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Force India, Ecclestone, deny Bahrain GP boycottComments Off Force India deputy boss Bob Fernley has dismissed reports the Silverstone based team could pull out of the controversial Bahrain grand prix. Two members of the team were allowed to return to Europe this week following a Molotov cocktail attack en route from the Sakhir circuit to the hotel. There were high-level meetings involving Force India on Thursday, sparking speculation the entire team could follow its frightened members back to the UK. But Fernley, admitting that security has been ramped up after the incident, is quoted by Express newspaper: “We are definitely taking part, that is decided.” Bahrain’s information affairs authority also released a statement featuring quotes by Bernie Ecclestone. “I have no knowledge of any teams planning to withdraw from the race and we are all looking forward to racing in Bahrain,” the F1 chief executive said. According to Telegraph correspondent Tom Cary, however, another incident like the one involving Force India this week could force F1 to change its decision to go ahead with the race. “If that happened again and someone was injured then that’s the nightmare scenario for organisers as it might push the teams over the edge,” he said. Many drivers, like Kimi Raikkonen, have said the situation is normal this weekend in Bahrain, but Cary does not agree. “Normally there would be PR events in town, you know, ‘meet the fans’ and that sort of thing but certainly as far as I’m aware there aren’t any of those happening,” he said. World champion Sebastian Vettel said he will be happy when track action begins on Friday. “I think it’s not a big problem,” the German said when asked about the security situation this weekend, “and I’m happy once we start testing tomorrow because then we worry about the stuff that really matters — tyre temperatures, cars.” Earlier, Vitaly Petrov’s manager indicated the Russian would only travel to Bahrain if F1 could guarantee his safety. “If it was dangerous they wouldn’t let us in,” the Caterham driver told The National in Bahrain. “If they make sure nothing gets thrown onto that track to hurt us, then we’ll be fine. We are here; if it happens, it happens,” added Petrov. In fact, almost everyone in Bahrain has been reluctant to comment in detail, but there is an obvious feeling of unease. Peter Sauber told Blick newspaper: “I feel like a guest, and so it is not polite to criticise your host.” But 1996 world champion Damon Hill allowed himself some criticism of F1, including the sport’s most powerful figures, Bernie Ecclestone and Jean Todt. He pointed out that FIA president Todt has said “next to nothing” about the Bahrain saga. “This I find baffling,” Hill wrote in the Guardian. “Surely it is possible to condemn acts of inhumanity without taking a side?” As for F1 chief executive Ecclestone, who has consistently trivialised the Bahrain issue, Hill noted that “few” in the paddock “dare to publicly disagree” with the imperious 81-year-old. “Perhaps we should (criticise him), instead of just muttering under our breath, scared of losing our passes,” said Hill. Hermann Tilke, the German architect who designed the Sakhir circuit, sees the entire saga as a storm in a teacup. “It is safe in Bahrain,” Tilke, whose company has an office there, told the Kolner Express newspaper. “I’ve never heard about any problems from our people. “Of course there is some unrest, but it is protests, not civil war. As Bernie Ecclestone has said, we do sports, not politics,” he insisted. “And if they demonstrate peacefully now, the media will report on it, so both sides benefit.” |
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Button replaces ‘crooked finger’ with ‘W for winner’Comments Off Jenson Button has dreamed up a new victory salute, after growing weary of last year’s “crooked finger”. “He keeps doing that,” Button grimaced a year ago, demonstrating Vettel’s awkward index-finger salute that always followed the Red Bull driver’s latest pole or victory. “It would be alright if it was straight.” At one point, just after yet another Vettel pole, the young German saluted the ranks of photographers with his finger, and Button jokingly attempted to bite it off. So, after winning in Albert Park ahead of Vettel in the 2012 opener last weekend, Button unfurled a new salute. Asked if Vettel will now get sick of the two-handed ‘W for winner’ gesture, Button smiled: “Hopefully he will. “I actually did the ‘W’ with a water bottle in my hand, which didn’t really work very well,” said the Briton. “I’m sure we will sometimes see the crooked finger but hopefully not very often this year.” |
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Ferrari glass ‘half full’ but no improvement yetComments Off Fernando Alonso kept up a positive outlook on Sunday despite some Italian newspapers describing Ferrari’s situation as a “crisis”. “After the way qualifying went, ending up with ten points behind the top two teams is good news,” he is quoted by La Gazzetta dello Sport. The sports daily Marca described the attitude as Alonso “seeing the glass half-full”. “For the Ferrari fans I say ‘wait a few races’,” former F1 driver Jarno Trulli told Italy’s Rai Uno television. “Alonso managed to do something good but Ferrari needs to react, immediately,” the Italian, who was Alonso’s Renault teammate in 2004, added. Team boss Stefano Domenicali, however, told Finnish MTV3 television that the F2012 will not be in better shape for ‘a few races’ at least. Alonso agreed that, with one week between Australia and Malaysia, “We will have almost exactly the same car” at the Sepang circuit this weekend. Added Domenicali: “We know what needs to be improved, but it can’t be done overnight.” Former F1 driver Jaime Alguersuari remarked that the improvement in Alonso’s pace between Saturday and Sunday was significant. “The opposite of Mercedes,” he told AS newspaper. “I think Alonso once again showed his quality, although clearly they have much work ahead. “A driver can only win with the best car, but what he can do is demonstrate his quality with a good or a bad car,” he added. It is on that final point that the pressure on Felipe Massa merely increased in Australia, as the Brazilian had a disastrously poor weekend from start to finish. “We need to get behind him now as it’s clear he’s under pressure,” Domenicali told Gazzetta dello Sport. “When people find themselves under pressure you have to find a way to relieve that pressure so they are free to express themselves in the way they can. “I’ve asked his engineers to work closely with him and analyse the data so they can offer their support,” he added. |
