Formula One

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Photo: Alexander Nemenov/AFP (Getty Images)

If you enjoy Formula 1, I highly recommend you take a break from whatever gossip inevitably crops up today and go read one anonymous mechanic’s account on Motorsport.com about how life for crews in the sport has gotten increasingly untenable, particularly over the last 12 months.

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The mechanic’s identity is shielded for obvious reasons. If one thing’s clear from his thoughts, he’s hardly alone. The confluence of F1 repeatedly breaking records for longest-ever seasons year-over-year and the global pandemic has created a situation where teams are railroading the very crews their success or failure depends on. It’s nothing new, as this individual says, but it does appear to be getting worse. It’s also rarely spoken about, though that’s slowly changing.

I don’t want to spoil the piece, because it really should be read in its entirety. Some tidbits are especially alarming though, especially in terms of how COVID has exacerbated already shitty treatment.

Some teams don’t want you to test too early in case that puts you out for qualifying or the race. Instead they prefer for you to wait until as late as you can for your pre-return PCR.

But if there is a problem and the test result doesn’t come back for any reason, then it’s the mechanic who suffers as he has to stay away from home for yet another day to go and get retested.

Also, this part about how, until recently, most teams booked shared rooms for personnel to save money. The so-called pinnacle of motor racing, the big show everyone strives for, forcing the people they need to shave hundredths of seconds off pit stops to bunk together all year long.

On hotel rooms, we did used to have to share rooms, but now a lot of teams have realised that giving everyone single rooms doesn’t really affect their budget too much. And the positive reaction they’re getting from the people due to that is is very beneficial for the teams.

It’s reaching a tipping point, according to this mechanic, as a growing number of people in his position are questioning why they should risk quality of life and even divorce on the road in F1, while other forms of racing present a far more fair balance.

There is a weird scenario where we are almost better off going to work in Formula 2, Formula E or WEC for slightly less money, but do almost half the number of races and not have to put up with all the hassles of a 23-race schedule. It should not be like that.

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Surely some will say — and have said in the comments of the article on Motorsport.com — that being an F1 mechanic is a “privilege” that justifies generally awful working conditions. As it happens, AlphaTauri’s Franz Tost has already said as much.

Others will point to the cost cap and shrug, as if teams and the FIA can’t work out a middle ground where engines are limited but employee well-being isn’t sacrificed. In fact, the existing structure of the cost cap already makes provisions for such matters, as F1 itself proudly highlights:

Further changes have been made since, such as excluding salary costs for staff on maternity and paternity leave as well as sick leave, plus the costs of medical benefits provided to team employees. This is to ensure teams are not motivated to cut costs in these areas to stay within the cap.

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Drivers have their own union, and crews deserve protection too. Liberty Media has displayed absolutely no consideration for a reasonable length to the season as drivers and many fans have vocalized; there’s even been talks of a third race in the U.S., something I’m sure shareholders are foaming at the mouth for. More races, in a sport in which half of them are snoozers anyway when unpredictable weather, track-blocking crashes or controversial officiating don’t play factors.

F1 is reaching a global peak it hasn’t experienced in decades, and is very good at presenting a slick production to the masses that distracts from how badly it’s failing its traveling crews. Hopefully individuals like this mechanic continue to speak out until teams and the sport as a whole can’t distract any longer.


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Photo: Getty Images (Getty Images)

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen won the Formula 1 driver’s championship this year, in a season that will be debated for ages, and also the last one before major rule changes go into effect next season, intended to help level the playing field. One thing is for sure: Red Bull team principal Christian Horner will be there, too, hoping to spoil things for Mercedes again.

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And not just 2022, but until at least 2026, after Horner, who has been with Red Bull since 2005, recently extended his contract off-season, according to MotorSport.com’s sources. Helmut Marko, who also has a hand in running the Red Bull show, was very Helmut Marko about it.

“[Red Bull owner] Dietrich Mateschitz said, ‘Christian who?’ in the beginning as Christian had zero experience in Formula 1. But I already knew him from Formula 3000 and other junior categories and I knew about his ambitions and skills. Now that has developed into something great.

“He is a charismatic team boss who, by the way - even before you [Verstappen] - was in the process of extending his contract until 2026.

“Within the whole team, or at least the top positions, we want to have stability for the transition years coming up, when the new engine regulations come in and when the new chassis regulations come in, so that we have a solid team for that.”

