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2011 Monaco Grand Prix (Rd 6, Free Practice 3, May 28th)

Monte Carlo. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

In a session where he replicating his pace from Thursday, Fernando Alonso once again claimed the top of time sheets this morning.

A quickest lap of 1:14.433 was enough to give the Ferrari runner a half-second advantage over next up Jenson Button (2nd, McLaren) and fellow Scuderia pilot, Felipe Massa (3rd).

Sebastian Vettel represented the Red Bull team in the top four; however the nature of the session seemed to indicated Vettel (and teammate Mark Webber, 7th) were concentrating on race pace, as opposed to qualifying runs.

It was something of a stuttered practice. Mercedes’ Michael Schumacher had been leading the way in the early minutes, when his teammate Nico Rosberg suffered a massive accident approaching the Nouvelle Chicane.
The 25-year-old lost control of his Mercedes under braking, throwing the MGP-W02 violently into the barrier’s, shredding elements of the car as it continued at speed beyond the chicane itself.
With debris strewn across the circuit, the red flag was instantly thrown, leaving the session locked down for nearly twelve minutes.

Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari would later pick up a right rear puncture from the left-over shards of carbon fibre.
The Spaniard took no further part in the session, parking after 13 laps, with a best of 1:16.617, giving him 8th, only two-tenths ahead of teammate Sebastien Buemi; however Alguersuari can certainly argue a better Saturday than Vitantonio Liuzzi.

The Italian brought out a second red flag at the tail end of the session, thanks to a huge accident at St Devote.
Whereas numerous others took to the escape road at the corner in moments of peril, Liuzzi lost his Hispania on the exit of the quick turn, pitching him left rear first into the barrier.
A secondary collision less than a moment later only compounded the problem, leaving the small squad with a big problem.

During the three sessions, both Hispania’s sat outside the 107% cut-off following their respective chequered flags and for the second time this season are facing the very real possibility of not making the Grand Prix.
Should Liuzzi be not repaired in time for qualifying, the Italian is likely to not race at all and with fellow Hispania inmate Narain Karthikeyan slower than Liuzzi, the 2011 Monaco Grand Prix may well be starting with only twenty-two cars.

Pos Driver Team/Car Time Gap Laps
 1.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari               1m14.433s            18
 2.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes      1m14.996s  + 0.563s  17
 3.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari               1m15.024s  + 0.591s  19
 4.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault      1m15.245s  + 0.812s  19
 5.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes              1m15.310s  + 0.877s  21
 6.  Lewis Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes      1m15.386s  + 0.953s  14
 7.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault      1m15.529s  + 1.096s  19
 8.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m16.617s  + 2.184s  13
 9.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m16.736s  + 2.303s  15
10.  Sergio Perez        Sauber-Ferrari        1m16.821s  + 2.388s  19
11.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes  1m16.990s  + 2.557s  20
12.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams-Cosworth     1m17.196s  + 2.763s  13
13.  Pastor Maldonado    Williams-Cosworth     1m17.333s  + 2.900s  17
14.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari        1m17.403s  + 2.970s  18
15.  Vitaly Petrov       Renault               1m17.779s  + 3.346s  17
16.  Nick Heidfeld       Renault               1m17.880s  + 3.447s  17
17.  Adrian Sutil        Force India-Mercedes  1m18.069s  + 3.636s  17
18.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus-Renault         1m18.115s  + 3.682s  20
19.  Timo Glock          Virgin-Cosworth       1m18.580s  + 4.147s  21
20.  Jerome D'Ambrosio   Virgin-Cosworth       1m18.808s  + 4.375s  21
21.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus-Renault         1m19.259s  + 4.826s  19
22.  Tonio Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth          1m20.115s  + 5.682s  15
23.  Narain Karthikeyan  HRT-Cosworth          1m20.278s  + 5.845s  16
24.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes                                   3

2011 Monaco Grand Prix (Rd 6, Free Practice 2, May 26th)

Monte Carlo. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Showing his expertise around the grounds of Monte Carlo once again, Fernando Alonso took the top spot in second free-practice yesterday.

The Ferrari-man led the early part of the session while the field circulated on Pirelli’s soft compound tyre, only to be bumped down the order by Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull).
As all changed to the supersoft tyres, Alonso once again took control of practice, setting 1:15.123, with the Spaniard managing a busy 42 laps.

Lewis Hamilton led the McLaren charge by assuming 2nd place in the session, just one-tenth shy of Alonso. The 2008 World Champion made a significant point with his placing, although with this only being practice, it is a wonder anyone noticed.
Despite having an intermittent KERS unit, Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg gatecrashed the Ferrari / McLaren / Red Bull party – the German driver set the 3rd best time ahead of Jenson Button (4th, McLaren), Vettel (5th) and Felipe Massa (6th, Ferrari).

Admittedly, it was something of a frantic session for the Ferrari duo, especially Massa. An early session near-coming together nearly saw Alonso wipe his front wing clean off Massa’s gearbox, while the Brazilian himself had several lairy moments, nearly removing every corner of his red machine on a number of occasions.

Rosberg’s veteran teammate, Michael Schumacher claimed 7th spot, albeit a full 1.233 seconds off of Alonso’s pace, but still finished three-tenths ahead of Red Bull’s Mark Webber.
It was not the most representative practice day for Webber – having not set a time in the morning, the Australian found himself without KERS in the afternoon; however, it is questionable if the gap to the lead should be that large.

Several drivers had offs during the second session, including Monaco-expert Pastor Maldonado. The Williams rookie – like many others – slid off at St Devote, but cleanly recovered his machine to set the 15th fastest time after a 49-lap stint.
Heikki Kovalainen (Lotus) went off at the same spot twice. Neither interruption stalled the Finn’s practice and he assumed 18th on the time sheets after 50 laps.
The same could not be said of Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari, who took to the St Devote escape Road only to plough into the barrier. It lost the under-pressure Spaniard some time, but he recovered to record the 17th best time, some 2.666 seconds off the pace, but two-tenths shy of teammate Sebastien Buemi.

In the dying moments of the session, Vitaly Petrov lost the rear of his Renault approaching the Nouvelle chicane, pitching him into the Armco barrier. It was a similar incident to Vitantonio Liuzzi’s morning crash – both ended their day’s with damaged front wings and suspensions.
Sadly for Liuzzi, the Italian received no afternoon running time – during his fix, engineer’s discovered a bubbling hydraulics issue with his Hispania machine, parking Liuzzi for the day.

At Force India, Paul di Resta’s afternoon was shortened by a gearbox failure. The Scot only ran 15 laps when his car stopped on track, leaving 20th on the time sheets.
Hopefully, di Resta will be on track in his new home come Saturday practice.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m15.123s           42
 2.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m15.228s  + 0.105  33
 3.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m15.321s  + 0.198  44
 4.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m15.448s  + 0.325  38
 5.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m15.667s  + 0.544  46
 6.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m15.781s  + 0.658  45
 7.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m16.356s  + 1.233  33
 8.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m16.642s  + 1.519  42
 9.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m17.101s  + 1.978  46
10.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m17.126s  + 2.003  38
11.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m17.337s  + 2.214  35
12.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m17.541s  + 2.418  47
13.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m17.570s  + 2.447  39
14.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m17.581s  + 2.458  32
15.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m17.633s  + 2.510  49
16.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m17.706s  + 2.583  37
17.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m17.789s  + 2.666  43
18.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m18.266s  + 3.143  50
19.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault          1m18.490s  + 3.367  39
20.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes   1m19.053s  + 3.930  15
21.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m19.185s  + 4.062  40
22.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m19.338s  + 4.215  35
23.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth           1m22.066s  + 6.943  33

2011 Monaco Grand Prix (Rd 6, Free Practice 1, May 26th)

Monte Carlo. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Making an early statement on the streets of Monaco yesterday was Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel.

In a twenty-five lap session, the Red Bull pilot registered a best of 1:16.619, taking the top spot away from Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso in the final moments of the session.

For a time, it was a session that saw both Felipe Massa (also Ferrari) and McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton also front the pack, before being shuffled down the order.

It wasn’t only Vettel and Alonso that nudged ahead of the pair – Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg sneaked in a time good enough for 3rd on the sheets, albeit half-a-second adrift of the quickest pace.  Massa and Hamilton eventually assumed 4th and 5th respectively, both around seven-tenths slower than Vettel.

However, not everything was going to plan at Red Bull, McLaren and Mercedes. Jenson Button (McLaren) secured the 6th best time, before spending the latter stages of practice soothing a malfunctioning KERS unit, while Red Bull’s Mark Webber did not set a time after his gearbox stopped functioning after three installation laps.
Michael Schumacher (10th, Mercedes) ended the morning in St Devote’s welcoming Armco barrier. The German veteran was not the only driver to have an off – both Sergio Perez (Sauber) and Heikki Kovalainen (Lotus) had harmless slides off the course; each recovering with little fanfare.
The same could not be said of Vitantonio Liuzzi. The Hispania racer locked his rear brakes on the exit of the tunnel, pitching the Italian hard into the barrier at the Nouvelle chicane.

There were other drama’s, not created by Formula 1’s complex machinery. “Weeper’s” (water seeping through the top layer of ground) crept across the track at the secondary start / finish lights, as an underground leakage peered out onto the surface of the road.
A swift red flag emerged, as circuit managers examined the scene, in an effort to find its source.

Monaco’s tightness and unique circuit concept means the track requires individual attention in order to attack its slender confines and high downforce requirements.
The weekend also calls for no DRS to be used in the tunnel at any stage, due to safety concerns.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault          1m16.619s          25
 2.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                   1m16.732s  + 0.113	24
 3.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes                  1m17.139s  + 0.520	20
 4.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                   1m17.316s  + 0.697	24
 5.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes          1m17.350s  + 0.731	23
 6.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes          1m17.534s  + 0.915	24
 7.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth         1m18.527s  + 1.908	30
 8.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes      1m18.578s  + 1.959	24
 9.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                   1m18.733s  + 2.114	16
10.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes                  1m18.805s  + 2.186	14
11.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                   1m18.928s  + 2.309	19
12.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari        1m19.234s  + 2.615	24
13.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth         1m19.395s  + 2.776	24
14.  Daniel Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari        1m19.463s  + 2.844	25
15.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari            1m19.768s  + 3.149	25
16.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari            1m19.792s  + 3.173	26
17.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault             1m20.083s  + 3.464	23
18.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault             1m21.116s  + 4.497	27
19.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes      1m21.548s  + 4.929	32
20.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth           1m21.758s  + 5.139	31
21.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth           1m21.815s  + 5.196	17
22.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth              1m22.840s  + 6.221	13
23.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth              1m23.885s  + 7.266	37
24.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault          No time             3

Parc Ferme, Episode 2 with Pippa Mann (Conquest Racing, IZOD IndyCar Series)

© PippaMann.com

With the 100th anniversary of the Indianapolis 500 just around the corner, Conquest Racing’s Pippa Mann was kind enough to give me a few minutes of her time for a brief chat.

This episode also gives a brief run down of the IndyCar season so far and and a quick catch up with qualifying for the great race. I hope you enjoy the show.

Episode One with Harry Tincknell can be found here.

2011 Indianapolis 500 Mile Race (Rd 5, Bump Day, May 22nd)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Without doubt, Bump Day for the Indianapolis 500 is one of the greatest day’s in the motor racing calendar.

It is a six hour span that sees tension, drama and conviction come to the fore — and occasionally controversy also reigns, as it did last night.

When Andretti-Autosport’s Ryan Hunter-Reay failed to qualify for the 500 mile race come Sunday evening, talks began to buy a spot on the grid for the beleaguered American.
By early Monday night, it had been confirmed that Bruno Junqueira – driving a second, one-off entry for Foyt Enterprises – had been removed from his seat and replaced by Hunter-Reay.

In this situation, Hunter-Reay will start the race from 33rd and last place (Junqueira had qualified 19th on Pole Day), in a car run by Foyt, but with a mixture of Foyt and Andretti sponsors.
For a team that won the great race twice in recent years (2005 and 2007), Andretti-Autosport sure struggle to qualify for the Indy 500 nowadays, especially considering their troubles last year too. Perhaps, with four drivers, the team stretched far too thinly for the people that work there now.

In a press release thereafter, AJ Foyt stated:

“We’ve been competitors for many years but still it’s the kind of relationship when someone is really down and out, you can’t turn your back on them – at least I can’t.”

Kicking your own driver to the kerb was probably not the best way to show your intentions, AJ. Foyt also said that:

“This is going back to the way racing used to be, where if people were in a lot of trouble, you tried to help each other out.”
Sorry AJ, but just because racing used to be that doesn’t mean it is right. Times have changed and maybe the way to do business in racing has to change with it.”

Michael Andretti also revealed that:

“The fastest 33 cars are what qualify for the Indy 500 and that’s always been the case. We’re not doing anything that changes that. This has happened before. One of the greatest finishes in Indy 500 history, in 1992, involved a car that had a driver change before the race. Scott Goodyear replaced Mike Groff and Scott nearly won the race. It’s not a new thing.
I disagree with the idea that we are doing something to hurt the integrity of the Indy 500. We would never do that – ever. The rule is the fastest 33 cars make the race – not the 33 fastest drivers. And, that is what will be on track Sunday.”

Again Mike, just because something worked twenty years ago does not mean it passes mustard today.

As much as I feel bad for Bruno, I also feel bad for the people who turned up at the Speedway.to see the drama unfold. The folks that paid hard money to see the field filled, only to find the result changed thereafter – memories of the 2008 Belgian Grand Prix spring to mind.
What’s especially sad is that AJ did not replace one of his own drivers with another, but that he sold his entry to a completely different team.

The IndyCar Series has had plenty of troubles over the years – whether they be the split, the proliferation of drivers with questionable talents and sizeable wallets or an occasionally curious application of the rules – it’s seen it all.
If the series really wants to be taken seriously, steps need to be taken to ensure this situation does not happen again – and that may mean changing the rules regarding the entry lists for race participation; something the team owners may rally against.

Yes, racing is a business and an expensive one at that, but it is very hard to do business if no one is buying your product and while this situation will certainly not see huge drop in fans, it is another example of the erosion of integrity that the series continues to endure.
And that is sad.

For the record, Paul Tracy, Ryan Briscoe, Charlie Kimball, Graham Rahal, Pippa Mann and Ana Beatriz all got in with their first runs before rain came. The tension sky-rocketed when it looked as if series star Danica Patrick would not make the show, but once the track was dry and the sky had brightened, the Andretti-Autosport driver qualified with ease.

With ten minutes remaining, Alex Lloyd pulled together a bonzai run to put his Dale Coyne prepared car into the field to bump Marco Andretti, before Andretti himself bumped teammate Hunter-Reay.
The final Andretti-Autosport driver, Mike Conway also could not get up to speed, while Raphael Matos (AFS), James Jakes (Dale Coyne) and Sebastian Saavedra (Conquest) also failed to make the grade.
Dragon Racing’s Ho-Pin Tung was a shoe-in to qualify on Pole Day until he smashed receiving a concussion. The second Dragon car – originally to be taken by Scott Speed – was crashed by replacement driver Patrick Carpentier during practice. The Canadian was unhurt.

Pos Driver Team Speed
 1.  Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt              227.472mph
 2.  Scott Dixon          Ganassi                  227.340mph
 3.  Oriol Servia         Newman/Haas              227.168mph
 4.  Townsend Bell        Sam Schmidt              226.887mph
 5.  Will Power           Penske                   226.773mph
 6.  Dan Wheldon          Herta                    226.490mph
 7.  Buddy Rice           Panther                  225.786mph
 8.  Ed Carpenter         Sarah Fisher             225.121mph
 9.  Dario Franchitti     Ganassi
10.  Takuma Sato          KV                       225.736mph
11.  Vitor Meira          Foyt                     225.590mph
12.  JR Hildebrand        Panther                  225.579mph
13.  James Hinchcliffe    Newman/Haas              225.572mph
14.  Bertrand Baguette    Rahal Letterman Lanigan  225.285mph
15.  Davey Hamilton       Dreyer & Reinbold        225.250mph
16.  Helio Castroneves    Penske                   225.216mph
17.  John Andretti        Petty/Andretti           224.981mph
18.  EJ Viso              KV                       224.732mph
 Bruno Junqueira Foyt 224.691mph** (Removed)
19.  Justin Wilson        Dreyer & Reinbold        224.511mph
20.  Jay Howard           Rahal/Schmidt            224.483mph
21.  Tomas Scheckter      KV/SH                    224.433mph
22.  Tony Kanaan          KV                       224.417mph
23.  Simona de Silvestro  HVM                      224.392mph
24.  Paul Tracy           Dreyer & Reinbold        224.939mph
25.  Danica Patrick       Andretti                 224.861mph
26.  Ryan Briscoe         Penske                   224.639mph
27.  Marco Andretti       Andretti                 224.628mph
28.  Charlie Kimball      Ganassi                  224.499mph
29.  Graham Rahal         Ganassi                  224.380mph
30.  Alex Lloyd           Dale Coyne               223.957mph
31.  Pippa Mann           Conquest                 223.936mph
32.  Ana Beatriz          Dreyer & Reinbold        223.879mph
33.  Ryan Hunter-Reay     Andretti                 (no speed)
Did not qualify:
     Raphael Matos        AFS
     Mike Conway          Andretti
     James Jakes          Dale Coyne
     Sebastian Saavedra   Conquest
     Ho-Pin Tung          Schmidt/Dragon
     Scott Speed          Dragon

2011 IndyCar Series (Round 5, Qualifying)
Pos Driver Team Points
 1. Will Power           Penske                   178
 2. Dario Franchitti     Ganassi                  160
 3. Oriol Servia         Newman-Haas              122
 4. Ryan Briscoe         Penske                   104
 5. Tony Kanaan          KV Racing                103
 6. Mike Conway          Andretti-Autosport       102
 7. Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt Motorsports  100
 8. Scott Dixon          Ganassi                   97
 9. Graham Rahal         Ganassi                   85
10. Takuma Sato          KV Racing                 84
11. Simona de Silvestro  HVM Racing                82
12. Vitor Meira          Foyt Enterprises          81

2011 Spanish Grand Prix (Rd 5, May 22nd)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel took his fourth victory of the 2011 Formula 1 season in Barcelona today, yet it was far from a simple affair.

The Red Bull driver crossed the line shadowed by the McLaren of Lewis Hamilton, as the 2008 World Champion pushed hard right up to the flag.
A race dominated by constantly evolving tyre strategies and ineffective DRS made for one of the best Spanish Grand Prix in recent memory, yet still something was missing…

Mixing the Starts
Starting behind teammate Mark Webber, Vettel jumped ahead of the Australian, despite having no KERS, only for Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso to slide passed both of them and take the lead.
It was an awe inspiring start from 4th by Alonso – who also jumped Hamilton – on the way to turn 1. Getting off the inside of the grid, the Spaniard stuck to Webber’s tail, bravely squeezing the nose of his Italian 150ᴼ in the corner apex and the race lead.

Jenson Button wasn’t quite as swift from the grid. The Briton bogged down on the grid, dropping from 5th to 10th by the end of the straight, as Vitaly Petrov (Renault), Michael Schumacher, Nico Rosberg (both Mercedes), Felipe Massa (Ferrari) and Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso) all streamed by.
Unwilling to hang back and let the race come to him, Button made short work of Buemi (lap 5), yet had already lost 12 seconds to the leading group, as he close up to the rear of Massa.

Another driver to plummet down the order was Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi – the Japanese pilot ran onto the gravel on his first lap, only to be clipped as he rejoined.
A right rear puncture and a pitstop later would see Kobayashi last of the runners.

Stopping Early
There was not long to wait for the first series of tyres stops. Sergio Perez was the first in on the 7th tour, but it would be another two before the front men pulled.
Vettel was the first to make the move, only to rejoin behind the slower Button, yet what should have been a disaster for Vettel, turned to gold quickly.
On his fresh Pirelli rubber, the reigning Champion made short work of Button, taking him into turn five, before doing the same to Massa a few corners later – it would prove to be key.

Over the following two laps, Alonso, Webber (lap 11) and Hamilton (lap 12) all pitted, with Alonso and Hamilton coming away cleanly, while a sluggish Webber dropped to 5th behind Button, before passing the McLaren soon afterwards.
Vettel, meanwhile, slotted back in behind Alonso, but the gap was still only 0.4 of-a-second. It was a gap that would stay for the rest of the stint, for as solid as Alonso was, he could not pul away.
Not only was Vettel staring closely at the Ferrari’s rear, Hamilton was on the Red Bull’s radar, but it was becoming clear that if any passing was to be done, it would probably not happen on track.
Webber, now on used softs, fell away from the leaders, yet was not close enough to the pack behind to feel worried.

Button stayed out until lap 15, filtering out into 6th between the two Mercedes, headed by Michael Schumacher.
The veteran had not reached the top five by some fluke – in fact Schumacher had been “on it” since he made a great start, keeping Rosberg at bay in the meantime.
That top five would swiftly become top six, as Button exerted the prowess of his better handling McLaren, taken 5th from Schumacher on lap 16.
Watching the trio closely was Petrov, who had fallen to 8th during the first pit sequence, just ahead of the speedless Massa (9th).

Confidence
With little confidence in Massa moving through the field, Ferrari placed their will behind Alonso, but when Vettel took an early second stop on lap 19, the game was up for the red machines.
Ferrari – sensing their lead was about to disappear – panicked and brought Alonso in a lap later. One lap was all Vettel needed to clear the Spaniard – thereafter, Ferrari were truly nowhere.
Webber pitted the same lap as Alonso, but it would be another four tours before Hamilton came in – a brave strategy by the McLaren crew, yet Hamilton held his pace on older tyres and with a 20-second gap, he jumped the Ferrari, despite a slower stop.

Nick Heidfeld was another driver making the best of his tyre strategy. The Renault man could not qualify yesterday due to a damaged car, but with several unused sets of Pirelli’s available to him, the German veteran was tearing through the field.
He had even reached the edge of the points positions when he he made his first stop on lap 21, but the speed was clearly apparent in the Renault.

Tyre strategy was not working quite as well for Heikki Kovalainen. Following a good qualifying that left him 15th, the Finn ran long in the first stint – getting up as high as 11th place, but he began to fall backward during his second stint.

Pushing Hard
Falling backward is not something one could say about Hamilton – if anything, the Briton continued to push.
Having lost five seconds during his slow stop, Hamilton had pulled to within two seconds by the 29th lap, while the Alonso / Webber pairing had disappeared from view, over 11 seconds in arrears.

Button, meanwhile, was playing the long game. Having avoided any pitstop madness since his first stop, it was clear the McLaren driver was pulling a three-stop strategy together – only unlike Turkey, it was working this time.
Whereas both Alonso and Webber made their third stops on lap 30 (changing to hard tyres), Button made only his second tyre change on lap 31 – somehow, Button was getting fifteen lap stints out of the softs.

As Alonso and Webber struggled for grip on the “icy” hard tyres, Button reeled the pair in (at two seconds per lap).
It helped a lot that Alonso and Webber were fight hard amongst themselves, even swapping positions with eachother on occasion, but all it really did was bring them closer to Button.
And Button pounced – first Webber into turn one (despite the Australian’s vigorous defence) and then the McLaren sliced by Alonso later that same lap.
Once Button had passed, he was gone and Alonso and Webber resumed their battle – albeit for 4th.

However, Button was not going to be a threat to the leading pair, yet Vettel was still very wary of Hamilton’s insistence upon remaining in his mirrors.
A pair of stops – lap 34 (Vettel) and lap 35 (Hamilton) – saw both change to used hards, as each matched the other’s challenge, though the gap stayed at just over two seconds.

Troubles Ahead
As Vettel / Hamilton tore through the field, they probably barely noticed the Hispania of Vitantonio Liuzzi.
It was awfully difficult to be honest – on a track that rewards good aerodynamics, the Hispania looked like a savage machine to drive. Even to the naked eye, the Cosworth-powered machine lacked grip, stability and confidence.
So when Liuzzi pulled off the track with a(n apparent) gearbox problem on lap 31, he may have breathed a quiet sigh of relief. There are not many circuits that will show the Hispania as badly as Barcelona – sadly Liuzzi’s teammate, Narain Karthikeyan still had half a Grand Prix to go.

Liuzzi was not the only driver in trouble on track – Massa’s race was also beginning to collapse completely.
Compared to his more illustrious teammate, Massa looked less and less comfortable as the Grand Prix, resulting in an embarrassing half-spin on lap 39.
The Brazilian was also finding difficulties with his gearbox, something that would bring his day to an early end seven laps from the end of the race.

While Massa struggled badly, Alonso continued uninterrupted; however the Spaniard interrupted his battle with Webber to make an early final stop.
It would be a disastrous move for the Ferrari team – now seemingly losing any grip on the strategy game – as Webber bedded in his fourth set of tyres neatly, the Ferrari man could not do the same with his fifth set.
As Alonso’s times fell away, all Webber had to do was keep running a steady pace and 4th was his.

One battle that certainly wasn’t dissipating was Mercedes tug-o’-war. Both Schumacher and Rosberg were playing three-stop strategies in a battle over 6th and 7th and with the race in its second-half, Schumacher was winning the fight.
Crucially, the pair had been briefly split by Force India’s Paul di Resta at the midway point when they took their second stops, but Rosberg had little patience for the Scot, dispatching him quickly.

As the silver-and-turquoise pair pitted for the final time (Schumacher; lap 42 and Rosberg; lap 43), they were resumed the battle almost together, separated by – at most – two seconds.
Indeed several times, Rosberg had a look down the inside of Schumacher into turn 1, only for the veteran to play hardball in a way that only Schumacher can… The word “forceful” comes to mind, especially when Rosberg clipped Spanish grass.
On this occasion, Schumacher had the advantage over his (much) younger teammate.

Forceful was a word to describe Lotus’ Heikki Kovalainen. Having run in the midfield early on, the pace of the car betrayed the Finn’s talent, as he fell to 18th approaching the final stint.
Pushing hard as always, Kovalainen over-stepped his own limits, hitting the turn 4 barrier on the 51st lap.

“It’s a real shame my afternoon came to an end like that, but up until that point the race was pretty good. Both Jarno and I were right in the mix early on and we were fighting in the midfield for a lot of the race but then the tyres started to go off and the early pace wasn’t there for the later stages of the afternoon.”

Several cars, including both McLaren’s, Webber and Jaime Alguersuari (Toro Rosso) were later reprimanded for taking too high a speed through the yellow flag zone.

Close, but Not Close Enough
Up front, the fight was tempting, and as Vettel and Hamilton stopped for the last time on laps 48 and 49 respectively, the race became a fight to the wire.
Clearly showing themselves to be the finest of the Formula 1 crop, the duo pushed eachother harder and harder as they scythed through swathes of traffic.
So dominant were the Red Bull / McLaren pair, that even Alonso would lose a lap to the front men, such is the true gulf between the latest Ferrari and leading cars.

Yet, for as much as they fought, Hamilton never really looked like he was ever going to pass Vettel.
The young German was too quick, too confident and Vettel’s stuttering KERS was balanced out by Hamilton’s ineffective DRS – status quo. As Hamilton charged, the gap closed to one second, then 0.7 of-a-second, then half-a-second, before settling at 0.6 each lap.
This wasn’t Shanghai and there was no magic late pass coming – Hamilton couldn’t even get close enough to try. Occasionally, a lappee would misjudge the gap and slightly block Vettel, before doing the same to Hamilton – in short, no one was going anywhere.
…and Vettel took the chequered flag – victorious again – with an advantage of only half-a-second. It was close – yes- but not that close.

“At the beginning of the race I thought I had a good start, I didn’t understand where Fernando came from! We couldn’t get close enough to use the DRS, but we got him with the pit stop. It looked like the McLaren’s were very strong; they stayed out longer on a different strategy, which bought them up to second behind us. From then on I knew that it would be very, very close; going into the last 10 laps felt the same as in China. At the end of the straights he would be right in my mirrors, so you don’t know if you should defend or not. It was very close, but on the last two laps, I could make it stick.”

Button, on the other hand, was really making his race come together. The ex-Champion had pulled so far ahead of Webber on his third set of tyres, that he had earned himself a free pitstop.
One final tyre change on lap 48 saw the McLaren man assume the last podium position and while it was no victory, it was a big improvement for Button.

Yet Webber may not be so pleased. After starting on pole, the Australian’s race really unravelled and come the chequered flag, Webber was nearly 48 seconds off his teammate – a staggering amount and an indication that Vettel may have fully conquered his teammate.
Alonso defeated Massa’s confidence long ago, but even he would dismayed that his Ferrari was a lap off of the Red Bull. Indeed the 2011 Ferrari may be lacking grip, but strategic thinking was also slightly askew for the Scuderia.

“The best bit of the race was obviously the start. I tried to do the maximum, keeping the quickest ones behind me for around twenty laps, but after that, there was nothing I could do. We lack aerodynamic downforce: here we did not have a wing that suited this track. We must analyse carefully the behaviour of all the modifications we brought to this Grand Prix and understand why, in the space of two weeks, we have lost ground to Red Bull and McLaren.”

And Then Everyone Else…
Schumacher eventually won the Mercedes battle and 6th will be a fine reward after starting 10th. It was a signal to Rosberg that the veteran isn’t ready to leave just yet, but it may not be long for Rosberg to regain the initiative.
Nick Heidfeld took 8th place after an excellent, if quiet drive from the rear of the field. The Renault man found himself embroiled in a battle just outside the points with Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso), di Resta, Perez and Petrov, taking all of them with the help of his fresh Pirelli’s.
In his final stint, Heidfeld even pulled 30 seconds out of the Mercedes pair, with Heidfeld coming home just half-a-second shy of Rosberg.

“I’m satisfied with eighth after starting from last position. Just like in Turkey, with one or two laps more I could have gained one or two more positions from the two Mercedes, but it’s still a good result if you look at where I started and everything that happened to the car over this weekend. It’s always encouraging to put in a strong performance, and I’m more happy and relaxed heading to Monaco.”

The Sauber’s took the final points, with young Mexican Sergio Perez assuming the point.
As in Australia, Perez had not shown startling pace, but did show enough consistency, especially on the hard tyres early in the race to bring himself into the points. A battle for 8th with Massa was fought briefly before his Ferrari gave up.
Kobayashi claimed the last point, as he battled back from his first lap incident.

One driver that may be disappointed with his performance is Vitaly Petrov. After a time behind the Mercedes’ in the first half of the race, the Russian fell further behind and out of the points in the latter stages. The Force India’s eventually made it 12th and 13th at the flag, with di Resta leading the duo.
Sebastien Buemi also had a silent Grand Prix, as Toro Rosso continue to struggle with race pace, although not as much as Pastor Maldonado, whose dropped helplessly down the order throughout the event.

Jaime Alguersuari disappointed in his home Grand Prix. The Spaniard was lapped twice by the leaders, as his poor 2011 continues – the thought of being replaced by Daniel Ricciardo taking his place mid-season must be growing large at this stage.
Rubens Barrichello was also nowhere in his Williams – the veteran took 17th, also two laps down, with Lotus’ Jarno Trulli not far behind in 18th spot.

Both Virgin’s came home 19th and 20th, with Timo Glock beating Jerome d’Ambrosio to the flag, while Narain Karthikeyan was the last finisher in 21st, albeit four laps adrift.

The 2011 Spanish Grand Prix may be remembered as one of the best to ever take place at the Barcelona circuit, but it was no classic by any means. The moment Hamilton came up to the rear of Vettel, the winner was obvious – and it was never going to be the Englishman.
It gives Vettel a 41 point advantage going into next week’s Monaco Grand Prix – McLaren need to come up with something fast if they are to topple the RB7.
Race Rating: 3 out of 5

The Spanish Grand Prix Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain;
Pos Driver Team Time
 1.  Vettel        Red Bull-Renault           1h39:03.301 (66 laps)
 2.  Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes           +     0.630
 3.  Button        McLaren-Mercedes           +    35.697
 4.  Webber        Red Bull-Renault           +    47.966
 5.  Alonso        Ferrari                    +     1 lap
 6.  Schumacher    Mercedes                   +     1 lap
 7.  Rosberg       Mercedes                   +     1 lap
 8.  Heidfeld      Renault                    +     1 lap
 9.  Perez         Sauber-Ferrari             +     1 lap
10.  Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari             +     1 lap
11.  Petrov        Renault                    +     1 lap
12.  Di Resta      Force India-Mercedes       +     1 lap
13.  Sutil         Force India-Mercedes       +     1 lap
14.  Buemi         Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +     1 lap
15.  Maldonado     Williams-Cosworth          +     1 lap
16.  Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +    2 laps
17.  Barrichello   Williams-Cosworth          +    2 laps
18.  Trulli        Lotus-Renault              +    2 laps
19.  Glock         Virgin-Cosworth            +    3 laps
20.  D'Ambrosio    Virgin-Cosworth            +    3 laps
21.  Karthikeyan   HRT-Cosworth               +    4 laps
Fastest lap: Alonso, 1:26.727
Not classified/retirements: Driver Team On lap
Massa         Ferrari                      60
Kovalainen    Lotus-Renault                49
Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth                 29

World Championship standings, round 5: Drivers: 
 1.  Vettel       118
 2.  Hamilton      77
 3.  Webber        67
 4.  Button        61
 5.  Alonso        51
 6.  Rosberg       26
 7.  Heidfeld      25
 8.  Massa         24
 9.  Petrov        21       
10.  Schumacher    14       
11.  Kobayashi      9       
12.  Buemi          6       
13.  Sutil          2       
14.  Di Resta       2       
15.  Perez          2

World Championship standings, round 5: Constructors: 
 1.  Red Bull-Renault          185
 2.  McLaren-Mercedes          138
 3.  Ferrari                    75
 4.  Renault                    46
 5.  Mercedes                   40
 6.  Sauber-Ferrari             11
 7.  Toro Rosso-Ferrari          6
 8.  Force India-Mercedes        4

2011 Indianapolis 500 Mile Race (Rd 5, Pole Day, May 21st)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

In what turned out to be a frantic and constantly surprising Pole Day, Alex Tagliani scored an emotional top spot for next week’s Indianapolis 500.

Top of the Pile
During what was a windy and moist-riddled day, speeds struggled to match what had been laid down during “Fast Friday”, but as the pole position shootout opened, the sun returned and the winds died down.

Tagliani topped the initial qualifying session, but went quicker still in the “Fast Nine” stint to score his first and Sam Schmidt Motorsport’s first IndyCar pole position. For Schmidt himself, it was an emotional end to the day, especially considering how close the team was to closing only a few months beforehand.

It was unclear if the final session of qualifying would actually run – slight rain disrupted the tail-end of the first session, getting heavier as it reached 3.40pm in Indianapolis, bring it to a halt with twenty minutes remaining.
The shower was brief; however the inevitable delay meant the fastest nine drivers only got a single run.

Going out last in the shootout, Tagliani set the benchmark with four very consistent laps, finishing with an average of 227.472 mph, although for a time it looked as it Ganassi’s Scott Dixon had done enough to take top spot.
The Kiwi had the penultimate run in his red Target machine – his four-lap average of 227.340 mph did, however, drop Newman-Haas pilot Oriol Servia to the outside of the first row.
Servia had set a leading pace early in the shootout (227.168 mph), before being toppled by Dixon; however no one else was able to crack a run at over 227 mph.

Several drivers had a go at Servia’s pace, including Tagliani’s one-off teammate, Townsend Bell. The American has not had a solid drive since his Formula 3000 days, but stepped into take 4th as if he had never been away.
Bell nudged ahead of Penske’s Will Power by 0.114 mph, while Dan Wheldon returned to the series to take 6th spot for Bryan Herta Autosport.

Former winner Buddy Rice gave Panther a solid starting place with the inside of row three, with Sarah Fisher Racing’s Ed Carpenter securing 8th on the grid.
The day’s biggest question mark was Dario Franchitti – the two-time Indy 500 winner was looking at 3rd on the grid, when his Ganassi-engineered machine spluttered and died, its fuel exhausted. Incredibly, Franchitti had been short filled prior to running – too short in fact, as he coasted to the pits without a shootout time.

Best of the Rest
Outside of the “fast nine”, KV Racing’s Takuma Sato assumed the inside of the fourth row with an average stint of 225.736 mph – a solid effort by the Japanese pilot. Alongside Sato will be IndyCar veteran Vitor Meira (11th, AJ Foyt Enterprises) and the highest placed rookie, JR Hildebrand (12th, Panther).
James Hinchcliffe came close to pipping Hildebrand for the top rookie honours – his four-lap average of 225.572 mph was only 0.007 mph shy of the Panther driver’s average, leaving Hinchcliffe in 13th spot. In their return to IndyCar racing, Bertrand Baguette and Davey Hamilton take 14th and 15th respectively.

Helio Castroneves struggled during the day, eventually only making it onto the inside of row six in his Penske-prepared machine. An Andretti will sit alongside Castroneves, but not one of the regulars as John Andretti became the only Andretti-Autosport driver to qualify on the first day. EJ Viso became the second KV Racer to make it in.
Bruno Junqueira (19th, AJ Foyt Enterprises), Justin Wilson (20th, Dreyer & Reinbold) and Jay Howard (21st, Rahal / Sam Schmidt) filled out the seventh row. Tomas Scheckter (22nd, KV / SH Racing), Tony Kanaan (23rd, KV Racing) and Simona de Silvestro (24th, HVM Racing) secured the eighth row.
It was a great effort by the “Swiss Miss” in her back-up car – de Silvestro’s hands received 2nd and 3rd degree burns in a crash on Thursday and was only cleared to qualify not long before qualifying.

More to Come
Surprisingly neither Ryan Briscoe (Penske) nor any of the regular Andretti-Autosport drivers made the race during the first day.
Briscoe crashed heavily during the morning, apparently cracking the steering wheel off his knees in the process, while none of the four Andretti-Autosport runners could garner the speed to make the field.
Neither of Ganassi’s second team drivers qualified either. Charlie Kimball found himself bumped out late in the session; however poor luck saw his final attempt interrupted by the last rain shower. Graham Rahal suffered from fuel pick-up problems.
Dragon Racing’s one-off entry, Ho-Pin Tung had been setting respectable speeds during practice week; however the Chinese / Dutch national crashed hard on the final lap of his opening run, leaving him with a concussion. Upon medical, Tung cannot run tomorrow and is out of the race.

Qualifying continues tomorrow with Bump Day, where fourteen drivers will be fighting it out for the final nine positions and with the presence of a Penske and the Andretti-Autosport regulars, it could be the most fraught Bump Day since 1995.

Pos Driver Team Speed
(Pole Position shoot-out)
 1.  Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt              227.472mph
 2.  Scott Dixon          Ganassi                  227.340mph
 3.  Oriol Servia         Newman/Haas              227.168mph
 4.  Townsend Bell        Sam Schmidt              226.887mph
 5.  Will Power           Penske                   226.773mph
 6.  Dan Wheldon          Herta                    226.490mph
 7.  Buddy Rice           Panther                  225.786mph
 8.  Ed Carpenter         Sarah Fisher             225.121mph
 9.  Dario Franchitti     Ganassi                  (no speed)
(First Qualifying)
10.  Takuma Sato          KV                       225.736mph
11.  Vitor Meira          Foyt                     225.590mph
12.  JR Hildebrand        Panther                  225.579mph
13.  James Hinchcliffe    Newman/Haas              225.572mph
14.  Bertrand Baguette    Rahal Letterman Lanigan  225.285mph
15.  Davey Hamilton       Dreyer & Reinbold        225.250mph
16.  Helio Castroneves    Penske                   225.216mph
17.  John Andretti        Petty/Andretti           224.981mph
18.  EJ Viso              KV                       224.732mph
19.  Bruno Junqueira      Foyt                     224.691mph
20.  Justin Wilson        Dreyer & Reinbold        224.511mph
21.  Jay Howard           Rahal/Schmidt            224.483mph
22.  Tomas Scheckter      KV/SH                    224.433mph
23.  Tony Kanaan          KV                       224.417mph
24.  Simona de Silvestro  HVM                      224.392mph
Yet to qualify:
     Paul Tracy           Dreyer & Reinbold        224.353mph
     Charlie Kimball      Ganassi                  224.262mph
     Ana Beatriz          Dreyer & Reinbold        224.258mph
     Ryan Briscoe         Penske                   224.134mph
     Marco Andretti       Andretti                 224.074mph
     Danica Patrick       Andretti                 223.831mph
     Graham Rahal         Ganassi                  223.822mph
     Alex Lloyd           Dale Coyne               223.564mph
     Pippa Mann           Conquest                 223.070mph
     Ryan Hunter-Reay     Andretti                 222.951mph
     Raphael Matos        AFS                      222.786mph
     Mike Conway          Andretti                 222.247mph
     James Jakes          Dale Coyne               221.846mph
     Sebastian Saavedra   Conquest                 221.526mph
     Ho-Pin Tung          Schmidt/Dragon           (injured)

2011 IZOD IndyCar Series (Rd 5, Qualifying)
Pos Driver Team Points
 1. Will Power           Penske                  178
 2. Dario Franchitti     Ganassi                 160
 3. Oriol Servia         Newman-Haas             122
 4. Tony Kanaan          KV Racing               103
 5. Mike Conway          Andretti-Autosport      102
 6. Ryan Briscoe         Penske                  101
 7. Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt Motorsport  100
 8. Scott Dixon          Ganassi                  97
 9. Takuma Sato          KV Racing                84
10. Graham Rahal         Ganassi                  82
11. Simona de Silvestro  HVM Racing               82
12. Vitor Meira          AJ Foyt Enterprises      81

2011 Spanish Grand Prix (Rd 5, Qualifying, May 21st)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

One day, all things must come to an end and in Barcelona today, Mark Webber finally broke Sebastian Vettel’s string of pole positions.

The Red Bull was the last of the “fast” runners to set a time – Vettel and the McLaren pairing of Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button crossed the line first to set their respective times.
But where Vettel looked to have set an unbeatable marker (1:21.181) halfway through Q3, Webber followed moments later, setting a blistering time that was two-tenths clear of the reigning champion.

“It was clear going into qualifying that we might have had a bit of a margin and would be battling for pole between ourselves today. We got through Q1 on the first set of hard tyres, which was good, and then in the crucial part of qualifying –in Q3 – it was just about getting the lap right.”

In the end, neither McLaren came remotely close to the Red Bull’s and as the chequered flag flew, Hamilton was confirmed as 3rd, but to be nearly one second slower than the Red Bull’s must be disheartening. The McLaren driver flatspotted his Pirelli’s on his fast lap, meaning he will start tomorrow’s race on slightly damaged rubber.

“The Red Bulls look very strong, but I’m going to do everything I can to jump at least one – if not both – of them at the start. When you start from the clean side of the grid, you automatically have a much better opportunity of getting a good start. When you’re trying to eke every last drop out of the car, you sometimes lock the front wheels – and that’s just what happened on my final lap. While the flat-spot to the front-left doesn’t look perfect, we’ll manage it by rebalancing the wheels, so it’ll be fine. We’ve definitely made an improvement this weekend.”

On the other hand, Fernando Alonso appeared to be delighted with his efforts. The Spaniard split the McLaren’s, giving Alonso reason to whoop over the car-pit radio – an unexpected reaction, but indicative of where Ferrari currently sit in the order.

“I did a perfect lap: I reckon that if I tried to repeat it twenty times, I could not do better! When you do a lap like that it’s hard to put into words what one feels: always being on the limit, in every corner is a really special feeling for a driver. I am very happy with this result, because we have never made it to the second row this year.”

Button for his troubles, took 5th – only three-hundredths shy of Hamilton / Alonso.

Vitaly Petrov was the best of the rest-of-the-rest in 6th. The Russian placed his Renault some two-tenths clear of Nico Rosberg (7th, Mercedes) and half-a-second ahead of Felipe Massa (8th, Ferrari).
It was a poor effort by Massa – his sole run was 1.907 shy of pole and nearly an entire second slower than his teammate.

“This was definitely not the qualifying performance we were expecting, but all weekend long we have struggled with the balance of the car: we would have needed to be perfect to start a bit further up the order and that was not the case.”

Pastor Maldonado secured a 9th place start for Williams, while Mercedes’ Michael Schumacher decided not to set a time in Q3 – with his KERS unit not operating, the team opted instead to save tyres for the race itself.

Sebastien Buemi leads the Toro Rosso charge from the sixth row, two spots and four-tenths of-a-second ahead of teammate Jaime Alguersuari. It’s another inter-team win for the Swiss pilot, coming shortly after a good points score in Turkey.
Sergio Perez split the Red Bull junior squad – his best of 1:23.367 was also more than enough to get ahead of his fellow Sauber runner, Kamui Kobayashi, although the Japanese driver may complain of being blocked on his final run.
From the indifference of the Sauber garage, came the relief and delight of the Lotus crew. For the first time since their return to Formula 1, the Anglo-Malaysian team found their way to Q2 on merit – Heikki Kovalainen book 15th place for his green-and-yellow machine.

“This is obviously a great day for Team Lotus and I want to thank everyone here and back at the factory for working so hard to get us to this next step in our story. With the work we did overnight and in FP3 I can feel that we have found a much better balance in the high-speed corners, and we can work more on how it feels in the low speed corners which is where I think we will find even more time.”

Next up were the Force India’s, led by Paul di Resta. despite upgrades to the car, both di Resta and teammate Adrian Sutil have struggled somewhat over the weekend. They will start 16th and 17th respectively.

The second Lotus of Jarno Trulli sits alongside Sutil on the ninth row. The Italian was delayed by a gearbox issue, only managing a single run at the end of Q1, but it was enough to clear Williams veteran Rubens Barrichello.
Sadly for the Brazilian, his 2011 season just goes from bad to worse. An initial run of hard tyres saw Barrichello set a best of 1:26.910, only for a gearbox problem to confine him to the pits for the rest of the session.

“I knew we had a gearbox problem as soon as I went out in Q1 as it felt strange. I think there is a big positive in saving a set of tyres, which is one way of looking at it, but having seen where Pastor finished, we could also have had a good shot inside the top ten. I will be pushing to be there tomorrow.”

Timo Glock starts alongside Barrichello, with both Hispania’s taking the eleventh row (led by Vitantonio Liuzzi), ahead of Jerome d’Ambrosio.
Nick Heidfeld will start tomorrow’s race from last position. The Renault team were just unable to prepare his car in time following Heidfeld’s scary fire in third practice.

Pos Driver Team Time Gap 
 1.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1m20.981s
 2.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     1m21.181s   + 0.200
 3.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m21.961s   + 0.980
 4.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m21.964s   + 0.983
 5.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m21.996s   + 1.015
 6.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault              1m22.471s   + 1.490
 7.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m22.599s   + 1.618
 8.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m22.888s   + 1.907
 9.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth    1m22.952s   + 1.971
10.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes
Q3 cut-off time: 1m23.026s Gap **
11.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.231s   + 1.691
12.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m23.367s   + 1.827
13.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.694s   + 2.154
14.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m23.702s   + 2.162
15.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault        1m25.403s   + 3.863
16.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m26.126s   + 4.586
17.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes 1m26.571s   + 5.031
Q3 cut-off time: 1m25.874s Gap *
18.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault        1m26.521s   + 3.561
19.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth    1m26.910s   + 3.950
20.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth      1m27.315s   + 4.355
21.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth         1m27.809s   + 4.849
22.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth         1m27.908s   + 4.948
23.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth      1m28.556s   + 5.596
24.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault              No time
107% time: 1m28.767s
* Gap to quickest in Q1
** Gap to quickest in Q2

2011 Spanish Grand Prix (Rd 5, Free Practice 3, May 21st)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel headed the third session at Barcelona this morning, with Red Bull teammate Mark Webber in tow.

The reigning champion only went with one run at the end of the session, only claiming the top spot in the dying moments.
Vettel’s quickest tour of 1:21.707, toppled Webber by a mere eight-hundredths of a second, a sign of may come in the later qualifying session.

Webber spent much of the practice swapping fast laps with Mercedes Michael Schumacher, before the Australian spread his wings late on.
Schumacher held on to 3rd spot in the end, albeit 1.35 seconds shy of the ultimate pace. It was the first time this weekend that Schumacher came home ahead of his fellow Mercedes runner, Nico Rosberg. The former Williams driver ran a solid 17 laps, registering a best of 1:23.397, leaving Rosberg 6th on the sheets.

In between the Mercedes duo were a pair of McLaren’s, led by Lewis Hamilton. Both of the silver-and-red machines took new gearboxes overnight – Hamilton and Jenson Button ran 13 and 14 laps respectively.

Ferrari also had to make some overnight changes, although these were enforced by the FIA. Following a complaint from a competitor, it was found their new spec rear wing was illegal, leaving the team to revert to the wing used up until the Turkish Grand Prix.
It is thought the new wing may have given their DRS a vast improvement, but shy of the revamped aero device, the red pair took 9th (Fernando Alonso) and 11th (Felipe Massa).

There was also plenty of work at Williams, as they removed the new floor, having felt the FW33 was worse off. With old parts re-instated, Rubens Barrichello split the Ferrari’s with a best of 1:24.318, while rookie teammate was three position further down, less than one-tenth slower.

The bottom of the pack revealed tales of woe for both Nick Heidfeld (Renault) and Narain Karthikeyan (Hispania).
Karthikeyan lost out during practice, thanks to a malfunctioning DRS, rendering him slowest, 7.85 seconds slower than Vettel; however Heidfeld’s problems were far more dramatic.
The Renault driver pulled off prior to turn nine, with the rear of his machine engulfed in flames. At this stage, it is unclear what started the fire, but it though a fuel overfill may have ignited, setting the machine ablaze.

Pos Driver Team/Car Time Gap Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault      1m21.707s            6
 2.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault      1m21.791s  + 0.084s  17
 3.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes              1m23.057s  + 1.350s  16
 4.  Lewis Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes      1m23.068s  + 1.361s  13
 5.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes      1m23.214s  + 1.507s  14
 6.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes              1m23.397s  + 1.690s  18
 7.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari        1m23.669s  + 1.962s  17
 8.  Vitaly Petrov       Renault               1m24.043s  + 2.336s  18
 9.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari               1m24.270s  + 2.563s  11
10.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams-Cosworth     1m24.318s  + 2.611s  18
11.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari               1m24.322s  + 2.615s  17
12.  Sergio Perez        Sauber-Ferrari        1m24.329s  + 2.622s  19
13.  Pastor Maldonado    Williams-Cosworth     1m24.399s  + 2.692s  17
14.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m24.535s  + 2.828s  16
15.  Adrian Sutil        Force India-Mercedes  1m24.695s  + 2.988s  18
16.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m24.722s  + 3.015s  14
17.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes  1m25.223s  + 3.516s  19
18.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus-Renault         1m26.236s  + 4.529s  11
19.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus-Renault         1m27.000s  + 5.293s  20
20.  Timo Glock          Virgin-Cosworth       1m27.706s  + 5.999s  20
21.  Tonio Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth          1m28.330s  + 6.623s  17
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio   Virgin-Cosworth       1m29.057s  + 7.350s  18
23.  Nick Heidfeld       Renault               1m29.200s  + 7.493s  6
24.  Narain Karthikeyan  HRT-Cosworth          1m29.562s  + 7.855s  16

Has Scott Speed Withdrawn From the Indy 500?

According to reports from within Indianapolis Motor Speedway tonight, Dragon Racing’s Scott Speed has split with Dragon Racing.

The American, who has previously raced in both Formula 1 and NASCAR, has struggled throughout practice to garner enough speed to bring him up the time sheets.
With frustration mounting, rumours began to fly that Speed had left his drive just one day shy of Pole Day for the great race.

Come the close of “Fast Friday”, Speed was 39th and last in practice with a speed of 222.5 mph; however with only 33 cars able to qualify for the race, the American may have been left on the outside looking in.
Speed’s rookie teammate and Renault Formula 1 reserve, Ho-Pin Tung, was running laps around 225 mph during the final day of practice.

Two drivers, Jacques Lazier and Jimmy Kite, were spotted outside Dragon Racing and Scott Speed’s garage very shortly after the former Toro Rosso driver walked, leading to speculation that Jay Penske may put one of the pair into the car for Bump Day.

2011 Spanish Grand Prix (Rd 5, Free Practice 2, May 20th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Like the morning session, Red Bull’s Mark Webber headed the second free practice in Barcelona.

The Australian took the lead of the order from early pacesetters Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) and Vitaly Petrov (Renault) , until the Red Bulls emerged on the soft Pirelli tyres, leaving Webber setting his mark (1:22.470) midway through the session.

Hamilton’s soft tyre run gave him 2nd place, only 0.039 shy of Webber – some three-tenths ahead of Championship leader, Sebastian Vettel. The Red Bull’s continued to display solid pace during their long run late in the session, aided by an RB7 treating its Pirelli’s delicately.
Jenson Button completed 32 laps on his way to 4th on the time sheets, albeit seven-tenths shy of the quickest run.

Fernando Alonso was the leading Ferrari with a best of 1:23.568. The Spaniard closed the Friday running in 5th, three places and seven-tenths clear of fellow Scuderia driver, Felipe Massa.
It was not the cleanest of sessions for the Brazilian, who complained of serious understeer through several of Barcelona’s high speed turns. Massa also had a couple of offs during practice, further hampering his running.
The red machines squeezed the Mercedes pair of Nico Rosberg (6th) and Michael Schumacher (7th).

Adrian Sutil had a heavily disrupted afternoon, due to a telemetry recording problem. The German completed 20 laps, the least of the runner, with a best of 1:27.123, stranding him 19th overall.
At the tail end of the sheets were the Hispania pair of Narain Karthikeyan and Vitantonio Liuzzi – both took the flag approximately seven seconds off the pace; a statistic that would see them outside the dreaded 107% barrier.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault       1m22.470s            35 
 2.  Lewis Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes       1m22.509s  + 0.039   27
 3.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault       1m22.826s  + 0.356   37
 4.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes       1m23.188s  + 0.718   32
 5.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari                1m23.568s  + 1.098   34
 6.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes               1m23.586s  + 1.116   35
 7.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes               1m23.981s  + 1.511   30
 8.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari                1m24.278s  + 1.808   30
 9.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari         1m24.290s  + 1.820   33
10.  Nick Heidfeld       Renault                1m24.366s  + 1.896   31
11.  Sergio Perez        Sauber-Ferrari         1m24.483s  + 2.013   38
12.  Vitaly Petrov       Renault                1m24.786s  + 2.316   43
13.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m25.296s  + 2.826   33
14.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams-Cosworth      1m25.303s  + 2.833   38
15.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m25.457s  + 2.987   34
16.  Pastor Maldonado    Williams-Cosworth      1m25.603s  + 3.133   43
17.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes   1m26.073s  + 3.603   32
18.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus-Renault          1m26.417s  + 3.947   37
19.  Adrian Sutil        Force India-Mercedes   1m27.123s  + 4.653   20
20.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus-Renault          1m27.189s  + 4.719   34
21.  Jerome D'Ambrosio   Virgin-Cosworth        1m28.036s  + 5.566   36
22.  Timo Glock          Virgin-Cosworth        1m28.062s  + 5.592   28
23.  Narain Karthikeyan  HRT-Cosworth           1m29.469s  + 6.999   28
24.  Tonio Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth           1m29.476s  + 7.006   31

2011 Spanish Grand Prix (Rd 5, Free Practice 1, May 20th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Mark Webber topped the first free practice session ahead of Sunday’s Spanish Grand Prix.

The Red Bull pilot set his best during a 27 lap session that saw him a clear one second quicker than his nearest rival and teammate, Sebastian Vettel.
While Webber’s best time of 1:25.142 set him apart from the pack, it gave an indication that the Red Bull pairing may have been splitting strategies, with the reigning champion concentrating on race set-ups. Vettel was also handicapped for much of the session thanks to an inactive KERS.

Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg finished the session 3rd, one-tenth shy of Vettel. Rosberg’s veteran teammate, Michael Schumacher, took 7th, with a best of 1:27.016 after a 32 lap morning – the silver pair squeezed Fernando Alonso (4th, Ferrari), Sergio Perez (5th, Sauber) and Lewis Hamilton (6th, McLaren).

Several teams brought large aerodynamic updates to the track, including McLaren, Force India and Lotus. Both Virgin and Williams arrived with modified floors and exhausts, while Hispania ran practice with several new aerodynamic pieces. It is a first for the tiny squad, who ran with the same version car all through 2010; however Hispania broke the curfew as they rushed to fix the new parts onto the F1-11.
Pirelli also brought delivered a new hard compound tyre. The Italian company modified the compound to last longer, in order to give teams more scope for race strategy.

Renault’s Vitaly Petrov secured 11th, minus the use of his KERS, losing a-tenth to his team mate, Nick Heidfeld (8th).
Toro Rosso’s under pressure racer, Jaime Alguersuari only managed nine laps, before an engine installation problem stopped his morning prematurely – he assumed 18th spot, some 1.5 seconds and six position shy of reserve pilot, Daniel Ricciardo.

Pastor Maldonado also got limited running due to an error in the latter half of the session. The Venezuelan suffered a slow speed off at the tight turn ten right-hander, leaving his Williams FW33 beached in the gravel. It left Maldonado classified 13th; eight-tenths shy of fellow Williams runner, Rubens Barrichello (10th).
Nico Hulkenberg sat in for Paul di Resta at Force India. The young German drove opposite his stressed teammate, Adrian Sutil, with Hulkenberg pipping Sutil to a better lap as the clock stopped.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault      1m25.142s    	     27
 2.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault      1m26.149s  + 1.007  20
 3.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes              1m26.379s  + 1.237  29
 4.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari               1m26.480s  + 1.338  27
 5.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari        1m26.738s  + 1.596  26
 6.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes      1m26.988s  + 1.846  19
 7.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes              1m27.016s  + 1.874  32
 8.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault               1m27.132s  + 1.990  21
 9.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes      1m27.138s  + 1.996  22
10.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth     1m27.212s  + 2.070  20
11.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault               1m27.241s  + 2.099  22
12.  Daniel Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m27.471s  + 2.329  23
13.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth     1m28.005s  + 2.863  11
14.  Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes  1m28.027s  + 2.885  26
15.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes  1m28.163s  + 3.021  22
16.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari               1m28.654s  + 3.512  28
17.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari        1m28.819s  + 3.677  23
18.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m28.995s  + 3.853  9
19.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault         1m29.231s  + 4.089  21
20.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth       1m30.896s  + 5.754  18
21.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth       1m31.235s  + 6.093  24
22.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth          1m31.268s  + 6.126  23
23.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault         1m31.418s  + 6.276  12
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth          1m32.106s  + 6.964  25

Parc Ferme, Episode 1 with Harry Tincknell (Fortec Motorsport, British F3)

© Harrytincknellracing.com

In a new feature at The Motorsport Archive, a new podcast – called “Parc Ferme” – is being launched for all to hear.

These podcasts will mainly present travels, thoughts and dealings in motorsport’s junior categories and for this first outing, where better to start than the Cooper Tyres British Formula 3 Series – a championship that I will be covering throughout 2011.

This episode gives a (very) brief overview of the season thus far and also features a brief soundbite from Carlin’s Kevin Magnussen as well a full interview with this episode’s featured driver, Harry Tincknell.

One hopes listeners can get around my Irish accent and initial nervousness, but more than that, I hope you enjoy the show.

De Silvestro Walks From Fiery Indianapolis Crash

IZOD IndyCar Racer Simona de Silvestro suffered a fiery crash in free practice at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

The ‘Swiss Miss’ suffered second-degree burns on her right hand and superficial burns on her left hand, when her HVM runner hit the SAFER Barrier in turn 3, before hurtling toward the turn four SAFER Barrier.
It has not yet been confirmed as to whether de Silvestro will be fully fit to take part in this weekend’s qualifying sessions. Should she not be in a position to run during qualifying, another river can take her place, as it is the car that qualifies rather than the driver.

As the car turned over on its roof, the lower part of the nose connected with the turn four catch fencing briefly, but with its momentum stalled, the car slid back down the track.
The Dallara caught fire as it came to a stop, causing burns to de Silvestro’s hands; however she left the scene without requiring assistance, to be sent to hospital for further check ups. There was further luck for de Silvestro for it appears as if the roll hoop broke during the incident.

Running was halted for a time while the catch fencing was repaired. It is a blow for the HVM pilot, whose best lap speed of 222.192 mph leaves her in the bottom half of the time sheets.
Practice has been severely curtailed so far this week, thanks to inclement weather and this incident may leave de Silvestro on the backfoot going into Saturday’s Pole Day qualifying session, should she be cleared.
With 41 cars trying for 33 spots on the grid, it is key for all to get as much track time as possible.

Planking at Indianapolis

As the 100th anniversary of the Indianapolis 500 draws ever closer, the field of 41 drivers have been preparing themselves ahead of this weekend’s qualifying sessions.

…or they would have had the weather permitted. Unfortunately, a mixture of heavy mists and occasional bursts of rain has kept the red flag out for the duration of the last two days. With the constant high speeds that are generated on oval tracks, no running takes place in damp or wet conditions.

As a result – and with little else to do, the internet grew with numerous images of drivers, crews and fans “planking”.
This recent phenomenon see lie down on a surface – or object – with the arms straightened in an effort to resemble a plank. It is an odd internet fad, but something that has helped generate some fun while the quietened hours tick away at the famed circuit.

Bright, but cloudy conditions are expected to return to Indianapolis tomorrow, which should (hopefully) see the field get in some solid running; however early forecasts are warning of heavy thunderstorms this weekend, which may delay qualifying for a couple of days.
Ironically, as the circuit closed for the day, the sun returned to Indianapolis.

Meanwhile, here are some planks.

Tomas Scheckter (KV / SH Racing)

Penske's Will Power and Ryan Briscoe

James Hinchcliffe (Newman-Haas)

Tony Kanaan (KV Racing)

Rafa Matos (AFS)

Gustavo Yacaman (Indy Lights driver)

The KV Racing foursome (EJ Viso, Takuma Sato, Tomas Scheckter and Tony Kanaan)

Scott Dixon (Chip Ganassi Racing)

Alex Lloyd (Dale Coyne Racing)

Arie Luyendyk Jr proves himself to be a nutter above the turn one grandstand.

..and the winner is: Paul Tracy (Dreyer & Reinbold) with his so-called "anti-plank"

These pictures have either been uploaded by the drivers themselves or their respective teams.

Public Transport’s Ping-Pong Ball

Dear Britain,
Please move a train station, or alternately, a bus stop closer to Snetterton Motor Racing Circuit, Norfolk.

Yours sincerely,
Leigh O’Gorman

2011 British F3 Round of Snetterton (Rd 3, Race 3, May 15th)

Kevin Magnussen recorded his second win British F3 win this weekend with another stunning display at Snetterton.

The Dane initially trailed fellow Carlin driver, Felipe Nasr off the line, but a first lap safety car period saw the Brazilian’s advantage pegged.
Indeed, it was an incident only 100 metres into the race that triggered the safety car, as Hywel Lloyd punted Fortec’s William Buller hard into the barrier. Buller was uninjured, but the race director neutralised the event while his stricken chassis was moved.

As the green conditions flew on the fourth lap, Magnussen wasted little in forcing his way past Nasr – in fact he repeated his move for the lead yesterday, going around the outside of turn one.

“There was my chance and I took it. It’s been a tough start to the season and to turn it around like this is incredible. Still a long way, still a long season and it’s going to be hard work. Felipe is a really good driver and there’s a lot of other good drivers as well. It’s not going to be easy and it’s not going to carry on like this. It’s going to be hard work, but I’ll keep pushing and believe in it.”

From there on, Magnussen was unchallenged as he slowly pulled away; however Nasr was facing a very different problem – his right front tyre picked up a slow puncture under the safety car, leaving his Volkswagen-powered Dallara disabled.
Nasr was then adjudged to fallen too far behind the safety car during the yellow period, earning the Brazilian a drive through penalty.
The pair of pitstops eventually dropped him down to the rear of the field, where he would eventually come home in 17th place. On fresh tyres, Nasr would claim not just the fastest race lap, but also Snetterton’s lap record.

While Magnussen ran ahead, Carlos Huertas (Carlin) and Riki Christodoulou (Hitech) fought over the final podium position – a fight won by the Carlin man thanks to a fourth lap pass.

“It was good. Started 5th and finished 2nd, taking two people. Obviously Rupert [Svendsen-Cook] couldn’t make the start. Bad for him, but I keep scoring points. I still have to improve qualifying, it’s not been great. I have to keep working on that, but I think the race pace is much better and all the time I improve, it’s gets better.”

Indeed, it was an unfortunate result for Svendsen-Cook – the 21-year-old was due to start 3rd, but an ill engine stranded him in the pits until moments before the race start.
Following his win at Oulton Park three weeks ago, Christodoulou maintained his cheerful form with another podium and a strong showing from the Hitech runner. It could have been more for the Englishman, who found himself blocked by Nasr on the restart.

“The start was good. I got close to Nasr and Magnussen at the start – wasn’t able to put it passed them, because [they] were battling and when Magnussen did the move around the outside of turn 1, I went to inside of Nasr, but he pretty abruptly chopped the door. It could have been a bit of crash, but I managed to avoid that, but it let Carlos [Huertas] passed me, so moved to 4th. As the race went on, I was able to pressure Nasr and put a pass on him.”

In what has been a quiet week for the Malaysian, Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin) secured a top four position ahead of Pietro Fantin (5th, Hitech). Double R’s Pipo Derani came home 6th.
Derani’s Double R teammate, Scott Pye, had an adventurous race. The Australian made a magical start from 12th position, claiming 9th by the first lap. That became 8th when Harry Tincknell slipped off circuit under the safety car and 7th as Nasr fell by the wayside.

Next up was Tincknell. A solid performance saw the Fortec driver earn the Sunoco Driver of the Weekend award, despite his safety car mishap. He had been running 6th early on, before falling to 10th; but climbed back to 8th as Nasr and Menasheh Idafar fell into trouble.
Lucas Foresti also had a good start, jumping from 13th to 9th by the flag. The Brazilian passed fellow countryman Yann Cunha (T-Sport) in the process, with Cunha eventually claiming the final point.

Adderly Fong took 11th, just missing out on the points. The Chinese driver held off a train of machines including Carlin pair Jack Harvey (12th) and Rupert Svendsen-Cook (13th), with the repaired Lloyd at the rear of the group in 14th.

An off for Fahmi Ilyas left the Fortec pilot running in 15th at the end, ahead of Rookie Class winner, Bart Hylkema. This win gives Hylkema a further points advantage over his sole Rookie Class rival, Kotaru Sakurai at the series breaks up for five weeks.

“I was struggling a lot in the beginning, I had a bad start – it just went wrong and I got stuck behind [Sakurai], but I was struggling a lot anyway with my car. It got a little bit better and he made a little mistake, so I was able to pass him. That was good, but I definitely was struggling with this race, so there are mixed feelings. It’s something that I look at, I really don’t know, but we had quite a lot of damage this morning. The guys did a great job and the car was fixed. I need to have a look, because we were lacking pace.”

Sakurai was the last of the finishers, coming home 18th and one lap down. He faired better than Idafar – the Bahraini driver pitted on the sixth tour with an engine misfire, losing two laps before rejoining the field.

Pos Drivers Teams Time / Gap
 1. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen    41:12.422 (23 laps)
 2. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen       +4.737
 3. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen       +6.913
 4. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen       +7.188
 5. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen       +9.155
 6. Pipo Derani           Double R-Mercedes      +14.913
 7. Scott Pye             Double R-Mercedes      +15.626
 8. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes        +19.135
 9. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes        +19.670
10. Yann Cunha            T-Sport-Volkswagen     +24.571
11. Adderly Fong          Sino Vision-Mercedes   +35.029
12. Jack Harvey           Carlin-Volkswagen      +35.677
13. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen      +36.433
14. Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision-Mercedes   +38.261
15. Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec-Mercedes        +47.447
16. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport-Mugen Honda  +1:15.494
17. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen    +1:30.741
18. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech-Mugen Honda      +1 lap
19. Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport-Volkswagen     +2 laps
 Retirements
R   William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes       +23 laps
Fastest Lap
    Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.933 (Lap 21)*
*Track record

2011 British Formula 3 Championship (Round 3)
 1. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen    114 points
 2. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen     73
 3. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes       71
 4. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen     68
 5. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen     56
 6. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen     52
 7. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen     51
 8. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen     45
 9. William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes       42
10. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes       33
Rookie Class
 1. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport-Mugen Honda  130
 2. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech-Mugen Honda    72

Trackside at the British F3 Series in 2011

2011 British F3 Round of Snetterton (Rd 3, Race 2, May 15th)

After a day of Carlin domination in the British F3 series at Snetterton yesterday, Fortec Motorsport hit back with a 1-2-3 finish of their own today.

Lucas Foresti led from flag to flag in the eleven lap short race, maintaining a strong advantage over Harry Tincknell throughout the running.
It was a strong performance for the Brazilian to claim his second win of the season, as attempts to catch Championship leader Felipe Nasr. While happy with his win, Foresti remained somewhat downhearted about his race three prospects:

“The [team] worked very hard. I did not have a good qualifying, but now I can show that my car is fast during the race. [Later on] I just need to do a good start and to do the best movements I can.”

For Harry Tincknell, the rookie driver achieved his second podium with his finest run of the year so far. The Exeter-born racer beat fellow Fortec pilot William Buller off the line, sweeping ahead on the approach to the first turn at Riches. Tincknell was, rightly, delighted with the progress of both he and his team:

“It was really, really good. I had a 3rd at Oulton [Park]; that was a breakthrough result and it gave me a lot of confidence coming here and we’ve been on the pace again. I was just getting used to the starts at the first couple of races and learning how to do them. Now I think I have found a sweet spot to get a good launch. Once I was inside Will going into the first corner, there was nothing he could do.”

Buller only had one opportunity to retake Tincknell – on the fifth lap – but the 19-year-old held on for the runner-up spot.

“It’s probably not the result we were looking for, but I am happy enough with the Fortec 1-2-3 – you can’t get much better than that. The pace was good and had a few chances, but it’s so hard to overtake here.”

Fortec didn’t have it all their own way, with Carlin’s Kevin Magnussen assuming the fastest lap of the race – his tour of 1:40.181 was enough to garner the Dane a bonus point.

Pietro Fantin broke up the Fortec party with the Hitech driver taking 4th at the line. The Brazilian drove a threatening race, shadowing Buller to the flag, eventually missing out on a podium by just 0.361 of-a-second.
Fantin had a more comfortable gap over Sino Vision’s Hywel Lloyd. 5th represented Lloyd’s best finish in the British F3 series since last year’s event at Magny Cours.
He held off Championship leader Felipe Nasr for the duration. It was not all bad for Nasr – the Carlin man made a huge jump off the line, swiftly moving from 9th to 6th prior to Riches.

