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D’Ambrosio could drive Fridays in 2012(0) Jerome d’Ambrosio has revealed he could drive one of the Lotus cars during Friday morning practice sessions at some point in 2012. The former Virgin driver, who is managed by Lotus boss Eric Boullier’s Gravity company, was appointed as the team’s third and reserve driver for this year. But, until now, it was not known if the role would involve Friday morning practice duties. Asked by the La Libre newspaper when he will be seen on the grid once again, Belgian d’Ambrosio answered: “I hope in 2013.” He will get his 2013 campaign up and running on Tuesday, when he gets the chance to drive Lotus’ current E20 for the first time at the Mugello test. The 26-year-old said on Monday: “I will try to show what I can do every time I have the opportunity, not only tomorrow but also during the Friday morning tests that I can participate in.” D’Ambrosio admitted he would rather be racing this year, but insists that his role at Lotus is a good stepping stone. “I’m not complaining,” he said. “I remain convinced that my decision to become a reserve driver with a big team was the best thing for me.” And he insisted he is not jealous of the similarly-aged Romain Grosjean, who took the E20 to the podium in Bahrain recently. “Honestly not,” said d’Ambrosio. “I would be a fool to think that if Romain had crashed twice more I would replace him in Barcelona. “Instead, what Grosjean has done confirms that young guys can be trusted. I am glad to see him succeed. “I don’t come to grands prix hoping one of my teammates is hurt. I’m here to learn, not to laugh.” He thinks Lotus could win a race in 2012. “It’s possible, yes,” said d’Ambrosio. “The E20 works well when it’s hot, degrading the tyres not too much. “In Bahrain, we had the best car in the race. We cannot afford to miss opportunities.” |
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Haug: Mercedes reaches F1 summit with ‘small budget’Comments Off Norbert Haug said he is proud Mercedes has reached the top of formula one in a short space of time and with a small budget. The German carmaker’s works team is often lumped together with F1′s other grandees including Ferrari and McLaren, but Haug insists the Brackley based outfit is in fact “a small team, with a small budget”. Mercedes’ competition boss, who on Sunday collected the winning constructors’ trophy on the Shanghai podium, also said some of the team’s rivals – undoubtedly Red Bull – “took five years to win”. “We have done it in two and a quarter,” the German told the RTL broadcaster. “That’s not bad at all. “And there are other teams that still have not made it.” So is Mercedes now a contender for the world championship, despite Haug’s earlier protestations that the team needs a few more campaigns under its belt for that? “It is too early to make a prediction,” he told Auto Motor und Sport. “I hope so, but so far we have seen three different winners in three races.” The newest of those winners is Nico Rosberg, who along with Damon Hill and Jacques Villeneuve are the only sons of F1 drivers to have also gone on to win grands prix. It is a good omen for Rosberg that both Hill and Villeneuve also won titles. Rosberg’s former Williams teammate, Alex Wurz, has high praise. “As a teammate (in 2007) he made my life difficult because he was such a fantastic qualifying driver. In the race it was then always okay. “But for this (race win) he deserves praise,” Wurz told the Austrian ORF broadcaster, “because he did everything after his pole position also sensationally.” But in Bahrain, there could be another winner, triple world champion Niki Lauda remarked. “I have never before seen F1 as interesting as this,” said the Austrian legend. “Every race we see another winner.” |
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Protesters burn Ecclestone flags in BahrainComments Off Bahrain protesters have stepped up their anti-grand prix campaign, with formula one vowing to push ahead with a race in the troubled island Kingdom next week. After the FIA declared that the race is definitely going ahead, Bernie Ecclestone on Friday met with team bosses in the Shanghai paddock. “There’s nothing (bad) happening. I know people who live there and it’s all very quiet and peaceful,” the F1 chief executive insisted. Media reports, however, suggest otherwise. Photos have emerged of protesters burning flags depicting Ecclestone’s face, whilst others marched in F1 overalls and helmets, carrying machine guns. Anti-F1 graffiti, meanwhile, is sprayed on walls throughout the capital Manama. Ecclestone, however, told the BBC late on Friday that the Bahrain protesters are “not protesting about formula one”. So with the race still scheduled, are the teams feeling comfortable? “All the teams are happy to be there,” insisted Ecclestone. Commented Red Bull’s Christian Horner after the meeting with the F1 chief executive: “The FIA have obviously done their research and come out with a clear statement that as a team entered into the championship we respect. “We’ll do our best to ensure that all our guys and girls are in a secure environment, but I don’t doubt that for a moment.” |
