ALONSO ON THE MAJOR MOTORSPORT CATEGORIES
Fernando Alonso returned to Formula 1 after a two-year sabbatical during which he completed something of a motorsport odyssey. The highlights were his pair of Le Mans triumphs as part of a Toyota crew, the World Endurance Championship superseason crown (all alongside Sebastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima), and a 2019 Daytona 24 Hours triumph with Wayne Taylor Racing. And, of course, there were his failed bids to win the Indianapolis 500 and a foray into the Dakar Rally.
When his return with what was then called Renault was announced in July 2020, Alonso made clear that he had been enticed back to F1 by the feeling that Renault/alpine would give him the chance to return to the championship’s highest level, with the rules reset coming in 2022.
That goal is his current sole focus, unlike in 2018 when his opening WEC superseason entries were combined with the final year of his second stint at Mclaren. Alonso suggests he had plenty of options to race in other categories aside from
F1 in 2021, but chose not to.
So, let’s hear modern motorsport’s versatility star explaining precisely why he chose to return to grand prix racing when he did, as well as his thoughts on the categories he left behind…
“Right now, I think, especially after the pandemic, [F1] is the series that is more capable to produce a good show and to produce a good competition. Like, in 2018, when I left, I was very honest with everybody saying that I had better feelings or ideas elsewhere than F1. And I had more attractive challenges in WEC or in Indy or in Dakar than what F1 offered me at that time.
“Now, it is exactly the same point. In 2020, when I made the decision to come back, all the other series were on the table, and I thought that Formula 1 was the best challenge in that moment. And the best competition.
“Even with the pandemic, the teams are still very strong and in good health economically and on performance side to produce fantastic cars and a good show. While some other series, maybe they’ve been more affected by the pandemic and by the sponsorship [loss] and by everything. This is my feeling.
“Obviously Indycar did only one race [Barber, when Alonso was speaking ahead of the Portuguese GP] or two races now with St Petersburg. It felt good and it’s always gonna be a nice championship. But maybe I was more attracted by F1.
“Dakar is still one thing that I can do in the future and has no problem of having more years into other categories.
“And WEC, I think it’s in a transition period at the moment. With the Hypercar, until all the manufacturers [arrive], and they don’t come until 2023, I think it’s in a transition period.
“So, I thought that F1 was the best thing on the table. Like it was not in 2018. But, this is obviously only a personal opinion and a personal motivation that drives you to choose the next challenge.”