vrijdag 31 augustus 2012

All great drivers need luck, but Alonso makes his own

It's not often Fernando Alonso is overcome with emotion, but he only just managed to hold it together as he stood on the podium after a quite stunning victory in the European Grand Prix.

His voice had already cracked as he giggled his delight on the team radio on his slowing-down lap - and in the pits Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali was in the same state as he praised a "fantastic" drive by the Spaniard.

But listening to the Spanish and Italian national anthems, the magnitude of the moment almost got the better of Alonso. He choked a bit, grinned, almost cried, gritted his teeth and then collected himself.

No wonder he was so emotional - in the previous half an hour or so, it had all come together to create a perfect weekend for him.

Fernando Alonso

Fernando Alonso (centre) celebrates winning the European GP with second place Kimi Raikkonen (left) and third place Michael Schumacher (right). Photo: Getty  

Alonso has driven some outstanding races in his career - he is generally regarded within F1 as the finest driver in the world - but this one has to be right up there with the very best.

Fighting up from 11th place on the grid, he pulled off some quite brilliant overtaking moves to make his way up into contention, the opportunism and skill never better than when he separated Lotus's Romain Grosjean from second place immediately after a restart following a safety car period.

That move meant Alonso inherited the lead when Sebastian Vettel's dominant Red Bull retired further around the same lap. Then, as he completed a spectacular victory, his day was made perfect when the man he regards as his main title rival, Lewis Hamilton, retired with two laps to go.

Both his main rivals out of the race, a momentous win in his home grand prix and less than 24 hours after Spain's football team made it into the semi-finals of Euro 2012. No wonder he was close to tears.

Of course, luck was involved in Alonso's win. He was not going to beat Vettel before the German's retirement - no one was - and he would not have been in a position to challenge Grosjean at the re-start had it not been for yet another pit-stop problem for McLaren.

But Alonso put himself in the position to gain from others' misfortune, and all the other positions he gained he worked for and won in a style befitting one of the greatest racing drivers the world has seen.

Ferrari's superbly quick pit crew played a part, too - one rival engineer said this weekend that they had moved the goalposts for pit stops this year.

But the fact remains that Alonso would not have had to do what he did had Ferrari's strategists not made the error that left him down in 11th on the grid - a decision for which the driver must share some blame.

Ferrari failed to realise that Alonso would need to fit a second set of the 'soft' tyres in second qualifying to be sure of progressing into the top 10 shoot-out.

Lotus had also planned to follow Ferrari's strategy of running a set of 'medium' tyres in Q2 followed by a set of 'softs'.

But when the English team saw how close it was in Q1, they realised they could not afford to take the risk, and switched to running two sets of 'softs' in Q2 and only one in the top 10 shoot-out.

It's impossible to know where Alonso would have ended up on the grid had he made it through.

Fortunately for Ferrari, their blushes were spared by his stellar performance on Sunday - on a track where it had previously been almost impossible to overtake but which came alive this year with the combination of degrading tyres and a DRS overtaking zone judged exactly right.

Ferrari took a fair bit of stick for the decision - and rightly so. It would be dangerous of them not to learn from it for this is not the first time this season that their strategy has been found wanting.

Alonso might have won in Barcelona had Ferrari not allowed Williams to get Pastor Maldonado ahead of him by making their second stop earlier.

As Alonso admitted himself, a win was also on the cards in Monaco had Ferrari reacted more quickly to his blistering pace on his in-lap and left him out to do a couple more.

And in Canada, where he fell back to fifth, he should have finished at least second - and could possibly have won - but the team failed to react to his tyres losing grip dramatically in the closing stages.

Had Ferrari got those calls right, Alonso could have been heading into the Valencia weekend on the back of two wins and a second place, rather than a second, a third and a fifth.

That's 27 points thrown away even before the error in qualifying this weekend. In a season as close as this, even if Alonso wins the title it is unlikely to be by that much.

In each case, the error has been a result of apparently not being reactive enough - being either too fixed on a specific, pre-ordained strategy, and/or too focused on one specific rival and not looking at the bigger picture.

That was exactly what happened in Abu Dhabi in 2010, when another strategy error handed the title on a plate to Vettel.

Ferrari have now got back many of those points thanks to the problems suffered by Vettel and Hamilton.

Despite Vettel's retirement, the Red Bull showed frightening pace in Valencia following the introduction of a major upgrade, as BBC F1 technical analyst Gary Anderson detailed on Friday.

Vettel would have walked the race had his alternator not failed on lap 34 and the pace shown by Red Bull this weekend will have set alarm bells ringing in Maranello and McLaren's factory in Woking.

At McLaren, though, they have other things to worry about after yet another pit-stop problem for Hamilton.

This time it was a failure of one of the new Ferrari-style angled jacks the team designed as part of a wholesale restructure of their pit-stop operation following problems in Malaysia, China and Bahrain earlier this year.

It lost Hamilton a place to Alonso when the leaders pitted during the mid-race safety-car period - and that of course would have meant he was leading following the retirements of Vettel and Lotus's Grosjean.

Given the tyre problems Hamilton found himself in during the closing laps, it seems unlikely that he would have been able to hold off Alonso for the victory, but it would have meant he was clear of Pastor Maldonado, and therefore the incident that took him out of the race, for which Hamilton was blameless.

Interestingly, if you look back at how many points Hamilton had lost to various operational issues at McLaren this year before Valencia, it was 27 - exactly the same number as Alonso.

Add the 18 or 15 he would have got for either second or third place in Valencia (depending on whether Kimi Raikkonen would have caught him) and that is more than 40.

After Valencia, he is now 23 points behind Alonso. The McLaren has been on balance the fastest car this year, but Ferrari's form is getting better and better and, after Valencia, Red Bull look more formidable than at any time this year.

There are still 12 races to go in an already extraordinary season that clearly has many more twists and turns to come. But Hamilton should be comfortably leading the championship. Have McLaren already thrown it away?

