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Alpine was "lost" at start of F1 2021, admits Rossi

Alpine Formula 1 CEO Laurent Rossi has admitted his team was "lost" at the beginning of 2021, but said its fluctuating form became "more linear than you think" after understanding the car better.

Esteban Ocon, Alpine A521

Alpine's 2021 season ebbed and flowed dramatically with Fernando Alonso and Esteban Ocon qualifying between fifth and 17th place in the first half of the year, their points finishes proving equally irregular.

Before the summer break the team enjoyed a breakthrough Hungarian Grand Prix, in which Ocon took his maiden grand prix win and Alonso grabbed fourth.

Several strong showings followed in the latter half of the season, most notably in Zandvoort, Russia and Qatar, which yielded a podium for Alonso, but it was nowhere in Monza, Austin and Mexico.

CEO Rossi admitted Alpine was "lost" in the early stages of 2021, saying the team "didn't even know" how it managed to score points in a troublesome Monaco weekend.

"At the beginning of the season we were lost," Rossi said. "Monaco is actually a very poor memory and that moment we were lost we had no idea what to do. We scored points, but we didn't even know how.

"That was difficult because we couldn't understand the car so well. It was early days, after that we knew what to expect."

When asked by Motorsport.com why Alpine's pace continued to fluctuate race by race, Rossi argued the team's form curve wasn't as dramatic as it looked on the outside once it began to improve its trackside operations and uncover the car's strengths and weaknesses.

"It's probably hard for you to appreciate it from the outside but for us it's actually way more linear than you think," he replied.

"As we went through the season, we understood the car much better. The biggest driver of improvements was really the way we operate. First to extract the most out of the drivers and then second as a team between the drivers to even push the boundaries further.

"It took us four or five months to get there but we built constantly, and I think Hungary was a dramatic display of when we get it all together, what it gives.

"It was a bit dramatic, but we saw progress, and then we started being way more predictive in what we would do during the next race. In fact, we knew we could score almost every race more or less a certain amount of points."

Fernando Alonso, Alpine A521

Fernando Alonso, Alpine A521

Photo by: Andy Hone / Motorsport Images

Tracks with low grip tarmac, like Austin's Circuit of the Americas, proved to be particular weaknesses for Alpine's A521 car.

Alpine's poor run of form in Austin and the following race in Mexico saw AlphaTauri draw level in the fight for fifth place in the constructors' championship, but Rossi said the team remained confident more suitable circuits were still to come, which was proven the case in Qatar, where it bagged 25 points and all but secured fifth place.

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"We knew Austin would be extremely difficult. Everyone was like: 'Oh, maybe it's the end of Alpine and AlphaTauri is going to catch up'," he recalled. "We were not sure we would manage to resist AlphaTauri, but we were sure which races would benefit us.

"On tarmac where the traction is a problem, we struggled finding a balance. In Austin you have bumps all the time, there's no traction. We had to work on the traction and when we did that we didn't work on the rest.

"From the outside it looked erratic, but we knew where the car operated well."

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