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F1 personnel injured in huge Williams fire(0) The drama stepped up a notch even after the chequered flag in Barcelona. A couple of hours after Williams’ first win since 2004, something exploded in the British team’s garage, triggering a major fire. Team members and fire crews battled the blaze as paddock regulars scrambled away from the heavy smoke and police arrived on the scene. The Telegraph’s Tom Cary said on Twitter there are “multiple injuries”. It is believed Williams, Force India and Caterham staff – some of whom bravely fought the fire – are being treated in the medical centre, some for smoke inhalation. An emergency helicopter will ferry others to hospital. “Couple of our guys got injuries, burns and maybe one broken wrist, no news on Williams guys I hope they’re ok,” wrote Caterham’s Heikki Kovalainen on Twitter. Rumours indicated the fire could have been caused by a KERS explosion, or possibly fuel, as a burned fuel rig was pulled from the gutted garage. |
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Schumacher: F1 2012 ‘a 1000 piece puzzle’(0) F1′s new face of 2012 is polarising the sport. It seems teams, drivers and spectators alike either love or hate the new great influence brought largely by Pirelli’s new generation of tyres. An admitted critic is Michael Schumacher. “It’s a 1000 piece puzzle that you need to put together at each race,” said the seven time world champion, according to Auto Motor und Sport. Not for three decades have four different drivers driving for four different teams won the opening four grands prix of a season. “From the standpoint of competition,” wrote Livio Oricchio in O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper, “there is no doubt that the Pirelli 2012 generation meets fully the objective of promoting the show. “But if you think purely about the engineering challenge that is formula one, and the genius of the people and the immense financial and technical resources needed for success, the tyres have now taken on such an importance that the results don’t seem compatible. “Myself, and many in formula one, hope the new versions of tyres that Pirelli is developing returns a little more predictability in terms of how they behave, without affecting the show too much.” For now, however, the teams need to put their puzzles together, and that will undoubtedly be the focus of this week’s three-day in-season test at Mugello. “He who understands the tyres first,” McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh astutely noted, “will have a huge advantage in the world championship.” A broad understanding is already developing, including why 2012 winners Jenson Button, Fernando Alonso, Nico Rosberg and Sebastian Vettel won from the very front of the field. “When you’re in a battle, you can’t take the lines that are best for the tyres,” said Mercedes’ Ross Brawn. All eyes are now turning to Mugello, where the understanding will continue. “These test days could change the balance of power in formula one,” Norbert Haug predicted dramatically in Bild newspaper. Not everyone is enthusiastic, however, including McLaren who oppose the Mugello test on cost grounds. Williams’ chief engineer Mark Gillan agrees: “The days of test teams are gone, so this is not logistically easy,” he is quoted by Germany’s Sport1. Bruno Senna added: “Mugello is not an ideal test track, as it’s very different to most of the tracks that are on the calendar.” |
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Pirelli job ‘not an option’ for Sutil(0) Becoming Pirelli’s test driver was “not an option” for Adrian Sutil, the out-of-work F1 driver has admitted. “Right now I’m waiting,” the former Force India driver told Eurosport Deutschland. German Sutil, 29, was an established F1 driver until 2011, when he became embroiled in a legal battle with Lotus team executive Eric Lux over an assault. He has been left without a seat for 2012, causing many to wonder why he – and not the less experienced Jaime Alguersuari – was not selected to test with F1′s official tyre supplier Pirelli. “A collaboration with Pirelli didn’t work out, but I was never in contact with them directly,” Sutil said. “It wasn’t an option.” He also didn’t find a test or reserve seat with a team. “The fact that there is hardly any testing, of course, is not very helpful,” Sutil insisted. He has been linked with struggling Felipe Massa’s Ferrari seat. “I do have to hope,” admitted Sutil, “that either some drivers don’t do well, or a cockpit becomes available. That is my chance. “That drivers are changed is just a part of formula one,” added Sutil. “My plan is to wait and see if there is a possibility. If not, then of course you have to give serious thought about what to do in the future — in 2013.” |
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Schumacher not expecting Sepang poleComments Off Michael Schumacher has played down expectations he or Nico Rosberg could put their 2012 Mercedes on pole in Malaysia. Last weekend in Australia, the W03 was strong in qualifying but faded in the race as it ate through the Pirelli tyres. Mercedes insists it is working on the race pace problem, but the Brackley based team could shine even brighter in Sepang qualifying, with the innovative W-duct working particularly well on the long straights. So could Schumacher secure his 69th pole on Saturday? “That would be too optimistic,” said the 43-year-old German. “I think the battle for fifth place is the maximum.” A really good qualifying for Mercedes, however, would be a problem for a team like Red Bull. “With the (W-duct) system, the Mercedes will be very difficult to overtake,” Dr Helmut Marko told Bild newspaper. It is believed the reigning champions, despite insisting the system is illegal, are hard at work on their own F-duct. But Marko admitted: “It is very difficult to recreate.” Mercedes team boss Ross Brawn believes all the fuss about the W-duct is a ploy by teams like Red Bull. “They are bombarding the FIA with questions about our technology in the hope of finding out the secret,” he said. |
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Korea to pay less for F1 raceComments Off The future of the embattled Korean grand prix looks safe for now. Completing its bespoke circuit at the last minute, South Korea joined the calendar in 2010 but soon bemoaned the huge costs. Sunday’s media report said organisers will save more than $20 million this year by successfully negotiating a reduced race commission and annual television license fee. The new deal will last until the end of Korea’s race contract, in 2016. The Korea Herald said organisers paid almost $40 million to Ecclestone’s Formula One Management last year — a 10 per cent rise on 2010. The new deal will see the 10 per cent increase scrapped, the report added. “With the successful negotiation, we’ll be able to save a significant amount of money this year,” said organiser Kang Hyo-seok. “It’s a still difficult situation, but we’re trying hard to improve it.” |
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Whiting: Tweaked DRS here to stayComments Off At least for now, the overtaking innovation ‘DRS’ is here to stay. The concept debuted last year, replacing the driver-operated F-ducts with a standard rear wing flap that can be adjusted by chasing drivers in the midst of battle during grands prix. Whiting said there are changes for 2012, to better balance the ease or difficulty of passing based on the experience of last year. “For example, here (in Australia) there is a second zone, and in China and Belgium the zones will be shortened. “Barcelona is lengthened by 50 metres and Canada there will be no second zone, same with Valencia,” he is quoted by Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo. “In Monza the zones will be longer, while for most of the other circuits we are satisfied.” |
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Force India not ready for 2012 podiumsComments Off Nico Hulkenberg has played down claims Force India could be a podium-getting ‘dark horse’ of the 2012 season. German Hulkenberg is returning to F1 with Silverstone based Force India this season, after being ousted by Williams at the end of 2010. Asked what his goals are by Germany’s Sport1, the 24-year-old answered: “First I want to establish myself (in F1), after the bad experience of 2010. “A couple of points would also be great,” he smiled. Some pundits, however, are predicting that podiums may be possible for Hulkenberg – the 2010 Brazil GP pole sitter – and his highly rated teammate Paul di Resta. “Clearly this is a dream,” the German admitted. “But at the moment I don’t think that’s our goal. Of course if we should be in that situation in a race, then we will try everything for it.” Hulkenberg conceded that Force India is not ready to challenge F1′s frontrunners. “I think Red Bull have their nose in front again, and McLaren are the closest to them. I have no idea what Ferrari are doing at the moment and Mercedes is also difficult to assess because they haven’t shown much.” He said countryman Sebastian Vettel’s crown, however, may be challenged. “It’s clear that he is the man to beat,” said Hulkenberg. |
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Button tips struggling Ferrari to recoverComments Off Jenson Button has tipped Ferrari to recover, after the famous Italian team announced it does not initially expect to be a podium contender in 2012. But McLaren’s Button said: “I’m sure Ferrari can find their way out of a sticky situation — if they’re in a sticky situation. “We’re all trying new things at the start of the year. One of us will get it right and I’m sure the others will follow suit in the end,” he told the Guardian. “They’re obviously on the back foot but I’m sure they’ll catch up.” Despite an almost unprecedented media muzzle, Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso broke his enforced silence last weekend to admit by way of analogy that his 2012 car is not in top Barcelona football players’ Messi and Iniesta’s league at present. But the Spaniard also pointed out that while the press is making a fuss about Ferrari’s troubles, the immense pressure on Ferrari is unique. “For example yesterday (Sunday at Barcelona) Red Bull had only a few laps and the last time on the sheet,” Alonso reportedly told Ferrari staff at Maranello. “If something similar had happened to us, hell would have broken loose, but here (in Italy) nobody really noticed it.” Alonso does not think he will be pushing for the Melbourne win next weekend, but he also insisted: “What counts is not to be first in the first race, but in November, at the end of the championship.” |