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F1′s Bahrain crisis deepensComments Off With F1 currently scheduled to arrive en masse in Bahrain next week, a crisis surrounding the possible cancellation of the island Kingdom’s race is continuing to deepen. The teams have now denied Bernie Ecclestone’s claim that they can simply choose to skip the event. “That would not be possible,” said a statement issued by the teams association FOTA. “Teams are unable to cancel (a) grand prix.” Bahrain, meanwhile, stepped up its campaign, accusing some of deploying “scare-mongering tactics” designed to force the race’s cancellation. The race organisers released a report conducted by Lotus, following the Enstone based team’s recent reconnaissance mission to Bahrain. “We came away from Bahrain feeling a lot more confident that everything is in hand,” Lotus is quoted as having reported. The team, however, reacted angrily, accusing the organisers of having released a “confidential” document. “Lotus F1 Team is one of 12 contestants of the … world championship and we would never try to substitute ourselves for the FIA”, said the Enstone based team. Surmised Times correspondent Kevin Eason on Twitter: “(It’s) getting messy…” At the same time, F1 chief executive Ecclestone became fully immersed in the political situation on Tuesday, reporteding personally phoning Bahrain’s crown prince to express concern about the jailed hunger striker. An Amnesty International report published this week had called for Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja’s release, amid claims he is now close to death and being force-fed. But the Bahrain government, through its information affairs authority, insisted that only police and rioters are being injured in “infrequent and remote clashes”. Also weighing into the argument was Sir Jackie Stewart, the eloquent triple world champion, who said: “I would go. “The commercial rights holder has sold a package, at a price, and it is part of the constructors’ agreement that they attend the races that have been published,” he told the Guardian. “As a team owner I would have to honour my agreement both orally and legally.” Whatever happens, the Bahrain saga – stretching back now over a year – is not good news for the future of the island Kingdom’s calendar spot. “Maybe we wouldn’t renew it (the contract),” Ecclestone admitted to the BBC. “We’ll have to look and see.” |
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Red Bull ‘has a plan’ to bounce back in ChinaComments Off Red Bull is ready to start bouncing back from a difficult start to 2012. That is the claim of the energy drink owned team’s racing consultant Dr Helmut Marko, who acknowledged that Australia and Malaysia was not a good start to the campaign for a third-consecutive championship-winning season. Comparing the reigning world champions with McLaren, Ferrari’s technical director Pat Fry agreed on Tuesday: “I’ve been slightly surprised by Red Bull’s lack of pace.” Marko acknowledged: “Over the race distance (in Malaysia) we saw that (Sauber’s Sergio) Perez was the fastest,” the Austrian said on Servus TV. “In wet but also in dry conditions, the Sauber was absolutely the fastest one. “On the other hand, the whole package did not come together for us,” Marko insisted, referring specifically to bad pitstops, and broken radios. “There are so many things that have to come together. But we have a plan for how to deal with it for China, to solve our problems. “I’m confident that we will get it back together sooner or later. “It makes things of course more exciting, although not quite as easy for us,” he smiled. |
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Grosjean crosses fingers for French GP returnComments Off Romain Grosjean has admitted he hopes France’s touted return to the F1 calendar is shown the green light. Amid expectations he would announce a race at Paul Ricard will go ahead in 2013, French prime minister Francois Fillon instead said last Friday that talks are ongoing. “I’m crossing my fingers that it will happen,” Lotus driver and Frenchman Grosjean told RMC Sport. “I think the enthusiasm for motor sport (in France) has been reborn,” he added, referring to the presence on this year’s grid of three French race drivers, plus Force India reserve Jules Bianchi. “There has been lots of positive feedback after the first two races and also the first points for Jean-Eric (Vergne). “I hope we will have a grand prix soon enough,” added Grosjean. Patrick Tambay, a former grand prix driver from France, believes politics can be thanked for the country’s touted return to the calendar. “I feel that the grand prix de France broke into the presidential campaign,” he said. “Since 2008, we hardly heard anything about it, and now it’s a hot topic. There is a strong desire to make it work. “All that remains is to validate the decision and set a timetable,” he added. Claude Sage, the administrator of the Le Castellet circuit, said Paul Ricard will be ready. “The circuit is approved for formula one,” he said. “We need to prepare the facilities for the public, in the form of temporary stands, as in Monaco. We have room to install them,” added Sage. |
