The Phnom Penh Post

Alonso eyes Triple Crown after Le Mans win

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FERNANDO Alonso admitted on Sunday that attempting to win the Indy 500 and become just the second man to win motor racing’s Triple Crown would be “very tempting”.

Alonso helped Toyota win their first Le Mans 24 Hour Race on Sunday alongside Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima and Sebastien Buemi.

The Spaniard won the race at his first attempt to give the Japanese manufactur­er, which had at times seemed jinxed, victory at their 20th attempt.

Alonso, a double Formula 1 world champion, was the star turn as he became ame the sixth driver to comomplete the Monaco-Le -Le Mans double after r Ta z i o Nu v o l a r i , Maurice Trintign a n t , B r u c e McLaren, Jochen Rindt and Graham

Hill.

Only Hill also won the Indy 500 for what has become known as the Triple Crown of motor sport, and it is 36-year-old Alonso’s avowed goal now he has slipped down the pack in F1.

“I went [to the Indy 500] last year without any particular objective. We were leading the race, we were close to victory, but we missed the opportunit­y [Alonso retired with engine failure 21 laps from the finish],” said Alonso.

“The Indy 500 is part of the Triple Crown and it it’s s really a very important goal. It’s attractive trying to conquer it and see if you can be an even better and more complete driver.”

Alonso shared the driving at Le Mans in the Toyota No8 and clearly demonstrat­ed his skill and adaptabili­ty as a driver to the 256,900 spectators.

In his first driving stint on Saturday, Alonso made two b r e a t h t a k i n g ov e r t a k i n g manoeuvres to pinch first place from the other Toyota, No7, with Argentine Jose Maria Lopez at the wheel.

Late at night, after Buemi drew a one minute “stop and go” penalty, Alonso took over and sparkl sparkled in the darkness as he closed the gap.

Alonso (p (pictured, AFP)climbed out of his car smiling after that shif shift scarcely showing sig signs of fatigue. “I felt go good at night. I was in th the zone and I pushed t to catch up,” he said.

Nakajima then took the lead and with Mike Conway incurring a stop-and-go penalty for Toyota No7, Alonso’s team was able to pull away finish just over a lap ahead.

Before the race, Buemi who, like Nakajima, had been vainly chasing a Le Mans victory since 2012, said Alonso “was a real plus for the team”.

The last F1 driver to win at Le Mans was Germany’s Nico Hulkenberg with Porsche in 2015, but he only entered one race, while Alonso signed for the entire endurance season and, after winning the first two rounds, is leading the overall standings.

Toyota is the only manufactur­er with a team in the World Endurance Championsh­ips after the withdrawal­s of Audi and Porsche in the last two years.

Their work on reliabilit­y over the winter has paid off with no sign of the mechanical failures that had plagued the team since 2012.

The only Toyota problem this weekend came 90 minutes before the end when Japanese Kamui Kobayashi crawled into the pit at the wheel of the Toyota No7 almost out of fuel.

As the clock ticked past 24 hours, the relief was visible on all the faces of the Toyota crew in the pit and the winning drivers as they completed a victory lap with Alonso and Buemi sitting on the car as Nakajima, who completed the last stint, drove.

The Toyotas finished first and second in the top category, Le Mans Prototype 1, where the competitio­n was eight nonhybrid prototypes run by private teams.

Five of those failed to finish, including the SMP Racing car driven by another former F1 champion Jenson Button failed to finish.

Toyota’s closest challenger­s were the two Rebellion Racing cars which finished 12 laps back.

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