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Petrov: Massa could lose seat during August break(0) Vitaly Petrov thinks it is possible Felipe Massa will lose his Ferrari seat long before the 2012 season is over. But Caterham’s Russian driver, who moved from Renault (now Lotus) at the end of last season, does not believe reports that Ferrari could sack the struggling Brazilian imminently, such as after next weekend’s Monaco grand prix. “I don’t think they’ll fire Massa just now. At least not until August,” Petrov is quoted by the state owned Moscow news agency Ria Novosti. There are six races until August’s month-long calendar ‘summer’ break. So while Petrov thinks Massa’s career is genuinely in danger, he does not agree that Ferrari is ramping up the pressure on the 30-year-old. “I wouldn’t say that Ferrari are criticising him that strongly,” he said. “They’re not saying he has one more chance or anything like that.” |
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Spain, Spa, France, Canada and Russia – race rumours(0) Valencia will not be on next year’s F1 calendar, Bernie Ecclestone said on Saturday. He confirmed that, starting in 2013, an annually alternating deal between the Spanish port city and Barcelona will begin. Barcelona, the scene of this weekend’s Spanish grand prix, will host the race in 2013, before Valencia returns to the schedule in 2014, the F1 chief executive told Reuters. Less secure, meanwhile, is France’s touted spot on the 2013 calendar, particularly with the country’s new anti-F1 president Francois Hollande now taking power. Until recently, the F1 chief executive was saying Paul Ricard was set to join the 2013 calendar, annually alternating a race date with Belgium’s Spa Francorchamps. As for the state of the deal now, the 81-year-old admitted: “I have no idea. No idea what they (France) are doing. “It’s a funny arrangement they were making anyway. So I just don’t know.” Ecclestone is also working on a new deal for the popular Canadian grand prix, having told promoter Francois Dumontier that the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve needs to be upgraded. “There are two ways of looking at it,” Dumontier, in the paddock of the Circuit de Catalunya, is quoted by La Presse newspaper. “Either Bernie requires an annual fee windfall, or he will charge a reasonable fee and ask in return for investment in the infrastructure.” He said the contract on the table is for 10 more years, taking Montreal’s existing deal through 2024. Ecclestone said on Saturday that he is sure an agreement will be reached, because Canada is one of F1′s most loved destinations. “I remember saying to Bernie, ‘New York, Austin, I don’t know why you want to go there. Your sure bet is Montreal’. He knows that. “He’s been in Montreal for 34 years. And in the 22 years of the grands prix in the United States, they’ve had eight different cities. “He said ‘You’re right’,” added Dumontier. Another rumour, repeated by The Times’ Kevin Eason on Saturday, is that the planned 2014 Russian grand prix in Sochi “is doomed”. |
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McLaren to join Red Bull teams at Abu Dhabi test(0) A third team has decided to join Red Bull in Abu Dhabi for the young drivers’ test. Due to the calendar congestion at the end of this season, and also to cut costs, most teams have opted to drop the Abu Dhabi option in favour of testing young drivers in July, at Silverstone. But Red Bull, and its second team Toro Rosso, are sticking with the original November plan, amid criticism July is too early to be assessing young drivers. McLaren is now following suit. “Our plan at McLaren at the moment is to test in Abu Dhabi,” said the British team’s sporting director Sam Michael, who said another factor against Silverstone is that teams are only half-way through their engine mileage allocations in July. “Engines is a significant factor,” the Australian explained. “If you want to test at the end of the year, you have so many part-mileage engines that all have a little bit of mileage on them so you can effectively do it for free, in terms of your race engines,” said Michael. “If you try and do that in the middle of the year, you can’t use your race engines so you have to prepare a special test engine.” |
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Abu Dhabi criticises young driver test shakeup(0) The boss of Abu Dhabi’s F1 circuit has criticised plans to run the young driver test at Silverstone later this year. Originally, the young driver test was scheduled to take place as usual this year at Yas Marina, the week after the Abu Dhabi grand prix. But, due to the calendar congestion at the end of this season, the majority of teams have decided instead to go to Silverstone in July, with only the two Red Bull-owned teams sticking with the Abu Dhabi plan. Lotus team boss Eric Boullier, however, is quoted by The National newspaper as saying the Silverstone plan is “nonsense”. Yas Marina chief Richard Cregan agrees: “If you’re a good young driver in the middle of a season, then