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Jan Kopecky beats Gaurav Gill as MRF takes another 1-2 finish

File photo after Kopecky has taken lead in New Caledonia APRC leg on Saturday. An MRF image New Caledonia, 18 May 2014: Team MRF Skoda driver and European Rally Champion Jan Kopecky beat team-mate Gaurav Gill to win Round 2 of the FIA Asia Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) in New Caledonia. Both MRF Skoda drivers were under investigation for postponing the start of Stage 13 as what they thought were unsafe conditions but both escaped with light penalties. Gill was comfortably leading yesterday before an accident caused him suspension damage. After two rounds, Kopecky and Gill are joint leaders with almost nothing to choose from them.
Driving the Team MRF Skoda Fabia S2000, Kopecky was in the driver’s seat with a 5 min lead heading into day 2. 2 stages were cancelled on Saturday, and SS12 was cancelled this morning. Then news came that the last 3 stages would also not run as conditions were so bad that the safety car also could not get through. Both drivers felt the conditions were impossible to drive in and hence requested for safer conditions before resuming.
2013 European Rally Champion Jan Kopecky admitted he has happy for the rally to finish after driving in very tough conditions. He said, “I am happy to have my first win of the season and the Team MRF Tyres Skoda team have been great in really tough conditions. I have to say I didn’t enjoy my driving so much, with so much mud. One stage I liked it was in the North, more like a proper stage, the rest was like driving over the fields in the mud, I didn’t enjoy so much. Our gap (today) was quite huge, so I didn’t want to make a mistake. There was no pressure and I was relaxed in the car, there was one stage in the North I enjoyed and each time I was able to go quicker than Gaurav, so it was good for us. We are now on equal points with Gaurav, that’s good for championship. If you have a close battle from the start its always better. Next is Australia – I’ve never been there, so a new country, a new rally we are looking forward to it.”
Defending champion Gill rued the fact that his mistake yesterday cost him the win but was happy to salvage 2nd place. He commented, “We had a good lead and a health margin, but unfortunately we got caught out by the conditions yesterday and found a tree on the exit of a corner, wasn’t so good for the car and we bent a suspension arm. Glenn (Macneall) and I had to do some repairs, the drive the last stage very conservatively. We’re happy to finished the day yesterday and today fastest of the day, so maximum points in the kitty – the best I could have done.”
Jan Kopecky and his Team MRF Skoda team next head to Australia on equal points (to be confirmed) with his team-mate Gaurav Gill in second. Many stages were cancelled after heavy rain made the roads impossible. The next round of the 2014 APRC is the International Rally of Queensland which will take place next month. Full bonus points will apply as the event had reached the required threshold. Last year 5 stages were cancelled on the final day, again after torrential rain.
Provisional Result Rally New Caledonia
1 – Jan Kopecky (Czech) Pravel Dresler (Czech) MRF Skoda 2hr01min40.6sec
2 – Gaurav Gill (IND) Glenn Macneall (Aust) MRF Skoda 2hr04min53.2sec
3 – Michael Young (NZ) Malcolm Read (NZ) Cusco Proton 2hr23min18.3sec
eom/Adrenna Communications Press Release.
Photos by MACSPEEDFOTO/ALAN MCDONALD
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Jan Kopecky takes lead as Gaurav Gill hits trouble: APRC
New Caledonia, 17 May 2014: Team MRF Tyres Skoda driver and European Rally Champion Jan Kopecky stormed into a comfortable lead in Round 2 of the Asia Pacific Rally Championship (APRC) in New Caledonia. Defending champion Gaurav Gill suffered a suspension failure which cost him any chance of fighting for the lead.
Czech driver Jan Kopecky and co driver Pravel Dresler have a lead of 5min20 sec over team mate Gill after Day 1 of Rally New Caledonia. Gill pulled out a 52 second lead until SS7 where he dropped 1min 40sec then a further 3min 40sec on the final stage of the day with suspension failure. Despite dropping so much time Gill holds onto second place for the MRF Rally Team with a 10 minute buffer over third place Sanjay Takale. Gill managed to get his car to the service tent with the mechanics confident of getting the car ready for tomorrow.
Overnight rain and further showers today made the 2 shorter inland stages very muddy and in many places almost impossible to drive. This created a day of attrition with 6 of the starters failing to finish the day. Both Australian APRC competitors Mark Pedder and Tom Wilde ended up off the road. The conditions became very tough forcing the organisers to cancel SS5 & SS8.
