‘I find it much easier to feel sorry for people struggling with hardship in life’
Fernando Alonso's much talked about return to McLaren after five frustrating seasons at Ferrari seems to have backfired so far but former Formula 1 driver David Coulthard doesn't feel sorry for the multi million pound worth Spaniard.
Having missed the season opener at Melbourne, Alonso retired in Malaysia and toiled to finish 12th in Shanghai on Sunday as McLaren continue to struggle in the early days of their engine partnership with Honda.
"I find it to difficult to feel sorry about multi million pound racing drivers. I find it much easier to feel sorry for people struggling with hardship in life. You make your choices, you get on with it," Coulthard, now a well known F1 pundit said about Alonso's travails at McLaren.
Most experts including Coulthard feel Alonso, 33, should have won more world titles than two he won with Renault way back in 2005 and 2006. He moved to McLaren this season after a long stay at Ferrari where finished runner-up in the championship thrice.
"There is no doubt that Fernando is still a great driver. I think he will comeback and have success in the future. But he has to take responsibility for his decisions and he doesn't always appear to be most competitive. In addition to that, Honda is not looking like the engine to have as of now," said Coulthard, who recently performed at the Red Bull run in Hyderabad.
New Ferrari signing Sebastian Vettel spiced up the Mercedes dominated championship by winning in Malaysia before Lewis Hamilton restored normalcy with his fourth victory in China.
Like last season, it looks like another season of intense battle among teammates Hamilton and Nico Rosberg. The German heated up the contest in Shanghai yesterday by accusing Hamilton of compromising his race.
Coulthard feels it is down to Rosberg now to show what he is capable of.