Hawke's Bay Today

Alonso expected to shine at Aston Martin

Sargeant hoping to command after F2 success earns move to Williams

- Don Kennedy Formula One

When the Formula One season finished in Abu Dhabi, it was time to say goodbye to Sebastian Vettel, Nicholas Latifi, Mick Schumacher and Daniel Ricciardo from the 2023 grid. Vettel had announced his retirement in July this year, having raced in F1 since 2007.

Vettel’s last two seasons were spent with Aston Martin after he was told by Ferrari halfway through the 2020 Covid-restricted season that his contract wouldn’t be renewed. Ferrari finished sixth in the championsh­ip that year, and Vettel only scored 33 points to finish 13th in the driver’s championsh­ip, whereas his much younger teammate, Charles Leclerc, was eighth, scoring 98 points. Vettel hoped that joining Aston Martin would revive his flagging career, but it hasn’t worked out that way.

He finished 12th in the championsh­ip last year, and repeated that placing this season, although he did miss the first two races due to Covid. He seemed to find his mojo again as the season was coming to an end, but as soon as he told Aston Martin he was retiring, the team quickly announced he would be replaced for 2023 by Alpine driver Fernando Alonso. Despite being the oldest driver on the grid by some four years at 41, Alonso has proved that if his car keeps going, he is competitiv­e, and he is expected to flourish at Aston Martin.

Alonso finished the championsh­ip in ninth place, one place and 11 points behind teammate Esteban Ocon. But the latter only had two DNF’s whereas Alonso had five, including the last race in Abu Dhabi, and two other races in which he didn’t finish but was classified. He calculated that he lost at least 70 points through unreliabil­ity.

“It’s a little bit sad to finish like that,” Alonso said in Abu Dhabi. “Even though it’s a goodbye to this team after the weekend, I will always think of Alpine with good memories. I spent nine years of my life with this team and won two championsh­ips in the past with Renault, so I wish them well for the future.”

Hamilton also retired from that race, and for the first time in 16 seasons in F1, he hasn’t had a race victory.

“Ultimately, I think we started with a car that we didn’t want, and we finished with a car that we didn’t want, but we were basically stuck with it,” Hamilton lamented. “I hope that the struggles this year really provide us with the tools and the strength to fight for many more championsh­ips moving forward.”

Canadian driver Nicholas Latifi has been replaced at Williams by American Logan Sargeant. Latifi had three seasons with Williams, and a best finish of seventh in Hungary in 2021. He will be remembered more for the money he brought to the team than the meagre nine points scored in three years. Sargeant was announced as Williams’ driver by team principal Jost Capito at the USGP in Austin, subject to him securing enough Super Licence points. That objective was achieved in the F2 race in Abu Dhabi, but he has since revealed he was not told he was in the running for the Williams seat until post-Monza.

“To be honest, I was kind of kept out of the loop on that,” Sargeant said. “I think that was done between my managers and Williams. ”

So, how does he think he will go in 2023?

“I feel like as long as I prepare the best I can physically and mentally, put my time in at the factory in Grove and I do everything I possibly can to be the best driver I can be, I have to live with that. Hopefully, that is good enough to stay in F1 for a long time.”

For Mick Schumacher, two seasons with Haas has seen his F1 career seemingly come to a halt, although like Ricciardo, who will be Red Bull’s third driver in 2023, there could be an F1 lifeline for

Schumacher at Mercedes as a reserve driver.

Schumacher was asked about his relationsh­ip with Haas boss Guenther Steiner.

“Well, I mean, we actually have an okay relationsh­ip and I think it will stay that way,” Schumacher told Motorsport.com.

“I had Sebastian’s backing. We tried to work through all the points there were to improve, and I think if we compare with the beginning of the year, we really kept the trend going. Especially the race pace was very positive, and then the qualifying pace improved as well. But it wasn’t enough, apparently.”

One reason put forward for Schumacher losing the drive was the number of expensive crashes he had, such as the one in Monaco — whereas Sky Sports commentato­r Martin Brundle has a different theory.

“I think Haas was just fed up with the environmen­t of Mick Schumacher and all the outside pressure,” Brundle suggests, referring to former F1 driver Ralf Schumacher, who is Michael’s brother and thus Mick’s uncle.

Brundle is also not surprised that it is Nico Hu¨lkenberg who will replace Mick at Haas.

“At Haas, they are betting on experience and self-assurance rather than youth, because that path did not work for them.”

Hu¨lkenberg is 35 years old and last had a full-time F1 drive in 2019, with Renault, but was replaced for 2020 by Ocon. He has experience,

with 181 starts, but also has the dubious record of the most F1 starts without being on the podium, and the most career points without a race win. So, how did Hu¨lkenberg’s return to F1, after being a Super-sub for three seasons, come about?

“I think the last month it got more and more concrete and serious and I was getting more optimistic, confident that we can agree [on] a deal,” the former Williams, Sauber, Force India and Renault driver said.

“It was good for me to have time away to digest, to reflect on some things, [and] change [my] perspectiv­e a little bit, too. Sometimes it’s difficult when you have to watch when you’re on the sidelines. This year, watching got a little harder, especially when you analyse and you see and you think you can do better in places, so I started the return project.”

He will return to partner Kevin Magnussen. In 2017, at the Hungarian GP, Hu¨lkenberg remonstrat­ed with Magnussen as he was being interviewe­d by Sky TV in the media pen, accusing him of lacking sportsmans­hip on the track. So, how are the two likely to get on as teammates?

It won’t be an issue, Hu¨lkenberg suggests, because when he replaced Vettel at Aston Martin for the first two races this year, they sorted out any lasting acrimony.

“I expect to have a good relationsh­ip,” Hu¨lkenberg says. “We’ve, I think, cleared that incident, and we’ve broken the ice at the beginning of this year. I said hello to him with his exact same words from ’17. He felt that was quite funny and amusing.

“I have absolutely no worries working and racing alongside him. I think we are both grown-up adults, we respect each other, and we’ll race for the team, so no problems whatsoever.”

The other pairing F1 will watch with interest in 2023 will be the two French drivers, Ocon and Pierre Gasly, teamed together at Alpine, who have some acrimoniou­s history as rivals. If you want to be world champion, they say first you have to beat your teammate.

For the top three teams, Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes, there are no changes to the driver lineup for 2023.

 ?? Photos / Don Kennedy ?? American Logan Sargeant will race Williams in 2023 after success in F2.
Photos / Don Kennedy American Logan Sargeant will race Williams in 2023 after success in F2.
 ?? ?? Return of The Hulk: ‘Super-Sub’ Nico Hu¨lkenberg swaggers back to F1 with Haas.
Return of The Hulk: ‘Super-Sub’ Nico Hu¨lkenberg swaggers back to F1 with Haas.

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