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Kovalainen wants midfield push for Caterham(0) Heikki Kovalainen is looking for Caterham to move into the midfield, according to his new management company. Having handled his own career in the wake of Flavio Briatore’s demise, Finn Kovalainen recently signed up with IMG, the sports and entertainment management giant. The 30-year-old has rebuilt his reputation since 2010 in the wake of mixed tenures for top teams Renault and McLaren. According to IMG Motorsport’s head of clients Martin Anayi, Kovalainen is now regarded by formula one team bosses up and down pitlane as among the top best drivers. “He is a great guy,” Anayi is quoted by Finland’s Turun Sanomat newspaper. “Heikki’s potential is obvious and he definitely wants to succeed.” There have been rumblings in the paddock that Kovalainen is disappointed that, despite being consistently the best of F1′s new teams since 2010, Caterham is yet to break into the midfield. “This is only the team’s third season, so there are still some growing paints,” IMG’s Anayi acknowledged. “Heikki has a strong desire to compete, and not just with his teammate Vitaly Petrov. The team’s boss Tony Fernandes wants to get in with the middle group. “This means that the team needs to regularly get into the Q2 stage of qualifying and in the race be aiming for the points,” he insisted. |
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Kovalainen: Caterham ‘too slow’(0) Heikki Kovalainen has admitted some disappointment about Caterham’s progress in 2012. In its third season of formula one, and despite being clearly more impressive than its direct rivals Marussia and HRT, the Tony Fernandes-led team intended to take a step forwards this year. Caterham took some upgrades to the Mugello test last week, but according to Finnish sources Turun Sanomat and MTV3, not all of them worked. “The car has a pretty good balance, but the lap times are not good enough,” Finnish driver Kovalainen is quoted as saying. “It’s good to drive but it’s just too slow,” he insisted. “We did not get all the updates to work as we had hoped, so in Spain we have only some things that are new,” added Kovalainen. The team is yet to score a point. |
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Barrichello: Oval driving ‘very different’ to F1(0) Nineteen years of formula one did not prepare Rubens Barrichello for his first taste of driving an Indycar on a high speed oval. The former Ferrari driver, who switched categories for the 2012 season after losing his Williams race seat, tested at the Texas Motor Speedway on Monday. “It was bloody fast,” he is quoted by the Associated Press, “and very, very much different than anything I have ever tried. “I’ve had places that in formula one that they say ‘Oh, it’s almost flat and it’s a big corner and it’s a big challenge’. But the walls were never so close,” the 39-year-old Brazilian enthused. Barrichello’s teammate Tony Kanaan admitted it was “fun” and a rare sight to see his close friend “nervous” prior to getting into a racing car. “It was quite exciting to see how excited he got, and how happy he got out of the car saying how awesome it is,” he said. |
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Fernandes rues lack of Malaysian support(0) Tony Fernandes has admitted he would have liked corporate Malaysia to have backed his formula one team. The Malaysian entrepreneur founded a UK based start-up team in 2010, calling it Team Lotus before a bitter spat developed with the Lotus name’s owner Proton. “While I was building a formula one team, I was being sued by my own countrymen,” he told The Star newspaper. “We’re the only true formula one team developed in Malaysia.” Now called Caterham, the team’s only Malaysian sponsorship is from AirAsia — Fernandes’ own low-cost airline. “Never mind that we were not sponsored (by Malaysia), that’s a company’s prerogative,” he said. “But, we were sued.” Some have accused Caterham of not having progressed much since 2010, but Fernandes strongly disagrees. “Two years ago we had nothing. We’re now 1.5 seconds away from Red Bull who are the world champions. We’re closing the gap. “You can’t build Rome in a day,” he insisted. |
