|
Vodafone extends McLaren sponsorship through 2013Comments Off Vodafone has extended its title sponsorship of McLaren through to the end of 2013, the British F1 team announced on Thursday. “Formula one is a strong platform from which we can engage our customers with unique experiences and events,” said Morten Lundal, group chief commercial officer of the UK based telecommunications giant. The Vodafone/McLaren relationship began in 2007. |
|
‘Selfish’ Alonso is title favourite to BergerComments Off Fernando Alonso’s rivals will need to be as “selfish” as the Spaniard to beat him to the 2010 title, according to Gerhard Berger. Although the former grand prix winner – a close friend of Red Bull mogul Dietrich Mateschitz – believes Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel are in the best car, Berger thinks Ferrari’s Alonso is the better driver. “Only if they’re as selfish as Alonso will they be world champion this year,” the Austrian is quoted by Sport Bild. “For me he’s the best driver at the moment overall; he has experience and is still young enough to be going flat out without fear,” added Berger. Alonso, 29, can also count on the full support of the Ferrari team, whose other driver Felipe Massa has fallen into line behind him. “Ferrari cannot do better than Alonso, and there is no better place for Alonso than Ferrari,” said Berger, backing the Italian team’s philosophy. In a separate interview with APA news agency, Berger said Adrian Newey’s RB6 is in a “class of one” in 2010, and dismissed rivals complaints about its legality as “cheap politics”. |
|
Spa in ‘negotiations’ over Belgian GP – officialComments Off A Belgian politician has played down fears Spa-Francorchamps is set to lose its grand prix, but admitted that no European venue is completely safe. Bernie Ecclestone said this week it is “absolutely” possible the famous and popular venue, which is reportedly struggling to pay the F1 chief executive’s annual race fees, will be axed to make room on the calendar for the sport’s expansion. Jean-Claude Marcourt, economics minister of the local Walloon government, reacted cautiously to the 79-year-old Briton’s comments. “Formula one is becoming more globalised,” he is quoted by the Belga news agency, “and some countries are sparing no expense to join in. “But we should not dramatise the situation; negotiations are still gong on,” added Marcourt. |
|
Van der Garde and sponsor McGregor eye 2011 Virgin seatComments Off A Dutch GP2 driver is edging ever nearer a formula one race cockpit for the 2011 season. Earlier this month, 25-year-old Giedo van der Garde’s manager revealed he is in talks with several teams and has received “concrete offers” from two. Former Dutch F1 driver Jos Verstappen said at the time that he believes van der Garde’s talks were with Virgin and Lotus. And now the Dutch magazine formule1.nl reports that he is in “extensive negotiations” with Virgin, who are believed to be seeking a pay-driver to be Timo Glock’s next teammate. Interestingly, van der Garde’s manager Jan Paul ten Hoopen is also the commercial director of the Dutch fashion brand McGregor, who are set to stop sponsoring the Williams team. And van der Garde’s father-in-law is Marcel Boekhoorn, a major shareholder of McGregor, who with ten Hoopen apparently visited Virgin’s team headquarters earlier this week. “It’s a possibility,” answered van der Garde when asked if he is going to make his F1 debut with Virgin in 2011. “I’ve only heard that we are talking; I have no idea if it will come to a deal. That is my management’s job. “Drivers are often the last to know. I only know that they are working on it and I hear there have been some meetings. I don’t know any more,” he insisted. |
|
Karthikeyan’s sponsors eye 2011 Force India seatComments Off Narain Karthikeyan has emerged as a contender to race with the Force India team in 2011. Before Karun Chandhok made his debut in 2010, 33-year-old Karthikeyan was India’s first grand prix driver, contesting the full 2005 season with Jordan. The Silverstone based team has since been re-branded as Midland, Spyker and is now Force India, headed by the Indian billionaire Vijay Mallya. Force India’s current driver lineup is reportedly not secure for 2011, with Adrian Sutil eyeing a move to a bigger team, Vitantonio Liuzzi struggling to keep up with his German teammate, and reserve driver Paul di Resta thought likely to move into a race cockpit. And the latest rumours from Italy, including a report in Autosprint magazine, is that Karthikeyan is a possibility for 2011. It is suggested his sponsors have up to $8 million in total to spend on the seat, including Mumbai-based Tata Motors who are thought keen to associate with next year’s inaugural Indian grand prix. On his visit this week to the Delhi site of next year’s race, Bernie Ecclestone said he hoped there would be an Indian driver on the grid. “If an Indian driver is in Vijay’s team or a good team it will be superb,” he said. |
|
