How Alonso is managing gruelling F1/WEC schedule
McLaren Formula 1 driver Fernando Alonso has changed his daily routine to avoid being “peaky” this season as he prepares to make his FIA World Endurance Championship debut.
Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images
The two-time F1 champion will make his first WEC start this weekend as part of a full superseason commitment with Toyota's LMP1 team.
Alonso's Spa-Francorchamps outing will come one week after the Azerbaijan Grand Prix, with the Spanish Grand Prix following a week later.
His WEC bid will include his Le Mans 24 Hours debut as part of a desire to win motorsport's Triple Crown of the Monaco GP, Le Mans and Indianapolis 500, which Alonso contested for the first time last year.
"I'm saving energy more every day," Alonso said. "I know that it counts. You try to think two weeks ahead, what energy you will need in two weeks' time.
"It's not a short-term preparation, it's long-term. I want to be 100 percent next Sunday, I need to be 100 percent next Sunday in Spain. I need to be 100 percent Sunday in Le Mans.
"It's definitely a very tight calculation of the training programme, how you fly, how you rest, which planes you take, the food you eat.
"You try to be on an average level of 99 percent and not be peaky this year."
The first truly intense part of Alonso’s season will be a eight-weekend run in which the Le Mans test day occurs between the Monaco and Canadian GPs, and then the gruelling Le Mans week begins.
Alonso will at least stay in France for the return of the country's grand prix the following weekend, before the Austrian and British GPs complete F1's first triple-header.
An even worse travel schedule will come later in the year.
The date change for the Fuji WEC race, specifically so Alonso can participate in Toyota's home event, means a run of five straight weekends across three continents later in the year.
The September 30 Russian GP is followed by the Japanese GP and the Fuji WEC race on October 14.
Alonso will then head to North America for F1's back-to-back races in the United States and Mexico.
Alonso gets a weekend off at the start of November before ending 2018 with a hat-trick of races: the Brazilian GP, the WEC's Chinese round at Shanghai and then the F1 season finale in Abu Dhabi.
He has already devoted significant time preparing for both. As well as his usual F1 simulator work with McLaren, Alonso has added multiple simulator sessions at Toyota's Cologne headquarters in Germany.
This is in addition to being part of three intense Toyota test simulations.
Alonso cited his Thursday morning ahead of the Azerbaijan GP weekend as a good example of how he has modified his travel schedule.
"I woke up and I planned to go to the gym and have a little exercise, I was only feeling 90%, so I did nothing," he explained. "I stay a little bit more in bed, I go early to sleep again [in the evening]. I'm as prepared as I can be."
Alonso's remaining 2018 schedule:
May 5 WEC Spa
May 13 Spanish Grand Prix
May 27 Monaco Grand Prix
June 3 Le Mans test day
June 10 Canadian Grand Prix
June 16-17 Le Mans 24 Hours
June 24 French Grand Prix
July 1 Austrian Grand Prix
July 8 British Grand Prix
July 22 German Grand Prix
July 29 Hungarian Grand Prix
August 19 WEC Silverstone
August 26 Belgian Grand Prix
September 2 Italian Grand Prix
September 16 Singapore Grand Prix
September 30 Russian Grand Prix
October 7 Japanese Grand Prix
October 14 WEC Fuji
October 21 United States Grand Prix
October 28 Mexican Grand Prix
November 11 Brazilian Grand Prix
November 18 WEC Shanghai
November 25 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix
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