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McLaren not yet ready with own F-ductComments Off McLaren is not yet ready to roll out a Mercedes-style ‘F-duct’ to complement its highly competitive 2012 car. Despite Mercedes struggling with tyres in the actual races so far, the W03 is a standout qualifying performer, thanks in part to the so-nicknamed front and rear ‘super-DRS’ system. Red Bull, Lotus and perhaps even Ferrari are threatening to protest, but until now McLaren – with arguably the dominant package of the 2012 season so far – has stayed out of the argument. “We don’t have a strong view one way or the other,” technical director Paddy Lowe confirmed during the regular Vodafone media teleconference on Tuesday. The F-duct will remain a hot topic in China this weekend, with Lotus’ technical boss James Allison believed to be armed with two new arguments against its legality. It was thought McLaren was quite advanced with its own version of the system. But Lowe revealed: “Until we’ve got clarity it’s difficult for us to commit a huge about of effort in that direction. So that’s where we are at the moment.” He steered away from suggestions Mercedes, including boss Ross Brawn, have flouted the “spirit” of the recent F-duct ban. “There’s no such thing as the spirit of the rules,” insisted Lowe, admitting that if there was a ‘spirit’ of the DRS rule, the Mercedes system is “definitely” in breach. “The debate around whether they can keep that system on the car is not about whether it is in that spirit or not, it’s about whether the text of the regulations means they can’t,” he explained. |
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Now Ferrari joins ‘anti W-duct’ warComments Off A third major team has joined the crusade against Mercedes’ so-nicknamed ‘W-duct’ innovation. Until now, only Red Bull and Lotus were pushing hard for the FIA to ban the drag-reducing system that Britain’s Sky television is calling ‘Super-dooper DRS’. Auto Motor und Sport reports that Ferrari has now joined the anti W-duct group, providing a new argument about why a driver is not permitted to activate a separate system by pressing the ‘DRS’ button on the steering wheel. “So far I have heard nothing that convinces us that it is illegal,” the FIA’s Charlie Whiting is quoted as saying. He is not, however, ruling out an eventual change of heart. “As we understood more about how the mass damper worked and as more arguments came onto the table, eventually we could no longer turn a blind eye,” said the Briton. Still, Whiting is not expecting a post-race protest in Malaysia. “I think everyone understands that that is not good for the sport,” he said. So far, McLaren is staying out of the fight, with Auto Motor und Sport believing that Martin Whitmarsh “will not wage war against his engine supplier”. Nonetheless, Mercedes boss Ross Brawn is more than unimpressed with the warring trio. “There are a massive amount of things we do with DRS, so to pick on one thing and say ‘We don’t like that very much as we haven’t thought about it’, is wrong,” the Briton charged. |
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Lopez: Raikkonen’s bad reputation not right(1) Lotus team owner Gerard Lopez has hit back at suggestions Kimi Raikkonen’s public image is an accurate reflection of the true 2007 world champion. But after signing the 32-year-old Finn – who is nicknamed the ‘iceman’ – for his return to F1 in 2012 after two years in world rallying, Lotus insists it is more happy with Raikkonen so far. “We feel very good with him and he clearly feels at home,” team owner Lopez is quoted by the Sun. “He smiles a lot when he’s with us. But most importantly he says he feels like part of the family. “I think Kimi has a public image that honestly from what we’ve seen does not translate into how he really is. “He’s a very hard worker, very good at providing feedback and has a good team spirit.” Lopez hinted, however, that he and team boss Eric Boullier did have some doubts about Raikkonen when they were considering their 2012 lineup. But “Once we talked to him, once we understood why he was coming back to F1, we really felt comfortable,” he insisted. “If you look at what happened at the (Jerez) test nobody can say he’s not on the pace.” |
