Alonso out to win Rolex 24
Alonso in the #10 Cadillac is out to win the Rolex 24 |
Fernando Alonso has made it clear that he is contesting this year’s Rolex Daytona 24 Hours to win, unlike last year when his debut was a fact-finding mission in prep for the bigger 24 Hours of LeMans.
This year Alonso lines up with multiple champions Wayne Taylor Racing driving the #10 Minolta Cadillac with Jordan Taylor, Renger van der Zande and his Toyota WEC teammate Kamui Kobayashi.
Speaking during the Roar Before the 24 at the banked race circuit in Florida, Alonso told reporters, “The expectation is higher, but we will see at the end. I think I’m in a much better position this time than last year."
“This year I take all the experience and learning from last year – traffic management, fuel saving, how the US safety cars work – it’s all going to be useful. Let’s say that changes the approach of the race. Last year was about preparation for Le Mans. This year is now about winning."
“[It] was my first endurance race of my life, my first closed-cockpit experience, and now I’m ready to enjoy it a little bit more. So far it’s been great, the target this year is definitely to be a bit more competitive on the trackside. I’m happy that we can be in a good position.
“I was confident about racing here last year, but the environment in this team, the success they’ve had in the past, how professional they are, and how they approach every session, that makes me more confident."
“I’m in a more competitive environment this year with this team. I know how 24-hour races work, and how difficult it is to predict what will happen. So we need to be calm and execute the race in the best way we can," added the two times F1 World Champion who quit McLaren at the end of last season.
Team chief Wayne Taylor scored a coup when he managed to sign Alonso for this year’s race, but he explained how it nearly did not happen, “Last year Zak Brown introduced me to Fernando, obviously I knew who he was, and we didn’t really discuss anything after that but a couple of weeks after that I phoned back and asked if he’d be available.
“That took about another three months before we could talk again because they were in the middle of their season. All of sudden it started to come together, then it went away again."
“I had to get a third driver, so the crew looked through all the WEC and all sportscar racing, not only to look at who was fast over one lap but over long periods of time, and clearly that person was Kamui Kobayashi."
“I’d never met him in my life before, didn’t know him at all, but I rang him and suddenly realised it was 2am where he was, so I put the phone down. I thought I was going to wake him up, but he calls straight back – and I say would you be interested in driving for me and he says ‘yes’, and that contract basically happened overnight!"
“And then through McLaren and Zak, there were some issues and it looked like we wouldn’t be able to get him, all very disappointing, and then I get a text asking ‘is there still a seat for him?’ And I said ‘there’s always a seat for him’. We quickly made a deal, through Zak, McLaren and Fernando," revealed Taylor.