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Season of confusion to continue on Sunday(0) F1′s season of confusion looks set to continue, with an uncertain weather forecast only adding to the uncertainty ahead of the Spanish grand prix. The bizarre 2012 contest stepped into yet another gear on Saturday, with events unfolding to put the previously-derided pay driver Pastor Maldonado on pole, alongside the crisis-ridden Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso. And the Pirelli tyre predicament, worsened on the challenging Circuit de Catalunya layout and under hot Spanish skies, will continue to confound teams on Sunday, with temperatures set to drop and rain clouds predicted to gather. “I am telling you now, honestly,” said Red Bull’s Mark Webber. “We don’t have even the slightest idea who will benefit when it gets colder.” The German magazine Auto Motor und Sport laid out the fascinating if bewildering situation as of Saturday in Spain: “Sebastian Vettel doesn’t know why his car suddenly lost grip in qualifying. “Jenson Button has no idea why he couldn’t generate any tyre temperature on the 40 degrees track. Williams don’t know why Pastor Maldonado clocked the second fastest lap. “Mercedes’ engineers had to admit they still don’t understand the Pirelli rubber.” Acting team principal Bob Bell smiled tortuously: “If we did understand, we’d be on pole. But even Pirelli don’t know all the answers.” Writing in O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper, Livio Oricchio estimated there are up to 12 candidates for victory. “A grid of madness!” said former F1 driver Patrick Tambay on France’s RMC Sport. “And it’s not over yet.” So, is Michael Schumacher – having sat out Q3 in order to save tyres for the race – now even more critical of Pirelli? “I’ll leave it with what has already been said,” he insisted late on Saturday. |
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Lauda: Winning ‘easier now’ for RosbergComments Off More wins could quickly follow for F1′s newest race victor, Nico Rosberg. The Mercedes driver began the 2012 season with more than a century of races under his belt, causing some pundits to predict he will never taste winning champagne. But he broke through in China just a day after his maiden pole. “I took 113 (races to win) and he’s on 111,” 2009 world champion Jenson Button smiled in Shanghai. Niki Lauda thinks Rosberg’s next wins will be easier. “It (winning) gets easier,” the Austrian legend said in China late on Sunday, “because he know you can do it, and you’ve proved it. “The next victories come quite quickly,” Lauda told the German broadcaster RTL. Patrick Tambay won just two grands prix in consecutive seasons, 1982 and 1983, but he said the first one – achieved in Keke Rosberg’s championship year – came with “a sense of completion”. “After that, things seem easier,” said the Frenchman, “especially so when you’ve waited 110 grands prix! “It will feel like a relief,” Tambay told RMC Sport. “Now, he’s still young at 26 but with a lot of experience; he has everything he needs to reproduce this victory. “The first is the most difficult.” However, Tambay thinks Rosberg has a fight on his hands if he thinks the Shanghai victory is a springboard to a potential championship challenge. “I see the McLaren as the best car of the season. They passed up a good opportunity for the (China GP) win,” he said. |
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Grosjean crosses fingers for French GP returnComments Off Romain Grosjean has admitted he hopes France’s touted return to the F1 calendar is shown the green light. Amid expectations he would announce a race at Paul Ricard will go ahead in 2013, French prime minister Francois Fillon instead said last Friday that talks are ongoing. “I’m crossing my fingers that it will happen,” Lotus driver and Frenchman Grosjean told RMC Sport. “I think the enthusiasm for motor sport (in France) has been reborn,” he added, referring to the presence on this year’s grid of three French race drivers, plus Force India reserve Jules Bianchi. “There has been lots of positive feedback after the first two races and also the first points for Jean-Eric (Vergne). “I hope we will have a grand prix soon enough,” added Grosjean. Patrick Tambay, a former grand prix driver from France, believes politics can be thanked for the country’s touted return to the calendar. “I feel that the grand prix de France broke into the presidential campaign,” he said. “Since 2008, we hardly heard anything about it, and now it’s a hot topic. There is a strong desire to make it work. “All that remains is to validate the decision and set a timetable,” he added. Claude Sage, the administrator of the Le Castellet circuit, said Paul Ricard will be ready. “The circuit is approved for formula one,” he said. “We need to prepare the facilities for the public, in the form of temporary stands, as in Monaco. We have room to install them,” added Sage. |