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Gascoyne vows to retire as Team Lotus technical bossComments Off Mike Gascoyne has vowed to end his career with Team Lotus. The 48-year-old was once the highest paid engineer in formula one, earning reportedly $8 million at Toyota in 2005. The Briton has also worked with top teams McLaren and Renault, his aggressive management style earning him the nickname ‘the rottweiler’. But he has curiously never been part of a world championship campaign, instead earning the reputation of a figure who can turn around a struggling team’s flagging fortunes. “My career has been built on the ‘go-to guy’ when you’re eighth, ninth, tenth and you want to become third,” he told the New York Times. Gascoyne speculated that he has never won a title “because I have always been head-hunted”. “I always used to describe it as the border town that gets the sheriff to come in and clean out the outlaws. And once they have got rid of all the outlaws you don’t need him anymore and he moves on to the next sort of lawless town, and that has sort of been my career,” he admitted. But he insists that Team Lotus, the best of the new 2010 teams owned and headed by Malaysian entrepreneur Tony Fernandes, is different. “I think now there is much more of a sense of belonging and it being my team. I certainly will retire at this team. “Now it is a sense of belonging and wanting to take the team all the way,” said Gascoyne. “I think for me it will be a tremendous sense of satisfaction to have taken the team from one bloke sitting on his own in an office to the winner’s podium.” |
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Oldest ex-F1 driver turns 100Comments Off Paul Pietsch on Monday becomes the only living former formula one driver with a three-digit age. The German, born on 20 June 1911, drove Alfa Romeos and Maseratis in the modern world championship’s earliest years, failing to win a race or even score a point. But he is also remembered for founding the authoritative magazine Auto Motor und Sport, and in his more recent years for refusing to use a walking stick or a hearing aid because they are “for old people”. Ironically as a 100-year-old now, Pietsch’s nickname was ‘Rennbaby’ (baby racer), due to his spending much of his earlier career as the youngest in the field. When his career stalled due to flagging finances, he founded a publishing company in a bid to get back on track. “I wanted to race again. We had to get the funding somehow, by selling something. I said to myself that I could sell my knowledge about motor racing,” he told the FAZ newspaper. |
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Damage found in Vettel’s Barcelona/Monaco chassisComments Off Red Bull may have identified the reason for Sebastian Vettel’s recent struggle to keep up with his on-form teammate Mark Webber. 33-year-old Australian Webber has commandingly won the last two grands prix from pole at the wheel of the dominant RB6. But according to Germany’s Auto Bild Motorsport, after returning to Milton Keynes from the Barcelona/Monaco double header, the Austrian team has identified damage to Vettel’s chassis. “We have found a defect in Sebastian’s chassis,” Red Bull Racing principal Christian Horner confirmed, referring to the car superstitiously nicknamed ‘Lucious Liz’ by the highly rated 2009 championship runner-up. Horner added: “For the next race in Turkey, he will have a new chassis.” Vettel, initially the stronger of Red Bull’s driver lineup this year, is now equal on points with Webber at the head of the 2010 standings. Briton Horner said he is confident Vettel can impress again at the wheel of a new chassis. “Sebastian began the season in great shape and I am sure he will bounce back at the next race. “In Barcelona and Monaco, Mark was simply stronger, he had more confidence and felt more comfortable in the car. In contrast, Sebastian complained several times about the balance of the car,” added Horner. (GMM) |
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FIA confirms Damon Hill to be Monaco stewardComments Off Damon Hill will be the fourth steward at this weekend’s Monaco grand prix. We reported last month that, amid FIA president Jean Todt’s new initiative to have well-known and experienced former drivers sitting alongside the three regular stewards at each race in 2010, Hill would preside at prestigious Monaco. The 1996 world champion never won at Monaco, but his father Graham Hill won the blue-ribant event no fewer than five times in the 60s, earning the nickname ‘Mr Monaco’. Hill, 49 and currently president of the Silverstone-owning British Racing Drivers’ Club, said earlier this year that his past squabbles with Michael Schumacher would not impede his ability to act impartially as a steward. “The people have to make decisions based on the analysis of right and wrong, irrespective of who those people might be,” he said. “I think I’m sufficiently distanced from it.” (GMM) |
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Berger backs Schumacher amid comeback negativityComments Off