it’s not ideal to be testing a formula one car midway through the year. “These guys should be focusing on whatever series it is they are racing, which is why the F1 testing in Abu Dhabi worked so well in the past because it was effectively the end of their season.” He also warned that the earlier timing of the Silverstone test means teams could spend more time trying to develop their cars than on seriously evaluating the next generation of drivers. “It is first and foremost a young drivers test and it must remain that,” Cregan insisted. “It is a chance for young drivers to get maybe a first chance to drive an F1 car and it is chance for teams to run their eye over a driver and evaluate his performance. “Developing the car and parts should be secondary,” he said. Abu Dhabi could, however, be back on if Silverstone’s weather forecast looks poor, even though as soon as a car has left the pitlane in July, that team will no longer be allowed to change its plans. Even though Lotus’ Boullier thinks the Silverstone decision was wrong, he has vowed to stick with the majority. “But actually I would like it to rain, so we will go back to the original schedule,” said the Frenchman. Cregan said Abu Dhabi’s door remains open. “We’ll still be working to the same standards,” he said. “So in that sense nothing changes.” |
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Only Red Bull teams stick with Abu Dhabi test plans(0) Red Bull’s two teams look set to test alone in Abu Dhabi later this season. Until recently, the now-traditional young drivers’ test – giving inexperienced drivers the chance to drive current F1 cars amid the sport’s strict testing limits – was scheduled to take place as per usual at the Yas Marina circuit in November. But those plans were reconsidered due to this year’s congested calendar. India takes place just one week before Abu Dhabi, the young driver test is scheduled for the week after and then the races in the US and Brazil happening back-to-back next. In the light of that arduous schedule, Reports in March said the teams were keener on having the young driver test at Silverstone. “It’s a long season as it is and there are a lot of back-to-back races this year, so it’s tough for them (the teams),” Abu Dhabi circuit boss Richard Cregan conceded. The German-language Speed Week reports in its May 2 edition that the majority of teams want to test instead at Silverstone, in July. But the magazine said Red Bull’s two teams – Red Bull Racing and Toro Rosso – are sticking with the original Abu Dhabi plan. The report also said other teams might cancel Silverstone at the last minute and join Red Bull in Abu Dhabi, should weather reports indicate the British weather would likely affect the July test. |
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Mixed feelings for F1 after Mugello test(0) F1 figures have mixed feelings after this week’s Mugello test. Amid speculation the Ferrari owned circuit would like a spot on the race calendar, it emerged that the famous Maranello based team pushed hard for the Tuscan facility to host the first in-season test in many years. “It’s very beautiful and the food is very good,” said Red Bull team boss Christian Horner, “but we are spending a lot of money and honestly we didn’t feel the need to come here.” Indeed, the only circuits comparable to high speed Mugello on the F1 calendar are Monza, Spa and parts of Silverstone. And testing at Barcelona prior to next weekend’s Spanish grand prix would have made infinitely more logistical sense. Lotus team boss Eric Boullier said Mugello was “money spent needlessly”. Of course, those in the Ferrari camp thought differently. “I would do more tests during the season,” said Fernando Alonso. “One lap here is worth 100 at other places, without considering that one day here is worth a year’s work on the simulator”. But Mark Webber said Mugello is too fast for a decent test circuit, but he was among those who enjoyed the layout. And the Australian couldn’t understand McLaren’s opposition, which extended to both Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button giving up their running to test drivers. “It was an absolute no-brainer for (Sebastian Vettel and I) to be here,” said the Red Bull driver. “Mileage is so limited these days that it’s good for me to be in the car. Any chance we get to drive the car in the real world, we’ll do it,” added Webber. |