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Caterham has ‘blown away’ F1 rivalsComments Off Tony Fernandes has given a strident defence of his formula one team, Caterham. The former Team Lotus outfit, headed by the cheery Malaysian entrepreneur Fernandes, entered its third season with high hopes it was set to join the midfield mix. Instead, the green cars – whilst still the cream of the backmarker group – are still better only than fellow stragglers Marussia and HRT. The Finnish broadcaster MTV3′s well-known analyst Mika Salo has advised lead driver Heikki Kovalainen to therefore quit Caterham at the end of 2012. “Something has been wrong with the car,” Kovalainen is quoted as saying by Turun Sanomat newspaper this week. “We need to see what is not right.” Fernandes, meanwhile, is looking fervently on the bright side, insisting Caterham has done markedly better than F1′s other 2010 start-ups. “We are competitive,” he told the Sun, reminding that Caterham was the last 2010 team given its official entry by the FIA a few years ago. “We’ve blown away Marussia and HRT when in actual fact they have been there six months longer,” insisted Fernandes. “We are half a second away from the established midfield … you must remember that this team is only two years old. “When I started, we were nine seconds away from the front. Last year we were about four seconds away from Red Bull. “This year, on certain laps, we lapped at the same pace as them. So I am very happy and I am strengthening the team all the time,” he added. But one of Caterham’s direct rivals, HRT, is looking to make a major step forwards this weekend in China, having struggled recently in the wake of team supremo Colin Kolles’ departure. “We come into this grand prix having had much more time to prepare the cars,” Pedro de la Rosa is quoted by the Spanish news agency EFE. “We will bring small improvements to China but what we really need is the cars back in Europe and then the team can concentrate at the (new headquarters) Caja Magica. “Step by step we will improve,” said the Spanish driver. |
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Caterham’s midfield bid not dead yetComments Off Caterham’s hopes of pushing into the midfield in 2012 are not dead yet. “We have obviously improved our pace relative to our 2011 speed,” the Malaysian businessman said. “But the teams ahead have also improved, so even though we are closer than this time last year we still have work to do to bridge the gap in qualifying,” he added. Fernandes insists, however, that the race pace shown by Heikki Kovalainen and Vitaly Petrov in Melbourne last weekend was “on a par” with some other teams. Former F1 driver and Finnish commentator Mika Salo, however, is not impressed. “The Caterham car is neither fast nor reliable,” he told MTV3. |
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Caterham preview the Malaysian GPComments Off
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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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Petrov ‘as good as Trulli’ says Caterham bossComments Off Caterham’s team boss insists Vitaly Petrov is just as good as the experienced grand prix winner he replaced. “I think he (Petrov) is as good a driver as Trulli, but he obviously brings a Russian commercial element,” Fernandes told the US cable news channel CNN. “It gives us the ability to exploit commercial opportunities in Russia. We’ve watched Petrov very closely. He brings in sponsorship. He’s competent enough to be a second driver,” he added. Fernandes, who also heads the Malaysian airline AirAsia and the English premier league club Queens Park Rangers, said Caterham is once again targeting tenth place in the constructors’ championship for 2012. “We want to get into the midfield,” he confirmed. “We said it’s going to take us two years, we want to be tenth then we want to be racing. “And looking at the times right now, we’re there or thereabouts. Maybe half a second, a second away from the midfield pack.” |
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Two F1 journalists are Caterham board directorsComments Off Two formula one journalists are on the board of the Caterham Group, the parent company of the Tony Fernandes-led team. UK Companies House records show that Joe Saward and David Tremayne were appointed as directors just nine days later. In the company filing, Briton Saward’s occupation is listed as “journalist/consultant”. “The nature of Saward and Tremayne’s roles in Caterham are as yet unknown, but one would assume Joe will announce something on his popular F1 blog during the next few days,” Steve Davies, of the skiddmark.com website, said. |
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Petrov could stay at Caterham beyond 2012(1) Vitaly Petrov could stay at the Caterham team beyond 2012, the Russian’s manager said on Friday. On the face of it, the deal is not a good look for Petrov, having displaced one of F1′s most experienced drivers – and a grand prix winner – on the back of his sponsors’ purse. Moreover, it also means there is no Italian on the F1 grid for the first time in decades. “Vitaly is thinking about his place in formula one, and the rest is a question to the team,” insisted Petrov’s manager Oksana Kosachenko. Team boss Tony Fernandes hinted in Caterham’s media statement on Friday that the Petrov deal is indeed fueled by the world’s economic situation. So does that mean he is a ‘pay-driver’, and Heikki Kovalainen the clear number one? “As far as I know,” Kosachenko said, “we’re having absolutely equal status.” She revealed that the initial contract is for one year only, but that could change. “At the moment we’re discussing that,” Kosachenko is quoted by the Ria Novosti news agency. Earlier, she admitted that Bernie Ecclestone – perhaps because he is scheduling an inaugural Russian grand prix for 2014 – was trying to help Petrov find a seat this season. “He was talking to me, he was trying to assist,” Kosachenko said on Friday, insisting that the eventual contract was “absolutely an internal deal” between Petrov and Caterham. “No one else involved,” she clarified. |
