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Kovalainen wants midfield push for Caterham(0) Heikki Kovalainen is looking for Caterham to move into the midfield, according to his new management company. Having handled his own career in the wake of Flavio Briatore’s demise, Finn Kovalainen recently signed up with IMG, the sports and entertainment management giant. The 30-year-old has rebuilt his reputation since 2010 in the wake of mixed tenures for top teams Renault and McLaren. According to IMG Motorsport’s head of clients Martin Anayi, Kovalainen is now regarded by formula one team bosses up and down pitlane as among the top best drivers. “He is a great guy,” Anayi is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper. “Heikki’s potential is obvious and he definitely wants to succeed.” There have been rumblings in the paddock that Kovalainen is disappointed that, despite being consistently the best of F1′s new teams since 2010, Caterham is yet to break into the midfield. “This is only the team’s third season, so there are still some growing paints,” IMG’s Anayi acknowledged. “Heikki has a strong desire to compete, and not just with his teammate Vitaly Petrov. The team’s boss Tony Fernandes wants to get in with the middle group. “This means that the team needs to regularly get into the Q2 stage of qualifying and in the race be aiming for the points,” he insisted. |
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French broadcaster TF1 not in BahrainComments Off Another television broadcaster has pulled out of this weekend’s Bahrain grand prix. It had already emerged that Sky Deutschland, MTV3 Finland and Japan’s Fuji TV would not be reporting from the scene of the race in the troubled island Kingdom. Now, it emerges that the travelling regulars for France’s TF1 are not in Bahrain either. The French-language RMC Sport reported that, like the other broadcasters, the decision was taken “because of the unstable situation” in Bahrain. It has also emerged that Stefano Mancini, the regular F1 correspondent for Italy’s La Stampa newspaper, had trouble entering Bahrain this week. He reported that he encountered the trouble, which ended when the FIA intervened directly, due to an interview he conducted last week with a Bahraini activist. “You work for a newspaper?” Mancini said, recalling what he was asked by the polite uniformed official. “Write the name,” the official said. “My name?” enquired Mancini. “No, the newspaper,” the official clarified. |
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More pull out as F1 resists Bahrain axe pressureComments Off A support-race team and a respected journalist have become the next to pull out of this weekend’s highly controversial Bahrain grand prix. The Porsche Supercup team MRS said its decision to skip the support race in the divided island Kingdom is the “first time in our history that we have had to cancel”. “In the end we have the responsibility for our employees,” said team boss Karsten Molitor, citing security concerns. Another withdrawal – joining the sacked Williams catering staff member, and the TV broadcasters Sky Deutschland, Fuji TV and MTV3 Finland – is the respected correspondent for O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper, Livio Oricchio. “I have decided in agreement with Estado to not go,” he said. “We had the tickets for the entire season, except for Bahrain and the United States, because there was a doubt they would be run. “Like many journalists, I will not be at Sakhir,” Oricchio admitted. “I always believed that the race would not take place, and I’m still not 100 per cent sure that something will not happen that will lead the FIA or FOM to cancel.” Indeed, following the sport’s decision to push ahead, the pressure on formula one to cancel at the eleventh hour has only intensified. Nabeel Rajab, the leader of the government opposition group Bahrain Centre for Human Rights, admitted that the next protests – ‘three days of rage’, to coincide with the race’s three-day calendar – are aimed specifically at F1. “We’re protesting to show anger at formula one for conducting the race here,” he is quoted by the BBC. And the wife of a well-known jailed Bahraini activist who is on a long hunger strike, added: “I am not angry with the government… what makes me angry is people like Ecclestone who decide to come to Bahrain because he thinks everyone is happy.” Italy’s La Stampa reports that F1 personnel have been advised to stay away from restaurants and shops, while “girlfriends and wives stay at home”. That’s not entirely true, as Felipe Massa touched down at the airport on Thursday with his wife and baby son. And Giedo van der Garde, the reserve driver for Caterham, said he has found Bahrain peaceful since his arrival on Wednesday. “I’ve not been here long,” he is quoted by Auto Hebdo, “but everything seems quiet. Obviously, there’s a heavy police presence,” the Dutchman continued. “But I haven’t seen any trouble or anything. Let’s hope it stays like that.” Marco Canseco, the correspondent for the Spanish sports daily Marca, said he witnessed a “minor altercation” in the capital Manama on Wednesday. “Then all the teams and everybody were able to get to the track for work without a hitch, the same on return,” he revealed. Many are protesting the race going ahead on moral grounds, others due to security fears, whilst others fear for F1′s image. “The ongoing debate about Bahrain is the only damage to the high gloss of the exciting 2012 season so far,” agreed Austria’s Kleine Zeitung newspaper. |
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China among best races in F1 historyComments Off Statistically, the Chinese grand prix raced straight into the history books as one of the most exciting formula one events of all time. “For me, we are having some of the best races in formula one history,” agreed Jenson Button after finishing Sunday’s Shanghai race behind Nico Rosberg. Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper reports that only three grands prix in the history of the sport played host to more individual overtaking moves. The report said there were 72 passes in total on Sunday, not including the first corner of the race. Seven of the moves were on Kimi Raikkonen on one lap, after the Lotus driver’s Pirelli tyres gave up the ghost. Last year in Shanghai, there were 63 passes. So far in 2012, there were more overtaking moves in China, Malaysia and Australia compared to the same races last season. Canada 2011 still stands as the site of the most passes during a single grand prix, at 89. In second place are the 1983 US grand prix and the 2011 Turkish grand prix (79 passes), followed by China last weekend. McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh is celebrating the spectacle of the 2012 season so far. “Who’s going to predict who will win?” he said, referring to this weekend’s grand prix in Bahrain. “I won’t. “We’ve had three very different races and I think we are going to have potentially 20 very different races this year.” |
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More passing in 2012 than early last yearComments Off The 2012 season has kicked off promisingly, with more overtaking moves recorded in the first two races than in the same exciting period last year. The finding is significant, given the highly lauded contribution early in 2011 made by the new passing aid ‘DRS’, and new official supplier Pirelli’s heavily-degrading tyres. Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper said 2012 has so far broken even the all-time records of early last season, when there were 63 overtaking moves – excluding the first laps – in Australia and Malaysia 2011. This year, there were 70 passes in Australia-Malaysia combined. It bodes well for this weekend’s Chinese grand prix, after last year’s Shanghai race saw no fewer than 63 separate in-race overtakes, including Lewis Hamilton’s winning move on leader Sebastian Vettel. “China proved to be one of the most fascinating races in our first year, so we have a tough act to follow,” said Pirelli’s Paul Hembery. “However, the philosophy we have adopted this year actually extends the window of peak performance on the slick tyres, which means that the drivers should be able to race harder and closer,” he added. Yet another factor at the 2012 Chinese grand prix could be the weather, with F1′s travellers already sampling wet Shanghai roads early this week. That forecast would suit Malaysia winner Ferrari, with technical director Pat Fry admitting that the Italian team’s 2012 car is almost a second off the pace in the dry. “Damp, low grip conditions suit our car and flatter some of the issues we have at the moment,” he said. |
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Maldonado: Williams ‘not far’ from top teamsComments Off From the depths of 2011, Williams is now ‘not far’ from the pace of F1′s strongest teams. It indicated a major turnaround for the formerly championship-winning team that collapsed to a dismal ninth place in last year’s points standings. Venezuelan Maldonado hopes last Sunday was indeed the start of a Williams resurgence. He said this weekend in Malaysia “should be interesting”. “McLaren and Red Bull look strong, but we are not far away,” he is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. “We were very close to (Red Bull’s) Mark Webber in the first and second stints,” said Maldonado. “I think we are faster than Ferrari, Sauber and Force India,” he added. Maldonado’s last-lap crash in Australia cost Williams a full ten points — double the team’s tally of the entire 2011 season. “We need points in the future,” he acknowledged, “but we are also now more relaxed now.” |
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Raikkonen’s managers now take a back seatComments Off
Kimi Raikkonen’s managers have revealed they only now take a back seat in the career of the 2007 world champion. But Steve told Finland’s Turun Sanomat that they only intervene now when the 32-year-old driver requests it — such as when he needed to negotiate last winter with Williams and his ultimate 2012 employer, Lotus. “We came to the end of the road really in late 2009,” he said. That is when Ferrari bought out the rest of Raikkonen’s contract, and he headed to world rally. “We can’t honestly say that we are real rally fans — it’s alien to us, while we know F1 through and through. “When Kimi wanted to go back to F1, he turned to us for help with the agreement. After a few months Kimi got what he wanted.” Robertson, however, explained that the father-son duo are no longer involved in the “day to day” running of Raikkonen’s career. “I have known Kimi for 11, 12 years, and he has become really close to us. When he asks for help, he knows that we are always ready to give it,” he continued. “I was delighted when he wanted to come back where he really belongs (in F1),” said Robertson. “There is so much nonsense about Kimi’s problems with motivation. “The truth is that he wanted to come back for one reason only — because he is super-motivated to race in F1 again. “By taking Kimi, it shows the (Lotus) team’s desire to succeed. I think Kimi and Romain Grosjean are a good combination. “By changing the drivers the team has showed that it was not satisfied with the level of last year and that they want to come back to being among the big teams,” he concluded. |
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Lotus back on the pace after chassis problemComments Off Lotus has overcome a serious chassis flaw to lead the field as the final pre-season test began at Barcelona. “The mounting of the suspension is now the strongest part of the car,” an unnamed team member is quoted by SID news agency. At the end of his return to action on Thursday, Romain Grosjean was quoted by France’s Auto Plus: “It (the E20) feels the same, there’s not much difference really.” Indeed, the revised car is 1 kilogram heavier, but the biggest issue is the four lost days of testing, which after an FIA clarification cannot now be made up. “To miss four days is not ideal as suddenly we have to try to work twice as hard to catch up,” continued Grosjean. “It’s true that it’s not great, but it’s not as problematic as it might have been.” He is referring to the fact that, so far, the Lotus appears intrinsically fast. Asked if the E20 felt as good around Barcelona’s demanding layout as it had at Jerez last month, the reigning GP champion enthused: “Yes, exactly the same. “You can trust the car, push it, play with it. “You can attack, and if you attack too much, you know what will happen — if you have understeer, you know that by attacking less, you’ll have less understeer. “On this aspect, the car is very good.” 1982 world champion Keke Rosberg told the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 that while the Lotus looks as good in Barcelona as it had at Jerez, it is still not clear if it will be able to compete against F1′s regular top teams. Auto Motor und Sport quotes Grosjean as saying: “I think there are a couple of teams ahead of us — Red Bull and McLaren look very strong. “Behind them, it’s a lot closer than it was before.” However, amid F1′s now extremely limited track testing regime, there is no ignoring the four lost days of running. Asked if he is ready for 2012, Grosjean said according to Finland’s Turun Sanomat: “I have to be. “Of course, the more time you have with your car, the better you feel. However, it is what it is. “We have this four days prior to Melbourne and that’s better than nothing,” he added. * Caterham had to replace Heikki Kovalainen with his teammate Vitaly Petrov on Thursday, as the Finn recovered at his nearby hotel with food poisoning. |
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Press tips ‘small advantage’ for Red BullComments Off Most leading specialist publications see Red Bull as the continuing pacesetter in formula one. “They still have an advantage, but it’s smaller,” agreed Jenson Button, according to Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo. His boss Martin Whitmarsh added: “Red Bull has a solid, fast car, better than us in slow corners, but we’re better in the fast ones.” Switzerland’s Sonntagsblick, however, sees McLaren actually ahead of the energy drink-owned team, with Mercedes in third place and Force India a surprise fourth. “Red Bull is faster (than Mercedes),” said the German marque’s boss Ross Brawn, “and clearly a little more than we had hoped for,” he told Auto Motor und Sport. The international publications said Lotus, amid their chassis flaw problems, rank anywhere between third (Auto Motor und Sport) and eighth (Blick). According to the same press, Ferrari is in trouble, ranking no higher than fifth in the lists of the aforementioned publications — and the authoritative Auto Motor und Sport predicting nothing short of a disastrous season for the fabled Italian team. Felipe Massa is quoted by Spanish reporters as saying Barcelona was “a little more positive” than the Jerez test recently, and he was asked to rank the development of the new F2012 car out of ten. “Probably more than five. There is still much to do, but now we are closer than we were,” said the Brazilian. As for whether the car is a race winner, Massa added: “I hope so, but it’s very