Author: David Bodapati

  • Volkswagen suffer at home rally; Daniel Sordo wins

    A Volkswagen perspective

     

    It was the home rally of all races where Volkswagen would fall short of their own high expectations for the first time since joining the FIA World Rally Championship (WRC) in January 2013. This was the first time Volkswagen have missed out on a podium place in a season which has seen the team pick up six rally wins in eight rallies. And all this despite World Championship leaders in the Drivers’ and Co-drivers’ categories Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia (F/F) and Jari-Matti Latvala/Miikka Anttila (FIN/FIN) both having their Polo R WRCs out in front at different stages of the rally, which was watched by a crowd of 200,000. However, Volkswagen can still boast some very impressive numbers after the Rally Germany: eight of the fifteen stages held were won by the Wolfsburg team’s Polo R WRC at this purely asphalt-based rally. Moreover, at least one Volkswagen driver finished every stage in the top three.

    Dani Sordo’s win at the Rally Germany means Citroën remain undefeated on asphalt for almost ten years. Latvala/Anttila finished the ninth race of the season in seventh, whilst Ogier/Ingrassia were 16th, a Volkswagen press release said.

    “The Rally Germany was my first visit in my new function,” said Dr Heinz-Jakob Neußer, who is head of technical development at Volkswagen and is responsible for the Motorsport programme. “I am very impressed with the professional nature of the brand’s profile and the skill shown by the engineers and mechanics. Due to adverse weather conditions, we had to contend with various set-backs. The mechanics have put in an excellent performance to repair the cars for the final Power Stage, from which we were able to collect four additional points. We were also able to win eight of the fifteen stages, demonstrating how competitive our Polo R WRC is and the amount of effort our drivers put in. We are looking forward to the upcoming rallies and will be doing everything we can to bring World Championship titles to Wolfsburg.”

    In the team’s début season, Volkswagen continue to lead all three categories at the WRC’s highest level after nine of the thirteen World Championship races. Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia continue to hold a comfortable advantage in the Drivers’ and Co-drivers’ standings; both drivers have a second chance to wrap up the title at the upcoming World Championship race in Australia, which will be taking place from 12 to 15 September. Ahead of this race, their lead over Ford’s Thierry Neuville stands at 75 points. If Ogier/Ingrassia manage to extend their lead to 84 points or more after the Rally Australia, they can no longer be caught.

    Volkswagen also continue to lead the way in the Constructors’ Championship with an advantage of 26 points.

    Damage limitation: Ogier/Ingrassia win Power Stage

    The Rally Germany had begun perfectly for World Championship leaders Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia. After notching up two of stage wins on Thursday, they went into day two as the overall leaders. However, the French duo came off the track on a particularly slippery section, damaging their Polo R WRC’s suspension in the process. This resulted in them having to sit out the rest of the day. In accordance with Rally2 regulations, they were allowed to resume on Saturday and recorded three fastest stage times from a possible five. Sunday’s Power Stage then softened the blow of earlier disappointments: with a fastest time in the final stage of the day, which awards the top three drivers with extra points, the French pairing added a valuable three points to their overall tally.

    Great performance goes unrewarded: Latvala/Anttila show excellent form on asphalt

    Jari-Matti Latvala and co-driver Miikka Anttila’s best performance on asphalt went unrewarded. After taking the lead at the start of the second day, the Finnish pair continued to build on their advantage until the eleventh stage. On the ‘Arena Panzerplatte’ stage, Latvala/Anttila clipped the passenger door of their Polo R WRC on one of the notorious ‘Hinkelsteine’ concrete blocks. The duo then had to compete with a door that kept on popping open. This resulted in the co-driver Anttila having to hold the door shut with his right hand whilst skimming through the pace notes with his left during the following stage. After there was slight delay in communicating the instructions, Latvala/Anttila slid from the track and were forced to retire. Just as their team-mates did the day before, the Finnish pair resumed under the Rally2 regulations and picked up some valuable points for Volkswagen in the three World Championship categories. They were also rewarded with an additional point in the Power Stage after a third-placed finish.

    Premature exit for Mikkelsen/Markkula

    Andreas Mikkelsen and Mikko Markkula (N/FIN) were forced to withdraw from the Rally Germany due to health concerns. Co-driver Mikko Markkula suffered a fracture to his seventh thoracic vertebra as well as damage to his eighth thoracic vertebra at the Rally Finland three weeks ago. The injuries were only diagnosed immediately prior to the Rally Germany. Therefore, Volkswagen Motorsport withdrew Mikkelsen/Markkula from the race for heath and safety reasons. Markkula had complained about having back pains at the Rally Finland, which subsided over the following days. However, the pain returned during the reconnaissance runs in Germany on Monday. The team decided to send Markkula for an MRI scan, which confirmed the injuries. The pair were consequently withdrawn from the race.

    Celebrities and bosses: Volkswagen welcomes many guests to its home race

    German actors Erol Sander and Ingo Naujoks did not pass up the chance to check out some WRC race action in and around Trier. Neither did presenter Andrea Kaiser and Austrian skydiver Felix Baumgartner, who, along with motor racing legends Carlos Sainz, Luis Moya and Jacky Ickx, kept their fingers crossed for the Volkswagen team. TV chef Mario Kotaska also made sure there was plenty of currywurst to go round with a stall he especially set up. Top bosses at Volkswagen also paid the drivers a visit, including Dr Heinz-Jakob Neußer, who superseded Dr Ulrich Hackenberg as the brand’s head of technical development.

    Volkswagen’s ambassador Felix Baumgartner had another reason to be joyful, as he was given his new company car in Volkswagen’s service area: a 340-horsepower Touareg V8 TDI with a 4.2-litre eight-cylinder engine.

    Statements, fourth day of the Rally Germany

    Jari-Matti Latvala, Volkswagen Polo R WRC #7
    “Let’s start with the positive: I have improved on my performances on asphalt from the past. I had never led an asphalt-based rally before and the times show that I am getting better on this surface. Of course, there is still room for improvement, but I’m happy that I was able to pick up some more points for the team in the Constructors’ championship after yesterday’s disappointment, even though the result was anything but perfect for me personally. Nevertheless, I’ll be going into the upcoming rallies with confidence and will do everything I can to give my team the best chance in the fight for the Constructors’ Championship. I’m happy for Dani Sordo, who is celebrating his first ever World Championship rally win here in Germany. I know how Dani must be feeling right now. He deserved the victory.”

    Sébastien Ogier, Volkswagen Polo R WRC #8
    “Of course, that is not how we hoped the weekend would pan out, but we were still able to make the best of it. The win in the Power Stage at the end was a nice success and may still prove to be important in the shake-up for the World Championship. I’m sorry for the team that we were not able to win our home rally. I’m really happy for Dani Sordo, because he has had a tough season so far and a first World Championship win is always something special. I’m now looking forward to Australia and Julien and I will be trying to edge ever closer to that World Championship title.”

    Andreas Mikkelsen, Volkswagen Polo R WRC #9
    “I was really looking forward to the Rally Germany and am disappointed that we couldn’t participate in our team’s home rally. Yet the safety of my co-driver Mikko Markkula obviously comes first. I hope that he can recover from his two fractures quickly so that we can compete together in the WRC again soon. Both Mikko and I have developed a completely new note taking system that only he is familiar with. It wasn’t possible to find a replacement so soon before the rally. At least we were able to do the reconnaissance for the rally and can use that again in the following years.”

    Jost Capito, Director of Volkswagen Motorsport
    “To win eight of the fifteen stages is a good sign and matches the amount we have been achieving prior to the Rally Germany. The Polo R WRC is also competitive on asphalt. However, our home race did not go as we had imagined or hoped it would. And that’s disappointing for us. Both Sébastien Ogier and Jari-Matti Latvala led the rally at some stage, but both were forced to retire in this position. We were close to victory, but missed out due to a few little mistakes. In sport, you can’t plan success, though, and you can’t take anything for granted. This is especially the case in the WRC, where it’s about every little detail and no mistakes can be made. And it is exactly this which makes our sport so fascinating. We will now work hard to be successful at the Rally Australia. We send our congratulations to Dani Sordo for his deserved maiden victory in the WRC, which was long overdue.”

    And then there was …

    … the last Spaniard to win in the WRC. Before Sordo’s success, you have to go back to 18 June 2004 to find the last rally win by a Spaniard. That was Carlos Sainz at the 2004 Rally Argentina. Today, Sainz works as an advisor for Volkswagen Motorsport.

    FIA World Rally Championship (WRC),
    Rally Germany, final results
    1. Daniel Sordo/Carlos del Barrio (E/E), Citroën 3h 15m 19.4s
    2. Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul (B/B), Ford + 53.0s
    3. Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen (FIN/FIN), Citroën + 2m 36.1s
    4. Martin Prokop/Michal Ernst (CZ/CZ), Ford + 8m 00.8s
    5. Robert Kubica/Maciek Baran (PL/PL), Citroën + 9m 01.3s
    6. Elfyn Evans/Daniel Barritt (GB/GB), Ford + 9m 14.2s
    7. Jari-Matti Latvala/Miika Anttila (FIN/FIN), Volkswagen + 9m 55.0s
    8. Hayden Paddon/John Kennard (NZ/NZ), Škoda + 13m 01.2s
    9. Mads Østberg/Jonas Andersson (N/S), Ford + 13m 28.1s
    10. Evgeny Novikov/Ilka Minor (RUS/A) + 15m 17.9s
  • Sahara Force India back in points but falls behind McLaren

    Spa, 25 Aug 2013: It was mixed fortunes for Sahara Force India as Adrian Sutil raced to ninth place in the Belgian Grand Prix, while Paul Di Resta failed to finish after being hit by Pastor Maldonado on lap 27 in the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa Francorchamps here on Sunday. Though the Indian outfit managed to get back into points after a couple of disappointing races, the midfield team who were in 5th place before the start of the race lost vital points to McLaren and lost the position.
    The Sahara Force India team slid to 6th position and now have 61 points, four less than McLaren, who moved to 5th place with Jenson Button finishing 6th today.
    Adrian Sutil finished P9 to get valuable two points to the team and increased his tally to 25. After the race Adrian said: “An interesting and exciting race, and it’s good to come away with two points. At the start I didn’t make the best getaway and lost a few places, but after that I settled into the race and was able to get ahead of a few cars and move into the top ten. I always enjoy driving here at Spa and I had some exciting overtaking moves today, which felt very nice. The two-stop strategy was the best way to go and it worked out well because I think we achieved the maximum that was available to us. We are still in a close fight with McLaren so it was important to get back in the points today after a couple of tough races.”
    However, Paul Di Resta, who remains on 36 points was disappointed today. Yesterday, he almost made it to pole but with rain receding, the big guns caught up in the last few minutes of qualifying. Paul, who had a DNF today said: “I got a lot of wheel-spin at the start of the race and was down in about tenth place going into turn one, but during the first lap I managed to recover to seventh. After the second pit stop I was racing closely with Adrian and there was a train of four cars battling as we went into the final chicane. Pastor [Maldonado] went in deep and missed the apex so I tried to get the cut-back and was going around the outside of him. He then decided to try and enter the pit lane, which was impossible given his track position. As a result he hit me, which took the rear corner off my car. It’s a real shame because the speed was quite strong today and I think there was definitely a point or two up for grabs.”
     
    Team Principal and Managing Director Vijay Mallya, however was happy that the team was back in points He said:
    “I’m pleased to see Sahara Force India back in the points after a fine performance by Adrian. He clearly enjoyed himself out there today and his overtaking moves were a highlight of the race. The strategy calls from the pit wall helped him stay in the hunt for points and his race pace was good. The incident with Maldonado hitting Paul was very disappointing because Paul was simply in the wrong place at the wrong time. It certainly cost us the chance to get both cars in the points. Going forward we will take the positives from the weekend and look to build on this performance level in a couple of weeks’ time in Monza.”
    ends

    Adrian Sutil finished 9th to get back Sahara Force India into points but the team fell back to 6th place behind McLaren. A SFI photo
    Adrian Sutil finished 9th to get back Sahara Force India into points but the team fell back to 6th place behind McLaren. A SFI photo
  • Vettel cruises to victory; Kimi’s 27-race points-run ends

    Spa Francorchamps, 25 Aug 2013: Sebastian Vettel took a comfortable Belgian Grand Prix win to extend his lead in the Drivers’ Championship to 46 points over Fernando Alonso, who finished second for Ferrari at Spa-Francorchamps ahead of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton.

    On Saturday, Hamilton had narrowly beaten Vettel to pole position but after the race start Vettel exacted revenge using the tow from the Mercedes to breeze past the Briton on the long Kemmel Straight.

    From there the German and his Red Bull Racing RB9 were flawless. Vettel only briefly ceded the lead to Jenson Button during his first stop on lap 14 but after passing the McLaren driver, who had yet to pit, at the end of the same lap, he seized total control, eventually finishing 16.8 seconds clear of Alonso.

    “It was fantastic race for us,” he said afterwards. “From start to finish [we had] really good tactics. Obviously it helped the first lap to have the tow off Lewis through Eau Rouge and then I was flying. Once I

    File photo of Vettel by Red Bull Racing team.
    File photo of Vettel by Red Bull Racing team.

    passed him we had incredible pace and really could control the race until the end.

    “We were a bit afraid of the rain coming towards the end but I think it just passed the circuit. A great race and a fantastic result. Can’t be any better.”

    Alonso’s race was more eventful – at least through the first half. After a rain-disrupted qualifying, the Spaniard was left to line up ninth on the grid. He didn’t stay there long after the race start. Making a good getaway, the Ferrari driver took a tight line through La Source and the move paid off, boosting him to fifth as the field powered through Eau Rouge.

    On lap four he muscled past Button to claim P4 and then raced past Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg two laps later to move into a podium position.

    After his first stop Alonso rejoined behind Hamilton but after the Mercedes driver erred at La Source on lap 15 Alonso used his better pace through Eau Rouge to set up a passing move under DRS on the Kemmel Straight. Hamilton attempted to respond but Alonso rebuffed the challenge.

    Armed with greater pace on the day, the Ferrari driver was soon building a gap, which, by the time of the chequered flag, had stretched to almost 11 seconds.

    “We had to recover some places [at the start],” said Alonso. “We were not OK yesterday but everything went OK from the start and then the car has the speed to overtake some cars and it was a little bit boring. After we got the second place we were nowhere near Sebastian and not a big threat from behind.”

    It was left to Rosberg and Mark Webber to conduct perhaps the closest front-of-order battle of the second half of the race.

    The Red Bull Racing driver made a poor start and dropped from third to sixth by the time the field was flying through Radillon. He passed Button for fifth position in the opening laps and set about chasing down Rosberg.

    The Mercedes driver was no easy target, however, and though the gap sank as low as half a second at some points during the race, Webber could not find a way past the German and finished fifth.

    Button finished sixth, holding his starting position thanks to a considered drive.

    In front of Button on the grid was Paul Di Resta, who had claimed fifth place thanks to a clever bit of strategy in the wet final qualifying session.

    Luck deserted him in the race however and after a poor start he went backwards until he was eventually dumped out in a collision with Williams’ Pastor Maldonado, who collided with Adrian Sutil at the final chicane before being pitched into Di Resta’s path. Maldonado carried on after pitting for repairs but Di Resta’s race was over, his Force India missing its rear left wheel and rear wing.

    Felipe Massa finished seventh for Ferrari, with Romain Grosjean eighth, ahead of Sutil. The final points place went to Daniel Ricciardo, who climbed from 19th on the grid to claim tenth at the end thanks to a good strategy that saw him take on medium tyres on lap 33 with the result that good pace at the end allowed him to pass Sergio Perez with four laps to go.

    2013 Belgian Grand Prix – Result
    1. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 1:23:42.196 25
    2. Fernando Alonso Ferrari +16.8 secs 18
    3. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes +27.7 secs 15
    4. Nico Rosberg Mercedes +29.8 secs 12
    5. Mark Webber Red Bull Racing +33.8 secs 10
    6. Jenson Button McLaren +40.7 secs       8
    7. Felipe Massa Ferrari +53.9 secs 6
    8. Romain Grosjean Lotus +55.8 secs 4
    9. Adrian Sutil Force India +69.5 secs      12 2
    10. Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso +73.4 secs 1
    11. Sergio Perez McLaren +81.9 secs
    12. Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso +86.7 secs
    13. Nico Hulkenberg Sauber +88.2 secs
    14. Esteban Gutierrez Sauber + secs
    15. Valtteri Bottas Williams + secs
    16. Giedo van der Garde Caterham +1 Lap
    17. Pastor Maldonado Williams +1 Lap
    18. Jules Bianchi Marussia +1 Lap
    19. Max Chilton Marussia 42 +2 Laps
    Ret Paul di Resta Force India +18 Laps
    Ret Kimi Räikkönen Lotus +19 Laps
    Ret Charles Pic Caterham +36 Laps

    ends

  • Ashwin Sundar, Yudai win a race each in MRF 1600 races

    Chennai, 25 Aug 2013: Yudai Jinkawa and Ashwin Sundar shared  honours winning a race each in the MRF 1600 races at Round 4 of the MMSC-FMSCI National Racing Championship held at the MMRT in Chennai. S Narendran continued his unbeaten streak in the LGB F4 category while Deepak Chinappa won his second race of the weekend in the LGB FS category. N Leelakrishnnan put on a flawless display to win in t he ITC category while Feroz Khan Japanese driver Yudai Jinkawa claimed pole position for tomorrow’s MRF 1600 race ahead of Tarun Reddy and Ashwin Sundar, an Adrenna Communications Press Release said.

    Ashwin Sundar wins a race. Photo by Adrenna
    Ashwin Sundar wins a race. Photo by Adrenna

    The first MRF 1600 race saw Tarun Reddy jump Yudai Jinkawa at the start before the safety car came out due to a collision between Advait Deodhar and Arjun Narendran. Both drivers retired on the spot. Tarun continued to lead till the last lap when Jinkawa pulled off a brilliant move to pass the young India. Tarun had to settle for 2nd place and was pushed to the line by a charging Vikash Anand, who managed to pass championship Ashwin Sundar earlier in the race.

    In the second MRF 1600 race of the day championship leader Ashwin Sundar won a chaotic race ahead of Vikash Anand and Advait Deodhar. Ashwin starting on pole position, lost out at the start to a fast starting Tarun Reddy. Ashwin reclaimed the top sport few corners later and almost collided with Tarun on the next straight as he tried to re-pass him. Tarun, while trying to overtake Ashwin at the end of the straight spun off bringing the safety car on to track. The race was red-flagged soon after as Kizuki Hirota failed to see the Safety Car board and crashed in to the back of Arjun Narendran on the start finish straight. At the re-start Ashwin got away cleanly and pulled away from the rest of the pack to extend his championship lead. Vikash followed him across the finish line ahead of Advait.

    N Leelakrishnan won his second race of the weekend with a commanding win in the ITC race. The battle behind him was a three way battle that went down to the wire. V Ramnarayan managed to take second place ahead of Arjun Narendran and Ashish Ramaswamy with less than a second separating the three. Arjun Balu continued to struggle with his new Volkswagen Vento and could only manage to finish in 5th position. Race 3 of the ITC finished in the same order with Leelakrishnan taking yet another convincing win ahead of Ramnarayan and Arjun Narendran, who were left to fight it out for second position.

    S Narendran made it 8 wins in 8 races after winning the first race of the day in the LGB Formula 4 category. Behind him Jigar Muni fought off Sudanand DR to claim second place. In the LGB Formula Swift category Deepak Chinappa once again stood on the top step of the podium with another win. He was followed closely by Rahul Ramaswamy who tried in vain to get past. He finally finished less than half a second behind the leader. Prashanth K had a lonely race and ended up in third place.

    In the Race 2 of the Indian Junior Touring Cars category, Feroze Khan was once again the class of the field as he took his second win of the weekend. VJ Senthil finished in second place with Charen Chandran finishing in third place. Feroze Khan made it a clean sweep in  Race 3 of the IJTC and finished ahead of Biren Pitwala and VJ Senthil.

    Results: (Timings were not provided by the Organisers)

    Race 3, LGB Formula 4

    1. S Narendran
    2. Jigar Muni
    3. Sudanand DR

    Race 3, LGB Formula Swift

    1. Deepak Chinappa
    2. Raghul Ramaswamy
    3. Prashanth K

    Race 2, Indian Junior Touring Cars

    1. Feroze Khan
    2. VJ Senthil
    3. Charen Chandran

    Race 2, Indian Touring Cars

    1. N Leelakrishnan
    2. Ramnarayan V
    3. Arjun Narendran

    Race 1, MRF 1600

    1. Yudai Jinkawa
    2. Tarun Reddy
    3. Vikash Anand

    Race 3, Indian Junior Touring Cars

    1. Feroze Khan
    2. Biren Pitawala
    3. Dr VJ Senthil

    Race 3, Indian Touring Cars

    1. N Leelakrishnan
    2. Ramnarayan V
    3. Arjun Narendran

    Race 2, MRF 1600

    1. Ashwin Sundar
    2. Vikash Anand
    3. Advait Deodhar

    ends

  • Dani Sordo heads the field after Day 3

    ADAC RALLYE DEUTSCHLAND
    (22 – 25 AUGUST 2013)

    RALLY NEWS

    At the end of the third day of competition in Rallye Deutschland, the leaderboard has once again been turned on its head. Citroën’s Dani Sordo now heads the field by a mere eight-tenths of a second over Thierry Neuville and Mikko Hirvonen has moved up into third, all benefiting from the retirement of overnight leader Jari-Matti Latvala.
    Today’s route was scheduled to take in two identical loops of three stages covering 153.70 competitive kilometres, however the final run through the Panzerplatte stage was, unfortunately, cancelled due to an earlier incident. Latvala started the day with a 7.3 second advantage over Neuville and retained his lead until the mid-day service, despite running wide in the infamous Panzerplatte stage and hitting a hinkelstein. In the first repeated stage this afternoon, however, the Finn went off the road in treacherously wet conditions and was forced into retirement. Neuville assumed the lead, despite also having his own dramas in the stage and the battle between he and Sordo then raged, the rivals split by just 1.1 seconds. In the final competitive stage, Sordo’s second fastest stage time of the day elevated him to the head of the leaderboard a mere 0.8 seconds ahead as the rally goes into its final day tomorrow. Behind them, Hirvonen is much further adrift, but nevertheless in the final provisional podium position.
    Fourth is now held by Martin Prokop and Robert Kubica has climbed into fifth. He heads FIA WRC 2 Championship rival Elfyn Evans by 7.8 seconds, both of them putting in a remarkable performance in much less powerful machinery than the world rally cars.
    Aside from Latvala, the other leading retirements of the day were Mads Østberg and Nasser Al-Attiyah. Østberg went into a field after missing a braking point and Al-Attiyah stopped with broken steering.
    Rallye Deutschland – Unofficial Results after Day 3
    1.   Dani Sordo/Carlos Del Barrio
    2.   Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul
    3.   Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen
    4.   Martin Prokop/Michal Ernst
    5.   Robert Kubica/Maciek Baran
    6.   Elfyn Evans/Daniel Barritt
    7.   Jari-Matti Latvala/Miikka Anttila
    8.   Hayden Paddon/John Kennard
    9.   Mads Østberg/Jonas Andersson
    10. Evgeny Novikov/Ilka Minor
    Citroën DS3 WRC
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Citroën DS3 WRC
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Citroën DS3 RRC
    Ford Fiesta R5
    Volkswagen Polo R WRC
    Skoda Fabia S2000
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    2hr 43 min 48.5sec
    2hr 43 min 49.3sec
    2hr 45 min 16.1sec
    2hr 49 min 54.8sec
    2hr 51 min 21.6sec
    2hr 51 min 29.4sec
    2hr 53 min 15.5sec
    2hr 54 min 25.8sec
    2hr 56 min 16.3sec
    2hr 58 min 00.3sec

     

  • Two dead in a support demo event of classic cars at WRC Rally Germany

    Trier (Germany), 24 Aug 2013: At the end of the third day of competition in Rallye Deutschland, the leaderboard has once again been turned on its head. Citroën’s Dani Sordo now heads the field by a mere eight-tenths of a second over Thierry Neuville and Mikko Hirvonen has moved up into third, all benefiting from the retirement of overnight leader Jari-Matti Latvala.
    Two people, a driver and a passenger, reportedly died on Saturday afternoon (local time) after an accident during the vinatage car demo, which was being run along with the WRC event. The accident overshadowed the main WRC event and a stage was cancelled for the day.
    A Press Releasefrom ADAC, the organisers of the rally, said:It is with great sadness that the organiser can confirm an
    accident took place this afternoon at the Arena Panzerplatte involving a historic car
    participating in a non-competitive demonstration programme.
    The car, driven by a Dutch pairing, left the route near the Gina crest. The emergency services
    were on the scene immediately to assist but despite their best efforts the injuries sustained by
    both the driver and passenger proved fatal. No one else was involved in the incident.
    Everyone associated with the event extends their deepest sympathies and condolences to the
    families, friends and individuals who are being touched by today’s terrible tragedy.
    The second passage of Arena Panzerplatte has been cancelled and the competition cars have
    been re-routed back to the Service Park in Trier.
    The rally will continue on Sunday according to its itinerary.
    In another press note, FIA stated that t

    A Volkswagen car in service. A VW photo
    A Volkswagen car in service. A VW photo

    oday’s route was scheduled to take in two identical loops of three stages covering 153.70 competitive kilometres, however the final run through the Panzerplatte stage was, unfortunately, cancelled due to an earlier incident. Latvala started the day with a 7.3 second advantage over Neuville and retained his lead until the mid-day service, despite running wide in the infamous Panzerplatte stage and hitting a hinkelstein. In the first repeated stage this afternoon, however, the Finn went off the road in treacherously wet conditions and was forced into retirement. Neuville assumed the lead, despite also having his own dramas in the stage and the battle between he and Sordo then raged, the rivals split by just 1.1 seconds. In the final competitive stage, Sordo’s second fastest stage time of the day elevated him to the head of the leaderboard a mere 0.8 seconds ahead as the rally goes into its final day tomorrow. Behind them, Hirvonen is much further adrift, but nevertheless in the final provisional podium position.

    Fourth is now held by Martin Prokop and Robert Kubica has climbed into fifth. He heads FIA WRC 2 Championship rival Elfyn Evans by 7.8 seconds, both of them putting in a remarkable performance in much less powerful machinery than the world rally cars.
    Aside from Latvala, the other leading retirements of the day were Mads Østberg and Nasser Al-Attiyah. Østberg went into a field after missing a braking point and Al-Attiyah stopped with broken steering.
    Rallye Deutschland – Unofficial Results after Day 3
    1.   Dani Sordo/Carlos Del Barrio
    2.   Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul
    3.   Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen
    4.   Martin Prokop/Michal Ernst
    5.   Robert Kubica/Maciek Baran
    6.   Elfyn Evans/Daniel Barritt
    7.   Hayden Paddon/John Kennard
    8.   Evgeny Novikov/Ilka Minor
    9.   Khalid Al Qassimi/Scott Martin
    10. Yuriy Protasov/Kuldar Sikk
    Citroën DS3 WRC
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Citroën DS3 WRC
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Citroën DS3 RRC
    Ford Fiesta R5
    Skoda Fabia S2000
    Ford Fiesta RS WRC
    Citroën DS3 WRC
    Ford Fiesta R5
    2hr 43 min 48.5sec
    2hr 43 min 49.3sec
    2hr 45 min 16.1sec
    2hr 49 min 54.8sec
    2hr 51 min 21.6sec
    2hr 51 min 29.4sec
    2hr 54 min 25.8sec
    2hr 58 min 00.3sec
    2hr 58 min 15.2sec
    2hr 59 min 11.4sec
  • Leela tops championship standings in Touring Cars; Deepak Chinappa wins

    Chennai, 24 Aug 2013: N Leelakrishnan went to the top of the Indian Touring Cars championship standings after a convincing win in the opening race of Round 4 of the National Racing Championship held in Chennai. S Narendran continued his unbeaten streak in the LGB F4 category while Deepak Chinappa and Suhail Sabharwal took honours in the LGB FS category. Japanese driver Yudai Jinkawa claimed pole position for tomorrow’s MRF 1600 race ahead of Tarun Reddy and Ashwin Sundar, according to an Adrenna press release.

    N Leelakrishnan qualified on pole position for the ITC race. He managed to fend off V Ramnarayan and Arjun Narendran at the start but the two kept up with the veteran driver putting pressure on him for the entire race . Arjun Balu continued to struggle with his new Volkswagen Vento and could only manage to finish in 5th position.

    S Narendran continued his perfect championship run in the LGB Formula 4 category with another convincing win in Race 1. After a great start he never looked back and took the chequered flag over 20 seconds ahead of second placed Jigar Muni. Sudanand DR took the final step of the podium. In Race 1 of the LGB Formula Swift category Deepak Chinappa took only his second win of the season to extend his championship lead. Suhail Sabharwal finished in an impressive second place ahead of last round winner Prashanth K.

    In the Indian Junior Touring Cars category, Feroze Khan, who is unbeaten this season, continued

    Deepak Chinappa. Photo by Adrenna Communications.
    Deepak Chinappa. Photo by Adrenna Communications.

    his great run of form with another win in Race 1. VJ Senthil finished in second place with Charen Chandran finishing in third place.

    In Race 2 of the LGB F4 race Narendran won yet again but this time had to work hard for it. C Rajaram finished in second place with Emmanuel Jebaraj in third place. The LGB FS battle for first place ended in a crash with championship contenders Deepak Chinappa and Prashanth K colliding with each other while fighting for the top spot. This gave Suhail Sabharwal the win with Deepak making it back to second spot ahead of Rahul Rangaswamy. Prashanth K finished in 4th position. 

    Earlier in the day Japanese driver Yudai Jinkawa put in a brilliant lap to qualify on pole position for the MRF 1600 race. 15 year old Tarun Reddy qualified in 2nd position ahead of championship leader Ashwin Sundar. Vikash Anand and Advait Deodhar will start in 4th and 5th positions respectively. Both races in the MRF 1600 category will be held on Sunday.

    Results:  (Timings were not received)

    Race 1, LGB Formula 4

    1. S Narendran
    2. Jigar Muni
    3. Sudanand DR

    Race 1, LGB Formula Swift

    1. Deepak Chinappa
    2. Suhail Sabharwal
    3. Prashanth K

    Race 1, Indian Junior Touring Cars

    1. Feroze Khan
    2. VJ Senthil
    3. Charen Chandran

    Race 1, Indian Touring Cars

    1. N Leelakrishnan
    2. Ramnarayan V
    3. Arjun Narendran

    Race 2, LGB Formula 4

    1. S Narendran
    2. C Rajaram
    3. Emmanuel Jebaraj

    Race 2, LGB Formula Swift

    1. Suhail Sabharwal
    2. Deepak Chinappa
    3. Raghul Ramaswamy

     

    ends

  • I am able to find the limits when conditions are edgy: Hamilton

    DRIVERS

    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Sebastian VETTEL (Red Bull Racing)
    3 – Mark WEBBER (Red Bull Racing)

    TV UNILATERAL

    Lewis, it was all about timing today and your timing was absolutely perfect.

    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, it was. It was obviously a good job by the team. I was so surprised when I crossed the line. When I started the lap, it looked like, on the board… I saw on the screen that I was about seventh or eighth and I thought ‘Oh my God’, especially as it was raining more. I went wide in turn one and the dash display is usually telling you whether you’re up or down and it said I was three seconds down and then five seconds and six seconds, so I didn’t understand what was happening in the lap but I just kept pushing. I could see I was catching Sebastian towards the end but what a blessing, I feel so fortunate to be up here.

    Particularly the middle sector seemed to be strong. So clearly through the Mercedes and yourself are well hooked up. How do you explain that?

    LH: I think generally I feel quite comfortable in changing conditions and I feel I’m able to find the limits when the conditions are really on the edge. And in the middle I pushed quite a lot in the middle sector particularly as I thought I was down three seconds, so I was really caning it. But, yeah, the car’s feeling good.

    Sebastian, today was obviously also keeping your nerve. What were you thinking about the closing stages? Were you thinking that there is as much to lose here as there is to gain?

    Sebastian VETTEL: No, there’s always something to gain. Yeah, it wasn’t clear that the first lap we did in Q3 wasthe lap, on intermediate tyres. Obviously we all went out for the start with slicks tyres. It was quite entertaining because it started to rain pretty heavily. Then on intermediates, as I said, it wasn’t clear because in the beginning it looked like there was more and more rain coming, so we were all rushing to get a lap in. But then it stopped raining and the circuit came back very quickly ands the last lap turned out to be the fastest lap, with the circuit drying. It’s difficult to know how fast you can go. Obviously I saw Lewis catching up in the last lap and I thought I could have gone a bit quicker here or quicker there. In the end it was quite close I think across the line. In these conditions anything can happen. A shame to miss pole, once again. I’m quite happy today. The boys did a very good job changing tyres from slicks to intermediates and got us an extra lap. Unfortunately the circuit wasn’t ready but all in all I think a good day for the team, so let’s see what happens tomorrow. We expect similar conditions to today, rain, dry and a bit of everything, so we’ll see.

    And Mark, your final qualifying session in a Formula One car at this Spa-Francorchamps circuit and it delivered its usual mixture of conditions. How was your session?

    Mark WEBBER: Yeah, difficult for all of us to make the right calls. But in the end I think we got most things right. It’s very easy to look stupid in those conditions, from a team side, from a driver’s side, making the right calls. In the end, we got most things OK I’d say. It’s a little bit bizarre with the DRS on or off in the session, actually in Q3. It’s available in the first part of quali but not at the end, but it’s the same for everyone, so it’s a very, very difficult thing, as Lewis has touched on, to know where you are, how the track’s moving around so much. It was quite a ballsy thing for me to go slow in the middle lap know if the track’s going to be better on the last lap, to save the tyres, because they’re struggling quite a bit in those conditions, on the inters. In the end, it wasn’t too bad a lap and it was quite tight obviously. So, yeah, pretty happy to be right up there for tomorrow’s race.

    Back to you Lewis. Obviously it’s not been the easiest weekend so far from the looks of things as far as practice has been concerned for you and the Mercedes team. Tell us about the race tomorrow. You’re obviously starting from where you want to be, but can you keep these two guys behind you?

    LH: I think this weekend they’ve both shown that they have incredible pace this weekend. But I’m hoping that whatever the conditions are tomorrow we can try to fight it out with them. The guys have done a fantastic job in bringing a good package here. I generally feel we’re quite close. I still feel the Red Bull is generally a little bit ahead of us in performance and that’s why results like this today feel even better because it feels like we extracted more than what the car can actually do, so I’m really happy with it.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Lewis, second race in a row now that in the closing stages of a Saturday afternoon you’ve spoiled Sebastian’s day. It’s becoming a bit of a habit and you two are having quite a duel at the moment.

    LH: I’m trying to catch him up. He’s obviously had incredible success over the last few years so I’m trying my best to battle with hum and I hope that we can do that in the race tomorrow whatever the conditions are. I just feel grateful for the way the year has turned out and that we can be so competitive and really try to challenge the Red Bulls. It’s a huge accomplishment by the team.

    Tell us about communication on a day like this. You were saying just a moment ago that you weren’t really quite sure what was going in the first part of the lap, obviously the times were all over the place, but in terms of the way the team communicates. We saw people making mistakes in Q1 and Q2, very easy to make mistakes and communication clearly critical to that.

    LH: Yeah, everyone is on edge and communication is key for all the teams. So they’re asking me what the track is like at certain points of the circuit and of course they need to be on it to make sure we get out at the right time. We nearly go pushed out of Q2, which I really wouldn’t have been happy with…

    Two one hundredths of a second.

    LH: Yeah, by the grace of God we got through. And then at the end, I didn’t know that I was going to be one of the last ones across the line. I just kept pushing and at the end of the day it was a good job by the team, particularly when the moment counted.

    Sebastian, as we were saying, Lewis and Mercedes coming on strong at the moment.

    SV: Yeah, surely. Obviously in qualifying they have been quite strong in the first part of the season and they keep doing it. I think today you have to look from a different point of view. In these conditions anything can happen. Lewis had quite and impressive middle sector. He was right behind me. Maybe it helped a little bit to know how fast he could go here and there. I checked in my mirrors and thought I could have gone quicker here, quicker there because he was closing up. But I’m very happy with the result. As I said, in these conditions anything is possible. Mark touched on it – it’s very easy to do the wrong calls and you’re out. So, overall, a good result and everything is possible tomorrow, condition-wise we expect the same as today.

    You obviously looked very comfortable yesterday, apart from the puncture obviously in practice two and again this morning, the Red Bull looked well balanced, quick on the circuit. There was a sign in Q2 when you just waited and went out and did that one run that there seemed to be quite a lot of confidence as far as you were concerned about the session.

    SV: Yeah, well confidence in the weather let’s say, mostly. It was supposed not to rain. I said OK there’s no point in going out, let’s wait, because the circuit will improve, which is what we did in the end. My first lap was not fantastic so I did another lap. I think we did the right thing there. Fortunately it didn’t rain. Obviously when it starts raining and you haven’t gone out you look really stupid. I think we trust the guys on the pit wall to judge the weather and the situation. Obviously, Q3 was different. The boys were quite in a hurry when we came back in to change tyres and go back out. But for Q2 I think it was the right call.

    Mark, we mentioned before that this is your last run in F1 quali at Spa-Francorchamps. Tell us about your relationship with this circuit, what you feel today and what you feel about this place.

    MW: It’s a sensational circuit. Compared to the ones that have been attempted to be designed of late obviously they’re nothing like this track. It’s a beautiful circuit to drive on, all the guys love coming here, the teams, the engineers. Even the cars I think in a bizarre way know they’re here in terms of Eau Rouge and Blanchimont. You know, La Source is very tight and then 10 seconds later you’re through Eau Rouge so it’s a great mixture. I won the Formulas Ford race here in 1996 so it’s a beautiful circuit to drive on in any category and yeah, looking forward to bringing the Porsche here next year.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Oana Popoiu – F1 Zone) Lewis, Toto Wolff said that Mercedes should start focusing on next year’s car. What are your thoughts about that, especially now when you are in front of Red Bull?

    LH: I think there’s several different people that have different opinions about it but I feel quite relaxed and comfortable with the people who are at the top who are going to make that decision. I don’t feel that next year is compromised at all or this year just yet. I think it’s trying to find a real fine balance. Of course we want to have the best shot possible next year but of course all of a sudden we’re competing as well as we are now so it’s striking a fine balance, but I think they’ll do a good job of that.

    Q: (Graham Keilloh – F1 Plus) Lewis, do you think if it hadn’t rained in qualifying that Mercedes had the pace to contend for pole position?

    LH: I would be guessing but my guess would be maybe not. The Red Bull was looking particularly quick and also the Ferrari was looking quite quick in the dry conditions, so I’m not necessarily sure that we had the pace to be as fast everyone today. But who knows, it’s just a guess.

    Q: (Simon Cass – Daily Mail) Lewis, you said coming into the second half of the season that you’ve never felt better. Is it fair to say that you’ve never been driving any better or certainly as well as you have been at the moment?

    LH: It feels like I’m driving the best but I feel like I’ve been driving well for quite some time and just sometimes circumstances don’t allow you to really show that. But I really feel that I’m getting everything out of the car, I’m getting everything out of every opportunity that I have. I know there’s a lot of pressure for everyone but I feel in a good place. And yeah, absolutely, I can’t remember the last time I crossed the line and had such a good feeling, particularly as I was looking for the TV screens and I just couldn’t beli… I could see the team was cheering so I couldn’t believe that. It’s just crazy to think that this is my 31st pole and it still feels like it’s the first one. It’s just an incredible feeling and I’m very grateful to be here today, as I said.

    Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto Motor) Lewis, yesterday you said on the radio that the car was all over the place and even today in the morning you had some problems, and now you are on pole position. I think Nico had quite a good long stint yesterday, how confident are you in the long stints of the Mercedes and the race pace, and would you prefer wet or dry in that respect?

    LH: I feel that the long pace is not bad. I think we… again, over the evening, last night we made some decent changes, but going into qualifying we made some better ones. Qualifying was more about just being there at the right time  and you never know when you’re going to be in the right position and I just happened to be one of the last ones coming across the line and that’s when the track would be at its best. But I think Nico proved that the long run was good and I think I had a few good laps as well but the Red Bulls are still pretty quick. I think it’s going to be close but I hear it’s going to rain pretty heavily tomorrow.

    Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action and National Speedsport News) Mark, it’s very easy for anybody to look silly out there, make a stupid mistake. How much more chancy is a session in the wet compared to a session in the dry when there are far fewer variables?

    MW: Yeah, emotionally it is a bit more of a roller-coaster, particularly when you’ve got… really it’s the conditions changing so much. In our industry and in Formula One we like to control as much as we can, obviously, and the plan into a normal dry qualifying session is obviously very regimented, very organized  and the fine tuning is incredibly precise. When it’s like that, obviously you have to make decisions on the bounce, the driver’s got to be very interactive with the pit wall, the pit wall has got to make the decisions with the boys so yeah, there is just, by circumstance, more emotion and the timing is a bit more – well, a lot more critical and that’s what makes people a bit more squeakier, let’s say, in terms of pressure. As I say, it’s easy to get it wrong.

    Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Sebastian, we saw today that it was very easy to make mistakes. Ferrari looked like they made mistakes at the end so they are quite far behind, while you and Mercedes did everything perfectly. How easy is it for you mentally to get in the car and know that you can trust completely what’s going to happen on the pit wall?

    SV: I don’t think you are in any doubt – at least for myself – in doubt of what the team does. Obviously  in terms of which tyres to use and when etc is largely depending on us inside the car, but I think, as Mark touched on, obviously in these conditions it’s a lot trickier to get it right, not just for the team, also for the driver because it’s so much easier to make a mistake. In the end, I think all three of us had very good laps at the end, on the lap where it mattered most. But for sure, compared to the dry, I think it’s much harder to nail that one where you don’t have room for error and it’s so much easier to make a mistake, go wide, lose the car, lose time so yeah, if I look back to the lap I had now, obviously, there’s room for improvement but many times I was quite close to lose the car. It doesn’t mean that I had to go off and crash the car but lose the car, lose time. That’s why,  in the rain, in the wet, in these mixed conditions, there’s a chance for everybody to over-perform, but there’s also the chance to get it wrong. It doesn’t take much and you are somewhere at the back.

    Q: (Leonid Novozhilov – F1Life) Lewis, what were you feeling in your last qualifying lap?

    LH: This one just now? Again, it didn’t feel spectacular. As I said, I went wide in turn one and my dashboard was really confusing me in terms of whether I was up or down on my previous lap, but I just kept pushing and particularly the first corner and the last two corners were terrible. I thought that the lap wasn’t that great but…

    SV: You thought I was on a cool-down lap which is why…

    LH: I was catching him…

    SV: …so much that I will just take it easy.

     

    Ends

    Hamilton (centre) takes the pole at Spa on Saturday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas photo
    Hamilton (centre) takes the pole at Spa on Saturday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas photo
  • Paul di Resta qualifies 5th for Sahara Force India

    Spa, 24 Aug 2013: Sahara Force India came through a challenging qualifying session of varied weather conditions with Paul Di Resta qualifying in fifth place ahead of Adrian Sutil in P12.
    P5        Paul Di Resta    VJM06-04
    Q1:       2:02.338           
    Q2:       1:48.925
    Q3:       2:02.332
    Paul Di Resta said: “Fifth place on the grid is a great result. At the start of Q3 I knew that I wanted to go straight out on the intermediates. It was a brave decision and the team let me go ahead with it, while the others chose dry tyres. I knew it was our best chance to get up towards the front of the grid and it paid off. It’s a shame that the rain stopped a bit too early because there were only a few cars that were quicker than us in the wet and they just got ahead at the end of the session. The main thing is we are in a strong position for tomorrow and we will come back tomorrow ready to fight.”
    P12      Adrian Sutil      VJM06-03
    Q1:       2:02.749
    Q2:       1:49.103
    Adrian Sutil: “I’m feeling disappointed with how things ended up today because I think we had the potential to get a better result. In Q2 I was on my final flying lap a bit too early and the track was getting quicker all the time. So we should have waited a bit longer and I think that would have made the difference to make the top ten. Also, I had some traffic on my fastest lap and that cost me some time.”
    Vijay Mallya, Team Principal & Managing Director
    “As soon as it started raining before qualifying we knew that it was likely to be an unpredictable qualifying session. The track conditions were constantly changing from wet to dry and it was vital to be on track at the right time on the right tyres. With Paul we judged this pretty much to perfection and for a while we were looking good for a front row start. But the rain eased up and he dropped down to fifth, which is still an excellent result. Adrian looked competitive in Q2 but we didn’t maximise our time on the drying track and he missed out on Q3. The big question mark for tomorrow is the weather. We’ve looked more competitive in the dry, but whatever the conditions we will push hard to come away with a strong result.”
    ends

    Paul di Resta qualifies 5th at Spa on Saturday. A Sahara Force India photo
    Paul di Resta qualifies 5th at Spa on Saturday. A Sahara Force India photo
  • Hamilton takes pole at Spa

    Spa, 24 Aug 2013: Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes AMG Petronas took the pole position ahead of Red Bull’s duo championship leader Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber for the Belgian Grand Prix FIA Formula One World Championship on Sunday  at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit.

    Lewis Hamilton took pole for Mercedes in a dramatic, rain-swept qualifying session at Spa-Francorchamps.

    Four drivers held pole position in the last few seconds of qualifying for tomorrow’s Belgian Grand Prix. With spray flying up from the wet track, Nico Rosberg’s stellar effort for Mercedes gave him a provisional pole but team-mate Lewis Hamilton and Red Bull Racing’s Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel had made it across the line just before the chequered flag appeared, giving the huge Spa-Francorchamps crowd an exciting two minutes, waiting to see if they could knock the Monaco and Silverstone winner off top spot.

    Conditions possibly improved in those last two minutes, though any gain was marginal. Webber crossed the line first and took P1. He held it for seconds only, however, as Vettel blasted through and took a tenth out of his time. For the briefest instant it was the Red Bull 1-2 that practice pace had suggested – but then Hamilton arrived to take his fifth pole of the season and fourth in succession. His time of 2:01.012 was two-tenths of a second better than Vettel had managed.

    “I feel I’m able to find the limits when the conditions are really on the edge,” said a jubilant Hamilton. “I pushed quite a lot in the middle sector particularly as I thought I was down three seconds, so I was really caning it.”

    At the start of Q3, there was a degree of chaos with most of the field going out on Option tyres. With drops of rain already falling, it was a gamble – and one that failed to pay off with the slick runners all returning to the pits at the end of their out lap. “It was quite entertaining because it started to rain pretty heavily,” observed Vettel.

    The one exception was Paul di Resta. Starting the session on intermediates he had the track to himself and took P1 by default. With the possibility of conditions worsening, he had an excellent chance of repeating Giancarlo Fisichella’s 2009 feat and taking a Force India pole at Spa – but the rain receded and he had to settle for fifth position.

    Behind Di Resta, Jenson Button took sixth for McLaren, ahead of Lotus’s Romain Grosjean and Kimi Räikkönen who took seventh and eighth, while row five was an all-Ferrari affair with Fernando Alonso ninth and Felipe Massa tenth.

    Qualifying had taken place in mixed conditions from the start: rain began to fall a few minutes before Q1 began. It was no surprise, though, as the radar had been showing the weather on its way for some time. It meant the session began on intermediate tyres but when the rain ceased partway through the 20minutes, the track began to dry quickly. Backmarkers with nothing to lose took a risk and ventured out on dry tyres. It paid dividends for the Marussia pair of Max Chilton and Jules Bianchi who qualified for their first Q2. Caterham’s Giedo van der Garde also made the cut. Eliminated were the Williams of Pastor Maldonado and Valtteri Bottas, Jean-Eric Vergne and Daniel Ricciardo from Toro Rosso, Sauber’s Esteban Gutiérrez and Caterham’s Charles Pic.

    Q2 was dry and saw the times drop by over ten seconds. With three drivers out of position and unlikely to challenge for a place in Q3, the battle was essentially between 13 cars competing for ten places. In a hard-fought battle the drivers to drop out were Nico Hülkenberg for Sauber in 11th, Force India’s Adrian Sutil in 12th and McLaren’s Sergio Pérez 13th. They were joined by Van der Garde 14th, Bianchi 15th and Chilton 16th, each of the latter three enjoying a career-best qualifying position.

    His teammate,  Nico Rosberg qualified in fourth positions  after an eventful wet-dry qualifying session. Stats by Mercedes team:

    • Lewis took the team’s eighth pole position in the past nine races and his fourth consecutive pole this afternoon
    • Nico qualified fourth and was fastest of all until the dying moments of the qualifying session
    • Four Mercedes-Benz powered cars qualified in the top six and it was the third Mercedes pole in five years at Spa
    • Weather forecasts currently predict similar mixed weather conditions for tomorrow afternoon’s race
    Drivers
    No.
    Chassis No.
    Qualifying 1
    Qualifying 2
    Qualifying 3
    Lewis Hamilton
    10
    F1 W04 / 04
    2:00.368
    P2
    1:49.067
    P10
    2:01.012
    P1
    Nico Rosberg
    9
    F1 W04 / 03
    2:01.099
    P4
    1:48.552
    P3
    2:02.251
    P4
    Weather
    Drying track in Q1; dry track in Q2; wet track in Q3
    Temperatures
    Air: 20-21 °C
    Track: 20-24 °C

    Lewis Hamilton 
    A fourth pole in a row just feels fantastic! The team did a great job to get the timing at the end of Q3 absolutely perfect and I was in exactly the right track position. I was so surprised when I came across the line to hear I was P1. I went wide in the first corner and I thought I was down on time from the read-out on my steering wheel. I just kept pushing and did a strong middle sector, then I could see I was catching Sebastian towards the end so it was a great feeling. I hope we can try and fight it out tomorrow, whatever the conditions. The Red Bulls are still ahead of us in terms of performance so results like this feel even more special because I know I’ve got the absolute maximum out of myself and out of the car.

    Nico Rosberg 
    It was a very difficult qualifying session and unfortunately luck wasn’t on my side today. When I took the chequered flag, I was quickest at that time, but the track quicker and quicker for the guys who had got the extra lap and eventually ended up in the top three positions, so I must be happy with fourth place on the grid. Our car seems pretty good in all conditions here this weekend which makes me hopeful of a strong race performance tomorrow afternoon.

    Ross Brawn 
    It was obviously a very tricky session for everybody this afternoon and we were far from perfect but we did enough things right to get the job done. In the closing seconds of Q3, track position was critical and Lewis – running last on the road on the final lap – did a great job with the opportunity he had. We were not sure how it would turn out as DRS had been disabled for that final lap, then we saw his time in the second sector and started to get excited. Nico didn’t get the extra lap but he was fastest of all when his session ended and it’s a fantastic team result to have two cars starting in the top four after such a mixed qualifying. We are expecting similar conditions tomorrow so we will have a good chance of success. But we will have to run a smart race and make the right decisions to do achieve it.

    Toto Wolff 
    That was a very tough qualifying session and another one where it was easier to get things wrong than right. It was very close indeed for Lewis in Q2 when he made it through by just two-hundredths of a second and that showed how challenging the entire hour was in terms of tactics and strategy. It was crucial to get on track at the right time and our result in Q3 was a great team performance. Both drivers produced special laps: Nico was top of the timesheets when he took the chequered flag and then Lewis delivered another of his magic laps, especially in the middle sector. Our engineers have clearly found a good set-up for these mixed conditions and we are expecting more of the same kind of weather tomorrow.

    2013 Belgian Grand Prix qualifying times

    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 2:01.012
    2 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 2:01.200
    3 Mark Webber Red Bull Racing 2:01.325
    4 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 2:02.251
    5 Paul di Resta Force India 2:02.332
    6 Jenson Button McLaren 2:03.075
    7 Romain Grosjean Lotus 2:03.081
    8 Kimi Räikkönen Lotus 2:03.390
    9 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 2:03.482
    10 Felipe Massa Ferrari 2:04.059

    11 Nico Hülkenberg Sauber 1:49.088
    12 Adrian Sutil Force India 1:49.103
    13 Sergio Pérez McLaren 1:49.304
    14 Giedo van der Garde Caterham 1:52.036
    15 Jules Bianchi Marussia 1:52.563
    16 Max Chilton Marussia 1:52.762

    17 Pastor Maldonado Williams 2:03.072
    18 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 2:03.300
    19 Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso 2:03.317
    20 Valtteri Bottas Williams 2:03.432
    21 Esteban Gutiérrez Sauber 2:04.324
    22 Charles Pic Caterham 2:07.384

    endsHamilton car takes pole 24Aug2013 Merc pic