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Williams leaves board of own F1 teamComments Off Sir Frank Williams has stepped down from the board of his own formula one team. “If for whatever reason I couldn’t come in to do my job, Adam would fill the gap,” he told the British magazine F1 Racing. On Friday, a team statement read: “Sir Frank Williams, founder and team principal, announced his decision to step down from the board.” He explained: “I turn 70 in April and I have decided to signal the next stage in the gradual but inevitable process of handing over the reins to the next generation. “This is not as dramatic a move as it may appear: I shall continue to work full-time as team principal and I shall continue to attend all board meetings as observer,” added Williams. He will also have a Williams family member on the board, as his daughter Claire steps up to be director of marketing and communications. Frank Williams said: “I am proud to say that she has fought hard to earn this appointment and of all the battles she has had to fight, the prejudices of her father were not the least challenging.” Late last year, the team’s co-founder Patrick Head also stepped down. |
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Press tips ‘small advantage’ for Red BullComments Off Most leading specialist publications see Red Bull as the continuing pacesetter in formula one. “They still have an advantage, but it’s smaller,” agreed Jenson Button, according to Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo. His boss Martin Whitmarsh added: “Red Bull has a solid, fast car, better than us in slow corners, but we’re better in the fast ones.” Switzerland’s Sonntagsblick, however, sees McLaren actually ahead of the energy drink-owned team, with Mercedes in third place and Force India a surprise fourth. “Red Bull is faster (than Mercedes),” said the German marque’s boss Ross Brawn, “and clearly a little more than we had hoped for,” he told Auto Motor und Sport. The international publications said Lotus, amid their chassis flaw problems, rank anywhere between third (Auto Motor und Sport) and eighth (Blick). According to the same press, Ferrari is in trouble, ranking no higher than fifth in the lists of the aforementioned publications — and the authoritative Auto Motor und Sport predicting nothing short of a disastrous season for the fabled Italian team. Felipe Massa is quoted by Spanish reporters as saying Barcelona was “a little more positive” than the Jerez test recently, and he was asked to rank the development of the new F2012 car out of ten. “Probably more than five. There is still much to do, but now we are closer than we were,” said the Brazilian. As for whether the car is a race winner, Massa added: “I hope so, but it’s very difficult to say anything in testing,” he is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. Indeed, Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi ended last week’s Barcelona test with the quickest time, but Blick’s veteran correspondent Roger Benoit warned against taking that too seriously. “When with the same tyres at the same time, (Mercedes’ Nico) Rosberg was a second faster per lap than Sauber’s Japanese,” he said. “In testing, the truth is seldom revealed — if the teams used lie detectors, they would all be laying exploded around us.” According to Britain’s Sun newspaper, Kobayashi confirmed: “I don’t think McLaren and Red Bull are slow. “We don’t really wish for wins or podiums. For us this is a bit too far away.” Instead, the midfield battle looks extremely tight, with Brazilian correspondent Livio Oricchio surmising that Sauber as well as Force India, Toro Rosso and Williams are all in there. “It will be race to race,” Toro Rosso’s Giorgio Ascanelli told the Italian press. “From what we’ve seen so far, this fight will be amazing.” And Oricchio concluded: “As for HRT and Marussia, who have not even presented their 2012 cars, they undoubtedly have capable people, but also almost as many difficulties.” |
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Ecclestone hopes Vettel’s dominance ends nowComments Off
They are famously close on a personal level, but for the sake of his sport Bernie Ecclestone wants to see Sebastian Vettel suffer in 2012. “It wasn’t good. The only person that would say no to that would be Sebastian, but I think everybody else would agree with it,” F1 chief executive Ecclestone told reporters on Thursday. He had just announced a new connectivity deal for F1 with Indian multinational Tata’s communications subsidiary. The aim is to modernise F1 in that area because, as the 81-year-old puts it, he is “getting old” and was “asleep” to the world’s new digital era. But more immediately important to Ecclestone is a better show in 2012. “I’m surprised we survived with (the TV ratings) we got right at the end,” said the Briton, referring again to Vettel’s dominance. “We need to see everybody else wake up.” Another element he hopes is in place this year is a fully-firing Lewis Hamilton, but Ecclestone admitted the 2008 world champion might have to farewell McLaren. “I think if he doesn’t perform this year, he’ll be looking maybe to move on, and the team may also be looking for him to move on,” he said. And yet another golden egg for Ecclestone would be a winning