Your basket is currently empty!
Tag: India
-
Sahara Force India feels podium-finish is not far away
Bangalore, 7 May 2013: Sahara Force India, the only Indian team in the Formula One World Championship, began the 2013 season on a bright note with a double finish at the season opener in Australia but despite bad outings in Malaysia and luck deserting Adrian Sutil, Paul di Resta matched his career-best fourth-place finish in Bahrain for one of the best starts to the season for the Silverstone-based team.In a press release received here ahead the fourth round of the FIA F 1 World championship to be held at Barcelona next Sunday, team Principal Vijay Mallya was in upbeat mood and hopes that the team will do much better this year. At home in India, Vijay Mallya was in financial troubles with his popular airlines, Kingfisher grounded for many months and even Sahara in trouble with SEBI, the securities exchange board of the country. With the application for revival rejected and employees of the airlines yet to be paid their arrears, there were rumours that the F1 team might be in trouble, but the `King of Good Times’ repeatedly denied that the F1 team would be affected financially.The team is currently in 5th position, 3 points ahead of Vodafone McLaren Mercedes but will have to switch gears to keep the slot as McLaren is expected to zoom past as the F1 bandwagon arrives to its favourite desitination of Europe after four fly-away races. Paul di Rest scored 12 points in Bahrain after being in contention for a podium finish for better part of the race but had to manage his tyres with a two-stop strategy. He now has 20 points in the Drivers’ Championship and is in 8th place while teammate Adrian Sutil with the six points he earned in Australian GP is in 12 place.Team Principal and Managing Director, Vijay Mallya, reflects on the team’s best-ever start to a season saying: “The return to Europe after the first few flyaway races is an excellent moment to catch our breath and evaluate where we stand. Overall the balance is extremely positive for Sahara Force India with our best ever start to a season. In terms of points scored we are nine points up compared to last year and we’ve been up at the sharp end fighting with the big teams.“After the pit stop problems in Malaysia, points finishes in China and Bahrain have set us back on the right path, but nobody in the team is taking it for granted and we will not rest on our laurels. At both the factory and at the track, everyone is working hard to ensure we can build on these good results. We intend to hold our ground and remain in the hunt for points and podiums.“Looking at our drivers, the performances of Paul Di Resta confirm just how much he has matured as a driver. He’s delivering consistently every week and we are reaping the rewards of all his hard work. He suffered a difficult end to the 2012 season, but he’s shown great mental strength and determination to regroup over the winter and recapture his best form. He’s pushing the team on and demanding the best from everyone, which is what we need.“Adrian Sutil has also shown his speed so far but the luck has not gone his way. The last two races have been very frustrating because he’s been the victim of other drivers’ mistakes. Without these incidents he would surely have scored well in both China and Bahrain. His race pace in Bahrain was remarkable because he was one of the fastest cars on track,” he added.“Having come so tantalisingly close to the podium with Paul last time out, we head to Barcelona full of optimism. The hard work everyone is putting in is paying off and we hope to see the rewards this coming weekend,” Dr Mallya concluded.Paul Di Resta responds on Barcelona GP:Paul, you’ve enjoyed your strongest start to a season – what’s your feeling after four races…We’ve got to feel very happy with how things are going and I want to congratulate everybody in the team. We took a very sensible approach to the winter and focussed on understanding the key areas that drive performance, which seems to have paid off. It’s important to pick up good points early in the season against our competitors and to be ahead of McLaren after four races is a credit to the team and a nice feeling. Of course we want to be on the podium and it was very close in Bahrain, but I’m sure it will come soon enough.Do you feel you have a car that will be competitive on any type of circuit?The car is performing well, especially in the heat, and we were also strong in the cooler conditions of China – so that’s a good sign. The key is making sure you find the right operating window whatever the conditions because that’s what makes the difference. We need to keep doing what we’re doing, but at the same time we know the return to Europe always sees every team bring more upgrades. Hopefully we can stay fighting with the big teams and keep picking up the points.With two tests already completed in Barcelona do you feel well prepared ahead of this weekend’s race?I guess we have more data around Barcelona than anywhere else, but at the same time the temperatures will be much higher at this time of year. So I’d expect that to change things quite a lot and impact on the tyres. Also, it’s one of those tracks where you’re constantly chasing the right aero balance to cope with the long, high-speed corners, especially turn three. But when you come to the end of the lap you need the mechanical grip for the hairpins and chicanes.Adrian on BarcelonaAdrian, four races in, how do you sum up the start of 2013?The start of the season was good, especially if you consider I had only two or three test days to prepare. Australia was a strong race and the best way to come back to Formula One. Since then I’ve been unlucky with being hit in China and the puncture in Bahrain, and I definitely missed out on a few good points. On the other hand there are lots of positives, especially the performance of the car and the experience of the races. It is still early in the season so there is more to come and the car is really fast. I’m sure we can recover the points we lost in the last few races.How hard is it to accept the disappointment when you’re simply in the wrong place at the wrong time – as was the case in China and Bahrain?These things happen all the time in Formula One – sometimes you benefit from them and sometimes it goes against you instead. They all balance by the end of the year. I try not to spend too much time thinking about the negatives, I try to move on and focus on how to do better. If something happens, I think whether I did anything wrong, learn from it and avoid doing it again.What do you expect from the upcoming race in Barcelona?I know Barcelona really well from all the testing we’ve done there over the years. It is important, after three difficult races without points, to finish the race without any incidents. If I do that, I should have the pace to be among the front-runners. I have to do my job, avoid mistakes and hopefully my luck will change. Wherever we have gone so far, the car has been competitive, so the next few races should see us scoring points and close to the podium.To watch the latest video interview with Adrian Sutil use the following link: http://youtu.be/4a_2_drbK1Iends -
Paul di Resta finishes a strong 4th in Bahrain GP
Bahrain, 21 April 2013:It was a successful day for Sahara Force India in Bahrain as Paul Di Resta raced to a strong fourth place. Teammate Adrian Sutil’s hopes of points ended with a first lap puncture in the Bahrain GP, the fourth round of the FIA Formula One World Championship which was won by Red Bull Racing’s Sebastian Vettel. Kimi Raikkonen in second and Romain Grosjean, who overtook Paul in the last few laps, made it a strong 2-3 finish for Lotus team. Reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel used a three-stop strategy to extend his drivers championship lead to 10 points. Vettel started from second on the grid on the P Zero White medium tyre and then completed two stints on the P Zero Orange hard tyre to seal his 28th career win by over nine seconds.Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen using a two-stop strategy and his team-mate Romain Grosjean coming third with a three-stop strategy. Grosjean passed Force India’s Paul di Resta, who was also on a two-stop strategy, in the closing stages to ensure that the 2013 Bahrain podium was identical to the podium line-up last year.Quotes from Sahara Force India stable:
