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F1′s sixth winner shapes up for Monaco(0) F1′s next winner could be at the wheel of a black and gold car. “I think Kimi (Raikkonen) will be the sixth different winner in the sixth race,” said Finnish commentator and former driver Mika Salo, to the MTV3 broadcaster. Although the results in 2012 have proved impossible to predict so far, many paddock pundits expected Lotus’ E20 to be the car to beat last weekend in Barcelona. “The big surprise was when Kimi didn’t win,” admitted former Ferrari driver Salo, referring to Pastor Maldonado’s victory for Williams. Also confident about Lotus’ potential is Raikkonen’s teammate, Romain Grosjean, who finished behind the 2007 world champion last weekend. “It’s good to be a little disappointed with third and fourth,” he told the French language RMC Sport. “It shows that as a team we are convinced we can win.” According to the reigning world champion team Red Bull’s drivers, however, there is a downside to this year’s impossible-to-predict F1 landscape. “Maybe we will see an HRT or a Marussia on pole in Monaco,” world champion Sebastian Vettel said, unenthusiastically and half-seriously. Mark Webber insists that what has been described as the Pirelli ‘lottery’ might not be a good thing for the sport. “I don’t know if they (the fans) will get sick of seeing so many different winners,” the Australian told Fox Sports. “It’s nice to have different winners but also we want rivals.” |
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Massa’s F1 career on brink of collapse(0) Felipe Massa’s formula one career is on the brink of collapse. Ferrari boss Stefano Domenicali left Barcelona insisting he expects the struggling Brazilian to “fight back starting in Monaco”. “We absolutely need his points to also fight for the constructors’ title,” he said. Earlier, the Maranello based team said on Twitter that Ferrari is “disappointed with” the 30-year-old’s performance. When asked about that comment, a Ferrari spokesman told the Sunday Times: “It was a poor choice of grammar. We are disappointed in the outcome of Felipe but not with Felipe himself.” But the very latest development is that Ferrari is now making it abundantly clear that Massa needs to up his game immediately. In a statement posted on its official website, Ferrari said Massa’s teammate Fernando Alonso “has always maintained a very high level”. As for Massa, his “drop off has made itself felt”, the report stated. “The Brazilian had picked up 49 points two years ago and 24 the following year, while so far this season he has just 2,” said Ferrari. “Everyone, he more than anyone, is expecting a change of gear starting right away with the Monaco grand prix”, the statement concluded. Even Massa’s strongest supporters in Brazil, like the O Globo journalist Celso Itibere, admit the situation is dire. “He is at risk,” said Itibere, “his decline is progressive, he is failing to react and he runs the real risk of not finishing the season. “At this time Ferrari has no one to take the job. Everyone they would like to have there – Perez, Kobayashi, Webber – are not available.” Tuesday’s edition of the Italian sports daily Corriere dello Sport will report that Massa’s ousting is imminent. And the latest edition of La Gazzetta dello Sport did not even once mention Massa’s name. “It is as though he does not exist,” wrote the Brazilian journalist Livio Oricchio in O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper. “Yet it is an Italian newspaper, and he is a Ferrari driver.” When asked if he fears for his F1 career, Massa said in Barcelona last weekend: “No. I live in the present. What will happen will happen.” Asked if he is afraid another bad performance will seal his fate, Massa insisted: “I’m not afraid of anything, especially criticism. It doesn’t affect me.” |
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Alonso: Grosjean can win grands prix(0) Romain Grosjean is a potential grand prix winner. That is the claim of the Frenchman’s first F1 teammate Fernando Alonso, who shared the Renault team with Grosjean in 2009. The Enstone based team, however, was imploding amid the crashgate scandal, and Grosjean struggled to perform after being drafted in to replace the sacked Nelson Piquet. He lost the drive at the end of the season and then found himself in the odd situation of farewelling his girlfriend, the French F1 presenter Marion Jolles, as she departed for a grand prix. “She was there and I was home,” Grosjean is quoted as saying in Barcelona by the Gulf Daily News. “Honestly, I thought it was over and I would never come back to formula one.” But, now as the new reigning GP2 champion, he is back in 2012 at the wheel of Lotus’ black and gold E20 — a car tipped by many as the favourite for victory this weekend. Many naturally tip Grosjean’s famous teammate Kimi Raikkonen as the most likely winner, but Spaniard Alonso rates the Swiss-born 26-year-old as well. “When his car was not so good he was criticised a lot,” Alonso told RMC Sport, “but when he has a good car he does very good results. “He has won GP2 and has a fantastic career. He has talent and I’m happy he went onto the podium (in Bahrain). “He can win a grand prix,” the Ferrari driver professed. |
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Schumacher happy criticism started tyre ‘discussion’(0) Michael Schumacher has denied his widely-reported comments about Pirelli’s 2012 tyres were simply about venting “frustration”. “What frustration?” the seven time world champion was quoted as having told German media in Barcelona. Not once but at least twice since the Bahrain grand prix three weeks ago, the Mercedes driver has suggested F1 and Pirelli have not got the balance right with the heavily-degrading tyres seen so far this season. Schumacher insists his intention was to start a conversation. “I am quite happy that we have initiated a discussion about how much influence one or another part should have in formula one,” he told reporters. Fernando Alonso agreed, pointing the finger at the media for “exaggerating” Schumacher’s view. “I read what he said and I don’t see any big problem with that,” said the Ferrari driver. Schumacher also sounded happy that his position triggered a meeting with Pirelli officials at the Mugello test last week. “We had a good meeting,” revealed the German, “to talk about this subject, so I just hope we continue to go in the right direction.” |
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Barrichello: Oval driving ‘very different’ to F1(0) Nineteen years of formula one did not prepare Rubens Barrichello for his first taste of driving an Indycar on a high speed oval. The former Ferrari driver, who switched categories for the 2012 season after losing his Williams race seat, tested at the Texas Motor Speedway on Monday. “It was bloody fast,” he is quoted by the Associated Press, “and very, very much different than anything I have ever tried. “I’ve had places that in formula one that they say ‘Oh, it’s almost flat and it’s a big corner and it’s a big challenge’. But the walls were never so close,” the 39-year-old Brazilian enthused. Barrichello’s teammate Tony Kanaan admitted it was “fun” and a rare sight to see his close friend “nervous” prior to getting into a racing car. “It was quite exciting to see how excited he got, and how happy he got out of the car saying how awesome it is,” he said. |
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Schumacher world’s second-richest sportsman(0) Michael Schumacher has been pipped at the post in the race to be the world’s richest sportsman. According to the Sunday Times’ annual listings, the seven time world champion’s (US) $823 million in career earnings is beaten only by golf legend Tiger Woods. American Woods has earned $869 million in his own ultra-successful career, the newspaper found. And the Sunday Times said the pair have each earned hundreds of millions of dollars more than other high-earning sportsmen, including Michael Jordan ($516m), Roger Federer ($316m) and David Beckham ($258m). F1′s two other representatives, Fernando Alonso and Kimi Raikkonen, were way down the top-twenty list, with their respective earnings at about $161 million apiece. McLaren’s world champions Lewis Hamilton ($89m) and Jenson Button ($85m), meanwhile, appear only on the list for British sportsmen, and they are both outpaced by the $129m earned by former Ferrari driver Eddie Irvine mainly through property investment. However, Hamilton and Button have each earned more in their careers than David Coulthard, Nigel Mansell, former BAR boss David Richards (all $80m) and Sir Jackie Stewart ($67m). Those earnings, however, are all dwarfed by Bernie Ecclestone’s estimated $4 billion, although the 81-year-old F1 chief executive does not appear at all on the list of the world’s richest overall. That list is headed by mega-earners like Sauber sponsor Carlos Slim, who according to the Sunday Times is worth $71 billion. |
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Leme: Massa ‘good’ driver in ‘very bad’ Ferrari(0) Well-known Brazilian commentator Reginaldo Leme has defended Felipe Massa, amid the Ferrari driver’s career crisis. Massa’s Ferrari seat hangs in the balance, and according to his boss Stefano Domenicali, he will have to improve in order to simply stay on the F1 grid with any team next year. But Leme has pointed the finger of blame at Ferrari’s struggling F2012 car. “It is very difficult to give an explanation for any driver’s bad phase,” Leme acknowledged on the Redacao Sportv programme. “The car is very bad. The fact that Alonso is always scoring (points) just shows that the Spaniard is the best driver of this generation. “No other driver, however good, could get anything out of that car. “I think that’s what’s happening with Massa,” said Leme. Massa will drive Ferrari’s heavily updated Barcelona-spec car at the Mugello test next Wednesday, while Alonso will drive on Tuesday and Thursday. Turning his attention to the 2012 championship, meanwhile, Reginaldo Leme said consistency is more important than ever before, with four separate teams having won races so far. “Look at Webber — he has been fourth four times and is third in the championship. Hamilton has been third three times and is right in contention.” |
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Raikkonen: F1 comeback easy with ‘good car’Comments Off Kimi Raikkonen has a simple theory as to why his return to formula one was much smoother than fellow former champion Michael Schumacher’s. After two less competitive seasons in 2010 and 2011, seven time title winner Schumacher, 43, is finally back up to speed this year. Finn Raikkonen is more than a decade younger than his German rival and he was off the grid for only two years, not three. But he thinks there is a simpler explanation as to why he has returned immediately to the pace, while Schumacher took more than two full seasons. “It’s just about whether you have a good car or not. It has made life much easier for me,” said Raikkonen, who has returned with Lotus. “He (Schumacher) was not so lucky,” the former McLaren and Ferrari driver told Germany’s Sport Bild. “The (Lotus) car is good,” the 2007 world champion added, referring to his black and gold E20. “Whether it’s good enough for victory or not, I don’t know. “At least we are not far away from the top.” Raikkonen insists not much has changed in F1 since he left for a world rallying foray at the end of 2009 — not even his friendship with Sebastian Vettel. “He has won two titles since then but it didn’t change him,” said Raikkonen. “Sebastian is a great racing driver but he’s also a really nice guy,” he added. As for himself, Raikkonen insists he is just the same. “Maybe people see me as more relaxed, which I think is down to the (Lotus) team,” he said. “It’s a different atmosphere to what I’ve experienced before.” |
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Alonso F1′s shock leader at soggy SepangComments Off Fernando Alonso is F1′s shock world championship leader, after Malaysian rain shook up the order at Sepang. “It’s a tough time for us at the moment, but we will remember this day,” said the Ferrari driver, who finished ahead of another surprise podium-sitter, Sauber’s Sergio Perez. The young Mexican was catching Alonso at a rate of knots when he made a mistake. “I think the win was possible,” Perez, who has been linked with Felipe Massa’s works Ferrari seat, said after beating the back-to-back 2012 polesitter Lewis Hamilton. Former Toro Rosso driver and BBC radio commentator Jaime Alguersuari, however, was not overly impressed. “The team did a fantastic strategy to put Perez on the right tyres at the right moment. For me, that’s it,” said the Spaniard. Back-to-back world champion Sebastian Vettel had an horror Sunday, cutting a tyre whilst passing an HRT and eventually retiring with what Red Bull described on the radio as an “emergency” technical problem. The German lies sixth in the drivers’ world championship, four points behind Perez and 17 off the lead. Title leader Alonso, meanwhile, is not overly happy with the rain-soaked win. “I think it changes nothing,” he said. “We are in a position that we do not want, fighting to get into Q3.” Team boss Stefano Domenicali agreed: “I hope this helps the people at home to push, but we were not stupid yesterday and we are not phenomenal today.” The Italian also denied that Perez’s debut podium is the ideal time to immediately pluck the Mexican from Sauber and put him in struggling Felipe Massa’s red car. “Not true, not true,” Domenicali told British Sky television. |
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Alonso has ‘samurai’ tattooComments Off Fernando Alonso has kicked off the new 2012 season with a ‘Samurai’ tattoo on his neck and back, Marca sports newspaper reports. Marca said the Spaniard and two-time title winner was inspired by the Hagakure, the spiritual guide written by 18th century samurai Yamamoto Tsunetomo. The report said most of Alonso’s tattoo is on his back. |
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Lauda: Ferrari crisis is exaggeratedComments Off It is already being described as a ‘crisis’, but former Ferrari driver Niki lauda is sure Ferrari’s situation in early 2012 is not that bad. “Everything is either great or everything is negative. I don’t think the Ferrari is as bad as it’s being made out. “I do know that the McLaren and Red Bull are very similar and Mercedes follows closely behind. Then comes Ferrari — but things can change very quickly,” added Lauda. As ever in Ferrari’s high-pressure Italy, however, the stakes are high and every episode is amplified — such as when comments made by Felipe Massa apparently contradicted Pat Fry’s prediction that an early podium is unlikely. “In my head is the thought that we can fight for the podium,” Brazilian Massa insisted after landing in Australia this week, “but that doesn’t mean that I don’t agree with what Pat Fry said in Barcelona.” Fernando Alonso, meanwhile, admitted Ferrari has no choice but to initially “grit our teeth” until the F2012 improves. “First of all, we have to see exactly where we are in terms of being competitive and then give our all to bring home as many points as possible in this early stage of the championship,” said the Spaniard. |