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Horner says no to Ferrari switchComments Off Christian Horner has told British newspapers he is not switching to Ferrari. Designer Adrian Newey has already said no to a switch to the Maranello marque, and now Horner – Red Bull’s 38-year-old team principal – has scotched similar speculation about his own future. “Ferrari is a great team but my future is committed to Red Bull,” he is quoted by the Sun. “You can see what the appeal is at Ferrari but you can also see the pitfalls.” And the Briton is quoted by the Daily Mail: “Dietrich Mateschitz gave me the chance as a 31-year-old to step into formula one and entrusted me to build a team for him. “I feel very much part of the team and I have no burning desire within me to go and work at Ferrari. “I am happy where I am. I have a multi-year commitment,” Horner insisted. |
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Insiders insist no writing off Red Bull yetComments Off Paddock regulars insist the formerly-dominant Red Bull team cannot be written off after a single defeat in Australia. But Melbourne was in fact the first race since before either of the German’s title-winning campaigns in 2010 and 2011 that a Red Bull car failed to lead a single lap. “You cannot discount them, they (Red Bull) are always there,” said Albert Park winner Jenson Button, “but it seems that the tables have turned.” After not winning a title since 2008 with Lewis Hamilton, Button’s McLaren colleagues will hope that is true. “Red Bull needs to dress warmly,” German racing legend Hans-Joachim Stuck told Sport1, “although I see McLaren on an equal footing only.” He warned against over-analysing the Melbourne result. “This is not a benchmark for the rest of the season — the Malaysia circuit is much more meaningful because who is good there is good everywhere.” However, McLaren hinted after Melbourne that it could actually have performed more strongly last weekend. “We were more than marginal on fuel,” boss Martin Whitmarsh is quoted by Kleine Zeitung newspaper. “There is no question we could have been faster (in Australia).” But so could Red Bull, Vettel insists. “In Melbourne, we learned a lot about the behaviour of our car, which has great potential,” he said. “We need to make it harder for McLaren in Malaysia.” Triple world champion Niki Lauda agrees: “Red Bull will catch up quickly.” Team advisor Dr Helmut Marko insisted: “We have not brought everything out of the car yet. So we are very optimistic about the next races.” He is also dismissive of Red Bull’s other rivals. “Only McLaren are on par with us,” said Marko, who scorned at Mercedes, the team who fared strongly in Melbourne before suffering in the race. “They were more like a chicane,” the acid-tongued Austrian added, according to laola1.at. |
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Alonso ‘saved Ferrari from disaster’Comments Off Fernando Alonso was spared the Italian media’s wrath after Ferrari opened its 2012 campaign with the troubled F2012 car. The under-pressure Felipe Massa’s opening race, however, “was a nightmare”, the daily newspaper added. Jaime Alguersuari, the former Toro Rosso driver who is now a media analyst, also praised fellow Spaniard Alonso. “For Ferrari, it is an unique advantage to have a driver like Fernando Alonso,” he told El Mundo newspaper. “He did a sensational Sunday, with intelligence and ambition, which will push and raise the team, I’m sure.” Alonso remains confident. “There may be cars quicker than us now,” he is quoted by Britain’s Daily Mail, “but it’s like Manchester United or Chelsea who play badly for a game but still win 1-0. “Before this race we were working 24 hours (a day),” Alonso is quoted by Marca, “now it must be 25.” The Spanish press, however, is livid. “The fifth place is really a miracle,” said the sports daily Marca. “The car is ridiculous, rendering the team a midfielder.” Jenson Button, meanwhile, received universal praise from the international press corps, as did the fact that Red Bull’s dominance appears to have been knocked by McLaren. “That’s good news for everybody except (Sebastian) Vettel,” insisted Corriere dello Sport. The fight, however, has just begun. “Vettel turned the middling new Red Bull into a good race car,” said Gazzetta, referring to the German’s performance on Sunday, “which is a warning to the opposition. “He is still the world champion, and he will be hunting his first triumph of the year in Sepang.” Tuttosport, meanwhile, said Mercedes – which until Sunday’s race was the talk of the Melbourne paddock – was the “big disappointment” of the 2012 opener. |
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Wealth has not dimmed Brawn’s driveComments Off Ross Brawn insists great wealth has not affected his drive to succeed. At the end of that campaign, Brawn sold the team to Mercedes, and the Financial Times claims the Briton – still team principal – collected dozens of millions of dollars. “I’m obviously a lot wealthier now than before and you wonder if you still have the same motivation to get up in the morning,” Brawn said. “But it did not alter my perspective or my passion and ambition to succeed in racing.” His job now is to win for Mercedes, and 2012 is year three, and the end of Michael Schumacher’s initial contract. “If it does not come off I will have to recognise there is something missing, something I am not able to do that perhaps someone else should have a go at,” revealed Brawn. |
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KH-7 enters Formula 1 with HRTComments Off
