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Germans tip Schumacher to retire in 2012(0) More than half of Michael Schumacher’s German compatriots think the seven time world champion will return to retirement at the end of this year. After three years of retirement, the 43-year-old returned to F1 in 2010 on a three-year Mercedes contract, which runs out in 2012. SID news agency commissioned the German market research company Promit to carry out a survey as to whether respondents think Schumacher will quit at the end of this year. 55.4 per cent answered yes, while only 26.2 per cent said they think Schumacher should sign on for at least another season. The winner of a record 91 grands prix has failed to see the chequered flag in three of the five races so far this year, finishing just tenth in both Malaysia and Bahrain. In contrast, teammate Nico Rosberg’s three top-seven finishes in 2012 included pole and victory in China, netting him 41 points compared with Schumacher’s 2 overall. “I don’t think we can write him (Schumacher) off yet,” insisted Telegraph correspondent Tom Cary this week. “His pace hasn’t been bad and he started the season very well. (He) was unlucky in quite a few races, his wheel fell off when he was running second in China and could have had a big haul of points. “He is making mistakes in wheel-to-wheel racing though. But if he gets a few decent finishes or even wins a race then we could see him continue (in 2013),” added Cary. |
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F1 assesses fallout after damaging Bahrain sagaComments Off With the F1 world now returned from Bahrain, the sport is assessing the fallout of one of the most controversial grands prix in history. The drivers were conspicuously quiet over the saga in the island Kingdom, but – with no contract tying him down – former Force India driver Adrian Sutil admitted he was glad he was not there. “In a situation like that, it is probably better not to go,” the German said on Sky Deutschland. “On the one hand, the decision was made (to go to Bahrain), on the other hand, it’s very difficult when there are so many problems in a country.” Red Bull reserve driver Sebastien Buemi, who has family living in Bahrain, does not agree at all. “I arrived on Monday and I had no problem — maybe there were a few more police than two years ago, but nothing happened to me,” the Swiss insisted on Austrian Servus TV. Force India and Sauber, however, witnessed Molotov cocktail attacks on their treks to and from the circuit. And Caterham team spokesman Tom Webb told the Sun that there was “one minor incident when one of our (hire) vans slowed down in traffic and its occupants saw a local youth on the side of the main road brandishing a bottle with a rag stuffed in its neck”. World champion and race winner Sebastian Vettel also admitted the feeling was tense in the paddock throughout the weekend. “It was not easy for anyone,” the Red Bull driver admitted, according to SID news agency, “but I’m glad that nothing happened to any of us (in F1).” And the Telegraph quotes Vettel adding: “Hopefully, we come back in the future when everything’s a little bit safer.” Reuters reports that Vodafone, the main sponsor of the half Bahrain-owned McLaren team, sent no staff to the country and expressed concerns to the British outfit. But Jim Wright, an F1 sponsorship expert, told the Guardian that he thinks while the sport’s image took a beating last weekend, sponsors will be happy. “Most teams handled a difficult decision very well,” he said. “On that basis I think a lot of people would be pleased with that and happy to get involved with them.” The television audience was also unaffected – even boosted – with the BBC reporting more viewers for Bahrain than Australia and Malaysia, and Germany revealing similarly strong figures. Still, there remains criticism. “Now is an opportunity to reflect,” former F1 driver Alex Zanardi told Tuttosport, “and make sure that major sporting events are assigned only to governments that deserve the honour of hosting them. “Ecclestone is brilliant and has made formula one what it is, but he can’t administer races at any cost and above all else,” insisted the Italian. Due to security fears, Force India sat out a practice session on Friday so that staff could return to their hotels in daylight. F1 chief executive Bernie Ecclestone was reportedly enraged, and according to rumours got his revenge by instructing Formula One Management’s television cameras to ignore the Silverstone based team’s cars in qualifying. “There was a bit of fuss about what we did,” deputy team principal Bob Fernley is quoted by Spain’s AS newspaper, “and it was not easy, but I think it turned out to be the right response. “We had a lot of pressure, our attitude was not well received,” he confirmed, “but I think that we had a duty of care to our employees, and to do the right thing by the team.” |