P4 Paul Di Resta VJM06-04Tyre strategy: Medium, Hard, HardPaul: “It’s great to round off the fly-away races with a fourth place and a race that was probably my strongest Grand Prix. The podium was very close, but with our strategy we were always going to be vulnerable at the end of the race – especially to Grosjean who had two new sets of medium tyres. I had a good start to the race, a strong opening stint and we showed our true speed today, but ultimately fourth place was the maximum that was possible. We will get on the podium one day, hopefully soon, but for now we can be very happy with the points we’ve scored today. A big thanks to the whole team because it’s been an excellent weekend and I feel we managed to get 100% out of the car.”P13 Adrian Sutil VJM06-03Tyre strategy: Medium, Hard, Hard, MediumAdrian: “It’s disappointing to get a puncture in a race that looked so promising. My start was clean and I was racing Massa going into turn four. I was on the outside; I gave him a lot of space but he was off-line and made contact with my front right tyre. I don’t know what he did exactly but I had a puncture immediately. I had to pit and lost a lot of time, which ended my chance of scoring points. I had amazing pace in the race and I just kept my head down to try and recover something from the race, but I had lost too much with the puncture. But I’m happy for the team and fourth place for Paul gives us more points. There are many more races to come so we will keep focused and next time score points with both cars.”Dr Vijay Mallya, Team Principal and Managing Director“A tremendous job by the team and a wonderful drive by Paul saw us come within a whisker of the podium today. Although we missed out on third, the twelve points scored keep us up in fifth place in the Championship and give us every reason to be optimistic for the coming races. Of course, we could have achieved so much more had Adrian not picked up a puncture on lap one. The contact with Massa proved very costly because Adrian’s race pace was on a par with Paul’s and we should have brought both cars home in the points. We will focus on the positives and enjoy this fourth place, which has confirmed the pace of the car and shown once again that we can race up at the front and beat some of the top teams.”ends -
Alonso gets first win for Ferrari; Vettel’s dash in vein
Shanghai, 14 April 2013: Fernando Alonso delivered Scuderia Ferrari’s first win of the season winning the UBS Chinese Grand Prix, the third round of the FIA Formula One World Championship to make it as a third driver to win a round each here on Sunday.
Kimi Raikkonen of Lotus stunned the Formula One world winning the season opener in Australia while Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, the reigning World Champion won a controversial Malaysian GP defying team orders. Today both the Red Bulls failed to get on to the podium. Vettel made a desperate dash, though, which was too little and too late to get on to the podium.
The teams opted for different strategies to save the Pirelli tyres and the race was action packed with Sahara Force India’s Adrain Sutil becoming an early victim while his teammate Paul Di Resta managed to get four important points with an eighth place finish after being in fifth place before he went for a pit stop in the fag end.
For Ferrari, Felipe Massa, after a strong start, had to settle for sixth at the flag but the eight points he added to the winner’s 25 takes the Prancing Horse ahead of Lotus to second in the Constructors’ Championship, just five points behind Red Bull.
Ferrari’s Luca di Montezemolo said: “I was very confident going into this race and today I am very happy, especially for Domenicali and for everyone in the Scuderia who has worked so hard and so well at the track and in Maranello, as they really deserve this victory. Fernando Alonso drove a great race and Felipe Massa brought home points that are important in the Constructors’ classification. Winning in China is very satisfying for Ferrari and it is also a source of great pride in Italian technology. Now we go on, but with our feet firmly on the ground. A thank you to the fans: it was very nice to see so many Ferrari flags in the Shanghai grandstands and to feel so much enthusiasm here in Italy”.
Team Principal Stefano Domenicali commented: “I am pleased with the result for the team as a whole today and clearly with winning a race that looked like being a difficult one from many points of view, starting with tyre management. After what happened in Malaysia, I am particularly happy to see Fernando on the top step of the podium, because it’s the best possible turnaround and it’s down to a great job from the guys here at the track and in Maranello. However, I am sorry for Felipe who, because of graining, was unable to make the most of his potential, nor to secure the result he could have aimed for after his great start. This is only the third race and in a few days we will already be back on track to take on another challenge in Bahrain. In this first part of the championship it is harder than ever to come up with an accurate evaluation of the hierarchy in the field: between qualifying and the race we have seen contrasting performances for some teams and therefore we must concentrate very hard on improving the car over the single lap in qualifying, while maintaining the performance level we have seen over the long runs”.
Fernando Alonso: “It couldn’t have gone better than this today! I hadn’t won since Germany and this has a special feeling because it was a tricky race full of action. Along with the second place I got in Australia, this result shows that the car is competitive and that we are working in the right direction to always be in the fight for the podium. For that, I have to thank the team for the huge efforts it has made both here and back in the factory. They have worked so hard to put me in this position from which I can fight with the others on equal terms. We had a good feeling all through the weekend and qualifying third gave us the possibility of fighting for the top places. On top of that, maybe we were owed some good luck. Along with that all the important factors worked perfectly, such as set-up, strategy, calling the pit stops and the stops themselves. All together it produced a win that wasn’t easy at the end of a race in which we made the most of our pace and did a good job of managing the tyres, which was definitely the most dangerous aspect. With no one dominating the Championship, it makes it extremely interesting, even if we are aware this is only the third race. We are under no illusions and we must continue to concentrate and do all we can to improve still further”.
Felipe Massa: “It’s difficult to understand exactly what happened today, because the start went very well. I was immediately quick and the car was working perfectly. At the first stop, I fitted the Medium tyres and after a few laps I began to suffer with graining on the front. That meant I lost ground to other cars and it was probably down to a problem linked to the track conditions and my driving style. All weekend, I haven’t felt comfortable with these tyres and in the race, any attempts I made to save them was useless. But for this problem, I would certainly have been in the fight for the podium, but I am still confident because, all the same, I was able to bring home a good points haul which is important in a season that has only just begun”.
Pat Fry: “The great start from both cars was certainly the best way to begin the race. We knew the Mercedes would have a slightly higher degradation than us and the double overtaking move on Hamilton at the start of Lap 5 meant we got into the lead immediately. We also knew that we would rejoin in traffic after the first pit stop, without knowing if we would have been able to overtake the cars that were on the Medium: the move paid off for Fernando with his stop on the sixth lap, while for Felipe, who pitted on lap 7, it was more difficult, especially as he had some graining which meant he was not able to finish any higher. Overall, the F138 showed that it has a good pace and we can take satisfaction from that. Now we must immediately turn the page and concentrate on the race coming up in Bahrain. We are absolutely aware that we still have a lot of work to do on qualifying performance if we want to make the most of our race pace”.
