After three years in the doldrums, McLaren driver Fernando Alonso is optimistic that in 2018 his team can challenge for fourth place in the constructors' championship, as the Woking outfit begin their Renault powered era, the manufacturer that took the Spaniard to two Formula 1 titles over a decade ago.
Despite a troubled preseason testing in Barcelona, Alonso is upbeat and told Reuters, “I think we should be optimistic. I think we had some reliability issues in testing but all of them are fixed now and the team did an amazing job in the past two or three weeks to have the car 100 percent for Australia.
“I think being in the points, being close to the top five, I think that will be the best thing we can do to start the season. We need this good result to motivate the team and to keep working for the rest of the season.”
McLaren, dominant in the late 1980s and early 1990s with Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, have not won a race since 2012. The fallen giants’ last title was with Lewis Hamilton, who has won three world championships since at Mercedes, in 2008.
The Honda engine’s struggles with power and reliability led to McLaren announcing the split last September. The striking papaya orange and blue MCL33 is the team’s first to be powered by Renault, whose engines took Red Bull to three race wins last season.
Since crossing to McLaren, Alonso has been stuck on 97 podium finishes, his last with Ferrari at the Hungarian Grand Prix in 2014.
He was bullish about his chances of reaching the milestone 100th podium during the coming season and felt the team should also have big ambitions in the constructors’ championship.
“I think so. I think top four is definitely a target for us and we know that Mercedes is a little bit ahead of everyone and is dominating the sport for the last four years,” said Alonso, who will also race for
Toyota at the Le Mans 24 Hours in June and in the full World Endurance championship.
“And they are the big favourites again to start the new season. But then we have Red Bull, we have Ferrari and definitely McLaren has to the next team on that order.”
With Mercedes having dominated the past four seasons, sweeping both the drivers’ and constructors titles, Alonso agreed that the Silver Arrows’ rivals needed to lift their game to keep fans interested in a series that has been criticised for becoming predictable.
He said, “It’s always important to have some competition in any sport. I think competitions and close fights will attract more people and will make the championship more interesting but I don’t think that’s any problem with Mercedes’ dominance. They did a better job than the others in the last couple of years because they deserve (it)."
“So it’s up to us to improve and to race our game and hopefully beat them very soon. And McLaren is probably one of the teams that can do that in the future, in the near future. And hopefully, that near future is soon and even this year,” added Alonso.