|
Maldonado wins, Alonso and Vettel lead title(0) F1′s astonishing season continues to live up to the hype, as a fifth driver and constructor on Sunday won the fifth grand prix of 2012. Not only is the victory Pastor Maldonado’s first, his walk up the steps at the Circuit de Catalunya was the first taste of the podium in his two-season F1 career. It’s also the first Venezuelan triumph in the sport’s history, and a hugely popular victory for Williams, the once-great British team headed by Sir Frank Williams, whose 70th birthday was warmly celebrated in the paddock on Saturday. “Boy did we need that,” said Williams on BBC television. And asked how he feels on Sky television, he smiled: “Relief.” “Some said Maldonado was a pay driver and he didn’t deserve his place in formula one but they’ll be eating their words now,” commented former team driver David Coulthard. “That was a fantastic drive,” added Coulthard, referring to Williams’ first win since Juan Pablo Montoya in 2004. Williams enthused: “I didn’t see him (Maldonado) make one single mistake.” “You can’t really fault him,” agreed Williams’ 1996 world champion Damon Hill. Amazingly, however, away from the champagne, Sebastian Vettel’s sixth place leaves him at the top of the drivers’ championship, and he is now neck-and-neck with Fernando Alonso, who finished second on Sunday in the improving Ferrari. Lewis Hamilton, who finished dead last on Sunday and finished eighth, is third in the points classification, ahead of Lotus’ Kimi Raikkonen. Finn Raikkonen finished third on Sunday, and is the favourite to become F1′s sixth different winner of 2012 in Monaco in a fortnight. “We showed we still have the speed,” the Lotus driver said after the Spanish grand prix. “If we had a few more laps, we could have fought for a victory.” |
|
Hamilton not bothered as Red Bull says noComments Off A few days ago, Red Bull’s team boss said Jenson Button – not the other McLaren driver Lewis Hamilton – is a more likely championship challenger for 2012. Hamilton, the 2008 world champion who had a tumultuous 2011 and was famously beaten by Button in the drivers’ points standings, insists he doesn’t mind. “It’s the first time I’ve heard of (the remarks) but they definitely don’t wind me up,” the Briton is quoted by the BBC. “There are a lot of opinions, and everybody has their right to an opinion, but it doesn’t really affect me. “It doesn’t really matter at the end of the day when I go out and do the job.” In fairness to Hamilton, he sounds confident and refreshed heading into the new season, has patched up his relationship with his girlfriend, and appointed Didier Coton to look after him in the paddock. “Lewis was a child prodigy — this is the problem,” 1996 world champion Damon Hill told the Sun. “When you have been brought up from an early age to be a product, at some point something will crack.” Another pundit, former McLaren driver David Coulthard, urged Hamilton not to be put off by Red Bull’s apparent lack of interest in his services. “I don’t think Lewis will ever be out of demand for the top teams,” said the Scot. “What are Lewis’ other options? I don’t think Mercedes are waving around a cheque book — I’d be surprised if Michael (Schumacher) and Nico Rosberg are in the top-four earners in formula one. “You also want a competitive car and if McLaren give him that, then he will probably stay,” said Coulthard. |
|
Jordan says Hamilton should stay at McLarenComments Off Eddie Jordan has advised Lewis Hamilton to stick with McLaren. “After the first couple of races it’s something we will probably want to get out of the way,” said Hamilton last month. For the moment, however, there is speculation, after Bernie Ecclestone said he doubts the 27-year-old will stay with the Woking based team forever. The major German daily Bild then reported that Hamilton has been earmarked as Mercedes’ ‘plan-B’ in the event Michael Schumacher does not stay in 2013. But Jordan, a former F1 team owner and boss, believes Hamilton should stay put. “Given their (McLaren’s) resources and level of investment, can you tell me that Lewis would be better off in another team?” he said on Tuesday at a BBC event. Jordan believes, however, that the famous British team can do a better job of handling Hamilton. “I think – and this is in some way a criticism – that they will have learned from their mistakes last season,” he said. One remedy is the placement by Hamilton’s management of Mika Hakkinen’s former manager Didier Coton, and another is the driver’s move from secluded Geneva to bustling Monaco. Hamilton has also reunited with his girlfriend Nicole, and had a long winter break. “McLaren appear to have given him a chunk of time off, to go away and to focus,” former long-time McLaren driver David Coulthard said. |
