sandman1347 wrote:
The question I find myself pondering is; does any of this actually add to his legacy in the way he intends? Honestly, I'm interested to know what others think about this. The idea of winning the "Triple Crown" is appealing and all but, in practice, is it really something that changes the way you think of a driver of Alonso's caliber? When he won at LeMans, it was a bit of an anticlimax. You expected him to win (especially with the fact that the Toyota was in a league of its own). The Indy 500 is much less predictable but, again, winning that race wouldn't really change my perception of Alonso as a driver the way winning another WDC would. Anyone feel differently about that?
Mario Andretti not only won a Formula 1 race... he won twelve F1 races AND the 1978 World Driver's Championship.
Mario Andretti not only won the Indy 500... he also won four Indycar Championships
Mario Andretti won several World Sportscar Championship races, winning 1 Daytona 24 and 3 Sebring 12hr races. He competed at LeMans across 4 decades, his best finish was 2nd in 1995 (at age 55)
Marion Andretti won the 1978-79 Int'l Race of Champions (IROC) series
Mario Andretti won several NASCAR races, including the Series' premiere event, the 1967 Daytona 500
Mario Andretti raced in the Can-AM series in the late 60's and early 70's.
Mario Andretti won numerous races in the USAC Sprint car series.
Mario Andretti won numerous races in the USAC Midget car series.
Mario Andretti often won races and multiple championships across multiple disciplines in the same (or consecutive) years. I'd like t see his frequent flyer mileage statement throughout his career.
Andretti and Dan Gurney are the only two drivers to have won races in Formula One, IndyCar, World Sportscar Championship and NASCAR. Is that a "Quadruple Crown?"
Point is... It's these kinds of accomplishments that create an actual legacy in racing worth mentioning. Fernando Alonso can do these one-off races for his personal satisfaction, which I am sure is his primary motivation. Because Andretti's 109 racing victories (across all categories) is 3-times more (and then some) than Alonso's 33 (32 F1 and one LeMans to date).
Indeed, Nando could race another 20 years and not accomplish half of what Andretti did.