Reel back to 1 March and put yourself in the shoes of Kevin Magnussen.
Life is pretty great right now. You have recently become a father and have a packed year of sports car racing to get stuck into. You are still only 29 but have found peace with the apparent reality that Formula 1 is now firmly in your past. After all the toil, it wasn’t to be. That sensational second place on your F1 debut for McLaren at the start of 2014 seems like another lifetime ago.
But the year at middling Renault and then four years at an increasingly uncompetitive Haas left you with little to show compared with what you could – perhaps should – have achieved. At least you went further than your old man, Jan, whose shooting-star trajectory in 1990s F1 burned out before it really began to shine.
But like so many before you and the many more who will follow, you just never landed the breaks. That’s life; that’s F1.
Still, Dad shook off his F1 disappointments to enjoy a long and fulfilling career in endurance racing. Now you’re following the same path, and how special was that to share a car with him in the Le Mans 24 Hours last year, even if luck gave you both another kicking.
This year, there’s so much to get the juices flowing: a fantastic dual campaign racing for Chip Ganassi’s Cadillac DPi squad in the US-based IMSA Sportscar Championship and, once it’s ready, Peugeot’s fabulous-looking 9X8 LMH to get to grips with in the World Endurance Championship. Next up is a second shot at the Sebring 12 Hours on 19 March, with victory in your sights.
Yes, life is good. Very good, in fact. What more could you possibly wish for?
Now, on 1 March, you’re told that instead of pounding around Sebring a few weeks later, you will be qualifying seventh for the Bahrain Grand Prix for the team that shut down your F1 career a little more than a year before, then the next day you will bring your Haas home in a mind-bending fifth place… You might well be seriously considering your own sanity.
As unlikely comebacks go, Magnussen’s Bahrain story is up there with the best.
A happy knock-on
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