May 4 (GMM) Gerhard Berger has backed Michael Schumacher amid a climate of continuing criticism of the seven time world champion’s performance so far in 2010. Four races into 41-year-old Schumacher’s F1 comeback at the wheel of a Mercedes, the critique of pundits has ranged from a verdict of disappointment to a harsh denigration of his skills after three years of retirement. “I find all the talk about Michael a bit tedious, because it is always with a negative slant,” 10-time GP winner Berger, who raced in Schumacher’s era until retiring in 1997, said on Austrian TV ‘Sport und Talk aus dem Hangar 7′. “Michael has come back and is doing what he wants. I think you cannot change the status of someone who is a seven time world champion,” added the 50-year-old former Ferrari and McLaren driver. Austrian Berger backs Schumacher to improve his pace in the forthcoming races. “We know his ambition. We know that if he does something, he does it right. I think we must take him seriously again in the future,” he said. After the initial three races of 2010, Berger admits that Schumacher’s performance in China was a setback. “It was weak, but that can happen,” said the former teammate of the late F1 great Ayrton Senna. “I think he has done an excellent job so far — except for the last race. In the first three grands prix he was in the top six of the championship. That is a great achievement,” added Berger. Also defending Schumacher is his countryman and friend Sebastian Vettel, who until the great German’s struggle in 2010 was nicknamed by the German press ‘Baby-Schumi’. “He is yet to exhaust the potential of his car and will therefore get better from a driving point of view from race to race,” the Red Bull driver told Switzerland’s Motorsport Aktuell. “I wouldn’t write him off for a long time,” added 22-year-old Vettel. Force India’s Adrian Sutil also sees nothing odd about Schumacher’s comeback to date. “I had counted on it being difficult for him. Formula one has changed to the extremes in the past few years so that you can lose half a second and not know exactly why,” he told spox.com. “Plus it would have been funny if Schumacher had beaten us all after three years of being retired — then he really would have been the god of F1. “That doesn’t mean he’s doing badly; on the contrary, he’s always in the top ten. He only needs time,” added Sutil. |
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De La Rosa confirmed as BMW Sauber pilotComments Off The Spanish pilot, Pedro Martinez De la Rosa will be the BMW Sauber ‘Scuderia’ second official pilot in the 2010 Formula One World Championship, as confirmed this Tuesday through a press release by the team based in Switzerland. A year later, still in Arrows, he added two more points in 17 tests, before signing with Jaguar for the 2001 season. In this racing-team, the Spaniard, could not shine due to the not very competitive single-seated he drove, attaining only fifth (Italy 2001) and sixth positions (Canada 2001) as his most outstanding performances. JUMP TO MCLAREN AND PODIUM IN HUNGRY. From 2003 on, De la Rosa he becomes McLaren’s test driver, and two years later he gets the chance to dispute a race with the Anglo-German racing-team, the Bahrain Grand Prix, where he finished on fifth position. Even though there was much speculation around De la Rosa’s jump to an official wheel –specially as a result of Fernando Alonso leaving McLaren-, finally the Finish Heikki Kovalainen closed the doors on him and the last three seasons he has not been able to challenge any Grand Prix. During the last months everything seemed to indicate that the Catalan –who has been President of the Pilot Association for two years-, would come back to the competition by the hand of the Spanish debutant team, the Campos Meta, negotiations with the Adrian Campos’ racing-team were interrupted so it will finally be the Sauber team which takes in the veteran pilot. PETER SAUBER VALUES HIS “EXPERIENCE.” “Pedro has worked during the last years for one of the best teams of technical level athletics. We, as a team, want to take advantage of his experience, as we would like Kamui to do,” stated in a press release Peter Sauber, Principal of the team. Likewise, the team principal of the Catalan’s new ‘Scuderia’ underlines that “the combination of an experienced pilot with a bright young hope usually renders good results.” He seemed “sure” that in this case, “it’s what’s going to happen next season.” “Of course, it’s essential that we can give them a good car and I have a very optimistic view of the evolution we can achieve at our factory. We’re capable of continuing our work with the 2010 car, just as we had programmed, despite of the recent uncertainty period”, Peter Sauber pointed out. |
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