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Vettel wins, takes title lead in BahrainComments Off F1′s surprise 2012 season has kept on bubbling in Bahrain. It is a measure of the excitement and unpredictability of the new championship that, just days after some media said the reigning title winner was in ‘crisis’, Sebastian Vettel won from pole and took the lead of the 2012 points standings. But the German only narrowly beat the returning 2009 world champion Kimi Raikkonen, with Lotus also completing the surprise podium as Romain Grosjean sampled the sport’s prestigious rostrum for the very first time. Vettel leads the championship by 4 points from Lewis Hamilton, who finished just eighth. Red Bull also leads the constructors’ chase, by 9 points from McLaren. Vettel is the fourth different winner in F1′s four races so far this year, following Jenson Button, Fernando Alonso and Nico Rosberg. It is his first win since India last year. “How many good stories can we have in formula one in terms of the racing?” David Coulthard said on BBC television. “We’re only four races in and we’ve had such a mix of winners.” |
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Schumacher could be Mercedes’ next winnerComments Off Michael Schumacher could be the next silver-clad driver who takes a Mercedes to the top step of the podium. His teammate Nico Rosberg dominated the Shanghai weekend and, at his 111th attempt, finally broke through with a maiden pole and win. The much-younger German also dominated Schumacher, the 43-year-old, at Mercedes in the last two years — ever since the seven time world champion returned to formula one in 2010. But former Benetton and Ferrari title winner Schumacher appears much more on Rosberg’s pace this season, and in fact even solidly outqualified his 26-year-old teammate in Australia and Malaysia. “It’s simple,” Schumacher told Brazil’s O Estado de S.Paulo. “The way I can drive this car is much more how I have driven a car throughout my whole life. “If you look at my driving today and compare with ten years ago, not much has changed,” said the famous German. “But if you look at 2010 and 2011, my arms never stopped working. “It wasn’t my way to drive,” insisted Schumacher. Having followed Rosberg early in the Chinese grand prix – before his retirement – Schumacher admitted that he could not quite match the leading pace. But, despite not standing on a podium even once since his F1 comeback, he has now smelled that a victory is close. “It will be the same feeling as when I went to the podium for the first time with Benetton, and Ferrari,” Schumacher predicted. “When I started with those teams, we were far away from being able to think about it. But after a lot of work, I would say years – just as now with Mercedes – we had reached the stage of being able to fight. “Most people have no idea how many things need to be changed, how much effort and investment is required. At 43 I’m going through all of this again, but it’s because I really love what I do.” Schumacher’s Mercedes contract expires at the end of this year. “You might not believe it,” he responded, “but I’m so focused on developing this car that I don’t think about it. “Later on in the season, of course, it’s inevitable. “Of course it gives me great pleasure that we are starting to see the results of this great work. I am still perfectly capable of winning in formula one,” Schumacher insisted. |
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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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Raikkonen return impresses champions Lauda, FittipaldiComments Off Two former champions have admitted they are impressed with how Kimi Raikkonen has re-adjusted to formula one after two years off the grid. Niki Lauda, the plain-speaking triple world champion, hailed F1′s 2007 title winner for driving “as though he had never been away” in the early phase of his return this season, according to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. Emerson Fittipaldi, the double champion of the 70s, agrees. “I am surprised that it has taken no time for Kimi to be back at the top of his form,” said the Brazilian. “Michael Schumacher is on form this year too, but it took him two years to get back in the groove. Kimi was on it from the very first test,” he added. Fittipaldi, meanwhile, had some advice for Raikkonen’s Lotus teammate Romain Grosjean, who despite showing promise is yet to see the chequered flag in 2012 after a collision in Melbourne and a spin in Malaysia. “(It’s) the same advice I’d give any driver, especially a young one: first you have to finish, then you can finish first,” he said. |
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Angry Vettel calls Karthikeyan a ‘cucumber’Comments Off World champion Sebastian Vettel didn’t just criticise Narain Karthikeyan after their clash in Malaysia — he called the Indian driver a vegetable. The back-to-back title winner’s points hopes went up in flailing Pirelli rubber towards the end of the rain-affected Sepang race following contact with Karthikeyan’s back-of-the-field HRT. “He was off the track. In my view, it was over,” Red Bull driver Vettel, now 17 points behind the championship lead after just two races, said on German RTL television. “As in real life, there are a few cucumbers on the road,” the German frowned. “It’s extremely frustrating, because in a chaotic race where I lost the radio right at the beginning, a fourth place would have been satisfactory.” More broadly, Vettel admits Red Bull has work to do. Asked about the current pecking order in 2012, he said: “We are somewhere in the middle. “(Ferrari’s) Fernando (Alonso) did a good race today but the key was to always come into the pits at the right time. “We have work to do, no doubt,” added Vettel. |
