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Klien: Alonso ‘stands out’ amid 2012 chaos(0) Even amid the chaos of the 2012 pecking order, the star performer is obvious. That is the view of former F1 driver Christian Klien, who confirmed to the Austrian news agency APA that one of his current roles is a simulator driver for the sport’s latest winning team, Williams. “It (2012) is very open,” he said, “but for me Fernando Alonso stands out.” Equal with Sebastian Vettel, Spaniard Alonso is at the top of the drivers’ world championship, a full eight points clear of Lewis Hamilton. The Spaniard’s car has been the struggling Ferrari F2012, but he has never finished a race this season lower than ninth (China). He has therefore scored points at every opportunity, even finishing first and second in Malaysia and Spain respectively. “Alonso has an inferior car,” Klien explained, “but he uses every single little opportunity. “He is the most complete driver who gets the most out of the package he has.” Triple world champion Sir Jackie Stewart agrees that, among arguably the most competitive grid of drivers since the late 80s, Alonso is the standout performer. “Right now we have the best generation of drivers we’ve had for a while,” the famous Scot told the Spanish sports daily AS. “Everyone talks about Vettel, who is a great driver, and also Hamilton of course, but there is also Button, Schumacher, Kimi — all champions. “There are others like Webber who also have the quality to win, young drivers coming up, many of them are very good, but also it is true that Alonso is fantastic.” Asked why the Spaniard has not added a title to his tally since 2006, Stewart said: “The explanation is easy — he hasn’t had the luck to get the best car. “Now he has one that isn’t good, but it’s in those circumstances that you see even more the quality that he has,” said Stewart. Given Alonso’s push to the top of the championship with a sub-standard car, therefore, all the talk about Ferrari writing off the 2012 championship has been silenced for now. “We have to keep developing the car,” Stefano Domenicali, Ferrari’s team boss, said after Barcelona, where significant upgrades were brought to the F2012 package. “We are not yet fast enough to consistently fight for the podium, but that is the only option if we want to be in contention for the title,” he insisted. |
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Massa’s F1 career on brink of collapse(0) Felipe Massa’s formula one career is on the brink of collapse. Ferrari boss Stefano Domenicali left Barcelona insisting he expects the struggling Brazilian to “fight back starting in Monaco”. “We absolutely need his points to also fight for the constructors’ title,” he said. Earlier, the Maranello based team said on Twitter that Ferrari is “disappointed with” the 30-year-old’s performance. When asked about that comment, a Ferrari spokesman told the Sunday Times: “It was a poor choice of grammar. We are disappointed in the outcome of Felipe but not with Felipe himself.” But the very latest development is that Ferrari is now making it abundantly clear that Massa needs to up his game immediately. In a statement posted on its official website, Ferrari said Massa’s teammate Fernando Alonso “has always maintained a very high level”. As for Massa, his “drop off has made itself felt”, the report stated. “The Brazilian had picked up 49 points two years ago and 24 the following year, while so far this season he has just 2,” said Ferrari. “Everyone, he more than anyone, is expecting a change of gear starting right away with the Monaco grand prix”, the statement concluded. Even Massa’s strongest supporters in Brazil, like the O Globo journalist Celso Itibere, admit the situation is dire. “He is at risk,” said Itibere, “his decline is progressive, he is failing to react and he runs the real risk of not finishing the season. “At this time Ferrari has no one to take the job. Everyone they would like to have there – Perez, Kobayashi, Webber – are not available.” Tuesday’s edition of the Italian sports daily Corriere dello Sport will report that Massa’s ousting is imminent. And the latest edition of La Gazzetta dello Sport did not even once mention Massa’s name. “It is as though he does not exist,” wrote the Brazilian journalist Livio Oricchio in O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper. “Yet it is an Italian newspaper, and he is a Ferrari driver.” When asked if he fears for his F1 career, Massa said in Barcelona last weekend: “No. I live in the present. What will happen will happen.” Asked if he is afraid another bad performance will seal his fate, Massa insisted: “I’m not afraid of anything, especially criticism. It doesn’t affect me.” |
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No rolling heads as Ferrari tackles new crisis(0) Stefano Domenicali has ruled out responding to Ferrari’s latest crisis with the old ‘rolling heads’ technique. One perception in the paddock is that the fabled Italian team, under intense pressure from the Tifosi and president Luca di Montezemolo, often reacts by emotionally shedding staff, with Aldo Costa and Chris Dyer the obvious recent examples. So, having installed new faces including Pat Fry but still struggling with the latest F2012 project, will boss Domenicali set heads rolling again? “Firing people is the work of two minutes,” he is quoted by Germany’s Auto Bild, “but this would not solve our problem. “Instead I need to find new people who can improve the organisation and push the engineers to improve the car,” added the Italian. In the meantime, there is no silver bullet. “I am not happy with the F2012 project,” he acknowledged. “But if you want to see the glass half full rather than half empty, then Fernando has done a great damage control and, with an improved car, he at least has the possibility to continue to fight for the championship. “We have to improve,” Domenicali insisted. “I have asked my people to wake up and respond, and I will no longer hear excuses.” |
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Ferrari men know Spain crucial for title(0) Ferrari’s title tilt could hinge on the competitiveness of the updated F2012 this weekend in Barcelona. “What I want is to have a competitive car in Barcelona,” insisted the famous Italian marque’s president Luca di Montezemolo on Tuesday. “That’s what I’ve asked for,” he is quoted as saying by Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo newspaper. Ferrari had congregated at its Fiorano test track, to watch Jacques Villeneuve drive the 1979 single seater to mark the 30th anniversary of his father Gilles’ fatal crash. But Montezemolo’s disappointment is with the latest Ferrari, which has been heavily updated since the Bahrain grand prix three weeks ago. “Our technicians are confident, but we will have to see how our opponents have advanced too,” he added. O Estado de S.Paulo correspondent Livio Oricchio claimed “Montezemolo knows” that anything other than a big step forward in Barcelona will mean Ferrari has to “start thinking about” its 2013 project instead. “Now we have to make a quantum leap, to have a car that is more competitive, less difficult to drive, and gives confidence to the fans,” Montezemolo is quoted by La Stampa newspaper. “Let’s see how it goes in Spain,” he told Rai television. “I have asked for an extraordinary response from our engineers,” Montezemolo is also quoted as saying by Italy’s Sky Sport 24. La Gazzetta dello Sport, meanwhile, quoted lead driver Fernando Alonso as saying: “Our goal is to be world champions in November, and if we are to succeed then we must do better than we have done so far.” Team boss Stefano Domenicali agreed: “We expect a significant evolution that will bring us closer to the step we need. “The Spanish grand prix is definitely open, as is the championship. I say this because we believe.” |
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Leme: Massa ‘good’ driver in ‘very bad’ Ferrari(0) Well-known Brazilian commentator Reginaldo Leme has defended Felipe Massa, amid the Ferrari driver’s career crisis. Massa’s Ferrari seat hangs in the balance, and according to his boss Stefano Domenicali, he will have to improve in order to simply stay on the F1 grid with any team next year. But Leme has pointed the finger of blame at Ferrari’s struggling F2012 car. “It is very difficult to give an explanation for any driver’s bad phase,” Leme acknowledged on the Redacao Sportv programme. “The car is very bad. The fact that Alonso is always scoring (points) just shows that the Spaniard is the best driver of this generation. “No other driver, however good, could get anything out of that car. “I think that’s what’s happening with Massa,” said Leme. Massa will drive Ferrari’s heavily updated Barcelona-spec car at the Mugello test next Wednesday, while Alonso will drive on Tuesday and Thursday. Turning his attention to the 2012 championship, meanwhile, Reginaldo Leme said consistency is more important than ever before, with four separate teams having won races so far. “Look at Webber — he has been fourth four times and is third in the championship. Hamilton has been third three times and is right in contention.” |
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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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Alonso: ‘Super’ Massa has nothing to proveComments Off Fernando Alonso has backed his beleaguered teammate Felipe Massa. Massa is fighting to save his Ferrari seat, but his team boss Stefano Domenicali insists the Brazilian also “needs to improve” for the sake of his very “future in formula one”. On the other hand, the Maranello based team is more than enthralled with the occupant of the sister F2012, Fernando Alonso. In fact, Domenicali told El Mundo newspaper last weekend that Ferrari has a “moral obligation” to the Spaniard, that might also extend to his involvement “in the important issues”. One important issue is the identity of his 2013 teammate. On Massa, Alonso is quoted by El Pais newspaper after Massa finished ninth in Bahrain: “He had a great start, pulled away from the traffic and ran a super race. “But we didn’t discover this just now: Felipe has won in Bahrain twice. He doesn’t need to prove anything,” said Alonso. |
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French broadcaster TF1 not in BahrainComments Off Another television broadcaster has pulled out of this weekend’s Bahrain grand prix. It had already emerged that Sky Deutschland, MTV3 Finland and Japan’s Fuji TV would not be reporting from the scene of the race in the troubled island Kingdom. Now, it emerges that the travelling regulars for France’s TF1 are not in Bahrain either. The French-language RMC Sport reported that, like the other broadcasters, the decision was taken “because of the unstable situation” in Bahrain. It has also emerged that Stefano Mancini, the regular F1 correspondent for Italy’s La Stampa newspaper, had trouble entering Bahrain this week. He reported that he encountered the trouble, which ended when the FIA intervened directly, due to an interview he conducted last week with a Bahraini activist. “You work for a newspaper?” Mancini said, recalling what he was asked by the polite uniformed official. “Write the name,” the official said. “My name?” enquired Mancini. “No, the newspaper,” the official clarified. |
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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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Massa summoned to Maranello amid career crisisComments Off Amid his performance slump and rumours Sergio Perez will soon replace him, Ferrari’s struggling Felipe Massa has been summoned to Maranello. A report on the Italian team’s official website said there is “sorrow” within the team at witnessing the “particularly difficult time” being suffered by Ferrari’s Brazilian driver. While Fernando Alonso leads the drivers’ world championship at present, 30-year-old Massa is yet to record a race finish better than his fifteenth at Sepang. But amid the calls for Massa’s head, team boss Stefano Domenicali – recalling a similar situation after Malaysia in 2008 – said his driver has the ability to react now. “The papers (in 2008) were demanding his immediate replacement and he managed to react in the best way possible, thanks to support from the team, which saw him win two of the next three races,” said the Italian. “Felipe has changed his plans and, instead of heading home to see his family in Brazil, he will be in Maranello tomorrow to work alongside the engineers to calmly analyse everything that happened in these past two races, trying to identify why he was not able to deliver what he is capable of,” added Domenicali. “That’s the right spirit and we are here, ready to help him.” |
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Alonso F1′s shock leader at soggy SepangComments Off Fernando Alonso is F1′s shock world championship leader, after Malaysian rain shook up the order at Sepang. “It’s a tough time for us at the moment, but we will remember this day,” said the Ferrari driver, who finished ahead of another surprise podium-sitter, Sauber’s Sergio Perez. The young Mexican was catching Alonso at a rate of knots when he made a mistake. “I think the win was possible,” Perez, who has been linked with Felipe Massa’s works Ferrari seat, said after beating the back-to-back 2012 polesitter Lewis Hamilton. Former Toro Rosso driver and BBC radio commentator Jaime Alguersuari, however, was not overly impressed. “The team did a fantastic strategy to put Perez on the right tyres at the right moment. For me, that’s it,” said the Spaniard. Back-to-back world champion Sebastian Vettel had an horror Sunday, cutting a tyre whilst passing an HRT and eventually retiring with what Red Bull described on the radio as an “emergency” technical problem. The German lies sixth in the drivers’ world championship, four points behind Perez and 17 off the lead. Title leader Alonso, meanwhile, is not overly happy with the rain-soaked win. “I think it changes nothing,” he said. “We are in a position that we do not want, fighting to get into Q3.” Team boss Stefano Domenicali agreed: “I hope this helps the people at home to push, but we were not stupid yesterday and we are not phenomenal today.” The Italian also denied that Perez’s debut podium is the ideal time to immediately pluck the Mexican from Sauber and put him in struggling Felipe Massa’s red car. “Not true, not true,” Domenicali told British Sky television. |