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Keke Rosberg: Economic situation saved Massa’s seatComments Off Felipe Massa may have kept his seat at Ferrari for economic reasons. Keke’s Finnish countryman Mika Salo, a former Ferrari driver, told MTV3 last week he was “surprised” Brazilian Massa kept his seat for 2012 after two consecutively poor seasons. Massa already had a contract for 2012, but at the end of 2009 – when Kimi Raikkonen was replaced by Fernando Alonso – Ferrari showed it is not afraid of paying handsomely to end a deal. So is Rosberg also surprised Massa is still Alonso’s teammate? “I think that’s been influenced by the fact that they burned quite a lot of money with Kimi,” the 63-year-old said. “They could have again paid off the guy with the contract and taken someone else, but at some point you have to be economically mindful — you can’t always go for the most expensive option,” added Rosberg. |
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Salo ‘surprised’ Ferrari kept Massa for 2012Comments Off Former Ferrari driver Mika Salo has admitted he was “surprised” his former team opted to honour Felipe Massa’s contract for 2012. “I don’t think Massa will be staying after this season,” former Sauber and Toyota driver Salo, who attended last week’s Jerez test, told the Finnish broadcaster MTV3. “I was surprised that he was allowed to continue this year.” Salo, 45, said there is a similar pecking-order at Red Bull, where Sebastian Vettel last year utterly dominated his teammate Mark Webber. He also commented on McLaren’s duo, comprising two world champions. “If McLaren has a good car then the drivers will be taking points off one another — that’s not something that will happen in the other teams. “On the track, (Lewis) Hamilton is the fastest but not quite as smart as (Jenson) Button in the races.” Salo sees less of a close battle at Lotus this year, where his countryman Kimi Raikkonen is returning to F1 alongside GP2 champion Romain Grosjean. “Kimi should be much faster than Grosjean,” he said, “who is only there because (Eric) Boullier is his manager.” As for Williams’ lineup of Pastor Maldonado alongside Bruno Senna, Salo said: “I think this is one of the worst pairings. Both are susceptible to mistakes. “Senna had few good races last year but faded badly by the end. “Maldonado is a bit of a hothead, so I don’t see it being a good year for them. “For (test driver) Valtteri Bottas there could be a good opportunity to get a race.” |
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Alonso gives Ferrari boost after worrying startComments Off Ferrari’s worrying start to the 2012 pre-season got a boost on Friday when Fernando Alonso topped the times in the famous team’s new car. Former Ferrari driver Mika Salo answered: “They’re having problems at every corner.” But although not as quick as the impressive Lotus earlier this week, Spaniard Alonso was faster than all comers on the last of the four-day session at Jerez, including Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel who had technical problems. Typically, Alonso was giving nothing away. “This time is worth nothing as is the one I set yesterday and those of the previous days,” he said. He was also not getting excited about Lotus’ potential title challenge. “I don’t know as even for them it’s a bit early and I would rather just say I am very happy to see Kimi (Raikkonen) back. “He’s a great driver and a great person,” said Alonso. |
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Raikkonen slams ‘ridiculous’ DRSComments Off Kimi Raikkonen has revealed he is no fan of F1′s ‘DRS’ concept. Having skipped the 2010 season entirely on television, Raikkonen began to watch some grands prix last year when his thirst for circuit racing returned. “The way the DRS wings work is for me a little ridiculous,” he admitted to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “Overtaking is not really a great art anymore. “You just put the wing down and go past easily,” said the 32-year-old. “The guy in front can’t really do anything. “But I agree that at least it makes the show better,” added Raikkonen. He admitted that his brief stint in American Nascar racing last year rekindled his love for wheel-to-wheel. “I realised how much I was missing it,” said the former McLaren and Ferrari driver. “That doesn’t mean I am sick of rallying; actually I’d like to do both but that’s not possible. “But if you want to race and you have the choice, first you look at formula one,” he added. Raikkonen was the fastest of all when 2012 testing kicked off at Jerez on Tuesday, insisting he is not fazed at the prospect of returning after two years away. “For me it’s easier to get used to the (Pirelli) tyres than it was for the others a year ago. For me it’s more like a new beginning.” As for the refuelling ban, which came in last year, Raikkonen insists: “That’s no big deal — the pitstop is just a little shorter. “Driving with the heavier car is not like day and night; it’s still the same sport. There’s just a few more buttons to push on the steering wheel.” |
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