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Alguersuari says 2013 return ’100 per cent’ sure(0) Jaime Alguersuari has told Spanish publications he is “absolute certain” he will be on the 2013 grid. “This is the best year of my life,” he told Mundo Deportivo, referring to 2012, the year after his young F1 career stalled when he was dropped by backer Red Bull. “I’m only 22,” said Spaniard Alguersuari, who is now Pirelli’s main test driver and a co-commentator for British radio. “I’m in the prime of my life. “It is increasingly clear that what happened with Toro Rosso was not a sporting decision. It was an internal decision and I don’t want to go deeper.” He sounded confident about the future. “It is 100 per cent that I will return in 2013. After being with Pirelli I will have very important knowledge. I knew that this transitionary step was necessary and I’m very happy,” said Alguersuari. “If I had gone (to be test driver) with a team, with all due respect, I’d have no options now. “I am developing a product (Pirelli) that nobody understands but that is vital for formula one — to know the tyres and to understand them. I’m in the right place,” he is quoted by La Vanguardia newspaper. “I chose to be with Pirelli because I knew it would be the most important (element) in formula one. “I know where I am and I know where I’ll be next year,” he insisted. |
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Alguersuari: red Bull loyalty ‘a mistake’(0) Jaime Alguersuari has concluded he made “a mistake” to remain loyal to Red Bull late last season. After testing Pirelli’s 2010 Renault car last week at Jerez, the Spaniard moved on to Barcelona to continue his work as a co-commentator for British radio. However, he revealed recently that he might have been on the 2012 grid, had he not believed Red Bull executives who told him he would be at Toro Rosso this year. “It was definitely a mistake not to negotiate with other teams,” said the Spaniard, “as I had the opportunity and declined offers,” he told Marca sports newspaper. “I did that because I had loyalty to Red Bull.” Asked if he has talked with anyone from Red Bull since his dismissal, the 22-year-old revealed: “The directors, no, the technical team, yes.” It still pains him that, in explaining their decision, the Red Bull officials like Dr Helmut Marko insisted Alguersuari was not a potential winner. “If you think that for six years they supported me then they changed their opinion overnight. One day you have a champion, the next you don’t,” he said. |
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Alguersuari axe ‘incomprehensible’(0) Jaime Alguersuari’s father has slammed Red Bull’s decision to axe his son. Jaime Alguersuari snr said the decision by Dr Helmut Marko to oust the young Spaniard after a strong season and at the age of 21 was “unfair and incomprehensible”. But “whoever killed him buried him badly,” Alguersuari snr added, referring to his son’s new full time roles as co-commentator on British radio and with Pirelli. Alguersuari snr, who is involved with the organisation of the Renault World Series, said his son is due to test Pirelli’s 2010 Renault test car next week. According to EFE news agency, Alguersuari snr also said his son’s career to date has been more impressive than Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne, who are Toro Rosso’s new drivers. |
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Pirelli signs test driver AlguersuariComments Off F1 tyre supplier Pirelli on Friday announced that Jaime Alguersuari has been signed as a test driver. The former Toro Rosso driver was left without a role for the 2012 season, so he signed on as a co-commentator for British radio as a means of staying in the paddock full-time. The 22-year-old Spaniard will join Pirelli’s existing test driver Lucas di Grassi, the former Virgin driver, and the pair will also develop tyres for GP2. Pirelli said Alguersuari will “bring his knowledge of the most current generation of formula one machinery”. He and di Grassi will test Pirelli’s newly-acquired 2010 Renault car at Jerez, Spa, Monza and Barcelona between May and September. “I have a huge desire to get behind the wheel of a formula one car again and return to competition, so this is a brilliant chance for me,” said Alguersuari. |
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Pirelli eyes Alguersuari, Trulli for test roleComments Off Pirelli is reportedly considering signing a 2011 race driver to be the official tyre supplier’s new test driver. AS newspaper in Spain said Jaime Alguersuari, formerly at Toro Rosso and now travelling the F1 calendar as a co-commentator for British radio, is a front-runner. Pirelli has secured the use of a 2010 Renault for private development testing this year, which is expected to begin in May. AS said the “only obstacle” to a deal for 22-year-old Alguersuari is that Pirelli, an Italian marque, is also interested in grand prix winner Jarno Trulli, who raced last year with Team Lotus (now Caterham). There are no Italian race drivers in F1 this year. |
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Alguersuari: Kubica ‘cannot pick up a glass to drink’Comments Off Jaime Alguersuari has revealed he has heard bad news about Robert Kubica’s condition. But former Toro Rosso driver Alguersuari has heard something very different. “I think Robert is and was a fantastic driver, fast and complete. I am sure that he could have been a world champion without a doubt,” he said this week when he was revealed as a co-commentator for British radio in 2012. “At the moment the latest information I have about him is not very good,” the Spaniard admitted. “He can not drink using his hand — I mean he cannot take a glass and drink, so it doesn’t look too good.” Kubica, formerly with BMW and Renault, crashed during a minor Italian rally early last year, forcing a metal barrier through the car. Alguersuari revealed that Kubica’s co-driver, Jakub Gerber, initially saw such horrific injuries that he “thought he (Kubica) was dead”. More than a year on, “I think his injury is worse than expected,” the 21-year-old continued. “Of course I would like him to come back, because without a doubt he deserves to be in F1.” |