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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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France rushing to complete GP deal(0) The French government is dashing to seal the lid on the country’s return to F1. Bernie Ecclestone has said a deal has been reached to annually alternate a race between Paul Ricard in France and Belgium’s fabled Spa-Francorchamps. But the final signature and official announcement are still missing. David Douillet, the French sports minister, told Le Journal du Dimanche that the chance France will be on the 2013 calendar is “90 per cent”. “The contract is going back and forth between the lawyers. I hope I get to London to meet with Bernie Ecclestone between Wednesday and Friday,” he added. The newspaper said Douillet is dashing to complete the deal by this weekend’s presidential election, because socialist frontrunner Francois Hollande has hinted the grand prix project would be reviewed if he is elected. Douillet admitted that it is “very likely” Hollande would “bury” the race. Le JDD newspaper said organisers and Ecclestone have agreed the race sanctioning fee, EUR 22 million, which is still a few million short of guaranteeing a balanced budget. And “without a balanced budget, we do not sign,” he warned. “The state, which does not participate financially, is still the guarantor of any debt.” There also remains an odd silence from the Belgian side, who have not confirmed that Spa is the circuit that will alternate with France. |
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Singapore eyes new race deal and F1 floatation(0) The fact F1 has chosen the Singapore exchange for the sport’s high profile floatation does not mean the city-state’s popular floodlit street race is guaranteed. The night event’s existing five year contract runs out this year, although a two-year notice clause in the deal means Singapore should stay on the calendar at least until 2014. On the face of it, a new deal seemed a certainty, given it was Bernie Ecclestone himself who chose Singapore as the location for F1′s forthcoming floatation. “Formula one is known in Singapore, and Asia is thriving. It is a simpler market and not as restrictive,” he said recently. Talks about a new race deal “are underway”, the local Business Times reported in March, “but it is understood that one sticking point is the sanction fee.” An unnamed banker commented: “The Singapore government wants formula one to be listed here and for that to happen, it knows the race has to remain here. “But at the same time, it doesn’t want to pay top dollar again. So the bargaining should continue for some time.” However, the English language newspaper now reports that F1′s floatation plans, and the expiring Singapore race contract, could be entirely unrelated. “We are in the process of negotiating a possible renewal of the (race) agreement and the outcome will be announced once discussions are complete,” said a spokesman for race promoter Singapore GP. Second minister for trade and industry S Iswaran insisted that the mooted floatation will not influence the outcome of the race contract negotiations. And the Singapore tourism board’s Aw Kah Peng added: “You’ve got to see whether the deal is right in every way. “We’re hoping everybody sees value in it and we get a so-called good deal for Singapore, in terms of whether all the numbers can work out and everybody takes home something — a kind of a win-win proposition.” |
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Ecclestone unhappy with Bahrain’s ‘UniF1ied’ slogan(0) Bernie Ecclestone has revealed he was not happy Bahrain organisers used the acronym ‘F1′ in its political slogan for last weekend’s race. The F1 chief executive was highly supportive of the island Kingdom’s intensely controversial return to the sport’s calendar, insisting Bahrain will retain its grand prix “forever”. But when asked about the banners around the Sakhir circuit and the island Kingdom that read ‘UniF1ed’, 81-year-old Ecclestone admitted to the Mirror: “We never put it there. “We told them to take it down, not to use it. I saw other things, not like that.” But Sakhir circuit chief Zayed Alzayani wore a cap bearing the slogan throughout the grand prix weekend, even when in Ecclestone’s company. Briton Ecclestone, however, denied the Bahrain slogan only intensified the opposition’s anger. “Before they started using that slogan there was trouble about F1,” he insisted. “People make excuses but there are only two sports where politics come into it; us and the Olympics because the profile is big enough. “There was a big golf match in Bahrain before F1 arrived and there was no problems there. “We are not here to tell people how to run their country.” Ecclestone, however, was angry with some of F1′s British journalists in Bahrain, following their harsh criticism of the decision to push ahead with the race. “I saw Bernie get angry in the press room with some British journalists,” revealed O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper correspondent Livio Oricchio. “I had never seen him that angry.” |
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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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Ecclestone confirms Spanish hosts to alternate race(0) Bernie Ecclestone has confirmed that Barcelona and Valencia will, from next year, alternate a single annual Spanish grand prix race date. Currently, the two venues have their own places on the formula one calendar. The Germany-style alternating scheme had been floated as a potential solution also for Spain, given the promoters’ financial struggles, and F1 chief executive Ecclestone’s need to free up calendar space for new races. “Under the circumstances, especially the current economic climate, the best solution we could find was that we alternate,” Ecclestone told the El Pais newspaper when asked about Spain’s two F1 hosts. He is unapologetic about the push – mainly at the expense of the sport’s European homeland – into new markets in the Far and Middle East. “We are a world championship, and that means we have to be all over the planet,” Ecclestone said. “We are not a European championship. “We should be grateful about how far we can go.” |
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Ecclestone: F1 to return to Bahrain ‘forever’(0) The calamitous Bahrain grand prix saga has not jeopardised the island Kingdom’s future on the F1 calendar. That is the strident claim of Bernie Ecclestone, after the F1 chief executive and FIA president Jean Todt displayed rare unity as they insisted the country’s civil and political problems would not affect the grand prix. But amid the bubbling Bahrain saga, Ecclestone had suggested that Bahrain might face trouble when it comes to negotiating a new contract, with the existing agreement only set to extend for three more years. However, when asked by Reuters if F1 is going to keep returning to Bahrain despite this year’s troubles, Ecclestone insisted on Sunday before leaving the Persian Gulf: “Absolutely. Forever. No problem.” Like Todt, he even played down the damage done to F1′s reputation this weekend. “I think it’s good because people talk about things, you know. You know what they say — there is no such thing as bad publicity,” said Ecclestone. In truth, reputation damage has undoubtedly been done. But Roger Benoit, the veteran correspondent for the Swiss newspaper Blick, admitted he is dismayed with how politics interfered with sport so strikingly this weekend. “On all continents, somewhere, all hell is breaking loose. And as a formula one reporter, you’re flying around this globe two or three times a year,” he wrote. “We go to countries that are politically explosive. Where human rights are violated, where poverty reigns. “But we hardly talk about it — not in China, India, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore or Brazil. In 2014, we’re going to Russia. “Years ago, our circus happily danced around in apartheid South Africa, and the military dictatorship of Argentina. “Formula one is pure entertainment. Detached from the problems of the world. But here, in Bahrain, every reporter entered the political field, whether he liked to or not,” wrote Benoit. So that is why Ecclestone is unapologetic, after championing the Bahrain grand prix. “Because, basically, the problems they have in Bahrain have nothing to do with F1,” the 81-year-old told El Pais newspaper. “The relevant agencies gave the nod as far as security was concerned, and I think it is clear that they were not wrong.” He also sees no problem with F1 being used as a political tool. “Governments want to have an F1 race for the same reason as they want the Olympics. We come to agreements with the promoters and, if that’s good for the country, fine,” said Ecclestone. |
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Ecclestone confirms French GP deal ‘done’Comments Off Bernie Ecclestone on Sunday confirmed reports France is definitely heading back to the F1 calendar. Reports earlier this weekend said authorities had “finally agreed” a figure for the sanctioning fee with F1 chief executive Bernie Ecclestone. It is expected that the Ecclestone-owned Paul Ricard will share an annually alternating grand prix date with Belgium’s Spa-Francorchamps, beginning in 2013. “Yes,” the 81-year-old Briton told French daily L’Equipe in the Bahrain paddock on Sunday. “The deal is done,” said Ecclestone. “We agreed the financial terms with the sports minister David Douillet, in my office on Tuesday. “We are still discussing a few things about money: ‘You give me this, I want that’,” he added. “But, for me, there is no doubt, we will sign it now,” said Ecclestone. He said the outcome of the forthcoming presidential elections in France will not spoil the deal. “Whatever happens, I don’t care,” said Ecclestone. “That’s a local issue that doesn’t concern me.” |
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Ecclestone meets again with French gov’t ministerComments Off Bernie Ecclestone has met yet again in London with David Douillet, the French sports minister. The F1 chief executive confirmed this week that a deal to alternate an annual calendar spot between France and Belgium’s Spa-Francorchamps beginning next year is now close. “Spa have agreed; apparently they’re going to do it in (Paul) Ricard,” Ecclestone told the BBC. The French sports daily L’Equipe reports that the 81-year-old’s latest meeting with Douillet is “another step towards the return of the grand prix de France”. The meeting, reportedly confirmed by “several sources including those in Belgium”, is Ecclestone’s second with Douillet in 2012. |
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