McLaren-Honda’s had a triumphant few weeks. Driver Fernando Alonso at the Azerbaijan Grand Prix in June after a mere eight races of going scoreless, and he even . Things are looking up.
But so are Honda’s goals at , which, unfortunately, is just . The team, blinded by its newfound ability to occasionally finish a race or , decided it wants to overtake Renault as only the second-worst engine supplier in F1.
It sounds reasonable given that there are only four engine suppliers in F1 at the moment, but then you remember how bad Honda is and all of that goes away.
Here’s what Honda motorsports head Yusuke Hasegawa, who even dared to mention the when talking about his goals for Honda, told :
“I think we can keep the same ratio of the increasing of the power but it is difficult to catch up Mercedes or Ferrari,” Hasegawa told Autosport.
“I really want to move ahead of Renault in terms of performance before the end of the season.”
When asked if he believed that would be a genuine possibility, given Honda’s current horsepower deficit to its rivals, Hasegawa replied: “Yes, I can see that on the data.
“I will not tell you the number, but we are closing the gap.”
Hasegawa added he felt this was the closest Honda has been to its rivals since returning to F1.
Renault, we must not forget, for the Red Bull F1 cars that can actually make the podium. Red Bull because F1 is often petty and silly. But even with those power units, Red Bull is still with 184 points to the leading Mercedes team’s 357.
McLaren-Honda is ninth out of 10 teams, with a whopping 11 points scored between its two drivers over the 11 races so far. They haven’t scored at all in most of them. The only team behind McLaren Honda is Sauber, which thought about switching to Honda engines the other week where that seemed like a good idea.
But, by all means, more power to Honda for setting goals. You have to start somewhere, even if you never make it more than a few steps away from the starting line.