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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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2012 start ‘couldn’t be worse’Comments Off Ferrari has made a “devastating start” to the 2012 season, the Italian sports newspaper Corriere dello Sport has blasted. “The new season could barely have begun worse,” said the report. Felipe Massa qualified sixteenth for Sunday’s Australian grand prix, while Fernando Alonso also failed to make the ‘Q3′ cut when he spun into the gravel. “There are deficiencies with the aerodynamics, with the tyres and the speed,” the Spaniard is quoted as saying. Added Massa: “I have the impression that the car has deteriorated compared to winter testing.” Looking on the bright side, however, Alonso said Ferrari’s situation is actually better than it was a year ago. “In 2011 we started with a deficit of 1.4 seconds, so we have recovered four tenths. Last year our first victory was in July, so this year we need to do it before.” La Stampa, a major Italian daily, sees it differently. “A year ago there was one car (Red Bull) clearly stronger than Ferrari, now there is McLaren in front, Mercedes and Lotus as well, and Toro Rosso and Force India improving …” Massa agrees: “We were more competitive in 2011.” Alonso, however, is staying positive for now. “The tests in Barcelona were worse (than Australia), so it means that we have chosen the right path. We must improve and we must do it quickly,” he said. |
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Lauda: Ferrari predicament ‘dramatic’Comments Off Ferrari has set to work to fix a problem at the rear of its troubled F2012 car, Italy’s Autosprint reports. This, however, left the homologated portion of the chassis that housed the original exhausts intact, with modification to require a new FIA crash test. “I want to understand what is happening, and how many seconds it will take to be fixed,” president Luca di Montezemolo is quoted as having said. Triple world champion Niki Lauda is alarmed. “I have never heard comments like this from within a team — this is dramatic,” the great Austrian told Blick newspaper. However, the Swiss newspaper also said some of Ferrari’s rivals are making similar modifications to their cars that will require new FIA crash tests. Even so, “nobody at Maranello expected this”, wrote the famous Italian sports daily La Gazzetta dello Sport. Corriere dello Sport, meanwhile, said the fact Ferrari gagged its drivers for the first time ever recently is “more worrying than the testing results”. Test driver Marc Gene told Spanish television Antena 3: “This will be a very long world championship, and we will fight to win. “At the moment we are not at the level we wanted to be.” It is faintly possible Ferrari is playing an extreme hand of bluff, but Lauda insists that theory is now believed by “only a few”. “They’ve got a great team,” Red Bull team boss Christian Horner told Sky Sports, “they haven’t fully shown their hand yet. I think they’re more competitive than people believe they are. “I’m sure the car looks a handful but sometimes a difficult car can be a quick car so it would be foolish to write off Fernando (Alonso) going into Melbourne,” he added. |
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Foreign press slams sorry Schumacher after HungaryComments Off In the eyes of the foreign language media, Michael Schumacher was the bad-boy of Sunday’s Hungarian grand prix. And even the Daily Telegraph said the Mercedes driver’s “arrogance can no longer be tolerated in formula one”. In Italy, La Gazzetta dello Sport said the German finally “went too far” with the violent defence of tenth position. “The arrogant Schumacher showed no remorse but is the same as ever; never his fault. It was a miracle that this manoeuvre did not end badly.” The Italian sports daily referred to the fact that the seven time world champion is an ambassador for the FIA’s road safety campaign. “A little advice for those starting their holidays; if someone tries to overtake you, please to the exact opposite of what the celebrated ex-champion did in Hungary.” La Repubblica and Corriere dello Sport called the move “madness”, Il Secolo XIX said it marked his “demise”, and Tuttosport said it was “dangerous”. “Barrichello just avoided crashing into the wall and landing in hospital, if not worse,” added the report. Corriere della Sera added: “Schumacher the villain, as he has always been.” Spain’s sports newspaper Marca said: “Schumacher’s return to formula one is one of the darkest chapters in the history of the sport.” At the same time, Schumacher posted an apology on his website, after viewing replays of the incident. “I have to say the stewards were right in their decision. My move against him was too hard,” he said. “I clearly showed him that I didn’t want to let him pass but, looking at it rationally, I wasn’t seeking to endanger him (Barrichello) with my manoeuvre. “If he feels I was then all I can say is sorry, this wasn’t my intention,” he added. |
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Kubica inks Ferrari ‘option’ for 2011 – reportComments Off
(GMM) According to the Italian sports daily Tuttosport, there is substance to the rumours linking Robert Kubica with Ferrari. The Turin-published newspaper believes Renault’s Polish driver has signed some sort of document with the Maranello based team. The report said the “option” on the 25-year-old’s services for 2011 must be taken up by Ferrari by July 15 of this year — between the British and German grands prix. Kubica told reporters in Barcelona that he is concerned that Renault’s closest rivals could catch up or pull away this weekend. He admitted he was hoping to see “a bigger upgrade” for the R30 in Spain. “Most of the teams are normally targeting a big upgrade for Barcelona and I hope just they don’t bring three, four (tenths), half a second, to here. “If they do we might be a bit more in trouble but we’ll see,” added Kubica. |
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Hakkinen to become Hamilton’s new manager soon – reportComments Off
Apr.30 (GMM) Rumours have intensified this week that Mika Hakkinen could soon become Lewis Hamilton’s manager. In the wake of the McLaren driver’s professional split with his father Anthony, 25-year-old Briton Hamilton has been perusing offers from potential managers. 1998 and 199 world champion Hakkinen, 41, already works with a young F3 driver at his own manager Didier Coton’s Monaco based Aces Group, and said last Sunday: “Perhaps I will come back to F1 as a manager.” The Italian sports daily Tuttosport now reports that the formalisation of a deal between Aces/Hakkinen and Hamilton could be made in the very near future. Hamilton’s career is currently handled by McLaren, but team boss Martin Whitmarsh is pushing his driver to appoint a “dispassionate, independent” manager. Hakkinen won his two world championships with McLaren and retired in 2001. |
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