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Paffett called up as Force India reserveComments Off Gary Paffett is next in line for a Force India race seat this weekend in Australia. Force India has therefore asked McLaren, its technical partner, for help. With Pedro de la Rosa now at HRT, Briton Paffett is the famous British team’s new official reserve driver. He has already been in action this weekend, demonstrating McLaren’s 2011 car to the crowds at Albert Park on Thursday. And Paffett, 30, will step into Force India’s car during the race weekend, should bad fortune befall the team’s regular drivers Nico Hulkenberg or Paul di Resta. “I’m happy to be available for Force India for this weekend,” said the DTM driver. He will not participate in Friday morning practice. “Of course, it’s unlikely that I will be called up and hopefully it won’t happen, but it’s nice to know that the team thought of me,” said Paffett. |
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Glock thinks new Marussia to beat 107pc ruleComments Off Timo Glock is hoping McLaren’s driver simulator is accurate. If not, he and rookie teammate Charles Pic could be left out of Sunday’s season opening Australian grand prix. Some promotional running on demo Pirelli tyres aside, the MR01 sat out the entire pre-season period because it twice failed to pass one of the FIA’s mandatory crash tests. “As it (the testing) was on the demo tyres, I can’t say much. The feeling was very good, but it’s just a feeling,” said Glock. In addition to the Silverstone shakedown, he has done three days at the wheel of the car in the virtual world, thanks to the former Virgin team’s technology deal with McLaren. In the McLaren simulator, German Glock said the car was fast enough to qualify for races. “But I’m cautious,” he said, “because we do not have much experience with the simulator.” Meanwhile, HRT is pushing to get a final shipment of components to Melbourne in order to put together a second 2012 chassis. “If there’s a flight delay, it could be we miss P1,” Pedro de la Rosa told the BBC. |
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Politician slams Ecclestone’s ‘bogan’ daughterComments Off An Australian federal politician has argued Melbourne’s grand prix should be axed because it bankrolls “Bernie’s billionaire bogan”. After watching a documentary about 27-year-old Ms Ecclestone, he said she uses a million-dollar bathtub, an elevator for her Ferrari road car, crystal balls for her bowling alley, and a massage parlour for her dogs. “One thing I am absolutely sure of,” said Thomson, “there are better ways to spend $50 million, year in and year out, than bankrolling Bernie’s billionaire bogan.” ‘Bogan’ is an Australian slang term for someone who demonstrates their lower-class background through their speech, clothing and behaviour. This weekend’s Australian grand prix is seventeenth at Albert Park. |
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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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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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HRT completes 2012 grid with Barcelona debutComments Off The 2012 grid is complete, after backmarkers Marussia and HRT finally revealed their new cars on Monday. At 5pm, the struggling Spanish team’s car managed ten laps with Narain Karthikeyan at the wheel. “The first impressions are quite good,” said the Indian driver. “It’s definitely a step up from last year.” Monday was HRT’s first ever winter test run with a new car, since the team’s inception in 2010. |
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2012 Marussia debuts with crash test still pendingComments Off Marussia’s 2012 car made its track debut on Monday, despite having failed to pass all the mandatory FIA crash tests. Designed by former Renault man Pat Symonds, the MR01 – fitted on Monday with demonstration Pirelli tyres – does not feature a ‘step nose’, uniquely in common with technical partner McLaren’s 2012 solution. “It has been a long and frustrating wait for everyone in the team but we can now get back on track and start working towards the first race of the season in Australia next weekend,” said team boss John Booth. The car must now pass the missing FIA crash test before Melbourne, and Symonds sounds hopeful. “The component in question has actually passed an ‘unobserved’ crash test but has been performing inconsistently in the observed tests,” he is quoted by Reuters. Also for a filming day, HRT’s 2012 car is making its debut on Monday, at the Circuit de Catalunya. |
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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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Sauber: Red Bull and McLaren lead 2012 fieldComments Off Red Bull and McLaren have the quickest cars as formula one teams prepare for the final pre-season test before Melbourne.
That is the view of Sauber designer Matt Morris, despite the Swiss team’s Kamui Kobayashi setting the fastest overall time at last week’s Barcelona test. “The top teams are yet to show their hands,” read a report in the German magazine Auto Motor und Sport. Morris agrees with that assessment. “If we are to believe our own analysis then Red Bull and McLaren are in front, there is a question mark about Ferrari, and behind them is a very close group of several teams. “I think the gaps between those in this central group will be smaller this year,” he added. The F1 world’s real gaze this week will however be on the apparent title contenders, with Lewis Hamilton quoted by the SID news agency as saying: “Maybe Red Bull are a bit quicker than us.” But McLaren’s team boss Martin Whitmarsh revealed: “We will have a fairly substantial (update) package in Barcelona this week. “We assume Red Bull will do the same,” he added. Unlike last year, however, there will be no last-minute technical sensation that determines the pecking-order for the start of the season. Sauber’s Morris explains: “There will be nothing spectacular; the rules don’t allow it any more.” But he admitted that the best-funded teams will continue to tinker at the edges, as demonstrated by McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull who have so far run several different exhaust configurations in the wake of the blown diffuser ban. Morris said: “Any modification in this area is an expensive pleasure, while before we (Sauber) do anything, we have to be sure that it is clearly better.” |
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‘Step noses’ still the hot topic at Jerez(1) Amid the European cold snap, Franz Tost admits he was worried Toro Rosso might be late for its own car launch. “When the trucks left Faenza on Saturday night I was worried we would not arrive in time,” La Gazzetta dello Sport quotes the relieved team boss as saying. Ultimately, it turned out well, although Daniel Ricciardo – one of Toro Rosso’s new Red Bull-backed rookies – was not overly impressed with the car’s looks. “It’s not exactly beautiful,” said the Australian, referring to the now notorious ‘stepped’ noses on the 2012 cars, “but I’d rather have a quick car than a pretty one.” Actually, designer Giorgio Ascanelli is worried the STR7′s nose might not be ugly enough. “I think we could have made it more aggressive,” said the Italian, “but in the end we had to homologate the car before we could test it.” Arguably more ugly is the nose on Sauber’s new C31, but Japanese driver Kamui Kobayashi isn’t so sure. “You think it’s ugly?” he told reporters at Jerez. “If everybody has the same style of car then it’s not ugly. Only the McLaren is different, so we will see.” On McLaren, Kobayashi might have a point. Of the eight 2012 cars seen so far, all of them have a ‘step’ except the McLaren. And Pedro de la Rosa has hinted that the new HRT will also feature the unattractive solution. “Like almost everyone one else we have had the idea to have as much area under the car as possible. The regulations force us to do what we have done,” Sauber designer Matt Morris is quoted by Auto Motor und Sport. Said Telegraph correspondent Tom Cary: “It begs the question — have McLaren got it wrong? “Were they ‘sandbagging’ – faking – at last week’s launch? Have they got it right and everyone else got it wrong?” McLaren’s technical director Paddy Lowe is confident: “We have always had a different philosophy than the others for the front of the car,” he is quoted by Blick newspaper. Two 2012 cars with ‘step’ noses – Lotus and Sauber – made their track debuts on Monday, ahead of official testing which begins on Tuesday. Lotus’ technical boss James Allison thinks the E20 is the “most beautiful ugly car” seen so far. “It feels great in first and second gear,” smiled Kimi Raikkonen, referring to the running for ‘filming purposes’. Agreed Sauber’s Kobayashi: “I obviously can’t make serious judgements on the car because we had just a promotional day and were running only demo tyres.” The new Williams will be seen for the first time on Tuesday. |
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Austin calls off Red Bull/Coulthard F1 demoComments Off David Coulthard will not be driving a formula one car on the streets of 2012 US grand prix host city Austin this weekend. The 13-time F1 race winner was slated to drive the Red Bull show car pending the approval of a city filming permit. “Due to feasibility, a formal formula one show car demonstration that is open to the public will not be executed this week,” the energy drink company said in a statement. Red Bull, whose F1 show car is already in the US, added that it is “excited about the upcoming US grand prix … and eager to drive awareness of the race and the sport in general to a broad audience”. |
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Williams hopes to keep Hulkenberg for 2011Comments Off Sir Frank Williams sounds unlikely to oust German rookie Nico Hulkenberg for the 2011 season. It has been suggested the 23-year-old could make way for Venezuelan pay-driver Pastor Maldonado. But in an interview with the BBC, the Oxfordshire based team’s founder, boss and biggest shareholder Williams heaped praise on Hulkenberg. “It was a little disappointing, maybe, in the first few races, perhaps because he was being over-cautious,” he said. “But lately he has become very competitive and we have just seen the beginning of something exceptional.” And when asked if F1 spectators will be seeing more of Hulkenberg, Williams added: “Absolutely. We do hope so yes. “He won all the way up to Formula 3 and GP2, he has won every single championship and in the right team, hopefully us one day, he will win the world championship as well in formula one.” The latest rumour is that it might instead be Rubens Barrichello moving aside for Maldonado, but Williams also had praise for the veteran Brazilian. “He has enormous experience. He is now, without doubt, the most experienced driver in the pitlane and he does demonstrate that very frequently,” said Williams. “His technique is very understated, he’s a very smooth driver. He likes to be mollycoddled emotionally a little bit, and he likes being told how good he is, but we don’t have any problem in telling him, we believe strongly in him. “He’s good fun and very experienced and that is a great value to any team,” he added. |
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