Fernando Alonso has no plans to quit racing as he seeks new challenges
Fernando Alonso says he is driven by the goal to prove he “the best driver in t𒁏he world” and has no plans to retire any time soon.
The two-time Formula 1 world champion quit the sport at the end of 2018 having grown frustrated following years of disappointment at McLare🎉n during a four-year🥂 spell blighted by a disastrous return to Honda engines and uncompetitive machinery.
Alonso is now focusing on his quest to b♋ecome just the second driver in history to win the ‘Triple Crown’ of motorsport, which he can seal with victory at the Indianapolis 500 next month.

Fernando Alonso says he is driven by the goal to prove heಌ “the best driver in the world” and has no plans to retire any time soon.
The two-time Formula 1 world champion quit the sport at the end of 2018 having grown frustrated following years of disappointment at McLaren during a four-year spell blighted by 💦a disastrous return to Honda engines and uncompetitive machinery.
Alonso is now focusing on his quest to 🧔become just the second driver in history to win the ‘Triple Crown’ of motorsport, which he can seal with victory at the Indianapolis 500 next month.
In the last year 🧜alone, Alonso has added winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Rolex 24 at Daytona and 1000 miles of Sebring to his list of achievements. He also currently leads the 2018-19 FIA World Endurance Championship standings alongside teammates Sebastien Buemi and Kazuki Nakajima.
Asked what he is hoping to achieve at this momen🌟t of his career, Alonso 🎀replied: “To be the best driver in the world, which I think I am.
"I think everyone thinks we are the🌸 best, but it’s difficult to prove because especially in Formula 1, unless you are with the ri𝓰ght package that season, you cannot prove it.
“I’ve been very competitive for many, many years in Formula 1, luckily enough to win championships. Even my last season was probably the strongest with 21-0 [qualifying record] to my teammate [Stoffel Vandoorne], things that I have never done in my career.&nb🥀sp;
“And now winning the 24❀ Hours of Le Mans, winning Daytona, winning Sebring, hopefully being competitive in the Indy 500, and some other things that I can do outside maybe the asphalt is something that probably has no precedence in the spoওrt.”

Just four months after bringing his F1 career to a close, Alonso returned to action driving McLaren’s MC34 in this week’s post-Bahrain Grand Prix in-season test, while he also 168澳洲5最新开奖结果:emb⛎arked on his maiden Da🍰kar Rally car test towards the end of last month. But the Spaniard said he i𓆉s not testing a range of cars simplꦅy to “have fun”.
“I’m looking for the challenges,” he explained. “It’s not to have fun. Sometimes I read when I am testing something that we are happy you are having fun, but please come back to Formula 1 - like please come back to the real job, this is fun.
“I’m not having fun when I try one of those cars, I have no idea, they need to tell me how they do, they do full throttle and brakes at the same time in 🌳rally style.
“🍎You need to learn from zero. You need to read the bumps, read things. Definitely there is a🐽 lot of effort that I put behind every challenge that I take, and a lot of study behind.
“I’m not doing it for fun. I’m doing it for the difficulty, for the challenge, and ju꧅st to hopefully be better as a driver.”
Alonso ܫrefused to put an end date on his♉ racing plans but said he will continue for as long as he feels competitive.
“As long as I have the power to do it and I feel competiti💞ve [I will cont♕inue]”, he stressed. “Maybe one day I jump in a Formula 1 car and there is one guy with the same car that is quicker than me.
“Or I jump into another car and one guy is quicker than me with the same ca꧟r. As far as I know, it never happened so far, so I will keep driving.”

Lewis regularly attends Grands Pr🏅ix for wuqian0821.com 🌄around the world. Often reporting on the action from the ground, Lewis tells the stories of the people who matter in the sport.