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Buemi Excluded from German GP Qualifying

Sebastien Buemi has been excluded from qualifying for the German Grand Prix following a fuel irregularity in his Toro Rosso.

Following an engine misfire and a fuel pressure problem during Friday’s free practice sessions, the fuel system was changed in Buemi’s STR07.
It is thought the fuel system may have been contaminated at this stage.

Having initially qualified in 16th, the exclusion deletes all of Buemi’s times; however the Swiss driver will still be able to start today’s Grand Prix, albeit from the pitlane. Another fuel system is to be installed in the Toro Rosso.

The reconfigured rear section of the grid looks like this:

Pos Driver Team Time Gap 
16.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m33.698s   + 2.700
17.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m33.786s   + 1.960
18.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault        1m35.599s   + 3.773
19.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth      1m36.400s   + 4.574
20.  Karun Chandhok        Lotus-Renault        1m36.422s   + 4.596
21.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth      1m36.641s   + 4.815
22.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth         1m37.036s   + 5.210
23.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth         1m37.011s   + 5.185***
24.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   -m--.---s   DSQ
*** Grid Penalty

2011 German Grand Prix (Rd 10, Qualifying, July 23rd, TV Notes)

Nürburgring. © Creative Commons / WIll Pittenger

As the chequered flag dropped at the Nurburgring, Red Bull garnered yet another pole position – and it wasn’t Sebastian Vettel.

Indeed it was Mark Webber that claimed his third pole of the year and Red Bull’s eleventh consecutive top spot in qualifying; however the Australian was run close by an unlikely suspect. Very close.

Webber’s final lap of 1:30.079 was only just enough to hold off McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton – the 2008 World Champion pushed hard to take his McLaren far beyond its capabilities.
Following his first run in Q3, Hamilton was a clear half-second shy of the Webber / Vettel pairing, but a mesmeric lap in dying seconds more than made up the McLaren’s deficiencies.

Hamilton even kept Vettel off the front row. Admittedly, the German has looked weaker than Webber all weekend, yet was still not that far away.
It is unlikely that Vettel expected Hamilton to split the Red Bull’s – that honour surely would be handed to Ferrari – and to be fair to the Scuderia, they’re still close. During both Q3 runs, Alonso was the first through the timing loops; however his best of 1:30.442 keeps him just shy of the Red Bull’s.

The rest of the top ten may as well have not bothered to show up. Felipe Massa (5th, Ferrari) crossed the line over eight-tenths off of Webber’s pace; while Nico Rosberg (6th, Mercedes) was 1.184 down on the top spot.
Jenson Button endured a horror Q3 session. The best the McLaren driver could manage was over one second slower than teammate Hamilton – a dreadful result for the Briton.

Adrian Sutil (Force India), Vitaly Petrov (Renault) and Michael Schumacher (Mercedes) recorded the 8th, 9th and 10th quickest laps respectively. Realistically, it is unlikely that trio were ever likely to climb higher up the order.

Petrov’s late Q2 time did manage to knock teammate Nick Heidfeld out of a potential top ten position. The Renault driver missed out on the final session by just three-hundredths of-a-second, but it will at least save the veteran a set of Pirelli’s for the race.
Heidfeld will have Force India’s Paul di Resta alongside. The Scot also lost out to a teammate running quick at the flag, although di Resta fell some way short of making into Q3.

Row seven was all Williams. Pastor Maldonado beat Rubens Barrichello to 13th place, as the Didcot squad visibly struggled through the weekend.
It must be said though that Williams are in a better position than Sauber. The Swiss squad could do no better than 15th with Mexican pilot Sergio Perez, while Kamui Kobayashi couldn’t even get out of Q1; however it is unlikely matters were helped by the Japanese driver being in the pits as he dropped down the order.
Once again, the Toro Rosso’s were amongst the slowest in Q2. Sebastien Buemi placed his STR07 in 16th place, just ahead of Jaime Alguersuari, yet neither will be happy to be 1.5 seconds away from the cut-off point.

As per usual, Heikki Kovalainen secured 19th in his Lotus, although the Finn will have Timo Glock (Virgin) alongside him on the is occasion. It was another Lotus / Virgin affair on the eleventh row, as temporary Lotus pilot Karun Chandhok out-qualified Jerome d’Ambrosio.
The recently renamed HRTF1 assumed the final row of the grid, with Daniel Ricciardo starting ahead of Vitantonio Liuzzi. The Italian recorded a quicker time than his relatively new teammate; however an ill-timed gearbox change dropped Liuzzi to the rear of the pack.


Pos  Driver                Team                 Time        Gap 
 1.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1n30.079s
 2.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1n30.134s   + 0.055
 3.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     1n30.216s   + 0.137
 4.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1n30.442s   + 0.363
 5.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1n30.910s   + 0.831
 6.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1n31.263s   + 1.184
 7.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1n31.288s   + 1.209
 8.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes 1n32.010s   + 1.931
 9.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault              1n32.187s   + 2.108
10.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             1n32.482s   + 2.403
Q2 cut-off time: 1m32.180s Gap **
11.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault              1m32.215s   + 1.217
12.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m32.560s   + 1.562
13.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth    1m32.635s   + 1.637
14.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth    1m33.043s   + 2.045
15.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m33.176s   + 2.178
16.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m33.546s   + 2.548
17.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m33.698s   + 2.700
Q1 cut-off time: 1m33.664s Gap *
18.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m33.786s   + 1.960
19.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault        1m35.599s   + 3.773
20.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth      1m36.400s   + 4.574
21.  Karun Chandhok        Lotus-Renault        1m36.422s   + 4.596
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth      1m36.641s   + 4.815
23.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth         1m37.036s   + 5.210
24.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth         1m37.011s   + 5.185 ***
107% time: 1m38.253s
* Gap to quickest in Q1
** Gap to quickest in Q2
*** Grid penalty 

2011 German Grand Prix (Rd 10, Free Practice 3, July 23rd, TV Notes)

Nürburgring. © Creative Commons / WIll Pittenger

On a cold morning at the Nurburgring, Sebastian Vettel set the fastest time in final practice for the German Grand Prix.

The Red Bull driver reached the top of the time sheets at close of action (1:30.916), pipping teammate Mark Webber (2nd) and Ferrari pilot Fernando Alonso (3rd).
The late session action was all about qualifying simulation as the big guns ventured out on the soft Pirelli rubber.

However the opening 30 minutes of practice saw both McLaren drivers – Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button – as well Nico Rosberg (Mercedes) hog the limelight, while on the slower medium tyres.
Hamilton eventually took 4th, just under seven-tenths slower than Vettel; however the 2008 World Champion narrowly edged ahead of Button and Rosberg – the advantage being mere hundredths.

Unfortunately KERS issues made the session somewhat more difficult for the second Mercedes of Michael Schumacher. The veteran secured 9th, some nine-tenths adrift of his teammates ultimate pace.
Felipe Massa completed thirteen laps on his way to 7th. The Brazilian finished the sixty-minute session with a quarter-of-a-second gap to Adrian Sutil (8th, Force India).
Pastor Maldonado enjoyed a fruitful session – his best of 1:32.751 was good enough 10th position.

With rain on the horizon, teams were out in their numbers to register as many laps as possible, but problems still introduced themselves – especially at Lotus.
Heikki Kovalainen suffered an early hydraulic failure, leaving the Finn to complete all his running in the second half of practice. His teammate for this weekend, Karun Chandhok, continued to struggle with brakes issues after a tough Friday.
The Indian pilot endured two embarrassing spins during the session – one at the pit entrance and another at turn 9 as the chequered flag flew.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m30.916s           15
 2.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m31.049s  + 0.133  16
 3.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m31.138s  + 0.222  12
 4.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m31.578s  + 0.662  13
 5.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m31.623s  + 0.707  14
 6.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m31.694s  + 0.778  19
 7.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m32.144s  + 1.228  13
 8.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m32.391s  + 1.475  20
 9.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m32.523s  + 1.607  16
10.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m32.751s  + 1.835  18
11.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m32.777s  + 1.861  18
12.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes   1m32.813s  + 1.897  21
13.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m33.072s  + 2.156  18
14.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m33.179s  + 2.263  17
15.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m33.531s  + 2.615  20
16.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m33.671s  + 2.755  20
17.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m33.948s  + 3.032  21
18.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m34.125s  + 3.209  19
19.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m35.385s  + 4.469  13
20.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m36.724s  + 5.808  21
21.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth           1m36.804s  + 5.888  23
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m36.894s  + 5.978  23
23.  Karun Chandhok        Lotus-Renault          1m36.959s  + 6.043  18
24.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth           1m37.554s  + 6.638  22

2011 German Grand Prix (Rd 10, Free Practice 2, July 22nd, TV Notes)

Nürburgring. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Second practice for the German Grand Prix saw a return to “business as usual” for Red Bull at the Nurburgring.

With hot-blowing off-throttle exhausts reinstated from this weekend, Mark Webber placed his RB7 at the top of Friday afternoon practice with a best of 1:31.711.
Webber jumped to head of the board with one hour remaining, later extending the gap to Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso.

As the session ran on, the Australian displayed powerful long running pace too – a fact that may worry his fellow competitors.
Alonso – victor two weeks ago in Silverstone – appeared to be keeping pressure on the Red Bull man. His best came within two-tenths of Webber, while also maintaining a similar gap over reigning champion Sebastian Vettel.
Felipe Massa, in the second Ferrari, took another 4th place, some seven-tenths down on Webber.

The Mercedes pair ran high in the order as they continue to evaluate recent aero upgrades. Veteran pilot Michael Schumacher claimed 5th, despite nearly having a crash with Alonso in the turn seven hairpin.
Nico Rosberg also had an off – albeit a high speed one – on the exit of turn eight, although Rosberg recovered to set the 6th quickest lap.
Rosberg also suffered a loss of telemetry during the session, although this was cured later on.

McLaren continued to test new floors and exhausts during the afternoon, with Lewis Hamilton completing 28 laps in the ninety minute session. The 2008 World Champion assumed 7th place – just over five-tenths quicker than Jenson Button whose session was shortened by a broken exhaust.
Just behind Hamilton were the two Renault’s led by Nick Heidfeld. Both missed large chunks of second practice due to car failures – Heidfeld was sidelined with rollbar issues, while Petrov needed a replacement radiator.
Adrian Sutil rounded out the top ten in his Force India in his 34 lap session.

