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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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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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Williams denies cigarette caused Barcelona blaze(0) Two days after winning in Spain, Williams is scrambling to put together the equipment it needs to contest next weekend’s Monaco grand prix. Mere hours after Pastor Maldonado secured the once-great British team’s first victory since 2004, a huge fire broke out in the pits, leaving one team member still in a Barcelona hospital with burns. “His family are in constant communication and he is in good spirits,” Williams said in a media statement. The Oxfordshire based team is now making efforts to ensure it can race in Monte Carlo, having lost a lot of equipment in the fire. Mercifully, however, Bruno Senna’s car appears to have survived, with the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 saying an initial inspection of the chassis showed no devastating damage. Maldonado’s winning car was in parc ferme at the time of the incident. “We had a lot of damage and lost a lot of equipment, including IT equipment,” chief operations engineer Mark Gillan said, according to the Daily Mail. “Over the next couple of days we will be looking at where we are parts-wise. “We will have everything we need to run operationally at Monaco, but we may be missing a few of the extras because obviously we don’t carry a complete set of spares for everything,” he said. It is believed more than one rival team has offered to help Williams by loaning the Sir Frank Williams-led outfit any equipment it needs. A McLaren spokesman confirmed the Woking based team has offered to help. Germany’s Bild newspaper said Williams’ damage bill runs into the millions. Team manager Dickie Stanford denied a rumour the fire was caused by a cigarette in the vicinity of Senna’s fuel tank while it was being emptied. “We don’t know the cause, but we would never allow smoking in the pits,” he insisted. Williams and F1′s governing FIA are investigating. |
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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.” |
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Salo believes Bottas to replace Senna soonComments Off Former F1 driver Mika Salo believes his Finnish countryman Valtteri Bottas is being groomed by Williams for a race seat — in 2012. When the Toto Wolff-managed Bottas, 22, was announced as the British team’s 2012 reserve, Sir Frank Williams said he would practice on 15 Friday mornings and then “most likely” be replaced with a “more experienced driver” for the rest of those race weekends. That more experienced driver would ultimately turn out to be Bruno Senna. So with Brazilian Senna struggling so far in 2012, Salo has revealed he senses things could be about to change. “Bottas is incredibly respected by the team,” Salo, now a commentator for the Finnish broadcaster MTV3, said. “When I spoke with Frank Williams, he praised Valtteri to the skies, and said that he belongs in the races. “I asked him when and he said it wouldn’t be long. “Yes, I read between the lines that he means this season,” added Salo. One major spanner in the works, however, is that Senna brings crucial sponsorship to Williams. “It is a difficult situation for Williams, where both drivers bring money,” Salo acknowledged. “But the good thing is that Frank Williams is not a businessman first, he is an old racing driver. He thinks about nothing else but how to make his team successful. “Although Senna is a nice guy, he is not able to drive at the level that he needs to be at.” When asked about Salo’s theory, Bottas commented: “I have no information.” |
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Raikkonen: Williams also ‘pretty good’ 2012 option(0) Kimi Raikkonen has admitted his failed negotiations with Williams ultimately turned out for the better. When he decided to try to return to F1 this year, the 2007 world champion negotiated at length with Williams. When those talks faltered, he turned to his second option, and quickly came to agreement with the former Renault team Lotus. The Enstone based team has been the surprise of the 2012 season so far, and in Barcelona Finn Raikkonen is arguably the overall favourite. He was asked by Turun Sanomat newspaper if the performance of Lotus, his only actual option for a race seat this year, has surprised him. “Well, I had another option,” said the 32-year-old, referring to Williams. “It’s hard to say what kind of results I would have had with Williams. They would have been pretty good as well but perhaps not quite as strong as we are doing now,” said Raikkonen, who finished second in Bahrain recently. He said he has not been surprised. “Last year (as Renault) they weren’t bad at the start of the season,” said the former Ferrari and McLaren driver. “But they had decided to put the exhaust at the front of the car and were not then able to develop the way they needed.” |
