In which case: Fernando Alonso. What a sensational story this would be. The guy has never lost his intensity, desire and sheer love of what he’s doing despite a decade in no-hope machinery. When he left for Indy, Le Mans and Dakar it looked like the F1 career was over, but back he came. Still a very great driver but pushing 40 it then seemed he’d be good for some starring cameos but surely the serious career years were behind him. He would never be getting back into a top team, surely. The starring cameos duly happened – recall his front row in wet qualifying at Canada last year in an Alpine which was ok but certainly not a front row car. Alpine mistakenly believed he didn’t have any serious options when it baulked at his request for a further three seasons last year and it was easy to believe he’d switched to Aston for three years as a proud emotional knee-jerk to being slighted.
But has the soon-to-be 42-year-old just put himself in position to resume his winning ways? With just eight more points distributed in a favourable way he’d be a five-time world champion already, rather than a two-time. Statistics often don’t tally with reality in something as machinery-dependent as motor racing and yes Alonso is not blameless in having been in the wilderness for so long. But he remains one of the greatest competitors this sport has ever seen and if he has finally got himself into the right place at the right time, it would be a fabulous story line.