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/06/alonso.html

Hans Joachim Stuck Otto Stuppacher Danny Sullivan Marc Surer John Surtees

Johnson gets nod from the oddsmakers

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/29/2301629/johnson-gets-nod-from-oddsmakers.html

Albert Scherrer Domenico Schiattarella Heinz Schiller Bill Schindler JeanLouis Schlesser Jo Schlesser Bernd Schneider

Best comebacks in the second half of an F1 season

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/bPDrGToguWE/best-comebacks-in-second-half-of-f1.html

Gaetano Starrabba Chuck Stevenson Ian Stewart Jackie Stewart Jimmy Stewart Siegfried Stohr Rolf Stommelen

Video: Air hose hangs, hooks pit crew

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/29/2301252/video-air-hose-hangs-hooks-pit.html

Philippe Streiff Hans Stuck Hans Joachim Stuck Otto Stuppacher Danny Sullivan Marc Surer John Surtees

Hunter-Reay still angry over Tagliani incident

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/29/2301906/hunter-reay-still-angry-over-tagliani.html

Bob Said Eliseo Salazar Mika Salo Roy Salvadori Consalvo Sanesi

The Kubica Chronicles

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/eDE2TXjjZ24/the-kubica-chronicles.html

Ricardo Zunino Pedro de la Rosa Keke Rosberg† Nico Rosberg Mauri Rose Louis Rosier Ricardo Rosset

donderdag 30 augustus 2012

Red Bull under the spotlight


Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel celebrate with Red Bull boss Christian Horner on the podium © Getty Images
Sections of the international media have questioned Red Bull's strategic approach to the world championship. After Sebastian Vettel won the Brazilian Grand Prix from the team's points leader Mark Webber at Interlagos, Der Spiegel noted: "Red Bull gives (Fernando) Alonso wings". Not switching the places means that Spaniard Alonso can take his Ferrari to just second place this weekend in Abu Dhabi and be champion, whereas the alternative strategy would have set up Webber for a straight fight. "It is not easy for Webber to drive in a team that considers him a burden to be up against Vettel," said La Gazzetta dello Sport. Tuttosport noted that it seems "the Austrian team would be happier to lose than to see Webber beat Vettel". "No team orders at Red Bull. Another own goal," headlined La Repubblica. Joan Villadelprat wrote in his El Pais column: "Had Red Bull opted for Webber a few races ago, the Australian would probably now be champion." Red Bull, however, is unrepentant. Team owner Dietrich Mateschitz told Salzburger Nachrichten newspaper that "second under proper conditions can often be more valuable than a first". But there is a feeling that the team is not simply giving up the fight for the drivers' title. One columnist in Brazil's Globo wondered if Vettel's radio message in Abu Dhabi might sound something like 'So ... Mark is faster than you'. "I'm always in favour of leaving the fight on the track with equal chances for both sides," said Rubens Barrichello. "But I wonder if they would do that if the situation was in reverse. ?Mark has done a great job this year and he has been told by his team what position he is in," said Lewis Hamilton. "Against adversity he has kept at it. I want to see Mark win." Webber believes that, if a strategy is deployed, it will only be on the "last lap" of the season this weekend. "Sebastian is part of a team," said Niki Lauda, who believes Webber should be backed fully by Red Bull. "If he does anything it should be helping Webber and not just on the last lap." Webber is quoted by Bild newspaper: "It makes sense. Otherwise it would mean that Ferrari's team orders would have paid off for Fernando." Red Bull team boss Christian Horner hints that sense will ultimately prevail. "We have already given too many presents to Fernando this year," he is quoted by Autosprint.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/red_bull_under_the_spotlight.php

Andy Sutcliffe Adrian Sutil Len Sutton Aguri Suzuki Toshio Suzuki Jacques Swaters Bob Sweikert

Could a London Grand Prix ever take place?

Few things in sport are guaranteed to generate publicity like someone high-profile in Formula 1 talking about running a grand prix around the world-famous sites of central London.

After all, what's not to like? Who doesn't think it would make one of the most spectacular sporting events the world had ever seen?

That's clearly what the PR agency which represents one of McLaren's biggest sponsors was thinking when they invited the media to a lavish event at London's RAC Club on Thursday to hear Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button talking about what it might be like to race around such a track.

An expensively produced video was played. Hamilton and Button said all the right things - while being careful not to be seen in any way to diminish the importance of Silverstone as the home of the British Grand Prix.

And a virtual race was staged around the track with teams led by the McLaren drivers featuring Rio Ferdinand, Melanie Sykes, Olympic gold medal winner Amy Williams and Radio One DJ Sarah-Jane Crawford.

All in all, an effective way to generate a bit of extra media coverage ahead of next weekend's ninth round of the world championship at, yes, Silverstone.

In what will doubtless have been fantastic news for the PR agency and sponsor in question, though, the story developed a life of its own even before the event was held, when F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone was quoted in a newspaper saying "maybe we would front it and put the money up for it".

A London race would see the drivers go past a number of iconic monuments.

Within F1, the idea of a race in London in such circumstances has been greeted with intense scepticism. "Of course it's not going to happen," one senior figure said on Thursday. "You know that, and so do I. But it makes a great story, doesn't it?"

On the back of it, there was an inevitable media whirlwind.

The mayor of London, Boris Johnson, was asked about it, and said he was "broadly positive providing we can satisfy the air quality and noise issues".

Which, of course, they never could. So, apart from the fact that it's a PR stunt on which Ecclestone has chosen to offer an opinion, that's the first reason why it is unlikely ever to happen. There are many more.

Before we get into those, however, it is worth mentioning that Ecclestone has tried to make a London Grand Prix work before.

In the mid-noughties, he discussed it with Johnson's predecessor Ken Livingstone and the Live Aid promoter Harvey Goldsmith, focusing on the two biggest hurdles - money and logistics.

Holding such a race would mean closing off part of central London for at least three days and disruption for much longer as preparations were made. There is an inherent cost in that.

Then there was Ecclestone's fee, setting up and securing the circuit, sorting out infrastructure, policing and so on.

On the plus side, a grand prix would showcase London and boost the city's profile, and probably - all things taken into account - bring in more money than it cost. Not that London, as one of the three biggest tourist attractions in the world, needs any extra publicity.

Five years ago almost to the day, I asked Ecclestone about these very plans. "I spoke about it with the mayor a couple of years ago, I think," he said. "He was very supportive. But we came to the conclusion that it would be too expensive."

A source close to Ecclestone expanded on that. "Bernie put a lot of effort into it," he said. "He said they looked long and hard at it and they couldn't make it work.

"There was very little money forthcoming from Livingstone, so it had to be self-supporting and they needed a way of getting people in.

"But there was only room for 30,000 people and, with the money they needed to pay to put it on, that would have meant charging �500 a ticket."

Damon Hill, then the president of the British Racing Drivers' Club which owns Silverstone, added that he had spoken "to Harvey Goldsmith about it a while back. I think it's dead. Logistically, it's a non-starter."

Which brings us back to the hurdles. The first being the idea that Ecclestone would put up the money for it. That's not how it works - venues pay a huge fee to the commercial arm of the sport, which Ecclestone runs, for the privilege of hosting F1.

That's not to say that F1 stumping up the money to host a race is a bad idea. Quite the contrary - some senior figures in the sport believe that's exactly what it should do to establish itself in America.

