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Ross Brawn: F1 ‘may regret’ FOTA split(0) Mercedes is committed to the crumbling teams association FOTA, team boss Ross Brawn insists. It is rumoured Lotus could be the next to go. But McLaren’s Martin Whitmarsh remains the chairman, and media outlets on Wednesday quoted Mercedes’ Brawn as saying the German marque remains “very committed” to FOTA. “We believe it’s a great shame that we’ve lost some of the members from FOTA because I think we may live ultimately to regret that,” he is quoted by Sky Sports. Contemplating the reasons for the FOTA split, Brawn explained: “When there is outside pressure it pushed FOTA together. Now, there is not so much, the natural competitiveness of the teams is pushing it apart a bit. “I hope we don’t regret it … because one of the objectives was to find the right solutions for F1, not just for individual teams.” |
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Expert thinks Lotus playing down chassis crisis(0) Lotus is grappling with a major problem less than one month before the start of the 2012 season. “We’ll put the right measures in place and we will be able to fix the problem before next week,” said technical director James Allison. But Gary Anderson, formerly the designer of Jordan and Jaguar cars, believes Lotus is playing down the problem. “You would have thought they could have fixed it overnight — chassis are made of carbon fibre composite so you’d be looking to bond new strengthening parts on,” he told the BBC. “In my experience, if you can’t do it in 24 hours, I don’t think you can do it at all. I wouldn’t be surprised if this meant they needed a new chassis, which would make it touch and go for the first race.” Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport thinks Lotus did not experience the fundamental problem at Jerez last week because the Circuit de Catalunya is a much more demanding circuit. Meanwhile, Red Bull’s world champion Sebastian Vettel was Tuesday’s fastest as the second of three group tests began, but he admitted Lewis Hamilton – in the new McLaren – was also impressive. “Ferrari is a bit of a secret at this stage and nobody knows whether they are really good or really bad,” admitted the German. |
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Toro Rosso’s driver shakeup too late(1) Jaime Alguersuari has told his fans he “will return” to formula one despite not having a seat on the 2012 grid. A Barcelona native, the 21-year-old’s fans showed their support by displaying banners as the Circuit de Catalunya test began on Tuesday. “I did nothing wrong, but I wasn’t killed either,” Alguersuari told the Italian magazine Autosprint. “I’m only 21 and I did my best with the equipment I had.” One of the men who replaced Alguersuari, Daniel Ricciardo, backed Red Bull’s decision to make a clean-sweep of the Toro Rosso lineup for 2012. “The only reason they kick you out is if you are not performing. And then you probably don’t deserve to be world champion,” the Australian is quoted by The Sun newspaper. “That’s just the business we’re in.” But Keke Rosberg, the 1982 world champion and Mercedes driver Nico’s father, criticised Red Bull for not giving Alguersuari a fair chance. “They (Alguersuari and Buemi) had been there for three years and they (Red Bull) didn’t think they would go all the way to the top, so I understand if Red Bull wants to do something else. “What I don’t understand is why the decision was made so late, when there was not anything else available for them. “If someone says in June that they no longer need your services the following year, that’s fair. Then you have the time to find a new job. “Buemi would probably have found something, if he’d have had more time,” added Rosberg. |
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Bottas: Renault engine better than Cosworth(0) Valtteri Bottas has given some insight into Williams’ decision to switch to Renault power for this year. But for 2012 the Grove based team has switched to Renault, the maker of world champion Red Bull’s engines, as well as fellow customers Lotus and Caterham. “The Renault engine is more powerful,” revealed Williams’ test driver Bottas. “It is also smaller in size, which is good for the aerodynamics, and has a lower fuel consumption,” he told the MTV3 broadcaster. The 22-year-old Finn, who is managed by Williams co-owner Toto Wolff, will drive the FW34 on Wednesday at the Barcelona test. He will also contest 15 of this season’s Friday morning practice sessions. “This season will definitely be better than the last,” said Bottas, “when it was Williams’ poorest in history.” Cosworth still supplies the struggling Marussia and HRT teams. |
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Mercedes wing innovation called ‘W-duct’(0) Paddock insiders already have a name for Mercedes’ new front wing innovation — ‘W-duct’. The Finnish broadcaster MTV3, describing the system as ‘W-duct’, has provided some detail as to how it works. When the car is being driven in a straight line, air flows into the tip of the silver car’s nose and is dispersed in a W-like pattern across the length of the front wing. But when the car is cornering, the air flows more predominantly to one side or the other, improving the balance and handling. Unlike the driver-operated rear wing F-duct, which was banned for 2011, Mercedes’ system is entirely passive and requires no moving parts, and is therefore legal. Meanwhile, team boss Ross Brawn on Tuesday defended Mercedes’ strategy of employing numerous technical bosses, including Aldo Costa, Bob Bell and Geoff Willis. “How it works is a mystery to me,” Red Bull’s Dr Helmut Marko told Die Welt newspaper, “but Mercedes must know what they’re doing.” |
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Trulli reveals Ferrari offer(0) 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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Mercedes eyes new two-year deal for Schumacher(0) Mercedes is eyeing a new two-year contract extension for Michael Schumacher, according to the major German newspaper Bild. “Bild knows that Mercedes wants to keep him,” said the newspaper, after the Brackley based team’s new W03 car was launched in Barcelona. The report said Mercedes has decided to offer Schumacher, 43, a new two-year deal through 2014. “Before we talk to any other candidate, our first contact will definitely be Michael,” confirmed team boss Ross Brawn. Schumacher commented: “I’ll decide when the time is right.” |
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Mercedes hints Schumacher to stay in 2013(0) Mercedes on Tuesday gave the strongest hint yet that Michael Schumacher is set to stay with the Brackley based team beyond 2012. But 2011 was undoubtedly a better season for the 43-year-old, moving team boss Ross Brawn to hint that Schumacher could receive a new deal for 2013. “At the moment we aren’t talking to any other drivers,” he told Sport Bild magazine. “I am also assuming that he is not talking to other teams. “So if Michael is still enjoying what he’s doing while bringing in the results that we expect, then why not? He definitely has not said that he is toying with the idea of stopping,” added Brawn. Mercedes’ competition director Norbert Haug added that the great German is “still one of the best race drivers in the field”. Haug said Schumacher is often as fast or faster than his younger teammate Nico Rosberg, which is impressive “because Nico is undoubtedly among the five best drivers in F1″, he is quoted by FAZ newspaper. Added Brawn: “It took a little longer than planned for Michael to be where he wanted to be — and even longer than I would have thought. “The first year was difficult,” admitted Schumacher’s former Ferrari colleague. “I think he did an excellent job in the races in the second year, while Nico was slightly better than him in qualifying. “I think that really frustrated him (Schumacher),” added Brawn. |
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Lotus’ pre-season hits Barcelona speed-bump(0) Lotus’ impressive start to the 2012 season hit a speed-bump on Tuesday. “I was very quickly aware that the car wasn’t responding as it should,” said the Frenchman. Grosjean was shaking down the second E20 chassis, but it will now be sent back to Lotus’ Enstone headquarters for investigation. “Fortunately (on Wednesday) we will have the chassis which ran perfectly in Jerez so I should get some good track time,” he said. Team boss Eric Boullier played down the problem. “This is a minor setback to our overall test programme,” he said. “If this is the only issue we have during testing then we will still be well prepared for the start of the season.” |
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Dumping Trulli ‘a no-brainer’(0) 1980 world champion Alan Jones has backed Caterham’s decision to dump Jarno Trulli. Caterham explained that Petrov brings “fresh impetus” to the team, whilst also admitting that the decision was made “with a realistic eye on the global economic market”. One French report has calculated the 27-year-old’s sponsorship contributions at EUR 12 million, including money from Russia’s largest petrochemical company Sibur. But the straight-talking Australian Jones, who won Williams’ first drivers’ title three decades ago, said Caterham was also right to oust Italian Trulli on performance criteria. Told that Heikki Kovalainen “destroyed” Trulli in 2011, Jones said: “I think he was destroyed by everybody, wasn’t he?” On Caterham’s decision, he told GMM: “In my opinion Trulli wasn’t doing the job so it would have made it a pretty easy decision to get in this younger guy who is perhaps a bit keener, a big hungrier. “It’s also a fact that he (Petrov) is bringing in money, so to me it’s a no-brainer,” added Jones. |
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Rosberg’s father says Mercedes delay ‘a risk’(0) Nico Rosberg’s father has questioned the decision by Mercedes to delay the launch of its 2012 car. “There is definitely some risk,” said former McLaren and Williams driver Keke Rosberg, 63. “It’s Barcelona and so there could be some snow and the test could even be cancelled. “Or if it happens to you what happened to Ferrari in Jerez, then you have even a shorter amount of time to fix everything. “The tests are separated only by days and then there is the last one, and again it could be snowing or raining,” added Rosberg. “It’s not Andalucia, remember, but the Costa Brava.” Rosberg said the issue for Mercedes and also Ferrari is the risks they are needing to take in order to catch up with last year’s pacesetters, Red Bull and McLaren. “How could Ferrari be having such problems, when without the exhaust gases last year they won at Silverstone? “Maybe it’s because they had to take such a leap, but when you do that there’s the risk it will go wrong. “It’s the same for Mercedes, because last year they were in calm waters with a big gap to the top and the middle groups.” |
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World champions assess Hamilton’s 2012 so far(0) 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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Keke Rosberg: Economic situation saved Massa’s seat(0) Felipe Massa may have kept his seat at Ferrari for economic reasons. Keke’s Finnish countryman Mika Salo, a former Ferrari driver, told MTV3 last week he was “surprised” Brazilian Massa kept his seat for 2012 after two consecutively poor seasons. Massa already had a contract for 2012, but at the end of 2009 – when Kimi Raikkonen was replaced by Fernando Alonso – Ferrari showed it is not afraid of paying handsomely to end a deal. So is Rosberg also surprised Massa is still Alonso’s teammate? “I think that’s been influenced by the fact that they burned quite a lot of money with Kimi,” the 63-year-old said. “They could have again paid off the guy with the contract and taken someone else, but at some point you have to be economically mindful — you can’t always go for the most expensive option,” added Rosberg. |
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Red Bull admits to ‘hidden secrets’ in RB8 car(0) Christian Horner has admitted Red Bull is keeping its cards close to its chest ahead of the 2012 season. But when the Adrian Newey-penned car was officially launched, the team refused to host a traditional unveiling ceremony, instead releasing a short animated video. “We didn’t want it photographed at the first opportunity from every side by our competition,” admitted team boss Horner to Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport. Amid Red Bull’s meteoric recent success, rival teams have copied the blown diffuser and flexible wing concepts, and this year’s ‘step’ noses are all the result of yet another Newey design philosophy beneath the chassis. “At last year’s launch at Valencia there were 100 photographers all doing their shots from the roof of the pits,” Briton Horner exclaimed. “In no time at all, everyone knew every dimension of our car.” So, in 2012, some mysteries about the RB8 continue to exist — one is the real or secondary function of the letterbox-style nose slot, and another is an unlaunched development of the exhaust layout. “Last year we had to have the blown diffuser out early,” explained Horner, “because we had to find out how the exhaust gases affected the tyres. “This time, the secret is in the detail, and you don’t want to give your competition too much of a helping hand,” he smiled. |
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2012 cars ‘not ugly’ insists Alan Jones(1) Amid all the ‘ugly’ talk, Alan Jones doesn’t mind the look of F1′s field of 2012. Paul Hembery, Pirelli’s motor sport director, recently decried the look as “pig ugly”. But 1980 world champion Jones doesn’t think so. “I don’t think aesthetics matter, and anyway I don’t really find them (the 2012 cars) particularly ugly,” the Australian told GMM. “There’s a couple of interpretations of the new nose that aren’t as nice as some of the others, but there are a few out there that don’t look too bad at all,” said Jones. “And I’ve never seen an ugly car in the winner’s circle,” he smiled. Meanwhile, another former world champion – 1982′s Keke Rosberg – described McLaren’s solution as aesthetically pleasing, but hopes the British team has not made a mistake by going a different route to the rest of the grid. “At least it’s nice looking and I wish the others would have done the same,” said the Finn. “Jenson Button is quite a big guy and he has said he is sitting significantly lower than last year. “If it (McLaren’s solution) suddenly becomes a problem for them, with the chassis already homologated then that’s just what they’ve got,” he told the MTV3 broadcaster. |
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