Senior Red Bull sources confirmed to Motorsport.com that Horner’s contract extension has already been signed, committing him to the team for the long-term.

Horner is a proven winner, and this is good news for Red Bull in the long-term, and for Verstappen, who will hope to build on his first title with a second one, or even a third or fourth. It is also good news for fans, because anyone who watches Drive To Survive, or watches the press conferences, or even just the races, has probably picked up on what a good foil Horner is for his chief rival and Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, in that neither of the two are likable in any traditional sense, which only adds to their entertaining nature as competitors.

Horner comes from money but also still comes off as a striver, while Wolff, who doesn’t come from money, comes off like a guy who has always belonged at the top. This is part of what made Verstappen’s win so satisfying, the feeling that the underdog peeled one off, no matter how true or untrue that really is. And maybe it will be over, almost as soon as it started, with Ferrari trying to steal the show next season, but for now, we know for sure that Horner will be in the mix for years to come, scrapping with someone. I can’t wait to watch.

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The Hyatt Regency on the Dubai Corniche
Photo: Hyatt

This weekend Formula One will end their dramatic season with the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at Yas Marina Circuit in the race’s titular emirate. While the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix became the first and so far only Formula One World Championship race in the United Arab Emirates in 2009, it was not the first race to be referred to as a grand prix within its borders.

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The neighboring emirate of Dubai hosted its own grand prix 40 years ago. In October 1981, the Formula One season concluded in Las Vegas with the infamous Caesars Palace Grand Prix. Two months later, there would be a race on the Dubai Corniche around the Hyatt Regency hotel. Despite the name, there’s no relation to the Jeddah Corniche Circuit in Saudi Arabia, just a similar general geographic location.

Yes, the Dubai Grand Prix wasn’t an F1 race. The headline event of the grand prix itself was a sports car race. The race was won by a Lola T70 with Gerry Marshall behind the wheel. The field primarily consisted of British drivers. This was due to the race being organized by Martin Hone, who would later bring the Birmingham Superprix to fruition.

If the spectators weren’t interested in sports cars, the stars in support events were worth the price of admission alone. Stirling Moss, Carroll Shelby, Phil Hill, Dan Gurney, Bruno Giacomelli, Derek Bell, Nigel Mansell and Helmut Marko drove in a Citroën CX all-star race. Giacomelli proved to be the fastest in the Citroën CXs and won the race.

Fans did get to see Formula One machinery out on the track as John Watson in a McLaren MP4/1 and Patrick Tambay in a Theodore TY01 attempted to win $5,000 in a fastest lap contest. Also, Juan Manuel Fangio drove one of the Mercedes-Benz W196s, in which he saw his 1950s success. Unfortunately, Fangio suffered a heart attack during the demo run, requiring the five-time world champion to undergo cardiac bypass surgery.

The 1981 event to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the UAE’s independence would be the only time the Dubai Grand Prix would be run. This month, a vintage motorsport event was held at the Dubai Autodrome to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Dubai Grand Prix and the 50th anniversary of the UAE’s formation. Despite Abu Dhabi’s now-perennial place on the F1 calendar, this 40-year old race still holds significance in Dubai.

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Photo: Formula E

The FIA World Motor Sport Council met in Paris yesterday. Along with approving the 2021-22 race calendar and the replacement of its awful qualifying format, the ABB FIA Formula E World Championship also received approval for a significant change to its race format. The electric single-seater category will no longer reduce the allowed amount of usable energy for each driver relative to the time spent under safety car conditions.

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Instead, Formula E will now increase the timed duration of the 45-minute race as compensation for time spent under both safety car and full course yellow conditions. Referred to as “Extra Time”, this new procedure may draw immediate comparison to stoppage time in soccer (or “allowance for lost time” to use the official term in soccer’s codified rules). “Extra Time” in Formula E will have 45 seconds added to the duration of the race for every minute spent under neutralized conditions. Though, no time will be added during or after the 40th minute of the race.

Motorsport is no stranger to rules lengthening race duration and distance for running under neutralized conditions. For example, the British Touring Car Championship doesn’t count the first three laps of any safety car intervention as race laps during its races. Also, many short tracks across the United States don’t ever count laps under caution as race laps during their events.

