'I love winning … I don't like to lose at anything,' says Fernando Alonso

The choice of team cannot be understated: The Spaniard, who will turn 39 later this month, won both his championship titles with Renault during the 2005 and 2006 seasons.

The veteran driver has made 314 Grand Prix starts in his F1 career, notching up 32 wins and 97 podiums (both his wins and podiums place him in sixth on the all-time list) across three teams — Renault, McLaren and Ferrari — and his return will mark the first time a driver has had three separate stints with a single F1 team (2003-06, 2008-09 and from 2021 onwards).

While Renault did not confirm if the deal will last longer than a single season, the driver himself clearly has designs on his return being not so much a curtain call, but a considerable new chapter in his impressive career.

Added to this, he feels the new regulations — meant to be introduced in 2021, but now delayed until 2022 because of coronavirus pandemic — will give him, and Renault, a chance to be more competitive.

The veteran Alonso will be replacing Daniel Ricciardo who’s moving to McLaren — the same team the Spaniard left in 2018 — and will see him drive alongside one of hottest young talents on the grid, 23-year-old Esteban Ocon.

In the first race of the 2020 season in Austria, Ocon and Renault finished in 8th place.

“Obviously, it’s a very happy day,” the 38-year-old Alonso told CNN World Sport’s Amanda Davies. “When I left Formula One, I felt that it could be a possibility to come back in 2021 … I’ve been able to breathe a little bit out of Formula One because I’ve got 18 consecutive Formula One seasons, which are quite demanding. I think I needed that time out and I come back now stronger than ever.”

Fernando Alonso of Spain and McLaren Honda walks in the Paddock during previews ahead of the US Formula One Grand Prix at the Circuit of The Americas on October 19, 2017.

But it is not as if he has spent his time away from the grueling sport with his feet up at home, watching the next generation of F1 drivers, some of whom are close to half his age, hoping to emulate Alonso’s achievements.

The Spaniard has won the Le Mans 24 Hours — for a second time — triumphed in the WEC world championship, attempted to conquer the famed Indianapolis 500 race and even managed a more than respectable 13th place finish in the legendary Dakar Rally. What’s more, Alonso has designs on competing in the Indy 500 for a third time next month.

Any way you want to look at it, Alonso’s drive for success and hunger to remain competitive remains undiminished.

“I hate losing,” he explains to CNN Sport with a huge smile on his face. “I love winning. But, you know, I don’t like to lose at anything, and it would be hard. Especially 2021. We know where the car is at now.

“We know the performance next year is a little bit of carryover from this year. So, I’m aware that we will have to work a lot and we’ll have to slowly improve the car. But, you know, I’m ready to take that challenge as well.”

Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain (R) and McLaren-Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton (L) of Britain celebrate on the podium with champagne after Formula One's Malaysian Grand Prix in 2012.

Yet when all is said and done, and commercial and career considerations are put to the side, how much of the romantic in Alonso played a decision in his return? After all, he has spoken about Renault providing his fondest memories within F1.

“Romantic is a big factor on this type of decision,” he said. “Coming back to Renault is a plus for me, because I know the people in the team, I know a lot of members that were on my time a couple of years ago. And also the commitment that

Renault made about Formula One and the future that the team that the team has now, I think it was important.”

By the sounds of it, Alonso’s future in motor sport still has many laps, races and — potentially — years left to run. So, just how long does he envisage getting behind the wheel?

“I think 10, 12 (years)” he begins, presumably joking, but then again, perhaps not. “Let’s see. Look, when I was 25 or 28, I thought maybe three or four more years in Formula One will be enough.

“But now at 38, for whatever reason, I develop more skills. I was driving in different cars, different categories, learning different driving styles. I said before, I feel fresh now, ready for traveling, ready for doing different things, work on the simulator.

“So, I feel better now than when I was 25. So, I cannot tell now that there’s only two or three years more in me. You know, maybe there are more.”

source: cnn.com