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Caterham dumps Trulli for PetrovComments Off Caterham on Friday finally confirmed speculation that Vitaly Petrov will replace Jarno Trulli in 2012. 37-year-old Italian Trulli, permanently in F1 since 1997 and the 2004 Monaco grand prix winner, said mere days ago that he expected to race this season. He tested Caterham’s 2012 car at Jerez last week. “It was not an easy decision to bring Vitaly in to replace Jarno, but it was one we made to ensure that we give fresh impetus across the whole team and with a realistic eye on the global economic market,” said team boss Tony Fernandes. The Malaysian businessman said an “agreement” was reached with Trulli to end his contract, “but he will always be part of our family”. “I understand the decision the team has made and I want to wish to the whole team the very best of luck for the season ahead,” said the former Minardi, Prost, Jordan, Renault and Toyota driver. Petrov, 27, had a seat fitting at Caterham’s Hingham factory on Friday and will test the car in Barcelona next week. |
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Gascoyne to attend ‘most’ races in new Caterham role(1) Mike Gascoyne has handed over day-to-day control of the Caterham team’s technical operations. That group now involves a GP2 team as well as the niche Caterham road car company, which was acquired by Malaysian millionaire Fernandes last year to solve the Lotus naming dispute. The news means Mark Smith will “lead the F1 team’s technical division day to day and will increase his presence at races”, a media statement read. Caterham said Gascoyne, formerly with Renault and Toyota, “will continue to attend races”, “adding his wealth of experience and knowledge to the team when it is required.” Gascoyne clarified on Twitter that he will be at “most” grands prix. “Mark Smith is exactly the right person to step up to the broader role he will now be taking on in the F1 team,” the statement quoted him as saying. |
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Barrichello to announce Indy future next weekComments Off Rubens Barrichello is set to decide next week whether he will switch from formula one to the Indycar series for 2012. “There is a lot going on, we have spoken with many people and there are things to be resolved, including the family aspect,” the 39-year-old told radio Bandeirantes on Tuesday. “There is great anticipation and if everything goes well I think we can make the announcement of the decision early next week,” added Barrichello. “I’m sure anyone who knows me can see in my eyes what I want. The first race is March 25 and there is no time to waste. “If we want to be in a competitive way, everything has to be right and that means sponsorship, team, family — everything.” Barrichello’s first F1 team boss, however – Eddie Jordan – has urged the likeable Brazilian to forego the Indycar opportunity. “I love Rubens — our story began when he was only 19,” the Irishman is quoted by Globo. “I love his family, his parents, and I think he should retire with dignity.” Barrichello’s contemporary David Coulthard, however, said: “I wish him luck in the United States. We had a great relationship throughout my career and I know how passionate he is about racing.” But fellow Brazilian Emerson Fittipaldi warned of the dangers of American oval racing. “Today, Indy is different to when I drove — the risk is higher but it is a risk that he knows he will need to take. “Still, I think he can have fun doing what he likes,” said the former series, F1 and Indy 500 winner. |
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Toro Rosso counts Caterham among 2012 rivalsComments Off Toro Rosso counts Caterham – the 2010 start-up team that has failed to score a single point since inception – among its close rivals for 2012. “Our direct competitors are Sauber, Force India and Caterham,” the Faenza based team’s boss Franz Tost is quoted by autohebdo.fr. Formerly Lotus, the Tony Fernandes-led Caterham team has been the best of the new 2010 teams including Marussia (nee Virgin) and HRT. “Caterham has managed to build a good infrastructure,” Tost is quoted as saying. “They have the Renault engine and a KERS from Red Bull and it means their package is good. “They have two experienced drivers and I expect they will become our rivals. “Our goal is to take seventh place in the championship — we must do better than last year,” added Tost. |
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