McLaren felt "disbelief" after Alonso engine failure
McLaren executive director Zak Brown said his team felt "disbelief" and "sadness" when Fernando Alonso suffered his engine failure on his first lap of practice at the Spanish Grand Prix on Friday.











Honda is still chasing answers as to why Alonso's engine blew up after encountering a sudden oil pressure loss just three corners into an installation lap at the Circuit de Catalunya.
But Brown said that with Alonso having failed to make the start of the Russian Grand Prix two weeks ago, it was incredible that his home event got off to such a bad start.
Asked about what his reaction was when he saw Alonso come to a smoky halt, Brown said: "Sadness. Disappointment. Just kind of a state of disbelief.
"But you then can't cry over spilt milk so quickly you turn your attention to Stoffel's car, and seeing what we learned there."
Pushed on whether he felt that there were any grounds to believe that Honda's situation was improving after increasing reliability trouble, Brown said: "I don't know that reliability is getting worse because we haven't had much reliability yet."
Alonso himself, who left the track immediately after the problem to go and play tennis, said he was not totally shocked about what had happened.
"In a way it is not a surprise," he explained. "We couldn't complete the formation lap on the Sunday in Russia and here we couldn't manage to complete the out-lap.
"It was more-or-less expected that we would have these problems right now, so it was a shame because here in front of the home people it's frustrating.
"But at the end of the day we've had this year some good Fridays and Saturdays, but bad Sundays as we haven't finished a race yet. But this one I have a feeling it will be a bad Friday and a good Saturday, good Sunday."
Seeking answers
Honda is still investigating the exact cause of Alonso's failure, and its F1 engine chief Yusuke Hasegawa explained that an order for the Spaniard to stop the car after telemetry data showed a warning came too late.
"The oil pressure dropped completely," explained Hasegawa. "The engineer told Alonso to stop the engine, but it was too late.
"There was a big hole in the bottom of the engine and the oil is missing. I don't know the reason why the oil leaked, but that is the reason why it blew."
One theory being looked at, however, is that the problem could be related to an issue that occurred the last time the power unit was used - during qualifying for the Bahrain Grand Prix - when Alonso stopped with an MGU-H problem.
Mercedes plan
Honda has long promised to leave no stone unturned in its efforts to turn around its fortunes in F1, and an option being considered is some kind of co-operation deal with Mercedes.
Talks about a potential partnership are ongoing, but nothing has been finalised yet.
Asked by Motorsport.com about whether such input from an external party like Mercedes was now essential for Honda, Brown said: "I let Honda comment on all of their activities, but I think it is essential that Honda continues to revise their approach to get more power and more reliability in the back of their car.
"And I believe they are working hard at improving the situation."
Additional reporting by Kuni Akai
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