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Alguersuari ready to return to F1 gridComments Off
Jaime Alguersuari has ruled out following his former Toro Rosso teammate Sebastien Buemi to Le Mans. 21-year-old Alguersuari, on the other hand, will remain in the paddock this year thanks only to his new British radio co-commentary role, amid rumours he could become Pirelli’s test driver. Le Mans, he insists, is not an option. “No, that’s avoiding F1,” he told the BBC. “I am working for the radio and I will do some go-kart races to help with my physical training. “Racing elsewhere is just starting another career. It’s doing something that’s not F1.” It is clear Alguersuari is keeping his diary clean in the event an opportunity arises to quickly return to the grid. “In F1 you never say never. Anything can happen,” said the Spaniard. The BBC is also acutely aware of its acquisition’s real ambition. Radio 5 Live controller Adrian van Klaveren said: “We are going to make the most of Jaime’s first hand experience right now knowing he could well be driving for one of the teams again in the near future.” Meanwhile, Alguersuari slammed his former bosses’ explanations as to why he and Buemi were ousted. “I respect the situation that they don’t want my work anymore, but what they’ve said is absolutely not acceptable,” he told the Daily Mail. “They said we are good drivers, but we are not winners. It doesn’t make sense if you give me a car that is not capable to be in the top ten.” |
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Alguersuari to stay in paddock with radio roleComments Off He may not have a race or even a reserve seat, but Jaime Alguersuari will at least be a regular face in the formula one paddock in 2012. Journalist Tom Cary said the news will be confirmed officially on Tuesday. Still just 21, Spaniard Alguersuari revealed last month that he will remain fully focused on formula one this year. “I am thinking only of F1,” he said. “What I can say is that I will devote myself body and soul to F1 in 2012. “I will prepare myself, with no contractual relationships with anyone, to be ready and available for any opportunity that arises.” |
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Chandhok hoping to return to HRT seat in BelgiumComments Off
Karun Chandhok has now turned his eye to next month’s Belgian grand prix as he prepares to sit out a second consecutive F1 race. The Indian rookie will nonetheless travel to Hungary this week, to reprise the British radio commentary duties he had to settle for at Hockenheim last weekend. Chandhok, 26, was sidelined in Germany due to HRT’s Japanese test driver Sakon Yamamoto reportedly having more sponsorship to offer the struggling Spanish team. Hispania has now confirmed that Yamamoto will continue to be Bruno Senna’s teammate in Hungary. “They are going to do what they need to do from their point of view,” Chandhok, who at Hockenheim had said he hoped to return to the car for Hungary, told Reuters. “The long summer break is coming up and we’ll have to see what happens for the rest of the season,” he added. HRT insists that Chandhok is still a team member, but strong rumours indicate that test driver Christian Klien is expecting a race or two later in 2010. A team spokesperson said the driver lineup for Spa-Francorchamps and beyond is not finalised. |
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Has Alonso mentally destroyed Massa?Comments Off Fernando Alonso has psychologically “destroyed” his Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa. That is the belief of former Super Aguri driver Anthony Davidson, who now attends grands prix as a commentator for British radio BBC. Ferrari incumbent Massa, 29, has struggled to match team newcomer Alonso so far this season, but the Brazilian has put the situation down to the F10 car and the tyres. But Davidson has a different theory. “I can sum up Massa’s problem in two words — Fernando Alonso,” said the Briton. “He has destroyed him mentally. Already. And I think that started at turn one in Bahrain,” said the 31-year-old, referring to the Spaniard’s pass on Massa on the outside of the first corner of the championship. Alonso’s controversial pit entry pass in China recently was also widely interpreted as another psychological victory for the feisty double world champion. Davidson added: “Every time he (Massa) goes out there, Alonso’s gone faster. He is driving hard, but in the back of his mind he will be thinking ‘yeah, but I bet Fernando has gone faster’. “And you get back to the pits and he has. It does get you down,” he said. |
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Button slams Massa after Q3 blockComments Off Jenson Button was critical of Felipe Massa after qualifying for the Monaco grand prix. With Fernando Alonso already out of the session due to his practice crash, the other Ferrari could also now be penalised by the stewards for the incident that occurred in the final ‘Q3′ shootout for the top ten grid placings. McLaren’s Button, the world championship leader, had to abandon his first timed lap when he encountered a slow-moving Massa in the final Anthony Noghes corner. “I don’t know what he was doing,” the Briton told the BBC. “There were only ten drivers on the track so it should have been easy (to get out of the way),” said Button, adding that the Brazilian “blatantly slowed me down”. During qualifying, former grand prix driver Anthony Davidson spotted Button also being held up by Sauber’s Pedro de la Rosa. “I would be furious if I was Jenson Button — he totally held him up,” said the British radio commentator. (GMM) |
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