Q. When did Fernando Alonso make his debut in Formula One? - + Fernando Alonso made his debut in Formula One in 2001 at the Australian Grand Prix.
Fernando Alonso said his beaching in the gravel during practice at the Japanese Grand Prix was “weird”, which he will look to review. Alonso appeared to dip a wheel onto the grass before the ...
Adrian Newey’s first month at Aston Martin is behind him, but Fernando Alonso believes his impact on this year’s AMR25 will be minimal. Newey left Red Bull’s F1 team last year and joined the ...
Now that the dust has settled on his introduction to the team, team driver Fernando Alonso has admitted that Newey is not having an immediate effect on he 2025 car. Newey has been in Formula 1 for ...
Aston Martin driver Fernando Alonso says he doesn’t understand why he crashed out of second practice from Formula 1’s Japanese Grand Prix. Around halfway through the hour-long FP2 at Suzuka ...
Fernando Alonso believes that fellow drivers and teams must ‘move on’ from the proposed V10 engine change and push ahead with the turbo-hybrid power units. Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen ...
And with that, the red flags returned, Fernando Alonso having spun his Aston Martin off into the gravel between the Degner corners and beaching it. “Bit of bouncing, something strange on the ...
The second free practice session of the 2025 Formula 1 Japanese Grand Prix at Suzuka Circuit was disrupted by grass fires, leading to red flags. The FIA quickly implemented safety measures ...
Juan Soto was introduced prior to the Mets home opener, while Pete Alonso was welcomed back on Friday afternoon at Citi Field ...
Instead, the spotlight turned to first baseman Pete Alonso, who ended his first at bat with a curtain call. It started in pre-game ceremonies, when the loudest ovations went to the top three ...
After a winter of uncertainty, Pete Alonso finally came home to Citi Field, re-christening the ballpark in the best way he knows how. Alonso’s first-inning opposite-field bomb off Kevin Gausman ...
Pete Alonso received among the loudest cheers — if not the loudest —during the Mets’ on-field introductions Friday, and that adulation didn’t stop once the game began. A one-man mob this ...