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Raikkonen asks Lotus for rally Finland permission(0) Kimi Raikkonen has revealed he would like to contest August’s rally of Finland. F1′s 2007 world champion returned from world rallying to grand prix racing this year. “Of course I wanted to do better. But I’m not finished. I want to go back, whether for my career or after I don’t know,” the 32-year-old told Motorsport News, according to the official WRC website. Earlier, Raikkonen admitted he had sidelined his rallying career for now in order to concentrate on F1. Before the 2011 season, Lotus’ (then Renault) regular driver Robert Kubica was seriously injured in a rally crash, and is still yet to return to the sport. “I’d like to do rally Finland this season as it fits with the calendar but you’ll have to ask the team if it fits in my contract,” Raikkonen said. |
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Alonso: Grosjean can win grands prix(0) Romain Grosjean is a potential grand prix winner. That is the claim of the Frenchman’s first F1 teammate Fernando Alonso, who shared the Renault team with Grosjean in 2009. The Enstone based team, however, was imploding amid the crashgate scandal, and Grosjean struggled to perform after being drafted in to replace the sacked Nelson Piquet. He lost the drive at the end of the season and then found himself in the odd situation of farewelling his girlfriend, the French F1 presenter Marion Jolles, as she departed for a grand prix. “She was there and I was home,” Grosjean is quoted as saying in Barcelona by the Gulf Daily News. “Honestly, I thought it was over and I would never come back to formula one.” But, now as the new reigning GP2 champion, he is back in 2012 at the wheel of Lotus’ black and gold E20 — a car tipped by many as the favourite for victory this weekend. Many naturally tip Grosjean’s famous teammate Kimi Raikkonen as the most likely winner, but Spaniard Alonso rates the Swiss-born 26-year-old as well. “When his car was not so good he was criticised a lot,” Alonso told RMC Sport, “but when he has a good car he does very good results. “He has won GP2 and has a fantastic career. He has talent and I’m happy he went onto the podium (in Bahrain). “He can win a grand prix,” the Ferrari driver professed. |
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Volkswagen plays down F1 rumours(0) Volkswagen, the German carmaking giant, has played down suggestions it could launch a formula one project some time soon. “There are always rumours about Volkswagen and formula one,” said Jost Capito, who has taken over from Kris Nissen as the head of the Wolfsburg-based company’s motor racing boss. However, he is quoted by Germany’s Sport1 as insisting that VW is only concentrating on its world rally programme. “The WRC programme is approved from 2013 to 2015,” Capito insisted. “There is no room to think about anything else. “It (F1) is not on our radar,” he is also quoted as saying by France’s L’Equipe. “Our hands are full already.” In the wake of BMW, Honda and Toyota’s departures, the only mass production carmakers in F1 are Renault – as an engine supplier – and Mercedes. Ferrari, McLaren, Lotus and Caterham produce niche sports cars. |
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Ecclestone quotes high price to Magny Cours(0) Magny Cours is still in the race to host France’s return to formula one. But according to RMC, the race’s former host – having run the French grand prix between 1991 and 2008 – has been handed a much higher price-tag than Paul Ricard. Just before Nicolas Sarkozy lost the recent presidential election, the basis of an agreement to annually alternate a French GP with Belgium’s Spa Francorchamps was agreed. The 2013 host would be Paul Ricard, the Bernie Ecclestone-owned circuit, and the race fee EUR 22 million. Politics, it seems, have intervened. Francois Hollande, France’s new president, is not a supporter of the grand prix, and vowed to re-evaluate the sport’s return to the country. RMC reports that officials at Magny Cours have used the opportunity to “repeatedly” contact F1 chief executive Ecclestone in recent days. The Nievre region is politically aligned with the new administration, but Ecclestone is reportedly “asking EUR 10 million more” for a race at Magny Cours. Politics, however, could also be on Paul Ricard’s side, with Citroen’s former world rally boss Olivier Quesnel reportedly lined up to lead the F1 project. Quesnel is reportedly close to FIA president Jean Todt, and the pair apparently met earlier this week. |
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Sainz jr on track for Toro Rosso future(0) Carlos Sainz jr is on course for a future in formula one. The 17-year-old Spaniard is the son of Carlos Sainz, the former two-time world rally champion. Sainz jr, however, has pursued a career in open wheelers, and – now that Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne have stepped up – he is the new cream of energy drink Red Bull’s junior driver programme. And another direct link to the world of formula one for Sainz jr is his new sponsorship deal with Cepsa, the Spanish oil company that is also Red Bull-owned Toro Rosso’s main backer. Sainz jr’s new Cepsa deal is for his participation this year in the British and Euroseries F3 categories, but “Our intention is to continue (beyond 2012),” Cepsa co-chairman Santiago Bergareche is quoted by Marca newspaper. “Hopefully everything goes well and Carlos will be in that world (F1) one day,” added Cepsa chairman Alfonso Escamez. He said the deal does not guarantee Sainz jr a future in f1. “The sponsors have no say on the teams of the drivers. We can try to influence, to give our opinion, but we are not (able to decide) on that side. “We hope that it does happen, but it will not necessarily.” |
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Kimi Raikkonen: F1 a job, ‘not my life’(0) Kimi Raikkonen insists he is “not interested” in formula one — except the cars, and winning. Asked by the reporter for Bild am Sonntag newspaper if the famous Finnish character might remove his sunglasses for an interview, 2007 world champion Raikkonen replied simply: “No.” At the end of his fourth race since returning to F1 from rallying, the 32-year-old was back on the podium in Bahrain. “It’s not going too bad,” he said. “I like what I’m doing, that’s enough. I don’t care if someone says whether I’m doing it well or not. “Still, it’s disappointing when you’re only second. Who knows what’s going to happen at the next race,” the Lotus driver added. Just after leaving F1 at the end of 2009, Raikkonen said he disliked everything about the sport — except the cars. Nothing has changed. “No. I’m only here for racing,” said Raikkonen. “All the other bulls**t I can do without. If you took away the cars from formula one, I would not be there. “Formula one plays no role in my personal life. I have a real life! I think for many people, their life is formula one. For me it’s not.” |
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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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‘Only certainty is uncertainty’ in F1 2012Comments Off All this year’s title contenders know after four ‘flyaway’ races in 2012 is that they do not know what will happen in Spain next month. “The only certainty is uncertainty,” read the German headline at Netzeitung. With F1 generally regarded in the wider world as a sport with predictable results, this is an entirely new situation. “The statistics show that it’s been nine years since there have been four different winners in the first four races,” said Ferrari team boss Stefano Domenicali. Indeed, the famous Italian team as well as McLaren, Mercedes and Red Bull have won the opening races of 2012, and also with potentially winning pace have been Lotus and Sauber. “More than that,” continued Domenicali, “you have to go back 29 years to find the last time four different cars won.” One explanation is that F1 has never been more competitive, with plenty of well-oiled teams and no fewer than six world champion drivers on the grid. But Domenicali thinks Pirelli is the dominant factor. And not everybody is happy about that. Michael Schumacher told Bild newspaper that this year’s tyres degrade so fast that rubber “flies from the rim” if he pushes too hard in a corner. “We drive around like the safety car. It is not a satisfying situation,” the seven time world champion said. Pirelli’s motor sport director Paul Hembery is unimpressed with the rebuke, insisting that the Italian marque is only trying to “make tyres that make the races exciting”. “We cannot take individual drivers into consideration,” the Briton insisted. “It would be dead easy for us to make tyres that don’t break down. Then the top ten would also be the top ten in the race. “But no one wants to see boring processions,” Hembery claimed. Agreed the Swiss headline at Blick: “Pirelli is sweeping away the boredom”. Indeed, not even the other Mercedes driver, Shanghai winner Nico Rosberg, agrees with Schumacher. “It’s total chaos. You don’t know who is going to be fast at the next track,” he is quoted by DPA agency. “Formula one has become almost unlike any other sport. “Yes, you cannot drive any laps any more at full throttle. Often, it’s like driving on ice. But that’s a big and an interesting challenge,” said the German. Undoubtedly exciting for the fans, but the teams are having to adapt quickly. Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport said on Sunday that Vettel’s victory could mean Red Bull resumes its dominant grip on F1. Dr Helmut Marko doesn’t think so. “We don’t even know who our opponents are!” he exclaimed. |