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Ferrari glass ‘half full’ but no improvement yetComments Off Fernando Alonso kept up a positive outlook on Sunday despite some Italian newspapers describing Ferrari’s situation as a “crisis”. “After the way qualifying went, ending up with ten points behind the top two teams is good news,” he is quoted by La Gazzetta dello Sport. The sports daily Marca described the attitude as Alonso “seeing the glass half-full”. “For the Ferrari fans I say ‘wait a few races’,” former F1 driver Jarno Trulli told Italy’s Rai Uno television. “Alonso managed to do something good but Ferrari needs to react, immediately,” the Italian, who was Alonso’s Renault teammate in 2004, added. Team boss Stefano Domenicali, however, told Finnish MTV3 television that the F2012 will not be in better shape for ‘a few races’ at least. Alonso agreed that, with one week between Australia and Malaysia, “We will have almost exactly the same car” at the Sepang circuit this weekend. Added Domenicali: “We know what needs to be improved, but it can’t be done overnight.” Former F1 driver Jaime Alguersuari remarked that the improvement in Alonso’s pace between Saturday and Sunday was significant. “The opposite of Mercedes,” he told AS newspaper. “I think Alonso once again showed his quality, although clearly they have much work ahead. “A driver can only win with the best car, but what he can do is demonstrate his quality with a good or a bad car,” he added. It is on that final point that the pressure on Felipe Massa merely increased in Australia, as the Brazilian had a disastrously poor weekend from start to finish. “We need to get behind him now as it’s clear he’s under pressure,” Domenicali told Gazzetta dello Sport. “When people find themselves under pressure you have to find a way to relieve that pressure so they are free to express themselves in the way they can. “I’ve asked his engineers to work closely with him and analyse the data so they can offer their support,” he added. |
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Montezemolo denies heads to roll in Ferrari crisisComments Off Luca di Montezemolo insists heads will not roll, as Ferrari looks set to race into the 2012 season without the chance of a podium. But also feeling the pressure is team boss Stefano Domenicali, who said at the weekend that he has “the support of president Montezemolo”. “I am not the one who designs the car: my task is to give my people everything they need in terms of organisation and structure,” said the Italian. But Montezemolo denied that Ferrari will react in arguably typical fashion by making sweeping changes. “I’ve always given my staff time and trust,” he told La Gazzetta dello Sport. “We have not even begun and already you’re putting the people in doubt? “Let’s not have that talk,” insisted the Ferrari president. He admitted the F2012 has untapped potential. “There are too few tests and unfortunately they are in public. But I would still wait before drawing conclusions about the title fight. “According to the drivers, the F2012 has some negative elements, but also some positive. The problems have been identified and I hope they can be fixed quickly,” he added. |
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Ecclestone: Kubica would have replaced MassaComments Off If not for Robert Kubica’s predicament, Felipe Massa would have lost his Ferrari seat by now. He told Austria’s Der Spiegel that Kubica, still recovering from horror injuries sustained in a rally crash in February last year, would have replace the struggling Brazilian Massa. “I think, for them (Ferrari), it’s a question of alternatives,” said Ecclestone. “Who, of those available to them, are better than Massa? “I am very confident that Robert Kubica would be sitting in that Ferrari now if a year ago he would not have had that horrible rally accident,” the 81-year-old opined. Italy’s Rallyemotion reports that Kubica tested a Skoda Fabia rally car last Thursday in Liguria. Meanwhile, Ecclestone backed Ferrari boss Stefano Domenicali, amid expectations the famous Maranello based team will struggle early in 2012. “Ferrari’s problems have nothing to do with the leadership,” he said. “The problems are on the technical side. But instead of firing someone, they should buy someone: Adrian Newey.” |
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Trulli reveals Ferrari offerComments Off Jarno Trulli has revealed he was offered a seat at Ferrari some years ago. 2004 Monaco grand prix winner Trulli, 37, drove since 1997 for Minardi, Prost, Jordan, Renault and Caterham’s former guise Lotus. Writing in his New York Times blog, correspondent Brad Spurgeon said Trulli was made the Ferrari offer while he was racing for Toyota between 2005 and 2009. Trulli reportedly told Italy’s Autosprint magazine that Ferrari team principal Stefano Domenicali’s predecessor, the now FIA president Jean Todt, made him the offer. “Nobody knows this, but at this point I think I can publicly thank Jean Todt for having been one of the few top team managers to consider me during my career,” he said. “I won’t tell you when exactly — I was racing for Toyota and I was doing very well. But I had signed a rather long contract with the Japanese, and in my career I’ve always honoured my commitments. “In 15 years of F1 I’ve never needed lawyers,” added Trulli. Trulli left Renault for Toyota at the end of the 2004 season, driving for the carmaker until it pulled out of formula one at the end of 2009. Rubens Barrichello left Ferrari at the end of 2005, replaced by Felipe Massa. Michael Schumacher retired a year later, replaced by Kimi Raikkonen. At Ferrari, Frenchman Todt handed over to Domenicali at the end of 2007. |
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