Tag: Sauber F1 team

  • Baton change at the Sauber F1 Team

    Hinwil/Yeongam, 11th October 2012: Some time ago, Peter Sauber announced that he did not wish to be on the pit wall when he turned 70. The company founder is proving true to his word: in two days’ time – on 13th October – he will turn 69 and is now stepping back from the day-to-day running of the team.
    Monisha Kaltenborn (41), CEO of Sauber Motorsport AG and responsible for business operations at Hinwil since early 2010, will additionally take over the role of Team Principal at trackside with immediate effect. Peter Sauber will continue in his capacity as President of the Board of Directors of all Sauber Group companies and remain responsible for the Group’s strategic direction. Monisha, an Indian-born law expert is settled as an Austrian citizen and is the only lady CEO in F1.

    Sauber (left) and Monisha. A file photo of Sauber F1 team.
    “We decided a long time ago that Monisha would take over from me,” explains Sauber, “but we left the timing open. Now is a good time for both of us, so this is the right moment to pass on the baton. After all, there have been a number of races I’ve been unable to attend – most recently the Japanese Grand Prix, where the team put in an excellent performance. I’m in no doubt that Monisha has all the necessary skills to be an outstanding Team Principal, and I’m equally certain she will ensure that the values underpinning the company live on. That is very important to me.”
    Monisha Kaltenborn, an Austrian of Indian origin, joined the company in 2000 to run the legal department, was appointed a Member of the Board of Management not long afterwards, and took over as CEO in January 2010. In late 2011 Peter Sauber transferred a third of the company’s shares into her name.
    “Naturally I’m very aware of the major responsibility I have for Peter Sauber’s racing team,” says Kaltenborn. “He founded the team over 40 years ago, and in the spring it will be 20 years since Sauber lined up for its debut Formula One grand prix. We are the fourth-oldest team in Formula One. To build up a project like this and keep it alive in a difficult environment is a tremendous achievement. I have set my sights high and am committed to taking the team forward as Peter Sauber would want and leading it on to success.”
    ends
  • It’s fantastic to see my home country fans happy: Kamui

    Hinwil/Suzuka, 8 October 2012: There was hardly anyone in the Formula One paddock in Suzuka who could resist smiling at the sight of an elated Kamui Kobayashi after his third place finish in front of a home crowd at the Japanese Grand Prix. A day later, the Sauber F1 Team driver talks about the first podium in his Formula One career.
    Kamui, has yesterday’s achievement sunk in yet?
    Kamui Kobayashi: “To be honest I don’t really know because I’ve been busy since the race was over. Last night there was a party with fans in Suzuka, and this morning I went straight back to Suzuka circuit because there was another event organised with more than 5,000 fans. In every respect it was a very intense weekend. I had a lot of confidence before we came to Japan, but then on Friday we were slower than expected, which was a bit worrying. Then qualifying went well, except I lost time due to a yellow flag, and the race was close until the very end.”
    What does the first podium finish mean for you personally?
    KK: “I’ve always felt that if you ever want to look back and regard yourself as a Formula One driver, you have to have been on the podium at least once. Without such a photo it’s a bit as if you had never been there. So it means a lot to me.”
    You frequently said in public before the race that you wanted to finish on the podium. That was quite a bold statement. What made you so confident?
    KK: “Firstly, I had great faith in our team; secondly, I knew we had a fast car; and thirdly, it was clear to me that Suzuka is the perfect track for it. Despite becoming a bit uncertain during Friday, I was very positive again on Saturday and after the formation lap I really had the feeling it would all go well this time. I had a couple of chances earlier in the season but missed them due to bad luck. I knew that the potential was there and this time it all went smoothly.”
    What were your thoughts and feelings when you crossed the line?
    KK: “I instantly relaxed when all the pressure came off. Without doubt it was a very important race for me in my career. And I felt: yes, now we will be having more strong races and really go for 5th place in the constructors’ championship.”
    And how was it being on the podium, facing the huge grandstand with all your fellow countrymen cheering you?
    KK: “This I cannot put into words. It was a fantastic feeling to see all the people in my home country so emotional and happy. It gave me such a lot and I will never forget that moment. I want to thank the Japanese fans for the great support they gave to the Sauber F1 Team and to myself.”
    A fan of F1 Sauber driver Kamui Kobayashi, who won a podium finish last week in Suzuka. Photo by Sauber F1 team.

    ends

  • FIA Press Conference – Japan

    Suzuka, 7 Oct 2012: Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull Racing team closed the gap as leader Fernando Alonso of Ferrari retired early and the championship was thrown wide open at the Japan GP here on Sunday. The top three drivers attended the mandatory FIA Press Conference. Felipe Massa was second followed by a well-deserved victory for home star Kamui Kobayashi of Sauber.

    PODIUM INTERVIEWS

    Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull) and Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber) celebrate on the podium in Suzuka on Sunday 7 Oct 2012. A Sauber F1 team photo.

    (Conducted by Jean Alesi)

    Sebastian, yesterday pole position, today winner but you pushed very hard until the last laps. Did you know Fernando was not racing again?

    Sebastian VETTEL: I saw the safety car at the beginning. I think first of all we had a very good start which was very important because I think right behind me there was a little bit of a crash and I saw a Ferrari was out. I wasn’t sure, halfway through the race when I was looking at the tower to see where the others are, I saw the car that was still racing was Felipe, so I was assuming Fernando was not racing any more. First of all I would like to thank everyone. The atmosphere here every weekend is unbelievable, we leave the hotel, we get so much support from all of you, the grandstands are full when we go down the main straight, nearly every single corner is full of people and it really makes our job very, very special. Thanks for all of that, domo arigato, and… unfortunately that’s all of my Japanese. I’ll try to pick up some words for next year. Thank you very, very much. Thanks to the team, thanks to Renault, all the guys have pushed so hard the last couple of months and I said on the radio, when you’re dreaming at night, you dream about being able to race a car like that. The balance was fantastic, and I was enjoying every lap. That’s why, I think we were has such a big gap to the guys behind – so I’m very, very happy.

    Felipe, we cannot say the race or the podium of your life… but almost. Two years without a podium, now you’re back. How do you feel about that?

    Felipe MASSA: I think it’s fantastic. To come here in Japan, starting tenth, which I was very happy with the car since the practice and then qualifying was not so good. I’m sure I was able to start in the top five so I was tenth. I was able to do a very good start, very clever on the first corner with the accident and everything that happened, and then the pace was very good from the car. Since the beginning of the race the pace was really good. I was behind Jenson and I was quicker than him, when he stopped to do the pitstop I was straight away half a second quicker per lap, so then I was able to push hard and overtake Jenson but also Kamui which was very quick in the front as well. So, for sure the race was much better than I expected. We did a good job, unfortunately Fernando is not here, fighting for the Championship as well, but I am very happy with my race and let’s keep pushing hard to be on the podium now, more than two years but every race now.

    Kamui, you can also speak in Japanese as well today, congratulations, the first podium of your life on your home racing track. Tell us about that.

    Kamui KOBAYASHI: English or Japanese? I think first of all, thank you very much for everyone. Everybody know this is my first podium, in Japan this is fantastic and unbelievable you know?

    PRESS CONFERENCE.

    Sebastian, that looked like a near-perfect race – a near perfect weekend in fact.

    SV: Yeah, as I just said, it’s unbelievable. Since yesterday in qualifying, nothing I think could be better. You come across these kinds of races or weekends very, very rarely. Unbelievable. We had a very good start, obviously it was important as Mark was running into trouble at Turn One and Two, I didn’t see what happened behind him. I saw I had a better start than him and Kamui was probably already past Mark before the first corner, I was focusing on my car and to get through the first couple of corners. But, yeah, obviously very quickly saw the safety car boards. Wasn’t sure what happened. When we came around the first time, surprisingly there was nothing there, so I think the marshals probably did a very good job cleaning up the track. I don’t know how many cars were involved but obviously, yeah, it was crucial to not be in that kind of pack. And after that I had a very, very good race car. It was behaving very well, so yeah, it’s very difficult to describe why. We didn’t have major upgrades for this race. I think it was just the fact of the car suiting to the track, finding the right setup on Friday and then toward Saturday it was just coming together. The balance was there and it was just working. I think we had a fantastic race and I said to the guys, when you have a dream about how your race car should be, that’s exactly what you’re wishing for, so I’m very, very happy and very proud of the team. They stayed very calm all the race. The pitstops obviously we had a big gap so we had a bit of luxury to the guys behind to drop some time – but they seemed very focused. Also, inside the car I tried not to drop too much time, because obviously with the sun coming down, the sun was quite low in the end and there’s a couple of tricky corners, especially Turn Eight, entrance of 13 where we’ve seen cars spinning over the weekend. And it’s very easy to get carried away and think about the corner after the present corner; you start to think ahead and lose the focus and do a little mistake. I tried to stay in the moment and until the end it was fantastic because I had a car where I could control the race and I could push as hard as I wanted to and take care of the tyres, so – not to make this too long – all in all it was… fantastic.

    It seems extraordinary that it’s only your third win and yet it brings you right into championship contention.

    SV: I’m very careful on this obviously, in terms of championships this race was a big step and it helped us but we see how quickly things can change. Look at the last… I don’t know how many races there were since the summer break but four or five; we had a DNF in Monza, if you look last year we had only one race where we didn’t finish, so obviously this year is entirely different for everyone. It seems that we are more on the limit, trying to find a step in the right direction, and that’s true for everyone, so it’s much closer; every weekend can be different and instead of then having a bad weekend and still finishing fourth or fifth, you might then be only tenth, because of guys like Sauber and Kamui, Sergio and other guys – the Lotus is very strong this year – so they all keep scoring consistently but obviously one of us at some point has to park and watch the race from the outside, which is not nice and something you don’t hope for. That is why I say I want to be very careful because it’s still a long way ahead and there’s a lot of things that can happen. I think it was important for us, obviously we did have some pace this weekend and important for us to make use of that.

    Felipe, obviously the start was very important for you, you picked up a lot of places there. Tell us what you saw at the start and how you picked up those places?

    FM: First of all I think my start was very good, I was able to overtake Lewis and then I get to corner one, I saw that Fernando and Kimi went a little bit outside… not outside of the track but very wide after corner one and then I pull inside both, so I was able to overtake both, and then after I saw Mark spinning around, I think a car push him, which I don’t remember very well but I think a car touch him and it push him and he’s spinning in front of me. Then I saw a space and I was able to go on the throttle and take this space and even take the KERS as it was another two cars going out of the corner a little bit slower. I was able to overtake these two cars by using the KERS and going before on the throttle. I think the start was a little bit complicated in corner one but I think we did a perfect job with all these things happening. After that, I was behind Jenson and Kamui, and Jenson was not so quick, so anyway, it was very important. It’s very difficult to overtake in this track, so as soon as they stop I prefer to stay out just to see. And then I improve half a second straight away and a little bit more in the next lap and I think they were a little bit in traffic, so I managed to pass both and then the pace was very good on the hard as well. So, very consistent, very good. Actually, the pace was very good since the whole weekend – unfortunately I couldn’t do a very good qualifying yesterday but y’know I think I was very happy with the car all weekend and very nice to be on the podium again after a little bit of time. Hopefully this is just the beginning of many podiums now in front.

    How much of a relief is it to be on the podium?

    FM: ah, it’s nice! It’s like a relief, y’know? It was great, and a great race anyway, able to push hard from the beginning to the end and show that we are here to fight for victory and for pole and not just to fight for a few points.

    Kamui, how much did you enjoy being on that podium at home?

    KK: Well, it was a fantastic race. We really working hard to get the podium, and you know my team mate has a couple of podiums already but myself, I had a couple of chance in qualifying, I mean I had good position to start, but always I never had luck. I mean we struggle at the start. But this time, maybe it’s good to start third, it’s no front row but the feeling was good because we had a long run on Friday and that was, I think pretty good pace and we had good confidence for the rest of the week. So, I think, when I gained position to second after the start, I was pretty sure to be on the podium. But then some point I think we really struggle a lot to hold Jenson. Especially the last stint was really tough because I change quite early for hard compound tyres but I think Jenson change, I think, a couple of laps later and I think that’s what’s really challenging for us. But if we want to hold Jenson we have to do it. And finally we need to manage tyres, I mean in the last couple of laps. It was within one second and really challenging for us – but I think finally we finish in the points, on the podium and that’s fantastic. Especially in front of my home grand prix, my first podium, that’s… y’know… amazing. Before the race I was joking: a couple of times I have a chance to get podium but I have bad luck and I couldn’t get it. But maybe I get this race in podium, maybe it’s something in destiny, y’know? So I’m very happy for the fans. There’s so many people supporting us. When we look there is so much crowd around the circuit and that’s amazing. Really, thanks to all the fans. I think we need to keep going for the future.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Flavio Vanetti – Corriere della Sera) Felipe, you had a great day and Fernando was unlucky but the question is, do you believe that the pace of the Ferrari is enough to match Red Bull now?

    FM: Well, let’s say not on this track. I think that on this track Sebastian has incredible pace compared to all the other cars. We saw that in qualifying and in the race it was the same. Anyway, I think it changes from track to track. Maybe this was a track where they were stronger during the whole championship. I think we need to wait and see track to track. We need to keep pushing very hard, we need to work very hard in the factory too to bring the right pieces for the car as well and try. Nothing is finished for Fernando. He did many many good races until now. What happened today was not nice for him but these things happen in the championship. It’s important that we push hard and concentrate on the next race. He’s still leading the championship and that’s important.

    Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Felipe, this was also a pretty important race for you and your future, also for you Kamui. Do think that this podium, for both of you, will help you to secure your seats at Ferrari and Sauber respectively for next season? Yesterday you said that this could be your last Suzuka. Is that true?

    FM: I think so.

    KK: Yeah, I think so too.

    FM: So, we think so.

    KK: We think so together, you know? We will have a good meeting tonight, to speak with our managers.

    Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Soon?

    FM: Yeah. I think so!

    KK: I think so.

    Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Sebastian, your first title was won by you chasing; the second was you being chased. What is your view on what might be the third one?

    SV: I don’t know. I can answer your question when I’m fortunate enough to win for the third time. Whether that’s this year or not I don’t know. Like I said, I’m very careful. I think we had a long journey so far, and it’s been a tough year. Still there are many races to go so today I don’t want to talk about the championship. I know I finished in front of everyone today, I won the race, so I know that I scored more points than anybody else today but you don’t know what happens next weekend. I think we have a very tough remainder of the season with a very new calendar for all of us, with a lot of back-to-back races. Basically next week Korea, then two races, one in India and Abu Dhabi, and then obviously America and Sao Paulo. I think there’s still a long way to go and as I said, we have to focus on every single race and try to do our best and then we will see whether it’s good enough. The target is to do our maximum in those five races, then we calculate our points. If it’s enough, I think it’s fantastic. If it’s not then it’s not the fault of these five or six races that we will do at the end.

    Q: (Nobuaki Tadaki – Tokyo Sankei Shimbun) Kamui-san, in the closing laps, Jenson was catching you and the podium was getting closer too and your many fans were cheering you. Would you please explain how you were feeling in that situation?

    KK: Well, it was a difficult moment. I think my tyre situation was quite tough. We spent more than 20 laps on them, especially in the last three laps my rear tyres were really getting bad. Of course, I needed to push, I could not slow down to save the tyres. Whatever I had, like oversteer, I had to really push. In the end, into the last lap, I was pretty sure I could hold Jenson because normally, I think, after the main straight, there is no chance to overtake on this track. Apart from that, I think getting on the podium but I was focusing on every lap because if I missed one corner, we could easily have lost my position so I think it was a good challenge for myself. And I think Jenson was pretty fast in the last stint. Finally, we survived and let’s say it was a great job from the team, because they gave us great advice while I was driving, and I was pretty sure to hold him and I was very happy. Every fan was shaking their hands at me, especially on the last lap so it was fantastic.

    Q: (Kate Walker – Girl Racer) Sebastian, since you first started in F1 you’ve been breaking record after record. Today you equalled Fangio on wins, you now have 25 percent victories from your race starts. Do you find these constant statistics – the reminders of these statistics from the press a pressure at all or do you just forget about them and get on with the racing?

    SV: No, I think they’re very special. Obviously I’m not aware of those kind of numbers but I think that’s a special thing about Formula One. We had great drivers in the past, great champions and great characters, and I think for all of us… when I said earlier the last time I was with Kamui on the podium it was probably in Formula Three and both of us had a dream for Formula One but at the same time, you know you are a young guy, you are racing in Formula Three, you know it’s only one or two steps away but then it’s so far away still. There’s only a handful of us, 24 drivers in Formula One. I think first of all you feel extremely fortunate and proud to be one of them and to race a Formula One car, stand on the grid, winning a race, driving for championships. At the time we were racing in Formula Three this was so far away. Obviously I knew these kind of guys, when you talk about records. When I was young I was following Formula One and Michael most of the time. But you never dreamed… imagined yourself being one of those guys and breaking any kind of record, even if it’s just having the best start or something silly which would already make you extremely proud. I think it’s an honour and as I said yesterday already, a circuit like this, where you really get to feel what the cars can do… unfortunately it’s impossible to explain to you how it feels, so it’s only something we share amongst ourselves and I think it’s something we should not forget at any stage, and it’s something very very special. I think it’s one of the best jobs you can have in the world in my – in our – point of view, but then to be successful it obviously starts to feed on itself and makes it very very enjoyable.

    Q: (Ted Kravitz – Sky Sport) Sebastian, how important has qualifying been for you? You look at earlier on in the European season you’ve sometimes struggled to get even close to the front row. Now you’ve really been doing the job in qualifying. How key is that in the championship run-in, and also do you feel that this is finished business after this time last year when you were made to be conservative and not win for the championship?

    SV: I think it’s very important… at the beginning of the season I think there was a little bit of a trend of saying that qualifying was not that important this year because the races were very upside down. Some of the races changed completely in the last ten laps, but I think it still shows how important it is, to be well positioned after Saturday’s qualifying for Sunday’s race. If you then take an average of 15 races or whatever we’ve had so far and you see how important qualifying is still, I think it was important for us to make a step forward on Saturday. Still, I think it’s very easy this year to not have the perfect Saturday afternoon – I experienced it last time two weeks ago in Singapore, how quickly it can change. I had a very good car, I was happy and everything seemed to work as per plan in Q1 and Q2. Then you arrive in Q3 and you don’t understand why you can’t go quicker. This morning I read an article about Felipe, or Felipe did an interview and I think he experienced the same thing yesterday. We do so many new sets of tyres, so many qualifyings and it’s then difficult to say OK, I didn’t get the grip on that run and it just didn’t come together and that’s why I was lacking the speed… because you always want an explanation, you want to find the reason why you weren’t quick enough. It seems this year that cars are obviously much closer together and the window seems much narrower this year, to make the tyres work. You especially feel that in qualifying so that’s why things can change quickly. You might get a messy qualifying even after a brilliant start and then it might compromise your whole weekend, so that’s how quickly it can change.

    Q: (Marco Dell’Innocenti – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Sebastian, at the end of the race, they said to you to be careful and in spite of it you set the fastest lap. Are you sure that nothing could happen, and secondly did you race with the double DRS today?

    SV: Well, today in the race I wasn’t really using DRS, so it didn’t really matter. Fortunately I didn’t have to use it. I think we’ve made improvements over the last couple of races. As I said earlier, qualifying was a bit our weakness and has seemed a little bit better in the last races.

    At the end, I obviously wasn’t trying to take any unnecessary risks. I was trying to control the gap to Felipe. I think last year I was sometimes in a similar situation with a gap of five or six seconds and trying to control the race too much and it got very close towards the end of the race, so I didn’t want to lift at any stage. As I mentioned earlier, I didn’t want to lose the focus and concentration and in the end, obviously I thought to myself maybe it’s not the smartest thing but as I said, I wasn’t trying to do something stupid but you don’t get to race a car like that too often in your life, where you feel in control and the car is balanced and you’re just very happy with what the car does, and how it behaves, so I was able to put some reasonably quick lap times in at the end.

    Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Felipe, was this the hardest one of the last six races for Ferrari on paper and what do you really have to do, where do have to concentrate the most to try to come back?

    FM: Are you talking hard for Ferrari or hard for me? Well, I would say our car was competitive here, not compared with the Red Bulls, but I think we had very good pace in the race. We had very good pace in practice as well. When I did a long run on Friday I was one of the quickest guys on the track, so I think the car was good here. I’m sure Fernando would have done a good job today. But anyway, we need to improve, we need to bring more new pieces, we need to push in that direction, to improve the car. Just going back to the qualifying, I didn’t have a good qualifying. Actually, I had a very good qualifying until the second set in Q2. Before that, I was always in the top five, top seven and I couldn’t use the tyres. As Sebastian said, sometimes you have that opportunity and you cannot use it, and I didn’t have any grip on the front tyres, and I think that was the biggest problem for my qualifying. I’m sure that starting in the top five would have been as the race was today, because I was fourth after corner three. Starting at the front is very important. The race is easier, you can control your tyres better and use the pace in a better direction. For sure, qualifying is very important.

    Q: (Tetsuya Otani – Car Graphic) Kamui, at the restart after the safety car, you had a pretty big gap in front of you, between Sebastian and you. What was the situation for you?

    KK: Actually I was stuck in gear. It was holding in first gear, it was already on the rev limiter and I couldn’t shift up to second and I need to brake, so I was really surprised. Anyway, I couldn’t fight with Sebastian. I didn’t mind, I couldn’t hold my position. He started pretty early, before, quite far away to the safety car line, so I had enough to recover. But it was a bit of a surprise.

    Ends

  • I rate Lewis as one of the best, I have to do a lot to fill his shoes: Perez

    Suzuka, 4 Oct 2012: New McLaren signing Sergio Pérez has admitted he has a lot to do if he is to match the achievements of Mercedes-bound Lewis Hamilton at the Woking-based team.

    New McLaren signing Sergio Pérez has admitted he has a lot to do if he is to match the achievements of Mercedes-bound Lewis Hamilton at the Woking-based team.

    The Mexican racer will mov

    Sergio Perez of Sauber (right) along with Lewis Hamilton at the FIA Thursday Press Meeting. Perez will be replacing Hamilton at McLaren next year. Sauber photo.

    e from Sauber to McLaren in place of the 2008 champion for 2013 and speaking in today’s official FIA press conference ahead of the Japanese Grand Prix, Pérez confessed he has “big shoes to fill”.

    “I rate Lewis as one of the fastest drivers on the grid, so it won’t be easy at all,” he said. “I know I have very big shoes to fill, so it will be difficult, but I will give everything I can. I will work as hard as possible to give the best result and to win championships with this great team.”

    And he added that he is already feeling the pressure of the move to a winning team.

    “I think with McLaren there is no other option (than to win),” he admitted. “You have to win every race. You have a car with which you can win every race. It’s a guarantee: McLaren is always a guarantee. So I have to work very hard. I have to give everything to my team and I’m ready to do that, once I have finished this season.”

    New team-mate Jenson Button, however, said Pérez had nothing to fear in joining McLaren and that the Mexican’s performances for his current outfit, for whom he has scored three podium finishes this year, have proved his worth.

    “He’s let his driving do the talking and he’s had some very good performances over the last couple of years,” said Button. “That’s the reason he’s got the drive he has at the moment and why he’s got the drive he has for next year.”

    Asked for his opinion about becoming Button’s team-mate, the new McLaren recruit said he was looking forward to the challenge but that he still had work to do for Sauber.

    “It will be great to have a very good champion (as a team-mate)” he said. “It will be a pleasure to work with him, to reach the same target for the team, which is winning and making the best car possible. So I’m looking forward to working together with the whole team.

    “I’m so motivated and enthusiastic to start working with my new team, but first I want to finish the next six races on a high for my (current) team and give everything I can for the team that gave me the opportunity to become a Formula One driver.”

    ends

  • Adrian Fernandez on Sergio

    Adrian Fernandez, a celebrated Mexican racing driver talks about Sergio Perez,  after McLaren announced hiring him for the 2013 season.

    File photo of Sergio taking out C31 on its first outing at Jerez in Feb, 2012. Photo by Sauber F1 team.

    THIS ARTICLE WAS PUBLISHES IN http://www.fernandezracing.com/ AND WAS REPRODUCED HERE BY KIND PERMISSION.

     

    Hello Everyone,

    With today’s announcement that Sergio will join the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes team in 2013 and the news that I am his manager, I can now officially say that I begin a new and exciting chapter in my career.

    The past few weeks have been hectic, but I am extremely proud of this accomplishment for Sergio, for his career and for our country. This is something that began a long, long time ago with Carlos Slim and Telmex – who supported Sergio’s career for many years – and the dream was realized when he joined the Formula One ranks. I am very thankful to Carlos and Sergio for letting me be a small part of the team then, and now to be actually taking over Sergio’s management. I wouldn’t have been able to do this without the help and support of Carlos and Telmex.

    It has been very enjoyable to work with McLaren, and I have to take my hat off to Martin Whitmarsh, team principal, and everyone that we worked with to make this deal possible. It took a lot of work and I was very impressed with the level of professionalism from Martin and his team and I have to thank all of them.

    Sergio is an unbelievable driver and he has earned his place at McLaren. He is not bringing money to the team. He has been hired to race. His performances earned him this position and that made my job easier because people were interested in him.

    We obviously owe a huge amount of thanks to Peter Sauber and his team, who gave Sergio the opportunity to compete in Formula One and show what he can do. I know that Sergio will be putting forth all his effort to finish on the highest note he can for them this year.

    For me, it is hard to describe how happy I am. As many of you know, I have been a part of Sergio’s life since he was a kid and his father worked for me for many years. He calls me “uncle” and, even though we are not related by blood, it just shows how tight our relationship is. So, to see this all the way through to today’s announcement, to know how bright his future is and to be a part of it puts me in a rare occasion – at a loss for words.

    I have been a successful driver and a successful team owner and now, with this, I hope I can be a successful manager and do a fantastic job for Sergio so he can really dedicate himself to racing and I can take care of the other areas which, to be honest, are the areas that I have been doing all of my life. I think it’s a good combination, and I definitely think we have a potential World Champion in our hands.

    As I have said, Mexico’s future in Formula 1 is shining brightly.

    Thank you for your support,

    Adrián

    NB: You can find the original article by Adrian here:

    http://www.fernandezracing.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=146%3Asilverstone&catid=48%3Aupnext-category&Itemid=105&lang=en

  • Interroll Group to paratner Sauber F1 Team

    Hinwil, 1 October 2012: Interroll becomes Promotional Partner of the Sauber F1 Team. With their Swiss headquarters and global operations, both companies strive for excellence as leading players in a highly competitive landscape.
    The Interroll Group is one of the world’s leading specialists within the field of internal logistics.The exchange-listed company employs around 1,500 people at 29 enterprises around the globe. Among the company’s 23,000 customers worldwide are plant manufacturers, system integrators and equipment manufacturers. Interroll’s products are in daily use by international companies and brands everyone knows, like Amazon, Bosch, Coca-Cola, DHL, Procter & Gamble, Red Bull, Siemens, Walmart and Yamaha (Motorcycles), according to a Sauber F1 team Press Release.
    “Until recently I had not heard of Interroll, but I now understand that I have been in touch with Interroll products almost every week”, says Monisha Kaltenborn, CEO Sauber Motorsport AG. “When we travel to the races we have to pass check-in desks and security checks equipped with Interroll conveyor products at airports all over the world very frequently. It’s obvious that Interroll is a very professional organisation with a great focus on quality. We clearly share a common culture.”
    “Formula 1, and the Sauber F1 Team in particular, represent the highest level of commitment to professionalism, perfection and quality,” said Paul Zumbühl, CEO of the Interroll worldwide group. „Sauber F1 Team is one of the most traditional and successful private teams in the Formula One arena. Our partnership is a perfect match regarding the ambition and corporate culture we share. At Interroll we call it the Climate of Excellence which strives for top quality, reliability and speed. Speed is of the essence, because the fast will eat the slow, not the big the small.”
    The partnership with Sauber F1 Team offers Interroll a platform to present its offering in an exciting context where logistics is one of the most critical factors. Interroll sees tremendous opportunities in making this connection, using the strong, dynamic parallels between the Sauber F1 Team and Interroll’s global internal logistics business to highlight the company’s cutting-edge profile in the years to come.
    Two time-lapse videos on Youtube show the logistical challenges in Formula One:
    Loading of trucks for European races: http://youtu.be/IwktteJxTcA
    Preparation of race cars for overseas transports: http://youtu.be/wE-L2v_JvK8
  • Sauber F1 Team’s Oerlikon solar park goes on stream

    Hinwil, 17 September 2012:

    Solar Car Port of Sauber. Sauber F1 team photo 19Sep2012

    The solar park constructed for the Sauber F1 Team in Hinwil by premium partner Oerlikon is now on stream after being officially opened today (Monday). It is one of the largest solar car ports in Switzerland. The construction, consisting of 1,573 technically advanced and aesthetically appealing thin-film silicon photovoltaic modules, stretches over an area measuring 2,249 square metres. A roof of one of the factory buildings has been fitted with solar modules and large sections of the company’s car park are now covered, which brings a number of benefits.

    It took just six weeks to construct the solar park thanks to the innovative and cost-efficient way the modules are fitted. The installation delivers 155,600 kilowatt hours of power per year – equivalent to the electricity needs of 44 households – and generates peak power of 173 kWp*. The energy payback time for the thin-film silicon solar modules is less than a year.
    “We are extremely proud of this sustainable extension to our company headquarters,” says CEO Monisha Kaltenborn. “For us, local power generation via a photovoltaic installation not only represents another contribution to fulfilling our environmental responsibilities, it also makes financial sense. The installation is cost-efficient and also allows a large number of vehicles to be parked under cover. On top of that, it fits in well visually with our factory as a whole, which is already highlighted by the modernistic glass architecture of the wind tunnel building’s façade.”
    The impact of the installation in terms of sustainability is clear – and neither can it be ignored by anyone passing by the Hinwil factory on Zürichstrasse. A display panel shows information on the system’s current output and the energy produced both on that particular day and in total so far.
    “We’re delighted to be able to support the Sauber F1 Team with these concrete steps as part of its commitment to protecting the environment,” says Oerlikon CEO Michael Buscher. “This solar park fully showcases the specific advantages of our solar technology, such as low costs, high operational effectiveness even in cloudy conditions, and a short energy payback time.”
    The solar park represents Sauber Motorsport’s third major step of 2012 in terms of environmental protection. On 3rd April the Sauber Group’s environment management system was awarded ISO 14001 certification and since 3rd May this year the Sauber F1 Team has been greenhouse gas neutral; the team supports a wind park project in India  which saves more in greenhouse gas emissions than the Formula One team generates (overcompensation: 30 percent).

     

  • We’re getting stronger, says Indian-born Sauber chief

    Hinwil, 12 Sept 2012: Three podium places and a front-row grid position are the highlights for the Sauber F1 Team after 13 out of 20 races in the FIA Formula One World Championship 2012. Last weekend’s Italian Grand Prix saw the team reach the 100-point mark – that’s already 56 more than their total for the whole of the 2011 season. Here, CEO Monisha Kaltenborn reflects on the points accumulated so far – and the ones that got away.
    Monisha Kaltenborn, the last eight days have been something of a rollercoaster ride. How did you experience the lows of Spa and the highs of Monza?
    Monisha Kaltenborn: “I’d rather not dwell too much on the disappointment of Spa. We had an outstanding qualifying and started from second and fourth on the grid. But we came away without a single point, and that was out of our hands. It was a race best forgotten in a hurry. However, the 20 points we collected at Monza were hard won and thoroughly deserved, and we’re very proud of our result there.”
    Did you really think Sergio Pérez could convert 12th place on the grid into second at the finish?
    Kaltenborn: “We know we can be very strong on race day. In Malaysia, for example, Sergio started way down in 15th place but still managed to finish second – albeit in some extraordinary weather conditions. And in Germany Kamui Kobayashi started from 12th on the grid but managed to finish fourth. However, no one could have expected that things would turn out so well at Monza.”
    The team finished last season on 44 World Championship points. After 13 grands prix in 2012 you already have 100. How would you explain this improvement?
    Kaltenborn: “Our technical people and engineers have succeeded in building a fine car in the Sauber C31-Ferrari. The weak points of last year’s car have been almost completely eradicated, while the ongoing development of the C31 is taking place at a very high level and extremely efficiently. Added to which, stability has returned to the team after a very difficult phase for the company in which we had to deal with the withdrawal of BMW in 2009. Re-establishing this stability has been very important. Another factor that should not be understated is that our two young drivers now both have another year of experience under their belts.”
    Can the privately-run Sauber F1 Team keep pace with the larger teams’ speed of development?
    Kaltenborn: “We are working extremely efficiently. The extensive package of upgrades we introduced for the races at Barcelona and Silverstone were successful. Our progress at the race track has met our expectations and calculations in full, which is a major feather in the cap of our engineers. And there’s still more to come from the C31. We’ll be bringing another series of upgrades to the upcoming races in Asia, at the same time as pushing ahead with the development of next year’s car, of course. So it’s not only a question of the pace of development, but more particularly efficiency. Here, the issue of costs clearly plays a critical role. The greater the resources at your disposal, the more intensively you can develop the car, and that is reflected directly in performance.”
    How would you assess the budget-related developments in Formula One?
    Kaltenborn: “There is an urgent need for action on this issue. For the majority of the teams in Formula One the financial challenges are huge. The Sauber F1 Team is very much in favour of introducing measures to push down costs further still. First and foremost, we hope that the Resource Restriction Agreement will be implemented and monitored effectively from 2013 onwards. It is also important that engine costs from 2014 are kept at a sensible level for the privately-run teams. A constructive move here would be to draw up a roadmap setting out the direction of technical development over a period of several years. That would make planning easier and reduce costs substantially.”
    What are you goals for the remaining seven races of 2012?
    Kaltenborn: “After our strong start to the season, many people were predicting that the wheels would come off for us, so to speak, as the season progressed. The reality, though, is we’re getting stronger all the time, and I’m anticipating that we’ll continue to deliver good performances through the final third of the season. Before the season got under way we said we wanted to significantly improve our position in the World Championship. Taking our seventh place in the constructors’ standings in 2011 as a starting point, that would mean finishing fifth this year. That’s an ambitious target, but you have to set your sights high. And I have every confidence in our team.”
    Monisha Kaltenborn with Bernie Ecclestone. File photo by Sauber F1 team.

    ends

  • Facile Monza win for Hamilton

    Monza, 9 Sept 2012: Lewis Hamilton cruised to a comfortable Italian Grand Prix victory at Monza on Sunday without any hiccups as he raced from lights to flag at the front and is quietly crawling up to catch the leader Fernando Alonso, who finished third behind Sergio Perez of Sauber, who staged another spectacular raid on the podium positions.  Fernando Alonso maintained his title charge and is still in the championship lead with 179 points. Hamilton is second in the drivers’ championship with 142 points, a point ahead of Kimi Raikkonen, who is a point ahead of reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel on 140.

    Pole winner Hamilton dominated from the start, holding off a strong first-corner challenge from the fast-starting Felipe Massa to maintain his lead. That was about as close to discomfort as the McLaren driver came over the next 53 laps. While behind him Massa and Jenson Button tussled for second, Hamilton simply stretched his legs and over the bulk of his two stints and effortlessly carved out a 13-second lead that remained largely unchallenged until the chequered flag.

    “It was pretty trouble-free,” Hamilton said afterwards of his third win of the season. “I don’t think I had any problems throughout the race and the guys did a great job through the pitstop. Also, I got a good start for once, so very, very happy with that.”

    However, Hamilton lamented the fact that team-mate Jenson Button failed to join him on the podium. The winner of last weekend’s Belgian Grand Prix was forced to retire after 32 laps, his car suffering a fuel system problem while in second place.

    “It’s very unfortunate for Jenson,” Hamilton said. “We were running 1-2 at the time and it would have been fantastic for the team to have won here and have first and second. I don’t really know what went on with his car but it was very unfortunate.”

    While Hamilton’s strolled to his 20th career win, the real race developed behind him, with Fernando Alonso carving his way through he field in a bit to make up for a qualifying session in which mechanical problems left him tenth on the grid. On his first lap of the race he climbed to seventh and by two-thirds distance the championship leader had hustled his way up to third.

    Part of that progress involved a nail-biting battle with Sebastian Vettel. However, the Red Bull Racing driver defended too hard under pressure from the Ferrari driver and the stewards handed Vettel a drive through penalty for “forcing another driver off the track”.

    Vettel’s penalty freed Alonso to make his move on the podium positions and after being ushered through to second by team-mate Massa, it looked almost certain that he would take 18 points and further bolster his championship lead.

    Sergio Perez, however, had other ideas. The Sauber driver had a difficult qualifying, starting 13th and as such his team opted to start the Mexican on the hard Pirelli tyre, taking their now traditional gamble on their driver’s ability to keep tyres alive and maintain good lap times over a long stint.

    Perez didn’t disappoint. He kept his first set of tyres going until lap 30 of 53 and then moved onto the medium compound. He rejoined in seventh and running as much as three seconds faster than the drivers around him on older hard tyres, he began carving his way through the pack.

    Eventually he came up behind third-placed Massa. It was no contest. Perez brushed the Brazilian aside and then a few laps later pulled the same move on Alonso, scything past the Ferrari to claim another spectacular, if unlikely podium.

    He set off in pursuit of Hamilton, with the McLaren crew warning their driver that the Sauber man was setting lightning-quick times. Perez closed to within 4.5 seconds of the McLaren driver but the Briton always had something in reserve and crossed the line in comfort to record his 20th career win and his first Italian GP win.

    Perez, though, was delighted with his efforts, especially as he admitted that keeping the hard tyres alive in his first stint had been difficult.

    “It was really enjoyable. One of those races where you have the pace and you are the one attacking,” he said. “[However,] during my first stint, to go that long and to be able to keep the pace was not easy at all. I did quite a lot of laps on those tyres. Then in the second stint we managed to go maximum attack and I was able to have good fighting with some drivers. It was just a great race.”

    Alonso, meanwhile, branded his race “absolutely perfect” despite losing second place to Perez in the closing stages.

    “An absolutely perfect Sunday for us,” he said. “Obviously the win was out of reach after the problem yesterday, starting tenth is not easy to think about victory, so if you cannot win, podium is next target. In all the simulations and all the predictions we had, it was never a podium finish, so basically it’s much better than expected. Jenson was out of the race and the two Red Bulls… so perfect Sunday maybe.”

    It was a far from perfect afternoon for Red Bull. After taking his drive-through penalty, Vettel rejoined behind team-mate Mark Webber. The pair soon swapped places and looked on course for a pride-salvaging finish of sixth and seventh place.

    It wasn’t to be. Six laps from the flag Vettel pulled with an alternator problem similar to the one that had caused him stop late in Saturday morning’s final free practice session and four laps later Webber too exited the race. The Australian spun out while pushing on heavily worn tyres and limped back to the garage to retire.

    With seven race left Alonso now has 179 points, 37 points clear of Hamilton, who is now second in 142 points. Kimi Raikkonen, fifth today, has stealthily moved up to third with 141 points. Vettle ins now fourth with 140 points and Webber is fifth with 132.

    Red Bull Racing keep hold of top slot in the Constructors’ Championship however, though with an obviously smaller margin. McLaren move to within 29 points of the Milton Keynes team’s total of 272 points. Ferrari are third with 226 points and Lotus are fourth with 217 points.

    ends

    Hamilton celebrates after winning at Monza on Sunday 9 Sept 2012. Vodafone McLaren Mercedes Photo
  • Sauber’s Kobayashi quickest in FP1

    Spa Francorchamps, 31 Aug 2012: Kobayashi’s time of 2m11.389s, was half a second quicker than that of Williams’ Pastor Maldonado with Daniel Riccardo and Jean-Eric Vergne behind them for Toro Rosso. Mark Webber was fifth for Red Bull Racing, Sergio Pérez sixth in the second Sauber. Nico Rosberg was seventh for Mercedes, ahead of Williams reserve driver Valtteri Bottas and the top ten was completed by Sebastian Vettel ninth for Red Bull Racing and Michael Schumacher tenth in the second Mercedes.

    Despite forecasts for a dry weekend, heavy rain swept across the circuit ten minutes before the session began. Rain continued to fall at regular intervals, preventing anyone considering a move to slick tyres.

    In the first half of the session, after installation laps had been completely, Kobayashi was the only driver prepared to go out on a long run.  His early benchmark time of 2m17.705s led the way for much of the session. Only in the latter 45 minutes did other cars come out to challenge that. Both Toro Rosso drivers briefly held the lead, as did the Williams of Maldonado, before Kobayashi reasserted himself.

    Not only was the Japanese driver quickest, but as the session drew to a close he had, with 20 laps, also completed the highest mileage, albeit closely followed by most of the field. The only cars not to get into double figures were the McLarens, Ferraris and Lotuses. While no-one visited the barriers, Felipe Massa pulled off the circuit at the end of the session with smoke pouring from the rear of his Ferrari.

    ends

    Sauber's Kobayashi fastest in FP1 on Friday at Belgian GP. 31August2012. Sauber photo.