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Karthikeyan sick of ‘cucumber-gate’Comments Off Narain Karthikeyan has revealed he is sick and tired of what could be described as ‘cucumber-gate’. After the Indian collided with Sebastian Vettel in Malaysia three weeks ago, he was twice shown the middle finger, and called a “gherkin” and “idiot” by the reigning world champion. But that’s when the real fuss began, as the world’s media became involved — a mischievous German reporter even presented Karthikeyan with a cucumber in China. “It’s done and I would have preferred for it to stay private,” he is quoted by the SID news agency. But the affair is threatening to drag on even longer, with Vettel telling reporters in Shanghai that Karthikeyan had apologised to him. He did not say if he has apologised himself. “Sebastian can say what he likes,” HRT driver Karthikeyan responded. He said the incident had become an affair of “unbelievable proportions”. “It’s crazy; I was questioned about it day and night,” he said. “It’s become too much — I don’t want to talk about it anymore and I’d prefer if I never even thought about it again.” |
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Ferrari has ‘great confidence’ in MassaComments Off Luca di Montezemolo has offered Felipe Massa some cautious backing. The struggling driver was summoned to Ferrari’s Maranello headquarters this week rather than travel home to Brazil to see his young family. But team boss Stefano Domenicali said the 30-year-old retains Ferrari’s full backing, despite two sub-standard performances in Australia and Malaysia and widespread calls within the media for his dismissal. Germany’s SID news agency quotes Ferrari president Montezemolo as saying: “We have great confidence in Massa. “And at the moment I don’t see many outstanding drivers out there,” he added. The implication could be that an “outstanding” driver might be a candidate to replace Massa either now or in the future. The cream of Ferrari’s own driver development academy, Sergio Perez, sensationally finished second behind Fernando Alonso last weekend in Malaysia, with Massa fifteenth. Brazilian former driver and now commentator Luciano Burti traces Massa’s decline all the way back to Hockenheim 2010, when on the one-year anniversary of his near-fatal crash he was told by his engineer: “Fernando is faster than you”. “When that order came, his house fell around him,” Burti told Brazil’s Globo. Soon after that, Alonso was – and still is – the darling of Ferrari, while one of Massa’s strongest supporters, the O Estado de S.Paulo correspondent Livio Oricchio, now believes the Brazilian is little more than the “test driver” for new components. |
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Brawn: New Schumacher deal would indicate progressComments Off Ross Brawn in Melbourne has admitted he would like to keep working with Michael Schumacher beyond 2012. There have been reports Mercedes sees McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton – also with an expiring contract – as a potential successor to Schumacher. Team boss Brawn, however, admitted he hopes Mercedes and Schumacher live up to their expectations in 2012. “We look forward to continuing to work with Michael,” he told SID news agency, “because that would mean we are successful in what we are doing. “If Michael stays in the team, that would mean that we are coming closer to our goals,” explained Brawn. “At some point in the season we will decide to continue, or do something else.” Schumacher, however, denied that 2012 is “any more important than any other” season in terms of his future. |
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Timo Glock:Marussia must focus on basics before KERSComments Off Marussia needs to get the basics right before worrying about KERS, Timo Glock explained on the eve of the 2012 season. Last year, the Cosworth-powered team was soundly beaten by its closest rival Team Lotus, who as well as changing its name to Caterham for 2012 has also added a Red Bull KERS system to its Renault-powered package. “On the subject of KERS, it is of course a disadvantage not to have it,” Glock is quoted by the SID news agency. “But we have said that our focus is right to first get rid of the four seconds of aerodynamic deficit, before we worry about the money and the manpower we need for five tenths with the KERS,” added Glock. “We have to get the foundation right first,” said the almost 30-year-old. |
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Haug: Too soon for Mercedes title challengeComments Off Norbert Haug on Monday played down reports Mercedes could be set to be a shock title contender in 2012. But Haug, Mercedes-Benz’s motor sport vice-president, insisted it is unlikely the former Brawn, Honda and BAR team can leap from fourth in the constructors’ world championship to first in just a single bound. “You don’t go from the the creation and restructuring of a team to (winning) the world championship in two years,” he is quoted by SID news agency. “The reigning world champions (Red Bull) didn’t, and we didn’t either (as engine supplier) with McLaren. “You just have to accept this building-up period,” added the German. |
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Vettel to push for rare title hat-trickComments Off If Sebastian Vettel hangs on to the drivers’ world championship trophy at the end of 2012, he will be only the third driver in the sport’s history with a title hat-trick. Eight drivers have won three or more championships in total, but only Michael Schumacher (2000-2004) and Juan Manuel Fangio (1954-1957) won more than two on the trot. Names including Prost, Lauda, Senna and Alonso all failed. “My guess is that he (Vettel) really can do it again,” Bernie Ecclestone told F1′s official website. “What points against it? I think anything else would be the surprise.” So what does the 24-year-old German think about the chances of a treble? “That only two or three had done it before, I was not aware,” he is quoted by SID news agency. “All good things come in threes. Of course it would be great, but there’s a long way to go and we stay patient and keep the feet on the floor.” The 2012 field, however, appears closer than in 2011, and the Red Bull perhaps not as dominant. “To say that everything is perfect would be a lie, because we have some problems to solve,” admitted Vettel ahead of the 2012 season opener in Australia. “It will only be possible to make a true assessment of our performance and the performance of the others this weekend.” |
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Lotus back on the pace after chassis problemComments Off Lotus has overcome a serious chassis flaw to lead the field as the final pre-season test began at Barcelona. “The mounting of the suspension is now the strongest part of the car,” an unnamed team member is quoted by SID news agency. At the end of his return to action on Thursday, Romain Grosjean was quoted by France’s Auto Plus: “It (the E20) feels the same, there’s not much difference really.” Indeed, the revised car is 1 kilogram heavier, but the biggest issue is the four lost days of testing, which after an FIA clarification cannot now be made up. “To miss four days is not ideal as suddenly we have to try to work twice as hard to catch up,” continued Grosjean. “It’s true that it’s not great, but it’s not as problematic as it might have been.” He is referring to the fact that, so far, the Lotus appears intrinsically fast. Asked if the E20 felt as good around Barcelona’s demanding layout as it had at Jerez last month, the reigning GP champion enthused: “Yes, exactly the same. “You can trust the car, push it, play with it. “You can attack, and if you attack too much, you know what will happen — if you have understeer, you know that by attacking less, you’ll have less understeer. “On this aspect, the car is very good.” 1982 world champion Keke Rosberg told the Finnish broadcaster MTV3 that while the Lotus looks as good in Barcelona as it had at Jerez, it is still not clear if it will be able to compete against F1′s regular top teams. Auto Motor und Sport quotes Grosjean as saying: “I think there are a couple of teams ahead of us — Red Bull and McLaren look very strong. “Behind them, it’s a lot closer than it was before.” However, amid F1′s now extremely limited track testing regime, there is no ignoring the four lost days of running. Asked if he is ready for 2012, Grosjean said according to Finland’s Turun Sanomat: “I have to be. “Of course, the more time you have with your car, the better you feel. However, it is what it is. “We have this four days prior to Melbourne and that’s better than nothing,” he added. * Caterham had to replace Heikki Kovalainen with his teammate Vitaly Petrov on Thursday, as the Finn recovered at his nearby hotel with food poisoning. |
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Sauber: Red Bull and McLaren lead 2012 fieldComments Off Red Bull and McLaren have the quickest cars as formula one teams prepare for the final pre-season test before Melbourne.