There is no market F1 wants to crack more than the US but last autumn Ecclestone played a game of brinksmanship with this season's new race in Austin, Texas, saying it would not be put on the calendar unless it paid its fee.

A similar situation seems to be developing with the proposed race in New Jersey overlooking Manhattan - an event F1 needs much more than one in London.

Then there's the fact that Britain already has a very popular grand prix at Silverstone, which has a contract until 2027, with a break clause either side can exercise in 2020.

With countries apparently queuing up for races - Russia is due in 2014, Mexico is also said to be imminent, Thailand is keen - the idea of holding two races in one country is seen very much as a thing of the past.

Equally, this is the second idea for a London Grand Prix that has come up in the past six days - on Friday another newspaper reported plans for a race around the Olympic Stadium.

Asked about this by BBC Sport at last weekend's European Grand Prix, Ecclestone said: "We're talking."

Hardly a surprise, is it, that F1 is so full of cynics?

In F1 - especially where Ecclestone is involved - one learns to never say never. But in a nutshell, what of the London Grand Prix?

Great PR coup? Yes. Likely to happen? Don't hold your breath.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/06/could_a_london_grand_prix_ever.html

Tony Trimmer Maurice Trintignant Wolfgang von Trips Jarno Trulli Esteban Tuero Guy Tunmer Jack Turner

Marko: Vettel Must Improve Qualifying Performances

Red Bull?s Dr Helmut Marko believes that Sebastian Vettel must improve his qualifying pace if he is to compete for the title. The German currently occupies third position in the standings, 42 points adrift of Fernando Alonso, with only one win so far, a stark contrast to his domination last year. “The title is still [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/svUhVnkXNg0/marko-vettel-must-improve-qualifying-performances

Aguri Suzuki Toshio Suzuki Jacques Swaters Bob Sweikert Toranosuke Takagi

Fernando Alonso: ?We did something better than the others?

Fernando Alonso was in upbeat mood after finishing fifth in Hungary, and he made it clear that he was delighted to have scored a good helping of points on a track which did not suit Ferrari. Although he lost ground … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/07/29/fernando-alonso-we-did-something-better-than-the-others/

Ottorino Volonterio Jo Vonlanthen Ernie de Vos Bill Vukovich Syd van der Vyver Fred Wacker David Walker

Riding duh Rails - Again...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/m4o87pUctlo/riding-duh-rails-again.html

Bob Scott Archie Scott Brown Piero Scotti Wolfgang Seidel Gunther Seiffert Ayrton Senna† Bruno Senna

Best comebacks in the second half of an F1 season

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/bPDrGToguWE/best-comebacks-in-second-half-of-f1.html

Bob Veith Jos Verstappen Sebastian Vettel Gilles Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Sr Luigi Villoresi

woensdag 29 augustus 2012

Hunter-Reay still angry over Tagliani incident

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/29/2301906/hunter-reay-still-angry-over-tagliani.html

Leslie Thorne Bud Tingelstad Sam Tingle Desmond Titterington Johnnie Tolan

2012 Hungarian Grand Prix: Team-by-team analysis

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/41w34dSXbew/2012-hungarian-grand-prix-team-by-team.html

Jody Scheckter Harry Schell Tim Schenken Albert Scherrer Domenico Schiattarella Heinz Schiller Bill Schindler

Franchitti's run atop IndyCar comes to an end

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/29/2301364/franchittis-run-atop-indycar-comes.html

Dennis Taylor Henry Taylor John Taylor Mike Taylor Trevor Taylor Marshall Teague Shorty Templeman

Column: NASCAR needs Kyle Busch to be himself

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/27/2296526/column-nascar-needs-kyle-busch.html

Bruno Senna Dorino Serafini Chico Serra Doug Serrurier Johnny ServozGavin Tony Settember Hap Sharp

OWR: Keeping Company with Krosnoff - Unfortunately

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/Yinas98BU_M/owr-keeping-company-with-krosnoff.html

Bernd Schneider Rudolf Schoeller Rob Schroeder Michael Schumacher Ralf Schumacher

Raikkonen: I Never Doubted Lotus

Kimi Raikkonen had no doubts that Lotus would bounce back from their disappointing 2011 season. The Finn returned to the sport this season, from a sabbatical in the World Rally Championship, with Lotus who he feels could mount a serious challenge for the title. The team are yet to secure a race victory on 2012, [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/t15r0Zs2RsI/raikkonen-i-never-doubted-lotus

Leslie Thorne Bud Tingelstad Sam Tingle Desmond Titterington Johnnie Tolan Alejandro de Tomaso Charles de Tornaco

Alain Prost takes On Kyalami (Video)

It’s fair to say the F1 cars of the 1980′s were hard to handle. With turbochargers churning out ferocious power and downforce nowhere near the level of what we are used to in the modern era, the drivers of the time were under vast levels of�pressure. Kyalami, South Africa, had a reputation as one of [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/utQmYy8AHJc/alain-prost-takes-on-kyalami-video

Syd van der Vyver Fred Wacker David Walker Peter Walker Lee Wallard Heini Walter Rodger Ward

dinsdag 28 augustus 2012

Mercedes and Caterham at City Racing Rotterdam 2012 (+Pictures)

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/1xxKj4e4dZY/mercedes-and-caterham-at-city-racing.html

Heini Walter Rodger Ward Derek Warwick John Watson Spider Webb Mark Webber Volker Weidler

Who will win the 2012 championships? | Debates and polls

Who will win the 2012 championships? is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

F1 is set for a frenetic end to the season with nine races crammed into 13 weekends. Will Fernando Alonso and Red Bull hold on their championship leads?

Who will win the 2012 championships? is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/LeaYsilisqU/

Mark Webber Volker Weidler Wayne Weiler Karl Wendlinger Peter Westbury

Hungarian GP: Hamilton dominates qualifying at Hungaroring

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/DfZxqhpw3vo/hungarian-gp-hamilton-dominates.html

Wolfgang von Trips Jarno Trulli Esteban Tuero Guy Tunmer Jack Turner Toni Ulmen Bobby Unser

Lewis Hamilton: ?The car?s been feeling really good?

