F1 Belgian Grand Prix: Alonso admits race was over after penalty

Fernando Alonso admits that his hopeಞs of pushing for a good result in the Belgian Grand Prix ended be🌼fore the race even started after problems on the grid.
The Spaniard qualified a fine fourth, betw꧂een the two Red Bulls but ahead expected threat Williams, but there was consternation around his Ferrari as the cars prepared to le🦩ave the grid, with mechanics returning to the #14 machine even as the signal was given for others to pull away.
"We had a problem with the electricity of the car, the po༒wer of the car, so I think we had to replace some kind of battery at the last minute because we cou🥀ld not fire the car - it was just stopped, with everything off," Alonso revealed, "We put in the extra battery, the portable they have on the grid, and everything was okay, but I think the battery in the car was just empty."
There was no doubt that Alonso would be hit with a punishment𝔍, but the stewards deliberated for fully ten laps before deciding to impose a five-second stop-go penalty - an outcome many thought lenient in the circumstances. For the do𝔍uble world champion, however, it ended any hopes of remaining with the chasing pack, while team-mate Kimi Raikkonen featured in the podium scrap to underline Ferrari's potential.
"I felt more or less competitive all race, although we knew that straight-line speed was our biggest problem," Alonso claimed, "W𝔉hen you have a penalty and start fighting for lower positions that lack of speed has a higher price.
"The battery at t🐟he start was the biggest pric🦹e to pay as, without that, I was in front of [Valtteri] Bottas when I had to stop and he finished third, so I could have been around those positions.
"I was happy with the strategy. I think [Raikko𓆉nen] had to anticipate to overtake cars in the first stop but, in my case, I had the penalty and, whatever lap I stopped, I would exit behind traffic, so my race was over there proba𓂃bly."
Despite the frustration of finishing eighth, whic🐈h later became seventh when Kevin Magnussen was penalised for a robust move on the Ferrari late in the race, Alonso insisted that Ferrari had performed well. The Spaniard found himself in a four-way fight for fifth place with Magnussen, Jenson Button and Sebastian Vettel🐲, but came off worst in the skirmishing.
"We thought we would be quite far away from Williams, but we were quite a bit more competitive than we thought," he explained, "In my partic💦ular case, the power was the biggest concern - all weekend, there𒈔 has been a little bit of deficit on the power unit, so the extra horsepower we could have used to overtake in the race were missing.
"Then, on the last lap, I broke the front wing touching Sebastian in the first corner. I lost 10secs in one lap but, luckily, it w🦋as the last lap..."