being spoken about, but it’s here, it’s ready to go.”

 ?? EPA ?? Fernando Alonso waits to start his qualifying run on Pole Day in Indianapol­is.
EPA Fernando Alonso waits to start his qualifying run on Pole Day in Indianapol­is.

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