Lewis Hamilton bounced back from his disappointing race in Germany to top the times in both sessions in Hungary for McLaren. The car has clearly been improved by the upgrades that were introduced in Hockenheim, although the bad weather there … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/07/27/lewis-hamilton-the-cars-been-feeling-really-good/

Johnny ServozGavin Tony Settember Hap Sharp Brian ShaweTaylor Carroll Shelby Tony Shelly Jo Siffert

Vettel set for titles aplenty


© Daily Telegraph
Tom Cary says in his column in the Daily Telegraph that the man dubbed ?Baby Schumi? has plenty of time to match or even surpass his compatriot?s record haul of seven world titles after he cinched his first in the Abu Dhabi night.
?Here, after all, is a young man, already dubbed ?Baby Schumi? by Germany?s tabloid press, winning the first of what will presumably be multiple world championships, and all at the tender age of 23. Plenty of time yet to match Schumacher's incredible haul of seven world titles. And yet, their phenomenal ability to drive racing cars apart, there is little similarity between the two men. ?There are still lingering doubts over his racing ability but with such blistering qualifying pace he is nearly always leading from the front anyway. Vettel is set for multiple world championships. Just don?t call him Baby Schumi.?
The Guardian?s Paul Weaver says it was difficult to begrudge Vettel his moment of glory after he won the first of what will be many world titles. He also looks back at some of the season?s highlights.
?An amazing Formula One season produced its final twist here on Sunday when Sebastian Vettel, who had never led the title race, won his first world championship. It is difficult to begrudge him his glory, for he had more poles (10) than any other driver and shared the most wins (five) with Fernando Alonso. There will be red faces as well as red cars and overalls at Ferrari, though, for deciding to bring their man in when they did, only to see him re-emerge into heavy traffic. ?Among the highlights, and every race felt like a highlight after the bore-start in Bahrain, there was that wonderful beginning to his McLaren career by Jenson Button, who won two of his first four races, even though he couldn't keep up the pace, especially in qualifying. ?Hamilton once again drove his heart out, and outperformed a car that looked a little too ordinary at times. He was superb in Montreal. Then there was Webber, the Anglophile Aussie who was the favourite among most neutrals to win the title. There was that spectacular crash when he ran into the back of Heikki Kovalainen and the most famous of his four wins, at Silverstone, when he said to his team at the end of the race: 'Not bad for a No2 driver.' ?But in the end there was only one German who mattered. It was the remarkable Vettel. This will be the first of a clutch of championships for him.?
The Independent?s David Tremayne focuses on the plight of the other title contenders, writing it is easier to feel more sorry for one than the other.
?It was impossible not to feel for both Webber and Alonso. Yet while a frustrated Alonso gestured at Petrov after the race, the Australian, predictably, refused to complain about his pitstop timing. ?A world championship seemed an inevitable part of Sebastian Vettel's future, but it came a little sooner than most expected, after his recent tribulations. You wouldn't bet against several more, and if that record-breaking streak continues, perhaps even Schumacher's achievements will be overshadowed.?
And the Mirror?s Byron Young elaborates further on the petulant behaviour of Fernando Alonso on his slowing down lap after his title dreams ended behind the Renault of Vitaly Petrov.
?Fernando Alonso was hurled into more controversy last night for a wild gesture at the former Lada racer who cost him the title. But the Spaniard brushed off accusations he gave Russian Vitaly Petrov the finger for ruining his title hopes by blocking him for 40 laps as they duelled over sixth place. "The Ferrari ace was caught on television cruising alongside the Renault driver on the slowing down lap and gesticulating from the cockpit. Petrov was unrepentant: "What was I supposed to do? Just get out of his way, pull to the side? I don't think that is how we race. It was important for the team for me to get points."

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/vettel_set_for_titles_aplenty_1.php

Wolfgang Seidel Gunther Seiffert Ayrton Senna† Bruno Senna Dorino Serafini Chico Serra Doug Serrurier

Bristol bash-up teaches tough lessons

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/26/2294825/bristol-bash-up-teaches-tough.html

Ernie de Vos Bill Vukovich Syd van der Vyver Fred Wacker David Walker

maandag 27 augustus 2012

Korea vs. Italy - Match comes to Draw with Ferrari 250 GTO the worse for the wear...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/QdGc12xTedQ/korea-vs-italy-match-comes-to-draw-with.html

Stephen South Mike Sparken Scott Speed Mike Spence Alan Stacey Gaetano Starrabba Chuck Stevenson

An electric world championship

Electric racing cars will have their own FIA Championship in 2014. The federation has just awarded the commercial rights to the series to Formula E Holdings, a company that is registered in Hong Kong, but operates out of offices in Berkeley Square in London. The new organisation is headed by Spanish businessman Alejandro Agag, who [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/08/27/an-electric-world-championship/

Jacques Swaters Bob Sweikert Toranosuke Takagi Noritake Takahara Kunimitsu Takahashi Patrick Tambay Luigi Taramazzo

2012 Hungarian Grand Prix: Team-by-team analysis

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/41w34dSXbew/2012-hungarian-grand-prix-team-by-team.html

Andre Testut Mike Thackwell Alfonso Thiele Eric Thompson Johnny Thomson Leslie Thorne Bud Tingelstad

Running an F1 team ?like warfare? says Williams CEO | F1 Fanatic round-up

Running an F1 team “like warfare” says Williams CEO is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

In the round-up: Running an F1 team "like warfare" ? Karthikeyan's F1 demo cancelled ? Salazar to be Spa driver steward

Running an F1 team “like warfare” says Williams CEO is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/uffUYP_-ztk/

Roelof Wunderink Alexander Wurz Sakon Yamamoto Alex Yoong Alex Zanardi

Ron Dennis pays tribute to Neil Armstrong | F1 Fanatic round-up

Ron Dennis pays tribute to Neil Armstrong is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

In the round-up: Ron Dennis on Neil Armstrong ? Ecclestone marries again ? More on Codemasters' F1 2012

Ron Dennis pays tribute to Neil Armstrong is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/lS0hn7ScLWI/

Graham Whitehead Peter Whitehead Bill Whitehouse Robin Widdows Eppie Wietzes Mike Wilds Jonathan Williams

Hamilton decision-making under the microscope


Lewis Hamilton has come in for criticism © Getty Images
Lewis Hamilton?s decision-making ability has come into question after he crashed into the side of Felipe Massa on lap one, causing his early retirement from the Italian Grand Prix. This incident has raised questions about his temperament and ability to bounce back. Kevin Garside of the Daily Telegraph questions how much we should really be expecting from Hamilton. ?Perhaps this is how it must be with Hamilton, an instinctive racer compelled to chase the impossible through gaps that don?t exist. He took the best part of an hour to compose himself before walking out into the sun to face the cameras. This was Hamilton?s third DNF of the season but the first of his own making. Occasions like this are perhaps reminders to us not to expect too much. ?On the days when Hamilton?s insane alliance of guts, skill and derring-do appear capable of delivering the world it is easy to forget he is only 25, an age when it is all too common for boys to believe themselves men.? Byron Young of the Mirror also pulls no punches about Hamilton?s performance and was heavily critical of the manoeuvre which meant he left the weekend pointless. ?To say that his dive down the outside at Della Roggia chicane was optimistic would be generous. Mystifying, definitely, with so much at stake. So often Hamilton has made them stick but yesterday the outcome was all too predictable.?

