Motor racing-China will expose McLaren's weakness, says Boullier

LONDON, April 3 (Reuters) - Sunday's Chinese Grand Prix will expose McLaren and Honda's weaknesses more starkly than last month's season-opening race in Australia, according to Formula One team racing director Eric Boullier.

Double world champion Fernando Alonso ran in the top 10 but failed to finish in Melbourne on March 26 while the Spaniard's new Belgian team mate, Stoffel Vandoorne, was 13th but last on the road.

"I can predict that we won't be as fortuitous with our pace, compared to our rivals, as we were in Australia," Boullier said in a team preview.

"The characteristics of the Shanghai International Circuit are very different from Melbourne, and its long, fast straights will likely expose the weaknesses in our package more than Albert Park did."

McLaren and engine partners Honda endured a difficult pre-season with reliability problems limiting their mileage in testing.

The former champions had hoped to take a big step up in 2017, after two years of struggle with Honda in the new V6 turbo hybrid era, but instead are looking likely to go back down the pecking order.

They finished sixth last year after ending 2015 ninth.

While Alonso exceeded expectations in Australia, he has not spared Honda in highlighting the lack of performance compared to rivals with Mercedes, Ferrari and Renault power units.

"We are last in terms of performance," he told reporters in Australia. "In normal conditions on a normal circuit we should be last and second last."

Honda's F1 head, Yusuke Hasegawa, recognised Australia had been tough and agreed with Boullier that another difficult weekend was in store in the second race of the season.

He said, with more than a hint of understatement, that there was "room for improvement when it comes to performance".

"We expect the Chinese Grand Prix to be even more challenging," added Hasegawa. "The race is always a bit of an unknown due to the changeable weather conditions, which affects the set-up and balance of the car.

"The track itself also places a lot of stress on the power unit with its slow- and medium-speed corners, and two very long straights. The key will be preparation and set-up."

Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel leads the standings after winning in Melbourne with Lewis Hamilton second for champions Mercedes. (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Mark Heinrich)

(This story has not been edited by economictimes.com and is auto–generated from a syndicated feed we subscribe to.)
Stay on top of business news with The Economic Times App. Download it Now!
FROM AROUND THE WEB

This boy can't go to school due to his liver!

Milaap

Book your home with a relaxed payment plan

Godrej Properties

13 Hours, a war film, streaming live on Amazon Prime Video

Amazon Prime Video

MORE FROM ECONOMIC TIMES

The Muslim who became Yogi Adityanath's gurubhai

6 interesting things about the new UP CM, Yogi Adityanath

Ask why Lalu cannot contest elections: PM Modi

From Around the WebMore from The Economic Times

Own a Ranches home under 5:80:15 scheme

Mahaveer Group

Feeling thirsty? Order drinks on holachef

HolaChef

ADA summer kurtis, starting from Rs 799

Ada

Best SIP Investment Plans in 2017 to Make You Rich!

FundsIndia

7 secrets that make Marwaris so good in business

I value money because I have seen tough times—Ajinkya Rahane

Actress Kalpana given state funeral, celebrities pay homage

Meet India's next generation of business tycoons