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Williams leaves board of own F1 teamComments Off Sir Frank Williams has stepped down from the board of his own formula one team. “If for whatever reason I couldn’t come in to do my job, Adam would fill the gap,” he told the British magazine F1 Racing. On Friday, a team statement read: “Sir Frank Williams, founder and team principal, announced his decision to step down from the board.” He explained: “I turn 70 in April and I have decided to signal the next stage in the gradual but inevitable process of handing over the reins to the next generation. “This is not as dramatic a move as it may appear: I shall continue to work full-time as team principal and I shall continue to attend all board meetings as observer,” added Williams. He will also have a Williams family member on the board, as his daughter Claire steps up to be director of marketing and communications. Frank Williams said: “I am proud to say that she has fought hard to earn this appointment and of all the battles she has had to fight, the prejudices of her father were not the least challenging.” Late last year, the team’s co-founder Patrick Head also stepped down. |
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Williams float timely as sponsors departComments Off Williams’ Frankfurt floatation is apparently timely, with reports claiming the famous British team has lost 43 per cent of its sponsors. In a statement issued beforehand, Williams said the share pricing values the business at EUR 265 million. The statement said the team’s “sponsorship is fully secured for 2011″, with the floatation not designed to raise capital because “existing shareholders” – mainly Patrick Head – are selling up. Bernie Ecclestone commented: “If I could buy shares in the company I would.” But a less rosy picture was painted by a report in the Evening Standard, claiming that “new data” shows that Williams’ recent “sponsorship income has reversed”. The report said the 43 per cent reversal from 2010 is the team’s “biggest in the past decade”. |
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Briatore blocked Kovalainen debut in 2004, 2005Comments Off Flavio Briatore twice blocked Heikki Kovalainen’s formula one race debut, according to a Finnish report. The Turun Sanomat newspaper said the 29-year-old, who in 2010 is contesting his fourth season with a third separate team, could have made his debut in 2004. Actually, Kovalainen debuted in 2007 with Renault, then run by his former manager Briatore. But he tested with Minardi as far back as late 2003 and was almost signed for the following season by the Faenza based team’s boss Paul Stoddart. At the same test was Jose Maria Lopez, Kovalainen recalls. “I was clearly faster than him,” he said. “Paul Stoddart would have offered the seat to me, I was ready, but my management had a different view.” According to the report, another opportunity for Kovalainen came ahead of the 2005 season, when he met with Williams’ Sir Frank Williams, Patrick Head and Sam Michael at Grove. But Briatore reportedly called off the talks when he decided that Kovalainen should contest a season of GP2 before becoming Renault’s full-time test driver in 2006. “Of course, each time when you have a chance to go into F1 and you don’t, you are disappointed,” Kovalainen confirmed. He split with Briatore after last year’s crashgate scandal, and negotiated his own move from McLaren to Lotus for 2010. |
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Hulkenberg has not lost Williams seat yetComments Off Nico Hulkenberg’s manager has played down suggestions the young German will definitely lose his race seat at Williams at the end of the season. The British team on Monday seemed to confirm speculation it is considering replacing the 2009 GP2 champion with the feeder series’ new title winner, Pastor Maldonado. Venezuelan Maldonado, 25, is heavily backed by the state owned petroleum company PDVSA, and Williams co-owner Patrick Head in Korea admitted that economic factors would influence the board’s driver decision for 2011. In a media statement, the Oxfordshire based team announced that Maldonado will test the FW32 in the post-season Abu Dhabi ‘young driver’ session next month. And he is not in contention for merely the team’s 2011 test seat, because Finn Valtteri Bottas “will remain” in that post next year, Williams said. Maldonado said last month that he hoped to secure a deal for his 2011 debut “before the race in Abu Dhabi, so I can participate in the tests there after the GP with my new team”. But Hulkenberg’s manager Willi Weber insists his rookie charge is still in the reckoning at Williams. “Nico is not ‘out’ already, as has been speculated,” he told the German news agency DPA. “The talks with Williams are continuing, but there are obviously alternatives,” added Weber. “Williams is the first choice and we would love to stay, but it is extremely important that Nico has a race cockpit in formula one for 2011,” he said. Interestingly, Weber seemed to acknowledge the legitimacy of Williams’ apparent reconsideration of Hulkenberg’s place at the team. “(Chairman) Adam Parr has a great responsibility to hundreds of employees and as the highest priority he must consider the welfare of the team,” he said. |