That is the view of Sauber designer Matt Morris, despite the Swiss team’s Kamui Kobayashi setting the fastest overall time at last week’s Barcelona test. “The top teams are yet to show their hands,” read a report in the German magazine Auto Motor und Sport. Morris agrees with that assessment. “If we are to believe our own analysis then Red Bull and McLaren are in front, there is a question mark about Ferrari, and behind them is a very close group of several teams. “I think the gaps between those in this central group will be smaller this year,” he added. The F1 world’s real gaze this week will however be on the apparent title contenders, with Lewis Hamilton quoted by the SID news agency as saying: “Maybe Red Bull are a bit quicker than us.” But McLaren’s team boss Martin Whitmarsh revealed: “We will have a fairly substantial (update) package in Barcelona this week. “We assume Red Bull will do the same,” he added. Unlike last year, however, there will be no last-minute technical sensation that determines the pecking-order for the start of the season. Sauber’s Morris explains: “There will be nothing spectacular; the rules don’t allow it any more.” But he admitted that the best-funded teams will continue to tinker at the edges, as demonstrated by McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull who have so far run several different exhaust configurations in the wake of the blown diffuser ban. Morris said: “Any modification in this area is an expensive pleasure, while before we (Sauber) do anything, we have to be sure that it is clearly better.” |
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Legal dispute could derail F1 at the NurburgringComments Off The future of the German grand prix at the Nurburgring looks set to race into the courts. Minister Roger Lewentz said he wants to personally take over the negotiations with Bernie Ecclestone about the future of the F1 race. But according to the SID news agency, the operator Nurburgring Automotive GmbH (NAG) has announced it will fight back, including demanding “substantial amounts” from the government for the wrongful action. “There is no reason for this extraordinary step,” NAG’s lawyer is quoted as saying. The company’s spokesman said the situation is crucial to Germany’s future on the F1 calendar. “Already, there are many candidates waiting for a (race) date to be available,” NAG spokesman Karl-Heinz Steinkuehler said. “Without the Nurburgring, formula one would make probably only a guest appearance every two years in Germany, at the Hockenheimring,” he warned. The minister Lewentz, however, said the government is ready for a fight, despite hoping for “an amicable solution” to the dispute with the operator. “If not, a lengthy legal dispute cannot be ruled out,” he said. “We consider ourselves well prepared.” |
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Hulkenberg inks 2012 return with Force IndiaComments Off Nico Hulkenberg signed a contract this week to race with the Force India team in 2012, according to reports. Germany’s motorsport-total.com reports that the German, who has been Force India’s reserve and Friday practice driver in 2011, will make his return to racing in 2012, replacing his experienced countryman Adrian Sutil. The report said Hulkenberg has inked a one-year deal with an option for 2013. “We will make no comment on the driver issue until the team makes a statement,” his manager Timo Gans is quoted by SID news agency. “Already the current contract includes an option, so either way a new contract does not need to be signed,” he added. Team boss Vijay Mallya has said he will not announce Force India’s next driver lineup until December. Sutil’s manager Manfred Zimmermann therefore denies that Hulkenberg will definitely be Paul di Resta’s new teammate in 2012. “That is not right. The team – Vijay Mallya and Rob Fernley – confirmed yesterday that this is a rumour in the press and not the truth,” he insisted. “We are in negotiations with the team,” added Sutil’s manager. “When they are concluded I cannot say, but we certainly will not wait until December the fifteenth.” |
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Germans think Vettel to beat F1 title recordComments Off Most Germans think Sebastian Vettel will break his countryman Michael Schumacher’s record of seven world titles. SID news agency commissioned the German market research company Promit to carry out a survey as to whether respondents think Vettel will one day be a record eight-time title winner. 59.5 per cent answered yes, with 24.6pc believing 42-year-old Schumacher’s now seven-year record will forever remain unbroken. |
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Vettel gifts China GP helmet to Barrichello(1) Despite attending his first race as the 2011 champion-elect, it was Sebastian Vettel who doled out a present in Korea. “Great surprise when I received a helmet that was missing in my collection. Thanks Vettel,” the Williams driver wrote on Twitter. German Vettel, 24, signed the helmet with “your friend”. Barrichello revealed that he has the helmets of “many” current drivers in his collection, including Mark Webber, Jenson Button and Jarno Trulli. “Almost everyone on the grid really,” added the 39-year-old. SID news agency said the helmet gifted by Vettel was the one the German wore to second place behind Lewis Hamilton in China this year. |
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No Olympic medals for F1 driverComments Off Formula one-style motor racing is never likely to be seen at the Olympics. That is the claim of current International Olympic Committee (IOC) president Jacques Rogge. “The most important thing must be the man, not the machine,” the Belgian said in an interview with Germany’s SID news agency. “I see no real chance that Sebastian Vettel will be in the race for a gold medal,” added Rogge. |
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