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I don't know @prisonermonkeys , maybe they look for another challenge and they are getting tired of F1?
I don't know @prisonermonkeys , maybe they look for another challenge and they are getting tired of F1?
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Well wellRead into it what you want / or not
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Why would Ferrari repeatedly make a grand song and dance about their place in Formula 1 and then quit to make a political statement and join a series that only has a short-term future guaranteed?
Why would Ferrari repeatedly make a grand song and dance about their place in Formula 1 and then quit to make a political statement and join a series that only has a short-term future guaranteed?
Ferrari's Fernando Alonso wants to race at the Le Mans endurance classic after ending his Formula 1 career.
The Spanish double world champion, 32, waved the flag to start the Le Mans 24 Hours last weekend and said it had firmed up a plan to race there he already had in mind.
"To win the Le Mans 24 Hours means a lot to any driver, so one day hopefully I will race there," he said.
"I think I will - that's 100% decided. But I need to wait until I finish F1."
Alonso re-iterated that he wanted to win at least one more title before stopping F1.
"Le Mans requires some test, some training and some dedication," Alonso said. "I am a person who if I decide to do something I do it 100%; I don't do it 50-50.
"So first I will try to do some more years in F1, try to win championships, try to help Ferrari but after that I won't be able to sit on the sofa, and endurance is a category you can race when you are a little bit older with no big problems. That will be my intention."
Former grand prix driver Mark Webber, a friend of Alonso's, quit F1 at the end of last season to move to endurance racing with Porsche.
He raced at Le Mans 24 Hours last weekend, and the Porsche 919 Hybrid he shared with Timo Bernhard and Brendon Hartley led in the closing stages of the race before engine problems ended their hopes late on.
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Former Red Bull driver Mark Webber, who retired from F1 last season, competed in the Le Mans 24 Hours endurance race last weekend.
Alonso said that he could make the move with Ferrari, whose president Luca Di Montezemolo is considering entering the company into the top sports-prototype class, where Le Mans winners Audi, Porsche and Toyota currently compete.
Ferrari won a lower category with its 458 car last weekend, with ex-F1 driver Giancarlo Fisichella among its driver line-up.
"We have talked many times with president Montezemolo about this matter because he is very passionate about the Le Mans," he said.
"He enjoyed very much the win of the 458 with Fisichella, with Gianmaria Bruni this year, and I know there is some thinking about coming back with a big car.
"It is not in the short term because now we need to put in place the F1 project and we need to win here."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/formula1/27930836
Quoted from BBC Sport F1 website. Seems the plot is thickening somewhat.
I don't think that's quite where I see the thickening.
What's the news, that once a driver leaves F1 he wants to continue in a world-level series? Or do you see this as somehow related to the current "plot"? You think that if Ferrari DID leave F1 then Alonso would too?
Definitely some thickening in your rather wide-of-the-mark assumptions, methinks.
No, more of a misused phrase on my part. Just seems now that Alonso himself has hinted that Ferrari may join Le Mans at some point in the near future like he himdelf intends to.
I think it's kind of a criticism-by-proxy. People want Ferrari to leave Formula 1 because that will be a justification of the criticisms of the sport. Their departure would then lead to the FIA moving heaven and earth to keep Ferrari, with the easiest way forward being to amend the rules to be something Ferrari would approve of.What's the news, that once a driver leaves F1 he wants to continue in a world-level series? Or do you see this as somehow related to the current "plot"? You think that if Ferrari DID leave F1 then Alonso would too?
Well, first of, I highly doubt that Ferrari is actually willing to drop their F1 programme. From what little digging I did, it seems that they already get prefential treatment over other teams, larger shares of the money involved and so on. Ferrari's making a lot of noise right now because they're not doing too well in F1. The regulations don't seem to suite Ferrari that well - my impression is that they'll try to pressure the FIA to change the regulations to something more... Preferable.
And personally, I don't really care if Ferrari joins LMP1 racing. I don't even want them to, to be perfectly honest. I could imagine a lot of bickering and bitching on their part if things don't go their way from the start.