Sahara Force India press release adds:
Sahara Force India secured four championship points today as Paul Di Resta raced to eighth place at the Shanghai International Circuit. Adrian Sutil’s race ended early when he was hit from behind by Esteban Gutierrez.
P8 Paul Di Resta VJM06-04
Tyre strategy: Medium, Medium, Medium, Soft
Paul: “A good result in the end and a strong recovery after a difficult start to the race. I was battling with Nico [Hulkenberg] on the opening lap, but unfortunately there was some contact with Adrian [Sutil] down at the hairpin, which put me on the grass and set us back three or four places. After that I was stuck in the pack, my tyres were graining, and I couldn’t really make much progress. It wasn’t until the third stint that I was in some clean air and the pace of the car was very strong. I was pushing all the way and I knew it would be very close after the final stop with Grosjean and Hulkenberg. But the pit crew did a top job; they kept their nerve and we managed to stay ahead of both of them. If everything had gone to plan I’m sure we could have done an even better job, but it’s good to pick up more points and to see our race pace right up there once again.”
DNF Adrian Sutil VJM06-03
Tyre strategy: Soft
Adrian: “A very disappointing day for me. Things were going well in the opening laps and then under braking for the final hairpin I got hit from behind as I turned into the corner. I guess Gutierrez missed his braking point and had nowhere to go but into the back of my car. My rear wing was broken and there was no option but to stop. It’s always a shame not to finish a race and I had a good chance of scoring more points today. I was on the soft tyre and the strategy looked to be shaping up well.”
Robert Fernley, Deputy Team Principal
“It’s the first time we’ve scored points in China so it’s good to get that monkey off our back and see Paul demonstrate the inherent pace of our car. He was boxed in the pack early on, but the strategy came back to us at the end of the race as Paul put in a fantastic third stint on the medium tyres. We left it until the last couple of laps to fit the soft tyres, but Paul had done enough in the clean air to keep Grosjean and Hulkenberg behind him. Credit should also go to the pit crew who were exceptional today with some very rapid stops, especially the final one. On the other side of the garage Adrian was the innocent victim of Gutierrez’s mistake. There was nothing Adrian could have done to avoid it but it certainly cost us a good chance of getting two cars in the points.”
Lotus quotes:
Kimi Räikkönen took his second podium finish of the season with a strong second place in the Chinese Grand Prix. Despite a rearranged nose and front wing – courtesy of contact with Sergio Perez’s McLaren – Kimi fought back after a poor start from the front row of the grid. Romain Grosjean endured a more difficult race, with ninth place his reward at the chequered flag. Kimi keeps up his run of consecutive points finishes and retains second in the Drivers’ Championship on a tally of 49 points; three behind leader Sebastian Vettel. The team falls one place to third position in the Constructors’ Championship on 60 points, with Ferrari now ahead with 73 points.
- Both drivers started on scrubbed sets of the soft compound (yellow) Pirelli tyre.
- Kimi pitted for new mediums (white) on laps 6, 21 and 34, Romain on laps 7, 23 and 37.
- Kimi incurred damage to his front wing after an early collision with Sergio Perez.
Kimi Räikkönen, P2, E21-03
“Second wasn’t quite what we wanted, but in the circumstances it was the best that we could manage today. I’m not 100% happy because we didn’t win, but it is what it is and second place is a good result after a bad start and the incident with Sergio [Perez]. It was quite difficult out there; obviously the car is not designed like that otherwise we would use it all the time, but I was surprised how good it was still. Of course there were some handling issues which was not ideal, but we just had to try to live with it and we still had pretty okay speed.”
Kimi’s teammate Romain Grosjean finished 9th getting a valuable 2 points in the process.

Fernando Alonso (centre) flanked by 2nd placed Kimi Raikkonen (left) and Lewis Hamilton on the podium on Sunday 14 April 2013 in Shanghai. A Pirelli photo. ends
-
Force India use Friday practice to test Aero programme
Shanghai, 12 April 2013: A busy Friday for Sahara Force India saw Adrian Sutil and Paul Di Resta finish inside the top ten during both practice sessions for this weekend’s Chinese Grand Prix.Adrian Sutil VJM06-03FP1: 1:38.125 P8 21 lapsFP2: 1:36.514 P8 32 lapsAdrian: “I’m feeling happy with how things went today. There were no major issues and we managed to test a lot of different things on the car, especially on the aero side. The important thing now is to understand which are the right parts and the best settings to use for the rest of the weekend. In terms of the tyres there is a big difference between the compounds, with the medium performing better than the soft. I think we look quite competitive, but it’s too early to say exactly where we stand.”Paul Di Resta VJM06-04FP1: 1:38.561 P10 15 lapsFP2: 1:36.595 P9 33 lapsPaul: “I think the story of the day was mainly about tyres and trying to understand how to get the most out of them. We’ve done as much as we could, but I think everybody found quite a big difference between the two compounds. Also, this is a track with characteristics that are always quite demanding on the tyres. We worked through the programme, tried a lot of different settings with the car and need to study the data carefully tonight to make the right decisions for the rest of the weekend.”Jakob Andreasen, Chief Race Engineer“It has been an incredibly busy day of practice and both car crews worked well to get through such a full job list. We approached the sessions in a methodical manner and made clear decisions as soon as the data indicated the best direction to take. So much of the focus on a Friday is on tyre performance, but we also managed to complete an ambitious aero programme, which has given us a good understanding of where we need to focus our efforts going forward. Overall I’m pleased with the day’s results and I’m confident that our competitiveness is similar to the performance level we showed during the first couple of races. The next target is to get both our cars into Q3 tomorrow afternoon.”ends -
Ghorpade to partner Dario in Formula Renault 2.0 Alps
Bangalore, 28 March 2013: Young Indian racer Parth Ghorpade confirmed his participation in the Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS Championship on Thursday. In a press release received here, the 19-year-old Parth said that he would be the first Indian to drive in this series and would drive for BVM Racing where he will partner Italian driver Dario Capitanio. Parth, who won the 2012 Formula Pilota Asian Championship, will compete amongst some of the most talented youngsters in motorsport, in a grid featuring 30 cars.
The Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS, is one of the most competitive feeder series for the Formula Renault 3.5 championship. The Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS, powered by the Clio III Renault Sport engine, has a paddle-operated 7-speed sequential gearbox, with 250bhp and push rod suspension.
Parth was in Vallelunga last week for the first test and was a constant runner in the Top 10 which has given him confidence for the season ahead. He commented, “The last few months have been tough as we have been deciding on which series to race in. We finally decided that while the Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS is one of the most competitive series, it is the ideal platform for me at this stage of my career. I was surprised on how I adapted to the car with ease and I must thank the BVM Racing team for making this possible. Testing was very positive but there is a lot more work to do and I hope we can be competitive at the first race in Vallelunga. Testing also showed us how competitive this series is with the top 20 cars within one second of each other.”
