Vettel will not run with the title this year

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added 22 days ago)

Victory in Malaysia and Bahrain has seen the triple world champion move ten points clear of Kimi Raikkonen but despite his two wins, the German has struggled in qualifying and Hamilton believes he will not run away with the championship.

Vettel will not run with the title this year

“Seb always seems to win in Bahrain, so that was no real surprise for us. I don’t think it will be the same for Seb in all the races plus Red Bull have seemed to struggle in some qualifying sessions,” Hamilton is quoted as saying in the Sun.

Having finished on the podium in Malaysia and China, Hamilton was looking for a third straight top-three finish in Bahrain but a grid penalty meant he had to settle for fifth. It was not a bad result for the Mercedes driver and he is hopeful that the Bahrain Grand Prix will prove to be one of the worst performances for the team.

“The Bahrain Grand Prix could turn out to be one of the worst grands prix for us because we had a lot of problems with the car,” he said. “We were on the back foot all weekend, so to come away with a fifth place when I started in ninth, was really pleasing. “I turned a negative into a positive and now had two thirds and two fifths. When I was joining a new team, I thought it would be a lot worse than that.”

Source: theformula1

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Formula 1 Chinese GP 2013 Preview: Ferrari Admit Need for Qualifying Pace

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added a month ago!)

The 2013 Formula 1 world championship continues this weekend, with drivers and teams readying themselves for the Chinese Grand Prix. The 5.451km long Shanghai International Circuit will play host to 2012 race winner Nico Rosberg of Mercedes and defending world champions Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull Racing, as the German looks to put the controversy of the Malaysian Grand Prix win behind him.

Formula 1 Chinese GP 2013 Preview: Ferrari Admit Need for Qualifying Pace

A good deal of the attention, though, will be on the scarlet cars of Ferrari. The marquee Italian team have not had the best of starts to this new campaign, a fact that will worry drivers Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa. Alonso, a double world champion with Renault before his move to Ferrari, made the absolute best of an underperforming car to drag the championship fight to, literally, the dying laps of the final race of the 2012 season.

A much sharper start to the season was needed to ensure a sharper challenge on Vettel and Red Bull's crowns. And judging by the performance from the first two races - at Australia and Malaysia - Ferrari may have reason to cheer.

The scarlet cars qualified in the top five for both races and were it not for an unfortunate opening lap accident for Alonso at Sepang, it is entirely possible they would have recorded top five finishes as well; Alonso was second in Australia.

However, the fact even their fastest qualifying time (Massa 1:50.587 was 0.913s slower than Vettel's pole in Australia) is still nearly a second off the Red Bull means a lot of work still needs to be done, particularly on Saturdays. The good news, though, is race pace appears quite competitive. In Australia, for example, the fastest Ferrari was Alonso's, with a time of 1:29.560, 0.320s off race winner Kimi Raikonnen of Lotus. And in Malaysia, Massa was faster of the two with only Vettel ahead of him.

"We've shown reasonable race pace and on all the tyre types we have used so far we have performed well, however we still have a way to go to be quickest in qualifying," Pat Fry, the team's technical director admitted.

"We've been concentrating on the longer runs, even if they are not as long as in the past, because this year we expect more pit stops during a race," Fry explained, adding that he expected the pace of R&D to be at least as fast as 2012.

Of course, whether that will be enough is something only time will tell. The 2012 championship car was significantly weaker than both the Red Bull and the McLaren in sunny or hot weather conditions: Alonso's charge to the title was built around a set of impressive results in mid-season, when a number of races were run in cool or rainy conditions.

Fry on China
Meanwhile, Fry also spoke on the weekend's Chinese Grand Prix. However, he was careful in his choice of words, refusing to position the team as favourites, explaining: "Shanghai is a challenging mix of different corner types and a 1.2 kilometre straight. Is it going to suit our car better than some others? It is too early to say, as there are too many unknowns."

The 2013 Formula 1 Chinese Grand Prix starts with two practice sessions on Friday, followed by a third on Saturday morning. Qualifying for the race takes place on Saturday afternoon and the race itself will be on Sunday.

Source: ibtimes

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Stage set for enticingly close Formula 1 season after final test

Posted in : Formula One Gossips, Formula One Races

(added few months ago!)

The eye-catching pace of Mercedes team-mates Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg on the final two days of winter testing has added an extra degree of intrigue and excitement to a Formula 1 season that already promised a great deal.

Stage set for enticingly close Formula 1 season after final test

On Saturday, Hamilton took the Mercedes around Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya in one minute 20.558 seconds - three-quarters of a second faster than any other car managed on that day. Rosberg then lopped 0.428secs off Hamilton's time on Sunday.

The German was only 0.364secs quicker than Ferrari's Fernando Alonso - who also beat Hamilton's time - but Rosberg's pace underlined one aspect of pre-season testing that has become glaringly obvious the longer it has gone on. Mercedes have made startling progress from the end of last season, when they were struggling even to score points.

"You can clearly see Mercedes are fast," says McLaren sporting director Sam Michael. "They have been fast all the time."Hamilton's time made such an impact that BBC F1 technical analyst Gary Anderson was moved to say he thought Hamilton and Mercedes could win the world championship this year.

For many, it was a bold claim. But what was particularly interesting was that Hamilton, who has spent all winter saying how the team's target was merely to get into the top 10 in the first qualifying session of the season on 16 March in Melbourne, did not completely rule it out.

"It's not 'no chance' and it's not definitely 'we will'," he said. "I think we definitely will be able to win a race at some point in the season. I hope we can at least. But when that will be, who knows?"

Hamilton's pace - and his 0.708secs margin over the rest of the field on the day - underlined the age-old problem with pre-season testing. Namely, what do the times mean?

After all, if you look down the list of fastest times from the two Barcelona tests in this feature, it clearly is not an accurate reflection of what the grid will be in Melbourne on the 16th.

Assuming normal, dry conditions and no unusual circumstances, it seems unlikely in the extreme that, for example, world champion Sebastian Vettel will be 12th in the Red Bull. Or that Force India's Adrian Sutil, back in F1 after a year away, is going to qualify seventh, ahead of a McLaren, both Lotuses and two Red Bulls.

So what is the true pace of all the cars in relation to each other?
It has been standard practice for years now for drivers and teams to say that winter testing is hard to read, and that they will not know for sure where they stand until qualifying in Australia. In reality, though, usually they have a pretty good idea. But this year is different. Even senior team people seem genuinely unsure. The one thing that is clear, though, is that it is close at the front of the field - very close indeed.

How close? "There are nine teams within one second," says Michael, with the caveat that it is a "broad-brush estimation given the caveat of fuel loads, variability in track conditions and so on".
Another senior engineer said he found it impossible to split Mercedes, Lotus, Ferrari and Red Bull but that McLaren were a little way off in terms of ultimate speed and really not looking very good at all in terms of long-run pace.

Michael counters by admitting that McLaren's long runs have occasionally been slow, "but it depends which ones you look at; some are good and some aren't". He adds: "We'll definitely be in the mix. In terms of confidence of whether we can be on the front row and win in Melbourne, I just don't know. I wouldn't say I was confident or unconfident. I'm neither way, just because I'm being honest. We just don't know."

The reason it's hard to split the teams is simple - the margins between the front-runners seem even tighter than last year, as most have predicted given only minor changes to the regulations.
The reason the list of fastest times does not bear a direct correlation with the competitive order is that teams set their fastest times on varying fuel loads - and when 10kg of fuel equates to 0.38 seconds in lap time, that makes a big difference.

The teams have a pretty good idea of the sorts of fuel loads their rivals run in testing, built up over years of experience, and they can use that to extrapolate ultimate pace, but only to a point - even where the teams are concerned, there is necessarily a bit of guesswork involved. They cannot be absolutely sure of the fuel load a driver is using at a given time, even if they have a good idea.