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Kovalainen: Caterham ‘too slow’(0) Heikki Kovalainen has admitted some disappointment about Caterham’s progress in 2012. In its third season of formula one, and despite being clearly more impressive than its direct rivals Marussia and HRT, the Tony Fernandes-led team intended to take a step forwards this year. Caterham took some upgrades to the Mugello test last week, but according to Finnish sources Turun Sanomat and MTV3, not all of them worked. “The car has a pretty good balance, but the lap times are not good enough,” Finnish driver Kovalainen is quoted as saying. “It’s good to drive but it’s just too slow,” he insisted. “We did not get all the updates to work as we had hoped, so in Spain we have only some things that are new,” added Kovalainen. The team is yet to score a point. |
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Raikkonen not ruling out Spain victory(0) Kimi Raikkonen is not ruling out victory in Barcelona this weekend. If he does succeed on Sunday, the Finn will become the fifth different driver, driving for a fifth different team, to win the fifth grand prix of 2012 — an almost unthinkable scenario for formula one. Not only that, some believe that – despite McLaren, Ferrari, Mercedes and Red Bull having fielded the winning cars so far in 2012 – Lotus is actually the favourite in Barcelona. Raikkonen and his teammate Romain Grosjean were both on the podium in Bahrain, and the black and gold E20 set the pace last week at the Mugello test. “You would say now that the Lotus and the Red Bull are the cars to beat,” said Melbourne winner Jenson Button on Thursday. Raikkonen, openly disappointed about his second place recently, hopes so. “If everything goes smoothly then we can be up there,” he told reporters on Thursday. He agrees that the car was a true pacesetter in Bahrain and Mugello. “Let’s hope it works just as well if not better here,” Raikkonen, 32, told the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 at the Circuit de Catalunya. “Then we will at least have the possibility of victory,” he added. He does not, however, want to talk about the championship. “It has happened before that I had the best car overall but was still not the champion,” said Raikkonen. “There are so many little things that have to go in the right direction for you (to win the title). “It’s pointless to think about the championship. Let’s try to do our job well, and see if that’s enough,” the self-described ‘iceman’ added. |
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Kimi Raikkonen: F1 a job, ‘not my life’(0) Kimi Raikkonen insists he is “not interested” in formula one — except the cars, and winning. Asked by the reporter for Bild am Sonntag newspaper if the famous Finnish character might remove his sunglasses for an interview, 2007 world champion Raikkonen replied simply: “No.” At the end of his fourth race since returning to F1 from rallying, the 32-year-old was back on the podium in Bahrain. “It’s not going too bad,” he said. “I like what I’m doing, that’s enough. I don’t care if someone says whether I’m doing it well or not. “Still, it’s disappointing when you’re only second. Who knows what’s going to happen at the next race,” the Lotus driver added. Just after leaving F1 at the end of 2009, Raikkonen said he disliked everything about the sport — except the cars. Nothing has changed. “No. I’m only here for racing,” said Raikkonen. “All the other bulls**t I can do without. If you took away the cars from formula one, I would not be there. “Formula one plays no role in my personal life. I have a real life! I think for many people, their life is formula one. For me it’s not.” |
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Grosjean told ‘Kimi faster than you’(0) Romain Grosjean was given a familiar instruction by his team during the recent Bahrain grand prix. The Finnish broadcaster MTV3 reports that the Frenchman was told that his teammate “Kimi (Raikkonen) is faster than you”. “Do not hold him up,” the radio message reportedly ended. In 2010, when team orders were still illegal, Felipe Massa was famously told “Fernando (Alonso) is faster than you” shortly before the Brazilian gave up the lead of the race to Alonso. Ferrari was fined $100,000. Today, team orders are allowed, but Lotus denied it instructed Grosjean to let 2007 world champion Raikkonen pass before the Finn finished second in Bahrain. “We don’t want to play team orders,” Lotus team principal Eric Boullier insisted in Bahrain, “so we let them race normally and what happened, happened.” |
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Salo: Raikkonen can win second title in 2012(0) Kimi Raikkonen can add a second title to his tally in 2012. That is the claim of the 2007 world champion’s countryman Mika Salo, who now commentates on Finnish television MTV3. In the fourth race of Raikkonen’s return to F1 from rallying, the 32-year-old last weekend challenged Sebastian Vettel for victory in Bahrain, finishing second for Lotus. Five years after his title with Ferrari, he is 19 points from the head of the 2012 drivers’ championship. “The most consistent team has been Lotus,” former grand prix driver Salo said. “They’ve been fast at every circuit so far. “In that sense, Kimi’s situation looks very good. I would not exclude it at all that he will be fighting at the very end of the championship, if Lotus is able to maintain the pace of development.” It is on Salo’s final point that