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Formula 1 Italian GP

Alonso: Aston Martin struggling to beat Williams and Haas is not acceptable

Alonso is concerned that Aston Martin is falling back in F1's pecking order

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin F1 Team, on the grid

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin F1 Team, on the grid

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

Fernando Alonso has lamented Aston Martin’s position in the Formula 1 pecking order with the team struggling to keep the upper hand on its midfield rivals.

The Silverstone-based outfit was the fifth-fastest team in the first part of the season but the AMR24’s upgrades have not delivered the expected performance gains so far.

While at least one Aston reached Q3 in each of the first seven qualifying sessions of the season (including sprint qualifying), it happened just five times in the next 12 - Alonso and team-mate Lance Stroll qualifying 11th and 17th for the Italian Grand Prix last weekend.

In terms of Sunday results, Aston scored 42 points in the first six rounds, 26 in the next six but just six in the latest four.

While the top four teams were out of reach again, two-time F1 world champion Alonso finished just outside the points in Italy, two-tenths away from a penalised Kevin Magnussen and just over one second off ninth-placed Alex Albon, conceding he feels somewhat powerless trying to get the best out of a midfield car.

"Nothing we can do, we are in our team's hands and I think Lance and myself, we’re trying to do the best we can every weekend," said Alonso.

Valtteri Bottas, Stake F1 Team KICK Sauber C44 fights Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24 out of the pit lane

Valtteri Bottas, Stake F1 Team KICK Sauber C44 fights Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24 out of the pit lane

Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images

"One inspired weekend, like this one from my side, I know it's going to be 'completely anonymous Monza 2024 from Alonso'.

“But I think this year we've been – Lance and myself – very close, and [in Monza] it was one of those weekends that I was a little bit better and I was happy with the car and pushing to the level that maybe was beyond 100% and that was P11, so disappointed on that.

"We need to be patient. We need to understand that the big target is 2026. But at the same time, I think as a team, we could accept not being in the top four battle - they are top teams and they are well in front of us. But now to be behind Williams, behind Haas, behind [RB], I think we need to raise the bar a little bit. We need to get better.”

On his Italian Grand Prix, he added: “We got lucky with the start – very good start, we overtook Nico [Hulkenberg] and then we were running 10th, close to Alex.

"We kept the pace surprisingly with the Williams, so happy with that and then we undercut him, so we were running ninth for the majority of the race [actually fewer than 10 laps].

“We opted for two stops – we could not make it on one with our tyre degradation. It is very painful to lose the points because I think we deserve it, in a way, with a well-executed race. But the car is what it is at the moment, and we need to get better.”

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24, leads Daniel Ricciardo, VCARB 01

Fernando Alonso, Aston Martin AMR24, leads Daniel Ricciardo, VCARB 01

Photo by: Sam Bloxham / Motorsport Images

Alonso doesn’t expect Aston’s performance to get significantly better in the near future, but he will eagerly wait for the AMR24’s next updates.

“[As long as] we don't have an upgrade on the car, this is what it is and this is not good enough,” he insisted. “Not good enough in Monza. Not good in Zandvoort, in Spa, in Hungary.

"So I don't think there's going to be a big change in Baku, Singapore or Austin unless we bring new parts. That's the plan.”

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