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‘I was struggling to feel my hands’: Aston Martin’s problems laid bare by Alonso’s woe in China | Giles Richards

about 15 hours ago
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The next round of the Formula One world championship in Japan will be the home race for the Aston Martin team’s engine manufacturer, Honda, at the Suzuka circuit.A celebratory affair, however, is not expected amid painful days for Honda, whose return to F1 has been marked by a failure to make the grade.Its engine’s shortcomings were exposed for the second successive race at the Chinese Grand Prix on Sunday.Fernando Alonso retired after 32 laps because the vibration from the engine was so severe he was losing feeling in his hands and feet.Hit teammate Lance Stroll had retired after 10 laps with a battery problem, an element of the hybrid engine that has plagued the manufacturer from day one.

The Spaniard was bluntly phlegmatic if more diplomatic than he was when last he toiled with an underperforming Honda engine, at McLaren between 2015 and 2017.“On ⁠lap 20 to 35 I was struggling a bit to feel my hands and my feet,” he said.“We were one lap behind, we were last, and there was probably no point to keep going.”When asked about Japan, Stroll was simply dismissive of their chances.“Unless they can find ⁠some magic in the next 10 days, pray.

Pray for me,” he said,Aston Martin were late to the first test in Barcelona and from then on completed precious few laps,The reason became clear only on the Thursday before the first race in Australia,The team principal and car designer, Adrian Newey, admitted their Honda engine had such a severe vibration problem which was transferred into the chassis that he feared his drivers were in danger of suffering permanent nerve damage,In China that fear was clearly real for Alonso.

The team are working as hard as any other and their commitment and ambition cannot be questioned, but for now the tools are not there,Their pre-season running, it transpired, had been so curtailed because the drivers as much as anything else, simply could not put in the laps,Worse still the engine, when it did run, was underpowered and unreliable,In Australia battery failures left them down to their very last units for the race,Alonso managed 21 laps and Stroll went beyond expectations in reaching 43.

In China the vibration problem caused even more of a stir when onboard footage showed Alonso taking his hands off the steering wheel on the two straights at the Shanghai International circuit because it was so uncomfortable.Easing the pressure on the fingers during a race is not unheard of in motor racing.During long stints at the 24 Hours of Le Mans 24, drivers will do so to prevent cramps, but it is rare in modern F1.“It was difficult, we found more vibrations than any other session of the weekend,” Alonso said.“Physically, I could not continue much longer.

It was not a nice feeling.”Honda and Aston Martin have at least been open about their problems and the disappointment at what was expected to be the start of a new competitive era under Newey is palpable.The task they face is formidable.Developing the car, which may yet be another Newey work of genius, is all but impossible until they can put laps on it and that requires a functioning engine.There will no quick fix for Japan.

It seems unlikely there will be any quick-ish fix, as Honda took comfort only in the team having completed a few more laps in China over the weekend as a whole than in Australia,“If we focus on the more favourable areas, we ran more miles than in Melbourne which is encouraging,” the Honda general manager, Shintaro Orihara, said with an inescapable air of straw-clutching from, let it not be forgotten, the engine supplier to a team that had hoped to be competing among the big four this year,Yet small gains have to be the focus for the moment,Mike Krack, the chief trackside officer who was formerly team principal, noted that all extra laps contributed to the learning process,The difficulty for Aston is it is a public and potentially long process.

Japan, then, must be endured by Aston Martin and Honda but both may take some little cold comfort in that the cancellation of the Bahrain and Saudi grands prix means that after Japan there will now be five weeks until round four in Miami.It is now an invaluable early-season gap during which the engineers at the Honda facility at Sakura have more time to try to solve the vibration issue.The financial investment at Aston Martin has been immense and their facilities are second to none but there will be no respite in front of home fans.An old racing adage says: “To finish first, first you must finish.” If Aston can do even as much as the latter by Miami it may be considered a victory.

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Gatz review – the Great Gatsby performed in eight and a half hours of attentive, immersive joy

A man enters his office in the morning, finds his computer on the fritz and, after a few attempts to turn it on and off again, comes across a copy of F Scott Fitzgerald’s 1925 novel The Great Gatsby. So he starts to read and when his colleagues enter they find themselves taking on the characters, and soon the novel unfolds around us, word by word. The New York theatre company Elevator Repair Service has produced a work that is not quite adaptation – given it doesn’t really adapt the novel at all – but that is utterly transfixing nonetheless.Following a keen interest in non-dramatic texts, the company wanted to see what would happen when a powerful literary work was read and performed in its entirety. The result is both strange and strangely familiar

