Fernando Alonso missed the entire opening practice session without turning a wheel.
Newey, one of the most celebrated designers in the championship’s history and now also team principal, admitted to feeling “powerless” as Aston Martin faces months of struggle before a real solution is implemented.
The irony is almost too perfect: Honda had already subjected this precise driver to this precise misery once before. The ghosts of Suzuka 2015 were stirring again.
Aston Martin’s plight is extreme, but it is not without precedent. These are the teams that fell farthest.
BAR (1999-2002)
There has rarely been a more magnificently ill-judged entrance in Formula 1 history than that of British American Racing (BAR).
BAR’s dual livery ruffled some feathers
Grand Prix Photo
Funded by the tobacco billions of British American Tobacco and conceived by Craig Pollock – manager of then reigning world champion Jacques Villeneuve – BAR arrived for its 1999 debut with the kind of promotional fanfare usually reserved for moon landings.
At the launch of the BAR 001, Pollock and his associates spoke openly about winning in its maiden season.
The reality was catastrophic.
Villeneuve began the year with 11 consecutive retirements
The BAR 001 proved to be a car of near-historic unreliability. Villeneuve began the year with 11 consecutive retirements, a streak of mechanical ignominy that lasted until the Belgian Grand Prix in August.
The team did not score a single point all season, a result that seemed almost impossible given the resources deployed.
Off track, things were scarcely better.
Internal reports later suggested that BAR’s considerable budget had been spent at a rate that left little for the car’s actual development.
The team’s behaviour over its controversial dual-livery scheme — two cars painted in different colours to satisfy two tobacco brands — had already irritated the governing body and the paddock alike. BAR took the dispute to international arbitration, lost, and was ordered to pay the FIA’s legal costs.
BAR’s fortunes improved in 2000, scoring 20 points on its way to fifth in the standings, then dropping to sixth with 17 points in 2001. By 2002, after a revolving door of technical staff, BAR had sunk to eighth in the constructors’ standings, managing just seven points across the season.
Pollock had already stepped down at the end of 2001, and it fell to his replacement David Richards to rebuild the technical operation from scratch.
The turnaround eventually came. Honda, which had supplied BAR’s engines, bought a 45% stake in the team in January 2005 and completed a full buyout later that year. For the 2006 season, the team was rebranded as Honda Racing F1, competing as a full manufacturer constructor.
BAR’s story was a perfect illustration of the gap between marketing confidence and engineering reality.
Jaguar (2000–2004)
When Ford bought Jackie Stewart‘s respected little team at the end of 1999, the corporate ambitions could scarcely have been stated more boldly.
One of many Jaguar’s DNFs
Grand Prix Photo
At Jaguar Racing’s official launch, Ford executive Wolfgang Reitzle spoke of winning races in 2000 and challenging for the championship two years later.
The F1 paddock absorbed this with the weary scepticism of those who have seen manufacturers arrive before.
The paddock, as it turned out, was right.