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Alonso has ‘samurai’ tattooComments Off Fernando Alonso has kicked off the new 2012 season with a ‘Samurai’ tattoo on his neck and back, Marca sports newspaper reports. Marca said the Spaniard and two-time title winner was inspired by the Hagakure, the spiritual guide written by 18th century samurai Yamamoto Tsunetomo. The report said most of Alonso’s tattoo is on his back. |
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Coulthard worried Hamilton already beatenComments Off After putting his tumultuous 2011 season behind him, Lewis Hamilton has kicked off this year’s world champion in downbeat mood. But after his teammate Jenson Button beat him in the 2011 standings, Hamilton could not hide his disappointment on Sunday when the 2009 title winner also beat him to the first corner in Melbourne, before Button and reigning champion Sebastian Vettel filled the top two podium spots. “I just struggled out there,” confused pole-sitter Hamilton said afterwards. David Coulthard, the former long-time McLaren driver and now paddock analyst, expressed concern about Hamilton’s “striking” post-race body-language and “stony-faced” performance on the podium. “Has it (Button’s win) knocked Lewis?” he wondered in his Telegraph column. Many in F1 are astonished by how Button, described as having entered Hamilton’s “lion’s den” at McLaren two years ago, is now being described by the famous British team as its title-winning hope. “People underestimate him,” said team boss Martin Whitmarsh. “He’s such a calm, mature and easygoing fellow that people don’t realise necessarily the hunger that’s in him to compete and to win. “He must now believe he’s in a good chance of a proper title run this year and providing we can continue to improve the car, not make mistakes, be reliable there’s no reason why he can’t do that,” he added. On Hamilton’s side of the garage, meanwhile, is a downcast driver and an expiring contract. “On his day, Lewis is unbeatable, and yet I suspect McLaren are wondering whether or not they want to keep him, because he brings so much baggage with him,” another former McLaren driver-turned commentator, Martin Brundle, told April’s Motor Sport magazine. As for Whitmarsh, McLaren’s team principal insists there is no concern yet that Hamilton has already re-entered another spiral of despair so early in 2012. Downplaying Hamilton’s post-race mood in Australia, he said: “When he starts getting happy with being third, or beaten by his teammate, then he won’t be the Lewis we all love and admire.” |
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World champions assess Hamilton’s 2012 so farComments Off A former world champion has dealt Lewis Hamilton a mild rebuke after the Briton refused to appear at Adrian Sutil’s assault trial. Sutil’s father has called the 2008 world champion “pathetic” while the former Force India driver himself described Hamilton as a “coward”. “I don’t know whether you’d call him a coward,” 1980 title winner Alan Jones told GMM, “but I don’t know whether I’d like to have him in the trenches with me.” Hamilton, who recently reunited with his girlfriend Nicole, had a tumultuous 2011 season and so this year will be accompanied to races by experienced manager Didier Coton. When involved with Mika Hakkinen’s career, Coton worked for the management company headed by Keke Rosberg. “In the past, Lewis has certainly made mistakes in the professional organisation of his life,” Rosberg, backing the changes Hamilton is making, commented to the Finnish broadcaster MTV3. “You can’t go flying every other week to America when you’re making a serious job of being a formula one driver,” he said. Keke Rosberg also questioned a recent claim made by the 27-year-old Briton. “He says he wants to win all the races this season. That’s quite a claim. “I would think Jenson Button wonders how he will do it when he will probably win a few races in the same car,” said Rosberg. |
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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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Lauda: Webber ‘pushes Vettel hard enough’Comments Off Keeping Mark Webber alongside new back-to-back world champion Sebastian Vettel for 2012 was the right choice. Webber, after mounting a close championship challenge in 2010, has failed to win a single grand prix this season compared to early title winner Vettel’s nine in an identical Red Bull. But pundit Lauda backs the move to renew his deal. “On a good day Mark is really fast and pushes Sebastian hard enough to keep the (car) development moving on,” he told Austrian television Servus TV. “I see it as a very good (driver) combination,” added Lauda. |
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Webber admits ‘no choice’ but Red Bull stayComments Off Mark Webber has vowed to improve despite now sharing a team garage with F1′s youngest ever double world champion. Less than a year ago, the Australian arrived at the season finale as a favourite for the championship, amid rumours he might be snapped up by Ferrari. But ten days into October of 2011, his teammate Sebastian Vettel is the back-to-back title winner. “We have had some problems but, ultimately, the problem is that I have not been fast enough or consistent enough to fight for wins with Sebastian,” admitted the 35-year-old. Webber said he has struggled to adapt to the Pirelli tyres and make good race starts but “It’s true that I have struggled with Seb”, he told the Spanish newspaper El Pais. “He has not had any problems with the tyres, with getting up and running at a good pace without destroying them. I have to improve,” said Webber. El Pais also reminded Webber that, last year amid the Silverstone front wing saga, he said that if he knew he was subordinate to his teammate, he would not sign a new deal. “What has changed to make you sign for another season?” asked the newspaper. Webber answered: “I re-signed because I had no choice.” But he denied that his single year deal is making him nervous, with drivers like Fernando Alonso and now Jenson Button locked into contracts for the long term. “They are younger than me, but it doesn’t worry me too much,” insisted Webber. “You can sign for two or three years but I am sure that Jenson and Fernando have clauses to opt out if they don’t have competitive cars.” And he insists he is not necessarily now Vettel’s ‘number 2′. “Well, both this year and last year we started on equal terms but it ended well for Sebastian. This time I have just been fighting to win races. “I have to be prepared because, maybe, he’s not going to like the new car or is not comfortable with it,” said Webber. But he acknowledged that Vettel is likely to remain up to speed because the RB8 “is going to be very similar to what we have now”. |
