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Williams denies cigarette caused Barcelona blaze(0) Two days after winning in Spain, Williams is scrambling to put together the equipment it needs to contest next weekend’s Monaco grand prix. Mere hours after Pastor Maldonado secured the once-great British team’s first victory since 2004, a huge fire broke out in the pits, leaving one team member still in a Barcelona hospital with burns. “His family are in constant communication and he is in good spirits,” Williams said in a media statement. The Oxfordshire based team is now making efforts to ensure it can race in Monte Carlo, having lost a lot of equipment in the fire. Mercifully, however, Bruno Senna’s car appears to have survived, with the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 saying an initial inspection of the chassis showed no devastating damage. Maldonado’s winning car was in parc ferme at the time of the incident. “We had a lot of damage and lost a lot of equipment, including IT equipment,” chief operations engineer Mark Gillan said, according to the Daily Mail. “Over the next couple of days we will be looking at where we are parts-wise. “We will have everything we need to run operationally at Monaco, but we may be missing a few of the extras because obviously we don’t carry a complete set of spares for everything,” he said. It is believed more than one rival team has offered to help Williams by loaning the Sir Frank Williams-led outfit any equipment it needs. A McLaren spokesman confirmed the Woking based team has offered to help. Germany’s Bild newspaper said Williams’ damage bill runs into the millions. Team manager Dickie Stanford denied a rumour the fire was caused by a cigarette in the vicinity of Senna’s fuel tank while it was being emptied. “We don’t know the cause, but we would never allow smoking in the pits,” he insisted. Williams and F1′s governing FIA are investigating. |
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Vettel: Ferrari ‘dangerous’ with new B car(0) Ferrari’s heavily upgraded F2012 has caught the eye of reigning world champion and last-start winner Sebastian Vettel. The famous Italian team and its lead driver Fernando Alonso have tried to play down the improvements made to the recently struggling red car. “It was good acting,” said Brazilian newspaper O Estado de S.Paulo’s correspondent Livio Oricchio on Friday. “The truth is that Ferrari have debuted a new car. Almost everything is different.” Red Bull’s Vettel has spotted the same thing. “If you ask me, Ferrari are dangerous,” Bild newspaper quotes the German as saying on Friday. The ‘B’ Ferrari features new front and rear wings, floor, sidepods, engine cover, exhaust and brake ducts. “A total reconstruction for a million euros,” said the newspaper. Alonso was quickest on Friday morning in Barcelona but then a long way down the order in P2. He played down his victory chances. But Vettel’s boss Dr Helmut Marko insists: “They (Ferrari) have become really fast.” |
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Brawn’s Barcelona absence triggers rumours(0) A lack of official information has triggered speculation about Ross Brawn’s health. And another rumour is that his absence in Barcelona could be connected with Mercedes’ billion-dollar dispute with Bernie Ecclestone over the next Concorde Agreement. The German squad announced on Thursday that Bob Bell is leading the team in Barcelona because regular boss Brawn is back in Britain on doctor’s orders. Bild newspaper said the 57-year-old was given the advice in hospital earlier this week, following a dizzy spell at his home in England. “It’s more than the flu,” chief executive Nick Fry is quoted as saying, “but I can assure you that it’s nothing life threatening.” Indeed, a spokeswoman told us on Thursday that Brawn will be back to work at Monaco in a fortnight. For Spain, Brawn will watch the action on television. “We will still keep in touch,” Michael Schumacher revealed. “Ross cannot be replaced. That’s simply impossible.” |
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Lauda tips Schumacher to win in 2012(0) Niki Lauda is sure Michael Schumacher will return to the top step of the podium this year. As Mercedes took a step forwards with its new W03 car in 2012, it was the famous seven time world champion’s teammate Nico Rosberg who tasted success first, securing pole and victory in China last month. But triple world champion Lauda told Germany’s Bild newspaper: “Michael Schumacher will win this year. “Finally Mercedes are good enough to be able to attack the best.” Schumacher, 43, has not been on the podium since he returned to F1 in 2010. The German has also played down the team’s chances on the demanding Circuit de Catalunya this weekend, even though Mercedes is debuting a new ultra-light carbon gearbox in Barcelona. Lauda, meanwhile, played down Schumacher’s widely-reported criticisms of this year’s Pirelli tyres, which have seen him labelled either a sore loser or a spoil-sport amid the exciting 2012 season. “Schumi can’t spoil formula one,” laughed the Austrian legend. “He has been in the business so many years — he knows how it works. “I see Rosberg’s success as spurring him on rather than frustrating him. He will fight through it,” predicted Lauda. |