|
Vettel penalty ‘was disproportionate’Comments Off
That is the opinion of an unlikely supporter of the 23-year-old Red Bull driver: Marc Gene. Spaniard Gene is Ferrari’s occasional test driver, who said the drive-through penalty after Vettel crashed into Jenson Button on Sunday “was totally disproportionate”. “It is true that he was too aggressive, but for there to be a penalty … he did nothing wrong, it was an incident of the race,” Gene wrote in his El Mundo newspaper column. Niki Lauda’s is a harsher critique, predicting that one more mistake for the young German will end his 2010 title chances. “You’re an absolute super-talent but you’ve taken excessive risks,” the former triple world champion wrote in Bild newspaper. “One more mistake and your world championship will be over. Then you will have to drive for your teammate, which would be the ultimate penalty,” said Lauda. He thinks Vettel is struggling with the pressure. “You’re in the fastest car,” Lauda said, addressing Vettel personally. “The pressure can be paralysing, because everyone expects you to be in front and everything else is a disappointment.” Lewis Hamilton, who according to British commentator Martin Brundle is driving better today than in his championship year in 2008, said Vettel’s lack of experience is showing. “The older I get, the more I understand about experience. Mark (Webber) is a very mature man and that definitely helps,” said the McLaren driver. David Coulthard advises his Red Bull successor Vettel to get used to the criticism, observing that “the knives seem to be out for him” now. “I want to make it clear I am not trying to excuse Sebastian’s recent high-profile errors,” he wrote in the Telegraph. “I see a young man who is suffering from his first spell of growing pains,” added the veteran of almost 250 races. “I am not excusing them (the mistakes) – as I have said before, F1 is no finishing school – I’m just saying they are understandable,” said Coulthard. |
|
Red Bull must move on as McLaren looks to pounceComments Off After the lost tempers and the blame game, Red Bull is now moving to put its championship campaign back on track in the ten days before reconvening in Canada for the next grand prix. Turkey not only staged a crash between teammates Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel whilst leading, it triggered a hotbed of intrigue as fingers were pointed and garage divisions were revealed and strengthened. Australian Webber, now the clear championship leader but at odds with both his team and his apparently favoured teammate, indicated he wants to patch up and move on. “We’ll probably have a difference of opinion about what happened until we go to our graves, but we’re both adults and we need to find a way of racing together that doesn’t compromise the team,” he wrote in his column for the Australian newspaper Daily Telegraph. A Red Bull source told the Independent that a calm-down meeting had already been held in Turkey, but that is at odds with reports that Vettel left the circuit early. “We had a detailed meeting and everyone had their say. There was no way that feelings were going to be allowed to fester. The matter is now all talked through,” said the unnamed source. Speaking to Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper, former McLaren driver David Coulthard warned of the dangers of an internal conflict. “It is a fact that within a racing team, it’s the worst possible scenario,” the Scot said, recalling his collision with Mika Hakkinen in Austria in 1999, where afterwards the Finn “did not want to talk to me”. But “You need to sort out these messes before the next race, otherwise it just continues to be a distraction,” said Coulthard. “The team’s task is to get the drivers to talk it through.” At the same time, Red Bull’s nearest title rival McLaren is attempting to use the saga to its advantage. “If they don’t kiss and make up it means they won’t be sharing information as much at the next race,” said Jenson Button. Offering advice to the warring Red Bulls, he added: “It’s about owning up and moving forward. If they can’t do that, it will play into our hands.” And Lewis Hamilton took a dig at Webber and Vettel by pointing out that he and Button did not collide when they similarly diced for position in Turkey. “That’s why we are world champions. I am proud to have him (Button) as my teammate,” said the Briton. (GMM) |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |