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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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Marko: Vettel team order ‘not tactical’Comments Off Red Bull has hit back at claims the team lied about a technical problem in Malaysia in order to gain a tactical advantage for the forthcoming races. Near the end of the Sepang race, Sebastian Vettel’s engineer repeatedly instructed the back-to-back world champion to retire his RB8 car. Team boss Christian Horner said the brake temperatures had risen to a dangerous level, but Vettel nonetheless raced to the chequered flag and finished eleventh, one position out of the points. Horner explained Vettel did not hear the radio calls due to a “lightening strike”, but photos prove that the German driver was also repeatedly shown pit boards with the same messages. And the 24-year-old revealed after the race: “Of course you can save the car, but I wanted to see the chequered flag. I think that’s how it should be.” Moreover, the authoritative Auto Motor und Sport quotes Vettel as confirming: “I heard the command.” Red Bull has been accused in some media reports of feigning the brake problem in order to retire the car for tactical reasons and therefore install a fresh gearbox for China next month without penalty. Dr Helmut Marko told Bild newspaper: “After the crash (with Narain Karthikeyan), the temperature of the brakes rose far above the allowed level. “We called him in purely because the car was no longer safe. It was not a tactical decision,” the Austrian insisted. It is reported that Vettel will sit with his team bosses this week in Milton-Keynes to discuss the apparently ignored team order. German racing legend Hans-Joachim Stuck said: “Another driver would be fired, but Vettel has the confidence of being a double world champion.” According to Welt newspaper, Swiss commentator Marc Surer added: “It was the right decision by Vettel, as the team needs to be careful with commands like that.” |
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Vettel risks penalty for ‘middle finger’ tiradeComments Off The FIA could sanction F1′s reigning back-to-back world champion for his behaviour during the recent Malaysian grand prix. Before calling backmarker Narain Karthikeyan a “gherkin” and “idiot” in the wake of their collision, Sebastian Vettel was captured by his on-board camera twice displaying his middle-finger to the Indian driver. “I think he’s highly frustrated because he’s having a tough season,” Karthikeyan told the Deccan Chronicle on Wednesday. “It’s completely unprofessional to blame me for the incident. The derogatory remark only goes to show him in bad light. “Just because he has a good car, he can’t call others an idiot,” Karthikeyan continued. “I have won races in all the previous single-seater championships I have participated in so I don’t need a certificate from Vettel.” Reports in Germany, including in the Kolner Express, Bild and Die Welt newspapers, claim that Red Bull driver’s behaviour may have breached the new stricter code of conduct introduced by FIA president Jean Todt. The FIA has been contacted for comment. “He has breached the code of conduct,” former F1 driver Marc Surer told Germany’s Sky television. “You sign it when you get the license and then you have to behave correspondingly. “Any behaviour that hurts other people or the sport is an offense,” added the Swiss. Asked what the penalties might be, Surer explained: “Anything from a warning to a license revocation. In this case I think it was quite understandable and there will be a mild punishment, if there is anything.” Hans-Joachim Stuck, however, is slightly less forgiving. “When you’re overtaking, misunderstandings can occur. I think Vettel needs to learn this. “With him, the curve was always upwards and now it’s not the case, and he needs to deal with that,” the German legend told the DAPD news agency. As for Vettel’s description of Karthikeyan as a “gherkin”, Stuck insisted: “It’s better than ‘asshole’.” Vettel’s attack, however, was sustained, with Kleine Zeitung newspaper now quoting the Red Bull driver as having said: “Maybe formula one is not the place to learn how to drive.” Stuck responded: “If Sebastian had left more space, it would not have happened. It happens sometimes so it’s a racing incident. “He (Karthikeyan) didn’t do it on purpose and it always takes two.” The HRT driver hit back by calling Vettel a “bully”, and even David Coulthard – a Red Bull team consultant – defended Karthikeyan. “He can’t make his car invisible,” the Scot is quoted as saying by the Mirror. Also defending Karthikeyan was Force India driver Nico Hulkenberg, who told the Indian press this week: “From what I saw, it was not Narain’s fault. “So I don’t really understand why he (Vettel) said all that.” Hukenberg’s Force India teammate Paul di Resta added: “Narain is entitled to do as much on the track in comparison with someone like Vettel. “Both are F1 drivers and are there to represent their teams.” |
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Surer: Ferrari revolution leads to ‘crisis’Comments Off Ferrari has fallen over by being too ambitious with the design of its 2012 car. He referred to Ferrari’s decision mid last year to abandon the 2011 car in order to restructure technically and philosophically and produce the radical F2012. But the new car has proved unreliable and uncompetitive in testing, leading some analysts to predict Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa will this weekend be beaten by not only Red Bull and McLaren, but also Mercedes, Lotus and possibly even Sauber, Force India and Toro Rosso. “They wanted to build an aggressive car, but they have changed too much,” Surer said. “Now they have realised that it doesn’t work and are having to back-track with parts. “For them, it’s a serious crisis. They’ll be lucky if they finish fourth”, he added, referring to the constructors’ championship. Alonso, however, sounded confident in Melbourne on Thursday. “In winter testing, we see some teams that are quite quick and then when we arrive at the race they are not quick anymore. “Maybe we didn’t reach targets that were very optimistic but that doesn’t mean we are slower than the other cars,” he warned. |
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Red Bull set for new flexible floor sagaComments Off Rumours are once again swirling in the F1 paddock about the alleged illegality of Red Bull’s dominant single seater. “I’ve heard about it but I certainly do not participate in the rumours,” Mercedes’ Norbert Haug admitted on German Sky television. “There are enough people who do that — spending a lot of time writing all sorts of those kinds of stories,” he added. “Of course, everybody looks around, which is perfectly normal.” Swiss commentator Marc Surer said he has seen the offending images of the bottom of Mark Webber’s car, showing “drag marks in the middle of the floor”. “The competitors see it too and think ‘Ah, something is up’. I happen to think that as long as the car passes the tests, everything is in order,” he added. |
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Mercedes investigating lost wheel on Schu anniversaryComments Off Mercedes is investigating how a rear wheel fell off Michael Schumacher’s car during qualifying at Spa-Francorchamps. “How embarrassing for Mercedes, to destroy his anniversary race because the wheel fell off,” Sky commentator Marc Surer is quoted as saying by Bild newspaper. 20 years ago, Schumacher’s first-ever F1 race ended within half a kilometre because the clutch in his Jordan failed. And in 2011? “We’ve looked at the data. It happened suddenly, within a second,” Mercedes team boss Ross Brawn said. “We are still looking into it. There is a locking mechanism and we had a few problems last year but not with the new system this year. “We have developed the system with our DTM team. There must be an explanation and I’m sure we will find it.” |
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F1 voices not keen on jet canopy proposalComments Off F1 figures have admitted they are not keen on proposals to put a roof above the heads of the sport’s drivers. After the incidents involving Felipe Massa and the late Henry Surtees in 2009, technical chiefs started looking into the possibility of jet fighter-style canopies or polycarbonate screens for the cars’ cockpits. The FIA has released a video (http://vimeo.com/26098946) showing a F1 wheel being fired at 225kph at a jet-fighter canopy and a proposed cockpit screen. “Full scientific results of the firings … have now been presented to the formula one technical working group,” the video revealed. 1992 world champion and occasional F1 steward Nigel Mansell admitted: “I don’t know if I’d like to see that. It wouldn’t really be formula one,” he is quoted by ennstal-classic.at. Another former driver Marc Surer agrees: “It would be very warm in there, and then the next problem is needing an air conditioner. And imagine if KERS fails and the vapours get into the cockpit.” Christian Danner said: “The visibility of the drivers will be affected by the reflection.” Mercedes’ Norbert Haug told Bild am Sonntag newspaper: “We are always interested in the advancement of safety. It’s an interesting experiment but I feel that a single seater cockpit needs to be open.” Nico Rosberg added: “It sounds good. Anything that increases safety is a step forward.” |