Two drivers that didn’t get much running were Daniel Ricciardo (HRT F1) and Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso).
Ricciardo was only his fifth lap when his Cosworth engine expired in the early minutes of the practice, while Buemi never even registered a time. The Swiss pilot completed three installation laps, before a misfiring engine ended his day prematurely.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m31.711s   	      34
 2.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m31.879s  + 0.168  38
 3.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m32.084s  + 0.373  28
 4.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m32.354s  + 0.643  36
 5.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m32.411s  + 0.700  31
 6.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m32.557s  + 0.846  32
 7.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m32.724s  + 1.013  28
 8.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m33.098s  + 1.387  17
 9.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m33.138s  + 1.427  22
10.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m33.211s  + 1.500  34
11.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m33.225s  + 1.514  17
12.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes   1m33.299s  + 1.588  34
13.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m34.113s  + 2.402  34
14.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m34.344s  + 2.633  34
15.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m34.487s  + 2.776  37
16.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m34.491s  + 2.780  35
17.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m34.996s  + 3.285  35
18.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m35.753s  + 4.042  42
19.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m36.940s  + 5.229  32
20.  Karun Chandhok        Lotus-Renault          1m37.248s  + 5.537  33
21.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m37.313s  + 5.602  33
22.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth           1m38.145s  + 6.434  31
23.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth           1m40.737s  + 9.026   5
24.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     No time              3

2011 German Grand Prix (Rd 10, Free Practice 1, July 22nd, TV Notes)

Nürburgring. © Creative Commons / WIll Pittenger

On a cool morning at the Nurburgring, Fernando Alonso topped the opening practice session for the German Grand Prix.

So off-colour were the conditions, numerous drivers struggled with tyre and brake temperature throughout practice, with several outbraking themselves and running off circuit.

Alonso was one of the few that kept his machine steady, recording a best time of 1:31.894 – over three-tenths quicker than the Red Bull pairing of Mark Webber (2nd) and Sebastian Vettel (3rd). Felipe Massa assumed 4th position in the second Ferrari, albeit nearly eight-tenths off Alonso’s ultimate pace.
Ferrari approached this weekend with some refined updates and should the first session be true to form, the Italian squad may be able to consolidate their British Grand Prix form.

McLaren arrived at the Nurburgring with a new rear wing (tested by Jenson Button) and several minor aero upgrades. The pair would find themselves well shy of the leading Ferrari, with Lewis Hamilton 5th (1.1 seconds slower) and Button in 6th (1.7 seconds down).
Hamilton and Button fared better than both Mercedes though. The turquoise cars, led by Nico Rosberg (7th) were both approximately 1.9 seconds off the pace. Michael Schumacher took 10th in the second Mercedes, but suffered a number of offs during the morning.
Mercedes have been attempting to claw back some of the gap to the leading three teams, but have as yet to find a breakthrough.

Force India brought several rear end upgrades to the track, helping them to 8th (Adrian Sutil) and 9th (Nico Hulkenberg) by the end of the session.
At this early stage, it seems that Force India may be on the verge of jumping Renault in the order. The Swiss-owned team tested new rearward facing exhausts in an attempt to halt their recent slump on form.
Come the chequered flag, Vitaly Petrov claimed 11th with a best of 1:34.094; some four places and 1.3 seconds quicker than under pressure teammate Nick Heidfeld, although Heidfeld was one of only a handful of drivers to set his best on the slower medium tyre.

Williams added new rear wings to their machines, while Rubens Barrichello took a front wing for practice. Barrichello secured 14th place following a 24 lap morning, while Pastor Maldonado struggled to 18th after 29 completed laps – some 4.9 seconds down on the quickest lap of the session.

As the session drew to a close, there two significant offs at turn five. The first of which came from Heikki Kovalainen in the Lotus as he bounced across the gravel, rejoining after the following corner.
More serious however, was Sebastien Buemi’s off . The Toro Rosso man lost his Ferrari-powered machine upon entry of the turn, before being launched by the gravel. The STR06 did not flip, but did reach considerable height at speed, coming down with thud in the trap.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari               1m31.894s           30
 2.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault      1m32.217s  + 0.323  24
 3.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault      1m32.268s  + 0.374  27
 4.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari               1m32.681s  + 0.787  23
 5.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes      1m32.996s  + 1.102  18
 6.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes      1m33.628s  + 1.734  22
 7.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes              1m33.787s  + 1.893  33
 8.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes  1m33.832s  + 1.938  27
 9.  Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes  1m33.858s  + 1.964  26
10.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes              1m33.863s  + 1.969  31
11.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault               1m34.094s  + 2.200  22
12.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m35.115s  + 3.221  23
13.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m35.371s  + 3.477  20
14.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth     1m35.389s  + 3.495  24
15.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault               1m35.444s  + 3.550  22
16.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari        1m36.371s  + 4.477  22
17.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault         1m36.392s  + 4.498  29
18.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth     1m36.842s  + 4.948  29
19.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari        1m36.882s  + 4.988  27
20.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth          1m38.504s  + 6.610  22
21.  Karun Chandhok        Lotus-Renault         1m38.765s  + 6.871  19
22.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth          1m39.279s  + 7.385  24
23.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth       1m40.109s  + 8.215  23
24.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth       1m40.428s  + 8.534  22

Chandhok Fills in for Trulli at Lotus

Only two weeks after the first seat change of the season occurred at Hispania, another – albeit temporary – swap was revealed yesterday afternoon.

Team Lotus announced that for the German Grand Prix, Karun Chandhok will be standing in for veteran Jarno Trulli.
The Indian last raced at the British Grand Prix for Hispania twelve months ago, before being dropped for the sponsored Sakon Yamamoto. It appears on the surface that Chandhok’s appearance this weekend is more to do with driver evaluation at Lotus rather than anything sponsor related.

Indeed Trulli’s off-colour performances throughout 2011 have raised questions about his future with the Anglo / Malaysian team and with Alexander Rossi also waiting in the wings, Trulli could be on borrowed time.
Admittedly, the Italian has complained vociferously about a lack of feel from his power steering all season – each “fix” has yet to cure the problems. Heikki Kovalainen endured similar issues in the early stages of the season, but has since adapted to the issue.
A further fix for the problem is expected for the Hungarian Grand Prix in one week’s time.

As for Chandhok, it is unlikely that the Indian will be a match for Kovalainen this weekend – one solid year out of a race seat can do much to temporarily blunt a driver’s race craft.
However, it is believed that Chandhok may be back in the seat for the inaugural Indian Grand Prix in October, leading to the impression that this temporary swap is also governed by the need to give the 27-year-old seat time.

The other Indian on the grid, Narain Karthikeyan, was dropped by Hispania at Silverstone, but may also reappear in Delhi later this year.

2011 British Formula 3 Round of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Race 3, July 17th)

Circuit Paul Ricard. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

A last corner shunt gave Felipe Nasr a shock British Formula 3 victory at Paul Ricard on Sunday.

The Carlin man watched calmly as 2nd place man Antonio Felix da Costa clashed with race leader Kevin Magnussen in the final turn, gifting Nasr his seventh win of the year.

It was a sad end to Magnussen’s race – to that point; the Dane had driven superbly well, leading every lap until speared by GP3 regular da Costa, who would recover to claim 2nd place – for a time.
Not believing his luck, Nasr sailed through for yet another victory, while Magnussen sat helpless trackside – his Dallara damaged beyond reason.

For a time, the battle focussed on Nasr and da Costa – the pair fought hard for the runner-up spot for much of the event, with Nasr heading his Portuguese rival for the first ten laps.
A mistake by the Brazilian through Beausset let da Costa through into 2nd; however the battle for the win continued to the flag – and the eventual crash. Soon after the chequered flag, da Costa was slapped with a 30-second penalty, dropping the Hitech runner to 9th.

It was not the only accident of the race. Like the second event of the weekend, this event opened with a smash, with the first six tours neutralised behind the safety car.

A start line bump between Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin) and Pietro Fantin (Hitech) became a smash, removing both from the running.
The lower reaches of the pack closed quickly, causing further carnage, with Bart Hylkema (T-Sport), Scott Pye (Double R) and Fortec’s Harry Tincknell pinballing on the grid.
Jaafar, Fantin, Pye and Tincknell – their day done – returned to their respective garages; while Hylkema continued following a pit stop for a new front wing.

Where others crashed limply, William Buller soared. An excellent start by the Fortec man lifted him from 8th to 4th, ahead Jack Harvey. Buller maintained a narrow advantage for the duration, although 4th would soon become 2nd with the loss of Magnussen and da Costa.
Harvey – buoyed by his first F3 win at the Nurburgring two weeks ago – came to within 0.5 of Buller at the line, scoring another top-three in the process.

Rupert Svendsen-Cook and Carlos Huertas made it four Carlin entries in the top-five, albeit several seconds behind Harvey.
Behind them, Fortec’s Fahmi Ilyas registered his first points of the season with a credible 6th place finish after fending off T-Sport’s Yann Cunha and Hywel Lloyd (Sino Vision) in the early laps.
As Ilyas escaped, Cunha succumbed to Lloyd’s pressure, falling off circuit and out of the top ten. A penultimate lap crash with the other Sino Vision racer, Adderly Fong, would see both Cunha and Fong retire from the event.

Lloyd continued on to record his fifth 7th place of the year, ahead of Championship Class debutante Bart Hylkema (T-Sport), who came 8th despite his early pitstop.
Emerging at the rear of the pack, the Dutch pilot climbed into the points paying positions, gaining a further spot thanks to da Costa’s penalty. With the displaced Hitech driver taking 9th, the final points place fell to Double R Racing’s Pipo Derani (10th).

Kotaro Sakurai secured a third unchallenged Rookie Class win of the weekend, coming home 11th overall.
Only T-Sport’s Menasheh Idafar placed behind the Japanese runner. The Bahraini national clashed with Lucas Foresti on the twelfth tour, causing the Brazilian to fall out of the race with accident damage.

Coming into this weekend, Foresti was Nasr’s last remaining challenger for the British F3 title, but with the Fortec man now 110 points down on Nasr, the championship is all but over.
Unless something drastic happen in the final four rounds, Nasr only needs to go into cruise control from here on in.

The next round at the famous Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium takes place from July 28-30.

2011 British F3 Round of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Race 3, July 17th)
Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
 1.  Felipe Nasr             Carlin Dallara-VW         40m52.715s (17 laps)
 2.  Will Buller             Fortec Dallara-Merc         + 3.248s
 3.  Jack Harvey             Carlin Dallara-VW           + 3.734s
 4.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin Dallara-VW           + 9.626s
 5.  Carlos Huertas          Carlin Dallara-VW          + 10.327s
 6.  Fahmi Ilyas             Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 17.462s
 7.  Hywel Lloyd             Sino Vision Dallara-Merc   + 24.990s
 8.  Bart Hylkema            T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 26.775s
 9.  Antonio Felix da Costa  Hitech Dallara-VW          + 31.504s
10.  Pipo Derani             Double R Dallara-Merc      + 32.711s
11.  Kotaro Sakurai          Hitech Dallara-Mugen       + 43.028s
12.  Menasheh Idafar         T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 54.094s
Retirements:
     Kevin Magnussen         Carlin Dallara-VW            16 laps
     Adderly Fong            Sino Vision Dallara-Merc     16 laps
     Yann Cunha              T-Sport Dallara-VW           16 laps
     Lucas Foresti           Fortec Dallara-Merc          11 laps
     Pietro Fantin           Hitech Dallara-VW             0 laps
     Scott Pye               Double R Dallara-Merc         0 laps
     Harry Tincknell         Fortec Dallara-Merc           0 laps
     Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin Dallara-VW             0 laps

2011 British F3 Championship Standings (Rd 6, Race 3)
Pos Driver Points
Championship Class
 1. Felipe Nasr            237
 2. Carlos Huertas         133 
 3. Lucas Foresti          127
 4. Jazeman Jaafar         115
 5. Kevin Magnussen        113 
 6. William Buller         106
 7. Rupert Svendsen-Cook   104
 8. Harry Tincknell         64
 9. Pietro Fantin           61
10. Riki Christodoulou      51
11. Antonio Felix da Costa  51
12. Jack Harvey             49
Rookie Class
 1. Bart Hylkema           214
 2. Kotaro Sakurai         213

2011 British Formula 3 Round of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Race 2, July 17th)

Circuit Paul Ricard. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

In an accident strewn Sunday morning at Paul Ricard, William Buller took his first British Formula 3 race.

The Fortec pilot beat Carlin’s Rupert Svendsen-Cook to the flag by only 1.6 seconds, although judging by Buller’s pace, that gap could have been longer had the event run longer than six laps…

Buller led the shortened event from lights to flag, but the County Down man had to wait for it, thanks to a start-line crash bringing out a red flag.
Following a speedy clean up, Buller led away from Svendsen-Cook, although the Carlin man kept the race winner honest all the way. The Fortec runner added some icing to the cake with the fastest lap.

Whereas Svendsen-Cook could do nothing about passing the on-fire Buller, the Englishman was also busy keeping an eye-out for Antonio Felix da Costa (Hitech) and Carlin’s Kevin Magnussen.

A staggering start by da Costa shot the Portuguese driver up the order from 6th to 3rd, with Magnussen, Jack Harvey and Carlos Huertas (both Carlin) falling behind the Hitech runner.
Once released by the gaggle of Carlin machinery, da Costa pursued Svendsen-Cook for the runner-up spot, eventually losing out by six-tenths at the flag, with Magnussen a second further back in 4th place.

Beyond the start, Huertas enjoyed a quite drive to 5th. A first lap move on Harvey gave the Colombian yet another top-five position. Yet for all his point-scoring consistency, the Colombian has yet to triumph in a British F3 car – a fact clearing holding his championship challenge back.

Harvey, on the other hand, enjoyed a rather feisty drive to 6th. A poor opening lap ensured the young Briton fell to 8th, although race long battles with Pietro Fantin (Hitech), Lucas Foresti and Harry Tincknell (both Fortec) made for an entertaining stint.

The fight lost Tincknell early on – a lunge on Harvey by Fantin, bounced the Hitech man into Tincknell’s path, sending the Fortec driver into a spin. With Tincknell off track and Fantin in recovery mode, Harvey made a fourth lap move on Foresti to assume 6th place.
For their troubles, Foresti recorded a 7th place finish, only six-tenths ahead of Fantin (8th). Tincknell’s race got worse after his spin – the Exeter man was hit with a drive through penalty for not respecting the track limits, leaving him 17th and last.

Carlin’s Felipe Nasr was also penalised for exceeding the track limits. The Brazilian had initially taken a 9th place finish, but 30-second post-race penalty would drop Nasr to 16th, bringing Jazeman Jaafar (9th, Carlin) and Hywel Lloyd (10th, Sino Vision) into the points.
The trio had had quite a fight during the race. A spin on his second lap dropped Nasr to 10th amongst Jaafar and Lloyd, although a forceful move on Lloyd brought Nasr another place.
On the penultimate lap, Jaafar passed Lloyd for what was then the final points paying place, only for their positions to improve after the event.

Kotaro Sakurai won the Rookie Class – unsurprising as he is the only competitor.

A faulty start-line procedure caused a multi-car pile-up that resulted in both Double R Racing drivers (Pipo Derani and Scott Pye) clattering into each other in a mesh of confusion.
T-Sport’s Bart Hylkema was also accident bound off the line. Hylkema came close to removing the two championship leaders, Nasr and Foresti). The Dutchman bounced off of Foresti, before being launched over the slow-starting Nasr.
Amongst the melee, Hywel Lloyd stalled, but was restarted; however Hylkema, Derani and Pye were done for the race.

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
 1.  Will Buller             Fortec Dallara-Merc       12m25.918s (6 laps)
 2.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin Dallara-VW           + 1.621s
 3.  Antonio Felix da Costa  Hitech Dallara-VW           + 2.288s
 4.  Kevin Magnussen         Carlin Dallara-VW           + 3.289s
 5.  Carlos Huertas          Carlin Dallara-VW           + 6.186s
 6.  Jack Harvey             Carlin Dallara-VW           + 9.693s
 7.  Lucas Foresti           Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 12.409s
 8.  Pietro Fantin           Hitech Dallara-VW          + 13.009s
 9.  Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin Dallara-VW          + 16.888s
10.  Hywel Lloyd             Sino Vision Dallara-Merc   + 18.748s
11.  Menasheh Idafar         T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 19.410s
12.  Adderly Fong            Sino Vision Dallara-Merc   + 20.134s
13.  Yann Cunha              T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 20.958s
14.  Fahmi Ilyas             Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 37.466s
15.  Kotaro Sakurai          Hitech Dallara-Mugen       + 39.201s
16.  Felipe Nasr             Carlin Dallara-VW          + 14.173s*
17.  Harry Tincknell         Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 50.685s
     (*30-sec penalty)
Retired:
     Pipo Derani             Double R Dallara-Merc         0 laps
     Scott Pye               Double R Dallara-Merc         0 laps
     Bart Hylkema            T-Sport Dallara-VW            0 laps

2011 British Formula 3 Championship Standings (Rd 6, Race2)
Pos Driver Points
Championship Class
 1 Nasr          217 points
 2 Foresti       127 
 3 Huertas       125 
 4 Jaafar        115
 5 Magnussen     113 
 6 Svendsen-Cook  94
Rookie class
 1 Hylkema       214
 2 Sakurai       192

2011 British Formula 3 Round of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Race 1, July 16th)

Circuit Paul Ricard. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

As the 2011 British Formula 3 Series turns to its second half, Carlin’s Felipe Nasr notched up his sixth victory of the season, earning a ninety-six point lead.

While not cruising to the flag, the Brazilian kept his nose clear of runner-up pilot Antonio Felix da Costa (Hitech Racing) for the duration, although the Portuguese runner tried his luck early on.

Nasr registered the win by only 1.2 seconds, yet appeared to have plenty in hand – an element demonstrated by claiming a late fastest lap.

There was another close fight for the final spot on the podium with Carlos Huertas (Carlin) holding off his Danish teammate, Kevin Magnussen. For the most part, it had been a quiet race for the Colombian, disturbed only by the charging Magnussen in the final few tours.

Magnussen, on the other hand, had a very different race. Having started on pole, the Dane bogged down badly, dropping him to 7th by the first turn. Swift moves passed Jack Harvey and Rupert Svendsen-Cook saw Magnussen climb back to 5th, followed by a multi-lap battle with championship challenger Lucas Foresti.
Sadly, the Fortec pilot was the loser in fight – as they fought, the pair collided at Beausset corner sending Foresti into a quick spin and demoting the Brazilian to 7th.
Breaking from the chasing pack, Magnussen chased Huertas down, but ran out of laps, leaving the Dane to settle for 4th. In the ensuing melee, Harvey swept passed Svendsen-Cook, soon pulling clear of his Carlin teammate.

As Harvey picked up another top-five, Svendsen-Cook was under pressure from Fortec’s William Buller. The Northern Ireland man grabbed 7th from a struggling Foresti, pushing Svendsen-Cook to the line – indeed, only six-tenths separated the pair as the crossed the finish line.

If anything, the fight for the final points places was just as ferocious. Suffering from battle scars, Foresti fell toward Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin), Harry Tincknell (Fortec), Menasheh Idafar (T-Sport) and Pietro Fantin (Hitech).
The quintet fought eachother hard – probably a little too hard – but it was Idafar and Fantin that would lose out. In fact, their races ended some laps prior to the flag, with Idafar retiring at two-thirds distance with a broken exhaust and Fantin suffering from an out of breath engine.
Jaafar headed the remaining trio, while a damaged Foresti claimed 9th, only two-tenths ahead of Tincknell.

Sadly, both Jaafar and Idafar garnered race 2 grid penalties for their battle tactics – Idafar took his T-Sport machine well outside the track limits to overtake early on, while Jaafar’s driving was considered far too aggressive in his fight for position.

Idafar wasn’t alone on the retirement list. The Bahraini national joined Bart Hylkema, who pulled in on lap three with a damaged suspension and rear wing.

Kotaro Sakurai won the Rookie Class – an anonymous feat as he is now the class’ only competitor. It didn’t stop him having a tough race – in the early laps, cockpit ballast came loose in his Hitech machine, lodging itself under the brakes, necessitating a pitstop. Sakurai finished 18th and one lap down.

2011 British Formula 3 Rd of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Race 1)
Pos Driver Team Time / Gap
 1  Felipe Nasr             Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen  28m 50.120s (14 laps)
 2  Antonio Felix da Costa  Hitech Dallara-Volkswagen      +1.295s
 3  Carlos Huertas          Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen      +8.602s
 4  Kevin Magnussen         Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen      +8.994s
 5  Jack Harvey             Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen     +12.811s
 6  Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen     +19.612s
 7  William Buller          Fortec Dallara-Mercedes       +20.232s
 8  Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen     +33.329s
 9  Lucas Foresti           Fortec Dallara-Mercedes       +35.888s
10  Harry Tincknell         Fortec Dallara-Mercedes       +36.059s
Other finishers:
11) Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec);       12) Hywel Lloyd (Sino Vision);
13) Pipo Derani (Double R);     14) Scott Pye (Double R);
15) Pietro Fantin (Hitech);     16) Yann Cunha (T-Sport);
17) Adderly Fong (Sino Vision); 18) Kotaro Sakurai (Hitech, Rookie Class);
Retired:
    Bart Hylkema (T-Sport, 3 laps); Menasheh Idafar (T-Sport, 10 laps)

2011 British Formula 3 Championship Standings (Rd 6, Race 1)
Pos Driver Points
Championship Class
 1 Nasr          217 points
 2 Foresti       123
 3 Huertas       119
 4 Jaafar        113
 5 Magnussen     106
 6 Svendsen-Cook  85
Rookie class
 1 Hylkema       214
 2 Sakurai       180

McLaren and Johnnie Walker

Scottish whisky brand Johnnie Walker has busied itself with McLaren Formula 1 drivers Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button of late.

