Tag: featured

  • Narain qualifies second for Docomo Dandelion at Suzaka season opener: Super Formula Japan Series

    Suzuka (Japan), 18 April 2015: Narain Karthikeyan, the first Formula One driver from India, made a stunning start to the Super Formula Japan Series this year qualifying in second place for Sunday’s race with Docoma Dandelion team.

    Narain who drove the series last year

    with a Toyota engine shifted to Honda engine with the new team Dandelion and took time to settle down in the first qualifying session finishing fourth with a time of 1:39.188, a mere 0.53 seconds behind leader Naoki Yamamota, also in a Honda engine.

    The Coimbatore-based Narain, then went on to top the time sheets in the second qualifier with a time of 1: 38.598 ahead of teammate Nojiri Tomoki in second and Yamamoto in third.

    However in the third and final qualification, Narain finished second with a 1:38.870 behind Yamamota, who clocked 1:38.585. Narain’s teammate Tomoki could only qualify 7th in the third session with a time of 1:39.816.

    Narain in car number 41 is raring to go and will start behind Yamamoto.

    Earlier, the team hosted Narain Karthikeyan with a warm welcom. “In the first session I had to check the set up and could attack only in the last six minutes. I had a good start in the second session and managed to stay ahead. Despite the red flag and disruption

    Narain Karthikeyan qualifies in P2 at Suzaka, the first round of the Japan Super Formula series on Saturday. A Docomo Dandelion team image
    Narain Karthikeyan qualifies in P2 at Suzaka, the first round of the Japan Super Formula series on Saturday. A Docomo Dandelion team image

    , I am happy with the position for tomorrow’s race. I have prepared well for the season,” said Karthikeyan.

    “The team told me to prepare using the qualification to set up the car as I know both Toyota and Honda engine,” added Narain.

    eom/with inputs from Tetsuya of Dandelion team

  • Aleix Espargaro on record pace to lead Argentina Free Practice

    Round 3: Argentina MotoGP™ – Free Practice One & Two
    Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo, Friday 17 April 2015
    Bridgestone slick compounds: Front: Soft, Medium & Hard; Rear: Medium & Hard (Asym.) & Ex-hard (Symmetric)
    Bridgestone wet tyre compounds: Soft (Main) & Hard (Alternative)
    Weather:   FP1 – Dry. Ambient 20-21°C; Track 26-26°C (Bridgestone measurement)
                     FP2 – Dry. Ambient 20-21°C; Track 30-32°C (Bridgestone measurement)
    Team SUZUKI ECSTAR rider Aleix Espargaro was in impressive form at Autódromo Termas de Río Hondo today, topping both of the day’s practice sessions and setting a time quicker than the current Circuit Record Lap in Free Practice 2.
    Having finished on top in an FP1 session that was marred by poor track conditions, Espargaro relished the improved conditions in FP2 to set a lap time of 1’38.776 to finish over half a second clear of his nearest competitor, Ducati Team’s Andrea Iannone. Iannone’s personal best time of 1’39.311 came on his final lap of the day and saw him pip Repsol Honda Team’s Marc Marquez to third on the timesheets by just 0.025 seconds. All of the riders in the top three used the medium compound front slick to set their quickest time, but while Marquez set his time using the hard compound rear slick, both Espargaro and Iannone used the medium rear slick for their hot lap.
    In a similar situation to the opening day of last year’s Argentina Grand Prix, the first session of the race weekend took place on a dusty track surface resulting in low grip levels and high rates of tyre wear. Conditions in the afternoon were better – although still not ideal – with improved grip available from the well-used tarmac. The low grip levels in FP1 resulted in the majority of riders using the softest front slick available this weekend, the soft compound option, for the first session. With track conditions improved for FP2, most riders switched to the medium compound front slick for greater braking stability, although the sub-standard track conditions meant the hard compound front was unused today. Rear slick choice saw a general preference for softer options in FP1; hard compound for the Factory Honda and Yamaha riders and medium compound for the remaining riders. For FP2, there was a shift in preference to the harder rear options at the start of the session – including the new extra-hard rear slick being used by the majority of Factory Honda and Yamaha riders – until the riders switched back to their softer rear slick options to set a quick time in the final ten minutes of the session.
    Slightly warmer temperatures and dry conditions are forecast for tomorrow. The riders will next be on track in tomorrow morning’s Free Practice 3 session, which will commence at 0955 local time (GMT -4).
    Masao Azuma – Chief Engineer, Bridgestone Motorsport Tyre Development Department
    “Today’s conditions were as we expected, the dirty tarmac in the morning reducing the grip level and also causing graining on the rear tyres. However, with more rubber on the tarmac in FP2 the track condition improved considerably resulting in improved lap times and greater durability. Considering that track conditions weren’t the best, the fact that the pace is already under the race lap record is a good indication that our tyres are working well and things should only get more competitive with warmer temperatures and better track conditions tomorrow. Another encouraging sign today was the performance of our new extra-hard specification rear slick, with riders commenting that it offers good, consistent grip. Overall, it was a good first day for Bridgestone in Argentina.”
    Argentina MotoGP: Top ten combined Free Practice 1 & 2 times
    Pos Rider Team Combined Practice Time Gap
    1
    Aleix ESPARGARO Team SUZUKI ECSTAR 1’38.776 (FP2)
    2
    Marc MARQUEZ Repsol Honda Team 1’39.311 (FP2) 0.535
    3
    Andrea IANNONE Ducati Team 1’39.336 (FP2) 0.560
    4
    Cal CRUTCHLOW CWM LCR Honda 1’39.403 (FP2) 0.627
    5
    Andrea DOVIZIOSO Ducati Team 1’39.434 (FP2) 0.658
    6
    Valentino ROSSI Movistar Yamaha MotoGP 1’39.463 (FP2) 0.687
    7
    Pol ESPARGARO Monster Yamaha Tech 3 1’39.648 (FP2) 0.872
    8
    Scott REDDING Estrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS 1’39.892 (FP2) 1.116
    9
    Valentino ROSSI Movistar Yamaha MotoGP 1’39.947 (FP2) 1.171
    10
    Yonny HERNANDEZ Pramac Racing 1’40.088 (FP2) 1.312
     eom/Bridgestone press release

    Aleix-Espargaro---Team-SUZUKI-ECSTAR---Argentina-MotoGP-FP2

  • We still let Lewis (Hamilton) and Nico (Rosberg) race: Toto Wolff, Mercedes

    TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – John BOOTH (Manor), Rob WHITE (Renault Sport F1), Eric BOULLIER (McLaren), Maurizio ARRIVABENE (Ferrari), Monisha KALTENBORN (Sauber), Toto WOLFF (Mercedes)

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Toto, we’ll start with you. Great race here obviously 12 months ago between your two drivers. This year, though, it seems you’ve got Ferrari breathing down your neck. How much of a restriction is that on your freedom to let your drivers do the race they want to do? 

    Toto WOLFF: First of all, it’s true, we have great memories of the race last year. But this year the equation changed, because clearly looking at the first three races Ferrari’s back and they they looked very strong this afternoon in the long runs. We will still follow the principle of letting Lewis and Nico race but there could be a situation where you just need to be aware that there is a new competitor, it’s not as easy, we don’t have the gap anymore like last year and this needs to be considered.

    Can you just drill down a little bit more into what we saw today? You mentioned, obviously you were quickest with the two cars in Free Practice 2, but looking at the long runs, at times it even looked, if anything, that the Ferrari was a shade faster.

    TW: Yeah. The Ferrari looked the quickest car out there in Free Practice 2. Very stable quick tyres, lap times. That was a Freudian [slip], tyres. We just need to get our act together and analyse it. This is Friday, Sunday’s going to be the important time.

    Thank you. Rob, if I can come to you: what’s the state of play this weekend with engines for your four drivers that are using your engine this weekend?

    Rob WHITE: Clearly we had a bad day at the office in China and the consequences of that bear very heavily, individually and collectively, on everybody at Viry. It’s never good to cause trouble for the teams or the drivers. So the state of play is that we’ve put a huge amount of energy into understanding where we were after China. That was a big logistical battle. Just the mucky detail of it is that the only legal way to get the engines out of China was for them to travel with the freight to Bahrain as expected. To get them to France to be stripped down and inspected would have been Wednesday or Thursday. So we didn’t do that. We had a welcoming committee. We had some specialists from France who made the trip in the other direction. We dismantled the engines in the garage during the week so that we could put a finger on exactly what went wrong in China. The situation is that we understand what happened to the two engines that failed during the race. One of the incidents, the one that happened to Kvyat, was an incident that we know about, which we were aware of a vulnerability for, and for which we have what we believe is a good counter-measure. We don’t expect to be vulnerable to that going forward. Unfortunately the failure that ended Max’s race was not of that type. We were absolutely not expecting such a thing at such a low mileage, so a real shame to end the race for him in that way. The time is such that the best we have for this week is engines of a similar spec, that we must look after during the Friday, Saturday and of course Sunday running, but we are vulnerable to that failure still. Looking forward of course the task back at the factory is to create a solution to that for the races ahead. We’re not out of the woods yet on that one.

    You’ve obviously pushed very hard on development, to try to close the gap. Have you pushed too hard and come unstuck or is it more complicated than that?

    RW: It’s true to say that we are paying the price for a late change of tack, a late arrival of the spec for the start of the season, taking account of some of the things in the environment that moved on – we all know the story about tokens that moved on just before Christmas. That’s part of it, not the whole story. We must keep our head down and deliver the solutions to the issues that were encountered earlier on but honestly a lot of the direct consequence is to do with the lateness of the arrival of the spec. We’re still on track delivering the solutions to the earlier problems. We’ll continue those. Obviously in Australia the big word was driveability and I think we’ve eliminated that from our vocabulary and now we’re hoping to be in a proper situation for Monaco, where of course it’s very important. We’ve got performance improvements in the pipeline for delivery later in the season, again taking into account the token situation. And the game now is to fold into the plan the consequences of the failures, which clearly puts the whole supply chain under a lot of pressure. So that’s the way the land lies going forward.

    Thank you very much. John, coming to you: double finish last time out in Shanghai. What are the steps along the pathway now and when do you get your 2015 car?

    John BOOTH: That’s the big question Ted.

    James

    JB: You both look alike! Yes, a double finish last time out in China. That was a major step forward for us. That was a major step forward for us. We ran every session on plan. Operationally we’re working as we were last year. So that step has been achieved. As for the 2015 car, our aim has always been for the August break, as with arriving in Australia it is a very aggressive target and will take a lot of achieving. But when we get back from these first four flyaway races we just really need to sit down and see if we can bring all the areas together that need bringing together to achieve that in that time frame.

    Well you’re here and you’re racing. What are the prospects for attracting fresh investment?

    JB: I’m sure there are prospects but we have a commercial plan that we’re comfortable is sustainable for our model and we’re confident in the investors we have now or the owner we have now to take us forward over the next few years.

    Thank you for that. Same question to you in a way Monisha, what does riding high in fourth place in the Constructors’ Championship, as you are at this stage, what does that mean for the prospect of attracting new income, new investors to the team?

    Monisha KALTENBORN: Well, it’s definitely a better position than we were in last year! But we’ve seen that… let’s say like in 2012, that even if you have good performance it does not automatically mean that you have sponsors lining up after the race weekend. So it’s important that we keep this up as well as we can, that we make the most of the opportunities we get, try to develop according to what’s possible for us and just make sure that we have the stability in the team.

    Well, as we said, you’re riding high at the moment in fourth. You finished behind Marussia last year and this year you’re ahead, at this stage, of Red Bull and McLaren. Have you had to revise your targets of where you want to finish at the end of this year?

    MK: I think we’re very mindful of the situation. We’re at the start of the season, there are a lot more races to go. We know it’s going to be very tough. We don’t dream about positions at the moment. For us it’s important that we stick to the plan we have, the development plan, and make sure that we just make the most of it.

    Eric, coming to you. Obviously from the outside it looks like a rather demoralizing start to the season but from the inside do you, as the leader, see the team channeling together, getting behind everybody and pushing in the same direction? Do you see all the positive signs you want to see?

    Eric BOULLIER: Yeah, I think obviously for the outside world, it’s a bit frustrating to be where we are, definitely where we don’t want to be. But from the inside we know what we are doing, we know what we want to achieve and we also know what’s coming along. There is some process to go through and I think, as you can see from the outside, the team itself, the atmosphere is good, everybody is working, everybody is concentrating and focused on what they have to do and we will get there eventually.

    And do you still maintain your view that you had before the season started that you will be competitive by the end of the season?

    EB: Yeah, I think so. Still. Obviously before the summer or from the European [season] onwards you will see a lot of development coming, both chassis and engine, so we may expect to be more competitive definitely by the end of the season.

    Q: Maurizio, coming to you, do you feel that you are breathing down Mercedes’ neck right now?

    Maurizio ARRIVABENE: If I’m going to tell you that we are going to win the championship, you think that I am out of mind, like a terrace in the house. We are happy, of course, we are coming back, we are following our programme but I think that Mercedes is still a super-strong team.

    Q: You’ve been around the Ferrari team in various different capacities for a very long time. What do you think that Sebastian Vettel is bringing to the culture of the team?

    MA: It’s the enthusiasm and the passion, like all the other guys. A driver that is so committed to Ferrari is making our job easy, I have to say. And on top, he’s said many, many times that since he was a kid, he was dreaming about Ferrari and he always liked it. Of course, last year it was impossible for him to say so, but now he’s liberated and he’s telling the truth. And then, as a driver, it’s very, very strong, very precise. Many, many journalists, they were asking about him and Michael. I said the things they have in common is the culture but then they are two different drivers with two different characters. But somehow, when you recognize that, there is something in common. I think this is based… this is a cultural base. It has nothing to do with the personality of the two.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Oubay Zakkar – Autosport Middle East) My question is for Maurizio. One of the main issues for Ferrari in the last few years was the lack of correlation between data from the wind tunnel and the numbers from the track. Has this issue been solved? Is the car working as expected?

    MA: Yeah, now the car is working as expected. I think we have… last year technical staff, they were in charge of developing the car in the wind tunnel, they were doing a lot of work to make sure everything was going well, and now the correspondence between the data we have on the track and the wind tunnel is fine. We are happy.

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Question to the five team principals. Last week former FIA President Max Mosley came out and said that he thought, in order to prevent Formula One from imploding, the existing contracts should be torn up and the money should be distributed more equally.  How do you feel about the implications of his statement?

    MK: Well obviously I can just speak for the contract we have at Sauber, and not being one of the teams that are considered to be, let’s say, privileged financially, I wouldn’t mind if that contract is torn.

    JB: Obviously we support any steps in that direction. I don’t think it’ll ever be quite that radical – but we would definitely support any steps in that direction.

    EB: The more you go through the grid, the more reluctance you will find, I guess, to tear apart the contract. But, I think it’s a comment from Max, it’s maybe out of context, so I think maybe F1 needs a bigger discussion, or a bigger picture to be discussed rather than just tearing apart the contract.

    TW: It’s an unrealistic scenario. The contract’s in place, you can be happy or unhappy but the contract is there. If you want to do it better, next time around.

    MA: I agree with Toto, the contract is there. But if Max has an idea to break the contract I want to tell him what he’s going to do without a team like Mercedes or Ferrari. Then he can organize a funny championship and then he can distribute the money.

    Q: (Jerome Pugmire – AP) Question to Toto. You just said “we don’t have the gap as last year and this has to be considered,” is this because perhaps you’re slightly worried that in particularly Nico may be getting too sidetracked by the competition with Lewis, as was shown by his comments last week? And perhaps maybe he should be concentrating a bit more on the threat from Ferrari?

    TW: No. That has no correlation. The point is that when you have a gap like we had last year, it is easy to compromise on race strategy sometimes because you want to assure you are keeping as neutral to the two of them, as neutral as possible. And sometimes that is not the quickest race. So there needs to be a situation… you have seen the situation in Malaysia where the two cars have been stuck up behind each other on the pitstop because we wanted to mirror the race strategy. It could be that we simply split the strategies, if needed, just to make sure that, if you are wrong with one of the strategies, at least the other car is able to achieve a good finish, or win the race.

    Q: (Kate Walker – motorsport.com) I have a question for the five team principals. In Formula One talk of succession planning usually focused on a post-Bernie world. I was wondering, the extent to which you think continuity is important for success – and whether or not you each have succession plans in place for your own eventual departures for the team or the sport?

    Maurizio, you’ve only just started, have you got a succession plan?

    MA: Regarding me? I’ve just arrived. C’mon! First of all I have to apologise. Before I said a Championship without Ferrari, Mercedes – but of course I mean all the historical constructors, with all respect for everybody here. Answering your question, in all the company, that they are called Company with a capital C, it’s normal that you have a succession plan. This is not anything new, it’s something that is part of the commitment that anyone, or everyone, who has an important position, must respect. For me, succession plan is part of the job that you have to do. Not for me yet, I hope.

    Monisha, do you have someone in mind?

    MK: Maybe Peter Sauber? No, I have not… I’ve had enough other issues to handle than looking at this. Maybe it’s a question more for Peter indeed. But coming back to what you said about continuity. I think that’s a very important point for Formula One itself. I think it’s what many teams have been saying, particularly on the technical side. If you can have a certain continuity and stability, it allows you to foresee the future better, to maybe also stabilize situations in teams better.

    Toto?

    TW: The trouble is others do your succession plan. I hope there is no succession plan in place for me yet.

    John?

    JB: I’m very happy and very proud to hold this position but time marches on and I’m sure eventually whoever makes the decisions will have the plan in place.

    Eric?

    EB: Well, McLaren is a big organization so I’m sure there is somebody, somewhere in McLaren who could step up and take my job, yeah.

    Q: (Luigi Perna – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Question for Arrivabene: yesterday Kimi Raikkonen was asked about his future in Formula One and the possibility to go on with Ferrari, and he answered that it was up to Ferrari to decide in the end. Can you say something about that?

    MA: You see, it’s only Italians who are calling me Arrivabene.  Everybody they are calling me Maurizio. The Italians call me Arrivabene, very formal. It’s early to talk… you want to know what I said to Kimi? He was telling me about the contract and I said to him, it depends on your performance. And Kimi, he’s the kind of person that he appreciates when you’re talking with him in a very transparent way and straight to his face. Kimi knows, now it’s early to talk about this at the moment. I’m happy about the performance of Kimi but he needs to push and he knows that.

    Q: (Ted Kravitz – Spy Sports) Maurizio – or Mr Arrivabene – we saw you being part of a football human wall in front of Sebastian’s car at the end of the session. Is this Ferrari’s idea of being more open and accessible to fans and TV viewers?

    MA: When you have passion for something, you are screaming like a football supporter, it’s normal. If I understand the question well.

    Q: You were shielding the front of the car after Sebastian broke his front wing so the TV audience couldn’t see what you were doing.

    MA: Normally, when some parts of the car are quite sensitive, we try to do our best to make sure that you don’t have 10,000 cameras as we had. They try to find out what’s going on. The real surprise that sometimes it’s tactical this thing. We were put in the wall but there’s nothing to see. I was there because I was curious.

    Q: (Ted Kravitz – Spy Sports) Can I just follow that up? That was my point. Obviously you’re not so naive to think that every other team doesn’t have very detailed photos of every part of your car anyway, so really, ultimately, aren’t you just blocking the cameras from seeing?

    MA: Yeah, you’re right. The cameramen are there to do their job, of course, but sometimes there are too many and sometimes they are turning around the box and taking video but not with the intention to share something with another team. They do it like this. Occasionally we have a problem, a real problem on the brakes and the guys naturally, they start to cover. Maybe it’s a bad habit but I was there to be with them but to look at Seb’s brakes and to understand. I’m not naive, I’m new, I need to learn.

    Q: (Luke Murphy – Formula Spy) Maurizio, we heard Sebastian say at the end of the session that he was struggling to decelerate the car and this was after the incident with Sergio Perez. Have you had a chance to look into that at all, or is there any issue identified?

    MA: No, we were looking at the telemetry and we saw something wrong with the brakes. This was the reason why we were looking and the guys they took away the carbon fibre shape to understand it better. This is what we learned from the telemetry but they are still looking now.

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) To Toto, Maurizio and Rob in particular, but Eric if you’d like to comment as well. I’m talking about the fifth engines that were discussed in Malaysia. Toto, you said last week that a proposal had been submitted to the FIA regarding this. What sort of progress has there been, and Rob, could it get to a stage where you’ve gone through four engines already, you’ve taken a penalty for the fifth before the regulation is introduced?

    TW: We’ve submitted the proposal to the FIA, the proposal is with the FIA and I guess it’s going to be discussed the next time around in a strategy meeting.

    RW: For the time being, we know what the sporting regulations say, that it’s four engines. It’s obvious that we’re over-using engines and to some extent then the way to deal with that is one step at a time, one race at a time and the penalty regime is what it is. If the regulations change along the way, then we will adapt our planning to take account of that. It will be the same for everybody the day that it happens if it happens. I understand from what Toto just said, that there is a proposal to be discussed. I can’t imagine it will be very complicated. I guess there’s one place in the rules where we would have to put five instead of four, and so how we would deal with that I think will  become clear as time goes by.

    EB: I’ve not see the proposal so I don’t know. It has to be discussed in the strategy group, I guess we have to wait for the strategy group and see what comes out. I guess and I hope it’s sensible, even if Honda is new this year in F1, we are maybe struggling with reliability but maybe less than my colleague here, but I think it would be welcome and cheaper solution to run a fifth engine because I think all the engine manufacturers have realised that going into strong reliability performance actually costs a lot of money.

    MA: As Toto said, the power unit engineers get together, they’re talking about that proposal and that proposal is going to be discussed in the strategy group on the 14th of May.

    MK: As a customer team on engines, we of course follow what our engine supplier says, but for us, the rules are given. We suffered that much last year, also with the engine we had. Some engine manufacturers do the job better, others don’t and it’s just different every season. So we say if there has to be an additional engine, as the smaller teams look primarily at the cost of it, and under what conditions it will be introduced, and what it’s meant to be doing.

    JB: We’re perfectly happy with the four engine rule but sometimes rules have to be changed for the good of the sport and this may be one of those but I’m sure it will get discussed at the strategy group.

    Q: (Nahed Sayouh –Autosport Middle East) Do you believe that refuelling should come back into F1 in order to make a new challenge for the designers and revive the spectacle, and make a difference in the race strategies?

    RW: It’s been a while since we’ve had refuelling. I think the reasons that it went away were appropriate at the time. The current set of technical and sporting regulations has been constructed without refuelling, so I think it’s a difficult thing to consider in isolation but I personally feel that the current regulations are very easy to understand. It’s obvious that there would be an immediate improvement in the show as a result of refuelling, but all of the things we know about about refuelling would remain the case. There’s a lot of kit involved, there’s a lot more people involved at a pit stop and so on and so forth. So I’m pretty neutral from an engine provider perspective. From a fan perspective, I don’t personally particularly yearn for the idea.

    MA: It depends, because it’s not a personal… it’s going to be easy to say refuelling or no refuelling. You have to think about what’s going on, about the issue whether you should do the refuelling. That means that you change a lot of the regulations that are related to the engine. Of course it involves the chassis of the car, so it’s something that is more complicated to discuss. It’s not just a question of in or out. Of course, if you ask somebody who would like to see the cars being refuelled they are going to say no, but I don’t think it’s a question of refuelling yes, or refuelling no. It’s a question of what we are going to do in the future and this is a matter that is going to be discussed at the strategy group.

    Friday press conference in Bahrain. An FIA image
    Friday press conference in Bahrain. An FIA image

    eom/FIA transcript of the Press Conference

  • Rosberg tops FP2 as Mercedes reasserts its authority: Bahrain Grand Prix

    Sakhir, 17 April 2015: After a low-key start to the Bahrain Grand Prix weekend with 15th and 16th place in the morning session, Mercedes reasserted their authority in the second free practice session, with Nico Rosberg taking top spot in the afternoon ahead of team-mate Lewis Hamilton. The Mercedes duo’s closest challenger was Kimi Raikkonen, the Ferrari driver finishing four tenths of a second behind Hamilton.

    The baking heat of the morning session, held in bright sunshine, led to unrepresentative conditions and the Mercerdes pairing spent the opening 90 minutes pursuing long runs that left them down the order, the duo were straight into the fray in the afternoon.

    Hamilton held away in the early stages of the session, run on medium tyres, the champion lapping four tenths faster than Rosberg and a tenth quicker than Sebastian Vettel’s Ferrari.

    However, when the performance runs took place, on the soft tyre, Rosberg vaulted to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:34.647, just a tenth quicker than the champion.

    Rosbergt’s

    Behind them Kimi Raikkonen took third spot with a lap of 1:35.174, a tenth clear of Vettel.

    The German was later involved in a minor collision with Force India’s Sergio Perez. Vettel reported a braking issue and was coasting towards home when Perez, jostling for track position with a Sauber appeared to cut across Vettel with the result that the Ferrari shipped front wing damage. Following an investigation after the session the race stewards ruled that no further action was warranted.

    Fifth place in the session went to Williams’ Valtteri Bottas, one of the last drivers to attempt a performance run. His best time was six-tenths off the pace. Team-mate Felipe Massa finished in ninth place.

    Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo finished sixth ahead, while Pastor Maldonado gave Lotus hope of a good weekend with the day’s seventh fastest time, though team-mate Romain Grosjean was down in P13.

    Sauber once again look set for a solid weekend, with Felipe Nasr landing the eighth-fastest time ahead of Red Bull’s Daniil Kvyat and Massa. Nasr’s ream-mate Marcus Ericsson was 11th fastest.

    After finishing seventh in the morning session, McLaren’s Fernando Alonso again showed improvement for the team by taking 12th place, four hundredths of a second behind Ericsson.

    In the morning session team Alonso’s -mate Jenson Button registered just two laps, his car stopping with an electrical issues and there was more frustration for the McLaren driver in the afternoon as he was ordered to stop his car after completing just three laps. He managed to rejoin later in the session but finished in 19thplace.

     

    2015 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 2
    1 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:34.647   31
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:34.762 0.115 33
    3 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1:35.174 0.527 30
    4 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:35.277 0.630 26
    5 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:35.280 0.633 36
    6 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 1:35.449 0.802 27
    7 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:35.474 0.827 34
    8 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1:35.793 1.146 27
    9 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull Racing 1:35.883 1.236 23
    10 Felipe Massa Williams 1:35.884 1.237 35
    11 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:36.148 1.501 34
    12 Fernando Alonso McLaren 1:36.191 1.544 22
    13 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:36.334 1.687 31
    14 Carlos Sainz Toro Rosso 1:36.471 1.824 32
    15 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:36.805 2.158 30
    16 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1:36.917 2.270 26
    17 Sergio Perez Force India 1:37.062 2.415 33
    18 Will Stevens Marussia 1:39.131 4.484 21
    19 Jenson Button McLaren 1:39.209 4.562 15
    20 Roberto Merhi Marussia 1:40.592 5.945 26

    eom/FIA release

  • Raikkonen quickest in first Free Practice: Bahrain GP

    Sakh

    Kimi Raikkonen tops Free Practice 1 at Sakhir on Friday. An FIA image
    Kimi Raikkonen tops Free Practice 1 at Sakhir on Friday. An FIA image

    ir, 17 April 2015: Kimi Raikkonen went quickest in first practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix, with Ferrari team-mate Sebastian Vettel second at a baking hot Sakhir Circuit. Mercedes, meanwhile, focused on long runs with Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton down in 15th and 16th place respectively.

    With track temperatures exceeding 50 degree and the running conducted in blazing sunshine, the session was unrepresentative of the conditions that will hold sway during Sunday’s first night race of the season and as such the timesheet had a somewhat muddled look, with Toro Rosso’s Max Verstappen in P1 and McLaren’s Fernando Alonso in second place for a period midway through the 90 minutes.

    After using the free set of medium tyres on offer in the first half hour, many teams left it until late in the session to bolt on a second set, with the Ferrari drivers among that group.

    Vettel, who had earlier been restricted to the Ferrari garage for a long period following a power loss on his car, was sent back out in the final ten minutes of the session and with the temperatures falling, the German jumped to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 1:38.029. That was swiftly eclipsed by Raikkonen who moments later crossed the line in a time of 1:37.827, to edge his team-mate by 0.202s.

    Valtteri Bottas was third for Williams with a lap of 1:38.390. That put marginally ahead of Toro Rosso’s Carlos Sainz who had also waited for more representative track conditions before bolting on fresh tyres for a late run that netted him a fourth-best time of 1:38.447. Daniel Ricciardo was fifth quickest for Red Bull Racing, while Verstappen slipped to sixth with his best lap of 1:38.504.

    Alonso gave one side of the McLaren garage something to smile about, with his best time 1:38.598 remaining good enough for seventh place.

    There was less to celebrate on Jenson Button’s side of the McLaren pit.  The Briton stopped at Turn 2 just as he was starting his first flying lap. The team later reported an electric problem and he remained stuck in the garage for the remainder of the session.

    Eight place in the session went to another late improved, Sauber’s Felipe Nasr, who set a best time of 1m 38.628s. The top 10 order was completed by Red Bull Racing’s Daniil Kvyat and Williams’ Felipe Massa.

    Having taken on a second set of tyres early in the session, both Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton concentrated on long runs, with Rosberg emerging the quicker of the two with a time of 1:39.293, just over two tenths of a second quicker than his team-mate.

    2015 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1:37.827   13
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:38.029 0.202 12
    3 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:38.390 0.563 23
    4 Carlos Sainz Toro Rosso 1:38.447 0.620 14
    5 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 1:38.455 0.628 17
    6 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1:38.504 0.677 22
    7 Fernando Alonso McLaren 1:38.598 0.771 18
    8 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1:38.628 0.801 17
    9 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull Racing 1:38.661 0.834 17
    10 Felipe Massa Williams 1:38.790 0.963 21
    11 Sergio Perez Force India 1:38.793 0.966 15
    12 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:38.842 1.015 23
    13 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:39.187 1.360 20
    14 Jolyon Palmer Lotus 1:39.283 1.456 31
    15 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:39.293 1.466 23
    16 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:39.532 1.705 22
    17 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:39.534 1.707 21
    18 Will Stevens Marussia 1:42.973 5.146 12
    19 Roberto Merhi Marussia 1:44.265 6.438 15
    20 Jenson Button McLaren No time   2

    eom/FIA release

  • Typical Argentina: sun and fog, narrow roads and flat-out sections; Mikkelsen trails Ogier

    The fastest drifters in the world are back in business after a 38-day break: Volkswagen kicks off the second quarter of the 2015 FIA World Rally Championship (WRC) at the Rally Argentina (23–26 April). After three back-to-back victories, double world champions Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia (F/F) have opened up a commanding lead in the World Championship in their Polo R WRC. Their closest rivals: team-mates Andreas Mikkelsen/Ola Fløene (N/N), who find themselves second overall after three rounds. Last year’s winners in Argentina, Jari-Matti LatvaRally Mexico 2015la/Miikka Anttila (FIN/FIN), are looking to bounce back from the disappointment of the last two rallies. All three Volkswagen duos face a unique and diversified rally route. The 345.70 kilometres against the clock consists of twelve special stages, including four stages of over 50 kilometres in length and the downhill classic “El Cóndor” with its characteristic fog.

    “Volkswagen can look back on a successful motorsport tradition in Argentina,” said Jost Capito, Volkswagen Motorsport Director. “This is where our company enjoyed its first major successes in top-class racing – and we are virtually unbeaten here. There is no doubt about it: we enjoy coming to Argentina – a country that is also a key market for Volkswagen. We also have big plans from a sporting point of view. We travel to Argentina leading the World Championship and will do everything in our power to win the Rally Argentina again. As Motorsport Director, it is a real luxury to be able to turn to three duos who are all capable of winning: Sébastien Ogier can look back on some fierce duels here with his team-mates Jari-Matti Latvala and Andreas Mikkelsen. They have all shown that the Rally Argentina suits them. However, we must always keep a wary eye on our rivals at Hyundai, M-Sport and Citroën – they all want to win and are capable of doing so. It will certainly not be boring for the fantastic Argentinean fans.”

    Ogier versus Mikkelsen – or: World Championship leader against his closest rival

    Double world champion versus youngster – that is the fascinating all-Volkswagen duel that has developed at the top of the World Championship standings over the past three rallies. Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia and Andreas Mikkelsen/Ola Fløene have put together flawless podium hat-tricks so far in the 2015 World Rally Championship. Ogier/Ingrassia won in Monte Carlo, Sweden and Mexico, and were joined on the podium on each occasion by Mikkelsen/Fløene. The coming duel in Argentina also promises to be exciting, as the two duos have already been in this situation in the past: back in 2012, whilst preparing for the World Rally Championship in the Volkswagen team’s Škoda Fabia S2000. They put on an entertaining battle for the class victory, until Mikkelsen/Fløene were forced to retire with a faulty suspension.

    Ogier versus Latvala – or: France vs. Finland

    Ogier against Latvala – the duel that kept fans on the edge of their seat during the 2014 Rally Argentina, and indeed throughout the entire season. Twelve months ago, Jari-Matti Latvala/Miikka Anttila produced an immaculate drive to finish ahead of their Volkswagen team-mates. A potential reprise of this duel would be of even greater importance in 2015. Victory for Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia at the Rally Mexico saw France draw level with Finland in the all-time best list in the World Rally Championship. Both countries now have 172 triumphs to their name. The next winner of the duel between Ogier and Latvala – they are the only competitors representing their respective nations in the top category of the WRC – will put their country ahead.

    Pentti Airikkala (1x), Markku Alén (19x), Marcus Grönholm (30x), Kyosti Hamalainen (1x), Mikko Hirvonen (15x), Juha Kankkunen (23x), Jari-Matti Latvala (12x), Timo Mäkinen (4x), Tommi Mäkinen (24x), Hannu Mikkola (18x), Harri Rovanperä (1x), Timo Salonen (11x), Henri Toivonen (3x) and Ari Vatanen (10x) have been victorious for Finland – that is 14 different drivers. For France, Alain Ambrosino (1x), Jean-Claude Andruet (3x), Didier Auriol (20x), Bernard Beguin (1x), Philippe Bugalski (2x), Bernard Darniche (7x), François Delecour (4x), Guy Frequelin (1x), Sébastien Loeb (78x), Michèle Mouton (4x), Jean-Pierre Nicolas (5x), Sébastien Ogier (27x), Alain Oreille (1x), Gilles Panizzi (7x), Jean Ragnotti (3x), Bruno Saby (2x), Patrick Tauziac (1x) and Jean-Luc Therier (5x) have all tasted success – 18 different drivers.

    Ogier versus the rest of the world – or: can anyone catch the championship leader?

    Team-mates Andreas Mikkelsen and Jari-Matti Latvala are certainly not the only drivers with their sights set on catching double world champion Sébastien Ogier – there are also plenty of good drivers and co-drivers outside the Volkswagen team, all of whom are hungry for a win. Hyundai’s Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul (B/B) are third in the Drivers’ and Co-Drivers’ World Championship, and were embroiled in thrilling duels with the Volkswagen duos at the recent rallies in Sweden and Mexico. Citroën goes in search of victory at the Rally Argentina with their gravel specialists Kris Meeke/Paul Nagle (GB/IRL) and Mads Østberg/Jonas Andersson (N/S). M-Sport-Ford lines up with the impressive youngsters Elfyn Evans (GB) and Ott Tänak (EST).

    A dozen stages – from classic to innovative

    From 2.68 to 56.77 kilometres in length, in sun or through fog, on spectacular city routes and barren lunar landscapes – the Rally Argentina features a wide range of conditions and demands a great degree of versatility from the drivers and co-drivers. The itinerary consists of just seven different special stages – but they are all demanding in their own way. On Thursday, a special stage will be held for the first time in Merlo in the province of San Luis, the epicentre of Argentinean motorsport. And new challenges await the competitors on Friday too: two of the special stages are new, the third – the classic Agua de Oro–Ascochinga – will be held in the reverse direction this year. Saturday is all about the rapid roads in the Punilla valley. The “Capilla del Monte–San Marcos” and “San Marcos–Characato” special stages offer the drivers two opportunities to show off their skills at top speed. On Sunday, the iconic “El Cóndor–Copina” forms the closing Power Stage, on which bonus points are up for grabs for the top three. And there is every chance that fog will once again play a role: the “El-Cóndor” stage slaloms over a lunar landscape from an altitude of 2,138 metres down to 1,389 metres above sea level.

    A 1,497-metre difference in altitude: an ever-increasing challenge

    While the Rally Mexico provided the highest point of the season at 2,752 metres above sea level – the “roof of the WRC” – the Rally Argentina features the greatest difference in altitude in this year’s World Rally Championship. The route ranges from 641 to 2,138 metres above sea level. The difference in altitude is 1,497 metres in Argentina, as opposed to 952 metres at the Rally Mexico. This requires the engine specialists to come up with a clever engine management system, which will stand the test in any extremes. The higher you get, the lower the air pressure and with it the oxygen content of the air – the result is less efficient combustion and thus less engine performance.

    Quotes ahead of the Rally Argentina

    Sébastien Ogier, Volkswagen Polo R WRC #1
    “I have never won the Rally Argentina, and would obviously like to stand on the very top step of the podium there for the first time. The atmosphere is excellent. The South Americans love their motorsport. It is the only rally, at which you can actually smell the fans’ barbecues in the cockpit when you are out on the special stages. I have been told that France pulled level with Finland in the all-time list thanks to my victory at the Rally Mexico. The goal now is obviously to move into the lead! However, we have seen at recent rallies that the opposition at Hyundai and Citroen are closing in and battling for victory with us. Compared to Mexico, the surface at the Rally Argentina is not as aggressive on the tyres and the temperatures are far lower. We would usually all use the softer compounds. We are unlikely to see any tactical games like we did in Mexico, when we opted for a crossover of hard and soft tyres.”

    Jari-Matti Latvala, Volkswagen Polo R WRC #2
    “I am really looking forward to the Rally Argentina. It is a gravel rally, but very different to the Rally Mexico. The surface in Argentina is far sandier, not as hard, and there is far more grip. My favourite special stage is ‘El Cóndor’, which forms the Power Stage, as it did in 2014. Miikka and I won here last year. We’ll have to wait and see whether we can repeat that feat – Sébastien Ogier is very strong at the moment. I have had a bit of time to relax and switch off since the Rally Mexico. I spent two weeks in the USA, where my girlfriend and I took a road trip through California and Nevada. I also had cause to celebrate: I reached the big ‘three-oh’, so we threw a small party. Small, because we had a fitness test in Lapland afterwards, in order to ensure we are as well prepared as possible for the Rally Argentina.”

  • Team MRF the team to beat in APRC as it looks to 4th straight win

    Whangarei, 15 April 2015: Team MRF head into this weekend’s first round of the 2015 Asia-Pacific Rally Championship targeting their fourth successive win in the prestigious series.

    The 2013 champion, India’s Gaurav Gill, will head Team MRF’s attack, ably supported by his Skoda Fabia Super 2000 team-mat

    File picture of MRF team courtesy MRF.
    File picture of MRF team courtesy MRF.

    e, Pontus Tidemand, from Sweden. Frenchman, Jean-Louis Leyraud, will drive a third Race Torque-prepared Skoda in New Zealand’s Rally of Whangarei, from April 17 to 19.

    Gill will fancy his chances of a second title this year, having won in 2013 and finishing runner-up last year. With experience of the Skoda Fabia S2000 and the events that make up the APRC, he’ll be hard to beat.

    But the early season hype has been around his young team-mate, who led the World Rally Championship qualifying Swedish Rally earlier this year. “I’m really looking forward to this new challenge. It makes me incredibly proud to see my name on the list of ŠKODA’s drivers,” Tidemad said. “I have been waiting for a chance like this for years and I will take care of it in the best way I can, both in terms of performance and development, to get a good result for ŠKODA Motorsport.”

    Despite not having had any experience with the seven events that make up the APRC, Tidemand will be hoping that he can repeat the performance of last year’s champion, and Team MRF driver, Jan Kopecky, who won on his first attempt. “We will do everything we can to take podiums and victories as soon as possible,” Tidemand’s co-driver, Emil Axelsson, added.

    While both Tidemand and Gill will contest all events in the APRC, Leyraud, who is based in New Caledonia, will tackle only those events making up the Pacific Cup component.

    In past seasons the Race Torque-prepared Team MRF Skodas have been the cars to beat, and with a proven package, team manager Lane Heenan is hoping for similar success in 2015. “The Skoda Fabia is one of the most successful rally cars in the world at present, with many international victories around the world, and we’re hoping that continues this year.

    “We’ll be using the same cars that finished last season so successfully, and with further development we expect to our drivers to be right on the pace again.”

    However, the new Fabia R5 is likely to replace the current Super 2000 model before the end of this year’s championship. “We plan to have our team running the new ŠKODA Fabia R 5 in the APRC by the end of the year – after all, the season finale takes place in our most important market, China,” ŠKODA Motorsport Director Michal Hrabánek said.

    The Rally of Whangarei commences on the evening of Friday, April 17, with a rally show in central Whangarei, before they attack two passes of the night time Super Special Stage at Pohe Island. Leg one continues on Saturday, heading as far north as Kawakawa for eight special stages on the fast, flowing cambered roads the rally is famous for, while Sunday’s final leg heads south of Whangarei for a further six stages. A total of 282 kilometres of competitive stages make-up the event.

    Team MRF’s strongest opposition is expected to come from the Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X of Indonesia’s Subhan Aksa, and New Zealander youngster Mike Young in a Subaru Impreza WRX STI.

    Calendar 2015
    1. 17-19 APR New Zealand
    2. 15-17 MAY New Caledonia
    3. 19-21 JUN Australia
    4. 14-16 AUG Malaysia
    5. 18-20 SEP Japan
    6. 30-01 Oct/Nov China
    7. 11-13 DEC India
    Subject to FIA Approval

    eom/MRF release

  • I do my talking on the track, says Hamilton ahead of Bahrain GP

    DRIVERS – Sergio PEREZ (Force India), Max VERSTAPPEN (Toro Rosso), Will STEVENS (Manor), Pastor MALDONADO (Lotus), Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes), Daniel RICCIARDO (Red Bull Racing)

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Lewis, you’re coming off the back of three straight poles to a circuit where you’ve never been in on pole position before in your career. How do you see this weekend and the battleground that is qualifying on Saturday? 

    Lewis HAMILTON: The same as every race. Excited for it. The team have worked very hard to try to learn from the last race and improve. Naturally, for me, as you suggested, I’ve been on the front row but I’ve not been on pole here. So naturally that’s something I want to try to change.

    Now throughout Formula One history the psychological battle between title rivals has always been intense. Can you tell us a bit about how you’ve evolved your attitude that and your thinking about that as you’ve matured as a driver?

    LH: It’s not really changed much. I just do my talking on the track, that’s how it’s always been since I was eight years old. And naturally you juts try to learn from decisions you take and experiences you have and hope that you get better.

    So, the approach is not to get involved then?

    LH: That’s not what I said. You just do your talking on the track and try to do your best. All the stuff that comes out of the car I have no particular interest in it.

    OK thank you for that. Coming to you Pastor, some good battles in China last time out and breakthrough points for the team, scored by your team-mate. How do see this Lotus team evolving in 2015?

    Pastor MALDONADO: To be honest we’ve been a bit unlucky in the first two races, especially for me in the first corner I’ve been hit by Nasr in Australia and I was P6 already and the same in Malaysia, I was P8 or P9, I think it was P8, and I’ve been hit by Bottas in the first corner, so the first two races have been completely compromised by the first corner, you know. Last race was actually our first race where we’ve been able to compete against the other teams, or the other teams around us. We confirm what we’ve been expecting, the pace of the car. Actually in qualifying we still maybe are not at the top of our package. We’ve been working quite hard and hopefully this weekend it should be a bit better than it was in the past three races. But actually the race pace was quite good, encouraging and we are really looking to do our best and to finally be in the points this weekend.

    There’s been a Lotus in the final part of qualifying at every round this year so far but you yourself have only managed it once. Can you tell us what areas you are focusing on in particular to make sure that you get yourself into Q3?

    PM: Yeah, quali is maybe the main focus for the team. We just need to try to put everything together. I think the speed is there. But normally it has been like this, even in the past, we’ve been less competitive in quali than in the race. I really expect, and we will approach different ways the qualifying to try to get 100 per cent from the car and then trying to keep the same situation or the same pace for the race.

    Thank you for that. Coming to you Max: the performance in China. No points but plenty of praise worldwide for your performance there. Do you feel it’s put you on the Formula One map and what was the highlight?

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Well, first of all, I was really enjoying my race. We didn’t have a great qualifying, but still I was very confident that we could do a good race because I think the car and it’s race pace is really strong, especially high speed. I had some good overtakes, I was really enjoying that. It’s also every race I’m getting more and more confident in the car. Especially in the first two race you don’t want to take too many risks and I decided in China it was time to do some overtakes and take some more risk.

    Toro Rosso, apparently, have never scored a point here in Bahrain, amazingly in their ten years. This weekend that, I’m sure, will be your target, but you do have some engine issues going into this weekend. Can you give us your thoughts on how that’s going to stack up?

    MV: Yeah, for sure it’s very short notice for us after China, where we had the engine issues. But we will try to do our best to deliver a good race and try to score points, because I think at the moment the car is capable of it and I’m feeling much better every race in the car. So I’m really looking forward to this race.

    Sergio, coming to you, obviously 12 months ago here a very strong weekend, qualified well, in fourth, got up on the podium. Presumably it’s one of your favourite tracks. What is it about this place and you?

    Sergio PEREZ: Obviously it was great, no, to remember that day. It was a fantastic day, a fantastic race for me. It was really difficult to make it onto the podium, as it was a very intense race all the way through. Generally, I have been doing well [here]. The year before I did quite well at this track, so I think I get on with the track quite nicely. Unfortunately we are not in a similar position to dream about a podium for this weekend but I think, hopefully, we can score some points and make a great improvement. I think we managed to do a good step in China, we just finished out of the points, so I hope that here we can score some points.

    You have a big update coming in Austria. From what you know of it what is the target of where it’s going to put you in the pecking order?

    SP: It’s difficult to say, as everyone is improving all the time and everyone is bringing upgrades. We are not the only ones who are going to bring them but we really have identified our issues with the car, our weaknesses, so in that respect it should put us a lot better. I think if we can solve the general issue of the car, the main weakness of the car, then it can be a really good step that can put us in a really good position to be a constant points scorer.

    Q: Will, obviously didn’t start in Australia or Malaysia but a 15th place finish last time out in China. Tell us about the mindset in the team and how you set goals and objectives for each race – and what they are here.

    Will STEVENS: As you said, China was the first race that I did personally this year – but as far as the weekend went, I think it was a big step forwards for the team. I think it was good to get both cars to the finish for the first time this year. As the weekend went, it ran pretty smoothly. I think, looking forward to this weekend, obviously we want to finish the race with both cars again. Every time I we back in the car, especially for me, missing Malaysia, I’m getting more and more comfortable. I think the pace that I showed in China was pretty strong. We just need to keep moving forward and see where we can get to.

    Q: From what you’ve seen and experienced so far, what makes you believe in this project.

    WS: From where we set out, we knew the first few races were going to be difficult. The team, where they finished last year in the Constructors’, they’re in a different position now to what they were before. So I think, moving forwards for the future, we can only get better. I think moving towards the end of this year, hopefully we’ll get the new car coming in and then we can really start to make some progress.

    Q: Daniel, coming to you, you’ve scored in all three races so far but not the kind of scores I imagine you were hoping for when the season started. Can you give us a window in on the mindset with things like engine duty cycles and other challenges you’re facing, and how that’s changed your expectations?

    Daniel RICCIARDO: It sounded pretty good, finishing the first three in the points – but obviously we hope for more at this stage. Look, we’re trying to do what we can, that’s for sure. There is progress being made. Still, obviously, we’re wanting more each race and I obviously felt we had a better… or rather we all expected a bit more from China. I thought the weekend was going to be better for us, especially after Friday. I think we’d made real good progress. Didn’t turn out that way but here we are a week later. Obviously there’s not much, updates-wise, that can happen in a week but from myself and the team as well, we still know there’s more potential in what we’ve got for now, and I think we can definitely try to grab that this weekend.

    Q: Obviously your start in China was a bit of a talking point. I think I’m right in saying that, apart from your start in Malaysia, both you and Kvyat off the line have lost places every single time in the first three races this season. Can you tell us what that’s all about.

    DR: Yeah. To be honest, Melbourne wasn’t as bad as it looked. As I guess most people are aware, we had a lot of driveability issues going on in Melbourne and it wasn’t until we got the gears, and where these problems were affecting us, that’s what really hindered our performance in Melbourne – otherwise the actual launch was decent. And yeah, Malaysia wasn’t bad. Obviously it wasn’t ideal, what happened in China, and obviously after looking through everything, yeah, it was my mistake in the end. Sometime I obviously won’t let happen again. The important thing is that I’m aware why it happened and what happened and will move on from there. Definitely last year the starts weren’t the strongest on the grid. In general it’s a point that we all want to improve. I think it’s got to be better this weekend.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Kate Walker – motorsport.com) I’ve got a question for Lewis. Your weekend in Shanghai has been rather overshadowed by coverage of the podium ceremony. I don’t know if you’ve heard the comments from the grid girl who was finally contacted and said she thought the entire thing was a bit of a fuss for something that lasted one or two seconds. What are your thoughts on the podium ceremony and the media furore that has surrounded something entirely normal in motorsport?

    LH: Good question. I hadn’t really heard too much about it until today. Obviously when you come into the team you get a kind of debrief of what’s happened during the week. So fortunately for me it’s not overshadowed my week. Ultimately it was a great weekend. My actions are through excitement. This is Formula One, it’s the pinnacle of motorsport, I’d just won a grand prix for the team and… I usually see it as a fun thing. I would never intend to disrespect someone or try to embarrass someone like that. So, yeah, I guess… I don’t really know the reasons why people are starting to bring those kind of things up but this is a sport that so many people love and the more we show character and fun, perhaps it reflects just how great this sport is. That’s what I try to do. I don’t really know what to say about it. It hasn’t really affected me and it’s nice to know that the lady wrote in… if it had been the other way and she’d wrote in and she was really unhappy, then perhaps there would be more concern.

    Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action / Speed Sport) Daniel, you said China didn’t go quite the way you thought it would. Is there just maybe some fine-tuning in the setup that you can get the car much better to your liking?

    DR: I think so. I mean, there’s definitely, I believe, within the car, there’s more to be unlocked, so to speak. In terms of setup, I don’t think myself or Dany have really found a balance or setting that we’re really comfortable with. I think China took a step forward, we did start to feel more comfortable but it still obviously didn’t give us a big chunk of lap time that we thought was still in there. So, there’s still a few balance things. If we keep ironing them out we will find… I don’t think it’s a second but we are going to find a fair few tenths that will put us in that group with Williams and hopefully get us onto the back of the Ferraris. Yeah. Good race here last year. I think we had good pace. Again just optimistic for a better weekend here. Everyone’s ready to go, and obviously after my start last week I’m hanging out to get back on the grid and redeem myself.

    Q: (Andrea Cremonesi – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Two questions for Lewis: the first is about management of the rear tyres. This is a hot track like Malaysia, the race is in the night. How afraid are you about the performance of Ferrari with the rear tyres? And the second one is about what Toto Wolff said about team orders. What comment can you make? If a driver says ‘too close’ they can make some unpopular decisions. I would like to have a comment from you.

    LH: Regarding the tyres, still as it was in Malaysia, very much a rear-limited circuit so you have to assume that Ferrari will be very strong again, but I think we’re going to try and take, from our experience with Malaysia, we’re going to try and take a slightly different approach and hope that that helps us combat that whatever you want to call it: weakness or area in which we can improve. I feel quite confident that as a team we can rectify that issue that we had in Malaysia, but it’s still going to be tough and Ferrari have been very very competitive in the last couple of races. So I anticipate they will be very strong this weekend and our race is definitely with them.

    I’m not really aware of Toto’s comments so I don’t really know anything about it. Team orders is not something we generally talk much about. It’s not our approach but ultimately our job as two drivers is to try to help the team get the best result overall and regardless of whether you’re first or second, it’s your job to try and make sure you try and secure the most points as possible for the team.

    Q: (Khodr Rawi – F1Zone.net) Sergio, how do you motivate yourself coming into this weekend, knowing that the maximum you could do is to score some points while last year you had a podium here?

    SP: Yes, it’s already the position that we have at the moment and only 12 months ago it was a different story but now it’s time to give our best, the same as we did those months ago. The difference is now that a great result would be to finish in the points, whereas 12 months ago a great result would be to finish on the podium. But it doesn’t really change anything. As a driver you have to be committed all the time and give your 120 per cent to your team to try to maximise the package that you have. It doesn’t really change anything. Obviously I wish to have a more competitive car with which I can show the potential that I have as a driver but it’s what it is and we will try to do our best. It doesn’t really change anything.

    Q: (Ralf Bach – Sport Bild) Lewis, did you really understand what Nico meant after the race that you drove too slowly? Did you truly understand what he meant?

    LH: Well, it’s something we spoke about after the race so I don’t particularly see a reason to go back into it. Obviously you know what my comments were after the race and some people have spun those words in whichever way they wanted to spin them. Yeah, we’re moving forwards and we will re-unite as a team this weekend and try to do a great job. There’s no issue between me and Nico. We saw each other this morning and everything is good. They’re going to be times when people are unhappy about some things but we’re grown-ups and we move past it.

    Q: (Ralf Bach – Sport Bild) The winner of the race is normally the quickest guy on the track, that’s what I mean.

    LH: But I was.

    Q: (Alan Baldwin – Reuters) Lewis, if I can go even further back, to last year’s race when you and Nico had a real battle here, given the comments that have been made over the last few days, do you think he’ll be even more fired up to try and get past you this time?

    LH: Well again, I don’t know what comments have been made over the last few days, I don’t read it, simply just not of interest to me, but last year we had an amazing race here, it was really fantastic, great fun, huge huge challenge both for Nico and for me and hopefully… that was the first night race here. It was honestly the best race, visibly, that I had seen here in Bahrain so it was great and I’m looking forward to that. I think with these tyres and with Ferrari in the mix, I think we could see a real special race here. On my part, I’m just going to keep doing what I do and try to… ultimately I want to improve. Last year I didn’t qualify on pole here, I’ve never been on pole here so that’s the challenge but as long as it doesn’t get in the way of the challenge of trying to win the race.

    Q: (Nahed Sayouh – Autosport Middle East) Max, after this race you will go to the European season where there are tracks which you have previously raced on. Do you believe that this will help you to show more speed?

    MV: To be honest I think so. You always try to do your best on every track and that’s how we are going to continue.

    Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action and Speed Sport magazines) Will, you did your first race distance in China; these guys all did race distances in testing. Do you foresee that you have a much better baseline now, starting out the weekend as far as the car is concerned?

    WS: Yeah, the longest stint I did before the race was six laps. So I had to learn the race as I was going. I think the race ran pretty smoothly so for sure starting here this weekend,

    Sergio Perez of Sahara Force India is on the left in the top row. An FIA image of the Thursday press conference in Bahrain.
    Sergio Perez of Sahara Force India is on the left in the top row. An FIA image of the Thursday press conference in Bahrain.

    we’re starting off from a much better position so I think as a team we can only progress and keep moving forward.

    eom/FIA press conference transcript

  • Warmer temperatures did not have a big influence on tyre choice: Birdgestone’s Manager Shinji Aoki

    Austin (Texas) 15 April 2015: Marc Marquez won his third consecutive race at Circuit of the Americas last weekend, the Repsol Honda star taking the chequered flag ahead of Ducati Team’s Andrea Dovizioso and Movistar Yamaha MotoGP’s Valentino Rossi.
     Start-of-the-2015-MotoGP COTA Bridgestone pic
    The race weekend was subjected to variable weather with cool, rainy periods giving way to warm and sunny weather on Sunday. The peak track temperature of 40°C during was the warmest reading for the whole weekend.
    Q&A with Shinji Aoki – Manager, Bridgestone Motorsport Tyre Development Department
    On Friday the MotoGP riders had their first ever wet session at Circuit of the Americas. What can you tell us about the grip level of the circuit in the wet, and how your wet tyres performed?
    “The grip level of the wet COTA tarmac was quite good compared to other circuits, and the riders were happy with how our wet tyres performed at this demanding circuit. Our main wet tyre option was our soft compound which offers a lot of grip, but the durability of this option in Austin was also very good as some riders completed half a race distance on set of wet tyres, with low levels of tyre wear. The alternative, hard compound wet tyre was also available but given the good performance and durability of the soft compound wet at COTA, I don’t think many riders would have chosen to use it if we had more wet sessions later in the weekend.”
    It seemed a lot warmer on Sunday compared to earlier on the weekend. Did this have an effect on tyre choice and tyre performance for the race?
    “Although temperatures were considerably warmer for the race, it didn’t seem to have a big influence on tyre choice for the race. There was maybe only a couple of riders who switched from the medium compound to the hard compound front slick for the race, but the operating temperature for our medium compound front slick is so good that most riders felt comfortable using this option for the race. In regards to tyre performance, the warmer temperatures didn’t have a considerable effect. Some riders did mention that the grip level during the race wasn’t as good as the day before, but this was likely related to the rain the night before rather than the temperature change.
    Unfortunately, due to the rain on Friday and cool temperatures on Saturday no riders chose to evaluate the hard compound rear slick during practice, and seeing as this tyre option was used by the race winner at this track in the last two years, I was curious to see how this option would perform this weekend. I believe had some riders assessed it earlier in the race weekend, it would have been a good race option, however, our medium compound rear slick handled the conditions well so it was still a positive outcome for us.”
    A few riders mentioned that the right side of the front tyre is put under considerable stress at Circuit of the Americas. Would asymmetric front slicks be well suited to this track?
    “There are sections of this circuit that place a lot of stress on the right shoulder of the tyre, but there are more left hand turns, so overall this circuit is still quite balanced. As we can only bring three different options of front slick to each race, I think the soft, medium and hard symmetric front slicks were the best options for this circuit. The soft front worked well when the circuit was cool with some damp patches, while the medium & hard were well suited when the track was fully dry and warmer. I think an asymmetric front slick may have performed well in certain conditions at the circuit, but as the riders were happy with the grip and stability on the left side of the medium and hard compound front slick, going softer on the left side of those tyres might not have brought much of an advantage. I can say that having three front slick options on offer at Circuit of the Americas this year was a welcome change for the riders and gave them enough options to deal with the variable conditions. ”
    eom/A Bridgestone interview
  • Marquez continues perfect record in USA with emphatic win in Austin

    Austin, 12 April 2015 (13Apr IST): Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez has returned to winning form in the Red Bull GP of The Americas with teammate Hiroshi Aoyama – replacing Dani Pedrosa – fighting to the last lap to take 11th place.

    Pole man Marc dropped back briefly from the start to 2nd place behind Dovizioso whilst Hiroshi got caught up and found himself 20th, from 16th on the grid. By lap five, Hiro had climbed to 13th and after a brief battle with Dovizioso, Marc took first place.

    With Rossi and Iannone fighting with Dovizioso, Marc never looked back and led from the front for the remainder of the race – taking his 20th victory in the MotoGP class. Hiroshi progressed further and reached 11th place, which he briefly lost on the final lap, but showed a fighting spirit and re-passed Barbera taking 11th.

    Marc has won on all six occasions that he has raced in the MotoGP class in the USA, and Honda celebrate their 11th consecutive win on American soil. The last non-Honda MotoGP winner in the USA was Jorge Lorenzo, at Laguna Seca in 2010.

    Now the team packs up and head straight to Argentina for the third round of 2015.

    Marc Marquez said: “I am very happy with this victory! After yesterday, things looked positive for us, but the only doubt was about the weather. In the end, it turned out stranger than it had seemed. When I saw that it was going to be a dry race, I started out very focused – because I knew it was important to try to win today. However, right from the first lap I saw that the track was not like it had been before the rain of last night. There was less grip and it was harder to ride comfortably. I decided to keep calm in the early laps to try to understand the situation well, and when I started to find a feeling similar to practice, I decided to push the pace a bit. That was when I was able to open up a gap.”

    Results Session

    Pos. Rider Num Nation Points Team Time/Gap
    1 MARQUEZ Marc 93 SPA 25 Repsol Honda Team 43’47.150
    2 DOVIZIOSO Andrea 4 ITA 20 Ducati Team +2.354
    3 ROSSI Valentino 46 ITA 16 Movistar Yamaha MotoGP +3.120
    4 LORENZO Jorge 99 SPA 13 Movistar Yamaha MotoGP +6.682
    5 IANNONE Andrea 29 ITA 11 Ducati Team +7.584
    6 SMITH Bradley 38 GBR 10 Monster Yamaha Tech 3 +10.557
    7 CRUTCHLOW Cal 35 GBR 9 CWM LCR Honda +16.967
    8 ESPARGARO Aleix 41 SPA 8 Team Suzuki Ecstar +19.025
    9 VINALES Maverick 25 SPA 7 Team Suzuki Ecstar +38.570
    10 PETRUCCI Danilo 9 ITA 6 Pramac Racing +41.796
    11 AOYAMA Hiroshi 7 JPN 5 Repsol Honda Team +47.199
    12 BARBERA Hector 8 SPA 4 Avintia Racing +47.339
    13 HAYDEN Nicky 69 USA 3 Aspar MotoGP Team +56.484
    14 MILLER Jack 43 AUS 2 CWM LCR Honda +56.731
    15 BAUTISTA Alvaro 19 SPA 1 Aprilia Racing Team Gresini +57.372
    16 LAVERTY Eugene 50 IRE 0 Aspar MotoGP Team +58.898
    17 BAZ Loris 76 FRA 0 Athina Forward Racing +1’08.787
    18 DE ANGELIS Alex 15 RSM 0 Athina Forward Racing +1’22.236
    19 ABRAHAM Karel 17 CZE 0 AB Motoracing DNF
    20 MELANDRI Marco 33 ITA 0 Aprilia Racing Team Gresini DNF
    21 HERNANDEZ Yonny 68 COL 0 Pramac Racing DNF
    22 DI MEGLIO Mike 63 FRA 0 Avintia Racing DNF
    23 REDDING Scott 45 GBR 0 Estrella Galicia 0,0 Marc VDS DNF
    24 BRADL Stefan 6 GER 0 Athina Forward Racing DNF
    25 ESPARGARO Pol 44 SPA 0 Monster Yamaha Tech 3 DNF

    eom/Honda press release

    Reigning world champion Marquez returns to winning ways in Austin on Sunday. A Repsol Honda image
    Reigning world champion Marquez returns to winning ways in Austin on Sunday. A Repsol Honda image