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Marko eyes Vettel contract extension to 2016Comments Off Red Bull has expressed the wish to extend Sebastian Vettel’s contract for a further two years. But Dr Helmut Marko has revealed to Sport Bild that he wants to add a further two seasons to the contract. “We made a contract with Sebastian to 2014 because both sides assumed that we would have two years together under the new engine rules. That has now changed,” said the Austrian. Marko is referring to the fact that, subsequent to the signing of Vettel’s 2014 deal, F1 decided to delay the debut of the new engine regulations from 2013 to 2014. “That is why we have also extended the agreement with our engine supplier Renault to 2016,” he explained. Vettel has expressed the desire to one day switch to Ferrari or Mercedes, but Sport Bild quotes him as sounding open to extending his Red Bull stay beyond 2014. “I feel very, very comfortable where I am at the moment and there is no reason to change. We’re like a family,” said the German. |
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Vettel to receive ‘Kinky Kylie’ as title presentComments Off Red Bull insists the champagne is not yet on ice, but the team’s owner has already decided what present he will be giving Sebastian Vettel for winning the 2011 world championship. In 2010, when German Vettel became F1′s youngest ever title winner, Mateschitz delivered the Adrian Newey-inked RB6 to his home in Switzerland. Red Bull’s team management are coy over the 24-year-old’s chances of wrapping up a second consecutive championship in Singapore this weekend, but billionaire Mateschitz is more honest. “We anticipate that, once again, we will achieve both of the titles this year”, said the famously low-profile Austrian, 67. He has high praise for Vettel, who enters this weekend’s Singapore night race with a lead so big that his only championship rivals have already given up the fight. “The fact that Sebastian is highly capable, we knew,” said Mateschitz. “That he would be able to deliver it so consistently over a long time has surprised many people.” Bild newspaper said Vettel’s championship present, the RB7 chassis that he has unofficially dubbed ‘Kinky Kylie’ – but minus a EUR 200,000 Renault engine – is worth almost a million euros. “Slowly, his garage in Switzerland is becoming too small,” confirmed Red Bull driver manager Dr Helmut Marko. So what does Vettel think about his championship present? “I am not thinking about that because I haven’t won anything yet,” said the driver at Zurich airport before boarding a flight to Singapore. Vettel told the German-language Eurosport that he is not counting on celebrating his second title this weekend. “When it happens does not matter. As long as we are still first after the final race, that will be ok,” he said. The RB7′s designer Newey insisted that Vettel will not be playing a points-counting game under the Singapore lights. “Seb doesn’t want to cruise to the world championship, he really wants to earn it,” the Briton told The Sun newspaper. |
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Vettel only fourth with speed of F1 successComments Off Sebastian Vettel’s rise to the top of formula one has been meteoric, but three other grand prix drivers achieved even more in their first 73 races. Vettel, 23, is the youngest ever race and title winner in F1 history and very likely to add a second consecutive championship to his impressive tally in 2011. But in terms of how much he has achieved in his first 73 grands prix, Sir Jackie Stewart ranks slightly higher with his 18 race wins and two titles in the same period. Vettel, by comparison, has only one title and 16 wins. Achieving even more than Stewart in the 73-race period was Michael Schumacher, who had 19 wins and two titles. And Damon Hill tops that list, amassing a single championship but no fewer than 21 wins within 73 races — an almost 30 per cent strike record. However, Vettel has achieved more in his career so far than had Alain Prost, Lewis Hamilton, Niki Lauda, Fernando Alonso and Kimi Raikkonen in the same period, while the great Ayrton Senna in his first 73 races won just 13 times and had failed to secure a title. Nigel Mansell, meanwhile, only won his first grand prix at the 72nd attempt, while Mika Hakkinen was approaching his 100th race before he finally broke through at Jerez in 1997. |
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Vettel breaks ’62-year-old’ Barrichello’s Top Gear recordComments Off Sebastian Vettel has broken yet another record. The flying lap, called ‘Star in a Reasonably Priced Car, takes place at the BBC show’s UK test track with F1 drivers at the wheel of a Suzuki Liana. Last year, Barrichello leapt to the top of the times by beating previous laps set by mystery Top Gear driver The Stig as well as the likes of Nigel Mansell, Lewis Hamilton and Mark Webber. But a few days before the British grand prix, Vettel broke that record by 3 tenths. “Why are we all surprised,” host Jeremy Clarkson joked, “that he’s faster than a 62-year-old Brazilian?” |
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