Their latest campaign sees them filming pieces over the course of each race weekend, for release soon after a Grand Prix has run its course.
The latest video sees Button and Hamilton talk about the British Grand Prix and what it feels like to race in front of their home crowd. Each race weekend will see the pair discuss various themes connected to certain circuits and races.

Recent years have seen McLaren become accustomed to crafting some very well designed virals – so much moreso than many other racing squads – and while the Johnnie Walker campaign may not have fun with the subjects in a way McLaren’s Vodafone videos do, they still reach an area that many teams in the sport have yet to conquer.

The latest video in the campaign is featured below and a growing list of Johnny Walker / McLaren’s 2011 content can be found here.

2011 British Formula 3 Round of Paul Ricard (Rd 6, Qualifying, July 16th)

Circuit Paul Ricard. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Following on from his pace setting times in Friday practice, Kevin Magnussen secured pole position for both British Formula 3 feature races at Paul Ricard.

The Dane’s best of 2:00.426 offered a 0.235 advantage over Felipe Nasr’s quickest tour – a gap that closed to just over over one-and-a-half-tenths for the weekend’s third event.
Nasr initially proved to be the quickest on track, before being overhauled by Magnussen, although the Brazilian still managed a second place starting position for both races.

Indeed the field displayed a incredible amount of consistency during the session, with the top ten positions for both races proving to be identical.

Come the chequered flag, Carlin drivers possessed five of the top six spots, with Hitech’s Antonio Felix da Costa breaking the party by taking 3rd, with Carlos Huertas alongside.
Jack Harvey’s run of improvement continues with each meeting. The rookie pilot secured a third row position, just ahead of Rupert Svendsen-Cook (6th) and Hitech’s Pietro Fantin (7th).

William Buller placed the highest Mercedes starter, qualifying his Fortec Motorsport machine in 8th. The Northern Irishman seized the place ahead of Jazeman Jaafar (9th, Carlin) and championship challenger Lucas Foresti (10th, Fortec).
Bart Hylkema’s first qualifying session saw the Dutch pilot qualify his T-Sport entry 12th (race 1) and 13th (race 3), respectively finishing 1.6 and 1.7 seconds shy of the top spot.

Race one:
Pos Driver Team/Car Time Gap
 1.  Kevin Magnussen         Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.528s
 2.  Felipe Nasr             Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.691s  + 0.163s
 3.  Antonio Felix da Costa  Hitech Dallara-VW         2m00.870s  + 0.342s
 4.  Carlos Huertas          Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.943s  + 0.415s
 5.  Jack Harvey             Carlin Dallara-VW         2m01.060s  + 0.532s
 6.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin Dallara-VW         2m01.105s  + 0.577s
 7.  Pietro Fantin           Hitech Dallara-VW         2m01.358s  + 0.830s
 8.  William Buller          Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m01.544s  + 1.016s
 9.  Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin Dallara-VW         2m01.628s  + 1.100s
10.  Lucas Foresti           Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m02.102s  + 1.574s
11.  Menasheh Idafar         T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.161s  + 1.633s
12.  Bart Hylkema            T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.178s  + 1.650s
13.  Harry Tincknell         Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m02.220s  + 1.692s
14.  Fahmi Ilyas             Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m02.313s  + 1.785s
15.  Scott Pye               Double R Dallara-Merc     2m02.409s  + 1.881s
16.  Pipo Derani             Double R Dallara-Merc     2m02.489s  + 1.961s
17.  Hywel Lloyd             Sino Vision Dallara-Merc  2m02.515s  + 1.987s
18.  Yann Cunha              T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.766s  + 2.238s
19.  Adderly Fong            Sino Vision Dallara-Merc  2m04.201s  + 3.673s
20.  Kotaro Sakurai          Hitech Dallara-Mugen      2m05.451s  + 4.923s

Race three:
Pos Driver Team/Car Time Gap
 1.  Kevin Magnussen         Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.426s
 2.  Felipe Nasr             Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.661s  + 0.235s
 3.  Antonio Felix da Costa  Hitech Dallara-VW         2m00.713s  + 0.287s
 4.  Carlos Huertas          Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.937s  + 0.511s
 5.  Jack Harvey             Carlin Dallara-VW         2m00.993s  + 0.567s
 6.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin Dallara-VW         2m01.003s  + 0.577s
 7.  Pietro Fantin           Hitech Dallara-VW         2m01.317s  + 0.891s
 8.  William Buller          Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m01.400s  + 0.974s
 9.  Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin Dallara-VW         2m01.610s  + 1.184s
10.  Lucas Foresti           Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m01.844s  + 1.418s
11.  Harry Tincknell         Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m01.900s  + 1.474s
12.  Menasheh Idafar         T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.095s  + 1.669s
13.  Bart Hylkema            T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.139s  + 1.713s
14.  Scott Pye               Double R Dallara-Merc     2m02.236s  + 1.810s
15.  Fahmi Ilyas             Fortec Dallara-Merc       2m02.278s  + 1.852s
16.  Hywel Lloyd             Sino Vision Dallara-Merc  2m02.435s  + 2.009s
17.  Pipo Derani             Double R Dallara-Merc     2m02.462s  + 2.036s
18.  Yann Cunha              T-Sport Dallara-VW        2m02.550s  + 2.124s
19.  Adderly Fong            Sino Vision Dallara-Merc  2m03.923s  + 3.497s
20.  Kotaro Sakurai          Hitech Dallara-Mugen      2m04.885s  + 4.459s

British Formula 3 In-Season Testing (Paul Ricard, July 15th)

Circuit Paul Ricard. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

On a warm clear day, Kevin Magnussen proved himself quickest during British Formula 3 practice running at Paul Ricard.

The Dane pipped teammate Felipe Nasr to the top spot by one-tenth of-a-second, after the Brazilian headed the morning session.

Although Nasr did not improve on his time during the afternoon, Magnussen shaved off nearly a second thanks mainly to a first session cursed by a spin, a puncture and several over technical issues.
By the close of the day, Magnussen’s best of 2:00.969 was enough to stamp his authority.

GP3 regular Antonio Felix da Costa returned for another weekend of British F3 action. The Hitech man assumed 2nd in the morning, but fell to 3rd, despite gaining half-a-second as the temperatures rose during the day.
Da Costa’s Hitech teammate, Pietro Fantin proved to be 4th quickest ahead of Carlin’s Rupert Svendsen-Cook (5th), who ran near the top of the sheets early on in the day.

Three more Carlin pilots followed. Carlos Huertas pipped improving rookie Jack Harvey to 6th by only 0.009 of-a-second, while Jazeman Jaafar registered 8th, some nine-tenths off the ultimate pace.
William Buller was the fastest Fortec runner, finishing the day 9th overall. The County Down native headed Championship challenger Lucas Foresti (10th) who ended the day one-tenth shy of Buller.
Foresti stayed ahead of T-Sport’s Menasheh Idafar by two-tenths as the chequered flag waved.

Setting the 15th best time of the day was Idafar’s new Championship Class teammate Bart Hylkema. Having dominated the Rookie Class so far in 2011, the Dutchman will be taking part in his first Championship Class race at Paul Ricard.
Kotaro Sakurai was the sole Rookie Class driver. His best came in the afternoon, albeit some 3.9 seconds off of Magnussen’s pace.

British Formula 3 In-Season Testing (Paul Ricard, July 15th)
Championship Class
Pos Driver Team Time
 1  Kevin Magnussen        Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 00.969s
 2  Felipe Nasr            Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.073s
 3  Antonio Felix da Costa Hitech Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.148s
 4  Pietro Fantin          Hitech Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.516s
 5  Rupert Svendsen-Cook   Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.634s
 6  Carlos Huertas         Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.655s
 7  Jack Harvey            Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.664s
 8  Jazeman Jaafar         Carlin Dallara-Volkswagen   2m 01.821s
 9  William Buller         Fortec Dallara-Mercedes     2m 01.914s
10  Lucas Foresti          Fortec Dallara-Mercedes     2m 02.025s
Rookie class
 1  Kotaro Sakurai         Hitech Dallara-Mugen Honda  2m 04.897s

“The Prince of Motorsport: B Bira”

It is often remembered as a time of honour, sportsmanship and openness in motorsport.

Simpler times when safety was not an issue and drivers were daredevils playing in the fire – and when Prince Birabongse Bhanudej Bhanubandh took to the wheel; motorsport felt the rare touch of royalty.

The man who would eventually be known as “Prince Bira” (or B. Bira) was born in Bangkok on July 15th, 1914 in a country then known as Siam (now Thailand).
Unbeknownst to the infant, he had been born into a world ready to rip itself apart, as anger and mistrust spread like viruses through governments and regimes around the globe.
Revolutions and civil wars were ripening, while the assassination of Franz Ferdinand at the end of June would trigger the First World War.

Yet for Bira, this world did not exist. A playful child, the Siamese Prince felt a love of cars at a young age, finding the utmost pleasure in thrashing little toy machines.
Thanks to his family’s long-standing connection to British royals, the thirteen-year-old Bira was uprooted and moved to England in 1927, where he fell under the influence of a man that would change his life forever – his cousin, Prince Chula Chakrabongse.

However, home was not the only thing element of Bira’s life that fell away – having already lost his mother at the age of four, his father would later die in 1928, effectively making the Prince an orphan at the age of fourteen. Thereafter Chula became Bira’s legal guardian.
As the 1920’s drew to a close, political pressures in Siam grew and in 1932 and King Rama VII abdicated the throne, but for the Prince, that life seemed a world away.

Royalty Behind the Wheel
A versatile and cultured young man, Bira attended Eton, Cambridge University and Byam Shaw Art School, but for all his knowledge absorbed, it would be an MG Magna that intrigued the young Prince.
The Magna – an 18th birthday gift from Chula – was ripe for racing, yet the Prince did not enter it into competition, instead preferring to bide his time; however when Chula formed the privateer squad White Mouse Racing in 1935, everything changed.
Determined to race, Bira obtained the permission of Chula and the dethroned Rama VII to enter a short event at Brooklands in 1935, but was not helped by his choice of vehicle – a slow and ageing Riley Imp. It would not stop the Prince from becoming one of the promising young stars of the Voiturette Class of International Racing (machinery smaller the Grand Prix cars).

Despite being rather shortsighted, Bira soon became a force to be reckoned with behind the wheel and with additional homes in both Geneva and Southern France, Bira took the opportunity to race in smaller European events. Having replaced the Riley Imp with a more up-to-date M3 Magnette, the car was fashioned with the colours of Siam – pale blue with a yellow trim, later to be known as ‘Bira Blue’.

A new ERA
Bira’s fortunes would take a further upswing later that year – Chula would purchase a new 1.5 litre ERA Voiturette machine that he would call Romulus. It would be a powerful combination, helping Bira to 2nd place in its first race at Dieppe (France) despite a mid-race stop for repairs.
The Prince continued to race well against the more powerful cars of the 1935 Grand Prix season, taking another second place at Switzerland’s treacherous Bremgarten circuit, followed by a 5th at the Donington and 3rd at Brooklands. For an unknown driver only competing in a small number of events, it was a startling array of results.

The following year saw the Princes purchase another ERA (called Remus) and a third machine – a Maserati 8CM – all of which would be split between international and British events.
It would be a year of further glory for White Mouse Racing. Bira’s quality behind the wheel of his quick and sturdy Romulus would ensure victory at the Coupe de Prince Rainier at Monte Carlo (the build-up race to the Monaco Grand Prix). The Prince would win a further four races in 1936 in his trusty ERA, before claiming another 5th and 3rd at Donington and Brooklands with the Maserati.
To top the year, Bira received the first of three BRDC’s Road Racing Gold Stars. However, the stellar string of results and good fortune could not last…

A Swift Downfall… and War
1936 was the peak for White Mouse Racing. The following year saw the tiny team pick up a Grand Prix Delage machine from the Mercedes-bound Richard Seaman. A second Delage was also bought – this time from a private sale – however both were to woefully underperform.
Despite the hiring of famous race engineer Lofty England, the cars were slow and unreliable, with good results now coming against lesser talents in equally difficult machinery.
In order to try to keep up with the fields of 1937 and 1938, White Mouse Racing was forced to run in the now outdated ERA machinery, leaving the Prince with precious little to play with. As more and more money was poured into upgrading the Delage pair, preparation of the ERA’s suffered and this showed in Bira’s largely disappointing results.
Although, there were occasional victories, they were not of the stature of previous years.

Indeed, Prince Bira’s success in the mid-30’s had made him famous for reasons beyond his heritage and as the decade drew to a close, a Grand Prix in the city of Bangkok came close to becoming a reality. With Siam now renamed Thailand, a feeling of hope rang in the air.

Sadly it was not to be. The Bangkok Grand Prix, due to run in October 1939, would not come to fruition. The outbreak of the Second World War put an instant halt to the race, with Thailand becoming occupied by Japanese forces not long thereafter.
While based at his new residence in Cornwall, Bira – loyal to the country in which he had spent his adult life – became a glider instructor for the Royal Air Force (RAF).
Yet Bira, like many of his motor racing contemporaries, would lose many of his racing years to the war – by the time he next sat in a racing car, it was 1946; still sometime before any credible races and championships could be strung together.

A Return to the Roads
As his 32nd birthday approached, Bira returned to race at Chimay in Belgium, finishing 6th in his Maserati 8CM, before returning to winning ways a year at the same circuit. However, his win came in his old ERA machine – a car considered outdated one decade previously; an acknowledgement of far European still had to come go as it rebuilt itself.
Lurking in the backdrop was the reformed White Mouse Racing, but this was no longer the 1930’s and the relationship between Bira and his cousin Prince Chula had cooled considerably. With British and European racing still proving to be sluggish, the privateer team imploded and the cousin’s went their separate ways for good.
For Bira, the slide was slow, but now his future was cast and the Prince began to fall towards oblivion. Chula, meanwhile, would pass away in 1963 having fallen out of the sport completely.

With Bira free from White Mouse Racing, the Thai pilot made a switch to Maserati in 1949 – a move that would garner several podiums – at a time when the Formula 1 World Championship was formed.
By entering the inaugural event at Silverstone in May 1950, Bira became the first, and thus far only Thai driver to compete in Formula 1 when he ran for Enrico Platé’s private squad, driving the Maserati 4CLT-48.
In what was fast becoming an outclassed car, Bira would retire from the British Grand Prix, although points would come Monaco (5th) and Switzerland (4th), rewarding him with 8th position over all. A podium at the non-Championship event at Goodwood was a highlight in a year bereft of delights.

The Beginning of the End
The Thai Prince attempted few events in 1951, one of which was the Spanish Grand Prix – indeed Bira pulled out after only a single lap with an engine failure; however he was well off the pace in qualifying. He did win the short 1951 Richmond Trophy at Goodwood and took 4th at the Bordeaux Non-Championship Grand Prix as a private entrant in his Maserati 4CLT, but beyond that results were sparse.
The following year brought two finished in Formula 1 races (Belgium 10th, Britain 11th), but no points. A podium at the Marseilles Grand Prix was his sole salvation, albeit five laps behind race winner Alberto Ascari. With his patience dissipating, Bira’s interest began to wane and his circuit appearances became more inconsistent.
1953 saw Bira start the year with Connaught Engineering, before switching to the Scuderia Milano squad. It would prove to be his lowest year in Grand Prix racing, with no points in F1 and few finishes in Non-Championship events.

Form returned briefly as the mid-50’s approached. Entered in his own Maserati 250F, Bira secured his final points finish in France, before winning the Non-Championship Grand Prix des Frontieres in Belgium. Two more runner-up spots in Non-Championship events came at Rouen and Pescara, until the Prince celebrated for a final time – one final victory came in January 1955 at the New Zealand Grand Prix in Ardmore.
Solid results at the Bordeaux GP and at the BRDC International Trophy shortly after the Ardmore event once again raised the Prince’s profile somewhat amongst his peers.
Then as the Belgian Grand Prix approached, an entry for Bira was muted – only for the Thai Prince to mysteriously pull out beforehand. With little fanfare, Bira suddenly – and unexpectedly – announced his retirement and turned his back on the world of motorsport.

Life Later On
Although Bira’s F1 results may not amount to much on paper, his skill in the wider arena of motorsport’s calendar brought much deserved success. He returned to Thailand for a time in 1956 following his retirement, but also kept home in Europe.
However, Bira did not disappear completely. Indeed the Prince joined the Thai Olympic squad as a sailor, débuting at the 1956 Melbourne Olympics and then competing in a further three games. His final appearance as an Olympian was at the 1972 Munich games, at the age of 58.

As time passed, the Prince ran several business’, but often they struggled – Bira could not bring his racing prowess to industry and without the support of the now defunct Thai monarchy, Bira descended toward financial severe difficulties.
Thereafter Bira returned to France and later to England for good – this former Grand Prix driver, forgotten and alone amongst London’s vast surroundings.

Sadly, Bira’s life would reach of an anonymous end. On the 23rd of December 1985, the Prince collapsed and died of a heart attack at Barons Court underground station in London. With no identification, Bira lay in state until a handwritten note found in his pocket gave clues as to his who he was.
Upon investigation by the University of London and Scotland Yard, Bira’s body was identified and the Prince was given a deserving celebration of life by the Royal Thai Embassy.

Bira would not be forgotten this time. Established in the mid-1980’s, Thailand’s “Bira Circuit” is the country’s sole track that has been certified by the FIA – for now. Should Formula 1 see a future there in years to come; that may well change.
The Bangkok Grand Prix did eventually happen; albeit in 1988 as a historic race – and Prince Bira’s famed Romulus took to the roads piloted by Narisa Chakrabongse, daughter of Prince Chula.
With Formula 1 slowly, but surely shifting its house further east in search of an undiscovered audience, rumours of a race in Thailand have grown exponentially, leading some to believe that the country may be a new Grand Prix venue, following on from Russia’s eventual début.
Should the sport move to Thailand, it would mark the first running of a Grand Prix in the nation – a feat so nearly managed for real over seventy years ago.

GP2 Asia Swallowed up by the Main Series

Following several lacklustre seasons, the GP2 Asia Series has finally been merged into the Main Series.

A non-entity of a 2011 season brought the doors down on the Championship, thanks mainly to the collapse of two rounds in Bahrain. After an opening weekend in Abu Dhabi in February, the concluded at Imola in Northern Italy.
With the introduction of a new chassis package earlier this year, the GP2 Asia series saw a full compliment on the grid; however the line-up for the previous three seasons has often been less than stellar.

All is not lost for GP2 Asia – while that Championship has disappeared, its Abu Dhabi round has been soaked up by the Main Series, with the possibility of a singe stand-alone event should the Bahrain Grand Prix not go ahead next year.

The Championship was initially created to stimulate Asian interest in the higher levels of junior level motorsport and to provide a window for Asian drivers to showcase their talents on a wider scale.
In this, the series failed. Of the four seasons the GP2 Asia Championship contested, only fourteen drivers from the Asian / Middle Eastern continents took part (some of whom did not stay around long). From that fourteen, only Kamui Kobayashi is currently in Formula 1, while Indian driver Karun Chandhok is the reserve drive driver at Team Lotus.

Hylkema Moves Up

Hylkema celebrated at the Nurburgring. © British Formula 3

Netherlands sole British Formula 3 competitor, Bart Hylkema, will be making the move the series’ Championship Class this weekend with his T-Sport squad.

The 21-year-old Hylkema has been battling with Kotaro Sakurai this season in the Rookie Class, taking eleven wins from fifteen races, earning a 55 point lead following the last round at the Nurburgring.

As part of his move, Hylkema will drive a Dallara F311 chassis in anger for the first time and take a Volkswagen engine. While Hylkema’s Mugen-Honda powered machine has often trailed the Championship Class runner, the Dutchman has clung on to the rear of the main pack in several races, nearly beating Hitech Racing substitute Max Snegirev at Brands Hatch last month.

Indeed, the T-Sport pilot has been very excited about the prospect and challenge:

“I’ve wanted to do this for a little while now and after discussing it with my family, manager, my sponsors and the team, we’re all agreed this is the perfect time to make the move and I want to thank them very much for making this possible.
It really is a very exciting step and one I’m sure will be the right decision. “

He added:

“It really is a very exciting step and one I’m sure will be the right decision. There are 15 races left this year so we have plenty of time to work on understanding the A-class car and how to get the most from it. It would have been nice to go on and, hopefully, to win the Rookie Class title but this step is much better for my development as a driver and much more important for my career as a whole.
Since the start of the season I’ve learned a lot and I feel this is the right time to take that knowledge and move things up a level. If you want to be the best you can, you have to race the best.”

Hylkema’s first challenge in the Championship Class comes at this weekend’s round at Paul Ricard in Southern France.

2011 British Grand Prix (Rd 9, July 10th)

© Creative Commons / Junafani

Fernando Alonso claimed his first Grand Prix victory of the season following a stunning drive at the British Grand Prix in Silverstone.

The Spaniard came home a clear 16.5 seconds ahead of Red Bull duo Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber, who – controversially – rounded out the podium line astern.

Alonso deserved this win in every aspect, yet the double-World Champion may except that enjoyed a dose of luck during the Grand Prix – including slow pitstops for both Red Bull’s.

The Wet and the Dry Stuff
Indeed the opening portion of the race saw much movement through the field, helped by varying weather conditions across the Silverstone circuit – something that Sauber pilot Sergio Perez discovered to his detriment pre-race. A spin on his way to the grid, saw the Mexican damage his front wing, necessitating a pitstop.
While the opening few turns remained dry, the run from Brooklands to the Becketts complex became sodden and treacherous. There was little doubt the field would need to start on Pirelli’s intermediate tyres.

Not like it mattered to Vettel. Another great start by the German saw him jump Webber off the line, while Alonso maintained 3rd ahead of a quick-starting Jenson Button (McLaren) and Felipe Massa in the other Scuderia machine.
Uncomfortable on his intermediate tyres, Button soon lost confidence – within a lap, the former World Champion had lost spots to both Massa and teammate Lewis Hamilton.
Hamilton also had an excellent start in his McLaren MP4-26. The Englishman surged from 10th to 7th in the first few turns, before stealing 6th from Force India’s Paul di Resta, moving into the top five thanks to his move on Button.

Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi maintained 8th off the line, ahead a quick starting Michael Schumacher (Mercedes) in 9th.
Feeling pressure from the rear, Kobayashi carefully guarded 8th from Schumacher in opening stint, only to feel the clump of a Mercedes front wing on the ninth lap.
A spun Kobayashi enjoyed a little luck – the Japanese pilot lost just two positions in the still damp Brooklands corner, while Schumacher destroyed his front wing. Taking note of the damage, Mercedes brought the veteran in for new nose and dry tyres – a move that would change the race.
With the circuit drying, Schumacher began to set quickest lap times, until a stop / go penalty parachuted the veteran back down the order; however the point had been made. Schumacher held his hand up for the initial error:

“Having used DRS for the first time in the race, I was arriving at the corner with over-run. Underestimating the effect, my braking was not good and this is how the collision happened. It was right to get a penalty but why it had to be a stop-go, and not a drive-through penalty, I would like to understand better as I felt it was too hard.”

Sadly for Williams, their lack of race pace in the wet was showing once again. Having started 7th, Venezuelan rookie Pastor Maldonado dropped to 10th in the opening few turns.
It would not be long before Adrian Sutil (lap 4), Nico Rosberg and Perez (both lap 5) demoted the Williams driver further, with Maldonado struggling for any grip on a damp and inconsiderate surface.
Maldonado’s veteran teammate Rubens Barrichello was also having a tough first few laps with the Brazilian started 15th, only to fall to 18th as the field sorted itself out. Only the three back-of-the-field squads (Lotus, Virgin and Hispania) were running behind the Williams.
Unfortunately for Lotus, neither driver had much of an opportunity to take advantage of the difficult conditions. The race was only three laps old when a gearbox failure curtailed Heikki Kovalainen’s participation, while an oil leak ended Jarno Trulli’s day early (lap 10).

Threats from Behind
Vettel was having no such problems up front. The championship leader spent the first stint pulling away from Webber. By the tenth tour of the circuit, Vettel had pulled an eight second lead over his Australian counterpart.
Webber, for his troubles, had been contemplating the threatening Alonso, as he snaked around his mirrors, yet the Australian neatly answered every proposition Alonso raised with guile. Meanwhile, Vettel – in clear air – pulled away from the 2nd / 3rd place battle.

By the eleventh lap, Schumacher’s quickening pace on dry tyres signalled the first tyre stops of the day. An obtuse strategy would make a loser of Massa – the Brazilian had been kept on track too long by the Ferrari team, duty bound to wait for Alonso to stop.
Staying on circuit until long after his tyres grew weary, Massa eventually gifted 4th place to Hamilton. It would only get worse for Massa. With his tyres cold and feeble, Button reeled the Brazilian in and forced the issue around the outside of Stowe.
Massa fought the Englishman hard through Vale, but the McLaren driver completed the pass for 5th into Club.

Kobayashi also lost out in the first stops. As the Japanese pilot exited his box, Maldonado was prepared to enter his; with a clang, the Japanese driver speared the Williams car, nearly taking down several Force India wheel guns. It would earn the Sauber driver a ten-second stop / go and signal the start of a disappointing spell.
Not long after the Sauber rejoined the race, he had been passed by Renault’s Nick Heidfeld. After starting a disappointing 16th, Heidfeld had climbed to 13th by the end of the first round of pitstops – moves on Maldonado and Kobayashi took Heidfeld to the edge of the points.

Kobayashi would also lose out to Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari. The Spaniard had spent the race climbing the ladder, having qualified 18th. Battling amongst teammate Sebastien Buemi and Vitaly Petrov (Renault), as well as Perez, Schumacher, Maldonado, Heidfeld and Kobayashi, Alguersuari eventually rose to 12th by lap 20.
Meanwhile, Kobayashi’s misery was completed as Maldonado too seized a position, prior to the Sauber man taking his stop / go penalty. Tell tail puffs of smoke from Kobayashi’s Ferrari engine signalled that all was not well with his power plant – by lap 28, the unit expired and Kobayashi was done for the day.
Schumacher – in recovery mode for the second time – swiped a position off of Petrov to trail Maldonado in 14th.

Maintaining the Gap
There would be no problems for Vettel as the pack filtered out; the Red Bull man maintaining a 6.4 second lead over Webber and an eleven second gap ahead of Alonso and the charging Hamilton.
Webber, comfortable on his Pirelli slicks, closed the gap to Vettel to less than two seconds, before the wary German responded. For the first time in 2011, Vettel was truly feeling a push from his Australian counterpart.

Hamilton – on the tail of Alonso by the 15th tour – made a decisive move for 3rd into Copse, beginning a chase after the leading two. Alonso, however, has rarely ever been a pushover.
With time, Alonso’s Pirelli’s came to temperature, giving the advantage back to the Ferrari – it would take until lap 23, but the Spaniard crawled back onto Hamilton’s rear wing, forcing a pass one lap later. Just like Valencia two weeks previous, the Pirelli’s on the McLaren were struggling, leaving Hamilton to necessitate a second stop on the 24th tour.

The 2008 World Champion was not alone in the pits. Having run a quiet 7th for much of the race, Paul di Resta also took a second service on lap 24; however the Scot arrived in his box to discover tyres destined for Adrian Sutil.
A rushed swap for the correct tyres cost di Resta 25 seconds, dropping the Force India man down to 16th and out of contention; whereupon he would clash with Buemi on his outlap. Sutil was clearly left disappointed:

“I think we made the switch to dry tyres at the right moment and we were running well. Then I got a call to come into the pits again, but when I got there the team were expecting Adrian, so there was obviously some confusion. That cost us about 25 seconds, which pretty much ended my chances. So it’s a frustrating race…”

The Toro Rosso pilot suffered an immediate puncture – Buemi travelled a short distance, before his strained suspension gave up the ghost, his day done. Another pitstop for a new front wing and set of tyres effectively finished di Resta’s day; too far from the midfield proper to manage a point scoring finish, but too far ahead of the tailenders to have to worry about battling them for position. Out of the car, Buemi was aggrieved:

“I would like to see the footage with Di Resta again to see exactly what happened, but from the cockpit, I was on the dry line, he tried to come up the inside of me where the track surface was still very wet. He had touched my left rear tyre which shredded it.”

Sutil, meanwhile, had suffered a puncture just as di Resta signalled for a stop (hence the confusion), but went without delay during his tyre change.

Even the Best Can Do It
Mistakes aren’t the sole property of the midfield teams. Indeed Red Bull made a couple of clangers – and it would hand the race on a plate to Ferrari.
This did not come about without Alonso’s help of course. Once passed Hamilton, the Spaniard reeled in the Red Bull pairing, plying the pressure as only he could. As Webber pitted on lap 27, the tyre change was sluggish, costing the Australian up to four seconds.
Vettel pitted a lap later, yet another stuck tyre allowed the Red Bull mechanics dramatically. Alonso – who entered the pits three seconds behind Vettel, emerged two seconds ahead. So slow were Red Bull in the pits, that Hamilton also jumped the Vettel / Webber pair.
From 1st and 2nd, the Red Bull’s slotted into 3rd and 4th as Alonso headed Hamilton, Vettel and Webber – there was, however, still the small matter of the rest of the race…

Again on used soft Pirelli’s, Alonso was in his element. That two second lead became over four seconds by lap 30; just under eight by the 33rd circulation and 9.5 seconds one tour later.
Hamilton, meanwhile, was feeling the pressure; his silver and red wing mirrors filled with the ominous blue and red smatterings of Vettel. The German too was on the lookout; all the while keeping tabs on Webber just behind him.
In the background, the scenery flourished with Jenson Button’s shadows. The Briton had stopped with Massa on lap 26, keeping his lead over the Ferrari, but as the Brazilian waited for his tyres to come up to temperature, Button escaped his sights.
As the second Ferrari fell away from the top five, Button drew to within two seconds of Webber’s rear. Once again, it appeared this looked like it would be decided in the pits.

Come the 36th tour, Vettel became the first to bite the bullet, with Hamilton stopping one lap later. It would be enough for the reigning Champion – a single lap extra on fresher tyres gained Vettel enough time to leapfrog Hamilton’s gripless McLaren, although it was a close run thing.
As Vettel emerged, he was trapped behind Massa’s slipping Ferrari. Determined to maintain his momentum, Vettel pushed his was passed Massa at Copse, immediately hitting top pace.
Hamilton – keen to maintain the battle with Vettel – also manoeuvred his way around Massa at Woodcote one lap around, but by this time, Vettel had already disappeared. Around them, Webber filed in for his last stop on lap 38, with the Ferrari pair pitting on laps 39 (Alonso) and 41 (Massa).
With a straight run to the flag, Alonso led from Vettel, Hamilton, Webber and… Massa?

Alas, McLaren’s day was to take a turn for the worse. Button, too, made for the pits on the 39th lap, only for things to go seriously awry. In the midst of his tyre change, a failed wheelgun ensured a loose right front – thinking the change had been completed; Button was released only for his tyre to work its way off at the pit exit.
With only three wheels left on his rather expensive wagon, the former Champion pulled off and out of the race.

Just as the team soaked up the loss of one driver, red lights started flashing for their other. Having battled hard with both Alonso and Vettel earlier in the race, Hamilton started picking up low fuel warnings from the pit lane.
With less than ten laps remaining, the McLaren man became a sitting duck for Webber – who sliced through with ease on lap 46 – while Massa, a further fifteen seconds adrift was now a lingering threat.

To the Flag
Not like it mattered much to Fernando Alonso. With the Red Bull’s cleared, the Spaniard set to the flag, pulling out a gap of over sixteen seconds at the flag.
For Alonso, it was celebration – for Ferrari, it was sheer relief. It didn’t come by accident and wasn’t wholly influenced the realigned engine mapping regulations either. Just when the team from Maranello needed upgrades, they arrived and Alonso delivered.

“The team did an amazing job and I dedicate this win to everyone at Maranello and at the track, whose work has allowed me and Felipe to drive such a good car. The track characteristics were not really suited to our car, but clearly, the improvements we brought here helped a lot. At the start, it was not easy to drive because parts of the circuit were very wet and others were only damp in parts. I only realised I could win when I came back out on track after the final pit stop. Clearly the problem at Vettel’s stop helped, as did the fact that, for a long time, Hamilton kept the two Red Bulls behind him, but I have to say that in the dry we were very strong.”

Less happy, however, were Red Bull. Beaten on both the circuit and in the pitlane, Sebastian Vettel took a consolatory 2nd place, in spite of Mark Webber.
The Australian, on a high following his Hamilton pass, captured Vettel in the dying laps. Determined to finally put one over on his teammate this season, Webber pushed Vettel to the limit, very nearly coming together with the German in Copse with three laps to go.
To the dismay of both Webber and the fans at home and in the stands, Red Bull team principal Christian Horner ordered Webber several times to stand down his attack.

Refusing to acknowledge, the Australian continued to push Vettel to the limit, before seeming to relent on the final tour. The pair crossed the finish line only 0.4 of-a-second apart, yet Webber was clearly unhappy, feeling a 2nd place could have been his. Webber did not try too hard to disguise his disappointment:

“It was a mixed race, it was very slippery at the start with the intermediate tyres, half the track was dry and half was wet and we had to wait for the slicks to come into play. I felt strong at the start of each stint, but less so towards the end of the stints – both Seb and I were having trouble with the tyres at the end of the race. I tried to pass him, but not quite, and that was the race.”

Massa was also on a charge. Aware that Hamilton was shy of fuel, the Brazilian scooped a-quarter-of-a-minute out of Hamilton in the final five tours. Sadly for the Ferrari driver, it wasn’t enough, but it was very close.
By lap 49, Hamilton led Massa by 7.9 seconds; then 4.3 one lap later and 1.7 seconds as the started the final tour. Indeed the pair spent much of the final lap together, fumbling for position and banging wheels – barging their respective machines, fighting hard, as ever, for each potential point.
For a moment through the final turns, it looked like Massa might have it, but as the pair exited club, Hamilton held the advantage and 4th place, taking the position by 0.024 of-a-second.
Fabulous stuff.

There Were Others
With one McLaren gone, all those behind moved up a position, including Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver had certainly been through the wars at Silverstone – not for the first time – however his pace was good.
The veteran had fallen back to 17th after his stop / go penalty, but quick running and the kindness shown to his tyres saw Schumacher climb the standings. Indeed by Schumacher’s final stop on lap 31, he had already reached 12th. A brief stop to fit new softs saw the multiple Champion only drop a single spot.
A pass on Alguersuari (lap 32) took Schumacher back to 12th, until the rest of the field stopped several laps later, leaving the German 9th behind Heidfeld, where he stay for the duration.

Schumacher’s teammate, Nico Rosberg, also utilised a somewhat unlikely strategy. After a poor start dropped him to 12th, Rosberg opted for only two tyre changes, slowly bringing the Mercedes back into contention.
Realistically, the Mercedes team are in something of a limbo. Not as quick as the top three teams, but a deal quicker than Renault’s often leaves the silver and turquoise machines fighting amongst themselves.
The British Grand Prix was no exception. Once Rosberg had scythed passed the slower midfield runners in the opening stint, the race had simply to come to him. As Button removed himself from the action, Rosberg slotted into 6th, admittedly not disturbing those ahead; however he faced a fierce battle from behind.

Sergio Perez also utilised an off-kilter strategy. Deciding on a two-stopper, the Mexican ran in 8th for most of the race, becoming 7th following Button’s retirement.
Thanks to a soft touch, Perez chased Rosberg on his decidedly fresher Pirelli’s, closing the gap to just half-a-second in the final few tours. Showing his muscle, the Mexican pressed, but Rosberg would not budge – it was enough to take the bite out of Perez’ rubber and the Sauber lost five seconds in the last two laps.

It was another quiet race for Heidfeld, yet the substitute brought yet more points to Renault’s table. After battles in the first stint, the German kept his R31 out of harms way as he slowly climbed the table.
Having taken his last stop on the 31st lap, the Renault man kept his wits about him, despite falling to 13th – as the field eventually filtered out, Heidfeld emerged in 8th place. A decent result indeed, but there is a distinct feeling of Renault falling behind Mercedes with each race.
An unusual tyre strategy for Alguersuari lifted him up the field. Having spent much of the race residing outside of the top ten, the Toro Rosso man utilised long runs to lit him up the order. Alguersuari persevered, eventually delivering his third consecutive points finish in 10th for Toro Rosso.

Beyond That
Following his puncture, Adrian Sutil rarely featured, yet still slyly reached 11th, pressurising Alguersuari to the flag. Sutil, himself, possessed only a nine-tenths lead over 12th place Vitaly Petrov as the race drew to a close. Having qualified on the seventh row, the Russian was never a factor in what was one of his most disappointing races of the season.
Disappointing carries an altogether different meaning for Rubens Barrichello. The Williams driver came home ahead of teammate Pastor Maldonado to take 13th and 14th respectively, although neither looked like troubling the points. Unable to recover from his mid-race issues, Paul di Resta had to make do with 15th.
Both Virgin’s came home two laps down, with Timo Glock leading Jerome d’Ambrosio at the line. Hispania’s Vitantonio Liuzzi beat new teammate Daniel Ricciardo in his first race.
It was a respectable weekend for Ricciardo who set out to finish his first Grand Prix and did so with little fuss.

All this manages to extend Vettel’s lead. With no consistent rivals stepping up, the German’s points total grew to 204 points – an advantage of 80 points over Webber, with Alonso a further 12 points behind.
Both Hamilton and Button have collected 109 points (three adrift of Alonso), meaning that this is surely a fantastic Championship battle for… second place.
With Vettel’s home race in Germany coming up next, it’s unlikely that his lead will shrink just yet.
Race Rating: 3.5 out of 5

2011 British Grand Prix (Rd 9)
Pos Driver Team Time
 1.  Alonso        Ferrari                    1h28:41.194 (52 laps)
 2.  Vettel        Red Bull-Renault           +    16.511      
 3.  Webber        Red Bull-Renault           +    16.947      
 4.  Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes           +    28.986      
 5.  Massa         Ferrari                    +    29.010      
 6.  Rosberg       Mercedes                   +  1:00.665      
 7.  Perez         Sauber-Ferrari             +  1:05.590      
 8.  Heidfeld      Renault                    +  1:15.542      
 9.  Schumacher    Mercedes                   +  1:17.912      
10.  Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +  1:19.108      
11.  Sutil         Force India-Mercedes       +  1:19.712      
12.  Petrov        Renault                    +  1:20.600      
13.  Barrichello   Williams-Cosworth          +  1 lap         
14.  Maldonado     Williams-Cosworth          +  1 lap         
15.  Di Resta      Force India-Mercedes       +  1 lap         
16.  Glock         Virgin-Cosworth            +  2 laps        
17.  D'Ambrosio    Virgin-Cosworth            +  2 laps        
18.  Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth               +  2 laps        
19.  Ricciardo     HRT-Cosworth               +  3 laps     

Fastest lap: Alonso, 1:34.908

Not classified/retirements: Driver Team Gap
Button        McLaren-Mercedes             11
Buemi         Toro Rosso-Ferrari           26
Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari               28
Trulli        Lotus-Renault                41
Kovalainen    Lotus-Renault                49

World Championship standings, round 9: Drivers: Constructors: 
 1.  Vettel       204
 2.  Webber       124 
 3.  Alonso       112
 4.  Hamilton     109 
 5.  Button       109
 6.  Massa         52 
 7.  Rosberg       40
 8.  Heidfeld      34
 9.  Petrov        31
10.  Schumacher    28       
11.  Kobayashi     25       
12.  Sutil         10       
13.  Alguersuari    9       
14.  Buemi          8       
15.  Perez          8       
16.  Barrichello    4       
17.  Di Resta       2

World Championship standings, round 9: Drivers: Constructors: 
 1.  Red Bull-Renault          328
 2.  McLaren-Mercedes          218
 3.  Ferrari                   164
 4.  Mercedes                   68
 5.  Renault                    65
 6.  Sauber-Ferrari             33
 7.  Toro Rosso-Ferrari         17
 8.  Force India-Mercedes       12
 9.  Williams-Cosworth           4

Repairing the Damage From Toronto

Following a stellar display at Iowa Speedway two weeks ago, the IZOD IndyCar Series dropped the ball in Toronto yesterday evening.

The race – eventually won by Dario Franchitti – was a fractured affair, peppered with numerous silly accidents that left several drivers fuming after the event, none more vocal than Penske’s Will Power.

When compared to the wheel-to-wheel talents displayed on the 7/8th’s of-a-mile oval in Iowa, it was truly difficult to comprehend how low the quality of competition had sunk.
This was compounded by a toothless race control who seemingly refused to bark, let alone bite. Despite the repeated avoidable incidents that took a number of drivers out of contention, race control at no point put their foot down, showcasing a shocking vision of weakness.

Whether it was Takuma Sato ramming Danica Patrick, Ryan Briscoe taking out Tony Kanaan, Briscoe himself being removed by Mike Conway, Paul Tracy powering into Vitor Meira, Ryan Hunter-Reay spinning Graham Rahal around or – most controversially – Dario Franchitti turning Will Power around and then later getting hit by Alex Tagliani, amateur hour reigned on the streets of Toronto.

A furious Power later commented:

“It doesn’t surprise me that he [Dario] didn’t get a penalty, because he never gets penalised, it’s pretty typical. It was a pretty dirty move. He just turned me around. Does anyone ever penalise this guy? I left the inside open on the brakes. I always race him clean, and he always races me dirty. He did the same at St Pete, though I didn’t say anything, and he did the same today. The guy that mouths off about everyone and whinges about everyone, and he’s the guy who races the most dirty, never gets a penalty from IndyCar. It’s just not right.”

Justin Wilson also received a few dents in his Dreyer and Reinbold machine. A late-race accident instigated by Marco Andretti, saw Wilson connect with Oriol Servia and several other participants. It left the Englishman feeling rather jaded after the race.

“It’s really disappointing. Oriol Servia and myself were racing hard and gave each other room and somebody else [Andretti] stuck their nose in there and pitched Oriol up into the air and took out five cars. It’s really frustrating when you are that close to the end to have your day, that was a pretty decent day, be ruined by some bad driving.”

IndyCar is working very hard to rebuild a battered reputation that has resulted in derisory television viewing figures, that continue to worry the series and its participants greatly and races like this do not help.
A post-race tweet from Tony Kanaan pondered whether the drivers need to learn how to drive again. One also wonders if race control need to relearn how to officiate and handle drivers, such was their shockingly poor display.

As a sidenote, in the pre-race show, co-commentator Jon Beekhuis tended the “no-blocking” rule came about because of Jeff Krosnoff”s fatal accident at the Toronto circuit in 1996.
Beekhuis is normally excellent as a technical back-up in the booth, but this was just a shocking rewrite of history. Krosnoff’s accident was simply that – a tragic, tragic accident, but it was not down to blocking.

In the incident, several car cars piled nto turn three and ran out of room, lifting Krosnoff into the air where the 31-year-old hit an exposed lamp post. Track marshal Gary Avrin was also killed in the accident.
That the producer’s saw fit to use this sad incident as an excuse for the “no-blocking” rule – a sporting regulation not added until several years later – was very poor form on their part and a sad realignment of history to suit the agenda of their piece.

2011 British Grand Prix (Rd 9, Qualifying, July 9th)

© Creative Commons / Junafani

Mark Webber registered his second pole position of the season for the British Grand Prix.

The Red Bull driver just nudged ahead of teammate Sebastian Vettel in changeable conditions. Webber’s best of 1:30.399 proving to be three-hundredths too much for his German counterpart.

Ferrari locked out the second row with Fernando Alonso beating Felipe Massa to 3rd, while McLaren’s Jenson Button rounded out the top five, albeit 1.5 seconds shy of the pole.
A stellar effort by Paul di Resta (Force India) brought the Scot to the third row for the first time.

Di Resta had a 0.004 advantage over Pastor Maldonado in 7th, both of whom were comfortably quicker than Kamui Kobayashi (8th, Sauber), Nico Rosberg (9th, Mercedes) and Lewis Hamilton (McLaren).
Several drivers attempted a late run in Q3, only for their laps to be rendered meaningless by growing rainfall.

Sauber’s Sergio Perez (12th) partners Adrian Sutil (11th, Force India) on the sixth row, with a disappointed Michael Schumacher in 13th.
The veteran missed out on the final section of qualifying by only two-tenths of-a-second. Schumacher headed both Renault’s (Vitaly Petrov, 14th; Nick Heidfeld, 16th) and the second Williams of Rubens Barrichello (15th). Heikki Kovalainen made it through to Q2 at the expense of the Toro Rosso’s.

Indeed Jaime Alguersuari led the Italian minnows out of Q1 (with half-a-second advantage over Sebastien Buemi).
The Toro Rosso pair lost their final run to inclement weather; however both had more than enough of an advantage over both Virgin Racing machine’s (Timo Glock, 20th; Jerome d’Ambrosio, 22nd) and Jarno Trulli’s Lotus (21st).
Vitantonio Liuzzi headed the final row of the grid. The Hispania runner pipped his new teammate Daniel Ricciardo to a 23rd starting position.

Pos Driver Team Time Gap 
 1.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1m30.399s
 2.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     1m30.431s  + 0.032
 3.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m30.516s  + 0.117
 4.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m31.124s  + 0.725
 5.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m31.898s  + 1.501
 6.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m31.929s  + 1.530
 7.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth    1m31.933s  + 1.534
 8.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m32.128s  + 1.729
 9.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m32.209s  + 1.810
10.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m32.376s  + 1.977
Q2 cut-off time: 1m32.588s Gap **
11.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes 1m32.617s   + 0.977
12.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m32.624s   + 0.984
13.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             1m32.656s   + 1.016
14.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault              1m32.734s   + 1.094
15.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth    1m33.119s   + 1.479
16.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault              1m33.805s   + 2.165
17.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault        1m34.821s   + 3.181
Q1 cut-off time: 1m35.132s Gap *
18.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m35.245s   + 2.575
19.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m35.749s   + 3.079
20.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth      1m36.203s   + 3.533
21.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault        1m36.456s   + 3.786
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth      1m37.154s   + 4.484
23.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth         1m37.484s   + 4.814
24.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth         1m38.059s   + 5.389
107% time: 1m39.156s
* Gap to quickest in Q1
** Gap to quickest in Q2

2011 British Grand Prix (Rd 9, Free Practice 3, July 9th)

© Creative Commons / Junafani

Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel headed a frantic final practice session for tomorrow’s British Grand Prix.

The reigning Champion beat Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso to the top spot with a quick lap of 1:31.401 – only six-hundredths quicker than the Spaniard.

In the background, Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner and chief designer Adrian Newey protested the rewriting of regulations regarding hot-blown diffusers – something that is felt may hurt Red Bull’s pace.

There were other issues for Red Bull. Mark Webber missed much of the session due to a mechanical failure, but re-entered the fray ten minutes prior to the chequered flag to set his best lap on the soft Pirelli tyres.
It was enough to give the Australian 3rd on the sheets, four-tenths shy of Vettel, but three-tenths ahead of his nearest follower, Felipe Massa (Ferrari).

Pastor Maldonado set the 5th quickest time in his Williams FW33. It had been a good session for the Venezuelan, who is staying with an updated diffuser and indeed gave the rookie a 1.5 second advantage over veteran teammate Rubens Barrichello (14th), who was still running the original parts.

McLaren’s Jenson Button assumed the final spot in the top six ahead of Kamui Kobayashi (7th, Sauber) and Nico Rosberg (8th, Mercedes).
It had been something of an up-and-down session for the Mercedes pair. Whereas as Rosberg comfortably completed the most laps in the sixty minute session, his teammate, Michael Schumacher, was sidelined with engine difficulties for a large portion of the practice.
Schumacher secured the 11th best time after completing 11 laps.

The second Sauber of Sergio Perez was 9th ahead of Force India’s Paul di Resta, who rounded out the top ten.  At the rear of the field, Formula 1 débutante Daniel Ricciardo (Hispania) ran quicker than teammate Vitantonio Liuzzi for the second time this weekend.

The session had been punctuated on a few occasions by droplets of rain, but rarely was the down pour great enough to bring the action to a halt.

Pos Driver Team/Car Time Gap Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault      1m31.401s            17
 2.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari               1m31.464s  + 0.063s  20
 3.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault      1m31.829s  + 0.428s  12
 4.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari               1m32.169s  + 0.768s  20
 5.  Pastor Maldonado    Williams-Cosworth     1m32.496s  + 1.095s  20
 6.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes      1m32.956s  + 1.555s  18
 7.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari        1m33.014s  + 1.613s  20
 8.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes              1m33.044s  + 1.643s  23
 9.  Sergio Perez        Sauber-Ferrari        1m33.264s  + 1.863s  21
10.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes  1m33.423s  + 2.022s  22
11.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes              1m33.551s  + 2.150s  11
12.  Adrian Sutil        Force India-Mercedes  1m33.660s  + 2.259s  22
13.  Lewis Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes      1m33.842s  + 2.441s  16
14.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams-Cosworth     1m33.905s  + 2.504s  21
15.  Vitaly Petrov       Renault               1m34.042s  + 2.641s  22
16.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m34.329s  + 2.928s  20
17.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m34.799s  + 3.398s  20
18.  Nick Heidfeld       Renault               1m34.822s  + 3.421s  21
19.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus-Renault         1m35.225s  + 3.824s  21
20.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus-Renault         1m36.905s  + 5.504s  21
21.  Timo Glock          Virgin-Cosworth       1m37.614s  + 6.213s  18
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio   Virgin-Cosworth       1m38.068s  + 6.667s  20
23.  Daniel Ricciardo    HRT-Cosworth          1m38.289s  + 6.888s  19
24.  Tonio Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth          1m38.568s  + 7.167s  17

2011 British Grand Prix (Rd 9, Free Practice 2, July 8th)

© Creative Commons / Junafani

Felipe Massa topped a rain interrupted second practice session at Silverstone yesterday.

The Ferrari driver only completed nine laps in a largely quiet practice, as heavy rain through the middle of the session saw no one leave the pits for up to 20 minutes.

Come the chequered flag, the Brazilian’s time of 1:49.967 was not to be beaten.
Despite feeling his Ferrari was stable in the wet conditions, Massa tempted only a single run:

“The weather meant it was a difficult day, with rain affecting both the first and second sessions. I had a bit of graining on the fronts, especially at the start of the second session, but towards the end, the situation improved and the performance of the tyre got better all the time.”

Indeed the first flying lap did not come until the half way point, when brightening skies tempted Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari onto the track. Prior to that, several drivers completed installation laps before scurrying back to the dry cover of their respective garages.

With the circuit drying, there was a flurry of activity in the final fifteen minutes, bringing all the quick men out for a single run.
The top spot initially belonged to Mercedes’ Michael Schumacher, before being toppled by teammate Nico Rosberg, who himself would be pipped by Massa.

Rosberg stayed 2nd on the time sheets behind the Ferrari, although Schumacher soon fell to 12th as each new combatant found a drier surface to run on. Schumacher, for his troubles could also argue that each driver ahead of him was in intermediates compared to his full wet tyre configuration.

Kamui Kobayashi claimed 3rd for Sauber. The Japanese driver completed 16 laps in his rebuilt C30 machine, that saw him go narrowly quicker than the McLaren pairing Lewis Hamilton (4th) and Jenson Button (5th).
McLaren brought a new-specification rear wing (Hamilton ran it in the morning, while both used it in the afternoon) and while the wet conditions made it difficult to get a solid read of the parts, Hamilton appeared encouraged:

“Despite the lack of running, today was actually quite encouraging; we tested a couple of things and I managed to pick up quite a decent feeling for the car. It’s going to be interesting tomorrow if it’s dry, because I think our car is looking quite good. The new rear wing also felt quite positive, but we’ve still got to decide whether we carry it over into tomorrow and the race itself.”

Behind the McLaren’s Adrian Sutil headed the Force India pairing to 6th and 7th, while Ruben’s Barrichello helped himself to 8th, albeit two seconds off of Massa’s fastest lap.
Sergio Perez (Sauber) and Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso) claimed 9th and 10th respectively, just nudging ahead of Vitaly Petrov (11th) in the leading Renault.

The two Red Bull pilots, Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, barely ran at all. Webber completing just six laps to secure the 14th best time, while Vettel (18th) only circulated four times.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari               1m49.967s             9
 2.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes              1m50.744s  + 0.777   16
 3.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari        1m51.395s  + 1.428   16
 4.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes      1m51.438s  + 1.471    6
 5.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes      1m51.518s  + 1.551    6
 6.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes  1m51.738s  + 1.771   18
 7.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes  1m51.781s  + 1.814    7
 8.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth     1m51.992s  + 2.025   13
 9.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari        1m52.169s  + 2.202   12
10.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m52.189s  + 2.222   21
11.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault               1m52.198s  + 2.231    9
12.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes              1m52.325s  + 2.358   12
13.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault         1m52.578s  + 2.611   16
14.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault      1m52.587s  + 2.620    6
15.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari               1m52.869s  + 2.902    8
16.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault               1m54.023s  + 4.056    8
17.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m54.274s  + 4.307   16
18.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault      1m54.545s  + 4.578    4
19.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth       1m54.714s  + 4.747   13
20.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth     1m55.155s  + 5.188    8
21.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault         1m55.155s  + 5.188   12
22.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth       1m55.549s  + 5.582   10
23.  Daniel Ricciardo      HRT-Cosworth          1m55.828s  + 5.861   10
24.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth          1m56.037s  + 6.070    6