Lotus’ 2012 season will really be made. “They (as Renault) also began the previous season just as well, but soon after they were nowhere,” observed the Swiss commentator Marc Surer, speaking on Austrian television Servus TV. “So the real question is ‘Do they have the resources to develop the car and stay where they are now?’” Even if Lotus’ challenge fades, the future for Raikkonen – who has surprised some experts with his re-adaptation to F1 after two years of rallying – is bright, Surer insisted. “I think he has shown everyone that he is still able to do just what he was doing before (leaving F1),” he said. “He is a lot younger than Schumacher, and if you look at the past ten years, he is probably one of the best talents that we have seen in F1.” Surer said he could therefore imagine Raikkonen leaving Lotus and returning to a ‘top’ team, but he wouldn’t know which one to recommend. “Everything is so balanced this year that it’s impossible to pick a car that he could win the championship in.” |
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Lotus not sorry after skipping team orderComments Off Lotus did not consider employing team orders in order to boost Kimi Raikkonen’s chances of winning the Bahrain grand prix. The 2007 world champion ultimately finished second and even had a stab at overtaking winner Sebastian Vettel. And he might have had an ever better chance at challenging the Red Bull had his Lotus team chiefs ordered teammate Romain Grosjean aside at a crucial moment. “Yeah,” confirmed Finn Raikkonen, “but there are no team orders and we know the rules. “I tried to get past as quickly as I can but it’s not easy with two similar cars. “It’s always easy to say afterwards ‘if we had done that’ but in the end we were not fast enough to win and we have to take the second,” he added. Despite team orders being effectively legal in F1, team boss Eric Boullier confirmed that Lotus does not follow that policy. “We don’t want to play team orders, so we let them race normally and what happened, happened,” he is quoted by the Mirror. The most important thing, according to Spanish commentator and former veteran F1 engineer Joan Villadelprat, is that the former Renault team still knows how to win. “Maybe they don’t have the best car on the grid, because McLaren and Red Bull and Mercedes are probably better, but Lotus have made a car capable of competing with the best in the right circumstances,” he wrote in El Pais newspaper. |
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Kovalainen to stay at Caterham for rest of 2012Comments Off Heikki Kovalainen has dismissed advice he should quit Caterham as soon as possible. Fellow Finn Mika Salo, a former Ferrari and Toyota driver, told the broadcaster MTV3 he thinks Kovalainen should jump ship now because Caterham has failed for the third year running to move into the midfield. But Kovalainen hit back by insisting he will at least see out his contract. “It is a fact that I have a contract until the end of this year. It’s written on paper,” he said in Shanghai. |
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Caterham has ‘blown away’ F1 rivalsComments Off Tony Fernandes has given a strident defence of his formula one team, Caterham. The former Team Lotus outfit, headed by the cheery Malaysian entrepreneur Fernandes, entered its third season with high hopes it was set to join the midfield mix. Instead, the green cars – whilst still the cream of the backmarker group – are still better only than fellow stragglers Marussia and HRT. The Finnish broadcaster MTV3′s well-known analyst Mika Salo has advised lead driver Heikki Kovalainen to therefore quit Caterham at the end of 2012. “Something has been wrong with the car,” Kovalainen is quoted as saying by Turun Sanomat newspaper this week. “We need to see what is not right.” Fernandes, meanwhile, is looking fervently on the bright side, insisting Caterham has done markedly better than F1′s other 2010 start-ups. “We are competitive,” he told the Sun, reminding that Caterham was the last 2010 team given its official entry by the FIA a few years ago. “We’ve blown away Marussia and HRT when in actual fact they have been there six months longer,” insisted Fernandes. “We are half a second away from the established midfield … you must remember that this team is only two years old. “When I started, we were nine seconds away from the front. Last year we were about four seconds away from Red Bull. “This year, on certain laps, we lapped at the same pace as them. So I am very happy and I am strengthening the team all the time,” he added. But one of Caterham’s direct rivals, HRT, is looking to make a major step forwards this weekend in China, having struggled recently in the wake of team supremo Colin Kolles’ departure. “We come into this grand prix having had much more time to prepare the cars,” Pedro de la Rosa is quoted by the Spanish news agency EFE. “We will bring small improvements to China but what we really need is the cars back in Europe and then the team can concentrate at the (new headquarters) Caja Magica. “Step by step we will improve,” said the Spanish driver. |
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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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