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  • News Flash: Tanak-Jarveoja crowned 2019 WRC Champions; Neuville wins

    News Flash: Tanak-Jarveoja crowned 2019 WRC Champions; Neuville wins

    Thierry Neuville and Nicolas Gilsoul scored victory on Rally de España in Salou today, but it was not enough to keep the Hyundai crew in the fight for the crown, as Toyota’s Ott Tänak and Martin Järveoja secured the 2019 FIA World Rally Championship title.*

    Tänak and Jarveojä finished in second place but importantly won maximum Power Stage points, which promoted them ahead of Dani Sordo and Carlos Del Barrio, who complete the podium in third place.

    Mads Østberg and Torstein Eriksen claimed FIA WRC 2 Pro victory for Citroën, while Eric Camilli and Benjamin Veillas won in the FIA WRC 2 class in a privateer Citroën C3 R5.

    * subject to the official publication of the results by the FIA

  • Marquez vs Viñales: a duel to the wire Down Under: Champ wins Challenger crashes out

    Marquez vs Viñales: a duel to the wire Down Under: Champ wins Challenger crashes out

    Cal Crutchlow on his way to his best finish this year so far. A MotoGP image

    Phillip Island (Australia), 27 Oct 2019: Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) and Maverick Viñales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) played high speed chess at the Pramac Generac Australian Motorcycle Grand Prix, with the two locked in a tense duel for supremacy throughout. It wasn’t a duel fought in overtakes and swapped paint, it was a duel in pure speed – with the two perfectly matched the point they made a break for it right down to the final lap. That final lap was a dramatic one as Marquez struck early and Viñales dug deep to fight back – and then suffered a dramatic crash that decided the first time the two men have really gone head to head. With that, Cal Crutchlow’s (LCR Honda Castrol) impressive ride became one to second place and his best finish of the season, with Jack Miller (Pramac Racing) completing the podium to the delight of the home fans – the first Aussie to stand on the rostrum on home soil in the premier class since MotoGP™ Legend Casey Stoner won the 2012 event at Phillip Island.

    From the off, the race was a classic – and dramatic. From P4 on the grid, Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) got a great launch to get the holeshot into Doohan Corner, with Viñales slipping to P6 from pole. Then, at Turn 2, two heavyweights were out of the race: Danilo Petrucci (Ducati Team) was pushed slightly wide by Marquez as the packed shuffled into the left-hander, and the Italian was a little too eager on the gas, highsiding and dramatically launched into Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT). The Frenchman was already wide and almost on the grass, therefore sadly also right in the path of the oncoming Italian. Riders ok, but out of a pivotal race.

    Back at the front, ‘The Doctor’ was still leading the way on his 400th Grand Prix start, with Crutchlow and Aprilia Racing Team Gresini’s Andrea Iannone slotting in behind the Italian as a freight train of nine riders formed at the front in the opening handful of laps. Rossi held P1 until Lap 4 when Crutchlow powered past the Yamaha into Turn 1, before Iannone then spectacularly led the race for Aprilia as Crutchlow, Iannone, Rossi, Marquez, Viñales, Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini), Andrea Dovizioso (Ducati Team), Miller and Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) all battled one another in a scintillating start to the 2019 Australian GP.

    The man with the pace for most of the weekend was slowly picking his way through the pack though. Viñales was up to third on Lap 8, second on Lap 9 and the lead on Lap 10. Knowing the polesitter had the pace to make a break, third place Marquez was then in a hurry to get past Crutchlow as he shoved the Brit wide at the top of Lukey Heights. That dropped the number 35 down to P4 behind Iannone, and Viñales and Marquez immediately seemed to pull the pin. Crutchlow passed the Aprilia of Iannone into Turn 1 and attempted to go with the leading duo as all three set mid 1:29s and escaped the monster battle for P4.

    The LCR Honda Castrol man couldn’t hold the pace of Viñales and Marquez, however, as the two Spaniards were relentless in the lead to pull away. But Crutchlow was far clear of the scrap behind as three Ducatis, two Suzukis, two Aprilias and a Yamaha fought tooth and nail. Rookies Francesco Bagnaia (Pramac Racing) and Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) were two impressive performers as they got up in the mix.

    By a handful of laps to go, Marquez was threatening to lead into Turn 1 – and sitting up. As the race rolled on, Marquez kept shying away from a pass, shadowing Viñales around the rest of the lap and waiting for the last. When that came around, there was nothing between the two over the line and the Honda suddenly struck. Viñales was quick around the outside in the hope of gaining the inside line for the Southern Loop, but Marquez shut the door. Next came Honda Corner and no way through, leaving Turn 10 as the likely major overtaking opportunity. And the race would be settled on the drop into 10, but now how we imagined.

    Viñales had already pulled off some sublime moves there, and this time he was equally apid over the crest of Lukey Heights, right on the back of Marquez. But then, drama suddenly struck as it proved too much to ask of the Yamaha and Viñales cascaded out the race and onto the grass, leaving Marquez uncotested to the line.

    For the reigning Champion it was victory number 55 of his MotoGP™ career, becoming the most successful Honda rider in the premier class and overtaking Mick Doohan’s record on the MotoGP™ Legend’s home circuit. Viñales’ crash bumped 2016 Australian GP winner Crutchlow into P2, a sensational result for the number 35 after last year’s near-career ending crash at Phillip Island. Meanwhile…

    Miller fought himself to the fore of the group battle for P4, which had now become a fight for the podium. On the run to the line, he had to fend off teammate Bagnaia to return an Aussie to the rostrum, apparently with a little inspiration from Ned Kelly. ‘Pecco’ pocketed his best MotoGP™ result in P4,  from P15 on the grid no less, topping off a great weekend for the Pramac team at Pramac Generac-sponsored GP. Fellow rookie Mir also claimed his best premier class result in P5, the Suzuki man holding off the super impressive Iannone as ‘The Maniac’ took his best Aprilia finish and equalled the Noale factory’s best.

    Dovizioso crossed the line in P7 just a whisker behind Iannone, meaning the Team Championship between the Ducati Team and Repsol Honda Team now sits at just one point. Rossi slipped back to eighth in the closing stages, holding off the challenge from Rins and Aleix Espargaro, who completed the top ten.

    Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) took P11 ahead of a tougher weekend for Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing), that closing Aprilia’s deficit to KTM a little in the standings. Johann Zarco (LCR Honda Idemitsu) took P13 on his Honda debut, with Karel Abraham (Reale Avintia Racing) and Hafizh Syahrin (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) completing the points.

    Miguel Oliveira (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) didn’t race after being declared unfit in his morning check up.

    That’s it from Phillip Island and another absolute classic Down Under, with another year to wait until we return. But there’s less than a week until we’re back on track in Malaysia at Sepang International Circuit, so tune in as the top Independent Rider and Team title fights roll on, and the team standings could get another shake up…

    Marc Marquez: “Incredible, incredible win because today we weren’t the fastest on the racetrack, Maverick was faster but I was waiting for him. I knew he was the target, I knew he was coming and didn’t start so well so I was waiting for him and when he overtook I tried to follow him and be there. I knew he’d push once he overtook Cal and that’s what he did. It was a strong move when I took Cal but I had to make it because I knew if Maverick had a gap of more than half a second or a little bit more, it would be impossible. So I was using his slipstream, he was so fast in T2 and T3, I was fastest in the last sector and the straight, where we could use our engine.

    “On the last lap it was my plan to overtake on the straight and then close the door, then I saw it started to rain, especially at Turn 3 and Turn 6, and I thought, ‘what’s going on?!’ but I just tried to brake late. At Turn 10 he’d already overtaken me twice and I knew he would come. I went in so deep, braking hard. I didn’t know he crashed but I think I would have had a second chance. I think I could have overtaken him before the finish line too.

    “It was a slow-cooked victory that, we tried to work on the details, all the Repsol Honda Team, and I equalled Mick Doohan in Motegi. Now, I’m the rider with more victories for Honda, which is something incredible. I’m happy, enjoying dreaming this dream. Just enjoy it because you don’t know the future.”

    Results: top-3
    1 – Marc Marquez (SPA – Honda) 40’43.729
    2 – Cal Crutchlow* (GBR – Honda) +11.413
    3 – Jack Miller* (AUS – Ducati) +14.499*Independent Team rider

  • The track is very demanding as it is very difficult to get the tyres work: Sebastian Vettel

    The track is very demanding as it is very difficult to get the tyres work: Sebastian Vettel

    Saturday’s post-qualifying press conference in progress. Photo by Abhishek Aggarwal

    Mexico City, 26 Oct 2019: Replying to a question by INDIAinF1 correspondent, Abhishek Aggarwal, about the circuit being on the highest elevation prompting a changing strategy, former world champion Sebastian Vettel said it would be a big challenge at this track which is very demanding.  “First of all, we lose a lot of downforce despite running all the downforce that we have. So, as Max was saying, the cars are sliding a lot, very difficult to drive. So, that obviously leads on to tyres and tyre management. It will be very difficult to get the tyres to work and make the tyres last. The other one, obviously, with such thin air up here is to make sure you cool all of your components such as brakes, engine, oil,” he added and concluded saying: A bit of everything!

    The following drivers who qualified top-3 attended the drivers’ FIA Press Conference on Saturday:  Max Verstappen (Red Bull Racing), Charles Leclerc (Ferrari), and Sebastian Vettel (Ferrari). 

    TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Paul Di Resta)

    Q: Max, that’s an excellent pole position on a track that had Ferrari written over it in terms of top speed. You missed out on the narrow margins last year but you’ve got the job done and given yourself the best chance tomorrow.

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it’s been quite an interesting day but of course to come out on top was incredible. Yeah, the last few races we know that Ferrari have been really quick on the straight but for us to come back like this and take pole position here, a big thank you to the team for that. They always kept pushing very hard. They kept bringing new parts to the car and it showed today that we are very quick.

    Q: Have you believed all weekend that you’ve had a car good enough for pole position?

    MV: Secretly you always hope and you always keep pushing. You try to find the right balance in the car and in Q3 that all came together.

    Q: And the start tomorrow? We know these Ferraris are quick down the straight, you’ve obviously got to defend there but you know what you’ve got to do based on last year.

    MV: Yeah, it will be a bit different for me, starting first instead of second on this track. We’re going to give it all. We have a good race car anyway so even if something happens in the start and we lose a position I think we are still fine.

    Q: Well done Max, nice to see you battling with the Ferraris. Charles, best of the rest I guess. Looked like the lap wasn’t going too bad until a small mistake right at the end of the lap on that last one.

    Charles LECLERC: Yeah, the first lap was quite good. The second one, we tried to put a bit more balance in the car to have a bit more front, which helped the first sector but then the last sector was too tricky and I lost the rear, so I lost all the time I made up in the first sector. But Red Bull was very quick. Max especially was extremely quick and the race is still long tomorrow.

    Q: I guess when you look in the distance there, you know you have a top speed advantage on these guys, you must be looking forward to the start and applying your strategy to try and optimise.

    CL: Yeah, definitely. The start will be very important but the top speed we have is very good so hopefully we can take advantage of this.

    Q: Sebastian, third place, I know you’re going to be disappointed with that. You’ve looked in very good shape all weekend, actually, and you were the king of the first sector but it looked like you struggled at the end of the lap?

    Sebastian VETTEL: Yeah, I had a mistake on my first run, so I was quite confident that in the second run I could make up for it. But unfortunately there was the double yellow so I had to slow down. So the lap was lost. But yeah, the car is good. Obviously I would have liked to be a bit further up, I think it was possible. But let’s see tomorrow. It’s a long race and I think we have the speed, as all weekend we have been quite quick.

    Q: You optimised that in Russia, which was a long run to the first braking zone. Do you still think you can get the business and do well tomorrow?

    SV: We’ll see. We hope to have a good start and then take it from there. Obviously it’s a long race, a tough one on brakes, cooling in general, so let’s see. Also with the tyres, I think it will be quite an adventure tomorrow. I think all top six cars opted to start on the medium tyre, so we will see who dares to go the longest. I’m looking forward to tomorrow.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Max, sensational performance by you, well done. Just how tough was it out there to find the limit in those ever-changing conditions?

    MV: Well, I think it was just because the track is very slippery and it’s difficult to get the tyres working in the right window, so it all depends on your out lap and everybody is trying to be close to each other and in the last sector we are always slowing down but then you just hope that your tyres are working for Turn 1. This time it was all going well and from the start of qualifying the car was working like I wanted it to be. Of course very happy then in Q3 to get pole.

    Q: You said this morning that pole might be a step too far. Did the car exceed your expectations?

    MV: Yeah, maybe a little bit. I think compared to yesterday we even made a step forward, so that’s always good, that’s always positive, and like I said before, with the tyres, they were working well this time so that’s good.

    Q: Many congratulations and good luck for tomorrow. Charles, you’re starting on the front row for the sixth consecutive race. How happy were you with the performance of your Ferrari?

    CL: Very happy, especially in the first run of Q3, I think the car there was very good. In the second run of Q3 I asked for a bit more front and it was just too much for the last sector, so I lost all the time I made up in the first sector. But overall Max was just too quick today for us. But the race is tomorrow. We have got good straight-line speed, which I hope we can take advantage of at the start.

    Q: Were you surprised by the pace of the Red Bull?

    CL: Yes and no. I think we expected them to be strong. After FP3 maybe we thought we had a shot for pole and then in qualifying they were too quick. So a bit surprised in qualifying.

    Q: Sebastian, coming to you: on pole last time out in Suzuka, P3 today. How would you describe your session?

    SV: Overall I think it was good. But unfortunately in Q3 on the first run I had a mistake and the second run I was caught out by the yellow flags, so yeah, not ideal. I didn’t peak when it was time to peak in the sessions, especially in Q3. But other than that, the car felt good. I think there was more in hand. Obviously Max was a fair bit faster than us but I think with a clean lap we could have challenged him.

    Q: Looking ahead to the race, how big a factor will tyre management be?

    SV: Yeah, it will be the most important part of the race. Obviously we’ll see how everything gets going. I think everybody opted to start on the medium tyres. We’ll take it from there. Obviously it’s a long race around here.

    Questions from the floor:

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – Autosport) Max, what do you think made the difference here to previous races, to have this sort of performance in qualifying and how satisfying is it to hit back after a few near misses since the summer break?

    MV: Yeah, I think the last few races we have been really hurt of course on straight line speed and on most of the tracks you can’t gain enough in the corners compared to what you lose on the straights and I think here it’s still big but this track has very low grip so it’s not only aero, it’s also mechanical grip, which is a little bit more important and good kerb riding and stuff like that and I think traditionally our car has always been very good. We just made a mistake in Singapore with the set-up, otherwise I think we could have been really quick there as well. For us it didn’t work out there. We learned a lot from it and I think we came here with a car which was very well prepared already on the simulator, where I was very happy with it and basically we didn’t need to change too much on the track and it was working.

    Q: (Fréd Ferret – l’Equipe) Question for all three of you. Do you think that the first straight line will be as at Sochi and how will you deal with the tow?

    MV: Well, just look at the last tow year. I guess that says enough.

    CL: Yeah, this time I won’t be starting on pole, second, so hopefully I can take the tow from Max and have an opportunity, but yeah, the start will be important for sure.

    SV: Nothing to add.

    MV: You will have a mega tow.

    SV: We’ll see.

    Q: (Lawrence Edmondson – ESPN) Max, it looked like you set a fastest final sector despite the accident of Bottas. Can you explain whether you backed off or if you were aware of it, if you saw the yellow flags coming into that corner.

    MV: I was aware that Valtteri crashed.

    Did you back off?

    MV: It didn’t really look like it, did it? No.

    Q: (Abhishek Aggarwal – INDIAinF1.com) Sebastian, as we know at this track, in the whole calendar it’s at the highest elevation above sea-level – 2.5km – Do you think there could be something like the thin air changing strategy for tomorrow’s race – comparing it to other circuits?

    SV: Well, it is a big challenge around here because obviously it’s a very demanding track for the car. First of all we lose a lot of downforce despite running all the downforce that we have. So, as Max was saying, the cars are sliding a lot, very difficult to drive. So, that obviously leads on to tyres and tyre management. It will be very difficult to get the tyres to work and make the tyres last. The other one, obviously, with such thin air up here is to make sure you cool all of your components such as brakes, engine, oil. A bit of everything.

    Q: (Jaap De Groot – Het Parool Amsterdam) Question for Max. Starting now on the pole position, new challenge according to the situation at the first turn. The last year you took a profit out of it form the second position. You see that also as a challenge to keep pole position?

    MV: We’ll find out tomorrow. I’m not too worried about it. If they drive by, it’s fine – then we have a good race.

    Q: Yeah, but the last two races that you won were decided in the first turn.

    MV: Yep, that’s true. Let’s do it a bit different this time!

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for all three of you. Usually you all love the downforce, you all love the cornering speed here, it’s quite different. We will get a presentation of the new regulations next weekend. We don’t know exactly what we expect – but would you be happy to lose a bit of downforce in the future? Because for us as a TV viewer it looks quite spectacular to see the cars sliding a lot in the fast corners.

    SV: I think as a one-off it’s nice, so obviously if we lose a lot of downforce for all the tracks it would mean that we lose a lot more up here as well. So, yeah, I think it’s always exciting to have fast cars. I think people also on the grandstand see if the cars are slow, hence, I think the trend to go towards faster cars with the regulations to go with faster cars from ’17 onwards – but I’m sure that we are all ready to go a little bit slower as long as it’s a step forward for all of us in terms of racing. If not, then obviously it’s not really what we want.

    MV: Yeah, I think that the cars are really quick at the moment and I don’t think you can find a way of following in a better way with the same cornering speeds like we have now, so I think we do have to go a bit slower but, of course, I do not want to go four, five seconds slower. Maybe two, two-and-a-half maximum. Stuff like that. The car will still be very impressive through the corners. And anyway, whenever you drive on the limit, it’s always very hard, so if it’s going two seconds faster, slower, doesn’t really matter. I think at the end of the day it’s more important that we can actually race instead of just be there and can’t do anything.

    Q: Max, do you enjoy the car when it’s producing less downforce, like here?

    MV: Well, I enjoy this car more, of course – but for sure we’ll find a way of making that car enjoyable as well.

    Charles?

    CL: I agree. The feeling in qualifying with this much downforce on the cars is just amazing and I love driving that way. But yeah, as Max said, we’ll need to sacrifice a little bit of that to have better racing. We just need to find the right balance it between cutting the speeds and trying to follow.

    Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto Motor und Sport) Max, today you lost only two-tenths on the Ferrari on the first sector, yesterday it was more than double. Any explanation for that?

    MV: I think we improved the car again a little bit and yeah, maybe yesterday was not the perfect sector one – but of course you always know you can improve, or you try, at least. And yeah, today it was just working a little bit better.

    Q: (Carlos Alberto Velázquez – Reforma) Question for Max. It’s your second pole it will be your third win here in Mexico. Wouldn’t Mexico be your best race track in your life, in Formula One. It will be your favourite for you?

    MV: No. I don’t think you can change your favourite track. Since I was a kid it was always Spa and it’s still the same. But I always love coming here. It’s different, y’know. Of course we have some tracks where we can do really fast through corners and have a lot of grip. This is the opposite. It’s still quite technical and you have to be really focussed on trying to hit the apexes well and trying to make the tyres work, which is a bit different to some other tracks, which I like. And yes, it’s been good to me in the past. It’s definitely not a bad track for me.

    Q: (Fernando Alonso – motorlat.com) Charles, I don’t know if we’ll lose the chance for a really tight fight in quali and do you think this will be translated to the race, to have a very close fight between the Red Bull and Ferrari?

    CL: Red Bull and, again, Max especially, was very quick yesterday in the FP2 long runs. So it’s going to be difficult but I think anything is possible if we take an advantage at the start. I think there are quite big problems for cooling for everyone, so it’s very difficult to follow around this track. So yeah, we’ll have to take the opportunity in Turn One is we have it.

    Q: Sebastian, do you think you’ll be closer to Red Bull in race trim?

    SV: Well, I think we were very close today. Maybe closer than the stopwatch was telling. So, I think it was a match and I hope it’s… I’m quite confident it’s going to be a match as well. Obviously it depends on how the race unfolds but also I would not rule out Mercedes.

    Q (Scott Mitchell – Autosport) To all three please. Just to go back to Valtteri’s crash and the yellow flag at the end of Q3. Is it clear among drivers and with the rulemakers what you can get away with, with a yellow flag – and also is it realistic to expect you to back off all that much in qualifying when all that’s on the line?

    CL: Yeah, of course, I think it’s clear for everyone that when there’s a yellow flag you need to slow down. On my side, the crash was behind, so I cannot judge that situation but yeah, I think it’s clear for every driver. It’s the basics.

    Anything more you’d like to say on this topic Max?

    MV: No, I think we all know what a yellow flag means.

    Q: (Lawrence Edmondson – ESPN) Why didn’t you back off then, if you saw the yellow?

    MV: Well, it doesn’t matter, does it?

    Q: Well it might, if the FIA look into it.

    MV: Well, then delete my lap. The second. The other lap was fine as well.

    Q: Not from a safety perspective? Any concerns?

    MV: Do we have to go there? To safety? I think we know what we are doing – otherwise we would not be driving an F1 car. It’s qualifying and, yeah, you go for it. But like I said before, if they want to delete the lap, then delete the lap.

  • Dalla Porta is the 2019 Moto3 World Champion

    Dalla Porta is the 2019 Moto3 World Champion

    The number 48 lifts the crown to become the first Italian lightweight class Champion since Andrea Dovizioso in 2004

    Lorenzo Dalla Porta displays No.1 helmet after becoming the Moto3 world champion for 2019. A MotoGP image

    Phillip Island, 27 Oct 2019: Lorenzo Dalla Porta (Leopard Racing) is the 2019 Moto3™ World Champion. After a stunning race win at Phillip Island to secure the crown, the Italian from the Tuscan city of Prato becomes the first from his country to win a lightweight class World Championship since Andrea Dovizioso took the 2004 125 title.

    Dalla Porta made his first appearance in the Moto3™ World Championship at Indianapolis in 2015 replacing Isaac Viñales at Husqvarna Factory Laglisse, the same structure he raced with at the time in the FIM CEV Repsol Moto3™ Junior World Championship. Throughout the rest of the season he only failed to finish once, at Phillip Island, and took a best result of eighth after an impressive debut showing.

    The following season, the Italian made more than just a few more appearances on the world stage. At Mugello he replaced Philipp Öttl at Schedl GP Racing and scored a point, and at Assen he replaced Jorge Navarro at Estrella Galicia 0,0, taking his second top ten in Moto3™. Later in the season, he then joined the Championship full time replacing Romano Fenati at Sky Racing Team VR46 from Silverstone on. The same year, his junior campaign continued and Dalla Porta was crowned 2016 FIM CEV Repsol Moto3™ Junior World Champion at the season finale in Valencia.

    2017 saw the Italian join Pull&Bear Aspar Mahindra and make the permanent move up to the World Championship, although the year was a tougher one for Dalla Porta, especially given his earlier results. He did enough to gain the attention of Leopard Racing for the following season, however, and joined the high-profile team for 2018.

    The switch was an immediate success and Dalla Porta was on the podium in the season opener at Losail, taking third place and his first rostrum finish in Grand Prix racing. From there followed some solid races as the Italian took a top ten finish more often than not, and his first win would come in the latter half of the season on home turf at Misano World Circuit Marco Simoncelli. More podiums in Thailand, Japan and Malaysia followed, putting Dalla Porta in the top five overall by the end of the year.

    2019 saw that promise pay off even more as Dalla Porta put together an impressive campaign. Again it began with a podium in Qatar, this time in second, and the Italian took two more rostrum finishes at Le Mans and Mugello. He missed out at Catalunya through no fault of his own, but he was back on the box at the TT Circuit Assen before taking his first win of the season at the German GP. Another two podiums at Brno and Silverstone saw him exchanging the points lead with key rival Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) as the two pulled clear at the top of the standings, but as the flyaways came around, Dalla Porta was the man with the momentum.

    Another podium at Buriram was backed up by a second win of the season at the Twin Ring Motegi to put the him in the driving seat on the road to Phillip Island, and some key drama hit early in the Australian GP as closest rival Canet crashed out in the first few laps – leaving Dalla Porta with an open goal. In a classic Moto3™ showdown around one of the most challenging racetracks on the calendar, the number 48 was fearless to take a hard-fought third win of the year and secure himself the crown.

    The 2019 Moto3™ World Champion is Lorenzo Dalla Porta!

  • Verstappen takes pole, but suffers 3-place grid penalty; Leclerc to start on P1

    Verstappen takes pole, but suffers 3-place grid penalty; Leclerc to start on P1

    By Abhishek Aggarwal

    Mexico City, 26 Oct 2019: Valtteri Bottas came out safe after a heavy crash in the final run of the qualifying near Turn 17 on Saturday but that put paid to the hopes of the Finn getting a pole position, as he is the only man who can stop Lewis Hamilton from winning the World Championship for another record year here at the Mexican Grand Prix, the 18th of the 21-event FIA World Formula 1 Championship at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriquez. A quick lap during the first runs put Max Verstappen on pole followed by Charles Leclerc of Ferrari with multiple world champion take p3 ahead of defending champion Lewis Hamilton.

    Charles Leclerc in action on Saturday. Photos by Abhishek Aggarwal

    However, it will not be Max Verstappen, who will start on pole for the race on Sunday. The talented youngster, who failed to respect the yellow flags and slow down after the incident, was penalised with a grid penalty of three places by the stewards. He took the second pole position of his career outwitting Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc by 0.266s, but Leclerc will now start on pole and Sebastian Vettel will be promoted and his Ferrari will start from front row on P2. The AMG Petronas Mercedes team will not have even one of their Silver Arrows on the first row on Sunday but Lewis Hamilton will start on P3 with the grid penalty to the pole sitter.

    Bottas was ahead of Verstappen in the final run of the Q3, when he crashed heavily, seconds before the end of the session, hitting the side barriers but he jumped out of the car safe, and was unhurt after the accident.  Bottas will start on P6.

    The Red Bulls took the lead early on in the session with Verstappen and teammate Alex Albon in the run. Albon clocked a lap of 1:16.175 that left him almost tenths of a second ahead of Leclerc. But Verstappen then posted a quicker lap to beat Albon by 0.249 of a second.

    Defending champion Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes, Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari and Valtteri Bottas were all behind the third-placed Leclerc and in the final run as all elected to stay in their garages, leaving the track clear for the battle to stay in the session.

    Earlier in Q2, crowd favourite and home hero, Sergio Perez, had an unfortunate exit from the qualifying session as the Mexican was eliminated along with Nico Hulkenberg, Kimi Raikkonen and Antonio Giovinnazi

    Further ahead Daniil Kvyat and Carlos Sainz put in good final flying laps to jump to sixth and seventh respectively and that dropped Bottas to eighth place ahead of Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly and McLaren’s Lando Norris. Also through to the second session were Alfa’s Kimi Räikkönen in P11 followed by Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo, Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez, the second Renault of Nico Hulkenberg and the second Alfa Romeo of Antonio Giovinazzi, adds an FIA release.

    Q2 began with Red Bull, Ferrari and Mercedes opting to send their drivers out on medium compound Pirellis and after the first runs it was Vettel who led the way with a lap of 1:15.914, while Verstappen held second thanks to a lap of 1:16.136. Leclerc was third ahead Bottas and Hamilton.

    In the final runs the Mercedes pair again went out on medium tyres and the Red Bulls and the Ferraris circulated on soft tyres, though they later backed out of the runs to ensure qualification on medium compound tyres. Hamilton and Bottas kept going, however, and Hamilton jumped to P1 with a lap of 1:15.721, a tenth ahead of his team-mate. Vettel was third and Verstappen progressed to Q3 in P4 ahead of Leclerc, Sainz and Norris. Albon made it through in P8 ahead of the Toro Rossos of Kvyat and Gasly.

    Verstappen then proved unstoppable in the final Q3 top-10 shootout. After going quickest in the first runs with a lap of 1:14.910 that left him 0.124s clear of Leclerc the Dutchman ramped up the pace in final runs to set a pole position time of 1:14.758. There was confusion in the final moments, however, as Bottas crashed in the final corner on his final run bringing out the yellow flags. The impact was heavy but he was soon out of the car and safe.

    With Verstappen on pole and Leclerc on the front row, third place went to Vettel, with Hamilton fourth. Albon scored his best qualifying result to date with fifth and Bottas qualified sixth, though the heavy damage to his car calls into question where he might start. Sainz qualified seventh ahead of team-mate Norris and the final top 10 places were filled by Toro Rosso’s Kvyat and Gasly.

    2019 FIA Formula One Mexican Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:14.758 7 207.260
    2 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:15.024 0.266 7 206.525
    3 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:15.170 0.412 7 206.124
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:15.262 0.504 6 205.872
    5 Alexander Albon Red Bull Racing 1:15.336 0.578 6 205.670
    6 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:15.338 0.580 5 205.665
    7 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren 1:16.014 1.256 6 203.836
    8 Lando Norris McLaren 1:16.322 1.564 6 203.013
    9 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:16.469 1.711 6 202.623
    10 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 1:16.586 1.828 6 202.313
    11 Sergio Pérez Racing Point 1:16.687 0.966 6 202.047
    12 Nico Hülkenberg Renault 1:16.885 1.164 6 201.526
    13 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:16.933 1.212 6 201.401
    14 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo 1:16.967 1.246 6 201.312
    15 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1:17.269 1.548 6 200.525
    16 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1:18.065 2.116 8 198.480
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:18.436 2.487 9 197.541
    18 Romain Grosjean Haas 1:18.599 2.650 9 197.132
    19 George Russell Williams 1:18.823 2.874 10 196.572
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 1:20.179 4.230 9 193.247

  • Jonathan Rea takes Race 2 victory ahead of Davies and Bautista

    Jonathan Rea takes Race 2 victory ahead of Davies and Bautista

    Unbeatable Rea scores third win of the weekend after a race-long tussle with Bautista!

    Jonathan Rea scores his third win. A WorldSBK image

    Losail, 26 Oct 2019: The final race of the 2019 MOTUL FIM Superbike World Championship took place under the floodlights of the Losail International Circuit for the Motul Qatar Round. After a season of last lap battles, new rivalries, record-shattering performances and triumphant successes, the final race of the season saw yet more phenomenal World Superbike action. Relentless as ever, Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) battled hard to beat Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it  Racing – Ducati) in a race to remember in Qatar.

    Powering off the line for the final time in 2019, Alvaro Bautista made the most of the Ducati power to lead the field to Turn 1, although the Spaniard went wide and allowed Jonathan Rea back ahead. Alex Lowes (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) slotted in behind them whilst Leon Haslam (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK) was right in the mix in fourth, with Michael van der Mark (Pata Yamaha WorldSBK Team) in fifth. It was a disaster for Loris Baz (Ten Kate Racing – Yamaha), who got Turn 1 all wrong and was plum last.

    On Lap 2, it was all action and drama as Rea and Bautista began to battle between Turn 6 and 9, swapping paint and scything under one and other, whilst Alex Lowes was also getting in on the act. At Turn 15, van der Mark took third from Lowes but both ran wide, allowing Toprak Razgatlioglu (Turkish Puccetti Racing) to come through from nowhere, whilst Chaz Davies (Aruba.it  Racing – Ducati) also capitalised on the squabbles. Leon Haslam was a big loser in the battle and was down to seventh.

    After the frantic action had calmed down on Lap 4, Bautista began to close down Jonathan Rea for first, whilst Chaz Davies was now up to third. Bautista and then Davies set the fastest lap of the race, with just over a second covering the leading trio and less than half-a-second covering Rea and Bautista. Meanwhile, van der Mark and Lowes had pulled away from Razgatlioglu.

    With 13 laps to go, Bautista made a move on Rea at Turn 1 but ran wide, with Rea slicing back through. Two laps later and the 34-year-old Spaniard tried again, but the Kawasaki of Rea was too strong on the brakes. With the swapping and changing, Chaz Davies continued to edge closer and now, just 0.273s separated a tantalisingly close podium. Soon, the gloves were off, and Bautista hit the front on Lap 9 at Turn 1, but Rea fought back and barged his way down the inside at the Turn 6 hairpin. Davies was even closer now, and it was a three-way heavyweight fight.

    With seven to go, and outside the top six, Razgatlioglu had dropped behind Haslam, whilst Eugene Laverty (Team Goeleven) was riding strongly on his final appearance on the Ducati V4 R. Loris Baz had recovered well and was now inside the top ten in ninth place, lapping faster than everyone ahead of him up to Chaz Davies. Meanwhile, van der Mark got the better of Lowes for fourth at Turn 6, although Lowes still occupied third overall in the standings and fought back at Turn 1 a lap later.

    Out front, Jonathan Rea had pulled away and left the duelling Ducatis of Bautista and Davies to fight it out. At Turn 15 with four laps to go, Davies made his move and got ahead of his teammate; the last time the two will be in the same team. It would be a critical moment, as the podium places wouldn’t change from that moment on, despite Bautista’s best efforts.

    Across the line for the final time, Rea took a 17th win of the season with a thrilling victory, whilst Chaz Davies clung on for another second place, ahead of Bautista, who bows out of Ducati with a podium. Alex Lowes took fourth and was third overall in the standings, whilst Toprak Razgatlioglu stormed through in a last lap shuffle to take fifth, ahead of a scintillatingly fast Eugene Laverty (Team Goeleven) taking his best finish of the season. Van der Mark, Baz, Haslam and Sandro Cortese (GRT Yamaha WorldSBK) completed the top ten, whilst Cortese’s teammate, Marco Melandri, failed to score points in his final race in the Championship.

    P1 – Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)

    “I wanted that race victory so much. My nanny is not well, so I text her this morning and tell her to watch the race because I wanted to win for her. This gave me a lot of motivation to not take one lap of rest and go all in from the first lap. Thanks to my team for giving me an incredible bike. We have changed massively the bike race to race, so it looks like our it works in a huge window. I achieved my biggest target in my career, which was finishing every single race of this season. I am so proud of this”.

    P2 – Chaz Davies (Aruba.it  Racing – Ducati)

    “I am happy to end the year on that note. We started the season that I was barely able to finish into the top ten in Phillip Island and now we end with a double podium, so we have come a long way and it has been a big learning experience in many ways and it is all good for next year. I am ecstatic to finish the season like this. Thanks to my team”.

    P3 – Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati)

    “It is nice to finish the season on the podium. I am happy because today I was able to recover the feeling with the bike. Yesterday we lost the way, but we were able to get back to the right way for the Tissot Superpole Race, and we kept the same setting for Race 2. We didn’t know what to expect from the long race, and I did fell the tyre drop, especially in entering the corners. I had problems when I had to stop the bike, but we managed to finish the race in third place. Thanks to Ducati for their support during the season, I look forward to next year”.
    #QATWorldSBK at Losail International Circuit: Race 2
    1. Jonathan Rea (Kawasaki Racing Team WorldSBK)
    2. Chaz Davies (Aruba.it Racing – Ducati) +2.978
    3. Alvaro Bautista (Aruba.it  Racing – Ducati) +3.100
  • Thierry Neuville takes the lead after the Spanish rally switches to asphalt

    Thierry Neuville takes the lead after the Spanish rally switches to asphalt

    Thierry Neuville takes the lead as the rally switches to asphalt on Saturday. An FIA image

    Catalonia (Spain), 26 Oct 2019: Thierry Neuville took the lead from his teammate Sébastien Loeb as Rally de España, the penultimate round of the 14-event World Rally Championship, made the switch from gravel to asphalt on Saturday morning. Dani Sordo is in third place as Meeke crashed out, completing an all-Hyundai Top three.

    After the cars were converted into asphalt specification during a longer than usual service on Friday night, the crews faced a loop of three stages this morning on Catalonia’s smooth and fast sealed surface roads.

    A charging Neuville, who had previously led briefly on Friday morning, won the first speed test of the day, SS7, to move ahead of Loeb, the overnight leader. The Belgian was fastest again in SS8 and despite a braking issue in SS9, he increased his advantage at the top to 11.4 seconds, hence keeping his hopes of winning the driver’s title alive.

    2018 Rally de España winner Loeb is second, 5.4s ahead of Sordo, who initially lost third place in the morning’s first stage after a second-quickest time from Toyota’s Kris Meeke.

    But Meeke then crashed out at the start of SS8, hitting a barrier with his Yaris WRC and ripping off the rear-right wheel. This moved the Spanish favourite back to third and Toyota’s Ott Tänak to fourth.

    Tänak had a steady start to the day but still took a stage win in SS9, coming closer to a maiden World Champion title.

    Jari-Matti Latvala is fifth ahead of M-Sport Ford’s Elfyn Evans and Teemu Suninen, while Sébastien Ogier is up to eighth, following the hydraulic issues he suffered on Friday on his C3 WRC. Just behind Ogier, Mads Østberg and Eric Camilli round out the overall top 10 in their Citroën machinery and lead FIA WRC 2 Pro and WRC 2 respectively.

    Østberg leads the Škodas of 2019 WRC 2 Pro champion Kalle Rovanperä and his teammate Jan Kopecky. In WRC 2, Pierre-Louis Loubet is second in front of Kajetan Kajetanowitz.

    Ninth overnight, Toyota’s protégé Takamoto Katsuta stopped at the start of the day’s first stage as he struggled to select gears in his Toyota, but he was able to continue after losing 17 minutes.

  • Charles Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in FP3: Mexican GP

    Charles Leclerc leads Ferrari 1-2 in FP3: Mexican GP

    Charles Leclerc tops FP3 in Mexico on Saturday morning. An FIA image

    Mexico City, 26 Oct 2019: Charles Leclerc went quickest in the final practice session for the Mexican Grand Prix, with the Monegasque driver beating team-mate Sebastian Vettel by just 0.027s at the end of a late chase for top spot following a wet start to the session.

    Heavy overnight rain left the Autódromo Hermanos Rodríguez track surface too damp for slick tyres and the early part of the session saw the few teams that took to the track run cautiously on green-banded intermediate tyres.

    Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen led the way in the first half-hour, the Dutchman posting a time of 1:26.118 that left him four-tenths clear of Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton.

    With a little over 13 minutes left in the session, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen bolted on a set of soft tyres and when the Finn immediately went more than four seconds quicker than Verstappen it sparked a furious final 10 minutes of action as teams attempted to learn as much as possible in the short time available.

    The top spot was traded among Bottas, on medium compound Pirellis, Verstappen, the second Red Bull of Alex Albon and McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, all on softs, before Bottas moved further ahead.

    The Finn moved to soft tyres and with a little over two minutes left on the clock he took P1 with a lap of 1:16.259. Hamilton couldn’t match that with his run on softs, with the Briton putting in a slight scruffy lap to cross the line over a tenth behind his team-mate.

    It was left to Leclerc and Vettel to lead the way and as the chequered flag was shown Leclerc took top spot with a time of 1:16.145, just under three-hundredths of a second ahead of Vettel.

    Their times shuffled Bottas and Hamilton to third and fourth places respectively, while Sainz took fifth place for McLaren.

    Neither Red Bull driver found space for a clean run in the final minutes of the session, with Verstappen coming across a slow Alfa Romeo on his run and Albon being slowed by Williams’ Robert Kubica. Verstappen thus had to settle for sixth place, almost eight tenths of a second off Leclerc, while Albon finished eighth.

    The Red Bulls were split by the Toro Rosso of Pierre Gasly. The Frenchman sat out the bulk of the session with illness but he went out on track in the final minutes to post a time of 1:17.090 to edge Albon by 0.004s.

    Lando Norris was ninth in the second McLaren, 1.001s off the pace and the final top 10 position was taken by Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez.

    Down at Renault technical problems prevented Daniel Ricciardo from taking part, while team-mate Nico Hulkenberg completed a single installation lap. The team reported “pollution of one of the cooling systems, which requires careful cleaning not to damage any component”.

    2019 FIA Formula One Mexican Grand Prix – Free Practice 3
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 14 1:16.145
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 11 1:16.172 0.027
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 18 1:16.259 0.114
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 16 1:16.381 0.236
    5 Carlos Sainz McLaren 14 1:16.638 0.493
    6 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 12 1:16.903 0.758
    7 Pierre Gasly Scuderia Toro Rosso 10 1:17.090 0.945
    8 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing 19 1:17.094 0.949
    9 Lando Norris McLaren 11 1:17.146 1.001
    10 Sergio Perez Racing Point 10 1:17.207 1.062
    11 Daniil Kvyat Scuderia Toro Rosso 14 1:17.529 1.384
    12 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo Racing 19 1:17.740 1.595
    13 Lance Stroll Racing Point 8 1:17.866 1.721
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Racing 8 1:17.881 1.736
    15 Kevin Magnussen Haas 12 1:18.132 1.987
    16 Romain Grosjean Haas 14 1:18.527 2.382
    17 George Russell Williams 13 1:20.965 4.820
    18 Robert Kubica Williams 13 1:22.002 5.857
    19 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1

  • Randy Krummenacher crowned 2019 FIM SuperSport king: #WorldSSPchamp

    Randy Krummenacher crowned 2019 FIM SuperSport king: #WorldSSPchamp

    Swiss star wins the title in the final race of his third WorldSSP season

    Randy Krummenacher, WorldSSP champioin. WorldSSP images

    Losail (Qatar), 26 Oct 2019: Randy Krummenacher (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) is the new king of the FIM Supersport World Championship, after holding on to his advantage over teammate Federico Caricasulo and Jules Cluzel (GMT94 YAMAHA) in the final race of the year.

    The middleweight class thus crowns another German-speaking Champion one year after Sandro Cortese’s fantastic achievement as a rookie. Krummenacher is the first Swiss rider to become World Champion in the World Superbike paddock and only the fourth if adding MotoGP™ (joining Luigi Taveri and Thomas Luthi, 125cc Champions, and Stefan Dörflinger, 50cc and 80cc Champion).

    2019 was the year that Krummenacher added consistency to his undeniable talent. After promising yet uneven spells in the 125cc World Championship and Moto2™, the man from Zurich landed in WorldSSP with a bang in 2016, winning his first race in the series. It would be his only win that year, but several more promising results gave him the chance to step up to WorldSBK in 2017 alongside Puccetti Racing.

    Krummenacher was back in WorldSSP for 2018 and, in similar fashion to his rookie season, made another instant impact by winning the second race of the year. The BARDAHL Evan Bros. rider starred in an unbelievable comeback at Assen one month later, yet the pieces never quite fell into place for the rest of the year, having to settle for fourth in the standings.

    Facing his third year in the class, Krummenacher remained with the BARDAHL outfit as they expanded to a two-rider lineup and the payoff was immediate. The Swiss rider dominated in Phillip Island as he did in his rookie season, leading every single lap, before adding a hard-fought second position in Thailand after battling through from eighth.

    Yet again, Krummenacher headed into the European rounds as the WorldSSP championship leader. In previous years this was where his championship challenge would start to unravel – but not this time. A brave last-lap move over Raffaele De Rosa handed him a second victory in three races at MotorLand Aragon, with teammate Caricasulo behind in third after leading most of the event.

    The tables were turned in Assen seven days later, when the Italian youngster caught Krummenacher off-guard in the last lap to take his first victory of the campaign by just 0.032 seconds, in what was the first true head-to-head battle between the pair in 2019. It would be far from the last.

    Embittered by that late defeat at Assen, Krummenacher repaid the favour four weeks later at Imola by snatching his third victory of the year with just five turns remaining, increasing his championship lead to 22 points in the process.

    Yet his teammate would not be one to give up so easily either, and in Jerez, once again we saw Caricasulo besting Krummenacher by the finest of margins to snatch back five points from his championship lead. The pair, clearly driven by each other’s success, not to mention the prospect of a first World Championship medal, put on a clinic in Misano two weeks after, rubbing shoulders right through the final corners. This time, once again, Krummenacher prevailed.

    Donington Park broke the streak of BARDAHL one-two finishes with a Jules Cluzel victory (his second of the campaign), and for the first time in 2019 Krummenacher did not feature on the podium. Yet the Swiss star still managed to show his excellent form, climbing his way through the field from an unfortunate fourth row start to finish fourth and less than a second behind the eventual race-winner.

    Still, Caricasulo was back on his trail and in Portimao, on the other side of the summer break, the Italian closed the gap to just 10 points thanks, in part, to a stroke of luck. The pair had returned to rubbing elbows throughout the race before a red flag forced an early conclusion. Final results were based on standings at the end of the last completed time-keeping point… Which was mere seconds after Caricasulo had overtaken Krummenacher for the race lead.

    Momentum seemed to be slowly shifting towards the Italian rider and the first lap at Magny-Cours did little to dispute that thought, after a highside left Krummenacher down and out, his first DNF in over two years. Caricasulo cruised into the race lead at the same time and everything was in place for him to become the new championship leader.

    And then the 23-year-old crashed. Twice. The crisis had been temporarily averted, Krummenacher was back in control and with a first match point set for Argentina. Here, the tension reached a boiling point with the teammates clashing inside the final laps and Krummenacher lamenting a lack of power. Neither man was on the podium and with Cluzel’s win this became a three-fight for the floodlit final round.

    Yet Krummenacher remained with an 8-point advantage over Caricasulo and 22 over Cluzel. Not a single point more was needed: the Swiss reverted his late misfortune and powered through to a career-defining title win. Strength of attitude, a crisp-cool personality and overtakes for days: World Supersport has a Champion to be proud of.

    The Krummenator is Champion! Congratulate King Krummi on social media with the #Championator21.

    Randy Krummenacher (BARDAHL Evan Bros. WorldSSP Team) 

    “This feeling is so great. I’ve been working for 24 years to achieve this goal. It is such a big thing that I still quite can’t realize it. I am thankful to all the persons that have supported me, to my family that stayed behind me even on the bad days, they pushed me to win. Thank you!”.
    WorldSSP Race at Losail International Circuit
    1. Lucas Mahias Kawasaki
    2. Jules Cluzel Yamaha +0.868
    3. Isaac Viñales Yamaha +3.332
  • Kush Maini secures Rookie win in Abu Dhabi night race

    Kush Maini secures Rookie win in Abu Dhabi night race

    Kush Maini on the podium. Photo for INDIAinF1

    Abu Dhabi, 26 Oct 2019: Kush Maini drove a brilliant Race 1 to bring home the Rookie Win in his first-ever night race at Abu Dhabi also achieved an overall sixth position in the Formula Renault Euro Cup at Yas Marina Circuit on Friday.

    Starting P6 on the grid, Maini managed to get ahead of Sebastian at the start and into the first corner. Maini then kept his fifth position for several laps before having to move back to P6 ahead of all the Rookies. From then on, he kept a steady pace to complete the race ahead of Patrik Pasma and Caio Collet.

    Kush was happy about the Rookie win and commented, “It was nice to have a Rookie win under the lights here in Abu Dhabi. There is such a big difference in temperatures which makes the event very interesting.“

    Kush finished the season 2nd in the Rookie championship and 6th in the overall championship with 102 points.