They were already in discussions with several teams and had almost reached an agreement with McLaren. But in that month of 2023, Aston Martin was ahead and Honda chose them.diffuser wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 17:18If you want to protect your teams interests and prevent these scenarios, you do. It's called management.TyreSlip wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 16:55True, Aston Martin should have done more visits on the progress. It was not, however, Aston Martin's job to babysit Honda and ensure that Honda put a large enough staff with experience on the project.franbatista123 wrote: ↑06 Mar 2026, 16:39
Baffling how they only became aware of it in November of last year. Communication between both parties must be terrible, this is a multi year project and should've been noticed much sooner.
I find it ironic that Honda went through a rigorous interview process to find the most dedicated F1 team to supply engines to for 2026 only not to dedicate the same amount of resources to the project from their side.
Let's face it, Lawrence didn't know what he was doing. Honda probably wouldn't have found a partner had AMR not come around. In spite of all the nice facilities, AMR have largely been a bottom feeder. They're building. I think Lawrence giving up a share of the team to bring Newey aboard, is Lawrence admitting that he is out of his depth in the engineering world. He's thrown money at big names and that has only resulted in him throwing money away. So from that point of view this was a failure from AMR side as well. They should have kept closer tabs on them.
Regarding the simulator, it has nothing to do with it. Newey said two years because he wanted to motivate the team. Already at the end of 2025, Aston Martin was finding the window before anyone else on Fridays.
With a better engine, Aston Martin would be in the running. But unfortunately, that's how it went, and let's hope for the best. Honda isn't the same as it was in 2015, but they need to wake up.