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Pirelli criticism shows Schumacher frustration(0) An obvious tension was evident at Mugello when Pirelli’s Paul Hembery was asked about Michael Schumacher. The seven time world champion had slammed F1′s official supplier after Bahrain, arguing that the 2012 tyres degrade so quickly it makes driving a grand prix car as slow as a safety car. “We haven’t spoken,” Briton Hembery is quoted by Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “I’ve just read something on the net about the tyres from his teammate Nico Rosberg which is very different.” Asked if Schumacher’s criticism was irritating, he answered: “We built the tyres the way we were asked to. “The FIA, Bernie Ecclestone, even the teams wanted it this way. The spokesman for the teams at the time was Ross Brawn, Schumacher’s team boss. “There have been four different winners in the four races so far, which alone shows that we must have done something right,” Hembery insisted. “As a fan I would be thrilled.” Asked if he can at least understand Schumacher’s frustration, he continued: “The four winners this year have not won by chance. “They were absolutely the best drivers in those races and all of them were faster than their teammates. “I can understand that Michael was frustrated at the last race. Among the four winners so far were two Germans, and then you had Kimi (Raikkonen), who in the fourth race of his comeback is on the podium. “Racers are winners; they’re not happy unless they’re winning.” Hembery denied that tyres have, in 2012, become more important than the cars or drivers. “That’s a misconception,” he insisted. “The driver has a huge impact. “Anyway I’m convinced that at Silverstone at the latest the teams will have the problem under control. Just as they did last year.” Finally, he insisted that Pirelli is not going to make any knee-jerk reactions. “If there are 23 drivers satisfied and only one dissatisfied, then I don’t think we need to change something,” Hembery is quoted by Bild newspaper. Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, however, acknowledged a slight frustration. “For the top teams it’s a bit frustrating,” he told La Stampa newspaper, “when it’s difficult to exploit all your potential. “It’s like Real Madrid, Barcelona and AC Milan suddenly playing with the budget of Cesena.” |
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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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‘Only certainty is uncertainty’ in F1 2012(0) All this year’s title contenders know after four ‘flyaway’ races in 2012 is that they do not know what will happen in Spain next month. “The only certainty is uncertainty,” read the German headline at Netzeitung. With F1 generally regarded in the wider world as a sport with predictable results, this is an entirely new situation. “The statistics show that it’s been nine years since there have been four different winners in the first four races,” said Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali. Indeed, the famous Italian team as well as McLaren, Mercedes and Red Bull have won the opening races of 2012, and also with potentially winning pace have been Lotus and Sauber. “More than that,” continued Domenicali, “you have to go back 29 years to find the last time four different cars won.” One explanation is that F1 has never been more competitive, with plenty of well-oiled teams and no fewer than six world champion drivers on the grid. But Domenicali thinks Pirelli is the dominant factor. And not everybody is happy about that. Michael Schumacher told Bild newspaper that this year’s tyres degrade so fast that rubber “flies from the rim” if he pushes too hard in a corner. “We drive around like the safety car. It is not a satisfying situation,” the seven time world champion said. Pirelli’s motor sport director Paul Hembery is unimpressed with the rebuke, insisting that the Italian marque is only trying to “make tyres that make the races exciting”. “We cannot take individual drivers into consideration,” the Briton insisted. “It would be dead easy for us to make tyres that don’t break down. Then the top ten would also be the top ten in the race. “But no one wants to see boring processions,” Hembery claimed. Agreed the Swiss headline at Blick: “Pirelli is sweeping away the boredom”. Indeed, not even the other Mercedes driver, Shanghai winner Nico Rosberg, agrees with Schumacher. “It’s total chaos. You don’t know who is going to be fast at the next track,” he is quoted by DPA agency. “Formula one has become almost unlike any other sport. “Yes, you cannot drive any laps any more at full throttle. Often, it’s like driving on ice. But that’s a big and an interesting challenge,” said the German. Undoubtedly exciting for the fans, but the teams are having to adapt quickly. Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport said on Sunday that Vettel’s victory could mean Red Bull resumes its dominant grip on F1. Dr Helmut Marko doesn’t think so. “We don’t even know who our opponents are!” he exclaimed. |
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Pirelli making F1 a ‘show’ or a ‘lottery’?(0) Tyres. The political dramas aside, that word utterly dominated the Bahrain grand prix weekend. Afterwards, Michael Schumacher admitted he was “unhappy” with the situation. “Sometimes we are driving only 60, 70 per cent through the corners,” he is quoted by Bild newspaper. Pirelli did not take the criticism lightly, insisting it has made Canada 2010-style, heavily degrading tyres to order, for the benefit of the ‘show’. Motor sport director Paul Hembery on Monday ‘re-Tweeted’ a message from a follower accusing the seven time world champion of having thrown “his toys out of the pram”. Moreover, Pirelli said Bahrain is perhaps “the most demanding” on the entire calendar when it comes to degradation. “As a result, knowing how to manage the tyres and contain thermal degradation was a vital skill” on Sunday, the Italian marque said in a statement. On Twitter, The Times’ correspondent Kevin Eason called Bahrain an “excellent race, although I am not sure we haven’t moved from tyre management to lottery”. The roulette wheel didn’t spin up for McLaren – the team with arguably the best overall car so far in 2012 – on Sunday. “Nobody has added a second to their cars in just a week after China,” lamented Jenson Button, “but here we were a second off the pace.” His boss Martin Whitmarsh told Auto Motor und Sport: “Maybe it was the pressures, maybe the temperatures. We really don’t know.” The German reporter said Whitmarsh’s comment indicates an “uncomfortable realisation” for such a scientifically meticulous team. Whitmarsh agreed: “It is now more important to understand the tyres than to find a bit more downforce.” The tyre marque’s test driver Jaime Alguersuari told Mundo Deportivo newspaper that Pirelli deserves credit, not criticism. “Pirelli is largely responsible for making F1 the most spectacular it has been in a decade,” said the young Spaniard. |
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Schumacher: Double-DRS protest ‘the normal game’Comments Off Michael Schumacher has dismissed the attempt to have Mercedes’ innovative ‘double-DRS’ system banned. Having twice previously rejected rivals’ claims the concept is illegal, the FIA late on Thursday threw out Lotus’ official protest. Seven time world champion Schumacher, who drives for Mercedes, admitted in China he doubts Lotus really thinks the system breaches any rules. “If someone has a good idea, we always have this sort of dispute,” the famous German told Bild newspaper. “It (the dispute is) because it’s going to take too long for the other teams to do the same thing. It’s the normal game,” said Schumacher. It is believed McLaren and Sauber are working on their own versions of the double-DRS, as are the reigning world champions Red Bull. “We have been working on it for some time,” a Red Bull source told O Estado de S.Paulo’s Livio Oricchio, “but it’s not easy to get even two small tubes down the entire length of the car, front to rear,” he admitted. Oricchio said Ferrari is also working on a version, to debut no later than next month’s Spanish grand prix. |
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Marko: Vettel team order ‘not tactical’Comments Off Red Bull has hit back at claims the team lied about a technical problem in Malaysia in order to gain a tactical advantage for the forthcoming races. Near the end of the Sepang race, Sebastian Vettel’s engineer repeatedly instructed the back-to-back world champion to retire his RB8 car. Team boss Christian Horner said the brake temperatures had risen to a dangerous level, but Vettel nonetheless raced to the chequered flag and finished eleventh, one position out of the points. Horner explained Vettel did not hear the radio calls due to a “lightening strike”, but photos prove that the German driver was also repeatedly shown pit boards with the same messages. And the 24-year-old revealed after the race: “Of course you can save the car, but I wanted to see the chequered flag. I think that’s how it should be.” Moreover, the authoritative Auto Motor und Sport quotes Vettel as confirming: “I heard the command.” Red Bull has been accused in some media reports of feigning the brake problem in order to retire the car for tactical reasons and therefore install a fresh gearbox for China next month without penalty. Dr Helmut Marko told Bild newspaper: “After the crash (with Narain Karthikeyan), the temperature of the brakes rose far above the allowed level. “We called him in purely because the car was no longer safe. It was not a tactical decision,” the Austrian insisted. It is reported that Vettel will sit with his team bosses this week in Milton-Keynes to discuss the apparently ignored team order. German racing legend Hans-Joachim Stuck said: “Another driver would be fired, but Vettel has the confidence of being a double world champion.” According to Welt newspaper, Swiss commentator Marc Surer added: “It was the right decision by Vettel, as the team needs to be careful with commands like that.” |
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Lotus’ Lux reveals – ‘I forgive Sutil’Comments Off Eric Lux has revealed he has forgiven Adrian Sutil for injuring him in a Shanghai nightclub a year ago. “I forgive Sutil,” Lux, a Lotus team executive, told Bild newspaper in Malaysia. “I would even be happy for him if he came back to race and had a job to do. For me, everything is past; I don’t have emotions about it anymore,” the Luxembourger added. Lux still bears a sizeable scar on his neck. “Whether the penalty was too much or not enough is not up to me,” he continued. “But if it had been one centimetre different, he would be spending the next 20 years in prison in China,” added Lux. |
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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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Mercedes could speed ahead in MalaysiaComments Off After all the pre-season hype, the Melbourne paddock banter about its clever F-duct system and a strong showing in qualifying, Mercedes failed to shine in last Sunday’s season opener. “Good question,” Michael Schumacher told Bild newspaper at an event this week in Malaysia. “We don’t know yet.” Agreed Finnish commentator and former F1 driver Mika Salo: “It’s going to be interesting. “Malaysia requires a lot more from a car aerodynamically than does Australia. “I am sure McLaren will still be at the front, but Red Bull and Mercedes will probably be closer.” So what happened to Mercedes’ early promise in Australia? “In the race we had some problems, especially with the tyres — they degraded too quickly,” revealed team boss Ross Brawn. But for Sepang, “We have an idea about how we can get it under control,” he added. If that is true, then Sir Jackie Stewart is looking forward to seeing “the old Michael Schumacher” for the first time since he initially retired in 2006. “He is driving well again,” the famous Scot told Kolner Express newspaper, “but so too is Nico Rosberg. “They have a much better car than last year, and Michael is finally showing what he is capable of. “I don’t know if that will be (good enough for) victories, but for sure we will see him again on the podium,” added Stewart. |
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Mercedes suspects Red Bull using ‘illegal trick’Comments Off Hot on the heels of the new F-duct controversy, Mercedes has turned the heat back onto Red Bull. “The discussion about our system has diverted the focus from the exhaust issue,” he said in Australia. The FIA has clamped down hard on the exhaust-blown diffusers seen throughout the grid last year, but much pre-season chatter focused on some teams’ post-ban 2012 solutions that reportedly fly close to the boundaries of the new rules. But now Germany’s Bild newspaper reports that Mercedes suspects Red Bull is also bending the rules in another area. The report said Mercedes’ sound analysis indicated Renault-powered Red Bull is deploying an “illegal engine trick”, apparently involving the turning on and off of individual cylinders. Mercedes’ competition vice-president Norbert Haug commented: “There is no official protest by us. But there are some questions that we are asking the FIA.” Red Bull’s Dr Helmut Marko hit back: “No one will find anything. We comply with the rules.” German specialist magazine Auto Motor und Sport, meanwhile, reports that Melbourne winner McLaren currently has the most sophisticated exhaust solution on the 2012 grid. “I wouldn’t say that it’s illegal,” said Peter Sauber, “but it’s borderline.” Teams including Mercedes, Lotus, Toro Rosso and Williams reportedly used much more conservative solutions in Australia. “First we wanted to see what is allowed and what is not,” said Williams engineer Mark Gillan. |
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Vettel names new Red Bull ‘Abbey’Comments Off Sebastian Vettel has named his new 2012 Red Bull chassis ‘Abbey’. Recently, the highly-superstitious German has given his F1 cars a female name — the 2010 winner was Luscious Liz, and last year’s dominant RB7 ‘Kinky Kylie’. So superstitious is Vettel that – as in 2011 – he has waited until the Wednesday before the season-opening Australian grand prix to decide the new name. Germany’s Bild newspaper said Vettel’s 2012 mount is ‘Abbey’ — perhaps after his favourite band The Beatles’ album Abbey Road, or the Silverstone corner? “Neither is true,” he insisted, “it’s just a cool name.” |
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