Michael Schumacher, but he admitted the seven time world champion might need to sit at the wheel of a Red Bull for that to happen. “I don’t think Sebastian would mind,” he said. “I’m not saying I don’t want Mark (Webber) around, I’m just saying it would be nice to see him (Schumacher) in the car where you know that if he doesn’t win it’s his fault, not the car.” Less important, Ecclestone argues, is the rare absence in F1 of a single Italian driver. “If Ferrari is winning,” he insisted, “it doesn’t make any difference.” Indeed, there are bigger fish on the F1 supremo’s plate: the thorny issue of Bahrain’s return in 2012, and a looming fight with the teams over the next Concorde Agreement. On Bahrain, he joked: “Pity I’m not going to be there myself but don’t worry. No, I shall be there, don’t worry.” As for the teams wanting a bigger share of F1′s revenue pie, Ecclestone answered: “I think they are right. If they don’t ask they are not going to get (it), are they?” But when asked to rate their chances of success, the Briton replied typically: “Slim to none.” |
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Lotus to seek permission for private testComments Off Embattled Lotus will ask its formula one rivals for permission to conduct a three-day private test after it has resolved a chassis flaw. With pre-season preparations limited to just three tests in 2012, next week’s Barcelona running will be the last before the championship begins in Australia. F1 race commentator Oskari Saari, working for the Finnish broadcaster MTV3, said Lotus has confirmed to him that it will seek permission to make up for this week’s lost running in the form of a three-day private test. “As they are based in Britain, then you would think that it would be at Silverstone,” he said. Recently at Jerez, Mercedes departed the opening pre-season test a day early and then made up for it with a private day of running at Barcelona on Sunday. But Saari admitted it is possible the other teams will not be keen to allow Lotus to modify its programme, given the pace of the new E20 car at Jerez. “However, I would imagine it is quite likely that the request will go through,” he said. “Every now and then, every team sometimes needs a helping hand from the others.” |
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Salo ‘surprised’ Ferrari kept Massa for 2012Comments Off Former Ferrari driver Mika Salo has admitted he was “surprised” his former team opted to honour Felipe Massa’s contract for 2012. “I don’t think Massa will be staying after this season,” former Sauber and Toyota driver Salo, who attended last week’s Jerez test, told the Finnish broadcaster MTV3. “I was surprised that he was allowed to continue this year.” Salo, 45, said there is a similar pecking-order at Red Bull, where Sebastian Vettel last year utterly dominated his teammate Mark Webber. He also commented on McLaren’s duo, comprising two world champions. “If McLaren has a good car then the drivers will be taking points off one another — that’s not something that will happen in the other teams. “On the track, (Lewis) Hamilton is the fastest but not quite as smart as (Jenson) Button in the races.” Salo sees less of a close battle at Lotus this year, where his countryman Kimi Raikkonen is returning to F1 alongside GP2 champion Romain Grosjean. “Kimi should be much faster than Grosjean,” he said, “who is only there because (Eric) Boullier is his manager.” As for Williams’ lineup of Pastor Maldonado alongside Bruno Senna, Salo said: “I think this is one of the worst pairings. Both are susceptible to mistakes. “Senna had few good races last year but faded badly by the end. “Maldonado is a bit of a hothead, so I don’t see it being a good year for them. “For (test driver) Valtteri Bottas there could be a good opportunity to get a race.” |
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Lauda film racing towards legal troubleComments Off A film about Niki Lauda could be set for legal trouble, with an Austrian group claiming the formula one legend granted it the rights. But according to the Kronen Zeitung newspaper and the APA news agency, another group of filmmakers is claiming Lauda had already given away the rights to a screenplay about his career. The other project was for a film called ’33 Days: To Hell And Back’, with Hannes Schalle claiming: “He (Lauda) was thrilled and promised us the rights. “Now he denies everything.” The group has already sought a preliminary injunction, prompting Lauda to comment: “If that’s what they say, then I wish them good luck. “Let’s see how it ends.” |
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Kovalainen relieved after Briatore ‘battle’(1) Heikki Kovalainen has admitted to relief after signing on with well-known management stable IMG. According to the broadcaster MTV3, Briatore did not give up Kovalainen without a fight. “We have had a battle with Flavio for a couple of years,” revealed the 30-year-old Caterham driver. “In the meantime, we had to take care of things ourselves.” Kovalainen admitted that with his current contract up at the end of this year, his future for 2013 and beyond is open. “Either we continue with Caterham or pursue at some other place, so in either case this (signing with IMG) is the right solution,” he said. |
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