How the day unfolded
- SS 1 Gill jumps out to a 30sec lead over Kopecky
- SS 2 Gill wins by 9.5 sec
- SS3 Gill wins by 1.7sec and leads Kopecky by 40.9sec at service after first loop
Stages are now repeated
- SS4 Kopecky wins by .5 sec
- SS5 Cancelled
- SS6 Gill wins by 11.6 sec and now has lead of 52 sec at second service after second loop
Stages repeated for third time
- SS7 Kopecky wins by 1min 40sec Gill has suspension damage
- SS8 Cancelled
- SS9 Kopecky wins by 4min 30 sec Gill crawls through stage with makeshift repairs
eom/MRF release from Adre

Kopecky takes lead in New Caledonia APRC leg on Saturday. An MRF image nna Communications
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Akbar Ebrahim replaces Vicky Chandhok as FMSCI’s deputy in FIA
Chennai, 17 May 2014: The Governing Council of the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (FMSCI) has nominated Mr Akbar Ebrahim, a renowned driver coach and an accomplished race driver, as India’s Deputy representative in the Federation Internationale de L’Automobile (FIA).The FMSCI Chairman Dr Vijay Mallya endorsed the decision and the FIA was informed of the same.Dr Mallya is the Titular Delegate of India and a member of the prestigious World Motor Sports Council of the FIA, which is responsible for all aspects of international motor sport at every level from karting to Formula One.Mr Ebrahim has replaced Mr Vicky Chandhok in the role and will represent the FMSCI to lend a hand to Dr Mallya in the FIA.Thanking the FMSCI’s decision, Mr Ebrahim said: “While my predecessor worked hard to get F1 to India, my priority now would be to get more Indians into F1 and its likes. We are going to work hard to create opportunities for our sportspersons to step out and take on the world. We’ll make sincere efforts to align with global best practices and avail all possible assistance from international associates.“India has all that is required for our kids and our sport to unleash, and what we need to do now is to package and present our case to the world. To start the campaign, we need to lead the charge in the Asian Region.”Mr Ebrahim had recently met FIA President Mr Jean Todt at the FIA Asia Pacific Region Motor Sport Forum in Sri Lanka, where Mr Todt had drawn everyone’s attention to FIA’s taskforce that is currently in operation in the Asia Pacific region.“The idea behind this initiative is to interact, assist and coordinate between motor sports federations in this region,” said Mr Ebrahim. “The Forum gave the confidence that there is a genuine consensus in the FIA to study and work with the ASN’s (National Sports Association) on common perspectives as well as individual requirements.“Some of the key areas that the Forum discussed were driver development, training of officials such as Race Director, Clerk of Course, Stewards, Time keepers, karting at grassroots level, singular Asia Pacific events, among others.”Mr Ebrahim said the FMSCI has offered to host a part of the next Officials’ training programme for the FIA Asia Pacific region.During his brief interaction with Mr Todt, Mr Ebrahim assured the FIA President that the FMSCI would strive to introduce the new FIA Formula 4 racing car as the first level junior international racing car in India, and would implement FIA’s Action for Road Safety, a programme promoted by FIA worldwide.eom -
Team MRF Tyres’ Gaurav Gill all set for New Caledonia
New Caledonia, 16 May 2014: Team MRF Tyres Skoda driver and defending champion Gaurav Gill will return to New Caledonia this weekend for Round 2 of the Asia Pacific Rally Championship (APRC). Gill, who won at New Caledonia last year, will be joined by European Rally Champion and Team MRF Tyres Skoda team-mate Jan Kopecký from the Czech Republic, as the two drivers are all set to resume their battle in the Skoda Fabia S2000.
The MRF team driver line-up is impressive featuring both the current APRC Champion Gaurav Gill and Czech driver Jan Kopecky European Champion. Last month in New Zealand, the MRF Rally drivers made the perfect start finishing 1-2 in the first round. Indian rallying champ Gaurav Gill took the honours after a 23 sec deficit on day 1 to win by 11 secs.
With both drivers closely matched and MRF Rally tyres ideal for New Caledonia conditions, Skoda factory backed cars prepared by Race Torque engineering are confident heading into Round 2.
Although twice a previous winner here, two of the stages are relatively new to Gill having been cancelled last year because of rain. So for a greater part it is a level playing field with team mate Jan Kopecky who showed in New Zealand he was extremely competitive by leading for over half of the rally distance.
Gaurav Gill was optimistic after winning last year. He commented, “I am thrilled to be back in New Caledonia with the MRF Tyres Skoda team. The stages will be slightly different this year with the roads been made wider and smoother and in most places it’s going to be faster than last year. Hopefully it will be dry this year. In New Caledonia it is important not to push too hard, it can be very tough on both drivers and cars and as the saying goes, first you must finish. Experience has taught me we don’t try to go faster we need to be more precise”.
New Caledonia is nestled in the South West Pacific and surrounded by the most beautiful tropical lagoons however venture inland and you will find the rugged interior roads that can catch out even the most experienced driver
The rally course is situated 50 kilometres to the north of the capital Noumea on mining and rural roads. There is 235 km of high speed tests broken down into 17 stages, 3 stages repeated 3 times on Saturday and the course run again in reverse on Sunday.
While the weather is normally fine and the temperature a balmy 25c this time of the year, rain can have a significant impact turning parts of the course into a skating rink.
2014 Asia Pacific Rally Championship Points after first round
(1) Gaurav Gill (IND) 38, (2) Kan Kopecky (CZE) 31, (3) Mark Pedder (AUS) 25

Gaurav Gill in New Caledonia on Friday. An MRF image eom/MRF Release from Adrenna Communications
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Juncadella tests new compounds for Force India despite off-track excursions
Barcelona, 14 May 2014: The second in-season test of the year took place after the Spanish Grand Prix, working on testing structures and compounds for 2015. Sauber and Toro Rosso tested on the first day, with Force India and McLaren taking over throughout day two.
With the first day mostly wet, just the new intermediate compounds were tested in the morning. In the afternoon, with the test timetable having been altered to maximise dry running, some of the prototype slicks for 2015 got their first outing at the Barcelona circuit. The focus on the opening afternoon was on new constructions, with around half the anticipated programme completed.
On the second day, held in dry conditions with trac

Force India backdrop at the Malaysian GP. An India in F1.Image k temperatures peaking in excess of 40 degrees centigrade, new constructions as well as compounds were tested with McLaren and Force India. McLaren completed the programme with Stoffel Vandoorne, who then went on to set his fastest time of the day on the current 2014 medium tyre, as the team ran some of their own tests, a procedure allowed by the current regulations. Daniel Juncadella tested for Force India, but was not able to finish the anticipated work due to delays and off-track excursions.
Pirelli’s motorsport director Paul Hembery said: “With rain affecting the first day of testing, the programme was put slightly out of kilter from the beginning, but this is something that you obviously expect and factor into your plans. It was also a good opportunity to try out some new intermediate weather tyres for next year. Once the weather became drier, we were able to focus on the new 2015 slick tyres. Following the test in Bahrain, we’re now beginning to build up a good picture of where we stand going into next year, so there is plenty of useful data to analyse heading into the next in-season test after Silverstone.”
Testing facts:
The first day of testing saw rain and very low temperatures with a maximum of 11 degrees centigrade air temperature and with track temperatures never going over 20 degrees centigrade.
The fastest time set throughout the two days of the test was a 1m24.871s set by Pastor Maldonado on the supersoft tyres in the closing hour of the second day.
Toro Rosso’s Jean-Eric Vergne who had a technical problem in the morning of day one only ran a total of 52 laps, whereas Guido Van der Garde in the Sauber managed to run 86 laps. Both were hampered by the bad weather conditions.
Today, Stoffel Vandoorne in his first day ever in a Formula One car, ran an impressive 136 laps on the Pirelli experimental tyres. Daniel Juncadella, in a Sauber, also did well, doing 91 laps.
As well as running on experimental tyres, the teams that were not testing specifically for Pirelli ran with the current tyres. Teams are allowed an overall maximum total of 135 sets of tyres for testing this year, including the in-season tests.
The next in-season test will take place after the British Grand Prix. Ferrari and Lotus will test for Pirelli on the opening day, followed by Red Bull and Marussia on day two. The final in-season test will be held in Abu Dhabi, after the race, where teams will have the first opportunity to sample the brand new 2015 tyre range.
Testing times:
Day 1
Chilton Marussia 1.26.434s Supersoft New Pic Lotus 1.26.661s Soft New Hamilton Mercedes 1.26.674s Medium New Raikkonen Ferrari 1.26.965s Soft Used Vergne Toro Rosso 1.27.724s Prototype Hulkenberg Force India 1.27.727s Medium New Massa Williams 1.27.756s Medium New Button McLaren 1.28.333s Medium New Kobayashi Caterham 1.30.101s Medium New Buemi Red Bull 1.31.440s Hard New Van der Garde Sauber 1.31.783s Prototype Day 2
Maldonado Lotus 1.24.871s Supersoft New Rosberg Mercedes 1.25.805s Medium New Raikkonen Ferrari 1.26.480s Soft New Gutierrez Sauber 1.26.972s Soft New Wolff Williams 1.27.280s Soft New Bianchi Marussia 1.27.718s Soft New Vettel Red Bull 1.27.973s Medium New Juncadella Force India 1.28.278s Prototype Vandoorne McLaren 1.28.441s Medium New Kvyat Toro Rosso 1.28.910s Hard New eom/Pirelli press release
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MRF MoGrip National Supercross Championship 2014 begins on May 18
Chennai, 14 May 2014: The 10th edition of the MRF MoGrip-FMSCI National Supercross championship has attracted almost 100 entries for each of the six rounds to be staged across the country.
Supercross is a motorcycling sport that involves off-road motorcycles on an artificially-created dirt track consisting of steep jumps and obstacles, and is usually conducted in stadiums.The first round of the championship will be held in Nashik on May 18and the second round in Pune on May 25.The other rounds are tentatively scheduled to be held in Coimbatore, Chennai, Ahmedabad and Mumbai.As a sport, Supercross is gaining in popularity in India, with close to around twenty thousand spectators thronging each venue last year, leading to an increase in participation and growing involvement and support from Corporate houses.MRF Limited is the title sponsor. TVS Motor Company, Hero Moto Corp, Sidvin Core-Tech, and IOC Servo are associate sponsors. Godspeed (Pune) is organizing the championship.KP Aravind (Team TVS, Bangalore), CS Santosh (Bangalore), Kerala rider Harith Noah (Team TVS) and Veer Patel (Baroda) are some of the Indian riders who have participated in recent Asian Supercross events in Sri Lanka and the UAE, and along with privateers Snehal Chavan (Team 9T9 Racing, Pune) and Gaurav Khatri (New Delhi), will be wowing the spectators with their daredevil style.Factory-backed Team TVS and Pune’s 9T9 Racing are among the top teams in the fray.Close to 40 thoroughbred motocross motorcycles will be seen in action in the re-christened SX 1 and SX 2 categories, while the newly-introduced Junior SX category is exclusively for riders below 15 years of age.The seven categories and their respective 2013 champions are:SX 1 (Foreign Open, Group A, Two/Four Stroke, up to 250cc Two-Stroke and 500cc Four-Stroke). 2013 champion KP Aravind (Team TVS, Bangalore).SX 2 (Foreign Open, Group A, Two/Four Stroke, up to 250cc Two-Stroke and 500cc Four-Stroke). Only for Privateers. 2013 champion Gaurav Khatri (New Delhi)Junior SX (Open to Group A/B/C/D, up to 260cc). Below 15 years.Newly-introduced.Indian Expert Class, Group B, (Two/Four Stroke, up to 260cc).2013 champion Pramod Joshua (Team TVS, Bangalore).Indian Expert Class, Group C (Two/Four Stroke, up to 260cc).2013 champion Pramod Joshua (Team TVS, Bangalore).Private Expert Class, Group C, (Two/Four Stroke, up to 260cc).2013 champion VS Naresh (Bangalore).Novice Class, Group C, (Two/Four Stroke, up to 260cc).2013 champion Suhail Ahmed (Team TVS, Bangalore).All defending champions have confirmed participation in the upcoming edition. -
Latvala-Anttila pair push VW teammates Ogier-Ingrassia to second place: Rally Argentina
Jari-Matti Latvala and Miikka Anttila claimed their second victory of the 2014 FIA World Rally Championship season at Rally Argentina today. The Finns were dominant throughout and beat team-mates Sébastien Ogier and Julien Ingrassia by one minute 26.9 seconds at the end of three long days of competition. Third place was taken by Kris Meeke and Paul Nagle in their debut World Championship outing on Rally Argentina.In the FIA World Rally Championship, Ogier tops the leaderboard, 24 points ahead of Latvala. Andreas Mikkelsen and Mads Østberg are equal on 48 points behind the two Volkswagen crews who have now collectively won nine consecutive WRC events. In the Manufacturers’
Latvala-Anttila of Volkswagen celebrate after winning Argentina Rally. A Volkswagen Motorsport image Championship, the German marque takes a commanding advantage and is 97 points ahead of nearest rivals, the Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally Team.
Today’s route covered four stages, without service, and took the crews to the famous Mina Clavero and El Condor stages to the southwest of Cordoba. Conditions were treacherous with deep mud, patchy fog and rain ensuring the final day of competition was no easy ride to the finish. The second running of El Condor counted as the Power Stage, where Ogier, Mikko Hirvonen and Latvala collected the extra points respectively for being fastest through this single stage.Behind the leading trio, Mikkelsen recovered from an early retirement in the event to take fourth position, but an alternator warning light after the final stage meant the Norwegian had an anxious drive to the finish. Thierry Neuville piloted the sole surviving Hyundai to fifth position in the team’s first visit to South America with the i20 WRC. The Belgian was forced to drive slowly in the final stage, however, having broken something in the transmission. Having adopted a different approach to this rally, Robert Kubica reaped the reward of sixth position and his first points of the season. He headed Elfyn Evans, who similarly drove a measured and safe rally to reach the finish in his first Rally Argentina. Martin Prokop finished eighth and Mikko Hirvonen climbed to ninth, having won three of today’s stages. Qatar’s Nasser Al-Attiyah claimed the final point-scoring position and also won the FIA WRC 2 Championship category for the second consecutive event.The sixth round of the FIA World Rally Championship takes the contenders back to Europe and the Mediterranean island of Sardinia for Rally Italia Sardegna (5-8 June).Rally Argentina – Final Unofficial Results (subject to scrutineering)1. Jari-Matti Latvala/Miikka Anttila2. Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia3. Kris Meeke/Paul Nagle4. Andreas Mikkelsen/Mikko Markkula5. Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul6. Robert Kubica/Maciej Szczepaniak7. Elfyn Evans/Daniel Barritt8. Martin Prokop/Jan Tomanek9. Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen10. Nasser Al-Attiyah/Giovanni BernacchiniVolkswagen Polo R WRCVolkswagen Polo R WRCCitroën DS3 WRCVolkswagen Polo R WRCHyundai i20 WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCFord Fiesta RRC4hr 41min 24.8sec4hr 42min 51.7sec4hr 47min 19.5sec4hr 47min 43.1sec4hr 49min 50.6sec4hr 51min 32.8sec4hr 51min 57.0sec4hr 53min 28.7sec5hr 01min 19.6sec5hr 04min 35.0secFIA World Rally Championship for Drivers (after 5 of 13 rounds)
Sébastien Ogier (FRA)Jari-Matti Latvala (FIN)Andreas Mikkelsen (NOR)Mads Østberg (NOR)Mikko Hirvonen (FIN)Kris Meeke (GBR)Thierry Neuville (BEL)Elfyn Evans (GBR)Martin Prokop (CZE)Bryan Bouffier (FRA)Henning Solberg (NOR)Ott Tanak (EST)Robert Kubica (POL)Benito Guerra (MEX)Chris Atkinson (AUS)Pontus Tidemand (SWE)Juho Hänninen (FIN)Jaroslav Melicharek (SVK)Nasser Al-Attiyah (QAT)sMatteo Gamba (ITA)Craig Breen (IRL)Yuriy Protasov (UKR)Jari Ketomaa (FIN)112 points88 points48 points48 points40 points32 points31 points26 points22 points18 points16 points10 points8 points8 points6 points4 points4 points4 points3 points2 points2 points2 points1 pointFIA World Rally Championship for Manufacturers (after 5 of 13 rounds)
Volkswagen MotorsportCitroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally TeamM-Sport World Rally TeamHyundai MotorsportVolkswagen Motorsport IIJipocar Czech National TeamRK M-Sport World Rally Teameom/FIA press release187 points90 points68 points55 points52 points24 points12 points -
Hamilton claims fourth win of season in Barcelona

Hamilton celebrates on the podium after winning the Spanish GP on Sunday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image Second place for Rosberg completes fourth consecutive Mercedes 1-2.
Red Bulls finish third and fourth; Force India finish 9th and 10th
Barcelona, 11 May 2014: Lewis Hamilton took his fourth straight win of the season fending off a late-race challenge from team-mate Nico Rosberg as the pair sealed Mercedes fourth 1-2 finish in a row.
Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo was best of the rest, claiming a lonely third, some 50 seconds adrift of Hamilton. Team-mate Sebastian Vettel had a more eventful race, the champion delivering a superb drive to climb from 15th on the grid to fourth place at the chequered flag.
Starting from pole, Hamilton led comfortably through the first stint, though with Rosberg in close attendance. In the duo’s first pit stop, however, while Hamilton took on a second set of medium tyres, Rosberg opted for a different strategy, taking on hard tyres in a bid to set himself up for a late charge when Hamilton would be on the slower prime rubber.
Just as in Bahrain Rosberg was indeed the quicker man in the closing stages but whereas that circuit had allowed the German to mount several attacks on his team-mate, Barcelona’s hard-to-pass on layout meant that Hamilton was more comfortably able to prevent any attacks taking place.
Afterwards, though, the Briton, whose win now puts him in charge of the Drivers’ World Championship, with 100 points to Rosberg’s 97, admitted that the German had been faster.
“I wasn’t fast enough really today; Nico was quicker,” he said. “I struggled a lot with the balance and really had to rely on my engineers a lot more to give me the gaps and to try to find where I could find time. Also, with all my settings, I was moving them up and down, up and down really trying to find extra time. But Nico was just generally quicker this weekend but fortunately I was able to keep him behind. My first win here in Spain, it means everything to me. ”
Rosberg, meanwhile, believed he would have been able to pass his team-mate had the race last a lap longer than the 66 scheduled.
“I think one more to be honest; one more and I could have given it a good go. I wasn’t close enough to give it a go there but next lap I would have,” he said. “But unfortunately that was it. So, I’m a bit gutted but still, second place, still close to the championship and many more races to go.”
Ricciardo’s race was a largely solitary affair. Starting third, the Australian made a poor getaway and that allowed William’s Valtteri Bottas to move ahead. Ricciardo spent the opening laps chasing down the Finn, only to be told by his pit wall to leave a two-second gap in order to preserve his tyres as they looked to pass the Williams on strategy. Ricciardo, though, sensed an opportunity and made repeated assaults on the Finn only for Bottas to cleverly position his car to fend off the assaults. Eventually Ricciardo relented, informing his crew that he would “cool it for a few laps”.
Red Bull then brought Ricciardo into the pit lane early, on lap 14, undercutting Bottas. Ricciardo was then able to use the clear air in front and his greater pace to make the necessary time to pass the Finn when he stopped six laps later.
Thereafter, it was a lonely race for Ricciardo as he looked after his medium compound tyres through a long second stint and then managed the final laps to land his second podium finish of the season, but the first from which he’ll take home points after his disqualification at the season opener in Australia.
“They [Mercedes] were a long way ahead,” he said. “I think coming into the race today we knew a boring race would be a pretty good one for us. We knew we didn’t really have the pace for Mercedes. We looked like a third-place car and in the end that’s what it was. We had a pretty comfortable third place and we just had to focus on getting the tyres to last two stops and that was it. Really nice to be on the podium and I’m sure I’ll be able to keep it this time.”
Early stops were of benefit, too, to Vettel. After qualifying 10th on Saturday when his car suffered a mechanical problem, the defending champion was handed a five-place penalty for the start when the gearbox of his RB10 had to be replaced.
He dropped a place at the start but soon began to move forward. By lap 12 he was up to 13th but he was clearly losing time as he became stuck behind McLaren’s Jenson Button.
He dived for the pit, took on hard tyres and then used the clean air the out-of-sequence stop gave him to claw back time on his rivals ahead. The strategy worked well and by the time he started the in-lap ahead of his second stop on lap 32 he was eighth. He then used two rapid stints on the medium tyres to push on and claim the scalps of Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen and Valtteri Bottas in the closing stages and claim fourth place.
Raikkonen’s team-mate Fernando Alonso, also made a three-stop race work and after spending much of the race trailing the Finn. He used the greater pace his fresh mediums gave him to pass his team-mate at the end and take sixth behind Bottas.
With Raikkonen seventh, Romain Grosjean finished an excellent eighth for the improving Lotus team, while the final two points-scoring places were taken by the Force Indias of Sergio Perez in ninth and Nico Hulkenberg in tenth.
2014 Spanish Grand Prix – Race Result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 66 1:41:05.155 25
2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 66 +0.6 secs 18
3 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 66 +49.0 secs 15
4 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 66 +76.7 secs 12
5 Valtteri Bottas Williams 66 +79.2 secs 10
6 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 66 +87.7 secs 8
7 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 65 +1 Lap 6
8 Romain Grosjean Lotus 65 +1 Lap 4
9 Sergio Perez Force India 65 +1 Lap 2
10 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 65 +1 Lap 1
11 Jenson Button McLaren 65 +1 Lap
12 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 65 +1 Lap
13 Felipe Massa Williams 65 +1 Lap
14 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 65 +1 Lap
15 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 65 +1 Lap
16 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 65 +1 Lap
17 Adrian Sutil Sauber 65 +1 Lap
18 Jules Bianchi Marussia 64 +2 Laps
19 Max Chilton Marussia 64 +2 Laps
20 Marcus Ericsson Caterham 64 +2 Laps
Ret Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 34 Brakes
Ret Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 24 Exhaust
eom/FIA press release -
A big thank you to my team, they’ve done an incredible job: Hamilton

Hamilton at podium interview after winning the Spanish GP on Sunday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image Barcelona, 11 May 2014:
DRIVERS
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Nico ROSBERG (Mercedes)
3 – Daniel RICCIARDO (Red Bull Racing)
PODIUM INTERVIEWS
(Conducted by Eddie Jordan)
What a great race, what a great finish – Lewis Hamilton, ladies and gentlemen, four race wins in a row; let’s hear it from him.
Lewis HAMILTON: A big thank you to my team, they’ve just done an incredible job this year. I’m really happy with the support I’ve had here in Spain, it’s the best I’ve ever had, so thank you to everyone in the grandstands, it means the world to me. My first win here in Spain, it means everything to me.
We heard you grumbling, or not quite happy with your team about the graining and also about the time loss in the pits. Tell me, were you upset?
LH: No, not for the pits. I wasn’t fast enough really today; Nico was quicker. I struggled a lot with the balance and really had to rely on my engineers a lot more to give me the gaps and to try to find where I could find time. And also with all my settings, I was moving them up and down, up and down really trying to find extra time. But Nico was just generally quicker this weekend but fortunately I was able to keep him behind.
Well, I needn’t tell everybody out there but you’ve now taken over the lead in the championship. Nico, what a fantastic fight, just like Bahrain, right up there at the end. How many more laps do you think you needed to pass him?
Nico ROSBERG: I think one more to be honest, one more I could have given it a good go. I wasn’t close enough to give it a go there but next lap I would have. But unfortunately that was it. So, a bit gutted but still, second place, still close to the championship and many more races to go anyway.
I needn’t remind you or anybody else, but you’ve been on this podium every race of this season so far. Going now to your home race, Monaco, where you won last year, surely you can make a massive effort for there?
Nico ROSBERG: Definitely. I’ll be going there to do it one better and try to come first there and repeat the win from last year. That’s the aim and we’ll see if it works out. And for those of you who don’t know Eddie is my number one favourite neighbor in Monaco.
I don’t they needed to know that! They want to know all about you. Ladies and gentlemen we’ll leave my neighbourly friend here and move to young Australian superstar, the man who has lit up the season so far from a rookie point of view, Daniel Ricciardo. I don’t want to be doom and gloom here, but you were 50 seconds behind, what are you going to do to catch these guys up?
Daniel RICCIARDO: Thanks
I just thought I’d bring you back down to reality a bit.
DR: No, you’re right. They were a long way ahead. I think coming into the race today we knew a boring race would be a pretty good one for us. We knew we didn’t really have the paced for Mercedes. We looked like a third-place car and in the end that’s what it was, we had a pretty comfortable third- place and we just had to focus on getting the tyres to last two stops ands that was it. Really nice to be on the podium and I’m sure I’ll be able to keep it this time.
Lewis, are you surprised with the dominance, because a lot of people called into question your idea of coming to Mercedes maybe 18 months ago. Had you got this in the back of your mind that this was all the potential that was being told to you?
LH: Yeah, sitting down with Ross at my mum’s house at the kitchen table, yeah this is the idea that I was given. I really, truly believed it was going to happen, but I could never have imagined us to have a 50-second gap to Red Bull in a race. So it’s just an exceptional job from the team and I feel truly blessed to firstly be a part of this team, to be contributing, getting the results. This is our fourth 1-2 together, it’s just unreal.
PRESS CONFERENCE
So, Lewis, where do we start? Four wins in a row, fourth Mercedes 1-2 in a row, which is fairly hard to achieve. First win for you in Spain and you’re leading the Driver’s World Championship for the first time since, I think, 2012. Which of those things means the most to you?
LH: Of course getting my first grand prix win here after trying for eight years. It’s very difficult to really put into words the feeling when you come to a race and have a result like this. Never have I had a car like this and obviously we’ve never had a gap like this to anyone before. Nico did a fantastic job today, it was a struggle to keep him behind, but I’m grateful that I was able to. I just feel that it is such a huge blessing, for not only me but for all the guys in the team, because of all the hard work they’ve done for many years now, but finally they are starting to see the fruits of their labour. So, for me, yeah, just enjoying every moment, every step of the way. And it’s really great today we have our board members, our bosses from Mercedes, so it was really good to… every time Dr Zetsche came last year, we generally had a bad race, so it was really important to get a good result for him to get rid of that negative bug, or bad luck that I guess he thought he was bringing, so I’m really grateful for the team being able to do that today.
Q: Nico, the start didn’t give you the platform or opportunity that maybe you’d hoped for. From there, like Bahrain, you tried something different on the strategy. Like Bahrain, Lewis said you were quicker today – but unlike Bahrain you didn’t really have a chance to attack, particularly at the end. Why was that? Why did it work out the way it did?
NR: The start unfortunately was poor. It’s a bit of a weakness that we have at the moment, just inconsistent and now I’ve had a couple of bad starts in a row – actually three bad starts in the races. And that’s costly, you know? Because, always losing out at the start, that’s not good, need to work on that. Other than that, the race, yeah, I felt comfortable, race pace was good. Best thing to do was to switch strategies. That was planned before the race. Worked out well, worked out perfectly – but this is a really, really difficult track to get close to the guy in front. I still got close, y’know Turn 10, the last lap. Could have got gone for a kamikaze move but it wouldn’t have worked. Lewis did a great job the whole weekend and just that little bit ahead. But there’s a lot of positives for me to take out of it. I’m fully motivated to just try to get that little bit extra and to edge him out next time – and it’s doable.
Q: Daniel, hopefully the first trophy you’ll be able to keep. Obviously the story of your race, a difficult start, losing the ground to Bottas but then getting him with the undercut first round of stops, then you were Billy-No-Mates, on your own driving around on your own – tell us how it worked out for you.
DR: Yeah. Not exactly the start I wanted. I think initially the launch felt OK but we lost a bit of traction after that. Bottas got past me. The first stint I tried to hang in there, had, let’s say, a pseudo-attempt into Turn One. I got underneath him but it wasn’t deep enough to pull the move off and then, yeah, it was just about doing an undercut and just trying to still make a two-stop work. So from then on a pretty lonely race. Unfortunately we’re not going to catch Mercedes. At least this weekend we weren’t going to, so a lonely third was not a bad result in the end.
Q: Final question to both Lewis and Nico, just looking ahead to the next couple of races that are coming up, Monaco is a track that’s been strong in the past for both of you and strong in the past for Mercedes, and then we go on to Montreal which has always been one of Lewis’s favourites. How do you go there, Nico? And your thoughts, both of you, on those two upcoming races.
NR: Monaco: fantastic. It’s my favourite race of the year. Great memories there from last year. Looking forward to it, with the car that we have also this year, it’s going to be great. For sure the opposition is going to be closer. Especially I expect Red Bull to be a lot closer, so it’s going to be tougher for us but still, we have a strong package, engine and car. So, should go fine around Monaco and going to try and make the most of it, repeat the win from last year.
Your thoughts Lewis…
LH: I think I have a bit of work to do in the next couple of weeks but of course I love those two races. Struggled last year in Monaco and struggled with this race, so need to figure out where I’m losing the time and apply it to the next race.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Question for Nico and Lewis. What was the main difficulty during the race: managing the hard tyre or doing quick laps at the end to fight to get Lewis with the medium?
NR: No, the big challenge was tyre degradation. Very, very big tyre degradation. That was really difficult to manage that. But I found my way and was quite comfortable with it, and then graining on the hard tyre which is the opposite of what we expected. We expected to have graining on the soft tyre. So it was very strange. Graining on the hard tyre and no graining on the soft tyre, it was really weird and unexpected.
Q: (Adrian Rodriguez – Agencia EFE) Question for Lewis, congratulations for your first win here in Spain. Makes it 26, one more than Jim Clark and one more than Niki Lauda, one of the big guys on your team – are you planning any jokes on him tonight and how many victories can you make it this year?
LH: At the rate the team’s going, we’re looking strong for at least a few more races. It’s by no means easy for me because I’ve still got a massive challenge with Nico. But, I mean, I could never had imagined winning these four races but it’s still so close, long, long way to go and, just as I was saying earlier, I’ve got a bit more time to find in this car, so going to work on it.
Q: Michael Schmidt (Auto Motor und Sport) Lewis, in the race, did you experience similar problems to those you had yesterday and how did you try to dial them out? There was a lot of conversation between you and the engineers.
LH: I did have the same problems as I had yesterday, yes. It was very strange because Friday P2 was excellent. The car was really good, degradation… I mean I was very very fast and I stopped my run with 18 laps or something like that, but if I just brought my pace down a little bit I probably could have eked it out even longer. Those changes just transformed the car and today, just not able to attack the corners due to snap oversteer, and that’s generally where Nico was catching me, through those entries of corners.
Q: (Leonid Novozhilov – F1 Life) To the Mercedes drivers: you have won every race this year. What secret did you find and where?
LH: I haven’t found any secrets but I think Mercedes – there is no secret really, it’s just been hard work and really constructive work. Often when you’re working towards something, sometimes you stumble and fall and then you have to build it again and the team has just been building and building, building and not really having many times when they’re falling. It’s quite remarkable, the actual car itself, the downforce is very good, I’m sure very very close with the Red Bulls and then with the engine, it’s the best engine Mercedes have made.
NR: It’s been five years, it’s been since 2010 this process started and so much has changed, it’s been such a long long way, the personnel restructuring, everything. Big big changes and now we’ve come to a point where, thanks to all the work from the past, we’re really just able… we’re becoming the best team in F1. That’s the way it is. I would still say Red Bull is the benchmark at the moment but we’re definitely shaking their chair at the moment and I think there’s the possibility that soon we will be the absolute best team, in terms of team organisation, capabilities, we’re getting there and hopefully it will be a long domination.
Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action and National Speedsport News) Daniel, Sebastian Vettel went from 15th to fourth, is that encouraging that the car – while not as good as a Mercedes – can slice through the opposition, or a bit worrying because it looks like he might be back up to speed and coming to challenge you?
DR: Obviously it’s the first thing you said. Yeah, really good. I just sort of heard on the radio that he was making progress through the field and when he was in fourth – I think he made a move in the last few laps so really good. I definitely see it as a positive for the team, third and fourth, particularly after his starting position. Obviously Mercedes are the top dogs at the moment but we seem to be settling ourselves nicely in that next spot and I think we’ve just got to now try and somehow creep our way closer. All the talk about Seb, I’m sure that was going to pass very soon and he’ll get to his World Champion form.
Q: (Tony Dodgins – Motorsport News) Nico, just before the first stops, on the radio we heard the team say ‘primes planned for the next stint’ and you said ‘the options are fine.’ Did that mean you wanted another set of options for the second stint or were you happy with the way it went?
NR: There was a misunderstanding from my side because we were going to go prime second stint – there were two variables. There was one where we go prime second stint if we have graining in the first stint or I go prime second stint to try and beat Lewis, if I feel that pace-wise I can be quicker and have a shot at it. I thought they were going prime because they thought I had graining but I didn’t have graining so that’s why I was confused but then I understood: it was to offset my strategy so that I would have a chance to fight Lewis at the end so it was fine – and just what I wanted.
Q: (Barna Zsoldos – Nemzeti Sport) Lewis, at the end of the 2012 season when you announced that you would switch to Mercedes, there were some really harsh criticisms against you, stating that you are destroying your career without the guidance of your Dad. Now that you’re winning and leading the championship and have the very best car of the whole pack, is it important for you that you could really prove that you can make good decisions on your own?
LH: Yeah, for sure, it was obviously a great call and there was never a moment that I ever doubted it but of course never could have imagined that we would be having this kind of success. I’m not one to rub it in people’s faces. I knew that I was in a good place, I knew that I was making the right decision for me and now it should be becoming more evident to people… I’m sure the people that wrote those things had an opinion at the beginning and I’m sure it’s changed now.
Q: (Adrian Rodriguez – Agencia EFE) To Nico and Lewis: you guys seem to get along pretty well right now but the problem is that just one of you can win if it keeps going this way. Do you guys believe that your relationship is going to be the same by the end of the year?
LH: We’ve been racing together for a long time so I don’t see why not.
Q: Does that help, Nico, that you’ve been racing together for a long time?
NR: Definitely yes, because we’ve been through this before. It’s not a first time and even back then we had discussions, debate but always… life goes on, discuss it and life goes on so that helps, yeah.
Q: (Anthony Rowlinson – F1 Racing) Lewis, you’ve said quite a few times this year about how perfect this car is, how well suited it feels. Could you explain just a little bit about how you’ve guided the development of it so that it suits your style?
LH: It’s a lengthy process. Obviously last year… when you request something to be changed, it takes some time because obviously you don’t want to take away their focus from the most important things which is getting downforce. I think it’s just taken some time. I think Michael required a little bit of a… he had a different driving style to me. He required different things, different seating position, different set-up and as I’ve come along, I’ve really tried to… and I guess Nico probably and Michael both kind of gelled and went in one direction with the balance and then as I’ve come along, mine is slightly different and I guess we’ve then created a hybrid: Nico’s come halfway, I’ve come halfway so we now require the same things from the car, but last year it was maybe a little bit different and so over the time just really, for the engineers to get to know what I require from a car and I think really working on being comfortable with the engineers as well, new engineers, it takes a while to build those relationships and that’s probably been a key strength to this year.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – Universo On Line) Nico, you are second in the championship now. Will you change your approach for the weekend, make strategies with more risks; even during the race, do you think you will change what you have been doing until now?
NR: There’s not much to change. The race was really lost in qualifying and at the start. Those were the two opportunities I had. Qualifying was very very close, I even had a bit of a problem which we found in hindsight, where I was a little bit down on power on the straight, but the difference was not enough to get pole, but still it was actually even closer than it looked. And then just had a poor start, so those were the two shots that I had at it and it didn’t work out. And then in the race, I nearly got another opportunity at the very end but again, just not enough. One more lap and I could have given it a go, I think, but I would have done everything the same again at the start of the weekend. Of course, I also missed FP1 which doesn’t help either. Many small thing which add up and there are only very small gaps so next time.
eom/FIA Release of the transcript
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Hamilton edges Rosberg to take Spanish GP pole

Hamilton (centre) flanked by Nico Rosberg on his right and Daniel Ricciardo after taking Spanish GP pole. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image Mercedes driver claims fourth pole of season ahead of team-mate and Daniel Ricciardo as Vettel hits trouble.
Lewis Hamilton edged a tight battle with Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg to claim his fourth pole position of the season.
“Nico has been driving really well, through P3 and through qualifying, so I didn’t know if I’d be able to get it, but right at the end I had to eke out absolutely everything and more from the car,” said Hamilton after claiming top spot in the dying seconds of the session.
Rosberg, who had topped the first two part of the qualifying hour, was understandably unhappy at losing out to his team-mate for the second race in a row.
“I’m definitely very disappointed. I don’t particularly enjoy coming second to Lewis,” he said. “In the end it was a good lap from me, so Lewis just did a better job and that’s the way it is. Anyway, it’s still all to play for tomorrow. Second place is only a little bit away from optimum because all it takes is a good start tomorrow and then I’m in the lead again.”
Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo was best of the rest in third place, though team-mate Sebastian Vettel stopped on track in the final segment of the hour. Home here Fernando Alonso, meanwhile, could only manage seventh place behind team-mate Kimi Raikkonen in a disappointing session for Ferrari.
Q1 of the hour got off to a dramatic start when Lotus’ Pastor Maldonado crashed out within moments of the green lights coming on at the end of the pit lane.
The Venezuelan lost control of his car on the run to Turn Three and crashed heavily into the barriers, his Lotus sustaining much front-end damage. The session was quickly red-flagged as the recovery vehicles headed to the corner to remove the wreckage.
When action resumed Mercedes’ Rosberg set the early pace with a lap of 1:26.764 on the hard tyre. Team-mate Hamilton made an error on his first run but slotted into P2, 0.4s down on the German. The Briton was straight on the radio to the Mercedes pit wall, telling his team that “we’ve made the car worse, it’s a nightmare to drive”.
By the end of the segment the pecking order had taken a relatively predicable shape with the Mercedes pair quickest ahead of Vettel and Ricciardo.
Behind them Massa was fifth ahead of Kvyat, with the soft-tyre shod Hulkenberg and Vergne eighth and ninth. McLaren’s Jenson Button took the final top-10 spot.
At the other end, along with Maldonado, out went the Caterhams of Kamui Kobayashi and Marcus Ericsson, the Marussias of Jules Bianchi and Max Chilton and the Sauber of Adrian Sutil.
In the second segment, Rosberg again the set the pace, rising to the top of the timesheet with a time of 1:26.088. Hamilton was again unable to match the German in the first runs, posting a lap just over a tenth adrift of his team-mate. Behind then the Red Bulls again slotted into third and fourth, though Ricciardo was this time in front. The Australian’s lap was deemed good enough to ensure a Q3 berth and he chose to sit out the final runs, as did Vettel.
Theirs was absence by choice, but elsewhere Kevin Magnussen abandoned the session while in P15, as did Jean-Eric Vergne in P16.
In the battle for the remaining Q3 places, Massa finished fourth to push Vettel to fifth, with Romain Grosjean sixth for Lotus. Kimi Raikkonen was seventh for Ferrari, ahead of Williams’ Valtteri Bottas, Button and an out-of-sorts looking Alonso who just managed to scrape into the top-10 shoot-out eight hundredths of a second ahead of Nico Hulkenberg.
As with Q1, the final segment got off to as stuttering start. Sebastian Vettel left the Red Bull Racing garage but slowed in the pit lane. Whatever issue he had seemed to right itself and he headed out on track only to stop at Turn 3, all drive lost on his RB10.
The stoppage brought out the red flags and when the session resumed Q3 seemed set for Rosberg to press home the advantage he had enjoyed in the opening segments.
It didn’t go according to plan however. Hamilton edged the German on the duo’s first run but Rosberg responded and as he crossed the line on his final tour, he jumped eight tenths of a second ahead of Hamilton’s benchmark. The Briton was just coming to the end of his final flying lap, however, and when he corssed the line he’d somehow found almost a second over his opening Q3 time, to claim his 35th career pole.
Behind the Mercedes, Daniel Ricciardo claimed his third top-three start of the season but admitted that while he had been pleased with his lap the one-second gap to the front row cars was a surprise.
“We’re again best of the rest but that’s not quite good enough, we’re still a second off,” he said. “I thought my lap was not too bad, so I was expecting a smaller gap than that. I think we’ve made some improvements but they – they being Mercedes – have as well. On a positive note we’re a clear third today. I think we had a pretty to P4, so that’s not too bad, but for sure we want to get closer to the front two.”
That fourth spot on the grid will be occupied by Williams’ Valtteri Bottas, while Romain Grosjean enjoyed a much improved outing for Lotus with fifth spot. The Ferraris of Raikkonen and Alonso will line up sixth and seventh and the remaining top-10 places were taken by Jenson Button, Felipe Massa and the unfortunate Vettel.
2014 Spanish Grand Prix – Qualifying Result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:27.238 1:26.210 1:25.232 16
2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:26.764 1:26.088 1:25.400 19
3 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing-Renault 1:28.053 1:26.613 1:26.285 16
4 Valtteri Bottas Williams-Mercedes 1:28.198 1:27.563 1:26.632 17
5 Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 1:28.472 1:27.258 1:26.960 18
6 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 1:28.308 1:27.335 1:27.104 18
7 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:28.329 1:27.602 1:27.140 16
8 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:28.279 1:27.570 1:27.335 18
9 Felipe Massa Williams-Mercedes 1:28.061 1:27.016 1:27.402 16
10 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing-Renault 1:27.958 1:27.052 No time 1111 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:28.155 1:27.685 13
12 Sergio Perez Force India 1:28.469 1:28.002 16
13 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:28.074 1:28.039 12
14 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 1:28.374 1:28.280 12
15 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 1:28.389 No time 10
16 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 1:28.194 No time 617 Adrian Sutil Sauber 1:28.563 9
18 Max Chilton Marussia 1:29.586 6
19 Jules Bianchi Marussia 1:30.177 6
20 Marcus Ericsson Caterham 1:30.312 8
21 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 1:30.375 6
22 Pastor Maldonado Lotus No time 2eom/FIA press release