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F1′s Bahrain crisis deepensComments Off With F1 currently scheduled to arrive en masse in Bahrain next week, a crisis surrounding the possible cancellation of the island Kingdom’s race is continuing to deepen. The teams have now denied Bernie Ecclestone’s claim that they can simply choose to skip the event. “That would not be possible,” said a statement issued by the teams association FOTA. “Teams are unable to cancel (a) grand prix.” Bahrain, meanwhile, stepped up its campaign, accusing some of deploying “scare-mongering tactics” designed to force the race’s cancellation. The race organisers released a report conducted by Lotus, following the Enstone based team’s recent reconnaissance mission to Bahrain. “We came away from Bahrain feeling a lot more confident that everything is in hand,” Lotus is quoted as having reported. The team, however, reacted angrily, accusing the organisers of having released a “confidential” document. “Lotus F1 Team is one of 12 contestants of the … world championship and we would never try to substitute ourselves for the FIA”, said the Enstone based team. Surmised Times correspondent Kevin Eason on Twitter: “(It’s) getting messy…” At the same time, F1 chief executive Ecclestone became fully immersed in the political situation on Tuesday, reporteding personally phoning Bahrain’s crown prince to express concern about the jailed hunger striker. An Amnesty International report published this week had called for Abdulhadi Al-Khawaja’s release, amid claims he is now close to death and being force-fed. But the Bahrain government, through its information affairs authority, insisted that only police and rioters are being injured in “infrequent and remote clashes”. Also weighing into the argument was Sir Jackie Stewart, the eloquent triple world champion, who said: “I would go. “The commercial rights holder has sold a package, at a price, and it is part of the constructors’ agreement that they attend the races that have been published,” he told the Guardian. “As a team owner I would have to honour my agreement both orally and legally.” Whatever happens, the Bahrain saga – stretching back now over a year – is not good news for the future of the island Kingdom’s calendar spot. “Maybe we wouldn’t renew it (the contract),” Ecclestone admitted to the BBC. “We’ll have to look and see.” |
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Raikkonen: F1 comeback easy with ‘good car’Comments Off Kimi Raikkonen has a simple theory as to why his return to formula one was much smoother than fellow former champion Michael Schumacher’s. After two less competitive seasons in 2010 and 2011, seven time title winner Schumacher, 43, is finally back up to speed this year. Finn Raikkonen is more than a decade younger than his German rival and he was off the grid for only two years, not three. But he thinks there is a simpler explanation as to why he has returned immediately to the pace, while Schumacher took more than two full seasons. “It’s just about whether you have a good car or not. It has made life much easier for me,” said Raikkonen, who has returned with Lotus. “He (Schumacher) was not so lucky,” the former McLaren and Ferrari driver told Germany’s Sport Bild. “The (Lotus) car is good,” the 2007 world champion added, referring to his black and gold E20. “Whether it’s good enough for victory or not, I don’t know. “At least we are not far away from the top.” Raikkonen insists not much has changed in F1 since he left for a world rallying foray at the end of 2009 — not even his friendship with Sebastian Vettel. “He has won two titles since then but it didn’t change him,” said Raikkonen. “Sebastian is a great racing driver but he’s also a really nice guy,” he added. As for himself, Raikkonen insists he is just the same. “Maybe people see me as more relaxed, which I think is down to the (Lotus) team,” he said. “It’s a different atmosphere to what I’ve experienced before.” |
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Marko: Red Bull has work to do to defend titleComments Off Dr Helmut Marko has admitted Red Bull has work to do in order to return to the front in formula one. Having dominated F1′s recent history, the energy drink owned team is now behind McLaren in the constructors’ standings after two races in 2012, while its highest placed driver is Mark Webber in fourth. Austrian Marko, the motor racing advisor to Red Bull mogul Dietrich Mateschitz, insisted that Adrian Newey and his technical team have built a good car for 2012. “But it doesn’t help,” he told Salzburg television channel Servus TV, “if we are the fastest only in certain conditions, rather than consistently. “To tell you the truth, at the moment it’s almost as though the car decides when it is the fastest, and when it is not,” Marko said during the ‘Sport und Talk aus dem Hangar-7′ programme. The outspoken manager also vigorously defended Sebastian Vettel in the wake of the Narain Karthikeyan affair, after Red Bull’s world champion lost his temper with the HRT driver following a clash in Malaysia. Marko firmly pointed the finger at F1′s backmarkers. “We have told our team manager to talk to both Marussia and Hispania about getting their drivers to simply pay more attention,” he said. “They are driving in another league, they’re six or eight seconds slower, and so they need to watch out more than they do. “They are 12 points Vettel lost that could be crucial in the world championship,” added Marko. He also fended off the claim that Vettel’s behaviour in Malaysia, featuring the display of middle fingers and calling Karthikeyan an “idiot”, was not worthy of a role model. “You’ve just been in a race, you’ve seen the chance of possibly a third place go away — you’re naturally upset because he’s a human as well. “I think we can understand an emotional reaction,” added Marko. |
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Raikkonen admits ‘minor doubts’ about returnComments Off Kimi Raikkonen has admitted he travelled to Australia recently unsure if he would be immediately back up to speed in formula one. “I always felt I could make a return to grand prix racing,” said the Finn ahead of his second race of 2012 with Lotus. “But, I can confess now, I got some good answers (in Australia) to my own minor doubts how quickly you can adapt the racing rhythm after being away for some time. The speed is there,” added Raikkonen. The 32-year-old has previously won the Malaysian grand prix with McLaren and Ferrari. |
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Raikkonen’s managers now take a back seatComments Off
Kimi Raikkonen’s managers have revealed they only now take a back seat in the career of the 2007 world champion. But Steve told Finland’s Turun Sanomat that they only intervene now when the 32-year-old driver requests it — such as when he needed to negotiate last winter with Williams and his ultimate 2012 employer, Lotus. “We came to the end of the road really in late 2009,” he said. That is when Ferrari bought out the rest of Raikkonen’s contract, and he headed to world rally. “We can’t honestly say that we are real rally fans — it’s alien to us, while we know F1 through and through. “When Kimi wanted to go back to F1, he turned to us for help with the agreement. After a few months Kimi got what he wanted.” Robertson, however, explained that the father-son duo are no longer involved in the “day to day” running of Raikkonen’s career. “I have known Kimi for 11, 12 years, and he has become really close to us. When he asks for help, he knows that we are always ready to give it,” he continued. “I was delighted when he wanted to come back where he really belongs (in F1),” said Robertson. “There is so much nonsense about Kimi’s problems with motivation. “The truth is that he wanted to come back for one reason only — because he is super-motivated to race in F1 again. “By taking Kimi, it shows the (Lotus) team’s desire to succeed. I think Kimi and Romain Grosjean are a good combination. “By changing the drivers the team has showed that it was not satisfied with the level of last year and that they want to come back to being among the big teams,” he concluded. |
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Raikkonen would have stayed in F1 in 2010Comments Off Kimi Raikkonen has argued he is back in the mood for F1 by revealing he would have kept racing in 2010. Indeed, at the end of 2009, Ferrari bought out the Finn’s deal so that Fernando Alonso could arrive early with the backing of the Spanish bank Santander. Raikkonen headed off for two years of world rallying but is back with Lotus in 2012, fending off all the old questions about his motivation. “Since I started in F1, I have always preferred the time we spend in the car from anything else happening in the paddock. It’s still the same,” the 32-year-old insists. Even now, he would prefer to split his F1 racing with more rallying, but has agreed to abide his team’s wishes that he stay off the gravel. “Ah, it’s normal with formula one they try to ban everything,” he told London’s Telegraph. “Unfortunately with what happened to Robert (Kubica) last year … but even before that it was written into contracts. “Maybe in the future if you can do some good results you can get a release or something. I still love it,” said Raikkonen. “If I could do it this year at the same time as formula one I would. I think it’s good practice and it’s good fun.” |
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After rally test, Kubica drives kartComments Off Robert Kubica is back on track yet again, according to the latest reports from Italy. La Gazzetta dello Sport now reports that the former BMW and Renault driver has tested a kart at a circuit in Montecatini-Terme, Tuscany. Former Renault boss Flavio Briatore advises Kubica not to rush his return to F1. “I have seen him a few times and have told him not to hurry back. You cannot lose your talent, but first you should focus on your health. 100 per cent,” he told Italy’s Sky Sport 24. Briatore recalled former Benetton driver Alessandro Nannini, who badly injured his arm in a helicopter crash in 1990. “He hurried back and we all know how that ended,” said Briatore. “I think Kubica will succeed, but he needs to plan to come back in two years. You can’t be in F1 if you’re not 100 per cent.” |
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