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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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Vettel not in trouble, Marko insistsComments Off Dr Helmut Marko has denied reports Sebastian Vettel was summoned to Red Bull’s headquarters this week to explain his behaviour at the recent Malaysian grand prix. The Narain Karthikeyan-saga aside, reports suggested the German deliberately ignored his bosses’ instruction that he retire his RB8 – ostensibly due to a brake issue – so that he could fit a new gearbox without penalty in China. The reports suggested Vettel had confessed immediately after the race that he heard the instruction but chose to ignore it. “That is all nonsense,” Red Bull’s motor racing consultant Marko told Sport Bild. “Sebastian did nothing – absolutely nothing – that was against our wishes.” Marko said Vettel’s visit to Milton Keynes this week was scheduled long ago, adding that he will be working inside the driver simulator amongst other things. He also hit back at claims the 24-year-old could be penalised by the FIA for breaching the code of conduct when he showed the ‘middle finger’ to Karthikeyan. “The matter was resolved during the meeting with the stewards (in Malaysia). For me, the case is closed.” Speaking to Kolner Express newspaper, however, an FIA spokesman confirmed that the code of conduct forbids superlicense holders from insulting their rivals. But he added: “I imagine the application of this paragraph was considered by the stewards in Malaysia.” And Sebastian Vettel’s spokeswoman said: “We know of no investigation.” |
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Vettel risks penalty for ‘middle finger’ tiradeComments Off The FIA could sanction F1′s reigning back-to-back world champion for his behaviour during the recent Malaysian grand prix. Before calling backmarker Narain Karthikeyan a “gherkin” and “idiot” in the wake of their collision, Sebastian Vettel was captured by his on-board camera twice displaying his middle-finger to the Indian driver. “I think he’s highly frustrated because he’s having a tough season,” Karthikeyan told the Deccan Chronicle on Wednesday. “It’s completely unprofessional to blame me for the incident. The derogatory remark only goes to show him in bad light. “Just because he has a good car, he can’t call others an idiot,” Karthikeyan continued. “I have won races in all the previous single-seater championships I have participated in so I don’t need a certificate from Vettel.” Reports in Germany, including in the Kolner Express, Bild and Die Welt newspapers, claim that Red Bull driver’s behaviour may have breached the new stricter code of conduct introduced by FIA president Jean Todt. The FIA has been contacted for comment. “He has breached the code of conduct,” former F1 driver Marc Surer told Germany’s Sky television. “You sign it when you get the license and then you have to behave correspondingly. “Any behaviour that hurts other people or the sport is an offense,” added the Swiss. Asked what the penalties might be, Surer explained: “Anything from a warning to a license revocation. In this case I think it was quite understandable and there will be a mild punishment, if there is anything.” Hans-Joachim Stuck, however, is slightly less forgiving. “When you’re overtaking, misunderstandings can occur. I think Vettel needs to learn this. “With him, the curve was always upwards and now it’s not the case, and he needs to deal with that,” the German legend told the DAPD news agency. As for Vettel’s description of Karthikeyan as a “gherkin”, Stuck insisted: “It’s better than ‘asshole’.” Vettel’s attack, however, was sustained, with Kleine Zeitung newspaper now quoting the Red Bull driver as having said: “Maybe formula one is not the place to learn how to drive.” Stuck responded: “If Sebastian had left more space, it would not have happened. It happens sometimes so it’s a racing incident. “He (Karthikeyan) didn’t do it on purpose and it always takes two.” The HRT driver hit back by calling Vettel a “bully”, and even David Coulthard – a Red Bull team consultant – defended Karthikeyan. “He can’t make his car invisible,” the Scot is quoted as saying by the Mirror. Also defending Karthikeyan was Force India driver Nico Hulkenberg, who told the Indian press this week: “From what I saw, it was not Narain’s fault. “So I don’t really understand why he (Vettel) said all that.” Hukenberg’s Force India teammate Paul di Resta added: “Narain is entitled to do as much on the track in comparison with someone like Vettel. “Both are F1 drivers and are there to represent their teams.” |
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Malaysia not committed to F1 beyond 2015Comments Off Malaysia is not yet committing its future to the formula one calendar beyond its 2015 deal. But Razlan Razali, the Kuala Lumpur circuit’s chief executive, said on Wednesday he is unable to say if there will be a race in 2016. “We can recommend all we want, but as (the) prime minister announced last year, the decision will be made by the cabinet,” he told the New Straits Times. Sepang commissioned consultants PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) last year to study the economic impact of the Malaysian grand prix. “PWC advised us to have another study on this year’s event,” revealed Razali. He also pointed some criticism at the lack of enthusiasm from some parts of the government, particularly when it comes to promoting the annual race. “Not all ministries seem interested,” Razlan admitted. |
