Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton Spygate's Fallout Boys

Sam Stevens by Correspondent Written on October 01, 2007
Open-uri

The second in a two-part series. Don't miss Part 1 of Sam's Spygate analysis.

This season's battle for supremacy on the F1 track has produced one of the most exciting championship chases in recent memory.

However, not all has been plain sailing—and much of the controversy can be attributed to the media.

In fact, the press may well have ruined this year's title competition by sullying the back pages with team politics and driver squabblings—instead of focusing on more compelling storylines.

To wit:

The efforts of Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen to fill Michael Schumacher's shoes at Ferrari?

Unmentioned.

The emergence of BMW Sauber as a real force in Formula One?

Overlooked.

A magnificent season for 22-year old McLaren rookie-cum-prodigy Lewis Hamilton?

Overshadowed.

You see, the real "news" appears to be the in-fighting at McLaren—at least if you believe what you read in the papers.

In one corner is Hamilton, McLaren's favorite son, who sits in his pram playing with his expensive toy and goes crying to his adopted father, team principal Ron Dennis, whenever the ever-so-nasty Fernando Alonso scratches his eyes or pulls his hair.

Alonso, on the other hand, is stuck with a toy that was supposed to be the best one on the market—but has been slowly dissembled throughout the season. The result has been a breakdown in relations with boss.

Therein lies the nut of this outrageously childish off-track rivalry.

Alonso came to McLaren with the idea that he would be the top driver. Not a totally unreasonable request when you consider that he came in on a very expensive contract, swapping two world titles with Renault for an anything-but-guaranteed title shot with a struggling team.

Or so we would have thought.

Hamilton has always been Ron Dennis' baby. Dennis meant to bring Hamilton along as a protégé after his success in GP2 in 2006, allowing him to learn the ropes as a backup driver for Alonso.

It hasn't quite turned out that way.

To everybody's amazement, and to Hamilton's credit, the rookie started the season in magnificent form, better even than the man ahead of him. Where Alonso sputtered, Hamilton flourished—and he hasn't looked back since.

Hamilton has impressed F1 observers all over the world with his speed, bravery, aggression, skill, and confidence. He may well become the first British world champion in 11 years—truly remarkable.

Of course, there's more to the story.

Alonso has blamed everyone but himself for his subpar performance on the track. He may feel, possibly rightly, that he was brought to McLaren under false pretenses. But perhaps he should have seen it coming. Given Dennis' fondness for Hamilton, Alonso was never going to get the preferential treatment he wanted—and perhaps needed.

Single Page
(0)
...
Share This  
Crop_45x45
or to post this comment

0 Comments

There are no comments yet. Get the conversation started by leaving the first comment

Loading more comments...
posted just now
  • Loading...
  • Nobody has liked this comment yet
Cancel

This comment and all replies have been deleted This comment has been deleted Undo delete

1,749
reads

0
comments

written on October 01, 2007 Sports

The best newsletter on the web

Subscribe Now

We will never share your email address


CBS Sports Official Partner
Certain photos copyright © 2009 by Getty Images.
Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of Getty Images is strictly prohibited.