|
Clever Sauber turning heads in 2012Comments Off Fernando Alonso’s win was a complete surprise, but the name of another team was on more paddock-dwellers’ lips after Malaysia — Sauber. “Only one team could do consistently good laptimes on all the tyres and in all the conditions, and it was Sauber,” confirmed Martin Whitmarsh, whose McLaren team had travelled to Sepang with arguably the fastest car. Also in Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport, Red Bull team boss Christian Horner agreed: “They (Sauber) have somehow managed to get all of the tyres to work perfectly, which at the moment is the key to success. “The (tyre) window is so small that it’s very easy to not be in it,” added the Briton. And Sepang winner Fernando Alonso, whose victory was only ensured by a late-race mistake by Sauber’s Sergio Perez, admitted: “No doubt about it, they were quicker than us.” Some believe it was only the Malaysian weather chaos that brought the Ferrari-powered C31 to the top of F1′s form-guide, but the Sauber was in fact also fast in Australia. “Our cars were severely damaged at the start (in Melbourne),” explained chief designer Matt Morris. “At the front for Perez, the rear for Kobayashi.” Nonetheless, both finished inside the top eight. “The race in Malaysia showed very clearly how fast our car is,” insisted team boss Peter Sauber, writing in Blick newspaper. “After two very different tracks, we have the assurance now that the C31 is a success.” The next question is precisely how the small Hinwil based team has managed to build a pace-setting car. One possible answer is the end of the blown diffuser era, and the fact that Sauber’s 2012 solution has already been copied by F1′s formerly-dominant Red Bull. Italy’s Autosprint, meanwhile, claims Ferrari is next, mischievously suggesting that the updated F2012 might aptly be called the ‘Ferrauber’. Referring to the FIA exhaust clampdown, Morris admitted: “We had to give up less than our opponents.” Peter Sauber added: “When I saw that Red Bull had chosen a similar route to us, I was sure that we were right.” Another trick on the C31 is a clever use of the loophole allowing an opening at the front of the car for driver cooling. “It’s no match-winner,” Morris insists, “but it gains us some (lap) time.” And Autosprint reports that another “trick” on the Sauber is located in front of the rear wheels, exploiting yet another “grey zone” in the regulations. |
|
Paddock abuzz with Concorde intrigueComments Off As ever in the high-intrigue world of formula one politics, what is not said always has more value that what is freedly revealed. Firstly, while some interpreted Saturday’s news as a 2013 Concorde Agreement being done and dusted, the F1 chief executive’s short statement in fact merely said “the terms” of the next contract have been agreed. And the major keyword was that “the majority” of the teams – including Ferrari, McLaren and Red Bull – are on board. “Bernie’s used the word majority,” McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh is quoted by the Mirror. “If there are 12 teams, that’s seven or more. “I don’t know any more.” The big missing domino is Mercedes, who according to multiple media sources are holding out for now. Another is the famous British outfit Williams. “All agreements between FOM and the teams are normally subject to confidentiality clauses,” Red Bull’s Christian Horner is quoted in German reports. “So I can’t comment.” Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport reported that, in addition to the aforementioned top teams, also set to sign up for 2013 are Red Bull sister team Toro Rosso and Ferrari-powered Sauber. Lotus and Force India are reportedly also part of that group. That leaves just the three slowest teams Caterham, Marussia and HRT as the other teams remaining in the cold. |
|
Massa tries to ignore axe rumoursComments Off Felipe Massa’s Ferrari seat is a big talking point in the Sepang paddock on Thursday. Mexican Perez, the cream of Ferrari’s development programme and already at Ferrari-powered Sauber, said in Malaysia: “It’s very early to say that or speculate.” Very keen for a chance like this, however, is Force India refugee Sutil, who has been left without a job in the wake of his criminal conviction. “I am very motivated and I’m training hard to stay fit,” the German is quoted on Thursday by Auto Bild Motorsport. All eyes will be on Massa this weekend, as Ferrari has agreed to build him up a new F2012 chassis in the wake of his lacklustre performance in Melbourne. “I really don’t care,” he said in reaction to the rumours, “I have a job.” |
|