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Glock: New Marussia car ‘good’ so farComments Off Despite a difficult winter for the Marussia team, Timo Glock is in a positive mood as he travels to Australia for the 2012 season. Indeed, the Russian website F1News quotes technical consultant Pat Symonds as saying the “last two months were the most difficult of my 20 years in formula one”. Due to a testing loophole allowing some running on demonstration Pirelli tyres, the Cosworth-powered car finally made its debut over two days of ‘promotional filming’ early this week at Silverstone. “The basis is definitely good; the first test miles were really good,” German Glock is quoted by the German-language Speed Week. “The car did exactly what we expected from it. The data we recorded corresponded exactly to what we had calculated previously,” he added. The report said Glock will travel to Australia on Friday, with his 30th birthday set to coincide exactly with the start of the new season. Symonds added: “There is still much to be done, but it is a long term project and so I hope that we move forward step by step.” |
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Two F1 journalists are Caterham board directorsComments Off Two formula one journalists are on the board of the Caterham Group, the parent company of the Tony Fernandes-led team. UK Companies House records show that Joe Saward and David Tremayne were appointed as directors just nine days later. In the company filing, Briton Saward’s occupation is listed as “journalist/consultant”. “The nature of Saward and Tremayne’s roles in Caterham are as yet unknown, but one would assume Joe will announce something on his popular F1 blog during the next few days,” Steve Davies, of the skiddmark.com website, said. |
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Marussia to race after passing FIA crash testComments Off Marussia’s 2012 car will be on the Melbourne grid next weekend, after the MR01 finally passed a missing FIA crash test. The MR01 finally made its track debut on Monday and Tuesday, due to a loophole allowing limited running on demonstration Pirelli tyres for filming purposes even when the mandatory crash tests have not been passed. But finally, late on Tuesday, Marussia announced that the crash tests have now all been passed. “After a challenging few weeks for the team, we are pleased to have overcome the last hurdle of the final FIA observed crash test, which we passed today,” said technical consultant Pat Symonds. “Whilst we have a lot of catching up to do, we take heart from the fact that everything is back on a more positive trajectory,” Renault’s former engineering director added. |
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Marko admits Red Bull ‘slightly ahead’Comments Off With the 2012 season now looming, Dr Helmut Marko has admitted Red Bull is “slightly ahead” of its rivals. “I see it like this,” Red Bull consultant and driver manager Marko told Austrian television Servus TV. “We are slightly ahead, then there are McLaren and Mercedes — I don’t know exactly, but not far away,” he said. On the other hand, Marko said Ferrari does not appear an immediate challenger. “At Jerez, their car was very bad. It has improved since then, but as we speak, Ferrari, I believe, are not in a position to go onto the podium,” said the Austrian. |
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Details: Marussia MR01Comments Off Marussia Racing’s new MR01 finally made its first on-track appearance during a promotional ‘filming’ day at Silverstone, just a few miles from is Banbury base. The Anglo-Russian team endured a torrid time in its attempts to get the car ready for the third and final group test at Barcelona last week, having skipped the opening session in Jerez to prepare the MR01 for early March, only to fail the mandatory FIA crash tests. Although both Timo Glock and rookie Charles Pic got some miles under their belts in Barcelona last month, it was at the wheel of the 2011-spec car, leaving them preciously short of time in the new machine ahead of its race debut in Melbourne next weekend. The Silverstone shakedown, part of a promotional event ahead of the car’s departure for the Australian Grand Prix, will provide both team and driver with vital information on the new machine, which has been conceived after a ground-up re-evaluation of the way Marussia designs its racing cars. As such, the car is almost entirely new, with very few carry-over components from last year’s Marussia Virgin MVR-02. The desire to make a clean break from the previous CFD-only creations presented the design team, led by technical consultant Pat Symonds, with the challenge of going back to basics to produce a solid mechanical package, whilst maintaining an eye towards achieving the incremental performance steps required to move the team forward. The starting point for the design programme was a consideration of the people and resources available to the Banbury-based team. The former three-base operation has been consolidated into