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FIA: 600 metre zone for rear wing overtakingComments Off At the Valencia test this week, F1′s governing body gave teams more details about the operation of the mandatory moveable rear wings in 2011. Drivers have been experimenting with the overtaking aid this week, with observers able to visibly see the rear wing open up on the straight to stall the downforce before it is clicked back into place at the braking zone. It has been feared that if chasing drivers are allowed to press the rear wing button too often, overtaking will become commonplace and uninteresting. So the FIA has told teams that if the chasing car is within a certain time of his rival – say, one second – he will be allowed to activate the wing only within a 600-metre zone at the end of a straight. These zones will reportedly be marked out with white lines, and Guardian correspondent Richard Williams reported that the one second gap will be calculated at the corner before the designated straight. “Further information, going into detail and the various scenarios still has to be clarified,” said Ferrari’s technical director Aldo Costa, adding that the wings for now will not be operated in the wet. “Then it will be a case of seeing how things go in the race to understand how to proceed,” he added, suggesting that the rules may be tweaked depending on the outcome of the initial races. The early feedback from the drivers is that, combined with preparing and triggering KERS and watching for the rear wing green light, their cockpit workload is increasingly unreasonable. “It’s just not enjoyable — pressing buttons, changing gear, pressing and holding,” said Rubens Barrichello. Of the newer generation, however, Fernando Alonso said he was beginning to get his head around the new functions after a few days in the car. The old guard is unconvinced. “It’s not motor racing. It’s calculation,” slammed Swiss ex-driver and German-language commentator Marc Surer. Team Lotus’ technical boss Mike Gascoyne thinks the FIA is right to flag possible changes to the rear wing rules this year. “I don’t think we’re going to get it right straight away,” he predicted, admitting his own concerns about the loss of racing’s purity. “Some of the greatest drives were by people like Gilles Villeneuve, holding off the rest of the field. Are you going to say ‘Well, that’s never going to happen any more’?” Another fear is that chasing drivers will call off a genuine overtaking attempt on another part of the circuit in order to simply press the button in the designated 600-metre zone. But F1′s most successful driver, Michael Schumacher, backs the concept. “It’s a good innovation,” he told Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. “We know that in F1 we have a problem with cars following other ones. If there is no dramatic change in the ratio between aerodynamic and mechanical grip, you need something else. This might help,” added the German. And Schumacher said he doubts pressing the button will make overtaking easy. “There is no button for just driving past someone. It could be that we just close the gap and get in the slipstream to start a fight. Or it could be that it’s not quite enough.” Ferrari’s Costa agrees: “Our calculations say that it (600m) is on the edge.” |
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Webber pulls the engine jokerComments Off World Championship leader Mark Webber will leave nothing to chance in South Korea and will work in a fresh Yeongam Renault unit The Red Bull driver is in fact the only one from the ranks of the five remaining candidates for the title, which can still rely on fresh power – both Fernando Alonso (Ferrari), Jenson Button (McLaren), Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) and Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull must) in the final sprint of the season to make do with second hand units. Quite easily ran the kick-off for Webber not. “There was a problem with Mark’s car, we were able to fix during the session. He was even on three wheels in a position to mark a very competitive time,” Horner replied to the question of ‘motor-Total.com’ expert Marc Surer, who had believed in stabilizing the cause. “This presumption of truth comes pretty close,” said Horner. “It was no big deal.” |
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F1′s travellers report first impressions from KoreaComments Off
F1′s travelling circus is arriving in South Korea, and the first reports are mixed.BBC television anchor Jake Humphrey summed up the Yeongam venue as satisfactory but “far from finished”. “Things look pretty ready to go,” said Virgin driver Lucas di Grassi, “with some beauty work still to be finished but the main structure is ready.” Others talked about their long journeys from the huge Seoul airport to Mokpo, the closest city to Yeongam, in the impressive high-speed KTX train with free wi-fi. Photographer Darren Heath was less impressed with the journey, tackled by many in buses. “F1 in Seoul? Nah, let’s have it in the middle of nowhere 100s of miles from anywhere,” he wrote on Twitter. Veteran Swiss correspondent Roger Benoit, writing in Blick newspaper, said the F1 track itself is an “enormous construction site”, and his hotel room one of the ones usually rented by the hour. “No joke,” he said. Reportedly so unimpressed was Williams with the local accommodation on offer that the British team has committed to a 3 hour round trip every day in order to stay in a nicer hotel. “Dominating the venue are the excavators, debris and waste,” wrote Benoit, who said a bridge over the front straight is still littered with scaffolding and hard-hatted workers. Sauber’s team manager Beat Zehnder complained about the cost of the team buildings, with the rent costing $40,000. “Whoever wants to use the upper floor must pay another 20,000,” he said, “but everyone has decided to just use the ground floor!” Said Benoit: “I’m already looking forward to the final races in Sao Paulo and Abu Dhabi!” Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said rolling machines are still working on the recently-laid top surface of asphalt, with the paint for the starting grid yet to be sprayed. “Only on Friday will we know whether the surface will withstand the stresses of formula one cars,” read the report. “Everything on the sandy site is under construction. Next to the pitlane is a large pile of sand. Whoever didn’t know that F1 is running here in a few days would think it’s not happening until next year,” it added. German Sky television pundit Marc Surer reports in Speed Week that the seating in some grandstands is not complete. “Much remains to be done, but as for the track itself, I am surprised that it is ready,” he said. “Whether it can withstand hours of practice and racing, however, is another question.” |
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Press ‘certain’ Spa ended Vettel’s title tiltComments Off
Sebastian Vettel was bearing the brunt of the international media’s post-race wrath after the Belgian grand prix. Italy’s La Repubblica said the Red Bull driver gets involved in incidents “at every race”. “He could easily have won this world title, but now it is certain that he will not,” said the major Rome-based newspaper. German Vettel, 23, lost control of his RB6 at Spa-Francorchamps and took out fellow championship contender Jenson Button. “Vettel is the big loser of this season,” agreed the Milan published Corriere della Sera. Said triple world champion and commentator Niki Lauda: “We’ll see if this error costs him the world championship. “There is pressure and you have to deal with it,” added the great Austrian. But there is support for 2009 runner-up Vettel. “Check it off and look ahead,” advised seven time world champion Michael Schumacher, according to the SID news agency. “The worst thing is when so-called experts – and I must include myself – give him all sorts of advice. He knows what happened and what should have been different. “All I can say is the year is still long,” added Schumacher. Former German grand prix driver Christian Danner said: “It’s not that he wants too much — he was just too impatient.” Swiss counterpart Marc Surer added: “He wanted to overtake and it went wrong. You can’t blame him; following someone is not his style and I like that. “Yes, it went bad, but on the other hand, you have to attack.” And famous German touring car driver Klaus Ludwig said: “The conditions were extremely difficult — you can’t believe how much. It’s like walking an extremely narrow tightrope.” |
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Media, pundits divided over Schumacher penaltyComments Off F1′s media and pundits are divided over Michael Schumacher’s late overtaking move on Fernando Alonso in Monaco. The stewards, including Schumacher’s former title nemesis Damon Hill, penalised the seven time world champion for illegally passing the Spaniard during a safety car period. But the safety car had actually pulled into the pits, prompting the message ‘track clear’ on the official monitors, and video evidence showed green flags and green lights. Former driver Marc Surer told the German news agency SID: “I think the stewards have made a mistake, because they had shown green (flags).” He insists there was at the very least no “clear” breach of the rules, given that the stewards took more than three hours to decide to impose the 20-second time penalty. The Italian press was less sympathetic. “Is he not 41 years old?” read an editorial in the Tuttosport newspaper. “He should know the rules by now.” Epsilon Euskadi boss Joan Villadelprat wrote in his El Pais column that Schumacher’s was a “monumental error”, but former German F1 driver Christian Danner said the mistake was the FIA’s for ordering that green flags be waved. Bild newspaper published a photo proving that Schumacher drove past a green light in the Rascasse corner prior to passing the Ferrari, even though Ferrari’s Stefano Domenicali argues that the race ended “under yellow conditions”. But Alonso insists he was “immediately certain” that the Mercedes driver would be penalised. “That’s why I let him go,” the Spaniard told spox.com. “My team had told me that you can’t overtake. I had wanted to try to pass Lewis Hamilton but they told me I could not.” And Sebastien Buemi told the Swiss newspaper Blick that Toro Rosso ordered him to hold position. “I was surprised when the team told me not to attack Liuzzi, because there were green lights flashing everywhere!” he said. (GMM) |
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