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HRT to be in Barcelona this weekComments Off HRT’s 2012 campaign looks set to finally get off the start-line, after the new single seater passed the mandatory crash tests. But writing in AS newspaper, correspondent Manuel Franco said the Cosworth-powered chassis has finally passed all the crash tests, meaning it can now debut this week at the Circuit de Catalunya. The final pre-season group test begins on Thursday, but Franco wrote that it is not clear precisely when the new HRT will make its debut, probably in Pedro de la Rosa’s hands. “But is expected that he (de la Rosa) and his teammate Narain Karthikeyan will be in Catalonia,” he added. |
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Early start for Mercedes’ Barcelona test(1) Mercedes got its Barcelona test off to an early start on Sunday. Mercedes, however, trod a different path recently by keeping its 2012 car under development at its Brackley factory while main rivals including Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren got their test campaigns up and running. Again running Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg this year, Mercedes took its old car to Jerez and then sat out the last of the four days of testing. Therefore allowed to make up the day in Barcelona on Sunday, and although details and laptimes are scant, it has emerged that both Schumacher and Rosberg ran the new stepped-nose W03 and completed more than a race distance. “Michael and Nico’s first impressions are positive,” Mercedes’ Norbert Haug told Bild newspaper. Also in action at the weekend was Williams, whose test driver Valtteri Bottas ran the new FW34 for an aerodynamic test at the Idiada facility in Spain. “I am glad I got some time to get used to the car before my test date in Barcelona,” he is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. |
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Jenson Button: Raikkonen ‘quick’, not showboatingComments Off Williams’ official launch took just five minutes in the Jerez pitlane on Tuesday, before the new Renault-powered FW34 had a difficult birth. Official testing action burst into life in 2012, with every team except Marussia – and nine all-new cars in action for the first time – kicking off their campaigns. Returning 2007 world champion Kimi Raikkonen was fastest all day. “The lap times don’t matter today,” Lotus’ Finn insisted. “I do have a good feeling, and that was not always the case in my career after the first day of testing,” he told Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “But I would rather be P1 at the end of the first race than at the end of the first test day,” smiled Raikkonen. Red Bull’s Mark Webber, with the team’s brand new title-defending car only the third quickest of the 2012 runners, agreed. “If what we saw today happens in Melbourne, then we’ll talk again,” he laughed, explaining the missed morning of testing as due to a crucial part being held up at an airport shrouded in fog. The Guardian also reports that a Red Bull truckie was stopped for speeding. Lotus team boss Eric Boullier, however, is convinced Raikkonen’s speed is real – and his motivation intact – after two years away. “Believe me, he is there.” Agreed technical director James Allison: “You can tell Kimi is a class act.” Like fellow top team Red Bull, the new McLaren also had a low-profile day, with Jenson Button just eighth quickest. But he didn’t accuse Lotus and Raikkonen of showboating. “Maybe he (Raikkonen) was running heavy,” said the 2009 world champion. “We maybe haven’t seen eye to eye a lot of the time when we’ve been racing, but he’s a very quick driver, a world champion. “He’s obviously in a very competitive car, and whatever they did today – low fuel or whatever – it was still quick.” Struggling on Tuesday was Caterham, whose new car could not be restarted following damage to the engine starter shaft, and Toro Rosso with an oil leak. And Felipe Massa was just ninth in the new Ferrari. “It is obviously too early to say if this year we will be able to win or not,” said designer Nikolas Tombazis. |
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Vettel eyes ‘laps of honour’ as 2011 calendar races outComments Off Sebastian Vettel on Wednesday said he intends to enjoy the rest of the 2011 season in winning style. “It’s different to Abu Dhabi 2010,” he told Germany’s Sport Bild, referring to last year’s season finale when he emerged as the surprise champion. “This year there are four grands prix to go; basically, four long laps of honour ahead of me. I can enjoy my second title much, much more,” said Vettel. And he intends to celebrate by winning; a feat he could not manage at the scene of his 2011 championship victory, Suzuka, on Sunday. “We did not manage it in Japan so we will try to take advantage in the next race,” said Vettel, referring to F1′s imminent round in Korea. In the wake of his title triumph last weekend, the F1 world has been busily hailing Vettel, including Stefano Domenicali who said he can imagine the 24-year-old driving alongside Ferrari’s number 1 Fernando Alonso. The Italian recently said he does not consider Vettel a true team leader, “But I never said I didn’t think he was good,” Domenicali told La Gazzetta dello Sport. Vettel has also flirted with a potential future switch to Maranello, revealing his desire to race for a “myth” team like Ferrari or Mercedes. But he said on Wednesday: “If we win a few races and championships, maybe Red Bull will become a legend as well. I will work hard next year.” |
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