German workers helped Korea to get F1 track readyComments Off Help from Germany ensured that Korea’s new F1 circuit is able to host its inaugural grand prix this weekend. That is the claim of Hermann Tilke, the architect of the circuit but retained only as an ‘advisor’ to the actual construction of the venue in Yeongam. When it became clear that the Koreans were struggling to complete the facility, Tilke stepped in, reportedly providing workers and machinery, primarily to get the track surface in racing condition. “In the end we sent workers over from Germany, otherwise it probably wouldn’t have worked,” he is quoted by Auto Bild Motorsport. Tilke insists that fears the track surface will break up this weekend are unfounded. “We have used a special formula — one that dries quickly and is ready immediately,” said the German, who said the only problem encountered by the drivers will be low levels of initial grip due to the bitumen sitting above the asphalt. But Tilke admitted that, earlier, he did have “some doubts” that the circuit would be ready, according to France’s L’Equipe. “It was necessary to analyse the problems and find solutions,” he said. “We (Tilke GmbH) helped, but the construction companies in Korea worked hard. “Overall, everything should be fine, but there might be some shortcomings here and there.” Indeed, on Thursday as the F1 paddock filled up, many of the sport’s travellers moaned about plumbing and late media shuttles to the circuit, whilst highlighting the circuit’s imperfections. “F1 has raced in a parking lot in Las Vegas, a desert in Bahrain and a swamp in Shanghai. “But never on a building site in the middle of nowhere,” said Bild newspaper, as 1500 Korean soldiers hurriedly screwed in seats in the grandstands whilst workers painted dirt track verges green. “We can hardly expect to be perfect from the outset,” said an event spokesman. The good news is that organisers are expecting a healthy crowd – perhaps 90,000 on Sunday – for the track action, although it is understood this number of tickets has not yet been sold. “We don’t expect too much on our first attempt at this event,” acknowledged the spokesman. “We hope interest in F1 (in Korea) will increase after this.” |
|
Ecclestone happy after visit to India F1 siteComments Off Before arriving in Korea, Bernie Ecclestone visited the site of next year’s inaugural Indian grand prix. According to local reports, the F1 chief executive gave the facility 40 kilometres from Delhi a thumbs-up, despite the recent international criticism of the Indian capital’s hosting of the Commonwealth Games. “Very, very happy,” he told journalists. “Much better than I thought. “I have no fears about the circuit. After the Commonwealth Games, silly people said ‘be careful’ but I’m so happy about the progress of work. “It is going to be much better than many tracks,” added the 79-year-old. Ecclestone countered reports that the airport will struggle with F1-levels of flow, or that the local infrastructure will not cope with the traffic. “The only thing left is more hotels coming up in surrounding areas,” he insisted. The Briton blamed the media for the negative hype about Delhi’s hosting of the Commonwealth Games, and pointed out that “different people” are organising the F1 event. “I will come back if necessary but I don’t think it will be necessary before (the 2011 race in) October. These people are quite capable, and I don’t see any problem,” said Ecclestone. Ecclestone arrived at Korea’s new F1 circuit on Thursday. |
F1′s travellers report first impressions from KoreaComments OffF1′s travelling circus is arriving in South Korea, and the first reports are mixed.BBC television anchor Jake Humphrey summed up the Yeongam venue as satisfactory but “far from finished”. “Things look pretty ready to go,” said Virgin driver Lucas di Grassi, “with some beauty work still to be finished but the main structure is ready.” Others talked about their long journeys from the huge Seoul airport to Mokpo, the closest city to Yeongam, in the impressive high-speed KTX train with free wi-fi. Photographer Darren Heath was less impressed with the journey, tackled by many in buses. “F1 in Seoul? Nah, let’s have it in the middle of nowhere 100s of miles from anywhere,” he wrote on Twitter. Veteran Swiss correspondent Roger Benoit, writing in Blick newspaper, said the F1 track itself is an “enormous construction site”, and his hotel room one of the ones usually rented by the hour. “No joke,” he said. Reportedly so unimpressed was Williams with the local accommodation on offer that the British team has committed to a 3 hour round trip every day in order to stay in a nicer hotel. “Dominating the venue are the excavators, debris and waste,” wrote Benoit, who said a bridge over the front straight is still littered with scaffolding and hard-hatted workers. Sauber’s team manager Beat Zehnder complained about the cost of the team buildings, with the rent costing $40,000. “Whoever wants to use the upper floor must pay another 20,000,” he said, “but everyone has decided to just use the ground floor!” Said Benoit: “I’m already looking forward to the final races in Sao Paulo and Abu Dhabi!” Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said rolling machines are still working on the recently-laid top surface of asphalt, with the paint for the starting grid yet to be sprayed. “Only on Friday will we know whether the surface will withstand the stresses of formula one cars,” read the report. “Everything on the sandy site is under construction. Next to the pitlane is a large pile of sand. Whoever didn’t know that F1 is running here in a few days would think it’s not happening until next year,” it added. German Sky television pundit Marc Surer reports in Speed Week that the seating in some grandstands is not complete. “Much remains to be done, but as for the track itself, I am surprised that it is ready,” he said. “Whether it can withstand hours of practice and racing, however, is another question.” |
|
Korea surface won’t break up insists TilkeComments Off Hermann Tilke on Wednesday sounded confident the newly laid track surface at Yeongam will survive this weekend’s inaugural Korean grand prix. With the top layer so recently laid and oils still seeping to the surface, it is feared this event could be a repeat of Spa in 1985, when the F1 cars had to go home because the track broke up. But Tilke, the architect who designed the 5.6km layout, said he is not worried about the strength of the surface. Instead, he predicted it will be a challenge for the drivers. “It will probably have little grip in the beginning. But they are the best drivers in the world and must cope with it,” the German, whose company provided machinery and expertise for the laying of the asphalt, told DPA news agency. “It will be very slippery in the beginning. But the track will become faster by the seconds until Sunday,” he added. Also sounding bullish on Wednesday was McLaren’s chief engineer Phil Prew, who had worried about the state of the brand new asphalt before arriving in Korea. “I walked the circuit this morning and the track surface didn’t look too bad,” he told reporters during a teleconference. “It wasn’t particularly greasy underfoot and it looked – from what you can tell – smooth, well-laid and consistent all the way around,” added Prew. |
|
Hulkenberg out, Maldonado in for 2011Comments Off Pastor Maldonado has signed a deal to race alongside Rubens Barrichello at Williams in 2011. That is the claim of Warm Up, the electronic version of Brazil’s Grande Premio publication. The report said Maldonado, the new GP2 champion, will replace Nico Hulkenberg. The 25-year-old Venezuelan reportedly inked the contract in the second week of October in Caracas, in the presence of a top official of the Grove based team and Maldonado’s sponsor PDVSA, the state-owned petroleum company. The report said Williams essentially had no choice, amid the prospect of losing four main sponsors – RBS, Philips, AirAsia and McGregor – at the end of the current season. PDVSA will reportedly pay EUR 15 million for Maldonado’s seat. Williams has been contacted for comment. |
|
Domenicali: Rival teams’ title approach ‘interesting’Comments Off Stefano Domenicali has admitted it will be “interesting” to see how Ferrari’s rivals tackle the remaining three races of 2010. Of the title contenders, only the Italian team is solely focused on a single driver, while Red Bull and McLaren still endeavour to provide equality to each of their race drivers. “In the other two teams they have both drivers that will fight (each other),” said team boss Domenicali, contrasting Felipe Massa’s role for the rest of the season in support of Fernando Alonso’s title challenge. “I think it will be very important to see how all the drivers approach the next few races mentally, within the teams and against the other drivers — it will be very interesting,” he added. The most obvious negative example of a team’s commitment to equality is 2007, when McLaren’s acrimonious duo Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso tied on points but both lost the championship against the odds to Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen. Flavio Briatore, who is Mark Webber’s manager, insists Red Bull should order the Australian’s teammate Sebastian Vettel to fall in line. “With only three races left, Red Bull should make Mark their number 1 driver,” he said in a new interview with the Times of India. He thinks team orders and the notion of number 1 drivers have an obvious place in formula one, whose biggest prize is the individual drivers’ title. “If I had been at Ferrari, I would have done the same thing,” said Briatore. |
|
Female DTM driver Stoddart wants F1 testComments Off Susie Stoddart has revealed she would like a formula one team to give her the opportunity of a proper track test. The 27-year-old Scottish driver, whose partner is the Williams co-owner Christian ‘Toto’ Wolff, currently races a Mercedes in the German touring car series DTM. “I dream about formula one,” Stoddart, no relation to the former Minardi owner Paul Stoddart, told the Austrian magazine SportWoche. “I would at least like my first test. That’s what I really want to do. But I don’t want it to just be a PR stunt. “I want to show them what I can do,” added Stoddart, who has also raced in Formula Renault and British F3. She is currently 12th in the 2010 DTM standings, ahead of former F1 drivers Ralf Schumacher, David Coulthard and Markus Winkelhock, with two races to go. |
|
Title challengers asked Chandhok about KoreaComments Off F1 drivers and engineers canvassed Karun Chandhok for his impression of this weekend’s new grand prix venue in Korea, the Indian has revealed. Chandhok, 26, contested the first half of 2010 with the HRT team, and was later deployed by Red Bull to the new – then incomplete – Yeongam layout for a demonstration in an F1 car. So, as the only driver in the world to have completed real laps in Korea, Chandhok revealed to Reuters that title contenders Mark Webber and Jenson Button have asked him about the circuit’s nuances. “You’d expect people to be calling, really,” said Chandhok, who is not travelling to Korea this week. The report said technical people from various teams, and his former teammate Bruno Senna, also asked Chandhok questions about his laps in Korea. “To be fair, a lot of people have very good simulators and they have a lot of faith in their simulators and simulation software,” he explained. “I think a lot of them tend to believe that more than anything else.” But he said Australian Webber spoke to him about Korea. “Obviously he was very curious to see what I thought about the place and what the circuit was like,” said Chandhok. And a more recent discussion was with Button. “We were chatting about this and that and he was quite curious about Korea,” added the Indian, revealing that the McLaren driver asked him about the camber of the corners. “I think some of that stuff is not so apparent until you get there. So he had questions about that sort of stuff,” said Chandhok. |
|
Briatore flags 2013 as year for F1 returnComments Off Having earlier flagged a possible return to F1 in the future, Flavio Briatore seems now to have set a definite date. Present at several races this year and still closely aligned with Bernie Ecclestone, the potential roles for Briatore – perhaps with Pirelli, Ferrari or alongside the F1 chief executive – are the subject of speculation. “I have drawn a line under the role of team boss, but that does not mean I am saying goodbye to F1. Far from it,” he recently told the Journal du Dimanche. Briatore, 60, has indicated he will focus on the sport’s “commercial” or “business” side, triggering rumours that Ecclestone sees the Italian as his successor. But although contemplating his 80th birthday later this month, Ecclestone insists he is not planning to step aside by 2013. Asked if he will still be running the sport at 90, the Briton told the Guardian newspaper: “Yes! The way I feel at the moment, why stop?” |
|
Korea was in doubt and Spa is nowComments Off Bernie Ecclestone has admitted that, mere weeks ago, this weekend’s inaugural Korean grand prix risked not going ahead. The F1 chief executive recently expressed doubt about the incomplete Yeongam venue, which has now been passed fit by the FIA to host the formula one circus. “It’s done now,” Ecclestone said in an interview with the Guardian newspaper. “Last month I didn’t think it would be finished. And it would have been cancelled then — for sure.” But the Briton, to turn 80 later this month, defended his campaign of the last decade or so to expand the sport far beyond its traditional European base. Since the late 90s, F1 has moved further into Asia and the Middle East, and the likes of India, the USA and Russia will soon also be on the calendar — despite waves of scepticism among some of the sport’s purists. “In the end common sense has prevailed and we’ve expanded. It’s just having the courage to do it,” said Ecclestone. A potential problem, however, is that F1′s expansion has put in jeopardy some of the historic, much-loved but outdated venues and hosts — like the popular Spa-Francorchamps. But is the incredible Belgian venue really in danger of losing its grand prix? “Absolutely,” Ecclestone insisted. “If it wasn’t supported by the government over there it probably would go because they wouldn’t be able to afford it. It’s the same with the British grand prix,” he added. Another problem is that the circuits replacing the old guard are mostly penned by Hermann Tilke, who has been accused of churning out bland clones. “Our problem is that we’re trying to build race circuits that are super safe,” Ecclestone explained. “You don’t get so much up-and-down because you can’t just put a new circuit anywhere. “But one of the best circuits in the world is Turkey. It’s a great circuit — that’s up-and-down.” But even the Istanbul venue is in doubt, the Briton revealed, because of efforts to cap the calendar at 20 races. “Maybe someone will decide they need a rest because it’s not working for them commercially. A good example is probably Turkey,” said Ecclestone. “They’ve built an incredible circuit and it might even be the best — but there’s not much enthusiasm from the public. I don’t know why.” |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |