|
McLaren signs former driver Magnussen’s son(1) McLaren has signed up the son of a former team driver to test its 2012 formula one car later this year. He moved on to contest 24 grands prix with Stewart until he was stepped down for poor performances in 1998. Now, the 38-year-old’s son Kevin, who is 19, has been signed up for McLaren’s young driver programme, which will include a seat at the young driver test later this year. Like Gary Paffett and Oliver Turvey, Magnussen will also work in McLaren’s state-of-the-art simulator. He first caught McLaren’s attention in 2010, and last year finished runner-up in the British F3 championship with eight poles and seven wins. This year, he will contest the Renault World Series. “The team has shown great faith in me so far and I feel that this is an important step in my career,” said Magnussen. |
![]() |
Danny Sullivan to be driver steward in GermanyComments Off 1985 Indy 500 winner Danny Sullivan will be the former driver in the formula one stewards room this weekend at Hockenheim. The 60-year-old American’s formative racing career took place in European open wheel series, but he raced in CART before switching to formula one with Tyrrell in 1983. He returned to America in 1984, winning the series in 1988 before announcing his retirement whilst recovering from a crash in 1995. |
|
Mansell to be F1 steward at SilverstoneComments Off 1992 world champion Nigel Mansell will be the driver-representative in the FIA stewards’ room this weekend at Silverstone. Before retiring in 1995, the 1992 world champion won the British grand prix four times (1986-7 and 1991-2). In 2008, countryman Lewis Hamilton won at Silverstone on the way to his own sole title. “Nigel Mansell used to say he’d gain half a second a lap at Silverstone just down to the support of the crowd,” said the McLaren driver. “I’m not so sure about that because you’re always on the limit. But you do get an extra couple of tenths of a second just by your natural feeling out there,” said Hamilton this week. Mansell, now 56 and minus his famous moustache, contested 191 grands prix and won 31 times for Williams and Ferrari. |
|
Schu will not ‘revive’ old form – BriatoreComments Off May 4 (GMM) Flavio Briatore does not think Michael Schumacher will ever again demonstrate the form that netted him seven world titles until his initial retirement. Three years after vacating his Ferrari cockpit in 2006, Schumacher has so far struggled to match his teammate Nico Rosberg at the wheel of Mercedes’ 2010 car. Pundits are split on whether the 41-year-old is past his prime or simply taking time to get up to speed. Briatore, no longer involved in F1 in the wake of last year’s Renault crashgate scandal, was team boss at Benetton at the time of Schumacher’s first back-to-back titles in 1994 and 1995. Italian reports quote the 60-year-old as saying the German “will not revive” the form of his first career. “I always said that Michael would find it tough against Rosberg,” said Briatore. “This year is going to be uncomfortable for him because there have never been so many good drivers fighting to win grands prix,” he added. |
|
Jeff Gordon Nascar ProfileComments Off Jeff Gordon is a famous American race car driver who was born in 1971 in Vallejo, California. He has won the Nascar Winston Cup four times, and he drives car #24 for Hendrick Motorsports. As of this writing, one of his most prominent sponsors is DuPont. Jeff Gordon began racing when he was only five years of age. He loved to race cars, and his family was supportive of him. His family actually relocated primarily because they wanted Jeff to be in a location where he could better harness his racing skills. While he was still a minor, Jeff had already won a number of races and was given the USAC Midget Car Racing Rookie of the Year award. After this, Gordon went on to win the USAC Midget title, and by 1991, he had gained the USAC Silver Crown. He broke a record by being the youngest person to ever capture the title. He went to the Busch Series after this, and had a large number of victories. Gordon crashed his car during the the Hooters 500 race in Atlanta in 1992, and this caused him to be placed in the 31st position. Jeff Gordon was one of many young racers who would be placed on high quality teams early in their careers. The success of Jeff Gordon allowed a younger generation of racers to begin competing in Nascar. Many critics felt that Gordon was not ready to compete at the professional level because of his habit of racing cars so hard that he crashed them. However, Gordon proved them all wrong during the 1994 season, were he emerged victorious in the Lowe’s Motor Speedway, which was a long and difficult race. Gordon would also go on to win at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway for the Brickyard 400. In 1995 he won what would become the first of four Winston Cup Championships. Jeff Gordon is also famous for rising up against the legendary Dale Earnhardt, and he has become a fan favorite. Many people consider Jeff Gordon to be one of the greatest drivers in Nascar because he achieved so much at a very young age. Even at 35 years of age, Jeff Gordon has successfully won 75 races, which is just one victory behind Dale Earnhardt. Jeff Gordon is also notable for making Nascar a popular sport with mainstream audiences. For a long time, the sport was only regulated to the south, but Jeff Gordon has allowed it to reach a high level of popularity due to advertising and his skills with the media. Author is a contributer for an auto racing blog at AutoRacingReporter.com. Find more auto racing websites at SportsWebsiteDirectory.com. Purchase sports website marketing at SportsWebsiteMarketing.com. |
|
De La Rosa confirmed as BMW Sauber pilotComments Off The Spanish pilot, Pedro Martinez De la Rosa will be the BMW Sauber ‘Scuderia’ second official pilot in the 2010 Formula One World Championship, as confirmed this Tuesday through a press release by the team based in Switzerland. A year later, still in Arrows, he added two more points in 17 tests, before signing with Jaguar for the 2001 season. In this racing-team, the Spaniard, could not shine due to the not very competitive single-seated he drove, attaining only fifth (Italy 2001) and sixth positions (Canada 2001) as his most outstanding performances. JUMP TO MCLAREN AND PODIUM IN HUNGRY. From 2003 on, De la Rosa he becomes McLaren’s test driver, and two years later he gets the chance to dispute a race with the Anglo-German racing-team, the Bahrain Grand Prix, where he finished on fifth position. Even though there was much speculation around De la Rosa’s jump to an official wheel –specially as a result of Fernando Alonso leaving McLaren-, finally the Finish Heikki Kovalainen closed the doors on him and the last three seasons he has not been able to challenge any Grand Prix. During the last months everything seemed to indicate that the Catalan –who has been President of the Pilot Association for two years-, would come back to the competition by the hand of the Spanish debutant team, the Campos Meta, negotiations with the Adrian Campos’ racing-team were interrupted so it will finally be the Sauber team which takes in the veteran pilot. PETER SAUBER VALUES HIS “EXPERIENCE.” “Pedro has worked during the last years for one of the best teams of technical level athletics. We, as a team, want to take advantage of his experience, as we would like Kamui to do,” stated in a press release Peter Sauber, Principal of the team. Likewise, the team principal of the Catalan’s new ‘Scuderia’ underlines that “the combination of an experienced pilot with a bright young hope usually renders good results.” He seemed “sure” that in this case, “it’s what’s going to happen next season.” “Of course, it’s essential that we can give them a good car and I have a very optimistic view of the evolution we can achieve at our factory. We’re capable of continuing our work with the 2010 car, just as we had programmed, despite of the recent uncertainty period”, Peter Sauber pointed out. |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |