Tag: Charles Leclerc

  • Charles Leclerc dedicates maiden F1 victory to Anthoine Hubert: Belgian GP

    Charles Leclerc dedicates maiden F1 victory to Anthoine Hubert: Belgian GP

    Charles Leclerc dedicates his first Formula One victory to his friend Anthoine Hubert who died on Saturday in an F2 accident. An FIA image

    Spa, 1 Sept 2019: Charles Leclerc took an emotional first Formula One win at Spa-Francorchamps and immediately dedicated his maiden victory to childhood racing rival Anthoine Hubert who tragically lost his life in a crash in Saturday’s FIA Formula 2 race at the Ardennes circuit.

    “On the one hand, I’ve got a dream since being as a child that has been realised. But on the other hand, it has been a very difficult weekend since yesterday,” he said after defying late pressure from championship leader to take the win.

    “We have lost a friend first of all. It is very difficult in these situations, so I would like to dedicate my first win to him. We have grown up together – my first ever race I have done it with Anthoine and there was Esteban [Ocon] – and just shame what happened yesterday. I can’t enjoy fully my first victory but it will definitely be a memory I will keep forever.”

    Leclerc’s victory was scored from the second pole position of his career and the Monegasque driver kept his advantage at the race start to lead ahead of team-mate Sebastian Vettel, Hamilton, and Bottas.

    There was drama behind the leaders through, with Max Verstappen’s race-ending within moments of the red lights going out to signal the start. The Dutchman’s start from P5 on the grid was not ideal and he was immediately passed by a number of cars.

    Verstappen responded by taking a tight line down the inside into the La Source hairpin. As he approached the corner, though, he hit Kimi Räikkönen’s Alfa Romeo pitching the Finn into the air.

    Verstappen’s car was also damaged in the incident and though the Red Bull driver attempted to carry on, his suspension broke as he exited Eau Rouge and he crashed out of the race.

    The incident brought out the safety car and as the field formed up behind the course car, Leclerc led ahead of Vettel with Hamilton third ahead of Valtteri Bottas and McLaren’s Lando Norris who had profited from the turn one incident to climb from 11thon the grid.

    Vettel was the first of the frontrunners to pit, with the German taking on medium tyres on lap 15. He rejoined in fifth place and was soon setting purple times as the new front three of Leclerc, Hamilton and Bottas continued to circulate.

    Race leader Leclerc made his sole stop on lap 21, but he rejoined behind team-mate Vettel and after Hamilton and Bottas had made their visits to pit lane, the German emerged as the new race leader, two seconds clear of the younger Ferrari driver.

    Vettel’s lead didn’t last long, however. Leclerc quickly closed the gap and on lap 25 Vettel was told to let his team-mate past. At the start of the next tour he obliged, drifting off the racing line on the run down to Eau Rouge to let his young team-mate re-take the lead. The German then came under heavy pressure from Hamilton. He defended well for a number of laps but on lap 31 he Hamilton got close enough and passed

    Further back, new Red Bull recruit Alex Albon began to make moves forward after his sole pits to swap opening medium tyres for new softs. The Thai driver, who has started from 17thon the grid emerged in P15 began to power through the pack. On lap 30 he moved into the points when he passed Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly with a good move into Les Combes and he then made a good move down the inside of Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo on the run towards Pouhon to claim an eighth place on lap 33.

    The second Toro Rosso of Daniil Kvyat was the next target and on lap 38 Albon powered past the Russian on the run down the Kemmel Straight.

    He now set off in pursuit of sixth-placed Perez, though the Mexican driver was nine seconds up the road. That was no deterrent, however, and by lap 42 he had reduced the deficit to the Racing Point to just two seconds.

    And in a frenetic final two laps, the Red Bull driver continued his rise. At the start of lap 44, McLaren’s Lando Norris, who had been running fifth stopped just beyond the start-finish straight and then with pace in hand Albon made his move on Perez on the long run to Les Combes. It was a brave one too, with the new recruit putting a wheel into the dirt on the right side of the track as the Mexican tried to defend.

    There was no denying the Red Bull’s pace, however, and as Leclerc crossed the line to take his first Grand Prix victory ahead of Hamilton, Bottas, and Vettel, Albon powered towards his best-ever F1 finish.

    Behind the Red Bull, Perez clung on to sixth ahead of Kvyat and Hulkenberg took eighth place ahead of the second Toro Rosso of Pierre Gasly. The final point on offer went to Racing Point’s Lance Stroll.

    2019 FIA Formula One Belgian Grand Prix – Race
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari –
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 0.981
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 12.585
    4 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 26.422
    5 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing 1’21.325
    6 Sergio Perez Racing Point 1’24.448
    7 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1’29.657
    8 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1’46.639
    9 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 1’49.168
    10 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1’49.838
    11 Lando Norris McLaren
    12 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1 lap
    13 Romain Grosjean Haas 1 lap
    14 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1 lap
    15 George Russell Williams 1 lap
    16 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo Racing 1 lap
    17 Robert Kubica Williams 1 lap
    18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo Racing
    19 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren
    20 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing

  • Charles Leclerc takes pole as Ferrari lock out front row: Belgian GP

    Charles Leclerc beat team-mate Sebastian Vettel by seven tenths of a second to claim pole position for tomorrow’s Belgian Grand Prix as Ferrari locked out the front row ahead of Mercedes at Spa-Francorchamps.

    Quickest across the first two qualifying segments, Leclerc stretched the gap back to his rivals in the final top-10 shoot-out to claim his third career pole with a lap of 1:42.519, a massive 0.748s ahead of Vettel who chiefly lost out to his young team-mate in the middle sector of the 7km circuit.

    Mercedes’s Lewis Hamilton, meanwhile, recovered from a crash in FP3 to claim third place on the grid ahead of team-mate Valtteri Bottas and Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen.

    Q1 was red-flagged after five minutes as Robert Kubica’s Williams suffered a smoke PU failure that left him stranded at the side of the track. The session was immediately halted.

    After a 10-minute delay the action resumed and at the end of the opening session it was Leclerc who sat in top spot with a time of 1:43.587, half a second clear of Vettel.

    Verstappen took third place in the segment but it was touch and go for the Dutchman, who prior to the final runs was outside the 107% margin after struggling with his car’s handling in the early stages of the session.

    In the final run he was quick over the first sector, but then spent the rest of what was a crucial run threading his way through a stream of traffic. The trickle of slower cars became a river at the end of the lap, but Verstappen eventually crossed the line in 1:44.622 to take P3.

    The session was then red-flagged for a second time when smoke jetted from the back of Antonio Giovinazzi’s Alfa Romeo and he pulled over on the run down to Eau Rouge.

    With just 43 seconds left on the clock, Toro Rosso’s Pierre Gasly was eliminated in P16 ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, the second Toro Rosso of Daniil Kvyat and the Williams cars of George Russell and Robert Kubica.

    Leclerc again set the pace in Q2, taking P1 with a first run of 1:43.376 that left him a little over a tenth of a second clear of Vettel. Mercedes rose to third and fourth, with Valtteri Bottas ahead of Hamilton and that left fifth place for Max, who set an opening Q2 time of 1:44.132.

    Leclerc then lowered the benchmark to1:42.938 to seal P1 with a tenth of a second in hand over Vettel. The German meanwhile was half a second clear of Hamilton with Bottas a further four tenths back.

    Eliminated at the end of Q2 were 11thplaced Romain Grosjean of Haas followed by McLaren’s Lando Norris, Racing Point’s Lance Stroll, Red Bull’s Alex Albon and Giovinazzi.

    There was no denying Leclerc in the final session either. The Ferrari driver went quickest in the first runs with a time of 1:42.644 as Max posted an opening time of 1:44.239 to slot into P5 behind Hamilton, Vettel and Bottas.

    The Dutchman improved by a whopping half a second on the final run, but as they have been all weekend Ferrari were untouchable, and Leclerc claimed pole position with a small improvement to 1:42.519. Vettel completed the Ferrari front-row lock-out, seven tenths of a second further back while Mercedes annexed the second row ahead with Hamilton third ahead of Bottas.

    That left Max as the session’s fifth fastest man and he’ll start from the front of row three tomorrow, ahead of the Renaults of Ricciardo and Hulkenberg, the Alfa Romeo of Kimi Räikkönen, Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez and Haas’ Kevin Magnussen.

    2019 FIA Formula One Belgian Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:42.519
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:43.267 0.748
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:43.282 0.763
    4 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:43.415 0.896
    5 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:43.690 1.171
    6 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:44.257 1.738
    7 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1:44.542 2.023
    8 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:44.557 2.038
    9 Sergio Perez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:44.706 2.187
    10 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:45.086 2.567
    11 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:44.797 2.278
    12 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:44.847 2.328
    13 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:45.047 2.528
    14 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:45.799 3.280
    15 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari –
    16 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso/Honda 1:46.435 3.916
    17 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:46.507 3.988
    18 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso/Honda 1:46.518 3.999
    19 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:47.548 5.029
    20 Robert Kubica Williams/Mercedes –

  • Charles Leclerc tops FP2 ahead of Vettel

    Charles Leclerc topped the timesheet in the second free practice session for the Belgian Grand Prix, eclipsing Ferrari team-mate Sebastian Vettel by more than six tenths of a second and running more than eight tenths quicker than the third placed Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas.

    After being edged out of P1 by Vettel in the morning session Leclerc quickly moved to the top of the order in the afternoon, going quickest in the early phases run on medium-tyres.

    Vettel was the first to move to soft tyres and attempt a performance run and while the German’s time of 1:44.753 briefly gave him P1, Leclerc soon bypassed that benchmark with an impressive lap of 1:44.123 that put him 0.630 clear of his team-mate.

    Vettel went for another attempt but a flawed first sector put paid to his chance of overhauling his younger team-mate.

    Bottas got closest to the pacesetting Ferraris and the Finn’s best time of 1:44.969 saw him finish a little over two tenths of a second behind Vettel, but 0.846s off Leclerc. Championship leader Lewis Hamilton ended up in fourth sport a little under five hundredths of a second behind his team-mate.

    Sergio Pérez looked like continuing Racing Point’s positive start to the weekend as he rose from P9 in the morning session to P5 in the second session, posting a good time of 1:45.117 to finish as the last man within a second of Leclerc. However, after 25 laps of the circuit in total Pérez’s session ended in smokey fashion as he suffered what looked like a power unit issue.

    Sixth place went to Red Bull’s Max Verstappen. After finishing third in the morning, the Dutchman was strangely off the pace in the second session and ended up 1.271s behind Leclerc as he complained of power delivery issues.

    Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen took seventh place with a time of 1:45.708, though the Finn was just over two hundredths of a second quicker than Lance Stroll in the second Racing Point.

    Daniel Ricciardo finished ninth for Renault and 10thplace in the session went to new Red Bull Racing recruit Alex Albon who finished 1.648 off Leclerc’s pace and four tenths adrift of Red Bull team-mate Verstappen.

    2019 FIA Formula One Belgian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2 
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 28 1:44.123
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 30 1:44.753 0.630
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 28 1:44.969 0.846
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 26 1:45.015 0.892
    5 Sergio Perez Racing Point 25 1:45.117 0.994
    6 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 20 1:45.394 1.271
    7 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 25 1:45.708 1.585
    8 Lance Stroll Racing Point 21 1:45.732 1.609
    9 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 26 1:45.735 1.612
    10 Alex Albon Red Bull Racing 21 1:45.771 1.648
    11 Carlos Sainz McLaren 28 1:45.999 1.876
    12 Romain Grosjean Haas 21 1:46.120 1.997
    13 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 26 1:46.209 2.086
    14 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 24 1:46.214 2.091
    15 Lando Norris McLaren 29 1:46.258 2.135
    16 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 24 1:46.328 2.205
    17 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso 28 1:46.374 2.251
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas 21 1:46.399 2.276
    19 George Russell Williams 30 1:47.887 3.764
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 32 1:48.331 4.208

  • Charles Leclerc tops FP2: German GP

    Charles Leclerc tops FP2: German GP

    Charles Leclerc tops FP2 at Hockenheim on Friday. An FIA image

    Hockenheim, 26 July 2019: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc went quickest in the second practice session ahead of the German Grand Prix, but Pierre Gasly’s session ended early when the Red Bull driver crashed out in the final corner, heavily damaging his RB15 in the German Grand Prix, the 11th round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship here on Friday.

    Leclerc, who was second quickest in the morning behind team-mate Sebastian Vettel, took over at the top in the afternoon, setting a best time of 1:13.449 during his performance run on soft tyres. That lap put him 0.124s ahead of Vettel, with Mercedes Lewis Hamilton Mercedes third and 0.146s behind the younger Ferrari driver.

    Following the qualifying simulations, the session was red-flagged with 16 minutes left on the clock when Gasly lost control in the final corner. The Frenchman lost the rear of his RB15 on entry and slid off through the gravel trap on the outside of the corner. He hit the barriers hard with the front left of his car and on the rebound slapped the rear left side into the wall too.

    Gasly had earlier struggled on his soft tyres run and so finished the session in a relatively lowly 15thplace, almost a second behind team-mate Max Verstappen.

    In the opening exchanges of the session, Ferrari carried on where they had left off in the morning session, with Leclerc, running hard tyres, and Vettel, on mediums, set the pace. Both Hamilton and teram-mate Valtteri Bottas then dislodged the Ferrari duo, but eventually, with around a third of the session gone, Vettel bolted on a set of soft tyres and set a new benchmark of 1:13.573 that was soon passed by Leclerc who edged a little over a tenth ahead.

    Hamilton went closes to eclipsing the Ferraris, his soft run getting to within 1500ths of a second of Leclerc, but Bottas ended the session further back, with the Finn’s soft run yielding a time of 1:14.111, 0.662 adrift of Leclerc.

    Fifth place on the timesheet went to Verstappen, with the Red Bull driver putting in a best time of 1:14.133 to finish just two hundredths of a second behind Bottas.

    Haas’ Romain Grosjean continued to show well for Haas, with the French driver a little under five hundredths of a second behind Verstappen. The last within a second of Leclerc’s benchmark was Racing Point’s seventh-placed Lance Stroll, with the Canadian 0.819 behind Leclerc.

    Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen took P8 1.009 behind the Monegasque pacesetter, with Nico Hulkenberg 0.14s behind in ninth. The top ten was rounded out by Sergio Pérez in the second Racing Point. Mexican finished the day 1.069 off the pace.

    2019 FIA Formula One German Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 33 1:13.449
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 30 1:13.573 0.124
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 30 1:13.595 0.146
    4 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 30 1:14.111 0.662
    5 Max Verstappen Red Bull 23 1:14.133 0.684
    6 Romain Grosjean Haas 33 1:14.179 0.730
    7 Lance Stroll Racing Point 32 1:14.268 0.819
    8 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 33 1:14.458 1.009
    9 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 26 1:14.472 1.023
    10 Sergio Perez Racing Point 30 1:14.518 1.069
    11 Carlos Sainz McLaren 34 1:14.662 1.213
    12 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 39 1:14.800 1.351
    13 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 33 1:15.010 1.561
    14 Alex Albon Toro Rosso 36 1:15.062 1.613
    15 Pierre Gasly Red Bull 19 1:15.089 1.640
    16 Lando Norris McLaren 29 1:15.247 1.798
    17 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 31 1:15.406 1.957
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas 28 1:15.470 2.021
    19 George Russell Williams 27 1:16.900 3.451
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 26 1:16.980 3.531

  • Leclerc quickest in FP2; Hamilton hits the wall: Canadian Grand Prix

    Leclerc quickest in FP2; Hamilton hits the wall: Canadian Grand Prix

    Leclerc tops FP2. An FIA image

    By Abhishek Aggarwal

    Montreal, 7 June 2019: The Red cars dominated the show in the second session of the Free Practice with Charles Leclerc beating his senior teammate Sebastian Vettel as Ferrari topped the timesheets in FP2 for this weekend’s Canadian Grand Prix, the 7th round of the Formula 1 World Championship, as reigning FIA F1 Champion crashed out.

    Mercedes driver and defending world champion Lewis Hamilton could not repeat his morning show where he had good pace to edge team-mate Valtteri Bottas by a tenth of a second in FP1 and he also had a good gap of almost a second to his Ferrari rivals. He was also quickest in the opening exchanges of FP2 before the Reds took over.

    A little under half an hour into the session the Briton swapped medium tyres for the softs as he prepared for his performance run, but he lost the rear of his car in the Turn 8 chicane and swiped the wall hard with his rear right wheel, sustaining a puncture.

    The Briton who also leads the table for Drivers Championship, managed to limp back to the pits, but clearly more damage had been to his car than just the puncture and he was forced to pull out of the session.

    That left the way clear for Bottas, who had spent all day trading times with his team-mate to claim top spot. The Finn put in a good lap of 1:12.311 on his soft-tyre run, but that was swiftly eclipsed by Vettel, with a lap of 1:12.251 and then Leclerc who squeezed past with a lap seven hundredths of a second quicker than that of his team-mate.

    It might have been expected that Red Bull would also be in the mix at the top of the timesheet, but neither Max Verstappen nor Pierre Gasly enjoyed good performance runs.

    On his qualifying sim Verstappen came across Gasly in the final chicane and focusing on his slow moving team-mate he understeered and smacked the Wall of Champions with his front right wheel. It seemed as if he had not sustained serious damage as he drove back to the pits, but he spent a long period in the garage and only rejoined the action late in the session.

    Verstappen ended the session 13thplace, four hundredths of a second behind Gasly who appeared to struggle for balance in his RB15 throughout.

    The absence of the Red Bulls at the top of the order and Hamilton’s crash meant that fourth place in the session went to McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, while Haas’ Kevin Magnussen finished fifth ahead of Hamilton.

    Seventh place was taken by Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez, who finished 5h with a best time of 1:13.003, a creditable 0.826s off Leclerc’s pace.

    The Mexican was separated from 10thplace team,-mate Lance Stroll by 0.168 and by the Renault pairing of eigth-placed Daniel Ricciardo and Nico Hulkenberg.

    Stroll, though, is to be investigated by race officials for an incident late in the session in which he banged wheels with Haas’ Romain Grosjean. The Frenchman was forced to back out of the final chicane as the pair jocked for position. (With inputs from FIA release)

    2019 FIA Formula 1 Canadian Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 39 1:12.177
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 38 1:12.251 0.074
    3 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 46 1:12.311 0.134
    4 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren 45 1:12.553 0.376
    5 Kevin Magnussen Haas 41 1:12.935 0.758
    6 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 8 1:12.938 0.761
    7 Sergio Perez Racing Point 39 1:13.003 0.826
    8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 40 1:13.016 0.839
    9 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 42 1:13.168 0.991
    10 Lance Stroll Racing Point 37 1:13.171 0.994
    11 Lando Norris McLaren 38 1:13.249 1.072
    12 Pierre Gasly Red Bull 38 1:13.345 1.168
    13 Max Verstappen Red Bull 22 1:13.388 1.211
    14 Alex Albon Toro Rosso 45 1:13.436 1.259
    15 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 40 1:13.521 1.344
    16 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 41 1:13.542 1.365
    17 Romain Grosjean Haas 39 1:13.598 1.421
    18 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 16 1:14.870 2.693
    19 George Russell Williams 36 1:15.036 2.859
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 44 1:15.287 3.110.

  • Leclerc’s late-race engine problem allows Hamilton to win Bahrain GP

    Leclerc’s late-race engine problem allows Hamilton to win Bahrain GP

    Hami consoles Leclerc after winning the Bahrain GP. An FIA image

    Sakhir, 31 March 2019: Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was denied a first Formula One victory by a late-race engine problem that allowed Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton to sweep past and claim his first win of 2019 in the Bahrain Grand Prix, the second round of the Formula One World Championship here on Sunday.

    Leclerc had led for the bulk of the race, but in the closing stages began to slow and reported an engine problem that was quickly diagnosed as an issue with the turbo. His pace flagged dramatically and at the end of the 48thlap of the 57 scheduled, Hamilton powered past to claim the lead. He was followed by Mercedes’ team-mate Valtteri Bottas, and Leclerc might have lost out on his first podium finish had a late Safety Car period denied Red Bull’s Max Verstappen the opportunity to also pass the Monegasque driver.

    When the lights went out at the start, Sebastian Vettel got the jump on polesitter Leclerc and seized the lead. Bottas, too, exploited the situation and muscled past the young Ferrari driver to take P2.

    Hamilton then tried to pressure Leclerc and as they tussled, Verstappen, who had started fifth, tried to slip down the inside of both in the final corner. He couldn’t make the move stick, however, and settled into fifth place.

    After his first lap difficulties, Leclerc quickly recovered and went on the assault. He pushed past Bottas at the start of lap two and then powered past Vettel under DRS into turn one at the start of the next lap to reclaim the lead.

    Leclerc maintained his lead through the first stops, but Hamilton managed to get past Vettel to take P2. The German was now third ahead of Bottas and Max, who took on medium tyres during a superb 2.1s pit stop.

    On lap 23 Vettel closed in on Hamilton and powered past the defending champion around the outside through Turn 4. Leclerc though was now 7.5s ahead of his team-mate. Behind Hamilton, Bottas was fourth, four seconds ahead of Verstappen.

    Now third, Hamilton pitted soon after the halfway mark and shed his soft tyres for a set of medium Pirellis, a move that was repeated on the following tour by Vettel.

    Vettel emerged ahead but the gap was narrow and the Mercedes driver was soon on the attack. He tried to pass in Turn 4 but was rebuffed by Vettel who held his line well. Hamilton was not to be denied, however, and on the following lap he made the move stick. Vettel spun following the pass and recovered but soon afterward his front wing mysteriously collapsed and he was forced to pit for repairs, dropping to P9. That bumped Verstappen to fourth place behind Bottas, with five seconds separating the Red Bull from the Mercedes.

    With a dozen laps to go the shape of the race changed. Leclerc began to complain of engine issues and as his lap times increased dramatically he was told that he had “no H recover”, signalling a turbo issue.

    At the end of lap 48 Hamilton swept past to claim the lead and with third-placed Bottas lapping five seconds quicker than the Monegasque the prospect of a Mercedes one-two came into view.

    By lap 51 Leclerc’s advantage over Bottas was just 15.9s and Max was a further 6.6s behind. After Bottas powered past Leclerc, Max closed in fast, but then with just four laps remaining the works Renaults of Nico Hulkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo expired. With Ricciardo’s car close to the trackside, the Safety Car was deployed and Max’s chance of a podium frustratingly evaporated and he was forced to settle for fourth place.

    With Max fourth behind race winner Hamilton, Bottas and Leclerc, fifth place went to Vettel. Lando Norris took sixth for McLaren, with Kimi Räikkönen seventh ahead of Gasly. The final points positions were taken by Toro Rosso’s Alex Albon and Racing Point’s Sergio Perez.

    2019 FIA Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix – Race
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes –
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 2.980
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 6.131
    4 Max Verstappen Red Bull 6.408
    5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 36.068
    6 Lando Norris McLaren 45.754
    7 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 47.470
    8 Pierre Gasly Red Bull 58.094
    9 Alex Albon Toro Rosso 1’02.697
    10 Sergio Perez Racing Point 1’03.696
    11 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1’04.599
    12 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1 lap
    13 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1 lap
    14 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1 lap
    15 George Russell Williams 1 lap
    16 Robert Kubica Williams 2 laps
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Renault
    18 Daniel Ricciardo Renault
    19 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren
    Romain Grosjean Haas

  • Charles Leclerc becomes 2nd youngest to get a pole; Ferrari lock-out front row; Hami p3

    Charles Leclerc becomes 2nd youngest to get a pole; Ferrari lock-out front row; Hami p3

    Leclerc takes pole on Saturday. An FIA image

    Sakhir, 30 March 2019: Charles Leclerc took the first pole position of his career, beating Ferrari team-mate Sebastian Vettel by almost three tenths of a second as the Italian squad locked out the front row of the grid for Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix, the second round of the FIA Formula One World Championship.

    Defending champion Lewis Hamilton was forced to settle for P3, 0.030 behind Vettel, ahead of Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas.

    At the start of the session Ferrari quickly seized control, with Leclerc taking P1 thanks to a lap of 1:28.495. Vettel slotted into P2, 0.238s behind his team-mate, while Valtteri Bottas took third place, a full second adrift of the pacesetting Monegasque. Hamilton’s final Q1 lap of 1:29.262 then moved him to third place

    In a tight battle, in which P6 to P15 were covered by just half a second, there was no escape at the end of the segment for Alfa’s Antonio Giovinazzi who was the first man eliminated in P16.

    The Italian was bounced out ahead of surprise casualty Nico Hulkenberg of Renault, Racing Point’s Lance Stroll and the Williams cars of George Russell and Robert Kubica.

    At the top of the table Leclerc’s opening time kept him in P1 ahead of Vettel with Hamilton third ahead of Lando Norris of McLaren who put in a superb lap to split the Mercedes drivers. Toro Rosso’s Alex Albon took sixth ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen and Red Bull’s Max. Romain Grosjean was 10thfor Haas.

    Leclerc again led the way in the first runs of Q2, setting a time of 1:28.046. That put him more than four tenths of a second clear of Hamilton, with Bottas in third.

    Verstappen slotted into fifth place with a lap of 1:29.143, ahead of Vettel who made a mistake in Turn 10 and was forced to run again as the top two stayed in the garage for the final runs.

    Pierre Gasly in the second Red Bull was in trouble though, down in P12, with a lap of 1:29.526 after the first runs.

    And in the final runs the Frenchman couldn’t find the pace to break out of the Q2 drop zone. He failed to improve on his first-run time and was bypassed by Toro Rosso’s Alex Albon who finished behind the first driver eliminated, Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo. Behind Gasly, Racing Point’s Sergio Perez was ruled out in P14 ahead of the second Toro Rosso of Daniil Kvyat.

    Vettel’s error in Q2 and the need for an extra run meant he was restricted to the garage for the first run in Q3. That left the door open for Leclerc and the Monegasque driver took top spot with a time identical to that with which Vettel claimed pole position in 2018.

    The gauntlet was laid down, therefore, and Vettel was the first of the Ferraris on track for the final runs.

    Despite getting running his team-mate close through S1, the lap went away from the German over the two remaining sectors and he could only claim P2 with a time of 1:28.160.

    Hamilton edged close to the front row with his final run, but in the end he had to settle for third place, three hundredths of a second behind Vettel.

    Leclerc, though, was going even quicker than on his opener and he eventually claimed his maiden pole, and the first in for a driver from Monaco, with a new track record of 1:27.866.

    With Bottas fourth ahead of Verstappen, who was also restricted to a single run, Haas’ Kevin Magnussen finished in P6 ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz and the second Haas of Romain Grosjean. Kimi Räikkönen was ninth for Alfa Romeo and the top 10 was rounded out by Norris.

    2019 FIA Formula One Bahrain Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:27.866
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:28.160 0.294
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:28.190 0.324
    4 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:28.256 0.390
    5 Max Verstappen Red Bull 1:28.752 0.886
    6 Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:28.757 0.891
    7 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren 1:28.813 0.947
    8 Romain Grosjean Haas 1:29.015 1.149
    9 Kimi Raikkonen Alfa Romeo 1:29.022 1.156
    10 Lando Norris McLaren 1:29.043 1.177
    11 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:29.488 1.622
    12 Alex Albon Toro Rosso 1:29.513 1.647
    13 Pierre Gasly Red Bull 1:29.526 1.660
    14 Sergio Perez Racing Point 1:29.756 1.890
    15 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:29.854 1.988
    16 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1:30.026 2.160
    17 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1:30.034 2.168
    18 Lance Stroll Racing Point 1:30.217 2.351
    19 George Russell Williams 1:31.759 3.893
    20 Robert Kubica Williams 1:31.799

  • Flash: Charles Leclerc takes pole, 2nd youngest to achieve the feat: Bahrain GP

    Sakhir, 30 March 2019: The young new face, Charles Leclerc is the second youngest to take the pole position of all time at the Bahrain Grand Prix on Saturday clocking 1: 27. 866 to beat his teammate and the youngest pole sitter of all time, Sebastian Vettel to secure a front-row lock-out for Ferrari at the qualifying here on Saturday ahead of the Bahrain Grand Prix.

    It was also a new track record as the only dirver from Monaco who  took the pole,. Leclerc set the record on his final lap for good measure, going around the Bahrain International Circuit in 1m 27.866s, 0.294s up on Vettel’s time.

    Behind the Ferrari duo came the Mercedes pair of Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas. The two silver arrows did a good job to close the gap, having to Ferrari, Hamilton ending up 0.324s off Leclerc’s pole time.

    Threatening them from fifth on the grid will be Max Verstappen in the Red Bull. His teammate Pierre Gasly has dropped out in Q2. The Dutchman is ahead of the Haas of Kevin Magnussen and the McLaren of Carlos Sainz.

    Kimi Raikkonen did a great job to qualify P9.

  • Charles Leclerc keeps Ferrari on top as Pierre Gasly crashes out: F1 testing

    After Sebastian Vettel topped the first day of pre-season F1 testing yesterday, new Ferrari recruit Charles Leclerc kept the Italian team at the top of the timesheets, finishing three tenths of a second clear of McLaren rookie Lando Norris.

    The session came to an early end for Pierre Gasly, however, when the new Red Bull Racing driver lost control of his RB15 and spun into the barriers. The French driver had spend most of the afternoon on short, data-gathering runs but as the final hour of the session neared he embarked on a quick run. However, after setting a personal best in the second sector, Gasly lost the rear of the car at the exit of Turn 10 and slid off into the barriers.

    Though the damage to the rear of his car appeared minimal, his team halted running for the day to begin repairs.

    Leclerc, meanwhile, had a trouble-free day and was soon into the groove in the morning session and after 90 minutes had worked his way down to a P1 time of 1:19.172s on C2 Pirelli tyres.

    An hour later and the Monegasque driver emerged on the C3 compound used by Vettel to set his day one benchmark. Leclerc maximised the extra grip from the yellow banded tyre and immediately moved further ahead of the field with a time of 1:18.247. The lap, within a tenth of a second of Vettel’s day one best, remained the benchmark for the rest of the day. He posted a total of 157 laps.

    Norris, meanwhile, waited until late in the day to log his best lap. The rookie Briton mirrored the day one efforts of team-mate Carlos Sainz and bolted on a set of C4 tyres late in the session to finish the day on 1:18.553s, 0.306 back from Leclerc’s time. Norris also completed 104 laps across his first day at the wheel of the McLaren MCL34.

    Kevin Magnussen took P3 for Haas with a time of 1:19.206 but a problem with his seat restricted his running. Reserver driver Pietro Fittipaldi took over in the last hour of running but completed just four laps.

    Fourth place on the timesheet went to Toro Rosso’s Alexander Albon. The rookie driver who finished third in last year’s F2 championship behind Norris and champion and new Williams driver George Russell had an unfortunate start to his F1 career, spinning within seconds of the session starting, but once he got jup and running properly the Thai-registered driver enjoyed a solid opening day.

    Albon ploughed through 132 laps of the Barcelona track and in the afternoon edged past Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi with a time of 1:19.301 set on C4 tyres. Giovinazzi racked up 101 laps to be the fourth and final driver to log a day two century.

    As with the opening day of testing Mercedes split running between Lewis Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas, with defending champion Hamilton at the wheel in the morning. The team once again focused on long-run pace, with Bottas ending the day sixth while Hamilton finished in P10.

    Gasly took seventh place before his spin, finishing ahead of the Renault pair of Nico Hulkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo. The Australian’s morning running was briefly interrupted by a rear wing failure. Behind them Lance Stroll finished ninth on his debut for Racing Point after moving from Williams.

    2019 Formula 1 Pre-Season Test 1, Day 2
    1. Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:18.247s 157 laps
    2. Lando Norris McLaren 1:18.553s 104 laps
    3. Kevin Magnussen Haas 1:19.206s 59 laps
    4. Alexander Albon Toro Rosso 1:19.301s 132 laps
    5. Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo C38 1:19.312s 101 laps
    6. Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:19.535s 89 laps
    7. Pierre Gasly Red Bull Racing 1:19.814s 92 laps
    8. Nico Hulkenberg Renault 1:19.837s 95 laps
    9. Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:19.886s 28 laps*
    10. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:19.928s 74 laps
    11. Lance Stroll Racing Point 1:20.433s 79 laps
    12. Pietro Fittipaldi Haas F1 1:21.849 13 laps.

  • Leclerc is a long-term commitment and the decision is taken by me: Arrivabene

    Leclerc is a long-term commitment and the decision is taken by me: Arrivabene

    Arrivabene at the FIA Friday press conference. An FIA image

    Singapore, 14 Sept. 2018: Team representatives Maurizio Arrivabene (Ferrari), Frédéric Vasseur (Sauber) Guenther Steiner (Haas), and Gil de Ferran (McLaren) attended the customary Friday press conference of the FIA ahead of the Singapore Grand Prix, the 15th round of the FIA Formula One World Championship here on Sunday. Transcript of the Friday press meet:

    Maurizio, please can we start with you? Welcome. There have been lots of announcements coming out of Ferrari this past week. Your 2019 driver line-up is sorted, with Charles Leclerc replacing Kimi Räikkönen. Talk us through how and why that change has taken place?

    Maurizio ARRIVABENE: How and why? It’s not clear? OK, I try to be clear. When you make some choices like this, that are related to the driver, you don’t have to look only at the short-term commitment but also at the long-term commitment. A long-term commitment means it’s not only for next year, it’s for the future of the team – how you are going to grow a young talent, and what you want to expect from him for the future. That’s very simple. It’s not a decision taken by Mr Simpson; it’s a decision taken by me, discuss it also with the top management, that is taking into consideration many, many factors. This has nothing to do with the respect that I have for Kimi, that is great, as a human being and a driver, but if you have to do a choice, thinking about the future of the team, I think we made the right choice, for us and for Kimi. And the way that we wrote the press release was absolutely intentional. We were using a different style, breaking a bit the rules of Ferrari, that is normally going to communicate this in one line, broke the rules, giving also tribute and respect to Kimi for what he has done with us and wishing him the best for the future, and the best for the future it’s here.

    Maurizio, just a second question on that: Charles Leclerc has had a huge impact on Formula 1 this year. Just tell me how excited you are by him, as a driver and what you think he can achieve in the sport?

    MA: The first mistake is to put too much pressure on the shoulders of this guy. It could be, potentially, a huge mistake. I signed with Charles in November 2016 or November 2015 the first contract in the Ferrari Driver Academy. In that contract we already designed and committed and signed and wrote his future in Formula 1, as we have done with Giovinazzi, the same thing. And that means we change a bit also the way that we organise the Ferrari Drive Academy but also how we are going to develop the talent for the future. So Charles Leclerc is not a big surprise, he’s one of the talented drivers that we have in Formula 1. Thank God, it’s a guy that he grew up with us and I hope that he is going to continue his career with us, at least until 2022 for sure. Having said so, if you look at the overall situation in the paddock, it’s an important sign that all the talent they are giving to Formula… look at Mercedes. They make a choice a couple of years ago with Bottas, a young driver, nearby a champion like Hamilton. This guy of McLaren for next year: they have Carlos Sainz with a guy that is considered a rookie. Next year Sauber have Kimi with Mr question mark and if you look at Red Bull they were brave enough to have Verstappen nearby Gasly. There is nothing strange in all of this but I think the good signal to Formula 1 is that we are striving to look for, to create the future champions.

    Q: Thank you, Maurizio. Gil, if we can turn to you, like Ferrari, as Maurizio said, you have opted for youth, particularly in one of your cars. What is it about the performance of 18-year-old Lando Norris that made him a must-have for McLaren?

    Gil de Ferran: Well, a lot of things, you know. I think, first of all, his racing record is impeccable. All the way from karting – he was the youngest world karting champion – throughout his career. And certainly what I have been able to observe every time he is in the car is… he’s a natural. He adapts very, very quickly, even in very unfamiliar conditions, with an unfamiliar car. Many times he is immediately on the pace and I think he’s also displayed a level of maturity during his Formula 2 performances this year that certainly I have been looking at more closely, that has been quite impressive and made us think that this is a talent for the future. I think we certainly believe he’s got tremendous long-term potential and we decided to go with that.

    Q: With Carlos Sainz new to the team as well, there is certain lack of continuity on the driver front. What sort of impact do you think that will have?

    MB: Certainly every time you have two new drivers it’s a more challenging situation because you have to learn how they are, how they operate. Everybody operates in a slightly different way. Certainly, as a team we aim to support the drivers the best we can, taking into account their differences. It certainly will take a little while for us to understand each other, how the team operates, how the drivers operate and tailor that support individually to Carlos and to Lando. Carlos is going into his fifth year of Formula 1 and although he is very young he is quite an experienced driver. Like I said before, he has shown quite well against different team-mates, so I think we’re very confident we have a good pairing.

    Q: Thank you, Gil. Guenther, with Ferrari’s line-up, sorted for next year, where does that leave Haas with regard to your driver choice for 2019?

    Guenther STEINER: I hope that we will announce our drivers in the next two to three weeks, so we will let you know when we are ready to announce it.

    Q: Can you just give us your thoughts… I’m not asking for names but the performances of your current drivers?

    GS: I think they’re doing pretty good! What more do you want to know – yeah, the money, the names, everything! I think we are performing pretty good this year, car-wise and driver-wise. We a few hiccups with one of the drivers in the beginning of the year but lately I think we are performing where we should be performing. Our drivers, at the moment, for us, looking in the future, we are a young team so I don’t think we are ready to develop any young drivers if you want to hear that.

    Thank you for that.

    GS: A pleasure!

    Fréd, thank you for waiting. Yesterday in the press conference, Kimi wasn’t that forthcoming when asked about his move to Sauber, so can you just put a little bit of flesh on the bone for us. How did you persuade Kimi to continue his career with your team?

    Frédéric VASSEUR: I don’t want to say, like my future driver, ‘why not?’ but I think for us coming from where we were last year… I had a look this morning on the FP1 of 2017, I think it is a huge opportunity to have in our car, in the Alfa Romeo Sauber, one of the three world champions who will race next year. It’s a huge opportunity for the team, for the brand, for everybody. We know that we are quite a young team also and we need to have someone leading the team with a huge experience and I think Kimi will fulfil all the parts of this.

     

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) Maurizio. How concerned are you by the errors being made by your lead driver in several races this year, and questionable race management decisions by the team – and what are you doing about them?

    MA: Oh my God! Again! OK, I start from the second one and I want to be clear, once and forever. I mean, I would ask some of you, all of you, who is so crazy to give team orders to a driver at the start of the race? I mean, we do our thing with the maximum professional effort. Before the race we are looking at the video of the start of the race, our team manager is giving instruction on the best line to follow to the driver. The only team order you can tell to the driver at the first corner is “guys, I would like to have both of the cars OK.” All the rest, I mean, it’s nonsense. I explain to you the reason why. Kimi, in the case of Monza, was in pole position. Do we agree for once on this? He was in pole position right? Sebastian was 8m from him. How you think that Kimi can look on his side where Sebastian is? In your opinion, the order is “Kimi, please slow down when you start and don’t worry if Hamilton and all the others, they are overtaking you.” What are we discussing about? That is the answer to your question. And then, team order, do you think the team orders, they were invented in Monza last weekend? I don’t think so. It’s 28 years that I’m in Formula One and I always heard team orders. There are many ways to give it to the team: before, during, after. That’s not important. The problem in Monza is that you have no time to give team order to anyone, because at the third corner it’s happened what has happened. So, this is the reality. I mean, don’t expect me to give team orders to the driver at the start of the race, looking forward to the first corner. It’s too dangerous and it’s crazy.

    And your assessment of Vettel’s performances this year?

    MA: You call it mistakes but if you look in Formula One everybody is making mistakes. Bigger or smaller. If we are a team, we fail and we win together so I don’t want to point my finger at Sebastian. I mean, nobody was happy after Monza but think about the rest of the team. If in Monza I was pointing my finger at Sebastian, think about a problem on aero, a problem on the pitstop, a problem on the engine. The guys, they are responsible for the different areas, they could think ‘OK, if he’s pointing the finger at Sebastian, next time it’s my turn.’ It’s not what I want. The only mistake you see in front of you is me. I’m responsible for the team. When the result is not coming, it’s my responsibility. Not the responsibility of Sebastian or the engineer or the responsibility of the mechanics. It’s my responsibility. If you want somebody to blame, he’s in front of you. The job was done already. I tell you, you don’t need to continue, but if you want, I’m still here! But something that is very important, I accept any criticism because in three and a half years I didn’t want anything, OK? So I accept the criticism from everybody, especially from the people who won before me – but in good faith not in bad faith. Because bad faith is not correct. I’m a correct person and I would like to hear comments that are in good faith, and then I’m accepting everything. As I said, I didn’t want anything.

    Q: (Joe Saward – Auto week) Maurizio, now you’re feeling talkative, can you talk about Ferrari’s attitude to the budget cap? Who makes the decision and what is your thinking and has it changed recently?

    MA: I mean, you talk in general about the budget cap. Of course the objective of everybody is to save money, to reduce costs. Then, the question is not the ‘what’, it’s based on the ‘how’. How do we want to do it? How do we want to maintain Formula One at the pinnacle of motorsport as it is? How do we want to continue to develop cars that are beautiful, also for the public. I mean, it’s not an easy equation. Everybody, they go sometimes their way but I think at the end we can find the solution. I was looking at the car presented a couple of days ago by Ross. It’s a good exercise, I was asking our engineers what they thought about this, they said it’s a bit underwhelming in their opinion and it looks like an old champ car. But, you know, it’s an exercise. Sometimes we go up here to have this kind of result. I think this is the game that everybody plays. Concerning the future, you mean the Concorde agreement of course. Starting from the point, I spoke with our CEO and everybody, they want to save money, as I said at the beginning, to reduce the costs, not to save money, they are two different things. It depends how you do it. The decision, it is something that is not mine because it is going to be a strategic decision that is involving the overall group. I mean, if in somehow accepting an agreement that is not taking into consideration where the Ferrari is in the market and the DNA of Ferrari, I repeat, it’s a kind of strategic decision and it’s not under my responsibility. Of course, I give all the information we discuss about this but he is the person that is going to talk with the appropriate people.

    Q: (Gaeton Vigneron – RTBF) Sorry to not be original but another one for you Maurizio. Starting from the point that Giovinazzi could go to Sauber, Kvyat could go to Toro Rosso, you could lose your two simulator drivers. My question is, are you ready for that, have you got an idea to get another one to fulfil this role – and Stoffel Vandoorne could be a driver for that?

    MA: We are always ready for everything. No concern. You will see about the future of Giovinazzi I think in the next few weeks, so I’m not concerned at all.

    Q: (Cheng Jin – Car and Fan) There’s a lot of rumours surrounding the future of Mick Schumacher because if he wins the F3 championship, he will get a super licence, so for Gunther and for Frederic, neither of your teams have announced their driver line-up for next year. Will you be interested in him? And for Maurizio and Gil, will you be considering putting him into your driver academy?

    GS: I think there is quite a hype about Mick Schumacher and he’s doing very well at the moment in Formula Three. We haven’t looked at it, as I’ve said before. We, at the moment, as a young team, we prefer to go with drivers with experience, but I think there is a future for Mick Schumacher in Formula One so let’s see what he’s doing in the next years and what his plans are. Maybe he doesn’t want to go straight to Formula One.

    FV: Yes, so far I don’t know if Mick has the 40 points for the super licence but honestly, I think there is a huge step between F3 and F1 and with the small number of test days we have during the winter, I think it’s – I don’t want to say impossible because we will see – but it’s quite difficult to do the step and it will make sense probably for him to do Formula Two or something like this. But he could have a link with a Formula One team, he could do some FP1… There are many ways to prepare for F1.

    Q: One of those ways could be as a simulator driver, Gil. Would McLaren consider him?

    GdeF: Look, obviously he’s doing very well in Formula Three and certainly he has a shot for the championship and the Formula Three championship is a very difficult one and I think a very good indication of how good you are so clearly he’s very good. We have not had any contact with him but we say as McLaren we are always looking throughout the motor sport arena globally, in a way. I think I would second what Frederic said: in a way I wish we had more opportunities to be able to work with young talent, perhaps more testing and different things like this, to be able to establish a relationship and help in the development of drivers like Mick.

    MA: Concerning Mick Schumacher, the most important thing is to let him grow without giving pressure. The recent results were very very good and I wish to him a great career. With a name like this, that wrote the historical pages of the Ferrari history, I think the door at Maranello is always open of course, but without burning the step, that is, a Schumacher family decision but let the guys have fun. I always repeat this, being focused, concentrated but at the same time have fun and to grow up slowly but certainly. Then we will see about the future. How can you say no, in Maranello, to a name like this?

    Q: (Stuart Codling – Autosport) Fred, what do you expect Kimi to bring to your team next year that you haven’t got already and can’t get elsewhere?

    FV: Clearly Kimi has huge experience in F1, I think he already told that yesterday. For the team, we are building up every single department and I think he will be very supportive in the process. I think from aero to design office to track engineering, tyre management, I think everybody in the team is more than welcome to have Kimi on board in the future. It’s a step forward for us for sure. This is on the technical side and on the more marketing and commercial side, for sure it’s a huge push and if you have a look at what we had last week in terms of social media, so it was probably the first time in our lives that we have so many connections. On both sides, I think it will be supportive for us.

    Q: Fred, are there still a lot of people at the team who can remember him from 2001?

    FV: Some, yeah. For sure, I was not there but some guys came to my office saying ‘ah, superb that Kimi’s back.’ But I don’t want to consider the fact that Kimi’s coming back that we have to think about the future, not about the past.

    Q: (Joe Saward – Auto week) Fred, talking about Mr Question Mark, can you tell us how many possible Questions Marks there are? Is it just two drivers we’re looking at or are there more drivers to be taken into account?

    FV: Please, the last two weeks for me have been a bit in a rush on the driver market and if I can have some days off from this?  After Singapore we will sit down with all the persons involved in the discussions and we will take a decision quite soon because I think it’s also good for the team to have a clear answer but it will be soon.

    Q: (Jake Michaels – ESPN) Maurizio, you said earlier that Kimi’s move from Ferrari to Sauber next year is the best thing for Ferrari and for Kimi. Can you explain why that’s the case and why the best thing for Kimi isn’t to stay at Ferrari?

    MA: It’s quite simple. I also said that it’s very important to look at the situation of the team in perspective, perspective meaning two or three years. So in my opinion, that is justifying enough our choice to have a young driver for next year, to grow up and that’s it. It’s not a decision that is look on the actual situation or only to next year. My job is to look forward to the future of the team. That was the justification of the choice.

    Q: (Jerome Pugmire – AP) Maurizio, just to follow up on that, Kimi said yesterday it wasn’t his decision and wasn’t his choice. Can you explain how he took the decision and did he try and persuade you to change your mind? How did he feel about it?

    MA: I think Kimi was funny also yesterday during the press conference. I try to be funny too. What did you expect Kimi to tell you, that Homer Simpson took the decision? Of course I took the decision but I have to say that the relationship with Kimi is so good that he understands. It’s not only a question of telling him this is the decision. If you do my job properly, it’s to take him through the process, and I took him through the process of the decision and he didn’t even try to say ‘yeah, I would like you to change your mind’ or something. He’s a professional driver. Then I heard many other things like ‘ah, you know, telling him in Monza was the wrong time.’ Think about if I had told him in Belgium and Sebastian was winning the race? Kimi was in the same position and then it was wrong to tell him in Belgium. So the right time is not written on the paper, but what is written on the paper is that when we sign contracts with a driver, we sign a contract with professional drivers. I always talk with my two drivers as professional drivers and I’m expecting from him the maximum of professional effort and to use all their professional skills and Kimi is one of them. Kimi was so nervous and so unhappy that I told him on Thursday, if I’m not wrong, in Monza but he was so unhappy that he made pole position on Saturday. We’re talking with professional drivers.

    FV: I have to make him unhappy ever single weekend!

    MA: Yeah, in fact that’s what I was thinking afterwards, because when I read some criticism and I said I accept the criticism, I was thinking OK, if it’s like this, I’m going to make him unhappy every weekend so he’s going to give us the pole position. Guys. We are talking about professional drivers not kids that they are driving at the luna park.