Scottish Daily Mail

He woke up and thought he was back in 1995...

Sportsmail ALONSO SHOWS ALARMING SIGNS OF MEMORY LOSS AFTER 135mph CRASH

- By JONATHAN McEVOY

FERNANDO Alonso ‘ woke up i n 1995’ after his crash in testing at Barelona’s Circuit de Catalunya, according to reports in Spain.

The extent of the double world champion’s memory loss has been revealed in El Pais, a daily newspaper close to Alonso and his management. They reported that when asked who he was, Alonso replied: ‘I’m Fernando, I drive go- karts and I want to be a Formula One driver.’

In 1995, Alonso was a 13-year-old pupil at Holy Guardian Angel school in his home town of Oviedo, northern Spain. When doctors pressed him further Alonso, 33, could not remember his debut with Minardi in 2001 or his world championsh­ips for Renault in 2005 and 2006.

The reports in Spain came 48 hours after Sportsmail revealed concerns that Alonso may have an underlying condition that caused him to crash a week last Sunday, which would throw his future career into doubt.

Despite MRI and CT scans during three nights in hospital in Barcelona and further tests in Oviedo on Monday, there are no assurances from his doctors, management or McLaren team that he will return for the Malaysia Grand Prix on March 29.

He has already been ruled out of the opening race in Melbourne on Sunday week. The concussion he suffered in Barcelona means he cannot be exposed to a second knock to the head, which doctors fear could kill him, regardless of wider questions about his health.

A McLaren spokesman said: ‘As regards Fernando’s medical situation, McLaren will not and indeed should not take the lead, since his medical care is being handled by the people best equipped for that task, namely his doctors.

‘So all we can say is that he is making good progress and that we hope and expect he will soon be back to his brilliant best.’

McLaren staff are not necessaril­y close to Alonso after he left the team in 2007 following a season of infighting, and may not even know their driver’s condition as well as some reporters in Spain.

Confusion has, therefore, surrounded the situation, not least after McLaren chairman Ron Dennis said that Alonso had not been concussed, a misunderst­anding that was corrected by the team’s official statements.

David Coulthard, a f ormer McLaren driver, said: ‘My experience of getting knocked out or having big shunts is that you remember the bit before, the bit after but not the bit in the middle. When you get knocked out it does not come with a warning; it just happens.

‘The brain is a fairly complex bit of kit, so if they are not able to see any brain injury of any sort it seems a bit medically confusing for me, so there is probably more from the story to come out over time. It is unusual for drivers to miss a grand prix over such a thing.’

Whatever the cause, Alonso’s predicamen­t is a blow for McLaren, whose form in testing suggested they are struggling very badly indeed for reliabilit­y and speed.

They signed him on a £28milliona-year contract at the start of their new relationsh­ip with Honda, yet will replace him with Kevin Magnussen, their 22- year- old Danish reserve driver, at Melbourne’s Albert Park.

Gary Hartstein, Formula One’s former chief doctor, has speculated that the most probable reason Alonso might have passed out would be arrhythmia — an irregular heartbeat. If so, he would require a pacemaker.

Another possibilit­y, said Hartstein, would be carotid sinus hypersensi­tivity, whereby pressure on the main artery to the brain causes the heart rate to drop, blood pressure to fall and the sufferer to blackout.

Hartstein told the BBC that this was ‘surprising­ly common’ and not totally unexpected at a fast corner in a Formula One car, such as turn three at Barcelona, where Alonso was travelling at 134mph.

But, then again, he was braking and changing gear as the accident happened, so how is this consist- ent with him passing out? The questions nag.

Alonso will need the FIA’s medical team to give him clearance to race in Malaysia, as well as the go-ahead from his own doctors.

He has been outwardly relaxed about missing the Melbourne race, saying from his father’s house in Oviedo, where he is recovering: ‘A second impact in less than 21 days (the stipulated period of rest) — NO.’

Alonso may have been l ess sanguine if McLaren were quicker, but both team and man will be mightily relieved when he is back, even if it is towards the back of the grid for now.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES/
DPA ?? Dash: Alonso (right) was airlifted to hospital after his crash
GETTY IMAGES/ DPA Dash: Alonso (right) was airlifted to hospital after his crash
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