Perez admits possibility of Ferrari futureComments Off Sergio Perez has admitted the possibility he could be paired with Fernando Alonso next year at Ferrari. At the same time, however, Red Bull’s reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel regularly declares his desire to one day race a Ferrari. “Ah, yes,” Perez told the Spanish sports daily Marca. So who is the real front-runner for Massa’s seat? “We will see,” he insisted, “as ultimately it depends on this year, which for me is very important.” Perez, 22, admitted at least that he is a leading candidate. “Yes, but this season is yet to even start and everything changes very fast in a year. There are many things that are yet to have been seen,” he said. “For me, Ferrari is the greatest team for which all the drivers dream of one day winning the championship but … let’s see. I would love to be there some day.” Perez acknowledged that Spaniard Alonso, Ferrari’s much-loved number one, would be a difficult teammate. “Very difficult, I would say Alonso is the most difficult on all of the grid to have as your teammate, I respect him a lot,” he insisted. Reportedly on the cusp of a top seat, Perez is nonetheless still fending off suggestions he is a ‘pay driver’, due to his strong backing by the Mexican sponsor Telmex. “In these days you do depend more on your support,” admitted Perez, “but I believe the talent remains the priority. “Even with the drivers having support, I don’t think there are any bad drivers on the grid. “I was criticised a lot for coming with the Telmex money, but if you look back, a driver who wins five races in GP2 and loses the title by 10 points will normally go in F1 the next year. “It (Telmex) is an influence, but to say it’s why I’m here is not fair,” he insisted. |
|
Perez backer Slim not ruling out Ferrari futureComments Off Sergio Perez’s backer has admitted a move for the Mexican driver to Ferrari is not out of the question for 2013. Slim’s son, Carlos Slim Domit, controls Telmex’s formula one programme, which is currently in the form of sponsorship of the Ferrari-powered Sauber team. But Perez, 22, is tipped to replace Felipe Massa at Ferrari next year. “His most important challenge is this season,” Slim Domit told Spain’s AS sports newspaper. “A good championship in 2012 can put him into the frame with the best teams, but a bad year would have the opposite effect,” he admitted. “It is true that there is a relationship with Ferrari on two levels — with them being the engine supplier of Sauber and the other because he (Perez) is in their young (driver) programme. “It’s a tough sport where results matter and, as such, the future will be clearer,” added Slim. He was also asked if Telmex has considered buying a F1 team, amid reports recently that the Slim family is interested in struggling HRT. “I don’t know,” answered slim. “In our case, being not directly involved allows us to select the team we work with and we do not change our strategy.” |
|
Marko: Toro Rosso ready to promote next rookiesComments Off Helmut Marko is refusing to rule out a change of driver lineup for Red Bull’s second team Toro Rosso this season. Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari are starting the year at the wheel of the Ferrari-powered STR5, but two highly rated Red Bull-backed chargers are waiting in the wings. Of the pair, Daniel Ricciardo is the highest profile, testing the car at Jerez on Thursday and set to drive it on every Friday morning at the 20 grands prix this season. But Marko, Red Bull’s inimitable driver manager, is also championing the cause of 20-year-old Frenchman Jean-Eric Vergne. “In Ricciardo and Vergne we have two outstanding talents. Buemi and Alguersuari know that their job is not a pillow, and we are not a boarding school,” the Austrian told Auto Motor und Sport. Former grand prix driver Marko has a reputation as a ruthless manager of drivers, not hesitating to pile the pressure on Toro Rosso’s current race lineup. “Buemi’s services last year were not what we expected of him,” he warns. “Alguersuari has developed, but is it enough?” Marko hailed Ricciardo’s raw pace, as demonstrated at the Abu Dhabi test last November, and said Vergne’s fighting spirit is unmatched. “If our four drivers went side by side into a corner, I guarantee Vergne would come out the other side first,” he said. |
|
Sauber ousting ‘hurt’ admits de la RosaComments Off
Pedro de la Rosa has vowed to catch up with his former team boss Peter Sauber at the end of the season.The Spaniard raced with the Swiss team in 2010 until last month’s Italian grand prix, whereafter he was replaced for the last five races by Nick Heidfeld. Sauber said he made the decision in order to gauge the true pace of the Ferrari-powered C29 car. De la Rosa has told Spanish radio Cadena Ser this week that he will catch up with the 67-year-old after the Abu Dhabi finale “to see if it was the right decision”. He admits that Sauber’s explanation that it was de la Rosa’s consistency that motivated the decision “hurt me”. But he said German Heidfeld is a “good driver, but the quality all the way through the field is very close”. 39-year-old de la Rosa also admitted that the occupant of the sister car, Kamui Kobayashi, is “much better than you think”. He also said that if he had strong sponsors, “I would still be there”. On the three-race championship fight, de la Rosa tipped countryman Fernando Alonso “but I don’t know if that’s my brain or my heart speaking”. He also said the layout of the Korean circuit looks “mixed”, with the tighter sections favouring the Red Bull, and the Ferrari to be better on the long straights. |
|
Heidfeld to replace de la Rosa from SingaporeComments Off Sunday at Monza was Pedro de la Rosa’s last grand prix with the Sauber team in 2010, according to a Swiss report. The Blick newspaper, with close links to the Hinwil based team’s chief Peter Sauber, said Nick Heidfeld will definitely be driving the Ferrari-powered C29 from now on, starting with the Singapore night race in two weeks. The news will almost certainly result in Nick Heidfeld, who this year was formerly Mercedes’ reserve driver, relinquishing his new role as test driver for the 2011 tyre supplier Pirelli. It will be the third Sauber tenure for German Heidfeld, 33, who also drove for the Swiss team in 2000-2003 and 2006-2009. “This makes sense,” wrote veteran Blick correspondent Roger Benoit, “because Sauber wants to make up the 20 point arrears to Williams, in order to finish the world championship in seventh position.” Compared with rookie teammate Kamui Kobayashi’s 21 points, long-time McLaren test driver de la Rosa has scored just 6 points on his return to the F1 grid this season. |
![]() |
McLaren urges against safety car rule changesComments Off Jul.7 (GMM) McLaren has urged formula one against making a knee-jerk reaction to the safety car rules. Although Ferrari cried foul after Lewis Hamilton’s drive-through penalty in Valencia – where multiple drivers were also penalised for transgressions – Mark Webber said this week that Red Bull saw the events of the race as “normal”. And although the Sporting Working Group is looking at the rules as a response to the Ferrari-powered controversy, McLaren managing director Jonathan Neale said on Wednesday: “I would be wary of knee-jerking. “There wasn’t a lot wrong with last weekend (Valencia) and I don’t think we should be doing instant rule-making,” he told reporters during a teleconference. Meanwhile, after Williams said it will test a blown rear exhaust for its car early this weekend, Neale confirmed that a similar approach will be taken by McLaren at Silverstone. “If the drivers think it’s good it will stay on and we’ll run it,” he said, after the upgrade for the MP4-25 was tested during a straightline session. “If not, we’ll continue to develop it.” Neale also backed Red Bull boss Christian Horner’s view that the effect of the exhaust concept has been overstated. “I would tend to agree that it’s not a case of bolt on your blown diffuser and then blow everybody into the weeds,” he said. |
![]() |
Sauber: Team must solve car pace riddleComments Off Sauber must improve its qualifying pace, team boss Peter Sauber insists. The two C29s qualified poorly at Valencia a week ago, but in the race Kamui Kobayashi featured strongly and his teammate Pedro de la Rosa also finished in the points. “So the crucial question for our team is: why is the car fast in the race but too slow in qualifying?” Sauber wrote in a column for the Swiss Sunday newspaper Sonntagsblick. “Our engineers as well as the drivers need to get to the bottom of this as fast as possible,” he added. Sauber said the Ferrari-powered C29 has “much potential” that only works “within a very narrow window”. A new aerodynamic package debuted in Valencia, and de la Rosa thinks the car will work even better at fast Silverstone this weekend. “I’m very much looking forward to the British grand prix,” said the Spaniard. (GMM) |
|
Brundle: Hamilton has not hurt FerrariComments Off In addition to Mark Webber’s spectacular crash, it was for many observers, the issue of the race weekend in Valencia: Lewis Hamilton obsolete in a safety car period, the medical car and it occupies just 13 laps later with a drive-through penalty. Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso then assumed the race, they have manipulated the Grand Prix of Europe, because Hamilton had in his view, by the late penalty to no disadvantage. According to former racing driver Martin Brundle, however, these accusations without any basis. “Alonso’s emotions have common sense superimposed,” former McLaren driver writes in his’ BBC’ column. Hamilton was by his maneuvers Ferrari ultimately not harmed. Instead, the Italians might as well be upset with race winner Sebastian Vettel. |
|
Montezemolo said: Slow teams should not be allowed in F1Comments Off
Jun.18 (GMM) Luca di Montezemolo has continued his sustained attack on formula one’s new teams. The Ferrari president thinks the grid should be filled by the bigger teams fielding three cars, rather than by opening the doors to newcomers including Lotus, Virgin and HRT. Next year, another small team is likely to make its debut. Spain’s El Mundo newspaper this week claims that the budget of the new Spanish outfit HRT is ten times smaller than Ferrari’s. “In modern F1 races cars with GP2 levels of performance shouldn’t be allowed to participate — they are supposed to race on Sunday mornings,” Montezemolo is quoted by Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport. Montezemolo argues that Fernando Alonso’s push for Montreal victory was ruined by the lapping of backmarkers, an apparent reference to his delays behind Jarno Trulli’s Lotus and the HRT of Karun Chandhok. But while it is true that, earlier this year, the small teams were vastly off the pace, all of the six cars were faster by multiple seconds than the entire GP2 field in Turkey recently. And in Canada last weekend, Heikki Kovalainen’s Lotus qualified just two tenths behind the Ferrari-powered Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi, while Virgin and HRT runners were also easily within 107 per cent of the pole time. The new teams’ laptime deficit in Canada was between 3 and 4 seconds, compared with Giancarlo Fisichella’s 2.2 second qualifying deficit in a Ferrari-powered Force India at the same circuit two years ago. A report at Italiaracing said: “It should be noted that the only complaints this season about the smaller teams have come from Ferrari.” |
![]() |
Toro Rosso’s Tost rues customer car banComments Off Jun.8 (GMM) Franz Tost believes F1 teams should still be able to run a ‘customer car’ acquired from active competitors. Since the Faenza based team was sold by Minardi in 2005, and until last year, Toro Rosso raced a chassis based on the car fielded by sister team Red Bull Racing. But in 2010, due to a rule clarification, the team had to build up its Italian base and staff in order to design and construct its own car, the current Ferrari-powered STR5. “Nevertheless, I am of the opinion that this rule is wrong,” team boss Tost is quoted in the latest edition of Auto Bild Motorsport. “With an intensive collaboration between two teams, you could cut the budget in half,” adding that the lower half of the grid would also be more competitive. However, Tost is also happy with the current situation, with Red Bull owning and operating two separate teams. “It works perfectly: Red Bull going for the world championship, and Toro Rosso working with the next generation. “Our current drivers Sebastien Buemi and Jamie Alguersuari are on the right track and have great futures,” added the Austrian. Tost also thinks team owner Dietrich Mateschitz is happy. “At the moment I don’t see any signs of a sale. In the (finance company) Money Service Group from Liechtenstein we also have our first own sponsor,” he said. |
|
FIA allows engine reliability fix for FerrariComments Off
(GMM) Ferrari’s proposed tweaks to its F1 engine design were approved by the FIA ahead of the Spanish grand prix. We reported last month that, after several engine problems for both the works team and its customer Sauber so far in 2010, the Italian team would ask permission to work on the design on the grounds of reliability. It has been rumoured that the main problem was isolated to the area of the pneumatic valves and air consumption, with the remedy qualifying for an exemption from the engine development ‘freeze’. Ferrari confirmed on Tuesday that it “requested and received authorisation from the FIA to make some changes within the framework of the current engine regulations and these modifications will be fitted to the engines to be used in Spain”. Looking ahead to his home race in Barcelona this weekend, Ferrari-powered Pedro de la Rosa told Spain’s El Pais that he was confident the Maranello based marque was on top of the situation. “I’m not worried at all, they’re going to fix it,” said the Sauber driver. |
|
Confirmed: Toro Rosso not working on F-duct systemComments Off
Apr.21 (GMM) Toro Rosso has vowed to buck the current trend in formula one by not working on a F-duct device. With the exception of the sport’s three new teams, it is believed the Ferrari-powered STR5 will therefore soon be the only car on the 2010 grid not exploiting the downforce-spoiling concept pioneered by McLaren. Technical boss Giorgio Ascanelli said Toro Rosso’s decision is based on financial considerations. “If I have ten euros and am hungry, I would buy two sandwiches instead of three grams of caviar,” he is quoted as having told the Italian magazine Autosprint. So far, Sauber, Ferrari, Mercedes and Williams have tested F-duct-like devices on their 2010 cars, with varying levels of success. Mercedes’ Ross Brawn said in China that those teams who are hoping to match McLaren’s straight-line advantage are now “learning just how complex” the integration of an F-duct is. Ascanelli added: “You might see some benefit after five months of development, but in that time we can improve and develop other parts of the car.” It is believed Red Bull, Red Bull and Force India will be the next teams to run F-ducts on their cars at forthcoming grands prix. |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |