Fernando Alonso on Friday spent more time on the tennis court than driving his ailing McLaren, with his tilt at the Indy 500 looking ever more inviting after another dark day on the Formula One racetrack.
Alonso’s home fans had barely settled in their seats for practice at the Spanish Grand Prix before his car’s Honda engine blew in a mess of smoke and oil. Liquid then poured out of the car as it was tipped up by a recovery crane.
Having failed to start in Russia two weeks ago due to an engine failure on the formation lap, Alonso departed the Barcelona circuit after a few choice words and later posted a picture on Instagram of himself playing tennis.
“The engine was not good enough. We came out of the pit lane and there was a hole in the engine, and the oil was streaming out. It blew up after 400m,” Alonso told reporters after returning for the second 90-minute practice session.
He was last on the time sheets and reported that the engine was even slower.
If the tennis photograph looked like a dig at Honda, accompanied with the seemingly sarcastic comment “keeping the body active,” he said that had not been his intention.
“I have very little time in these weeks, with traveling, with planes,” said the 35-year-old, who will go straight from Barcelona to Indianapolis tonight to prepare for his debut in the Indy 500 on May 28.
“So when I discovered that I had two hours free, instead of being on the sofa and watching television, I went for some training. My dedication is still 100 percent to my fitness and my preparation,” he said. “It wasn’t humor to go outside the circuit to play tennis, it was preparation. People got it wrong. I went out to have some fun and escape the circuit.”
McLaren, the second-most successful team in Formula One history in terms of race wins, have yet to score a point in four rounds of this year’s championship and are last in the standings.
Meanwhile, Honda’s Formula One reputation, after two seasons of unreliability and poor performance, is being dragged deeper into the mud.
Alonso is out of contract at the end of the season and has said his future whereabouts would depend on who could offer him a winning car.
“It’s not my reputation, it’s theirs [Honda’s] — and it’s their money, and their image,” he said. “I try to drive as fast as I can, but it’s a much bigger problem for them.”
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