One engineer refers to this as "the 10kg noise" - in other words there is a 0.3-0.4secs margin of error in any of these predictions. That, in F1, is a lifetime. And that is the problem with making any kind of prediction right now beyond the fact that it looks very tight at the front. Let's take Red Bull as an example.
The car has rarely done outstanding lap times in testing and, from the numbers alone, there has been precious little evidence of it being a stand-out car.

But Red Bull are known to play their cards close to their chest in testing, careful never to reveal their true performance. Team boss Christian Horner calls this "concentrating on ourselves"; others call it "sandbagging" - deliberately disguising their true pace. Vettel's fastest time this winter was a 1:22.194. But that was set at the second test, and tyre supplier Pirelli reckons the track was around 0.5secs a lap faster at the third.

Take off that 0.5secs and that gives Vettel a 1:21.694. Now assume he is running 60kg of fuel and that makes the Red Bull capable of a 19.414. But if he had 70kg, then it becomes a 19.034, which is that little bit faster than anyone else if you apply the same calculation based on the fuel loads the various teams are believed to run in testing.

Meanwhile, out on the track, the Red Bull, to use Gary Anderson's words, "looks totally planted, as if it just has more downforce than everything else". The McLaren, by contrast, has understeer. And the Ferrari lacks rear-end grip on corner exit.

And then there were Webber's late runs on Thursday. On a drying track, in tricky conditions in which downforce would be a huge help, Webber was repeatedly lapping at speeds way out of reach of anyone else. He ended the day 1.655secs clear of the field - by far the biggest margin of any driver on any day during the winter.

Other teams warned not to read too much into Webber's times. He ran three sets of new tyres in a row, they said, and the track was in very poor condition having just dried out after a day of rain. And of course, there are all the usual caveats - it's only testing, we don't know what fuel loads he was on, and, for his final lap time, he was on new 'soft' tyres and no-one else was.

But the caveats work the other way around, too. If we don't know what fuel the Red Bull was running when it was miles faster than anything else, it's also true that we don't know what fuel it was running when it looked ordinary.

So did Webber's pace in an apparently innocuous test session on Thursday inadvertently let the cat out of the (sand) bag, so to speak, revealing that Red Bull are sitting on a significant advantage?
I asked Webber that very question. "We'll find out on the 16th, buddy," he replied.

Source: bbc

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Formula 1 an auction, says driver Jaime Alguersuari

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

Jaime Alguersuari believes Formula 1 is "an auction" after failing to secure a seat for the forthcoming season. The 22-year-old Spaniard was released by Toro Rosso at the end of the 2011 campaign and spent last season as Pirelli's tyre tester while working as a summariser for BBC Radio 5 live. He claims he was assured of a seat.

Formula 1 an auction, says driver Jaime Alguersuari

"Those who committed themselves with me have given reasons I must accept but I do not share. F1 has become an auction," Alguersuari said. "I assure everyone I have been convinced for most of the 2012 F1 season that my seat was secured in a team that usually scores. "They did tell me and I believed it to be true. Due to this conviction I passed up other opportunities in other championships."

BBC's chief F1 writer Andrew Benson says that "pay drivers" - those who bring sponsorship with them to secure a seat and which the Spaniard was referring to - "have been a fact of life for as long as the sport has existed".

Alguersuari was the 2008 British Formula Three champion before moving up to F1. He joined Toro Rosso in 2009 and, at the age of 19 years and 125 days, became the youngest driver in history to start a Grand Prix when he took his place on the grid in Hungary. The Barcelona-born driver is adamant he still has a future in the sport. "I know how old I am, I know my track record and I'm convinced I deserve a winning car in F1," he continued. "Is my career over in F1 at 22 years old? Despite everything, I strongly don't think so. "So I will continue to be active in Formula 1 [with Pirelli], and complete more kilometres than any third driver in this discipline."

Source: bbc

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Adrian Sutil could return to F1 with Force India this season

Posted in : Formula One Drivers, Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

The 30-year-old, who drove for the team in its various guises from 2007-11, is a contender for the vacant seat in 2013 alongside Scot Paul di Resta. Frenchman Jules Bianchi is believed to be the other candidate. Sutil was found guilty of grievous bodily harm in February 2012 and did not race in F1 last year. Force India said at the time that the decision not to retain him was unrelated to his conviction for the incident at a Shanghai nightclub following the Chinese Grand Prix in April 2011.