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Wolff could increase Williams stake to 49pcComments Off Christian ‘Toto’ Wolff has admitted he might increase his minority stake in the Williams team to 49 per cent in the future. It emerged last week that, alongside founders and long-time owners Sir Frank Williams and Patrick Head, the stake bought by Austrian entrepreneur Wolff in 2009 was 10 per cent. “I can confirm it is 10 per cent,” he is quoted by the German-language motorline.cc. “But I have an option to increase my minority stake to a strategic investment.” The publication said Wolff’s share could increase to as much as 49 per cent, also quoting him as saying he would consider exercising the option “in time”. But he rejected British reports that the Oxfordshire based team is in financial trouble and struggling with losses and debt. “If you look at the last 12 months, 2009 for us was a good and very profitable year,” Wolff insisted. |
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Austrian investor’s Williams share is 10pcComments Off The minority share of the Williams team now owned by Austrian Christian ‘Toto’ Wolff is 10 per cent, it has emerged. sThe stake bought in 2009 by the motor racing enthusiast and investor, whose girlfriend is the Scottish DTM driver Susie Stoddart, was not disclosed at the time. But according to a report in London’s Evening Standard, based on company filings by the Oxfordshire based team, the figure is 10 per cent. The report said Wolff is believed to have paid about $16 million for the stake, which would value the British outfit at about US $160m. Sir Frank Williams’ stake has therefore dropped from 70 to 63 per cent, and Patrick Head’s from 30 to 27 per cent. Wolff, 38, also owns shares in Aces Management, the driver management firm involving Didier Coton and Mika Hakkinen, as well as the F3 engine supplier HWA. |
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Also Williams to debut Red Bull-like exhaustsComments Off The next formula one team working hard on a Red Bull-style exhaust system for its 2010 car is Williams. McLaren, Mercedes and Renault will soon follow suit, and now it emerges that Williams is to adopt a similar layout for its Cosworth-powered FW32. Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport said the new exhaust system will appear no later than the British grand prix in mid July. The report said the package will include new wings and a bigger double diffuser. “We are expecting a big step,” said Williams’ long-time engineering boss and co-owner Patrick Head. |
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Barrichello plays down steering wheel tossComments Off Rubens Barrichello has denied claims he recklessly endangered his F1 rivals after crashing out of Sunday’s Monaco grand prix. The Brazilian veteran threw his steering wheel onto the racing line after shunting due to a technical problem whilst climbing Beau Rivage at high speed. The impacts dented the Armco barriers on both sides of the Monaco layout, and in apparent frustration Barrichello, who turns 38 this Sunday, threw his $50,000 steering wheel onto the track. It was promptly run over by Karun Chandhok, who dragged the expensive debris all the way to the tunnel before it came loose and was run over again by Bruno Senna. It was a spring from Barrichello’s Brawn that last year struck the hapless Felipe Massa on the helmet. It is also a fundamental rule breach not to re-connect the steering wheel after abandoning a stricken car. “What was he doing?,” Chandhok said of Barrichello. “Charlie (Whiting) actually asked me about it. You see on the video that he just throws it.” But the Williams driver insists: “I threw the steering wheel because I wanted to get out of the car as soon as possible. “After the shunt I was facing the wrong side of the track and the car was on fire,” he argued. Williams co-owner Patrick Head also defended his driver. “If you are standing in the middle of a 120mph corner, you tend to think ‘let’s get out of here as quickly as you can’.” (GMM) |
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Williams admits losing Webber ‘a mistake’Comments Off Sir Frank Williams admits that letting Mark Webber switch to Red Bull at the end of 2006 was a “mistake”. After two disappointing seasons with the British team in 2005 and 2006, the Australian moved to Red Bull, where in the past week he has won two grands prix from pole position. “You could say we made a mistake,” Williams is quoted by Austrian newspaper Kleine Zeitung. “Our car was a disappointment, and we thought he was a part of that problem. Therefore, he was not our first choice (for 2007),” added the Grove based team’s eponymous chief. It is now expected that Webber, 33, will sign an extension to his current contract for the 2011 season. Williams