The ALPS series will have 30 drivers for the 2013 season with 7 rounds consisting of two races each. The 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS calendar includes visits to the historic Spa-Francorrchamps, Monza, Imola with the first race taking place in Vallelunga on April 7. Each race weekend will have three 60 minute practice sessions on Friday, with qualifying and Race 1 on Saturday and Race 2 on Sunday.
BVM Racing are a title winning team in the Italian Formula 3 Championship, and Formula Abarth Championship (European and Italian) and also races in Formula Renault World Series 3.5,. Team owner Giuseppe Mazzotti was excited to have an Indian on board and was highly impressed with Parth after the first test. He commented, “Parth was immediately on the pace and adapted quickly to the new car and the track of Vallelunga, where he has never driven before. I am confident that we will have a good season together. I am very happy to have a driver of Indian nationality in our team as we have worked in the past with many international drivers, but never Indians. India is making waves in the motorsport world and I am convinced that this successful partnership will open doors for us to work with the other great talents from the region.”
Parth will be engineered by Mario Gargiulo, who played a big role in helping him win the 2012 Formula Pilota Asian Championship. He commented, ”I personally know very well Parth, because together we competed and won in the 2012 Formula Pilota Championship. I knew that he would be well adapted to the new car and that he also learned pretty quickly the tricks of a difficult track as Vallelunga. During the test his performance improved run after run and more importantly he gave important feedback to further develop the car. I’m sure we can have a very good season together and ensure that he gets due recognition in the European motorsport circles.”
19 year-old Ghorpade is the 2012 Formula Pilota Asian Champion, a five-time National Karting Champion, and runner-up in the inaugural 2010 Volkswagen Polo Cup India.
Calendar for the 2013 Formula Renault 2.0 ALPS
1 April 7 Vallelunga 2 May 12 Imola 3 June 9 Spa-Francorchamps 4 July 7 Monza 5 July 28 Misano 6 September 8 Mugello 7 October 6 Imola http://www.facebook.com/parthghorpade
https://www.twitter.com/ParthGhorpade
www.parthghorpade.com
-
Ghosh-Naik win South India Rally: INRC season opener
Chennai, 24 March 2013: Overnight leaders National champion Amittrajit Ghosh (co-driver Ashwin Naik) nursed his ailing Mitsubishi Lancer Cedia (Group N) to a splendid victory in the AVT Premium South India Rally even as debutants Mahindra XUV 500 and Volkswagen Polo achieved a 1-2 finishes in their respective categories to provide a memorable finale to the first round of the 2013 Indian National Rally Championship, near here, on Sunday.
Kolkata’s Ghosh had to deal with mechanical problems through the two days and 14 Special Stages but managed to bring the Cedia home in one piece as he clocked one hour, 54 minutes, 09.3 seconds to annex the Overall title, an Adrenna press release said.
“Over the two days, we had to change 13 parts and we never had a clean stage. Thus, it was great to come away with a win, my second here after 2011, and start the new season with maximum points although we didn’t get to drive the way we wanted,” said Ghosh.
Finishing second behind Ghosh was Bangalore Vikram Devadasen (Shrikanth Gowda), also in a Cedia, with a time of 01:54:41.5 while the Kerala pair of Dr Bikku Babu and George Verghese came in third at 01:55:31.0.
In the INRC 1600cc class, Sirish Chandran (Nikhil Pai) and Arjun Rao (Satish Rajagopal), both in a Volkswagen Polo, finished first and second respectivey ahead of Byram Godrej (Prajwal Pai) who drove a Maruti Baleno.
“It was a good result for the Volkswagen Polo considering that we came to the event with hardly any testing, but the car handled well even in the rougher sections which speaks a lot for its reliability. Our thanks to Volkswagen for providing all the support,” said Chandran.
There were celebrations in Mahindra Adventure camp too as 2011 champion Gaurav Gill (Musa Sherif), driving the XUV 500, was the quickest overall and duly won the title in the SUV category with team-mate Sunny Sidhu (PV Srinivas Murthy) coming in second followed by the lone Gypsy entry, Bangalore’s Sanjay Agarwal (Shivaprakash E).
“The performance of the XUV 500 was beyond our expectations. A lot of people had underestimated the capability of the XUV, but we showed what it was capable of. It was a learning experience and I am sure we will improve through the season.
“The MRF tyres also played an important part in our success. They gave us specially prepared tyres for this event and they worked really well,” said Gill who underlined his status as country’s top Rally driver.
Also impressive was Delhi’s Samir Thapar (Vivek Ponnusamy), the lone entrant in the Indian Rally Championship category in an all-wheel drive, turbo-charged Mitsubishi Lancer Evo X. Thapar, returning to rallying after a 12-year break, was the second fastest overall behind Gill, clocking 01:52:59.0.
Topping the Junior INRC class was Suhem MK and Jeevarathinam J in a Maruti Baleno while Asad Khan (Zayne Asrar) driving a Maruti Esteem were second with Adith KC (Robin Rajkumar), also in a Maruti Esteem, completing the podium.
Provisional final classification:
INRC Overall: Amittrajit Ghosh / Ashwin Naik (Mitsubishi Cedia) 1 (1hr, 54mins, 09.3secs); Vikram Devadasen / Shrikanth Gowda (Mitsubishi Cedia) 2 (01:54:41.5); Dr Bikku Babu / George Verghese (Mitsubishi Cedia) 3 (01:55:31.0).
INRC 2000cc (Group N): Ghosh / Naik (Mitsubishi Cedia) 1 (1:54:09.3secs); Devadasen / Gowda 2 (1:54:41.5); Dr Babu / Verghese 3 (1:55:31.0).
INRC 1600cc: Sirish Chandran / Nikhil V Pai (Volkswagen Polo) 1 (1:56:00.2); Arjun Rao / Satish Rajagopal (Volkswagen Polo) 2 (1:56:47.6); Byram Godrej / Prajwal Pai (Maruti Baleno) 3 (1:57:19.4).
JINRC: Suhem MK / Jeevarathinam J (Maruti Baleno) 1 (01:58:08.8); Asad Khan / Zayne Asrar (Maruti Esteem) 2 (1:58:54.5); Adith KC / Robin Rajkumar (Maruti Esteem) 3 (2:03:21.0).
SUV: Gaurav Gill / Musa Sherif (Mahindra Adventure, XUV 500) 1 (1:50:32.3); Sunny Sidhu / PV Srinivas Murthy (Mahindra Adventure, XUV 500) 2 (1:59:20.9); Sanjay Agarwal / Shivaprakash E (Maruti Gypsy) 3 (1:59:27.5).
