|
Vettel failure a surprise admits Red BullComments Off A gutted Red Bull team on Sunday night was ruing a catastrophic Korean grand prix, where Mark Webber lost the championship lead, and Sebastian Vettel the race. The immediate attention centred on pole sitter and race leader Vettel’s Renault engine failure, which Helmut Marko said took the team and its supplier by complete surprise. “It did,” the Austrian said on German television RTL. “It’s our first engine failure this year. “The mileage was at about 1600 kilometres, and normally the average (life) is 2000-2100,” added Marko. “Something broke in the valve area, so it’s the first time. On Friday we were using an engine with much higher mileage,” said the team’s motorsport consultant. He advised German Vettel, 23, not to give up. “It’s not easy, but there are still 50 points to get,” said Marko. “Alonso is on his last engine. We’re not giving up.” Renault apologised for the failure. |
|
Ferrari deserve ‘severe punishment’Comments Off Ferrari should receive a significant sporting sanction for breaking the rules at Hockenheim, according to the controversial former president of F1′s governing body. Race leader Felipe Massa moved over to let Fernando Alonso win the German grand prix in July and “both cars and both drivers should lose the points they achieved”, 70-year-old Briton Mosley said. “I will not make any recommendation, but on the facts at the moment there should have been some sporting sanction and not only a fine,” he added. Mosley said “most teams” would like the team orders ban to be repealed, but he said the rule was designed to “meet the needs of millions of fans”. “In the event that it (team orders) is brought into play, we have to impose a severe punishment,” he explained. |
|
Red Bull crisis to have no quick endComments Off Dyed-in-the-wool racer Martin Brundle on Monday said he sees no quick end to Red Bull’s new self-induced crisis. “I doubt that trip across the Atlantic for the next round in Montreal will extinguish these fireworks,” the BBC commentator said on Monday, as the international media got to work on Sebastian Vettel’s crash at Istanbul Park with race leader and teammate Mark Webber. The Sun’s headline referred to the one-two gift handed to McLaren, toying with the energy drink’s slogan by insisting “Red Bull gives you wins”. Other sections of the press were more serious. “Red Bull has a conflict of jealously and betrayal,” said El Mundo newspaper in Spain. Italy’s La Repubblica likened the previously dominant team’s self-destruction to “suicide”. Britain’s The Independent referred to the fact that Webber, branded crazy by Vettel’s gesticulations and told by his bosses that he should have let the young German past, must now have the impression he is the number two driver. Webber acknowledged that Vettel’s gesticulations were caused by the “adrenalin” of the moment, but “Red Bull need to take steps to ensure the current world championship leader can have complete faith that the support within the team is spread evenly”, said the newspaper. And Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport noted that the 33-year-old is “not the kind of guy who is told to finish second”. Strangely within the paddock, it was only the Red Bull bosses who thought Webber had done something wrong. “Where should Mark have gone?” Lewis Hamilton – who had a box-seat view of the incident that unfolded in front of him – told German television Sky. “I think the gap he left him was big enough. “Even though Jenson and I both want to win, we also have respect for each other. I’m really happy that I have such a good relationship with my teammate.” Said Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg: “Mark didn’t move at all. For me, it was clearly Sebastian’s fault.” Niki Lauda said the 22-year-old had been “much too aggressive”, and former driver Alex Wurz noted in Turkey: “All my racing colleagues are in agreement that it was Vettel’s fault.” Ross Brawn thinks these situations can be minimised if drivers know clearly the rules of engagement. “It depends on what has been said beforehand,” the Mercedes team boss is quoted by Die Welt newspaper. “Although it’s racing, the rules must be known to the drivers.” Peter Sauber, meanwhile, had some sympathy for Christian Horner, admitting to Blick newspaper in Switzerland that these situations are “a nightmare for a team chief”. (GMM) |
![]() |
Nascar Sprint Cup Series: Biffle Adds Another VictoryComments Off For the second consecutive time, Greg Biffle managed to advance in the final section of the Camping World RV 400 Sprint Cup race at Dover International Speedway taking the victory and overcoming the leaders and favorites to win this particular competition. Biffle certainly surprised many of us with his brief running to grasp the title. |
Contacts and information
|
Social networks |
Most popular categories |