“I’m talking to teams,but I want to do this competitively,not do it just to do it. For now,I don’t know where that leaves me.”
Should Ricciardo fail to secure a seat he covets elsewhere on the grid for next year,a sabbatical – rare,but not unprecedented in F1 – could be a possibility.
The celebration after Ricciardo’s grand prix win for McLaren at Monza,Italy,last September.Credit:Getty Images
Finland’s Kimi Raikkonen,the 2007 world champion,spent two years away from F1 at age 30 and came back for a 10-year second chapter to his career,winning three more grands prix for Lotus and Ferrari.
Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher returned with Mercedes for three seasons between 2010-12 after retiring from Ferrari in 2006,but managed just one podium finish in 58 races before calling it quits at the age of 43.
Alonso,who turned 41 in July and signed a two-year deal with Aston Martin to create an opening at Alpine,took two years off at age 37 and is in the second season of his comeback to the sport.
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Ricciardo admits the constant speculation over his future this season has,indirectly,taken a toll.
“When I put the helmet on,I feel confident that there’s a switch that flicks to help shut things out,” he said.
“But we’re not robots,we’re not superhuman,and even if things don’t bother you,they can still affect you and your energy levels. It never helps.”
Ricciardo’s downturn in results mirrors that of McLaren,who came into the regulation reset of 2022 set to shake up the competitive order of the sport with high hopes,but have instead gone backwards.
McLaren finished inside the top four of the F1 constructors’ championship for the past three seasons,and ahead of last year’s Belgian Grand Prix,McLaren had scored 163 points to sit equal third with Ferrari after 11 races.
Australian F1 driver Daniel Riccardo on the tractor at the family farm in WA.
At the same stage of the 2022 season and with two additional races before this weekend’s return to the Spa-Francorchamps circuit,McLaren has scored 95 points and sits fifth in the teams’ race,while Ferrari has won four grands prix to be second in the standings,behind only runaway leaders Red Bull Racing.
“The rule changes for this year raised expectations – their expectations of me in year two,but also their expectation of the car,” Ricciardo said.
“Could this be the year the team really makes that step because of the rule changes? It hasn’t happened,so those two things combined – maybe the dream was too high with both of those factors. When it wasn’t happening,it quickly turns to pessimism,and things decline quite quickly.”
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Ricciardo admitted arriving this weekend at Spa-Francorchamps,where he won for Red Bull Racing in 2014,would be a “weird” feeling.
“It’s not through a lack of effort that the results haven’t come,I don’t feel it’s something I’ve brought on myself,” he said.
“The highs we’ve had like Monza have been rare,but they don’t get any higher … but those results just weren’t consistent enough. That’s been the struggle in the 18 months with McLaren up to now. It’s not something where I wish I’d done something different – I obviously wish the stopwatch had been different in my time here,but it’s not like I was slacking off and got what I deserved.
“I don’t have regrets,but I wish it have had turned out better. There are no regrets in terms of things I could have done to stay here. This is their decision. It’s something I think they felt they needed to do.”
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