Tag: F1

  • Horner has Bahrain concerns

    Red Bull team principal Christian Horner has voiced his concerns with regard to the “rather worrying” situation in Bahrain.

    This year’s grand prix, which was due to be the season-opener, had to be cancelled following a political uprising that resulted in the deaths of a number of protestors.

    The race currently has a slot of April 22 for next year, the fourth event on the calendar, but even though it is still six months away there remain doubts as to whether it will go ahead.

    Last week 13 doctors and nurses were handed sentences of 15 years for treating activists wounded during the protests, whilst a further seven received terms of five to 10 years.

    The international condemnation that followed their sentencing, from governments and human-rights groups, was overwhelming, and with a further 264 cases pending, the situation shows no sign of easing.

    Speaking to Press Association Sport with regard to the prospect of a race in the Gulf kingdom next year, Horner said: “Obviously it’s worrying when you hear the type of news that’s come out of Bahrain.

    “But [F1 supremo] Bernie [Ecclestone], more than anybody, is probably acutely aware of the situation there.

    “When the time is right for difficult decisions that have to be made, he’s demonstrated he’s not afraid of making them.

    “But yes, some of the reports that have come out of Bahrain recently, the situation is rather worrying.”

    Horner is naturally hoping if and when a decision is made, it is done so sooner rather than later to avoid the uncertainty that unfolded in the weeks leading up to this season.

    “Prior to the end of the year there is plenty of opportunity, with different world council meetings, for them to look at it,” added Horner.

    “So I’m sure at that level, between the promoter and regulators, it will be discussed in some detail.

    “We have to trust their judgment that they will make the right decisions, which I am sure they will.”

    Horner has confirmed the matter has yet to be discussed by the Formula One Teams’ Association, although is convinced it will be soon.

    “I’m sure if we have a meeting either this weekend or next weekend it will be on the agenda,” said Horner.

    “It’s a situation the teams, though, have little influence over, but the right decision was made this year.

    “I’m sure if there is a difficult decision to be made again – and I’m sure it won’t be left so long next time – I’ve every confidence in Bernie who puts the calendar together.”

    Renault team principal Eric Boullier, however, feels F1 can afford to wait until as late as possible to give Bahrain every possibility of resolving any problems.

    “I would be in favour of waiting until the last minute. If everything is clear by February, let’s go there,” said Boullier.

    “We’ll keep an eye on it. On the human side, it’s not nice to see all these problems, but on the sport side, we want to be back in Bahrain.

    “We have not changed our position from last year. Bahrain has been part of Formula One for many years. They have invested in Formula One and we like to go there. It’s part of the show now.

    “So we want to be back, but not at any price because we have some people (team members) we are responsible for.”

    McLaren team principal and FOTA chairman Martin Whitmarsh also believes time is on the sport’s side to see if the situation becomes calmer.

    “As far as I know it’s quite a lot calmer than it was six months ago when we were having this discussion before,” said Whitmarsh.

    “We’ve enough time to speculate on next year. It’s probably a bit premature at the moment. We just have to see what it happens.

    “There was clearly some unrest, clearly some aftermath from that, but I don’t know what’s going to happen in the coming months.

    “It’s a bit early to speculate on what may or may not happen.”

  • Force India in points again at Sepang

    From Special Correspondent (F1)

    Kuala Lumpur, 10 April 2011: In hot and humid conditions, the expected rains failed to arrive and Red Bull Racing continued its dominance with Sebastian Vettel winning his second race of the season and fourth consecutive F1 race as he logged in 25 more points to comfortable win the Petronas F1 Malaysia Grand Prix at Sepang, 80 kms, from here on Sunday. McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button was second and Nick Heidfeld of Lotus F1 Renault was a surprise third.

    Thanks to Russian Petrov’s spectacular off-the-track excursion and sad retirement, Force India’s Paul di Resta, who drove a consistent race was in 9th place but the experienced Michael Schumacher overtook Paul in the last lap to bag two points. Paul got one point again for his 10th place  It was tough race for everyone with tactics and strategies ruled the roost and Force India Formula One Team came home in 10th and 11th positions for a second successive finish for both the drivers who finished 9 and 10th at the season opener in Melbaourne. The team is now joint 5th in the Constructors’ Championship with four points on the table, and Paul di Resta joins Adrian Sutil on two Championship points.

    Both drivers made a clean race start, however Adrian had to return to the pits for a new nose on lap 3 after a coming together with Rubens Barrichello. Paul was the first to make a tyre stop and it was a different strategy of tyre options for the drivers. Paul had a very good race battling with Rosberg and the mid-fielders in the first stint and Schumacher in the second. He made up four places to bring home another point for the team on Sunday. Adrian quickly made up lost ground due to the early nose change and was charging through the field for most of the race. He ran consistently in 12th position until a retirement by Petrov led to Adrian crossing the line in a well deserved 11th place.

    “I am quite happy I must say. The team did a good job with the strategy. I just could not hold off Michael at the end, he had fresher tyres and we had to stop a bit earlier for my third stop than predicted. But I also did not want to risk the championship point as well,’’ said Paul di Resta.

    “The first few laps were not brilliant as I lost my front wing touching Barrichello’s rear tyre. Then we had a two-stop strategy, Changing from soft tyres to hard and another set of soft again and I made them last well, which is positive. We could have been in for a much better finishing position, which is a shame. Overall the team did a great job with the pitstops so I’d like to thank them for that,’’ said Adrian Sutil.

    Team Principal Vijay Mallya was all praise the team: `The boys did a great job with the pitstops in very difficult weather conditions and the team’s strategies worked very well. Paul did an excellent job coming home in the points once again, while I believe that Adrian would also have finished in the top ten had it not been for the early nose change which altered his two-stop strategy.’’

    Talking about the Indian Grand Prix he was excited and said it was a big event. “Millions of youth were dreaming of an Indian team in the Formula One and it was my first dream a few back. Now India getting to host a GP is second big dream come true. We have lined up some updates for our aerodynamics and constantly making changes to improve the cars. The aim is to do better than last year and the whole team is working hard and confident,’’ he conduded.

    Elsewhere, Raghupathy Singhania, the JK Tyre stalwart gave away the prizes for the inaugural JK Racing Asia Series, a support race before the F1 event and for the first time JK banner was the back-drop at the Prize Distribution ceremony of an F1 event.

    eom/David

  • Force India in points again but Schumy pips Paul

    Kuala Lumpur, 10 April 2011: In hot and humid conditions, the expected rains failed to arrive and Red Bull Racing continued its dominance with Sebastian Vettel winning his second race of the season and fourth consecutive F1 race as he logged in 25 more points to comfortably win the Petronas F1 Malaysia Grand Prix at Sepang, 80 kms, from here on Sunday. McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button was second and Nick Heidfeld of Lotus F1 Renault was a `surprising’ third.

    Thanks to Russian Petrov’s spectacular off-the-track excursion and sad retirement, Force India’s Paul di Resta, who drove a consistent race was in 9th place but the experienced Michael Schumacher overtook Paul in the last lap to bag two points. Paul got one point again for his 10th place  It was tough race for everyone with tactics and strategies ruled the roost and Force India Formula One Team came home in 10th and 11th positions for a second successive finish for

    Singhania who presented trophies for the support race seen with Indian race Bharath. Photo by Scorp News
    Singhania who presented trophies for the support race seen with Indian race Bharath. Photo by Scorp News

    both the drivers who finished 9 and 10th at the season opener in Melbaourne. The team is now joint 5th in the Constructors’ Championship with four points on the table, and Paul di Resta joins Adrian Sutil on two Championship points.

    Both drivers made a clean race start, however Adrian had to return to the pits for a new nose on lap 3 after a coming together with Rubens Barrichello. Paul was the first to make a tyre stop and it was a different strategy of tyre options for the drivers. Paul had a very good race battling with Rosberg and the mid-fielders in the first stint and Schumacher in the second. He made up four places to bring home another point for the team on Sunday. Adrian quickly made up lost ground due to the early nose change and was charging through the field for most of the race. He ran consistently in 12th position until a retirement by Petrov led to Adrian crossing the line in a well deserved 11th place.

    “I am quite happy I must say. The team did a good job with the strategy. I just could not hold off Michael at the end, he had fresher tyres and we had to stop a bit earlier for my third stop than predicted. But I also did not want to risk the championship point as well,’’ said Paul di Resta.