Adrian Sutil could return to F1 with Force India this season

Sutil was given an 18-month suspended sentence and fined 200,000 Euros (then £167,224) in February 2012 after being found guilty of assaulting Eric Lux, an executive with the then-Renault team, now called Lotus.

A Force India spokesman said: "Adrian Sutil had a seat fitting with the team this week. "At this stage the test driving schedule for the Barcelona test is not finalised but there is a possibility Adrian could be involved. "The driving schedule will be communicated on Monday next week."The second pre-season test runs at Barcelona's Circuit de Catalunya from Tuesday to Friday next week, 19-22 February. At last week's first pre-season test in Jerez, Force India had Di Resta, reserve driver Bianchi and simulator driver James Rossiter in the car.

Source: bbc

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Number crunching gives early F1 form guide - Gary Anderson

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

On the face of it, the fastest lap times from the first pre-season Formula 1 test last week are meaningless - the cars are not in the order you would expect and some teams who you know will not be winning races were right up at the top.

Number crunching gives early F1 form guide - Gary Anderson

But I have been analysing the sheets of all the lap times done by the drivers and I think I have a way of producing a list that reflects pretty well the true competitive order of the new cars. That order has some big surprises in it - the quickest cars appear to be those of McLaren, Ferrari and Mercedes, with Lotus not far behind. And Red Bull - the world champions for the last three years - look relatively slow. Let me explain how we get there.

Let's start with the list of fastest times overall from the four days of the test, which looked like this:
1. F Massa (Ferrari) 1:17.879, 2. K Raikkonen (Lotus) 1:18.148, 3. J Bianchi (Force India) 1:18.175, 4. R Grosjean (Lotus) 1:18.218, 5. S Vettel (Red Bull) 1:18.565, 6. E Gutierrez (Sauber) 1:18.669, 7. J-E Vergne (Toro Rosso) 1:18.760, 8. N Rosberg (Mercedes) 1:18.766, 9. J Button (McLaren) 1:18.861, 10. L Hamilton (Mercedes) 1:18.905, 11. S Perez (McLaren) 1:18.944, 12. P di Resta (Force India) 1:19.003, 13. D Ricciardo (Toro Rosso) 1:19.134, 14. J Rossiter (Force India) 1:19.303, 15. M Webber (Red Bull) 1:19.338, 16. N Hulkenberg (Sauber) 1:19.502, 17. V Bottas (Williams) 1:19.851, 18. P de la Rosa (Ferrari) 1:20.316, 19. P Maldonado (Williams) 1:20.693, 20. C Pic (Caterham) 1:21.105, 21. L Razia (Marussia) 1:21.226, 22. M Chilton (Marussia) 1:21.269 23. G van der Garde (Caterham) 1:21.311
The problem with that list is that you do not know how much fuel the cars had on board, and fuel weight makes a big difference to lap times. So on its own, the list is worthless.

So, the next step is to look at how many laps the driver did on the run on which he set his fastest time. You know he must have at least that amount of fuel on board. Taking Massa as an example, his fastest time was set on a six-lap run, so he must have had at least six laps' worth of fuel on board. Each lap of fuel burnt is equivalent to a gain in performance of 0.086 seconds. Apply that calculation to Massa's time, and you get a potential lap time of 1:17.536.

Do that for all the drivers, and the list looks like this:
1. Massa 1:17.536, 2. Rosberg 1:17.566, 3. Grosjean 1:17.961, 4. Raikkonen 1:17.977, 5. Bianchi 1:18.004, 6. Vergne 1:18.160, 7. Vettel 1:18.308, 8. Perez 1:18.430, 9. Hamilton 1:18.476, 10. Gutierrez 1:18.498, 11. Button 1:18.690, 12. Di Resta 1:18.832, 13. Ricciardo 1:18.877, 14. Rossiter 1:19.132, 15. Webber 1:19.167, 16. Hulkenberg 1:19.331, 17. Bottas 1:19.508, 18. De La Rosa 1:19.887, 19. Maldonado 1:20.350, 20. Van Der Garde 1:20.882, 21. Pic 1:20.934, 22. Chilton 1:21.012, 23. Razia 1:21.226

A few obvious things stand out immediately. First, the Ferrari is still at the top. Second, the Mercedes looks much more competitive - that is because Rosberg's time was set at the start of a 14-lap run. Third, the Red Bulls have slipped down the table.

But this still is not the definitive list, because some of the teams try to disguise their true form in testing.
So they will do a 'low-fuel' run - the one that sets their fastest overall time - with more fuel on board than they needed to make the car look slower than it is, for example.

The ones that do it most tend to be the biggest teams. The smaller teams tend not to mess about. They want to know where they are. The big teams pretty much know they will be at the front, but they do not want their rivals to know exactly how quick they are.

But there is a way around this. Nearly all the teams do longer runs on race-distance levels of fuel. By applying the time lost as a result of the extra fuel in the car, you can extrapolate back from the lap times they do at the start of these long runs to give another list of fastest laps.

In theory, this list should match closely to the second list, the 'potential' lap times. If it does not you know either that the car was not full of fuel when it started its 'race' run or the car had more fuel than it needed when it did its headline lap time in the first list.

Most of the times do match reasonably closely - the 'potential' and 'high-fuel adjusted' times of both Red Bulls, for example, were within 0.3secs, and the same went for Raikkonen's Lotus. The Saubers' times were almost identical, as were those of Williams and Force India. See what I meant about the smaller teams?

Unfortunately, Massa and Rosberg did not do representative high-fuel runs, but that's not necessarily a problem - I think their fastest times were on pretty low fuel, so are probably pretty representative. The key point is that anyone who has a quicker 'high-fuel adjusted' time than 'potential' time was almost certainly running more fuel than they needed when they did their 'headline' time. The prime offenders here are the McLarens - but that is not a surprise, as it is well-known they rarely run low fuel in testing.

Source: bbc

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Lotus E21 is first Formula 1 car unveiled for 2013 season

Posted in : Formula One Cars

(added few months ago!)

The E21 bears a striking resemblance to last year's model, with which Kimi Raikkonen won the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and took third in the championship. Team principal Eric Boullier said Lotus have set a minimum target of third in the constructors' championship, one place better than 2012. Technical director James Allison said: "The detail (changes) add up to a significant amount of performance."

Lotus E21 is first Formula 1 car unveiled for 2013 season

There were no obvious innovations on the car at launch but teams usually keep these under wraps until closer to the first race, which is in Australia on 17 March. "The rules for 2013 are very, very similar to those for 2012," Allison said. "So you can expect a lot of family resemblance from the 2012 car, but as ever in F1 the devil is in the detail.

"There are some neat new ideas and some pushing of the same sort of concepts we have been working on for the last few years."One of the few rule changes this year has been that teams are allowed to use what has become known as a "vanity panel" to disguise the ugly steps on the top of the noses that drew criticism last year.

But the new E21 did feature a step on the nose in the area of the front tyres, although it is more elegantly implemented than many in 2012. Allison said: "We have not done it yet because the cosmetic panel would weigh a few grams and with a Formula 1 car putting a few grams on that you don't need to is anathema. "But if we find a cosmetic panel that looks nice but much more importantly and crucially gains us a bit of downforce we'll pop it on quick as you like."

One obvious change from the 2012 car was a new design for using the exhausts for aerodynamic effect. The bodywork that helps guide the exhaust gases down to the area where the rear floor meets the rear wheels - where the gases 'seal' the gap and create downforce - is reminiscent of that on the 2012 championship-winning Red Bull.

Raikkonen, who was one of the stars of last season on his return to F1 after two years in rallying said: "It's not going to be easy to improve what we did already last year but that is the aim. Hopefully we can do it."He added that he expected the same teams to be competing at the front. "I don't think the running order will change a lot," Raikkonen said. Team-mate Romain Grosjean came in for heavy criticism last year as a result of a series of first-lap accidents, one of which resulted in a one-race ban.

He said: "It's clear we had good qualifying speed and too many incidents. And that is what we are going to try to work on."Lotus also named last year's GP2 champion Davide Valsecchi of Italy as their third driver with Belgian Jerome D'Ambrosio remaining the official reserve driver.

Source: bbc

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Pay as you go, go, go: F1's 'pay drivers' explained

Posted in : Formula One Drivers, Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

The Marussia team's decision to release Timo Glock from his contract because of "commercial" reasons has focused attention on an aspect of Formula 1 that some see as unsavoury and more casual viewers probably did not even realise existed.

Pay as you go, go, go: F1's 'pay drivers' explained

The truth is that "pay drivers" - those who bring sponsorship with them to secure a seat - have been a fact of life for as long as the sport as existed. For teams such as Marussia, who started life back in 2010 as Virgin, needing a driver to bring money, to help the team reach their annual £40m budget, is just something they have to accept. Marussia, in fact, have done more than that - they were admirably open in their press release announcing Glock's departure that pay drivers were part of their business model.

What their news release was saying was that previously they felt they could manage with one pay driver and one salaried, with external sponsorship making up the budget. That one pay driver this year was initially planned to be Englishman Max Chilton - however promising Chilton is, there is no secret that part of the reason he is there is his financial backing.

But now, Marussia said, the global economic downturn had changed things. External sponsorship was proving harder to come by, and that meant they could no longer afford Glock's salary and have a full budget. Glock introduced sponsors to the team, but his salary was significantly greater than what they paid. Chilton owes his drive to the fact that his 'salary' is far less than the income from the sponsors he brings with him.

There has been an outpouring of sympathy for Glock's predicament from his colleagues. McLaren's Jenson Button, a world champion, and Red Bull's Mark Webber, a multiple race winner, were among those who sent messages of condolence and best wishes to Glock on the social networking site Twitter. Glock might not be in the same league as leading names such as Fernando Alonso, Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel, but he was good enough to finish on the podium three times, among other strong performances, in his two years with the Toyota team in 2008-9.

It was Toyota's decision to quit F1 abruptly at the end of Glock's second season with the team that meant he ended up at Virgin/Marussia. Without a drive, and with no competitive seats available, he took a chance that they would quickly make progress. Finn Heikki Kovalainen was in a similar situation at the end of 2009 after being dropped by McLaren - and he ended up at Lotus Racing, another new team, who are now called Caterham. But Kovalainen, who won a race in 2008, is also set to drop out of F1. His Caterham team will take a second pay driver alongside Frenchman Charles Pic for this season.

It's not hard to see the appeal of pay drivers. Last year, Kovalainen was earning in the region $2.5m, while team-mate Vitaly Petrov brought about $10m in sponsorship. Petrov not only finished ahead of Kovalainen in the championship but by finishing ahead of Pic, then at Marussia, in the final race of the season the Russian secured them 10th place in the constructors' championship, which was worth $11m.

To put those numbers into context, the highest earner in F1 this season will be Hamilton on $31m (£19.6m), some way ahead of Alonso on a reputed 15m euros (£12.7m). Money influences decisions up and down the grid and what constitutes a 'pay driver' is not black and white.

Sergio Perez, Button's team-mate at McLaren this year, owed his arrival in F1 with Sauber in 2011 to significant financial backing from his home country Mexico. In that sense, he was a pay driver. Now, insiders expect McLaren's Mexican sponsorship portfolio to grow as a result of his joining the team. So was the lure of potential sponsorship one of the main reasons McLaren took Perez and is he still therefore a 'pay driver'?

Team boss Martin Whitmarsh says not, but there was surprise up and down the pit lane that McLaren did not instead choose German Nico Hulkenberg, whose performances have arguably been more impressive, but who is not linked to significant funding. Hulkenberg, ironically, is now at Sauber, where novice Esteban Gutierrez owes his presence to those Mexican backers.