one site, the Marussia Technical Centre in Banbury, bringing the various elements of the business together to form ‘one team’. In particular, the design department and practices now benefit from far greater integration and collaboration. Furthermore, the aerodynamic department has been completely restructured and the aero methodology reinforced, blurring the boundaries between CFD and experimental work in the wind tunnel, as well as enhancing the fidelity of the team’s aero approach. The technical partnership forged with McLaren Applied Technologies in July of last year has also been influential in the design process and the relationship is starting to yield benefit as the advanced facilities that the Marussia team has access to have been used to prove the correlation process with the MVR-02. It is however early in the relationship and the MR01 will become a beneficiary of the relationship in due course. The key design priorities were to address previous aerodynamic deficiencies and, mechanically, achieve greater weight saving. At the same time, a lot of the detail of the car has been refined and the design team have been a little more adventurous than before, stepping closer to the engineering boundaries. The car can best be described as a significant evolution of its predecessors. The relationship with McLaren is also evident, as the MR01 is only the second car launched this season, after the Woking giant’s MP4-27, to eschew the stepped nose concept favoured by the rest of the field. “We are very pleased to be running the new MR01 for the first time this morning,” team principal John Booth admitted, “It has been a long and frustrating wait for everyone in the team, but we can now get back on track – literally – and start working towards the first race of the season in Australia next weekend. “Today is the first of two promotional events, so while the drivers will be able to get a feel for the car, they won’t be able to draw any real conclusions until we start running in anger in Melbourne. Nevertheless, this is an important day for us and we’ll enjoy every minute on track with the new car.” Glock turned the first laps with the MR01, beginning his third season with the team and providing the all-important element of continuity required to keep moving the package forward. He is joined in 2012 by Frenchman Pic, who embarks on his rookie year in F1, having made the step up from GP2 to replace Belgium’s Jerome d’Ambrosio. Both drivers will get track time with the new car over the next two days, albeit running on demonstration tyres as opposed to the Pirelli P-Zeros that they will use once competition starts in Melbourne. |
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Vettel failure a surprise admits Red BullComments Off A gutted Red Bull team on Sunday night was ruing a catastrophic Korean grand prix, where Mark Webber lost the championship lead, and Sebastian Vettel the race. The immediate attention centred on pole sitter and race leader Vettel’s Renault engine failure, which Helmut Marko said took the team and its supplier by complete surprise. “It did,” the Austrian said on German television RTL. “It’s our first engine failure this year. “The mileage was at about 1600 kilometres, and normally the average (life) is 2000-2100,” added Marko. “Something broke in the valve area, so it’s the first time. On Friday we were using an engine with much higher mileage,” said the team’s motorsport consultant. He advised German Vettel, 23, not to give up. “It’s not easy, but there are still 50 points to get,” said Marko. “Alonso is on his last engine. We’re not giving up.” Renault apologised for the failure. |
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New F-duct helping Red Bull on straightsComments Off
The Red Bull team does not fear straight lines as much as it did earlier in 2010, according to a German media report.After dominating on the slow, corner-dominated Hungaroring in August, the RB6 was subsequently beaten to the flag at Spa and Monza; circuits punctuated by long stretches of asphalt. Then, before he dominated at Suzuka, Sebastian Vettel said the Japanese layout was “designed for” the Adrian Newey-penned car, even though the Renault engine was not expected to be strong on the front straight and the long run between Spoon and the chicane. Team consultant Helmut Marko has been vocally worried about F1′s forthcoming trip to Korea, with the new layout featuring twistier sections separated by some very long straights. After Mark Webber and the team pulled out leads in both world championships at Suzuka, the Austrian said “we need a cushion, especially for the next race”. “One of the three long straights (in Korea) is 1.2 kilometres long,” Marko groaned. According to Auto Motor und Sport, however, the RB6 is now performing better on the straights, thanks to the latest development of the car’s F-duct. The report said Newey has essentially aped the Renault team’s F-duct solution, and as of Suzuka the RB6 is producing better straight line speed. “We are no longer losing so much on the straights,” confirmed Vettel. |
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2010 finale to show which Red Bull driver ‘better’ – VettelComments Off