co-owner Patrick Head confirmed that he and Sir Frank were reluctant to pay Webber a high salary to stay on board in 2007. “It wasn’t that we thought he wasn’t worth a decent salary, but we’d lost a major sponsor and we were going through some very tough times commercially,” he is quoted by the Guardian. “For the amount Flavio was asking, we didn’t think we could build a car that would justify keeping him on,” added Head. The Briton also thinks Webber, the first Australian world championship leader since Alan Jones in 1981, has improved since leaving the Williams team. Said Head: “He was very quick over a single lap but in our view he had an occasional tendency to make mistakes in the race and suddenly go off. “In his first year with Red Bull he was pretty much the same. But in his second year with them we noticed that those in-race mistakes disappeared.” (GMM) |
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Nico Hulkenberg: No ‘negative’ pressure from bossesComments Off Nico Hulkenberg insists he is not yet under ‘negative’ pressure from his bosses to up his game in formula one. The German rookie has outqualified Rubens Barrichello twice so far in 2010, including in Barcelona, but he has generally been outshone by his more experienced teammate. Williams, although having groomed the reigning GP2 champion with test seats in both 2008 and 2009, is famous for not having a lot of patience for tardy or struggling drivers. But Hulkenberg, 22, said he doesn’t feel under pressure, even though the British team’s overall performance has not been good in 2010. “No, not at all,” he told the May print edition of Germany’s Motorsport-Magazin. “Quite the contrary, I have the full support of Frank, Patrick and Sam. They have not said a negative word, everything is good. “We are in this situation together and we must come out of it together.” But admitting he is “well prepared” for F1, Hulkenberg insists he cannot be compared with successful past rookies like Lewis Hamilton, who made his debut in 2007 with “15-20,000″ kilometres under his belt. “I had just seven days this winter,” said Hulkenberg, who is managed by the famous Willi Weber. “Even though I had very good results in F3 and GP3, I cannot be expected to have my teammate – who is now in his 18th season – immediately under control. “Or if it was so, then Rubens would probably stop immediately,” he added. Although not unduly pressured by his bosses, Hulkenberg said he is aware of the “responsibility” of occupying one of the Grove based team’s two cockpits. “As a driver, you bear a responsibility for the whole team, for the 500 people behind it, the sponsors, all the money involved. “It is not going quite as planned, but I am in formula one, with the best drivers in the world … give me a little time,” he said. |
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qualifying times IndyCar Series at Barber Motorsports ParkComments Off Full qualifying times for the third round of the 2010 IZOD IndyCar Series at Barber Motorsports Park.
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Danica Patrick 6th in the ARCA 200-mile raceComments Off Danica Patrick who finished 6th in the ARCA 200-mile race last Saturday, February 6th, will participate Saturday’s Camping World 300 NASCAR Nationwide Series race. Beyond Daytona, Patrick’s 2010 campaign is confirmed starting with the Feb. 20 race at Auto Club Speedway and the Feb. 27 race at Las Vegas Motor Speedway. Following Vegas, Patrick will take a four-month hiatus to focus on her IndyCar Series responsibilities before returning to drive June 26 at New Hampshire Motor Speedway ARCA stock cars are almost identical to Nationwide Series cars. Patrick’s ARCA start Saturday was the first race in a stock car for the Roscoe, Ill., driver, who in 2008 became the first woman to win an IndyCar event. Her participation in the Camping World race was contingent on her performance on the high-banked Daytona track. Patrick veered off track after contact with a car driven by former Formula 1 driver Nelson Piquet, Jr., and slid sideways through the grass into Turn 1. Her car sustained minor damage when it struck the 31-degree banking of the corner, but she rallied from the back of the pack and ran as high as 5th before the checkered flag waved. JR Motorsports will still field two cars for the Nationwide Series season opener. Due to sponsorship reallocation for the upcoming season, Dale Earnhardt Jr. will drive the No. 88 Chevrolet in place of Kelly Bires in what is the first of two scheduled races for the JRM co-owner. Bires will return to the seat of the No. 88 Chevy the following week at Auto Club Speedway and could be called upon to drive the No. 7 Chevrolet at Daytona should Patrick not compete in that event. “We want to give Danica the best opportunity to compete at Daytona, and that includes making sure she is 100 percent comfortable in that driver’s seat,” said Kelley Earnhardt, JRM co-owner and general manager. |
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