Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Hamilton details ADUO order as Mercedes and Ferrari get F1 engine help

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Hamilton details ADUO order as Mercedes and Ferrari get F1 engine help

No more naysayers, surely? How Monaco proved Antonelli's searing form wasn't just luck

Feature
Formula 1
Monaco GP
No more naysayers, surely? How Monaco proved Antonelli's searing form wasn't just luck

Alpine requests right of review with FIA over penalties which cost Monaco GP podium

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Alpine requests right of review with FIA over penalties which cost Monaco GP podium

Le Mans 24 Hours: Aston Martin fastest at test day

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Le Mans 24 Hours: Aston Martin fastest at test day

Cadillac loses maiden F1 point as Perez penalised

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Cadillac loses maiden F1 point as Perez penalised

Russell “beyond frustration” after dismal, point-less Monaco GP

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Russell “beyond frustration” after dismal, point-less Monaco GP

Why so many F1 drivers were penalised for pitlane speeding in Monaco GP

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Why so many F1 drivers were penalised for pitlane speeding in Monaco GP

Gasly felt "robbed" of F1 Monaco GP podium as Alpine requests right of review over pitlane speeding

Formula 1
Monaco GP
Gasly felt "robbed" of F1 Monaco GP podium as Alpine requests right of review over pitlane speeding

McLaren F1 team painful to watch in 2015 - Mika Hakkinen

Mika Hakkinen admits it has been "painful" to watch his former team McLaren struggle for performance and reliability in Formula 1 during 2015

McLaren suffered 12 retirements and scored just 27 points as it finished ninth in the constructors' championship ahead of only Manor after embarking on a new partnership with Honda.

Hakkinen, who won the 1998 and 1999 world titles with McLaren, conceded it is a difficult time for McLaren, but he is confident the team will learn from the experience.

"Of course it's painful to watch them because everyone is talking about the failure," said Hakkinen. "It's physiologically demanding.

"If McLaren had a bad season this year, I don't see that as the end of the world.

"It's a big team and there are some great people working there.

"I'm sure with the right positive mentality and thinking, they will get over the problems and they will come back to being successful.

"This is not the end of McLaren. This is the start of McLaren.

"It's a new relationship they have with a new engine manufacturer.

"This is a like a test to see how they can go over the problems together and face the challenges in the future.

"When you learn new things, you make mistakes and those mistakes make you wiser and you can be better."

Hakkinen thinks McLaren's success in the past and its approach to racing will help it turnaround its fortunes.

"When I was racing there, they analysed every details very carefully and that is what makes them great," he said.

"I'm sure with the drivers they have and the experience the team has, they know how to get there.

"When I was there, it took years analysing yourself, working with your team, understanding where are the problems are and how we can win, how we can be better, where we can be better.

"But when the victory arrived we were calm and collected, we had more confidence, we believed in ourselves more than ever."

Previous article F1 is a lose-lose for engine makers
Next article Red Bull believes its criticism of Renault in F1 was fair and honest

Top Comments

Latest news