McLaren's Sabbatical Year
By Karl Ludvigsen, England
Atlas F1 Senior Writer
Despite a nearly perfect United States Grand Prix, Karl Ludvigsen believes next year is not a season in which McLaren can be seen as challenging again for either Championship titles. But the Woking-based team are planning for the future
But this has not been a McLaren-style season. Not at all. The team will have to gain some good placings in Japan to avoid ending the year with only a double-digit total in the Constructors' Championship points, something that hasn't happened since 1997. This is the team that Hakkinen led to World Championships in 1998 and 1999, at the culmination of a dramatic recovery to form in cooperation with Mercedes-Benz. Austere and antiseptic McLaren may be, but it's a style that has made them a winner. I'm confident that the Woking outfit hasn't lost the drive that brought it back to the top of the heap.
For the immediate future, though, the prospects for McLaren aren't good. Ferrari are still on a roll and Michael Schumacher Esq. seems as determined as ever. They will be hard to beat next year. Similarly, the BMW-Williams package will reach serious maturity in 2002, as will its Michelin tires. I think those two will lead the battle for supremacy in Formula One, with some interruptions from Renault and Jordan-Honda. Next year is not a season in which McLaren can be seen as challenging again for either Championship titles.
That's why I think Ron Dennis is quietly but clearly declaring 2002 a rebuilding season for McLaren. Here's why:
Ron Dennis is shrewd enough to know that he has to set out a long-term strategy to his sponsors and backers. He can't make unrealistic promises, especially not to Mercedes-Benz. You'll recall that I said earlier in the year that Mercedes would be fit to be tied about BMW's remarkable success in only their second year? I recently spoke to a visitor to McLaren whose appointment with Ron had to be cancelled because, she was told, "There are three Mercedes people in his office yelling at him." Dennis has to be able to tell those people not to expect too much next year but that his rebuilding should bring the desired result in 2003.
This is the long view that brings success in Formula One. More than any other factor, it marks the difference between the true "Grandee" teams and the also-rans. The Grandees are not scrambling from month to month and season to season for sponsors, engines, designers and drivers. They have the luxury of being able to plan for the longer term in all those respects. Why do they have that luxury? Because they are run by people whose natural inclination is to play the long game, to strategize well down the road. They know when and how to sacrifice the short term to gain a long-term advantage. That's what I think McLaren will be doing next year.
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