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F1: McLaren says Magnussen's tough run part of the normal learning curve
Kevin Magnussen's difficult run since his second place on his Formula 1 debut in Australia is part of the normal learning process for a rookie, according to McLaren racing director Eric Boullier.
The Dane starred in Australia, finishing third on the road before being promoted by Daniel Ricciardo's exclusion for exceeding the fuel-flow rate, but has failed to score a point since. In both Malaysia and Bahrain, on-track clashes with Kimi Raikkonen compromised his race, while in China McLaren's lack of competitiveness meant he finished 13th.
"Obviously, he is a young rookie driver and it reminds me, in my experience [as team principal at Renault/Lotus] of [Romain] Grosjean and [Vitaly] Petrov," said Boullier. "They went through the same processes – it's part of the learning curve, unfortunately.
"They are inexperienced and need to be able to understand the car. It's not helped by the fact that he has a car that is not so easy to drive today."
Magnussen admitted before the Chinese GP that he found it challenging to race down the order in F1. He had a clean race in China, but like Jenson Button he struggled because of the McLaren's lack of downforce, finishing only nine seconds behind his team-mate.
"Just lack of downforce, really – it's a shame because we just don't have enough," said Magnussen. I think that's the only problem we have with the car. The way the car is run and the way it feels is good, it just lacks overall grip."
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