While not bluntly stated, the impetus of the regulatory change seems to be obvious, the first race of the 2021 Valencia E-Prix. The race featured multiple safety car periods which resulted in a massive energy reduction, creating a situation where half the field ran out of power. Many outlets including this one used the term “farce” to describe the disastrous race. The new regulations should allow energy management to remain a part of strategy in the series while avoiding any future farces of a similar nature.

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Image: Formula One

The U.S. market is getting a second Formula One Grand Prix next year with the addition of a new street-ish circuit on the grounds of the Miami Dolphins stadium. With Circuit Of The Americas currently still on the 2022 schedule, it looks like F1 fans in America will have an extra reason to get excited for the zoom zoom go fast cars. It seems that Netflix has done a lot to raise the value of F1 in this country, and this might be the first major piece of growth as a result.

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We’ve been following the saga of the Miami Grand Prix for seemingly years now, but the track is actually being built, the whole thing is allegedly funded, and now it’s officially on the F1 calendar for 2022. There was a time when this didn’t seem possible, but here we are just 8 months out from the race, and May 8th is the finalized date. I mean, it’s always possible that the date will get kicked out to some other time, like a James Bond film. And Florida is such a mess right now that it’s totally possible the state descends into chaos over the winter and the green scaly ‘Florida water dogs’ take over the territory as their own.

“There is no doubt in my mind that the Formula 1 community and the sport’s fanbase worldwide are going to be amazed by what they see next May,” said Miami Grand Prix CEO Richard Cregan.

“The circuit construction is progressing in line with expectations, and now that we have our date confirmed with Formula 1, we can rapidly follow up with revealing more of the detail of the experience that will be enjoyed at the trackside which will make this a truly stand-out addition to the calendar.

“This location is already well known for creating unforgettable experiences for events like the Super Bowl and Miami Open. We look forward to embracing an entirely new global sporting occasion.”

The Hard Rock Stadium complex is getting a total exterior revamp to host F1, including some pretty impressive grandstand complexes along the track, and a Middle-East-rivalling VIP complex on the main straight. The track layout looks alright, I suppose. Maybe it’s time to get optimistic about this thing. 


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Photo: Peter Fox (Getty Images)

The Hamilton Commission, started by seven-time Formula 1 champion Lewis Hamilton and co-chaired by Royal Academy of Engineering CEO Dr. Hayaatun Sillem, published a comprehensive report Tuesday detailing the systemic barriers to the involvement of Black people in motorsport, and in engineering fields at large.

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The 93-page report, titled Accelerating Change: Improving Representation of Black People in UK Motorsport was the culmination of 10 months of research, amassing large swaths of data across primary and higher education, as well as within Formula 1 itself. It’s interspersed with accounts from Black students and working engineers, detailing firsthand the institutional forces and attitudes that pushed them away from pursuing their careers. And it makes actionable recommendations on how decision makers in motorsport can generate the diversity they so often claim to encourage. You can read it in full here.

The Commission takes aim at three particular areas that impede inclusivity and representation for Black people in STEM fields: inspiration and engagement; support and empowerment; and accountability and measurement. It’s unfortunately rife with stories of young Black people becoming disillusioned with motorsport upon noticing a distinct lack of employed individuals who look like them. There are also numerous accounts of Black students facing discrimination within the engineering community and overt racism from instructors steering Black students away from STEM-related interests.

One refrain in the report is something heard from hiring personnel across multiple F1 teams over and over again: that ethnicity isn’t relevant to them. They’re simply trying to find the best person for the job. This mindset only dismisses the problem and furthers the institutional racism that impedes minorities from entering these fields. If every team is sourcing talent from the “best” universities, and those universities aren’t interested in supporting a diverse body of students to begin with, the status quo will never change.

And of course, even when Black people make it to the highest level of motorsport — the Commission estimates “the proportion of Black people in Formula 1 to be less than 1 percent” — they inevitably continue to face discrimination. Quaashie, one F1 engineer interviewed in the report, told the following story about his experience developing a GT car, before his time in F1:

“Things got off to a bad start. We were trackside and jokes would be made about Black people; jokes about afro combs and fried chicken, to jokes about crime rates or poverty in Africa, which were inappropriate. I felt powerless. I was the only Black person trackside in my team.”

Quaashie left that program and later joined an F1 team. The culture was better, but still disappointing; the report paraphrases that “there was no emphasis on the team to be inclusive. He approached the marketing manager about doing something to showcase diversity, but it was deemed unnecessary.” Today, he’s thankfully working at a team that he says is much more supportive.

The Commission ultimately makes 10 recommendations, listed on pages 22-24 of the report and quoted below:

We recommend that Formula 1 teams and other motorsport businesses broaden access to motorsport by expanding the apprenticeships provision to include higher apprenticeships and degree apprenticeships as an alternate pathway into the sector, as well as availability to paid work placement and work experience schemes.

We recommend that a new exclusions innovation fund be established, developing programmes that address the factors that contribute to the high proportion of students from Black backgrounds being excluded from schools.

We support the piloting of new approaches to increase the number of Black teachers in STEM subjects that lead to careers in engineering, namely mathematics, physics, design and technology, and computing.

We recommend the creation of targeted support programmes for Black students in post-16 education to enable greater progression into Higher Education courses and work-based training opportunities linked to the motorsport sector.

We support the creation of scholarship programmes to enable Black graduates from degrees in engineering and allied subjects to progress into specialist motorsport roles.

We ask that Formula 1 teams (and other Motorsport organisations) take the lead in implementing a Diversity and Inclusion Charter for motorsport to commit the sector to improve diversity and inclusion across all organisations.

We support the promotion of the National Education Union Anti-Racism Charter for schools, and we call on teachers’ unions and other leadership bodies in education to work with us to ensure widespread adoption of the Charter.

We call on the Department for Education and other bodies holding education data to enable easier public access to disaggregated data on student and staff characteristics at subject level.

We recommend the development of best practice guidance for STEM inspiration and outreach activities to enable inclusive engagement with Black students in schools, and with those who influence them.

We recommend that additional STEM activity support be provided to supplementary schools that are led by Black community groups across the UK.

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Stefano Domenicali, F1’s CEO and president, said he and his colleagues will “reflect on all of the findings.” Domenicali also said that F1 “completely agrees” with the call to increase diversity across the sport, and that F1 will be “announcing more actions in the coming days.”

Let’s hope those actions go a little further than hashtags and “End Racism” t-shirts. But as long as they’re still doing the t-shirt thing, maybe they could apologize to Lewis Hamilton for this whole sad episode?


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Lewis Hamilton recovers from his rough Azerbaijan Grand Prix restart after accidentally pressing his “magic button.”
Photo: Clive Rose (Getty Images)

The Azerbaijan Grand Prix at Baku was a disaster for Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton (and, well, for Mercedes in general). The reigning Formula One World Champion looked set to take the lead at one of the late-race restarts… until he went sailing off the racing line into the run-off zone. Hamilton lost out on his chance to scoop up a crucial win, instead taking home a measly 15th place. It all comes down to a so-called “magic button.”

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(Welcome to Motorsport Explained, the series where we break down racing rules and concepts in easily digestible ways for all the beginners out there. If there’s something you’ve always wondered about or something that has never made sense, leave your topic in the comments or email me at eblackstock [at] jalopnik [dot] com.)

A magic button definitely sounds like the kind of thing that would be banned about as quickly as it was introduced in our modern day, highly regulated motorsport world.

Basically, that magic button offers a little bit of extra help on starts and restarts by taking advantage of hybrid-era rules. So, things are more complicated now than just pressing the brake pedal and having the hydraulic brakes respond. Instead, part of the braking is done by squeezing the brake discs, which offloads kinetic energy as heat and slows the car. The other part of the braking comes when the hybrid system sucks up some of that energy to store in the car’s battery, which in turn slows the car down. It’s the same principle as one-pedal braking in electric cars.

It can be a little complex, so I’ll give you a little visual of how things are done:

Drivers now get to adjust how much braking power comes from the energy harvesting, alongside the more traditional adjustments of wheel-to-wheel brake bias.

The magic button is one way of mapping that brake bias. In this case, it moves the brake bias more toward the front of the car than you’d want for normal racing, and it also completely eliminates energy harvesting, so it’s a front-loaded, mechanical braking situation.

That, in turn, means the front brakes and tires stay within an optimal temperature window, even during safety car periods that would normally cool the brakes and tires. Press the magic button while following a safety car, and it’s almost like you never slowed down from speed.

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You just need to make sure that particular setting is no longer active when you’re, y’know, attempting to turn into a corner. All that frontward brake bias means those brakes are just going to lock up if you hit them too hard, which is generally what’s asked of drivers when they approach a first turn.