Meanwhile, Perez's former Sauber team-mate Kamui Kobayashi - who has looked every bit as good in the last two seasons - is without a drive because he doesn't have sufficient sponsorship backing.
Then there is Williams. They signed Venezuelan Pastor Maldonado at the start of 2011 because of £30m-a-year in sponsorship money from his home country's national oil supplier, a deal that was approved personally by the President Hugo Chavez.

No-one is saying Perez and Maldonado don't deserve to be in F1 - they clearly do. Maldonado, while wild, has already won a race - superbly, in Spain last year, holding off Alonso no less. And Perez presumably will for McLaren.

In their case, their budgets smoothed their path to a job they deserve on ability anyway. With some lower down the grid, that is less clear. This is just the way of the world in an expensive sport. And depending on how you look at it, even the careers of the very greatest are influenced by money. Argentine Juan Manuel Fangio, a five-time world champion in the 1950s, would probably never have made it to Europe without the backing of the government of Juan Peron.

Vettel would not be in F1 without Red Bull funding him pretty much from childhood. Likewise, Hamilton's career had until this year been almost completely financed by McLaren. Ferrari would have signed Alonso anyway, but the fact he was going there certainly smoothed the path to them getting a big sponsorship deal with Spanish bank Santander, and vice versa.

The fact is, every driver on the grid has had to find funding to make their way through the ranks to F1.
The bigger concern for F1 right now is that this situation is becoming more and more prevalent - and Glock's predicament is the perfect illustration. External sponsorship money is harder and harder to come by. In the financial crisis, the money is simply not there.

For some time now, it has been clear that F1 teams were finding it increasingly difficult to make ends meet. Businesses struggle when they either don't have enough income or their costs are too high. In F1, in the current global climate and with budget restriction not working as well as some would like, both apply.

That raises difficult questions for the teams and for the sport itself. Ferrari will always be there. Red Bull are secure as long as owner Dietrich Mateschitz feels it suits his purposes; likewise Mercedes and their corporate board. Even McLaren are affected. Now forced to pay for their Mercedes engines for the first time, they have seen Hamilton leave, partly because they could or would not get close to matching the salary Mercedes were offering him.

Below that, every team has concerns about funding, to a greater or lesser extent, and there is a constant threat that one or more of them might not survive - as HRT did not last season. That brings into question the whole F1 business model. If there is not enough external sponsorship out there to maintain the whole grid, where will the money come from to keep the sport's wheels turning?

Currently, teams get their funding from sponsors and from TV companies, who do their deals with F1 boss Bernie Ecclestone, who then distributes about half the funds to the teams. But TV companies - with one or two exceptions - are also feeling the pinch. Meanwhile, one alarming statistic is regularly trotted out. F1's entire global TV rights income is about the same as that of the Turkish football Premier League - in the region of $490m.

Most are astonished to hear that, but it seems as if it's accurate, as far as these figures can be accurately assessed. Which raises questions about whether the sport is being marketed and promoted as effectively as it might be. Teams under threat; questions about their financial models for all but the very richest; and also about whether the sport is making the most of its huge global appeal. That's a far bigger problem than 'pay drivers'.

Source: bbc

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Mercedes appoint Toto Wolff as director of motorsport

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

Toto Wolff, a shareholder in Williams, has been appointed Mercedes' motorsport boss and executive director of its Formula 1 team. The Austrian, 41, replaces Norbert Haug, who left Mercedes last month. Wolff will help run the company's F1 programme as well as overseeing its other motorsport activities, including in German Touring Cars (DTM).

Mercedes appoint Toto Wolff as director of motorsport

Wolff will retain his shareholding in Williams, which is in the region of 10%, but relinquish his directors role. He will also take what Mercedes describes as "a significant minority interest" in Mercedes' F1 team, of which he will be executive director.

Non-executive chairman Niki Lauda, the triple world champion who was instrumental in persuading Lewis Hamilton to join as a driver for 2013, also becomes a shareholder. Wolff and Lauda will manage Mercedes' F1 operations along with team principal Ross Brawn.

Dieter Zetsche, head of Mercedes-Benz Cars and chairman of the management board of Daimler AG, said: "As an entrepreneur, investor and motorsport manager, Toto Wolff has proven that this sport runs in his blood; at the same time, he is also well aware of the economic necessities of the business.

"With Toto Wolff, we have gained for our Formula 1 team not only an experienced motorsport specialist, but also a longstanding enthusiast of the Mercedes-Benz brand. Together with him and Niki Lauda, we will further develop our motorsport activities and guide our Silver Arrows into the next era."

Wolff said he was leaving Williams "on good terms", adding: "Mercedes is one of the most important participants in motorsport worldwide. I am not only a big fan, but also a longstanding friend and enthusiast of the brand.

"I am looking forward to the challenge and, along with preparing for a successful racing season, also want to focus on the targeted promotion of new talent."Williams team principal Sir Frank Williams said: "Toto was a key support to me in his role as executive director last season, deputising at a number of races when I was unable to attend. "However, positions such as the one offered to him by Mercedes do not come around often.

"Toto has a long history with them and I certainly was not going to stand in the way of him accepting this once in a lifetime opportunity."Wolff's departure, along with that of chief operations engineer Mark Gillan last December, seems to leave a void at the top of the company.

Wolff acted as de facto team boss for much of the second half of last season and Gillan ran the engineering side of the team at the racetrack. Williams said the team would continue to be run by its executive board. It is expected they will make a new appointment to fill Gillan's position.

Wolff's appointment is the latest development in a major shake-up in Mercedes' sporting department.
In September, Lauda's appointment as non-executive chairman of the F1 team was announced at the same time as Hamilton's signing as their new driver.

Hamilton replaced Michael Schumacher, who retired as a direct result of the Englishman's deal.
The shake-up is a reflection of how seriously Mercedes is taking the under-performance of its F1 team.
They took over the Brawn team at the end of 2009 - the year they won the drivers' and constructors' title double with Jenson Button - but have won only one race in three years and ended last season struggling even to score points.

Source: bbc

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F1: Suzi Perry replaces Jake Humphrey as BBC presenter

Posted in : Formula One Gossips

(added few months ago!)

Suzi Perry will present the BBC's Formula 1 coverage from the start of next season, replacing Jake Humphrey. Perry, 42, previously presented the BBC's MotoGP coverage for 10 years, as well as reporting on other sports.

F1: Suzi Perry replaces Jake Humphrey as BBC presenter

"Motorsport is my life and I've really missed being away from the grid," said Perry. "I am so excited to be joining the BBC. Working alongside such an eminent team and the F1 world is a huge honour and I can't wait to get started."The BBC also confirmed that the British, Belgian, Italian and Brazilian Grands Prix are among 10 races that will be shown live on terrestrial television.

However, the Monaco Grand Prix will not be shown live on the BBC. There will be extended television highlights of the action from Monte Carlo and the other nine races that are not part of the BBC's live TV coverage. All 20 races will be broadcast live on BBC Radio 5 live or 5 live sports extra, with live text commentary on the BBC Sport website.

The BBC extended its agreement to show Formula 1 though to 2018 in July 2011, sharing rights to the sport with Sky Sports where previously it had been the exclusive UK broadcaster. Beyond her experience in sport, Perry has presented television programmes across entertainment, technology and travel, most notably the Gadget Show on Channel 5 since 2003. "She'll bring real energy and years of experience to one of the biggest jobs in sports broadcasting," said BBC Head of F1 Ben Gallop.

"Her presenting ability, coupled with her love and knowledge of motorsport, make her an excellent addition. "I'd also like to take this opportunity to thank Jake Humphrey for his enormous contribution to the coverage over the last four years and we all wish him the best for the future."

Humphrey, who presented the BBC's Formula 1 coverage from the start of 2009, announced in September that he would leave at the end of the 2012 season to front BT Vision's Premier League football coverage. The rest of the BBC's presentation team for 2013 "will be confirmed in due course", according to the corporation.

Source: bbc

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