With just 3 or 4 races to go in 2010, there are no more signs that Red Bull is set to throw its full weight behind championship leader Mark Webber’s title tilt.The Australian would openly accept number 1 status over Sebastian Vettel, and recently consultant Helmut Marko indicated the team would soon consider the possibility. But Vettel, who remains 21 points behind Webber, put his campaign back on track with a strong weekend in Singapore, and afterwards announced his intention to push on. “The drivers championship is still open,” said the 23-year-old German in Singapore. According to the German newspaper Die Welt, he announced that he and Webber have agreed to a “professional approach” to the next decisive races. And “We will find out who is better,” Vettel is quoted as saying. It means that of the three top teams in with a chance of the 2010 title, only Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso can currently count on the backing of his teammate. “It is almost inevitable with the way the season has swung backwards and forwards that this will go right down to the wire,” said Red Bull boss Christian Horner. Alan Jones, the last Australian to become world champion in 1980, backed his countryman to beat Vettel in a dog-fight. “I think if it gets down to a bit of a head-game, I’ll back Mark every time,” said the former Williams driver. “It’s a fascinating championship,” added 63-year-old Jones. “We haven’t had one like this for years, where five people could become world champion with four races to go.” |
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Marko hints preferred status unlikely for WebberComments Off The likelihood of imminent ‘number 1′ status for Mark Webber has taken a backwards step. After the Australian moved further ahead of Red Bull teammate Sebastian Vettel in Belgium two weeks ago, he suggested the time might be nearing for the team to put its eggs in the Webber basket. However, the 34-year-old has a tetchy relationship with team consultant Dr Helmut Marko, particularly after the Silverstone front wing saga and Webber’s unhappy boast that he is the “number 2 driver”. So when it was put to Austrian Dr Marko that Webber might now be favoured over Vettel, he told Sportwoche: “A few races ago he (Webber) was demanding more equality!” Marko is also critical of McLaren boss Martin Whitmarsh’s post-Belgium comments that Vettel has become F1′s “crash kid”. “That’s not a fair way for them to fight for the championship,” he charged. |
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Red Bull’s size and status ‘hurts’ F1 rivalsComments Off
Rival teams are pointing fingers at Red Bull not only because the RB6 is quick, according to Dr Helmut Marko. Team consultant Marko, Austrian team owner Dietrich Mateschitz’s right-hand man, is referring to the fact that powerful F1 rivals have been complaining all season about the alleged illegality of the Adrian Newey-penned car. “It is not just our success,” he is quoted by Kleine Zeitung newspaper. “We have at most the third biggest budget in formula one. We are a private team, not a car manufacturer, and that hurts them even more,” added Marko. He said he has “lost count” of the number of legality tests carried out by the FIA that the RB6 has always passed. “It is continually suspected that our cars are not according to the rules,” said Marko. “If we put in the same amount of energy on watching what the other teams are doing, as some of the others do, then our car would not be as fast. “This is just part of the psychological warfare. We can only take it in our stride,” he added. Marko also revealed that the men who have contributed to the success of the dominant RB6 are constantly courted by rival teams. “All of our top talent have long-term commitments, but they’ve all had other offers,” he said. “Adrian (Newey) could earn more money somewhere else, but it is with us that he can really work freely. Our philosophy suits him best, the spirit in our team is unique and we are all aimed in the same direction.” Even though the leads should arguably be much bigger, Red Bull is narrowly heading both championship tables at present. “There are seven races left,” said Marko. “It will be crucial to have no failures, because our goal is the world title. “And we want to maintain this same level for the next five years,” he added. |
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Coulthard not critical of Ferrari’s Fiorano testComments Off David Coulthard does not back Christian Horner’s view that Ferrari were “naughty” for testing at Fiorano last week. Red Bull boss Horner has accused the Italian team of breaching the “spirit” of the in-season ban by trying a new exhaust layout at Fiorano under the guise of a filming and promotional run. “I say fair play to them,” said former Red Bull driver and now team consultant Coulthard. “The rules are the same for everyone,” he wrote in a column for the Telegraph. Also running similar low exhaust layouts to good effect in Valencia this weekend are Renault and Mercedes — even though some of Renault’s new parts were delayed when a van en route from Enstone hit a deer. Sauber is not running the layout, even though the C29 is featuring numerous improvements in Spain. Pedro de la Rosa told EFE news agency: “We have taken a small step forward, while others have taken a giant one.” (GMM) |
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