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/09/hamilton_decisionmaking_under_1.php

Albert Scherrer Domenico Schiattarella Heinz Schiller Bill Schindler JeanLouis Schlesser Jo Schlesser Bernd Schneider

Ferrari Launch Their 2011 Car The F150

Ferrari have become the first team to launch their 2011 Formula One car – named the F150. Thw F150 name comes from the fact it is 150 years since Italian unification, the flag bearer for the nation decided it was important to increase exposure of the major event in the country’s long history. �The cars [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/ferrari-launch-their-2011-car-the-f150/

Tony Trimmer Maurice Trintignant Wolfgang von Trips Jarno Trulli Esteban Tuero Guy Tunmer Jack Turner

zondag 26 augustus 2012

Schumacher prepares to mark 300th race at Spa | 2012 Belgian Grand Prix

Schumacher prepares to mark 300th race at Spa is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Michael Schumacher will make his 300th F1 race appearance at next week's Belgian Grand Prix.

Schumacher prepares to mark 300th race at Spa is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/S48NMxf9hPk/

Marc Surer John Surtees Andy Sutcliffe Adrian Sutil Len Sutton

The Top TEN Formula One Stars Of Tomorrow

If you were to ask any young racing driver what their aspirations are in their career, you can bet that reaching Formula One will be what the majority hope to achieve. In the world of motorsport and racing there are several platforms for drivers to show their talent and claim a place at the top [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/_A39x9YcCR4/the-top-ten-formula-one-stars-of-tomorrow

Graham Whitehead Peter Whitehead Bill Whitehouse Robin Widdows Eppie Wietzes Mike Wilds Jonathan Williams

Engine dispute threatens F1 schism

Seven different winners from the first seven grands prix, an intensely competitive and wide-open championship battle, unpredictable races. On the surface, all is well with Formula 1. Behind the scenes, though, there is ferment.

At its heart is the planned introduction in 2014 of new rules, including new, energy-efficient, turbo-charged engines. The debate about whether this is wise or even possible in the current global financial climate has the potential to tear Formula 1 apart.

The new engines are being pushed strongly by governing body the FIA and have the support of the key manufacturers in Formula 1. But there are fears they will be much more expensive than the current 2.4-litre V8s and that the teams - the engine manufacturers' customers to a large degree - will not be able to afford them.

The engines have a powerful enemy - F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone has been against them from the start. He describes the arguments behind adopting them - which can be read in detail here - as "PR" and thinks they should be dropped.

He lost the first battle - they were formally adopted last year as part of the 2014 technical regulations, which also feature major chassis changes - but is still fighting to kill them off.

In that context, the recent formation of a group representing the interests of the F1 circuits should be seen as a transparent attempt by Ecclestone to bring more weight to the argument to scrap the engines.

What has developed is a classic impasse.

Bernie Ecclestone is working away behind the scenes to stop the new engines. Photo: Getty

F1 is in theory committed to the new engines. Renault and Mercedes want them to happen, and Ferrari dismiss rumours they would prefer them to be dropped by saying they will happen. Whether independent Cosworth, which supplies lowly Marussia and HRT, will be able to afford to build one is unclear.

But the teams not directly supported by engine manufacturers have not yet been told how much the new engines will cost, and fear it will be much more than the five million euros they currently pay annually.

Meanwhile, Ecclestone is working away behind the scenes to stop them. He has got former Renault team boss Flavio Briatore to come up with a 'GP1' set of rules, which include - among other things - continuing with the current engines.

The threat, clearly, is that he will take the commercial rights holders and the circuits with him (and possibly many of the teams), giving the FIA the choice to drop the engines or lose the substance of its championship.

But if that happened, Renault, for one, would almost certainly drop F1, and so might well Mercedes. So who would supply the engines to the new championship? And it would take a brave team to join any breakaway series.

On the other hand, if the FIA presses ahead and the teams cannot afford the new engines - there are rumours they could be as much as four times the price of the current V8s - where will all the cars come from in the FIA F1 world championship?

As the chief executive of the Sauber team, Monisha Kaltenborn, puts it: "If we go back to the days when engines were so much more expensive, I wonder how many teams could afford that. And F1 with four teams wouldn't be very exciting."

The manufacturers, though, believe dropping the new engines would be a mistake - as would delaying them by a further year (their introduction was already pushed back from 2013 as part of negotiations last year).

For them - and particularly for Mercedes and Renault - the new small-capacity turbos with significant energy recovery systems are in line with the way the road-car business is going. Without them, there would be no justification for a continued involvement in F1.

Mercedes team principal Ross Brawn says: "We're committed to a new engine programme, it's progressing, we've been able to justify the budgets to our board and we don't want to see a deferment or a delay in that new engine.

"It sends a very bad message back if Formula 1 keeps changing its direction on things that are so fundamental, which need so much investment to make work. I think the new engine is very exciting."

Brawn adds that the future sustainability of the sport depends on moving with the times.

"We're going to be running around on two-thirds of the fuel that we're running on now with, we think, comparable power outputs," he says.

"We've got to change the engine at some stage. We will become irrelevant with the engine if we don't look to change.

"The world's changing and I think the new engine is a far more relevant engine for F1 for the future.

"If we're going to get new manufacturers into F1, which I think is a good thing, then why will they come in to build an antique V8 engine? They won't.

"They will only come in with this new engine, so we want to attract manufacturers back into F1 and this new engine is very important (in doing that)."

But the sustainability argument has a counter-point, as detailed by Marussia chief executive officer Graeme Lowdon.

"The teams do understand the direction the FIA is going with the new engines and people do generally support it," he says.

"We're happy to see technology go in that direction, but that has to be secondary to the sustainability of the sport."

The backdrop to that statement is that times are tough for all but the very biggest teams in F1. While the top four are all pretty much financially secure, there are concerns to one degree or another for the other eight.

The latest development in the saga came at last weekend's Canadian GP, when Mercedes vice-president of motorsport Norbert Haug said: "It's absolutely clear if you introduce a new engine that it will cost more in the beginning but I think we can achieve comparable spending over a five-year period and that has to be the target."

This was news to most customer teams - but even that might not be enough to end the argument. As Lowdon puts it: "The challenge for most businesses is cash-flow." In other words, many teams don't have the money to pay higher up-front costs, even if they come down later.

Talks are continuing behind the scenes, but as for what the solution to the conundrum might be, Lowdon voices the current situation best: "I have absolutely no idea."