3 days ago
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How to Make a Killing to Wu-Tang Clan: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Glen Powell indulges in some murder most profitable, and the influential rap collective arrive in the UK complete with a clutch of peerless classicsHow to Make a KillingOut nowLoosely inspired by the much-loved Ealing comedy Kind Hearts and Coronets, here is a dark comedy that sees Glen Powell play an upwardly mobile schemer who isn’t afraid to murder his way to his inheritance. Directed by John Patton Ford (Emily the Criminal).Reminders of HimOut nowMaika Monroe (It Follows) stars as a woman who goes to prison following a car accident in which her boyfriend (Rudy Pankow) is killed. On release, she finds herself drawn to a handsome local bar owner (Tyriq Withers). Romance based on the bestselling Colleen Hoover novel

4 days ago
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The Guide #234: Five big questions before the 2026 Oscars

Happy Oscars Eve eve to you all. The film industry’s glitziest night takes place on Sunday, at an ungodly hour for those of us covering it from the other side of the Atlantic. Coffee will be essential for anyone staying up, as will the Guardian’s annual liveblog, covering every last minute of the ceremony as well as its red carpet run-up. Head over to the homepage on Sunday evening for that, plus news and commentary on the night’s events.There’s plenty to read before that too: our annual Oscar hustings, making the case for each of this year’s best picture nominees (I sided with Sentimental Value); an interview with Academy top dog Bill Kramer; a piece on the increasingly toxic discourse around many of this year’s nominees; and Guardian film editor Catherine Shoard’s reader Q&A on this year’s race and the state of film in general

4 days ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump being gifted an Olympic medal: ‘Yet another award he didn’t win’

On Thursday night, late-night hosts discussed an odd White House women’s history month event, the fallout of the war on Iran and why Melania Trump is starting to sound an awful lot like her husband.Jimmy Kimmel spent a chunk of his Thursday night monologue on a White House women’s history month fundraiser hosted by Donald Trump. As part of the event, Melania Trump gave an extended introduction to the president.“You know how some couples as they get older start to sound alike?” asked Kimmel. “Well, while introducing her husband, Melania had an awful lot of nice things to say about herself

4 days ago
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Seth Meyers on Pete Hegseth: ‘The face of a man war-fighting with his colon’

Late-night hosts dug into the Trump administration’s vague intentions for the war in Iran, the conflict’s oil-price effect and a Maga rally in Kentucky with Jake Paul.On Late Night, Seth Meyers checked in on Donald Trump’s now two-week-old war in Iran. “The president is maybe sort of threatening/teasing that he might put boots on the ground in Iran? But Republicans can’t seem to agree on whether they support that idea, or for how long, or why,” he explained.The confusion comes from the top: Pete Hegseth, the “defense secretary/morning show host/fifth-year senior who just found out that yeah, he’s gonna need to do a sixth year” who made a big deal about turning the defense department into “the department of war” and “refocusing on the core mission: war fighting”.“And before we go any further: was there a problem with the term ‘warfare’?” Meyers wondered

5 days ago
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Sydney Biennale 2026: politics is everywhere – but with nuance, beauty and heart

According to its critics, this year’s Biennale of Sydney, under the leadership of Emirati artistic director Hoor Al Qasimi (the first Arab appointed to the role in the festival’s 53-year history) was destined to be a “hate Israel jamboree” at worst; a hotbed of pro-Palestinian politics at best. These fears – which appear to have originated from pro-Palestine statements Al Qasimi and her parents made in the past – are not borne out by the festival itself, which opens this weekend across five key venues, spanning from the inner city out to Penrith and Campbelltown.In an unusual move for the biennale, Al Qasimi wasn’t present at the vernissage – but with or without her, the resulting festival, the event’s 25th, is complex and nuanced. It’s light on spectacle and slogans; not a political chant but rather a polyphony of voices – more than 80 artists from 37 countries – singing their own songs. The theme, “Rememory” – taken from Toni Morrison’s novel Beloved – is reflected in works that look to the past to find answers to present dilemmas and envision better futures

5 days ago
societySee all
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Sally Berry obituary

about 7 hours ago
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I help people with psychosis off the streets. Sometimes, their minds won’t let them leave

about 10 hours ago
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Tell us: how is the meningitis outbreak in Canterbury being handled?

about 12 hours ago
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Women feel coerced during maternity care in England, charity says

about 16 hours ago
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Cannabis is not an effective treatment for common mental health conditions, says review

about 23 hours ago
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‘The videos are terrifying’: students describe spreading panic amid Kent meningitis outbreak

1 day ago