Indian Rally Championship: Samir Thapar / Vivek Ponnusamy (Mitsubhishi Lancer Evo X) 1 (1:52:59.0).
ends
-
Sutil starts on P8 hoping for a dry race; Kimi penalised
Sepang, 23 March 2013: Sahara Force India showed good pace in today’s Malaysian Grand Prix qualifying with Adrian Sutil topping the time charts in Q1. However, rain played spoilsport as Sahara Force India cars had good pace in the dry.In the Q2, only Adrian Sutil could go through to Q3 and finally he qualified in ninth place. Adrian will move ahead a place following the stewards’ penalty for Kimi Raikkonen for obstructing Nico Roseberg. Raikkonen will now start on P10.Paul Di Resta was caught out by rain showers in Q2 and will start from P15. Paul had an off-the-road excursion in one lap and in the very next took a multi-spin to finish way back and failed to qualify for Q3. He will start from P15.King of Good Times, Vijay Mallya, will be arriving on Saturday and will be present with the team on Sunday. Sahara Force India, who finished 7th in the Constructors’ standings in 2012 where they consistently competed with Sauber team but lost out the sixth place. The goal for this year, is to regain the sixth place and the team started the season well with a double finish in Melbourne and with 10 points in the kitty, they will be looking for a dry race to score more points tomorrow.P9 Adrian Sutil VJM06-03Q1: 1:36.809Q2: 1:36.834Q3: 1:53.439Adrian: “It’s a shame that the rain arrived for Q3 because our pace in the dry had been very strong. I’m still not totally confident with these tyres in the wet and the car was sliding around in the corners with too much oversteer. I will hope for a dry race because we have a competitive car and I’m happy with the balance. The target is to try and push to the front tomorrow with a good strategy and come away with points or maybe more.”P15 Paul Di Resta VJM06-04Q1: 1:37.493Q2: 1:44.509Paul: “Quite a frustrating day because we got caught out by the weather. We’ve looked strong this weekend so felt quite confident heading into qualifying, but the rain arrived earlier than the team expected. Now we need to see what the weather does tomorrow, but I will certainly come back fighting. I’ve got lots of new tyres, which is more than enough to complete the race and the car has been working well here so far.”Robert Fernley, Deputy Team Principal“We ended qualifying today feeling a little bit disappointed. Throughout practice we have been very competitive in the dry and Adrian demonstrated that once again during Q1 when he set the fastest time. In Q2 we misjudged the weather with the rain coming in earlier than anticipated, which proved very costly for Paul who didn’t have time to complete his quick lap in the dry. Adrian progressed to Q3 but struggled in the wet conditions and didn’t feel comfortable on the intermediates. Had it been dry, I’m confident he would have been higher up the grid. Going into the race we will keep a close eye on the weather and be pushing hard to get both drivers home in the points.”ends -
Kimi tops with Friday times
Sepang, 22 March 2013: Kimi Räikkönen topped the times on the first day of running as the second round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship – the Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix – got underway at the Sepang International Circuit.
Kimi set a 1min 36.569secs lap in an afternoon session which was interrupted by a minor rain shower, while Romain Grosjean was sixth fastest. The team evaluated new front wings on both cars with a new exhaust and related bodywork also featuring on Kimi’s car.
Meanwhile, Sahara Force India was back in action today as Adrian Sutil and Paul Di Resta completed their free practice programmes ahead of Sunday’s Malaysian Grand Prix. Paul was P8 to Sutil’s P10 in the second FP session today.
Adrian Sutil VJM06-03FP1: 1:37.769 P6 17 lapsFP2: 1:37.788 P10 10 lapsAdrian: “The morning went OK and the balance was quite good. We made a change during the lunch hour to cure some oversteer and my general feeling with the car is good. I missed out on some running this afternoon, but I think the rain interrupted things for everybody so I didn’t miss too much dry track time. I still managed a run on the hard and the medium this afternoon so I’ve got a feel for both the tyre compounds.”Paul Di Resta VJM06-04FP1: 1:37.773 P8 15 lapsFP2: 1:37.571 P8 30 lapsPaul: “I think we’ve had a reasonable day. We’ve got some tyre data and first impressions suggest that our performance level is pretty similar to where it was in Melbourne last week. Hopefully we can continue the progress overnight. Generally I’m fairly happy but, as always, there’s some work to do tonight to make sure we’re comfortable on both the compounds going into the race.”Jakob Andreasen, Chief Race Engineer“A fairly typical day in Malaysia with dry running this morning and a light shower in the afternoon session. On the whole we got through the bulk of the programme and both Paul and Adrian seemed pretty content with the handling of their cars from the start of running. Adrian’s afternoon session was cut short as a precaution, but it did not cost him too much dry track time relative to the others. Paul clocked up 30 laps this afternoon, running both the hard and medium compounds, and is in good shape heading into tomorrow. We don’t have as much long run data as we would ideally like, but we have enough information to make some sensible predictions.”Lotus team quotes as Kimi runs on top again
Alan Permane, Lotus Trackside Operations Director sends his technical programme notes:
– We evaluated a new front wing on both cars.
– Kimi ran with a new exhaust and outlet package in both sessions.
– Pirelli’s hard (orange) compound tyre was used in the first session, the hard and medium (white) dry tyres as well as the intermediate (green) in the afternoon.
– The second session saw rain-interrupted long runs on both tyre compounds.What we learned today:
– The E21 ran reliably, giving strong performance on all tyres and in all weather conditions.
– The new front wing works well and will be retained for the rest of the weekend.
– The new exhaust package works well and will remain on Kimi’s car for the rest of the weekend.Kimi Räikkönen, E21-03
Free practice 1: P2, 1:37.003, 15 laps
Free practice 2: P1, 1:36.569, 28 lapsKimi: “It was a pretty good day. We tried changing a few things on the car and made progress with where we wanted to be at the end of the sessions. We had some running in the wet which you often get around here and the car feels fine. We ran pretty heavy today so I don’t know how we’ll be when everyone is light for qualifying, but I’m happy with where we are and expect we’ll be reasonable tomorrow.”
Romain Grosjean, E21-01
Free practice 1: P10, 1:37.915 17 laps
Free practice 2: P6, 1:37.206, 26 lapsRomain: “We’re still working on the setup of the car as it’s not quite right for me and it’s difficult to understand why exactly. The new front wing does feel better than the one before so that helps. Kimi was running an updated aero package which looks to be an improvement so we know there’s more pace to come in that area, but there are still things we can do with the current specification once I get everything working for me. It was pretty hot out there – quite a contrast to Melbourne – but I felt comfortable and I’m looking forward to making some improvements tomorrow before we head into qualifying.”
James Allison, Technical Director: “I’m happy with our day’s work. We came here this week seeking reassurance that our car would be equally as competitive in a very different set of conditions to what we saw in Australia, and the early indications are that it looks reasonably useful. The upgrades we’ve trialled today also appear to be working well. Although both drivers ran the new front wing, Romain was at somewhat of a disadvantage in not having the latest exhaust variation and related bodywork on his car, so he can take heart from a healthy position on the time sheets. The only slight interruption to proceedings was a compromise to our long run programme once the rain arrived, but this actually proved to be pretty useful in itself as we now have a better understanding of the crossover point for the intermediate tyres. Overall it’s been a very productive day.”
ends
-
Splitting strategies is to attack for points: Bob Fernley
TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Bob BELL (Mercedes), Cyril ABITEBOUL (Caterham), Robert FEARNLEY (Force India), Sam MICHAEL (McLaren), James ALLISON (Lotus), Pat FRY (Ferrari)
FIA Friday PRESS CONFERENCE
James, can we start with you? A great win for you and the team to start the year off in cold conditions in Melbourne and from what we saw this afternoon can we conclude that you’re pretty quick in the heat as well?
James ALLISON: The weekend will tell but it’s been a good day so far and the car seems quite happy here.
Is there any circuit that you fear from here?
JA: All of them! You just take them one at a time. It would be good to come away from here, if we can, competitive. So I think doing well in cold and doing well in hot would be good.
Will you able to maintain that development throughout the 2013 season against your main rivals?
JA: I think our team has got a reasonable history of keeping up with, and sometimes exceeding the general development race that happens during the season.
Can you say anything about the way Kimi Raikkonen drove in Melbourne. There seems to be a surge of confidence really. He’s gone up a level has he, since last year?
JA: He’s certainly very, very relaxed and confident this year. He drove the race incredibly patiently. I think he knew he had a good car under him. He knew he didn’t have to scamper up behind the group in front and he looked after the tyres, only going quickly when he needed to. It was just a very mature and smooth, fast race.
Bob Bell, last year the Mercedes was very good in cold conditions, perhaps less good at places like this. Have you addressed that with this car?
Bob BELL: Yes, I think we very much hope we have. We put a lot of effort in over the winter to really understand what the issues with last year’s car were. We had a pretty reasonable winter test in cold conditions. Of course Melbourne, as you said, was cold as well. We’ll see when we come away from here whether we’ve actually got on top of those issues. I think we’re pretty upbeat, pretty confident we’ve achieved that.
What differences have you noticed in the way you’re operating as a team with the arrival of Lewis Hamilton?
BB: Lewis, no question, is a new dynamic for us and that always happens with the introduction of a new driver, particularly one as competitive as Lewis is, so he’s a real motivational force in the team and indeed for his own team-mate. I think he’s lifted all of our game. He’s driving us; he’s clear about what he wants, what direction he wants to go in, and that is sympathetic to where we were going anyway, so I think it’s going very well.
What effect do you see he’s had on his team-mate Nico Rosberg?
BB: Team-mates naturally always want to outdo each other, so if you bring a new one in, if that raises his game then I think his team-mate will try and follow suit. It’s perfectly natural healthy competition.
Pat Fry from Ferrari – second place finish in Australia, ahead of Red Bull. You’re leading the Constructors’ Championship going into this race. What was the feeling, the mood like in the post-race debrief?
Pat FRY: I think people were pleased with the race pace of the car. It was quite obvious that Kimi was going to be two-stopping. I think you could see him two seconds back from the group, as James mentioned. I don’t think we could have followed suit and competed on a two-stop which is why we went for the aggressive three-stop, which got us through the traffic. All in all, it’s one those… with that and the 60km/h pit lane limit, it’s always that balance between two-stop and three-stop. We weren’t brave enough to make the two-stop work. Kimi was, so good luck to them, or well done to them. We just need to keep on working on the pace of it. It’s nice being second but you always want to win don’t you.
What are your thoughts about the pace of Lotus, the way they’ve started the season?
PF: It is very good. I don’t think we would have been brave enough to have attempted a two-stop there, so yeah, I think they’ve done well.
Can you talk a little bit about the renaissance of Felipe Massa? Obviously he was strong in the second half of last year, he out-qualified Alonso in Melbourne and raced ahead of him for two stints. What is it that’s changed in him do you think?
PF: It’s hard to say really. He’s got a good attitude. He’s driving very well. Very sensible not overdriving the car. If you look at last year the first half was a bit of a struggle, the second half was a lot better and he’s continued that form into this year, which is obviously good for us as a team in the Constructors’ [Championship].
We’ll come to Bob Fearnley from Force India. Force India obviously led the last race of 2012 in Brazil and you led twice in Melbourne last weekend en route to seventh with Adrian. What’s the outlook, do you think, for the year ahead?
Bob FEARNLEY: I think the Brazil race was on merit to a degree what we did in Melbourne obviously was tyre choice. It was very nice to be there but it was the result of strategy more than anything else. Overall, I think the performance of the car and team is quite good at the start of the season.
Q: And what was the problem for Adrian Sutil? We saw him in his shorts with half an hour to go.
BF: We had an oil seal problem. We just needed to stop it to make sure there was no damage to the engines.
Q: Can you talk a little about Sutil, his return from over a year out of a Formula One cockpit, very little testing. Were you surprised by his performance?
BF: I wasn’t surprised after his test in Barcelona. I think in Barcelona, when Adrian came in, if anybody could have put together a perfect assessment of a driver coming in for a test it was that occasion. I think Adrian did a great job and didn’t surprise me at all in Melbourne.
Q: Cyril, Caterham one of I guess three teams that were perhaps a little disappointed with performance in Melbourne – perhaps along with Williams and McLaren – what’s going on behind the scenes at Leafield that gives you confidence going forward?
Cyril ABITEBOUL: Clearly, I think that we have chosen to go for a strategy that is a little bit different from other teams, in the sense that we do not operate our new car for now. We have strategies that will make the car evolve according to different packages, the first of which will come in Bahrain. So we are running right now on hybrid car, so we are pretty much where we expected it to be. It doesn’t mean it is where we wanted it to be. Having said that, we have been analysing clearly the difference, the gap between Marussia and our car. First we want to diminish a little bit the fight between Marussia and ourselves. We are just competitors and we would like to make our way up through the grid, not backwards but up towards the front. Clearly we see most of the developments that we did over the last year, the last 12 months, we think they made two-thirds of the difference over the last 12 months and only one-third over the winter. And of that one-third only half is coming from KERS. So I think that we have a real chance to be optimistic. Some good stuff is happening in the wind tunnel. Obviously we want to make sure this is translating into reality in Bahrain.
Q: Obviously it’s a home race for your Malaysian shareholders. How’s it looking for this weekend?
CA: It’s looking pretty much similar to the last weekend in the sense that it’s going to be on the edge with Marussia. I think the utilisation of tyres and driver familiarisation, driver mistakes also can make a difference so this is what we are getting ready for. We are going to have our shareholders present, so we want to make sure we have a good show at that moment.
Q: Sam, the team and drivers were very open in Melbourne about the problems that you were suffering with the car. Can I ask you what went well that weekend?
Sam MICHAEL: I think we got close to extracting most out of the car. First of all it goes without saying that we’re not… there’s no-one in McLaren who’s satisfied with where our performance is. So we’ve spent a lot of time in the last few weeks – before Melbourne as well because we had all the signs there from winter testing – going through data and analysing exactly what we need to do to improve the car. We’re about winning races, as we proved at the end of last year. We made some quite substantial changes to the car with a view that over the course of the season they would pay us back in terms of wins. I’d say that we… all of the people inside the group at the moment are focussed on understanding the 28 and turning it into a winner as soon as possible.
Q: Presumably you’ve considered – you won the last two races of last year – you’ve considered bringing last year’s car? Have you now ruled that out as a plan?
SM: All of our focus is on the current car. That involves understanding it, doing tests, we’ve done a lot of testing today actually on the circuit, we’ve done a lot of work in the factory in the last four or five days since Melbourne, making some encouraging progress in those areas, so right now all of our efforts are concentrated on the current car.
Q: What does your experience tell you about how long it will be before you’re challenging the two gentlemen [Fry, Allison] to the right?
SM: As soon as possible – but it’s very hard to make predictions because when you’re trying to unlock two or three different areas on the car, my experience tells me it’s very unpredictable to know when that’s going to happen. What I will say is the past history of McLaren as a group to recover from situations like this is extremely strong and consistent. They’ve done it before and I don’t see any reason why the engineers won’t do it again this time – especially based on the activity that I’ve seen and we’ve all been involved in over the last couple of weeks. I think it won’t take long for us to be back up there – that’s the target.
Q: It looked like Jenson Button in particular was a bit closer to the pace when the conditions got more changeable after the rain. Are you hoping for more of those conditions over the weekend?
SM: Hopefully. That was a trend that we saw in Melbourne as well – that we were extremely competitive on intermediate conditions. Not so much on full wets, and the slicks… we know where we are. We’ll see what happens. Normally here it’s full wet or nothing. It’s one of those one zone-type tracks.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Dieter Rencken – The Citizen) To the two engineers plus anyone else if you’d like to contribute: last week we had qualifying delayed and then run on Sunday. We’ve had races red-flagged here and postponed – it’s been happening more and more recently. Is there any way the sport can put together regulations where we can minimise the number of either red flags or postponements to give the fans what they really come here to see and pay for?
PF: I think that with the conditions you sometimes get here, there’s so much rain, it would just be impossible to run so I think we can try and make the cars safer to run and I think we have but purely down to the… is there a tyre good enough for the conditions… there was a downpour in 2009, wasn’t it… you’re never going to make something that can survive that kind of situation.
Q: (Dieter Rencken – The Citizen) Sorry, I’m talking generally, not just about here, because we’ve had it in Canada and all over the place. So I’m saying should we not be looking at a committee to investigate some way of overcoming this, not necessarily just here in Malaysia?
PF: I just think that for me, personally, I just think it’s a very difficult thing to overcome. With that much water, it’s not safe to run. Whether the FIA want to get a committee together to try and understand and see if it is possible to run in that, that’s entirely up to them.
JA: I haven’t got a lot to add. You know, you’ve seen it. The spray becomes impenetrable very quickly and the cars start to aquaplane. You could do something about the aquaplaning to an extent, with a different set of tyres, but the spray would still be an issue and there would still come a point where the aquaplaning would dominate, especially at places like this so I don’t think technically there is much of a solution. We just have to wait for when there are conditions that a car can run.
BF: Not unless anybody’s got a quick connection to the man upstairs, no.
BB: No, I don’t think I can add anything to that. I think the teams are genuinely busy enough trying to design the car to meet the existing regulations. I’m sure the FIA have it within their power to investigate these things and see whether something could be done but as far as the teams are concerned, we’ve just got to get on and do the best job we can within the regulations as they currently stand.
Q: (Kate Walker – Girl Racer) Mr Fernley, over the last few races – last season, we saw it last week as well – you guys seem to have made a deliberate decision on the pit wall to split your strategies and do almost opposite things with your two drivers. Is this a lack of confidence in your strategic decisions, or is it something more deliberate?
BF: I don’t think it’s a lack of confidence. I think I would have thought that Melbourne was obvious, that you’ve got one driver that’s qualified on a supersoft and then you’d be the first of the contenders running on the medium. I didn’t think there was anything risky in that at all.
Q: (Kate Walker – Girl Racer) It just seems that with that kind of approach, it’s not just in Melbourne, we did see it in 2012 as well, that it will give one driver the opportunity to finish really well and the other less so. Not that you’re favouring one over the other, it was an even split. I was just wondering what the thinking behind that approach was?
BF: Well, I think in 2012 you’ve got a slightly different process there because obviously we were defending – not defending, actually we were attacking and trying to get our position back from Sauber, so what you’re trying to do is maximising the opportunities for optimum points and that would be the reason for the main split of the strategies. But where possible, you’re always going to go for an optimum strategy for both drivers and we would do that. I think in Melbourne that was an optimum strategy for both drivers.
Q: Speaking of two different drivers, James, what’s the situation with Romain Grosjean? He’s not been quite on Kimi’s pace in the first Grand Prix and obviously again today he seems to be a bit behind; what’s your analysis?
JA: Romain showed us over and over again last year that he is a driver with a lot of pace. That’s the one really valuable commodity that a race driver has and he’s got that. He’s not had an easy weekend either here or there, because we haven’t been able to provide two cars in exactly the same configuration on either occasions so in Melbourne on Friday he was running a step behind Kimi in terms of his aero package, and then he had the upgrade for Saturday morning but then Saturday was disturbed by the weather as we all know. Here, once again, we only have one set of kit and we’ve chosen to run that with Kimi and Romain is disadvantaged for that. It’s a feature of not having in-season testing that you try to upgrade the cars as fast as you can and generally speaking, that means that you’re always going to have one set of kit ahead of the second set and that almost inevitably means that one driver gets to try it before there is a second one available. We will always try to get two sets available but not always possible. So he’s had a difficult set of circumstances and he’s also up against a teammate who is really firing on all cylinders so those are the two things.
Q: (Alex Popov – RTR) Cyril, can you clarify the story of a possible merger with Marussia?
CA: Yeah. I think we provided a comment – both Marussia and ourselves – regarding the fact that there have been some discussions over the Christmas period but clearly I think we all know that business, we all know Formula One, we know that it’s quite a fluid and versatile environment. To be honest, I’m not that old and since I’ve been in F1 I think I’ve maybe heard ten times about mergers, including four big names, so there is nothing very big in that. We looked at that, we looked at whether it was making any sense, it didn’t make any sense, it didn’t happen. End of story.
Q: (Luigi Perna – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Pat, are you confident you can have the same pace as Lotus or even better in this race compared to Melbourne?
PF: I think our race pace should be OK here, similar to Melbourne. In terms of tyre degradation I’m not sure yet. We need to go and look at the numbers. Obviously today’s running was a little bit mixed up. When everyone was doing their long runs this afternoon, there was rain in turns six and seven, so we need to see. Hopefully we will be able to get the degradation under control as well.
Q: Is it likely to be another race where doing one less stop than your rivals is one of the keys to success, do you think?
PF: I’m not sure how close we are to a three to four changeover or a two to three changeover. We need to have a look through the data and see really. I’d like to see James try and two stop here on Sunday.
Q: James, do you fancy it?
JA: Generally speaking this track is one stop more than Melbourne, so I think that might be a bit brave.
Ends
-
Team Slideways to debut VW Polo in INRC 2013
Pune, 20 March, 2013: Pune-based rally team, Slideways Industries, is all
set to debut the Volkswagen Polo 1.6 in the Indian National Rally
Championship at the AVT Premium South India Rally in Chennai this weekend.According to a Team Slideways press release, the Polo is the first all-new car to debut in the INRC in over six years and the first hatchback in the rally championship in over a decade. And it comes with first class pedigree, the WRC-spec Polo having just won two of the last three rounds of the World Rally Championship.
Team Slideways Industries, backed by Pune-based Pinnacle Group, will enter
two Polos in the South India Rally driven by Sirish Chandran (co-driver
Nikhil Pai) in the 1600cc class and Rohan Pawar (co-driver Nitin Jacob) in
the Junior INRC class. The cars have been built to FIA Group N regulations
by Chettinad Sporting in Coimbatore under the guidance of Team Slideways
Industries’ technical director Byram Godrej. The car is powered by a
1.6-litre four-cylinder petrol engine that develops over 110 horsepower
thanks to revised ECU mapping and modified intake and exhaust and drives
the front wheels via the standard five-speed gearbox. The only change
permitted to the transmission as per regulations is the inclusion of a
limited slip front differential. The suspension retains the standard
layout and geometry but the dampers are high-spec three-way adjustable
units made by renowned European manufacturers Ohlins and Reiger.The team completed an extensive test session in Coimbatore last week to
fine tune the suspension setup and check the reliability of the car. “Over
two days we drove the Polo hard and fast and despite hitting everything we
could find the car didn’t breakdown, which is a very encouraging sign for
a car that hasn’t been rallied till now”, says Sirish Chandran. “Being
able to survive such punishment is a testimony to how well built and
incredibly tough the standard road-going Polo is.”The team also enlisted the help of seven-time national rally champion
Naren Kumar to fine tune the suspension and at the end of the test session
he declared himself happy with the performance and setup. “The suspension
is very good, nearly as good as the N+ suspension we used to run on the
Cedias”, says Naren.Safety has been given utmost priority and the roll-cage has been designed
to the highest international safety standards while also increasing the
strength of the shell. “The Polo is an inherently tough car and the
torsional rigidity of the shell is unbelievable, so much so that this is
the first rally car I’ve worked on that doesn’t even need strut braces”,
says Byram. “On the handling and reliability front the car is now sorted,
what we need to work on is the engine but we will do that after the first
rally in Chennai. Inherently the engine is very torquey and that will help
us immensely in tight stages, particularly the hairpins where the Polo is
sure to make up time over the other cars.”Under Group N regulations the gearbox ratios cannot be altered but the
Polo’s shorter ratios will prove to be an asset, making up for its heavier
body shell compared to other cars on the grid. Another big advantage the
Polo has is its compact dimensions and hatchback body shell which makes it
more nimble and chuckable.“We are hugely excited to debut the Polo in the INRC”, says Rohan Pawar,
team principal, Slideways Industries. “The car is fast, reliable and
crucially exciting to watch. You can’t expect rally fans to come out and
watch cars which have long since ceased production in India; they have
nothing to relate to. With the Polo rally enthusiasts can now look forward
to a contemporary car which looks great while being driven fast and I am
sure it will be a game changer for the INRC, especially with the factory
support of Volkswagen Motorsport.”Team Slideways Industries has received extensive support from Volkswagen
Motorsport in terms of spares, technical know-how, performance parts and
logistics support. VW Motorsport has in fact dispatched a truck-load of
spares including a spare engine and gearboxes to the South India Rally to
support not just Slideways Industries but any competitor who runs a Polo
in the INRC.The Polo runs on 195/60 R15 ZDM2 rally tyres made my MRF Tyres which have
been developed not just in India but in the Asia Pacific Rally
Championship where MRF Tyres won the title last year. The tyres are a big
contributor to the performance and handling of the car, both on tarmac and
gravel.
The team will also run two Balenos, for Byram Godrej (co-driver Prajval
Pai) and Aniruddha Rangnekar (co-driver Harrish Kumar) in the 1600 class.
“We have concentrated our resources on running two Polos and making sure
both are reliable; after all to win you have to first finish”, says
Aniruddha who was instrumental in forming the team. “By round three we
hope to have all four Polos ready and by the time we get to our home rally
in Nashik I am sure the car will have made the headlines everywhere.”Slideways Industries is also proud to welcome Maui Jim as the official eye
wear partner for the team. All the team drivers, co-drivers and technical
personnel will be seen sporting Maui Jim eyewear throughout the season and
fans following the team on its website www.SlidewaysIndustries.com, on
Facebook (www.facebook.com/SlidewaysIndustries ) and Twitter
(@SlidewaysInd) will stand to win exciting merchandise throughout the
season.IRC/INRC Calendar for 2013
Round 1: 22-24 March: MMSC Chennai (Gravel, SSS on tarmac)
Round 2: 12-14 April: Northern Motorsports, Bhuj (Gravel)
Round 3: 17-19 May: Kolkata , RRPM (Gravel)
Round 4: 07-09 June: WISA, Nashik (Tarmac)
Round 5: 25-27 October: K1000, KMSC Bangalore (Gravel)
Round 6: 29 Nov -01 Dec: MSCC, Chikmagalur (Gravel)ends