    “The first few laps were not brilliant as I lost my front wing touching Barrichello’s rear tyre. Then we had a two-stop strategy, Changing from soft tyres to hard and another set of soft again and I made them last well, which is positive. We could have been in for a much better finishing position, which is a shame. Overall the team did a great job with the pitstops so I’d like to thank them for that,’’ said Adrian Sutil.

    Team Principal Vijay Mallya was all praise the team: `The boys did a great job with the pitstops in very difficult weather conditions and the team’s strategies worked very well. Paul did an excellent job coming home in the points once again, while I believe that Adrian would also have finished in the top ten had it not been for the early nose change which altered his two-stop strategy.’’

    Talking about the Indian Grand Prix he was excited and said it was a big event. “Millions of youth were dreaming of an Indian team in the Formula One and it was my first dream a few back. Now India getting to host a GP is second big dream come true. We have lined up some updates for our aerodynamics and constantly making changes to improve the cars. The aim is to do better than last year and the whole team is working hard and confident,’’ he conduded.

    Elsewhere, Raghupathy Singhania, the JK Tyre stalwart gave away the prizes for the inaugural JK Racing Asia Series, a support race before the F1 event and for the first time JK banner was the back-drop at the Prize Distribution ceremony of an F1 event.

    eom

  • Indian Motorsports Marshals Club formed to train Marshals for Indian GP

    Chennai, 21 Dec 2010: The Indian Motorsport Marshals Club (IMMC) has been formed as a national-level organization to provide race officials and marshals to manage the first-ever Indian F1 GP at the Jaypee Circuit, Noida, Delhi on 30th October 2011. Under the auspices of the Federation of Motorsport Sports Club of India (FMSCI) and the international FIA Institute of Motor Safety, the IMMC have just completed the first-level training programme to ensure the F1 Grand Prix (GP) in 2011 is a real sporting success.

    Marshalls willing to sign up can do so with the SPV (Special Purpose Vehicle), www.immc.in that has been created for this, to volunteer to work at the first-ever F1 GP in India. These marshals will then go through a selection and training programme to ensure the best quality marshals. The MSA will provide support throughout 2011 up to an including the GP itself.

    Founding members of the Marshals Club. Adrenna photo

    This training is part of a thorough on-going programme of support and development provided by the Royal Automobile Club Motor Sports Association of the UK (MSA). Two trainers, Sue Sanders and Ian Watson have spent the last 4 days this week, working with senior motorsports officials of this country who will on to undertake training of new and existing marshals across the country.

    Sanders said “The people we have worked with have been so enthusiastic; it’s been a real pleasure to work with them. They seem to be very passionate about motorsports and we are looking forward to helping out in any way possible”.

    Ian Watson commented “There are certain individuals within the group who are very experienced and they’ve proven throughout the week their intention and determination to deliver very high quality training for all marshals.”

    The MSA Training Team will be back to provide further support in the build up to the event and some of the senior officials might also visit at least one other F1 GP for intensive hands-on tracks-side training at all levels including the conclusion of the Train-The-Trainers Course. As a result of the formation of the IMMC, the FMSCI will soon have a large pool of licensed marshals to officiate at all the FMSCI events around the country on a need be basis, thereby adding further improvements to the administration of the sport.

  • KARUN CHANDHOK,  A Quick rise to stardom

    By George Francis, Scorp News

    Chennai, 3 August 2003: Karun Chandhok’ India’s fastest teenager’s created history on the 3rd August 2003, when he won the seventh race in the Rockingham Motor Speedway, becoming the most successful Indian driver in the British Formula 3 ( Scholarship Class) Championship. This win makes him India’s most successful international formula 3 drivers ( in terms of career wins) and also takes him back to the top of the championship points standings. Karun’s exploits in the field of motor racing, can be compared to a ride in the elevator, as to the fastest Indian in the world, Narain Karthikeyan, who seems to have taken the staircase, He got into racing at the right age, made the right moves, won every championship, that he participated, and is now leading the British Formula 3 Championship. What’s it that made his teenager so successful in racing at a young age? Why was he not bothered to spend his time with girls and the like as other teenagers and ‘freak out’ at some college? Karun, who was on a high after five wins ( two at Silverstone, two at Oulton Park, and one at Rockingham) in the last eight starts, spoke to Scorp News in a telephonic interview about his interest in the sport and his exploits and what it that makes him different from the others in the same field.

    Karun, son of the famous racer, rallyist, and tuner, and the current president of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India ( FMSCI), Mr.vicky Chandhok, and grandson of one of the founder members of the Madras Motor Sports Club, and the FMSCI, Mr. BI Chandhok has a racing line in his blood. His first Birthday cake was shaped like a car, and as he grew, his bed was car-shaped, and as his mother, Chitra puts it “Convalescing from a childhood illness, he converted his bedroom into a race track, and spent time ‘racing’ with the family doctor”. Born on 19th January 1984, the 19-year-old Karun, never went to a formal racing school. Having finished his 12th Standard at the Sishya School, in Chennai, the teenage dare-devil has put a full stop to studies and is all concentration on his racing career. In fact, it is interesting to note that he is a vegetarian in food habits.

    “ I grew up on the racing track”, says Karun. Who has accompanied his father on all his racing, testing, and rallying jaunts. “ My goal was always to become a racing driver, and I was just waiting for the mandatory age, to get my Competition License”. But if anyone had seen him, when he was fifteen, they would have written off the 94 kilogram bulks of a Karun. With this bulk, he participated in a Karting event in the Daytona race way at Buckmore, Park, UK, in the year 2000. That was his first ever race. This was after he did a stint at the Bill Sisley Karting School there, He got back to India and drove in the All India Motor Race Meet (AIMRM) at Sriperumpudur. “With my bulk, I was faster than others in testing”, remembers Karun.

    It is then that the grind started. Karun, who decided that it was time that he started racing, started a strenuous daily workout, Running, Swimming, and dieting, the 16 year old, was preparing for the assault in the JK Tyre National Road racing Championship, that would start later in the year. It was when he reduced 14 kilograms, to start the season, that  he sent a clear message ti his parents and the racing community that he meant ‘ serious business’.” I clipped another 12 kilograms by the end if the season and was feeling fit enough to race the rest of my life”, says Karun.” We were really surprised with what he did and hen decided come what may, we have to back this kid in the career”, says Vicky.

    Not having attended any formal Racing course, Karun feels that “ none can teach racing to anyone. Its in the blood, and one can only fine-tune it. In fact I feel that the Racing Schools that are very famous in the UK cannot give the king of attention that our racing drivers require in India. Someone like Akbar Ebrahim ( the first ever Indian to race abroad), and his Advanced Driving Corporate Academy, ( ADCA), can give more personal attention and shape our talents in the early stages of our career”. In fact, Akbar was Karun’s Coach, in 2000 and 2001.

    Starting his racing career, in the year 2000, Karun, won the JK Tyre National Road Racing Championship, 2000, in the Salon Cars, Nevertheless, he also drove the Formula Maruti Indian Single- seater car, and won both the race on debut. Karun had arrived, and the mtorsporting community started looking up to his younger, who was making waves. Having won the Indian Championship, the logical step was to move to the next level of Asian Motorsports, the Formula Asia series ( now the Formula BMW). The JK Industries who have  the commitment that they would send the National championship winners to the Formula Asia series, stood by Karun and the 17 year old entered the Formula Asia series in the year 2001.” This was a big jump that I wasn’t asking for. Slick tyres, wings, gearboxes that were different, and car set-up planning. I was thrilled”, says Karun,” The Formula Asia cars were great fun, after driving the Esteem and the formula Maruti. But the Championship itself was a lot easier than I expected. The competition was not fierce”..

    Karun Chandhok, started making waves in the Formula Asia ( FA) series like Narain Karthikeyan. He went one step further and won 8 out of the 14 races, and erased Narin;s record of seven wins. Karun, was well on the way to racing stardom. He became the youngest Formula Asia Champion at 17.”I could not have done what I did in the FA series if not for some very important people who helped me on the way. My parents, Akbar Ebrahim my coach, Patrick Roberts my race Engineer, and the mechanics” ,says Karun. In fact, Patrick who is fondly called,’paddy’ has been there in the FA circuit right from the days of Akbar Ebrahim, to Narain, to parthiva Sureshwaran, to karun.”in this series, I learnt how to go about studying new tricks, how to make full use of tyres how to plan your race and how to pace yourselves, and most importantly, how to be a team player”.

    While he was still on his way to the FA Champions title, Karun tested for Formula 3 with Carlin Motorsport., the leading F3 team. Driving a TMF Dallara 398 Mugen Honda, ( the same car that has a earlier been driven by Jenson Button, Narain Karthikeyan , and Takumo Sato among others), Karun drove the fastest lap at 51.9 seconds shattering the 52.7 seconds benchmarks, assigned to him by the Carlin Motorsport Race Engineer Antmony Hyiet.” The first day of testing was a real Baptism by fire as it was held in typical Welsh weather – cold, windy, and very wet. The initial few laps were difficult for me and I spun off on more than one occasion during the first few laps. From there on I got more and more comfortable with the car and conditions, and thanks to the team Narain and Rob Wilson ( the driver coach), we ended with lap times far better than we expected to achieve before the test. Thankfully, the next day was dry and Narain and and Boyo ( the race engineer) had told me that if I did  a 52.7 that would be a very good effort for a first day out. By lunchtime, we had managed a 52.4 and after a run in new tyres managed to do 51.9 at the end of the day. The team was happy with the progress made  through the day”,says Karun. Extremely impressed by the young Indian’s performance, Martin Stone, Team Carlin Motorsports’s co-owner said, I am delighted that our long standing (20 years) relationship with India is continuing and I will be taking personal interest in overseeing Karun’s F3 season”. Sanjay sharma, Head Motorsport, JK Industries said, “ it is really heartening to see the recognition Indian Motorsport talent is getting today. Its good to see Karun starting his F3 career with Carlin following in the footsteps of Narain”.

    Now was the time of reckoning. Have got to where he wanted, Karun had to now decide the future course of action for the next season, 2002. there were two classes for the F3 Championship, namely, the Scholarship class and the Championship class.” The Scholarship Class is for cars which are one year old, and a good training ground for new drivers as they learn the car and the circuits for less money compared to doing their first year in the Championship Class”. With these choices in front of them, Boyo, Martin Stone, Akbar and Vicky started their discussions on the P.O.A. for the year 2002. “ we decided that we would go in for the scholarship Class that would cost us 2.3 Crores to run the full Championship. They were now faced with a problem, because Carlin Motorsport had decided not to run in the Scholarship Class.

    Finally, they chose, Team T- Sport, and Carlin’ agreed to sell their present cars and give all the data and setups to Russel Eacott ( the owner of T-Sports), in 2002. with his mission accomplished for a berth in the F3 team, Karun returned to do the rest of the Formula Asia series.

    Karun continued his FA exploits until he became the youngest winner of the Championship and the top Asian Rookie. At the end of the year at the famous Macau Grand Prix in the ‘Casino city’, there is an one-off racing weekend for F3 cars and the supporting races have the FA series, motorcycles, Salon cars and the lot. It is in this Macau GP that Narain qualified as the first Indian on pole in the 2000 GP in Formula 3, and ,missed a victory when he crashed while he was leading. However, he went on to win the Korea GP which has been running in the next weekend, from 1999 onwards. Karun was all prepared for the Macau GP of 2001.” According to Narain and Parthiv, it is undoubtedly the best circuit that they had driven on. Macau is probably the most prestigious race for any driver who isn’t in Formula1. It has a very long history and the circuit is still rated as one of the most demanding and challenging in the world. Over 7 kilometers in length, with over 20 corners, the circuit was a thrill. We got only an hour session to learn the circuit, before qualifying, and after that were still wondering which way the next corner would go”. Karun, who was a rookie at Macau, was not looking for any fancy results in the first three at the podium

    Karun qualified 7th at Macau, of  which he was “dissatisfied”. But when the actual race started,” I had the best start of the year. Starting 7th, I managed to get into 4th at the first corner, and squeezed into second position after the first lap of 7 odd kilometers. The person on third was nudging me from behind and knowing the circuit, I eased off and allowed him to pass quite tamely and held on to my third spot”. Karun Chandhok, became the first Indian to ever grace the podium at Macau.” This was the Best Race of the Year for me”, he said. Having accomplished the inevitable, as a rookie in Macau, Karun  returned home for a short break before resuming the F3 tests at the UK.

    In February, 2002, Karun moved to the UK, on his F3 mission. Starting his test, the 18 year old saw stars. “ I had four accidents in my first ever test and realized that things are not the same in Asia and Europe. Weather conditions hardly change in Asia, whereas in the UK, the morning to afternoon climatic changes and the wind speed changes, has us on our toes all the time. The whole method of working is different- the technique, the weekend, and the testing. It is physically more demanding, and the cars are technically more advanced”. The first race of the weekend came up at Brands Hatch.

    “ The whole weekend seems a blur to me even now”, says Karun, “I qualified on 5th and 6th for the two races and finished 6th and 5th. After being in the top three and winning races. I was disgusted. The whole chapter was disheartening. I realized that I underestimated the task at hand, and by the end of the third lap in a race wanted to be competitive. I was I on the back foot and was hardly enjoying myself. I understood that the learning curve is going to be much more harder than expected. The team decided that we start concentrating on miles covered, and the lap timings. This changed my attitude towards the whole thing. I started gaining confidence and worked on building up my performance”. Karun was racing in the one year old chasses which had the H pattern five speed gear box, as against the six speed sequencial gear box in the Championship Class cars.

    “It was the Croft circuit that changed my attitude. It was a major turning point. I was quick in tested and qualifying on pole, I missed a gear shift and finished 6th in the first race. I knew that the potential was there to finish on top. In Silverstone, next, I was genuinely fast,” says Karun in the 2002 championship, there were 13 racing weekends ( rounds) for the class, and each of  the weekends had two races each. Getting 3 second positions and 3 third positions and two DNF (did not finish), the young Indian finished 6th in the British Formula 3 Scholarship Class Championship, 2002. This is not exactly where I wanted to finish at the end of the championship but I learned a lot about the car and the set-up,” he quipped.

    Once again it was that time of the year when decisions are made regarding the next season.” We looked at how Karun had performed, and knew that if he has  to make it he has to do it in the next year. We started working on how to give him the financial support that he needed, because what he got from his sponsors was not enough”, says Vicky with a smile, “ we decided that it is best that he drives one more year in the Scholarship Class”. Once more team T-Sports signed up with Karun and the new season is the make or break year for Karun in this class. Karun started working on his promos and Castrol Limited invited him for a meeting with Juan Pablo Montoya, his idol in Formula 1, at the Wiliams F1 team factory.

    Karun Chandhok, the teenage racing sensation of India, decided that he put his best foot forward and went into the championship with all that he could muster to prove himself, this year. The Championship runs 12 two race rounds and eight of them have already been run. 7 wins, 3 second places, 2 third placings, one fourth place, and 3 did not finishes, has put Karun Chandhok on top of the Championship standings this year. In the early part of the British Formula 3 Championship 2003, Karun was leading in the Scholarship class early in the season, but the DNFs put him backward and he had to work his way up again to lead from the front. The championship offers 20,15,12,10,8,6,5,4,3,2,and 1 point to the top 11 finishers in each of the 24 races that from the Championship and an extra point to the driver who records the fastest lap in a meet. Karun leads the championship by 2 points now, with teammate steve kane behind him and Ernesto Viso 20 points behind, Karun spoke about his chances of winning the championship this year, “ There’s definitely a good chance for me. There are 8 race more and we are in the final one third of the Championship. There are 189 points up for grabs to go and so a lot can happen still. It’s going to be hard but I’m going to give it my best shot”. Commenting on the competition, Karun was realistic “ it’s going to be really hard for sure. All of us ( Steve, Ernesto, and myself) and are all capable of winning more races. Mental strength is going to play a big part in the races to come”.

    What are his ambitions? “I really go only one year at a time and my interest is to so the British Formula 3 Championship class next year. Last year has already seen my father selling his garage in Karapakkam near Chennai to support my racing. The next year the budget is a whooping 3.8 crores and I hope more sponsors come by”. Karun now lives in a small town Brackley, about 10 minutes from Silverstone, and says that his team is family for him. He cycles, runs, swims, does light weights and floor exercises, in addition to Yoga. He also doubles up as an instructor at Silverstone.

    Karun unlike Narain says, that he does not miss family and Indian food. “ I do not miss home. I miss a good dosa once in a while”, he says. Karun has Alain Prost and Montoya as his heroes in “ on track driving’ and Michael Schumacher, for handling the 400 odd people that form the Ferrari team in such a dominant style.’I admire him for that”, he says.

    Karun ,who started with JK Industries, as a sponsor in 2000, now has Kingfisher, JK, Amaron Batteries, Ucal Mikuni, Rolon, AVT, and Parx to support him in his racing venture.” Last years we managed 86 lakhs out of the sponsorship and the rest of the 1.5 Crores was financed by selling the Karapakkam property. This year out of the 2.5 Crores budget, we have made up 1.13 Crores through our consortium of sponsors. We still need 1.27 Crores and we are knocking at all the doors possible”, says father Vicky Chandhok, who is not leaving any stone un-turned to get his son’s racing career going. “ I am happy with the consistency that he ha shown oin performance. His consistency in performance combined with speed and the mental make-up to attack and race has made me very happy. Gentlemen have no place on the track during a race. We expected him to do well and the podium finishes and prizes have re-confirmed it. He is performing not beyond or under our expectations. I hope as the years go on should become better and launch himself into the ultimate….Formula1”.

    Karun’s ambitions is Formula1, but he dare not mention when he would did in a Formula 1 car. A perfectionist in his day to day lifestyle, and an expert on etiquettes, Karun Chandhok, is all concentration on his rest of the 2003 season in the F3 Scholarship class. “If he does well in the Championship standings at the year, he should be in the British Formula 3 Championship Class next year. This will mean a whooping 3.8 Crores and I really hope that I can fine the sponsors for that”, says Vicky. It is interesting to note that Karun handles his PR himself, amidst his busy and demanding life-style. “ The moment the race is over, as I start driving home, he is all set with his laptop and writing the story of the races that he just ran. Even if he has had the worst of the day of his life at the track, he finishes the story, sends it to the media the and then un-winds himself.  I am happy that he is an independent boy and does no depend on anyone for anything”, says Vicky.

    Karun’s ambitions are clear. “ Narain needed more time to get his feet in this world because he was the pioneer in the Indian motor racing scene. I went to be faster and I hope to be there ( Formula 1) before I turn 20”, he says. “Further, I am the luckiest of the lot in India to come from a family of racers and am sure that this would take me to my goal”, he confirms. One thing is very clear, that with the likes of Narain, and Karun, the Formula I teams should be looking at India and the first Indian who would get into a Formula 1 team. For the record, Narain who has tested for two formula One Teams, is now running second in the World ( Formula Nissan) series championship standings.

    In July 2003, Karun was invited by Bernie Ecclestone, the Bossman behind the Formula 1, to the start grid ( which is a very exclusive place in F1 races ) of the Formula 1 British Grand Prix, where Karun met many of his racing heroes and among others had a personal audience with the Royal Crown Prince of Bahrain ( the Next F1 destination), Sir Jackie Stewart, Damon Hill, Mark Webber, and many more people who mattered in the world of Formula 1. writing an emotional piece about this whole episode, Karun concluded,” with the support of Mr.Ecclestone, as well as of course my sponsors back in that very same paddock as a driver is a realistic possibility. Let’s wait and see…..!!” when asked a whether his connections and the recent developments in his Motorsporting career has brought him closer to his dream…Formula 1 …He modestly says, “who knows!! Time will tell….”

    eom/georgefrancis/written in 2003, published 11 March 2010

  • Karun Chandhok makes debut as F1 commentator

    Bangalore, 16 October 2005: Top Indian international racer and the Formula 1 aspirant Karun Chandhok made his debut as a commentator of F1 races with his commentary on the Chinese Grand Prix today.

    The Chennai-born racer, with a racing pedigree and huge knowledge of motorsports history and experience in current racing scenario, came out sparkling as a commentator today on Star Sports channel which has rights to broadcast the live F1 Grand Prix races in India.