difficult to say anything in testing,” he is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. Indeed, Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi ended last week’s Barcelona test with the quickest time, but Blick’s veteran correspondent Roger Benoit warned against taking that too seriously. “When with the same tyres at the same time, (Mercedes’ Nico) Rosberg was a second faster per lap than Sauber’s Japanese,” he said. “In testing, the truth is seldom revealed — if the teams used lie detectors, they would all be laying exploded around us.” According to Britain’s Sun newspaper, Kobayashi confirmed: “I don’t think McLaren and Red Bull are slow. “We don’t really wish for wins or podiums. For us this is a bit too far away.” Instead, the midfield battle looks extremely tight, with Brazilian correspondent Livio Oricchio surmising that Sauber as well as Force India, Toro Rosso and Williams are all in there. “It will be race to race,” Toro Rosso’s Giorgio Ascanelli told the Italian press. “From what we’ve seen so far, this fight will be amazing.” And Oricchio concluded: “As for HRT and Marussia, who have not even presented their 2012 cars, they undoubtedly have capable people, but also almost as many difficulties.” |
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Vettel, Alonso cautious on 2012 title prospectsComments Off F1 grandees Sebastian Vettel and Fernando Alonso have refused to predict they will be in the running for this year’s world title. “I think it’s too far away,” back to back world champion Vettel, referring to the three week gap until Melbourne, told German reporters. “At the moment we do not know where we all are, which is why I don’t want to talk about the first race or the championship.” Agreed Alonso: “I think it’s wrong to try to figure out in February if you are going to have a successful season or not. We don’t know,” he is quoted by AS newspaper. “The feelings I have are that we are faster than the Giulietta,” he smiled, referring to the Alfa Romeo road car. “I don’t know. Red Bull seems to be strong but we will not know how much until we get to Melbourne,” said Alonso. According to Finland’s MTV3, McLaren’s Jenson Button added: “I don’t think Red Bull will have the same kind of head start they had at the beginning of last season. “But Sebastian is of course the favourite, as he should be — he won the past two championships.” |
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Kovalainen ‘not concerned’ as Petrov joins teamComments Off Heikki Kovalainen insists he has “no concerns” despite having to start work with a new teammate less than a month before the 2012 season. In 2010 and 2011, and since the formation of the former Lotus team, Kovalainen has shared the green garage with fellow grand prix winner Jarno Trulli. Now, Caterham has replaced the Italian veteran with the much less experienced Vitaly Petrov, who has moved his Russian backing from Lotus (formerly Renault). “I got along well with Jarno, but a new teammate doesn’t change my life in any way,” Kovalainen insisted to Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper. “I have met with Vitaly here in Barcelona and I don’t have any concerns. He is definitely a strong competitor but I always give 110 per cent to beat my teammate. “I don’t underestimate anyone,” he added. Kovalainen admitted that Petrov might have to adjust to the fact that Caterham is smaller than Lotus, and the car not as competitive. “Of course he has to get used to the team,” he said, “and if he has any questions, I’m available. “But Vitaly is a professional driver and in F1 it is expected that the driver is able to start tackling the programme right away.” |
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Early start for Mercedes’ Barcelona test(1) Mercedes got its Barcelona test off to an early start on Sunday. Mercedes, however, trod a different path recently by keeping its 2012 car under development at its Brackley factory while main rivals including Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren got their test campaigns up and running. Again running Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg this year, Mercedes took its old car to Jerez and then sat out the last of the four days of testing. Therefore allowed to make up the day in Barcelona on Sunday, and although details and laptimes are scant, it has emerged that both Schumacher and Rosberg ran the new stepped-nose W03 and completed more than a race distance. “Michael and Nico’s first impressions are positive,” Mercedes’ Norbert Haug told Bild newspaper. Also in action at the weekend was Williams, whose test driver Valtteri Bottas ran the new FW34 for an aerodynamic test at the Idiada facility in Spain. “I am glad I got some time to get used to the car before my test date in Barcelona,” he is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat. |
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Lopez: Money a ‘side issue’ in latest Raikkonen deal(1) Lotus team owner Gerard Lopez insists he is delighted with Kimi Raikkonen, despite earlier negotiations to secure the Finn’s services having foundered. “We had some contact with Kimi in 2010,” revealed Lopez, according to Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper. Reports in 2010 linked Raikkonen with the Enstone based team, but the talks apparently soured after becoming public knowledge. “I think (in 2010) he was still enjoying the challenge of rallying, giving the impression that he wanted to do it and F1 at the same time,” said Lopez. He also hinted that 32-year-old Raikkonen considered money as a crucial element in the 2010 talks. “This time everything was different,” he said. “I can assure you that Kimi came back because he wanted to race and that money was a side issue.” Reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel, meanwhile, joked on Thursday when he was asked if he had seen his friend Raikkonen at Jerez after the Finn’s two days of running. “I haven’t. I think he went straight to the bar,” Vettel laughed to the MTV3 broadcaster. |
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Vettel on track to F1 greatness(1) Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull could reign over a new era of dominance in formula one, the international press and paddock pundits said after Sunday’s Japanese grand prix. At Suzuka, despite needing only a single point to rule his last opponent out of contention for the 2011 title, Vettel ensured Jenson Button will not come within 14 points of his second consecutive world championship. The young German did it by finishing third but Spain’s El Mundo hailed a campaign that has been “too perfect” for the Red Bull driver. Sir Jackie Stewart told the Daily Mail in Britain that he can’t see why Vettel won’t dominate for years to come. “He is unquestionably the most mature 24-year-old racing driver I have seen,” said the triple world champion. Agreed Britain’s Telegraph: “Vettel may rule for 10 years”, with the Independent adding he “has hallmarks of a new Prost or Senna”. “Last season he was a sometimes callow 23-year-old,” observed the Guardian. “This year he has appeared a 24-year-old veteran”. 1996 Monaco grand prix winner Olivier Panis is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat: “He is one of few drivers who may have the opportunity to break Michael Schumacher’s almost unbreakable records”. Agreed Virgin’s Timo Glock: “If he keeps getting machines like this year, he could beat Michael”, the German is quoted by Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport. Vettel’s achievement sees him join Schumacher and seven other fellow greats – including Fangio, Hakkinen and Alonso – who have managed back-to-back championships. “Now we will see who is the youngest three time world champion,” smiled Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso. German chancellor Angela Merkel has already delivered her official congratulations, while the Kolner Express quoted a Suzuka spectator called Norbert as saying: “I am not a double world champion, only his father”. Canada’s French language La Presse had high praise for Vettel, insisting he is “largely responsible for Red Bull’s dominance this season”, with Reuters saying he has gone from “Crash Kid to Mr Consistent”. And the team’s Dr Helmut Marko warned: “As the whole team is staying together, I see no reason why we cannot be as successful next year.” According to father Norbert, young Vettel has not let his success and fame change him. “You need to be hard for formula one, but he’s not a bastard”. Niki Lauda wrote in Bild newspaper: “His friendly facade is genuine, but behind the babyface is a killer.” And among his future achievements could be his mentor’s ultimate record. Smiling Vettel told reporters at Suzuka: “Did you notice that Michael is the youngest seven time world champion — ever?!” |
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Montezemolo: Re-hiring Brawn not the answerComments Off Luca di Montezemolo has rejected calls Ross Brawn should be lured back to Ferrari. “The management of the team will remain unchanged,” the Italian added this week at the Frankfurt Motor Show, according to Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper. “There are some small repairs to make, but it is not related to the key positions.” Elements of the Italian media and Ferrari’s passionate ‘Tifosi’ have suggested the team should reunite with Briton Brawn, its former technical director, and once again have designer Rory Byrne in a key role. “The hiring of Ross Brawn has been proposed but surely it can be seen how hard he has had it at Mercedes,” Montezemolo insisted. “We have chosen the path of stability,” he continued. “Should I be sorry?” he is quoted as saying by Corriere della Sera. “No, because we are always among the protagonists. “The abolition of track testing penalised us strongly, as ours is a culture of the mechanical, unlike the English (culture of) aerodynamics. “And then there are the rules that are too restrictive on the engines, with the technicians frustrated with their inability to increase the horse power,” added Montezemolo. |
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