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/06/engine_dispute_threatens_f1_sc.html

Ricardo Zonta Renzo Zorzi Ricardo Zunino Pedro de la Rosa Keke Rosberg† Nico Rosberg Mauri Rose

The Danica Show

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/VDzDseWUsbM/the-danica-show.html

Graham Whitehead Peter Whitehead Bill Whitehouse Robin Widdows Eppie Wietzes Mike Wilds Jonathan Williams

Young Driver tests

If ever there was an illustration of how Formula 1 teams cannot agree on anything, it is the kerfuffling this year over the Young Driver test. For the last couple of years this has been held at Abu Dhabi, after the race there. However this year some of the teams did not want to do [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/08/23/young-driver-tests/

Chuck Stevenson Ian Stewart Jackie Stewart Jimmy Stewart Siegfried Stohr

Michael Schumacher: ?I just ran out of road??

Michael Schumacher crashed in a wet FP2 session for the second time in a row when he went off in Hungary this afternoon. Schumacher slid straight on into the tyre wall after hitting standing water following a heavy shower mid … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/07/27/michael-schumacher-i-just-ran-out-of-road/

Ted Whiteaway Graham Whitehead Peter Whitehead Bill Whitehouse Robin Widdows Eppie Wietzes Mike Wilds

zaterdag 25 augustus 2012

Motorsports ?N Music

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/ZSs2tSD_WKE/motorsports-n-music.html

Vincenzo Sospiri Stephen South Mike Sparken Scott Speed Mike Spence Alan Stacey Gaetano Starrabba

Five ways to improve F1


Emerson Fittipaldi in his heyday © Sutton Images
In an interview in the Times, former world champion Emerson Fittipaldi?s outlined his five-point plan to enhance Formula One. Cut costs ?They spend a fortune in wind-tunnel testing alone. Reduce costs and the slowest teams would catch up and make it more even.? Limit downforce ?They need to reduce enormously the downforce in the cars, the only way to bring back overtaking. We need more mechanical grip so that you have longer braking areas, can set up the car coming out of a corner, get in the slipstream and then overtake.? Close the pitlane ?When the safety car goes out they should close the pitlane. Now it?s just a lottery.? Lift ban on team orders ?It is a very stupid rule. It?s why they are called teams, it?s why they have two cars. If a driver is leading in the championship, everything has to go in his favour. What is wrong with that? It?s so easy for teams to camouflage their orders anyway. All they need to do is tell one guy on the radio he has a problem with his brakes. They can bend the rules very easily. In the old days they would even swap cars, so why do we have this ban now?? Retain traditional grands prix ?These places are the soul of racing. The Americas are under-represented. We have Canada back, but there is no USA, no Argentina, no Mexico. We need to stay in the heartlands.?

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/five_ways_to_improve_f1.php

JeanLouis Schlesser Jo Schlesser Bernd Schneider Rudolf Schoeller Rob Schroeder Michael Schumacher Ralf Schumacher

Schumacher on his "number one race track in the world" at 300th GP

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/ufJocDCWR4A/schumacher-on-his-number-one-race-track.html

Roelof Wunderink Alexander Wurz Sakon Yamamoto Alex Yoong Alex Zanardi

WAG WEEKLY: Nicole Scherzinger

In the glamour sport, Lewis Hamilton and Nicole Scherzinger are the real glamour couple. Being a racing driver, earning millions of pounds and living the jet-set life seems to have its perks, and Lewis has definitely got one of them in the shape of the lovely Nicole. The former Pussycat Doll is, we think its [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/3Y665BRNSgc/wag-weekly-nicole-scherzinger

Maurice Trintignant Wolfgang von Trips Jarno Trulli Esteban Tuero Guy Tunmer Jack Turner Toni Ulmen

Lewis Hamilton: ?The car?s been feeling really good?

Lewis Hamilton bounced back from his disappointing race in Germany to top the times in both sessions in Hungary for McLaren. The car has clearly been improved by the upgrades that were introduced in Hockenheim, although the bad weather there … Continue reading

Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/07/27/lewis-hamilton-the-cars-been-feeling-really-good/

Jody Scheckter Harry Schell Tim Schenken Albert Scherrer Domenico Schiattarella Heinz Schiller Bill Schindler

Why Michael Schumacher Could Win The 2011 World Championship

Michael Schumacher?s 2010 comeback was somewhat abortive.� The results, the driving standard and the overtakes were well below par for the former champion.� He even let his team mate beat him for the first time in his career.� So why can Schumacher, the fallen Ferrari hero, win the world championship for an 8th time? It?s [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/14/why-michael-schumacher-could-win-the-2011-world-championship/

Nino Vaccarella Bob Veith Jos Verstappen Sebastian Vettel Gilles Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Sr

vrijdag 24 augustus 2012

Bristol qualifying rained out, Mears awarded pole

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/24/2290626/bayne-captures-pole-for-bristol.html

Domenico Schiattarella Heinz Schiller Bill Schindler JeanLouis Schlesser Jo Schlesser

FIA closes Red Bull 'Engine maps' loophole

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/JjrZWHLlUAI/fia-closes-red-bull-engine-maps-loophole.html

Bruno Senna Dorino Serafini Chico Serra Doug Serrurier Johnny ServozGavin Tony Settember Hap Sharp

Campaign launched to save Team Lotus


© Save Team Lotus
One side of the Lotus naming dispute has been put forward on a new and in-depth webpage called www.saveteamlotus.com. The basic background is that the Lotus Racing F1 team had its naming rights revoked for next season by Group Lotus and, in order to keep racing under the Lotus name, bought the Team Lotus brand off David Hunt, who had owned it since the original team?s last race in 1994. Group Lotus has now taken Lotus Racing to court to try and stop it using the historic name in Formula One next year. The issue has been a source of constant confusion for many fans and the new webpage offers a breakdown of David Hunt?s and Team Lotus? side of the argument.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/campaign_launched_to_save_team_1.php

Desire Wilson Justin Wilson Vic Wilson Joachim Winkelhock Manfred Winkelhock Markus Winkelhock Reine Wisell

The Tomaso Files: ?Gee-tar, Grills, a Growler or Two, Greens and Gondola?s ...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/-MJncAtEieI/gee-tar-grills-growler-or-two-greens.html

Hap Sharp Brian ShaweTaylor Carroll Shelby Tony Shelly Jo Siffert Andre Simon Rob Slotemaker

Holidays and motor racing?

The French have a lovely expression for traffic jams that keep starting and stopping. The cars, they say, are “en accord�on” and anyone who travelled down the Rhone Valley this summer on the celebrated A6 – the Autoroute du Soleil – on what they call a red or black day will understand the concept. Be [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/08/21/holidays-and-motor-racing/

Adrian Sutil Len Sutton Aguri Suzuki Toshio Suzuki Jacques Swaters Bob Sweikert Toranosuke Takagi

Hornish Jr. on the move in Nationwide

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/23/2286419/hornish-jr-on-the-move-in-nationwide.html

Aguri Suzuki Toshio Suzuki Jacques Swaters Bob Sweikert Toranosuke Takagi Noritake Takahara Kunimitsu Takahashi

donderdag 23 augustus 2012

NASCAR hits Menard with stiff penalty

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/22/2285443/nascar-hits-menard-with-stiff.html

Markus Winkelhock Reine Wisell Roelof Wunderink Alexander Wurz Sakon Yamamoto Alex Yoong Alex Zanardi

Karthikeyan Makes Surprise F1 Return With HRT

Narain Karthikeyan has made a surprise return to Formula One after being announced as one of Hispania HRT’s drivers for the 2011 season. The Indian driver was unveiled as the first racer to be working with the Spanish based squad, who look likely to enter into a second season of racing despite on-going financial concerns. [...]

Source: http://f1fanatics.wordpress.com/2011/01/07/karthikeyan-makes-surprise-f1-return-with-hrt/

Johnnie Tolan Alejandro de Tomaso Charles de Tornaco Tony Trimmer Maurice Trintignant

Hungarian GP: Hamilton dominates qualifying at Hungaroring

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/DfZxqhpw3vo/hungarian-gp-hamilton-dominates.html

Eddie Sachs Bob Said Eliseo Salazar Mika Salo Roy Salvadori Consalvo Sanesi Stephane Sarrazin

Quip of The Weekend

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/AkCoDqzjZ-I/quip-of-weekend.html

Jarno Trulli Esteban Tuero Guy Tunmer Jack Turner Toni Ulmen Bobby Unser Jerry Unser

Bill Milliken 1911 ? 2012

Bill Milliken has died at the age of 101. He was known in racing circles as the father of vehicle dynamics. William F Milliken was born in Maine in the Spring of 1911. He graduated from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1934 and went to work for Boeing, working with wind tunnels, flight [...]

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/07/31/bill-milliken-1911-2012/

Alex Yoong Alex Zanardi Emilio Zapico Ricardo Zonta Renzo Zorzi Ricardo Zunino Pedro de la Rosa

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1?s future | F1 technology

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1′s future is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

The days of open cockpits and uncovered wheels may become a thing of the past - and not just on safety grounds.

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1′s future is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/hYlr-KXcge0/

Reine Wisell Roelof Wunderink Alexander Wurz Sakon Yamamoto Alex Yoong

woensdag 22 augustus 2012

Holiday time?

Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/08/02/holiday-time/

Bernd Schneider Rudolf Schoeller Rob Schroeder Michael Schumacher Ralf Schumacher Vern Schuppan Adolfo Schwelm Cruz

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1?s future | F1 technology

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1′s future is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

The days of open cockpits and uncovered wheels may become a thing of the past - and not just on safety grounds.

Why covered cockpits and wheels may be F1′s future is an original article from F1 Fanatic. If this article has been published anywhere other than F1 Fanatic it is an infringement of copyright.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/f1fanatic/~3/hYlr-KXcge0/

Chico Serra Doug Serrurier Johnny ServozGavin Tony Settember Hap Sharp Brian ShaweTaylor Carroll Shelby

Are They Reaching Their Full Potential?

Aside from the confusing name change saga in the last couple of years, Lotus are making the headlines for one thing and one thing only, and that is success. But, are they reaching their full potential? After an awful 2011 season, where they started brightly but faded toward the season?s close, Lotus are firmly back [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/QQLti52xo94/are-they-reaching-their-full-potential-2

Dorino Serafini Chico Serra Doug Serrurier Johnny ServozGavin Tony Settember Hap Sharp Brian ShaweTaylor

Campaign launched to save Team Lotus


© Save Team Lotus
One side of the Lotus naming dispute has been put forward on a new and in-depth webpage called www.saveteamlotus.com. The basic background is that the Lotus Racing F1 team had its naming rights revoked for next season by Group Lotus and, in order to keep racing under the Lotus name, bought the Team Lotus brand off David Hunt, who had owned it since the original team?s last race in 1994. Group Lotus has now taken Lotus Racing to court to try and stop it using the historic name in Formula One next year. The issue has been a source of constant confusion for many fans and the new webpage offers a breakdown of David Hunt?s and Team Lotus? side of the argument.

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/11/campaign_launched_to_save_team_1.php

Bill Schindler JeanLouis Schlesser Jo Schlesser Bernd Schneider Rudolf Schoeller

Alonso the new favourite


Fernando Alonso is the new favourite for the title © Getty Images
Fernando Alonso is the new favourite to win the Formula One drivers? title, said David Coulthard in his column for The Telegraph.
?He is the man with the momentum and, on the same basis that I backed Mark Webber to win the title before Korea, is now my favourite to claim the world title in Abu Dhabi on Nov 14. ?When the cars are so evenly-matched you have to back the man in possession. Especially when that man is a two-time world champion and arguably the finest driver of his generation.?
The Mirror?s Byron Young drew comparisons between Alonso and seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher as the Spaniard bids to become the sport?s youngest ever triple world champion.
?Like Schumacher, Alonso accepts no opposition within his team. Ultimately he fell out with McLaren over their refusal in 2007 to bring Lewis Hamilton to heel. ?He returned to Renault on condition he was No.1, only to be at the centre of the Singapore cheat scandal - engineered to hand him victory. ?The Spaniard has always denied involvement but at the German GP in July he was brazen enough to radio Ferrari to rein in team-mate Felipe Massa so he could start the winning streak that has taken him to the brink of history.?

Source: http://blogs.espnf1.com/paperroundf1/archives/2010/10/alonso_the_new_favourite_1.php

Brian ShaweTaylor Carroll Shelby Tony Shelly Jo Siffert Andre Simon Rob Slotemaker Moises Solana

A unique exhibition of 50 photographs taken by Drivers and Team Principals for Charity

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/-T0YDWGfK6Q/a-unique-exhibition-of-50-photographs.html

Gilles Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Jacques Villeneuve Sr Luigi Villoresi Emilio de Villota Ottorino Volonterio Jo Vonlanthen

Mt Tahoma calls...

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/Wo2PeQs6uZ4/mt-tahoma-calls.html

Emilio Zapico Ricardo Zonta Renzo Zorzi Ricardo Zunino Pedro de la Rosa Keke Rosberg† Nico Rosberg

dinsdag 21 augustus 2012

Not bad for the number two driver

There was a moment of levity in the news conference after the British Grand Prix when race-winner Mark Webber was asked if he would continue to fight for the championship or back off and support Red Bull team-mate Sebastian Vettel.

The journalist in question clearly does not know Webber very well. But the men on either side of him - Vettel and the world championship leader Fernando Alonso - certainly do. The two of them broke out into broad, knowing grins at the sheer unlikeliness of the suggestion.

Webber, as befits a man with class out of the cockpit to match his ability in it, treated his inquisitor with a delicacy that some of his rivals might have found more difficult to summon. But, before expanding on his answer, even he couldn’t resist drawing the humour out of the situation.

“Yeah,” he drawled, smothering a smile. “At Hockenheim (the next race), we will let Seb through.” Cue even bigger smiles from Alonso and Vettel, who are well aware he will be doing no such thing.

Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel

Mark Webber (left) celebrates winning the British GP with team-mate Sebastian Vettel. Photo: Getty

There is no Formula 1 driver more rooted in the concept of fair but hard competition than Webber – as his battles for equal treatment at Red Bull, which boiled over at Silverstone in the previous two races, attest.

There was no repeat this year of the squabbles that took place in 2010 and 2011, when Red Bull’s apparent preference for Vettel – and the Australian’s absolute refusal to play a supporting role - were laid bare in different ways.

The internal dynamic at Red Bull is very different this year. The team and drivers seem more at peace with their respective positions, and the drivers are fighting it out on the track without the tensions of previous seasons. And Webber is proving every bit a match for the double champion.

Webber out-qualified Vettel in the wet on Saturday, lining up alongside pole position man Alonso on the front row, and then won a straight battle with the Ferrari driver in the sunshine of race day to move within 13 points of the world championship lead.

The internal qualifying score at Red Bull is now five-four in Webber’s favour, and the 35-year-old has two wins to the German’s one. After a difficult season watching Vettel romp to the title in 2011, Webber has bounced back in style this season. A serious title contender he certainly is.

For a long time, the British Grand Prix looked to be Alonso’s to lose. He converted pole position into a lead at the first corner, with the help of a take-no-prisoners sweep across the track to deter the faster-starting Webber, and he led through both rounds of pit stops.

But in the last 14 laps before the chequered flag, Alonso found his Ferrari a much less competitive proposition on the ‘soft’ tyres he had saved to the end of the race because he had not liked them when he tried them in the one dry practice session on Saturday morning.

Webber remorselessly closed him down and, with Alonso defenceless, swept by into the lead with four laps to go.

It would be easy to blame Ferrari for choosing a strategy that in hindsight turned out to lose them the race. Easy but wrong.

It made perfect sense to save the more fragile ‘soft’ tyres to the end of the race, when the track would have more rubber on it and the cars would be carrying less fuel. It just turned out, in hindsight, to be the incorrect choice.

Alonso, Webber and their respective teams have reason to leave Silverstone satisfied.

Ferrari confirmed their recent progress, and theirs is now clearly a seriously fast race car – as evidenced by the fact that Alonso has contended for victory in each of the last five races, as well as team-mate Felipe Massa’s upturn in form. It is a remarkable turnaround after starting the season 1.5 seconds off the pace.

But, as both Alonso and Ferrari team principal Stefano Domenicali admitted after the race, the car is not quite a match for the Red Bull, which is now clearly the fastest in the field.

Although Red Bull team boss Christian Horner denied it after the race, the championship seems to be distilling down to a straight fight between Alonso and the Red Bull drivers – Vettel is only 16 points behind Webber.

McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton is being left behind in fourth place. He is 37 points behind Alonso in the standings after finishing eighth at Silverstone, but more worryingly McLaren have slipped from the pace.

Quite apart from the problems this will cause for them in the championship, it is particularly bad timing for a team whose driver is out of contract at the end of the season.

Hamilton is known to have had conversations with Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes. It is not clear how much interest there is in him by any of them but this is not the sort of performance that will encourage him to sign a new contract at McLaren.

The other defining issue of the British Grand Prix weekend was Silverstone’s apparent return to the bad old days of traffic jams and muddy car parks.

The fact that even Bernie Ecclestone – who has never needed an excuse to kick Silverstone – refused to blame them for the horrendous traffic jams of Friday that led to them asking 20,000 fans with tickets not to come on Saturday underlines the reality that the organisers can hardly be blamed for the wettest June on record.

Nevertheless, there were clear examples of organisational problems as well as bad luck, and the track’s contingency plans clearly did not work on Friday, even if Silverstone did subsequently manage to dig themselves out of the hole they found themselves in with some effectiveness. They also showed laudable honesty in admitting there were serious problems.

The situation is more complex than it seems. The size of the fees charged by Ecclestone make it hard for races to make any money out of hosting a grand prix and Silverstone simply does not have the funds to pour money into solving the problem.

But a problem there is, and it could easily recur – as every F1 driver pointed out at the weekend, the British summer is notorious for its poor weather.

Those involved in the post-mortem meetings planned for this coming week will have to be imaginative in trying to coming up with solutions, but solutions, whatever they are, do need to be found.

Source: http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/andrewbenson/2012/07/andrew_benson_1.html

Markus Winkelhock Reine Wisell Roelof Wunderink Alexander Wurz Sakon Yamamoto

Get Real Dudes! Herr Schumacher is Still the King of Indy

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/nofenders/zbjv/~3/wZkO7DRHoXc/get-real-dudes-herr-schumacher-is-still.html

Huub Rothengatter Basil van Rooyen Lloyd Ruby JeanClaude Rudaz Eddie Russo Paul Russo Troy Ruttman

NASCAR, Fox Deportes reach 15-race deal

Source: http://www.newsobserver.com/2012/08/20/2281044/nascar-fox-deportes-reach-15-race.html

Ricardo Rosset Huub Rothengatter Basil van Rooyen Lloyd Ruby JeanClaude Rudaz Eddie Russo Paul Russo

The Race That Never Was

Anyone tuning in late to ITV?s F1 coverage on June 19, 2005 would be forgiven for thinking the American round of the championship had been a most exciting affair, with multiple crashes and retirements throughout. Only six cars remained on track, and four of them backmarkers at that. But what on earth could have happened [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Formula1Fancast/~3/JfQzQR8IgLw/the-race-that-never-was

Bobby Unser Jerry Unser Alberto Uria Nino Vaccarella Bob Veith Jos Verstappen Sebastian Vettel

Pirelli - Technical tyre notes for the 2012 Hungarian Grand Prix

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/F1InsightAFormula1Blog/~3/NT16pwQ-L6g/pirelli-technical-tyre-notes-for-2012_26.html

Wayne Weiler Karl Wendlinger Peter Westbury Chuck Weyant Ken Wharton