Hence what happened in Baku. Hamilton somehow reactivated the magic button (honestly, with all those dials and buttons and knobs, I don’t know how this doesn’t happen more often) just before or during the restart. When he went into the first corner, instead of taking advantage of all that sweet, sweet brake heat, he cooked the discs and slid off the track. Not exactly the ideal situation for someone aiming to defend his championship.

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And that’s also why you’ll see the Mercedes team get shockingly good starts. They have a very ideal combination of settings that allows Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas to shoot ahead of the pack during some of the most crucial milliseconds of a race.

That magic button is also legal, by the way. Drivers adjust brake bias and energy storing at just about every corner of every race track. That’s part of what makes F1 racing so fun and so technical. Implementing a specific button to press that changes the brake bias is totally fine. It just might come with some unintended consequences.

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Photo: EMILIO MORENATTI/POOL/AFP (Getty Images)

I do my best to be kind and share the love amongst my fellow writers, but there are just some times where I have to ask what the hell someone was thinking. So today, we’re going to run through some truly questionable articles about Formula One that have made their rounds on Twitter lately. If you’re thinking about doing the whole writing thing… maybe opt for a slightly different route than these folks.

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Lewis Hamilton’s Freestyle

This is a slightly older article from 2012, but it makes its rounds every so often as a gentle reminder that we aren’t particularly far removed from some incredibly racist notions about Lewis Hamilton. In this article, Autosport editor Mark Hughes imagines what it would be like if Hamilton were to “talk like he tweets,” where he proceeds to draft up a ridiculous freestyle rap-like dialogue between Hamilton and his race engineer.

The article is intended to be funny, I imagine, and probably also a little disparaging toward Hamilton’s use of Black vernacular on social media. Personally, I think Hughes unintentionally made Hamilton sound like a badass in the sense that this driver is just out here coming up with rhymes while also handily driving an F1 car. But you most definitely cannot ignore the fact that Hughes is picking fun at Hamilton for, essentially, being Black. Never a good call.

But Have You Seen The Women?

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Part of me wishes this BusinessF1 story were a joke, because then it might be kind of funny. But I don’t actually think it is. I think this is a legitimate story intended to serve some sort of legitimate purpose. I just can’t imagine what that purpose is.

It starts off with an intro noting that there were no women featured in F1’s Netflix docuseries Drive to Survive. The solution? Why, just show off all the lovely wives and girlfriends in the paddock and have a chat about the drivers’ sex lives, of course!

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This spread spans 16 whole entire pages, during which time it refers to Sergio Perez as a “swordsman,” analyzes teenage girlfriends, hints that several drivers are actually gay, and posits that Finnish drivers Kimi Raikkonen and Valtteri Bottas are divorced because they drink a lot.

But don’t be offended, snowflakes: this story comes with a health warning that reads, “The editor wishes to apologize in advance for this article which some readers may find incompatible with their view of the 21st century.” Thank you for the clarification.

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Actually, Nikita Mazepin Assaulting A Woman Is Good

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That isn’t the only gem BusinessF1 has posted recently. At the start of the year, the publication went out of its way to exonerate Nikita Mazepin for his faults, which mainly get chalked up to an overreaction by cancel culture for a bit of harmless fun.

Basically, the premise here is that Haas F1 overreacted to a video of Mazepin allegedly assaulting a woman in the back of the car by calling that action “abhorrent” but also doing nothing else. The pull-out quote is one of this article’s gems, as it reads, “It was funny, harmless fun, no more no less and the girl thought nothing of posting it on Nikita’s social media sites.” The structure of the sentence somehow implicates the woman in the situation, who didn’t actually have anything to do with whether or not Mazepin posted the video.

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The author also notes that Guenther Steiner’s response should have quite literally been “boys will be boys.”

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Photo: Renault F1 Team

Two-time Formula One World Champion Fernando Alonso is re-joining the grid next year after two seasons away, taking up the Alpine F1 Team seat vacated by Daniel Ricciardo at the end of this season. The Spaniard is wasting no time getting back into the swing of things, as he has already run a slew of test sessions with the Renault team (which will be renamed Alpine next year) in their 2018 car, as well as 1,000 kilometers of “filming day” allowance in the current car. Because of this lack of experience with the current spec, the team was recently given clearance to run Fred in the young driver test at the Abu Dhabi circuit later this month on the Tuesday following the season-ending Grand Prix.

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Alonso left his role in the McLaren team at the end of the 2018 season and has spent that time pretty much just being a lazy bum. All he’s done since then is win the Daytona 24, win Le Mans twice, score an FIA WEC World Championship victory, participate in (and finish) his first Dakar rally, and make two efforts at the Indianapolis 500. Obviously he’s been racing a hell of a lot since leaving F1, but there’s nothing quite like an F1 car to prepare you to drive an F1 car. That’s why he and the team need as much testing time as possible to get back up to speed.

When Alonso starts the 2021 season, it will mark twenty years since his first race with the Minardi team. Technically he’ll be re-joining the sport with a team that he’s raced with on three separate occasions, as the Enstone-based Renault has hired Alonso initially from 2001 as a test driver through his two World Championship seasons in 2005 and 2006. He left for one ahem tumultuous season at McLaren before returning in 2008 and 2009. After five seasons with Ferrari and three more with McLaren, plus two on sabbatical driving whatever he damn well pleases, Alonso is back with the French manufacturer.

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The post-Abu Dhabi test was originally planned to be a run-in with the new 18-inch wheel and tire package from Pirelli, but because that rule change has been pushed back to the 2022 season, the test was swapped out for a new young driver event. Each team is allowed up to two cars to test with their young driver academy participants.

The sporting regulations specifically state that the test is “an optional one-day test, for the sole purpose of providing young drivers with the opportunity to test a current Formula 1 car ,” and goes on to say that nobody with more than two Grands Prix of experience would be allowed to participate. Clearly Alonso is not either of those things.

Despite pushback from McLaren, Racing Point, and Ferrari, the FIA has decided that Alonso and Renault/Alpine would be allowed special dispensation to take part. Allegedly the decision came down from on high, as Jean Todt himself made the choice.

Interestingly, Fernando will also be driving his old 2005 Renault R25 chassis during the Abu Dhabi weekend, which won the teams and drivers championship that year. Obviously this doesn’t gain him or the team anything in terms of setup data for the 2021 car, but it’s a nice warm up for the test the following week, and it’s a nice goodbye to the Renault name, and a nice bridge for the gap between Fernando’s old life and his new one in the sport.

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Photo: Renault F1 Team

And in case anyone wants to ask, yes, I’m still miffed that Alpine didn’t ditch Esteban Ocon in favor of Sergio Perez. A Perez/Alonso combo would have been just *chef’s kiss* perfection. Anyway, welcome back Fernando. I was a fan for his first twenty years in the sport, I suppose I’ll continue to root for him as he enters a third decade in F1.

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Photo: Getty Images (Getty Images)

Lewis Hamilton won a record-tying seventh Formula One title on Sunday after taking home the Turkish Grand Prix. Charles Leclerc was running second until he locked a wheel on the antepenultimate turn and let two cars past. I still am not quite over Leclerc’s subsequent meltdown on the radio.

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You can find video of the mistake at around 5:44 of the highlights on YouTube, which I would embed here except Formula One doesn’t let its YouTube videos play on other websites.

More dramatic than the mistake, though, was Leclerc’s reaction. “You did a good job. Really good job,” someone calmly tells Leclerc after he’s crossed the line. He disagrees.

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The combination of shame, humiliation, and anger in the beginning eventually gives way to through-gritted-teeth congratulations of Vettel, which you get the sense was the real humiliation. Leclerc knows he should have been on that podium; instead it was his teammate, whose ass Leclerc has spent the season kicking. Leclerc is currently fifth in the drivers’ standings; Vettel is 13th.

I remember seeing this clip Sunday and recoiling a bit at the Leclerc’s vulnerability and passion, so late in the season and with the championship race over; when I saw some fresh comments from Vettel about Thursday on Formula1.com, I watched it again and it had the same effect. Here’s what Vettel said:

“Probably irrelevant, to be honest. Turkey is a special place for me because it’s where everything started. It’s probably not where everything ends but still I think, looking back to many many years ago, I think having Charles as a team mate, I often see myself in him as well.

“He’s a lot younger, he’s very quick and I think the fact that - I haven’t had the chance to talk to him yet – but I will tell him later that being on the podium or not actually is a bit irrelevant for him because he has so many years ahead of him and so many podiums to come, which I’m sure of.

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That the podium is irrelevant is easy to say when you are on it; Leclerc’s first chance to make up for everything won’t come until Bahrain on November 29.

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