Riki Christodoulou ran undisturbed to 7th ahead of Carlos Huertas (8th, Carlin), Magnussen (9th, Carlin) and Yann Cunha (10th, T-Sport).
For Cunha, it was something of a reserved success – the 20-year-old took his first point in the championship, but were it not for a bad start from 8th, it may well have been much more.

Double R’s Scott Pye came home 11th, some six seconds up on teammate Pipo Derani (12th), with Fahmi Ilyas claiming 13th at the flag.
Adderly Fong (Sino Vision) climbed to 11th at the start, but a spin on the fourth lap dropped the Chinese pilot to 14th.

A first lap collision involving T-Sport’s Menasheh Idafar and Carlin pair Jack Harvey and Jazeman Jaafar saw Harvey retire on the spot, while Idafar and Jaafar lost a lap pitting for new front wings.
T-Sport’s Rookie Class runner, Bart Hylkema also retired on the opening lap kerfuffle, gifting victory to Kotaru Sakurai – his first class win of the year.
Rupert Svendsen-Cook retired in the pits thanks to a lingering engine misfire.
Race Rating: 2 out of 5

2011 British Formula 3 (Round 3 Race 2)
Pos Driver Team Time/Gap
 1 Lucas Foresti           Fortec-Mercedes     18:38.889 (11 laps)
 2 Harry Tincknell         Fortec-Mercedes        +5.395
 3 William Buller          Fortec-Mercedes        +7.594
 4 Pietro Fantin           Hitech-Volkswagen      +7.955
 5 Hywel Lloyd             Sino Vision-Mercedes   +9.245
 6 Felipe Nasr             Carlin-Volkswagen     +10.415
 7 Riki Christodoulou      Hitech-Volkswagen     +10.898
 8 Carlos Huertas          Carlin-Volkswagen     +11.574
 9 Kevin Magnussen         Carlin-Volkswagen     +11.910
10 Yann Cunha              T-Sport-Volkswagen    +13.396
11 Scott Pye               Double R-Mercedes     +14.798
12 Pipo Derani             Double R-Mercedes     +20.757
13 Fahmi Ilyas             Fortec-Mercedes       +25.528
14 Adderly Fong            Sino Vision-Mercedes  +25.905
15 Kotaru Sakurai          Hitech-Mugen Honda  +1:04.682
16 Jazeman Jaafar          Carlin-Volkswagen      +1 lap
17 Menasheh Idafar         T-Sport-Volkswagen     +1 lap
 Retirements
 R Rupert Svendsen-Cook    Carlin-Volkswagen    +11 laps
 R Jack Harvey             Carlin-Volkswagen    +11 laps
 R Bart Hylkema            T-Sport-Mugen Honda  +11 laps

2011 British F3 Championship (Rd 3, Race 2)
 1 Nasr          113 points
 2 Foresti        69
 3 Jaafar         58
 4 Huertas        58
 5 Svendsen-Cook  45
 6 Fantin         44
 7 Buller         42
 8 Christodoulou  39
 9 Magnussen      36
10 Tincknell      30
Rookie class
 1 Bart Hylkema  109
 2 Sakurai        57

2011 British F3 Round of Snetterton (Rd 3, Race 1, May 14th)

Carlin’s Kevin Magnussen took a fabulous British Formula 3 victory at Snetterton today.

The Dane pulled off two very brave moves around the outside of Riches corner, to assume the lead, either side of a safety car period.

It was not the greatest of starts for Magnussen. A sluggish start from the front row saw the 18-year-old fall to 3rd place behind Hitech Racing’s Riki Christodoulou. Amidst this, poleman Felipe Nasr flew off the line, although the Brazilian was only able to pull out a small margin in the early stages.

Magnussen made the first of his sterling overtakes around Riches at the beginning of the third tour, as the Dane forced the issue upon Christodoulou. With the Hitech man dispatched, Magnussen pegged Nasr’s lead to just over one second, until eighth lap, whereby the race was neutralised by the safety car.
Both Scott Pye (Double R) and Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec) retired on laps six and seven respectively, – Pye with a mechanical and Ilyas with an accident; however with their machines stranded in dangerous positions, the safety car emerged, closing up the field in the process.

Green conditions returned on the eleventh lap, and though Nasr got a good restart, Magnussen’s was even better, allowing the Dane to force the issue and push around the outside of Riches turn. The decisive move made, Magnussen held the lead, eventually winning by 0.6 of-a-second despite some late race pressure being applied by Nasr.

“I didn’t make the best start and fell down to 3rd, but got passed Riki [Christodoulou] in the first corner. I was catching Nasr when we had the safety car – he was good on the restart and got a really good go, but I managed to get on the outside of him on the first corner and just take it. I just took my chance really – I saw a gap and just went for it.”

Carlos Huertas completed an all-Carlin podium. The Colombian started 4th, collecting 3rd spot when Christodoulou suffered an off on the the fifth lap while under pressure. While not ecstatic, Huertas was seeing some positives from his run:

“Yeah, much better than qualifying where I was really struggling with the car. I had good pace and was within a tenth of the fastest lap. It’s a big improvement and points, so I’m happy.”

Christodoulou’s error also let Rupert Svendsen-Cook and Pietro Fantin through; however where the Briton would repass Fantin on the twelfth tour, Svendsen-Cook was simply too far ahead.
Fantin, for his efforts, assumed a safe 6th ahead of Hywel Lloyd (7th, Sino Vision) and Harry Tincknell (8th, Fortec).

Fortec Motorsport duo William Buller and Lucas Foresti rounded out the top ten, with Buller ahead at the flag. Foresti started from 15th, but having reached 10th by lap seven, the Brazilian attempted several aggressive moves on his teammate.
However Buller was just as aggressive in his defence – although Buller came close to crossing the line on the 13th lap, squeezing Foresti onto the grass on the start / finish straight.

Yann Cunha (T-Sport) took 11th ahead of Adderly Fong (Sino Vision). They finished far in front of Jazeman Jaafar, who had a disastrous race – a poor start (falling from 7th to 14th on the opening tour) left the Malaysian on the back foot for the first stint.
Jaafar made his way to 11th for a time, only to be jumped by Cunha and Fong at the post-safety car restart.
Come the chequered flag, Jaafar also lost places to Pipo Derani (13th), Menasheh Idafar (14th) and Jack Harvey. While Idafar and Harvey had indifferent races, Derani earned his 13th spot, by lining up on the grid incorrectly, gaining a drive through as a result.

Magnussen’s victory lifts him to 9th in the championship table with 32 points; however the Dane is still a long way adrift of his Championship leading teammate, Felipe Nasr – his podium leaves him with 108 points; twice that of next up Lucas Foresti.

Bart Hylkema took another Rookie Class win over Kotaru Sakurai, giving the Dutch driver a 64 point lead over his Japanese rival.
Race Rating: 3.5 out of 5

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
 1   Kevin Magnussen       Carlin Dallara-VW         30m54.041s (17 laps)
 2.  Felipe Nasr           Carlin Dallara-VW           + 0.616s
 3.  Carlos Huertas        Carlin Dallara-VW           + 3.373s
 4.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin Dallara-VW           + 5.255s
 5.  Riki Christodoulou    Hitech Dallara-VW           + 8.051s
 6.  Pietro Fantin         Hitech Dallara-VW           + 8.542s
 7.  Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision Dallara-Merc   + 11.238s
 8.  Harry Tincknell       Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 11.906s
 9.  William Buller        Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 12.016s
10.  Lucas Foresti         Fortec Dallara-Merc        + 13.427s
11.  Yann Cunha            T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 15.210s
12.  Adderly Fong          Sino Vision Dallara-Merc   + 19.791s
13.  Pipo Derani           Double R Dallara-Merc      + 23.081s
14.  Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport Dallara-VW         + 23.729s
15.  Jack Harvey           Carlin Dallara-VW          + 26.026s
16.  Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin Dallara-VW          + 26.952s
17.  Bart Hylkema          T-Sport Dallara-Mugen      + 28.744s
18.  Kotaro Sakurai        Hitech Dallara-Mugen       + 34.746s
Retirements:
     Scott Pye             Double R Dallara-Merc         6 laps
     Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec Dallara-Merc           4 laps

British Formula 3 International Championship (Rd 3, Race 1)
Pos Drivers Points
 1 Nasr          108
 2 Foresti        59
 3 Jaafar         58
 4 Huertas        55
 5 Svendsen-Cook  45
 6 Fantin         37
 8 Buller         34
 9 Magnussen      32
 10 Tincknell     21
Rookie class
 1 Hylkema       109
 2 Sakurai        45

2011 British F3 Round of Snetterton (Rd 3, Qualifying, May 14th)

Following on from yesterday’s test session, Felipe Nasr was again quickest in qualifying for races one and three at round three of the British Formula 3 series at Snetterton.

The Brazilian pipped fellow Carlin runner, Kevin Magnussen late in the session – his best of 1:39.147 left the Dane to line up alongside Nasr in 2nd, some three-tenths slower.
Magnussen will also start 2nd for the opening race of the weekend. Having stalled on pole at Oulton Park three weeks ago, Magnussen will be hoping to take advantage of his front row start this time around, after a difficult opening couple of rounds.

Rupert Svendsen-Cook (Carlin) and Riki Christodoulou (Hitech) filled out the second row of the grid, while the third row was another all-Carlin affair as Carlos Huertas beat Jazeman Jaafar to 5th position.
Hitech’s Pietro Fantin took 7th, just one-tenth ahead of Pipo Derani (8th, Double R) and Harry Tincknell (9th, Fortec). Sino Vision’s Hywel Lloyd rounds out the top ten.

Menasheh Idafar made the best of his Volkswagen-powered T-Sport machine, only just nabbing 11th, with William Buller (Fortec) and Scott Pye (Double R) lingering close behind.
Both Lucas Foresti (Fortec) and Jack Harvey (Carlin) had disappointing days, finishing up 14th and 16th respectively – they sandwiched Brazilian runner Yann Cunha.
Beyond Harvey, Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec) and Adderly Fong’s (Sino Vision) best laps were over two seconds shy of Nasr. Rookie Class drivers Bart Hylkema (19th, T-Sport) and Kotaru Sakurai (Hitech) secured the back of the grid.

Round 2; Race one grid:
Pos Driver Team/Car Time
 1. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.549
 2. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.573
 3. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen     1:39.842
 4. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.845
 5. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.919
 6. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen     1:40.065
 7. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen     1:40.111
 8. Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision-Mercedes  1:40.218
 9. Pipo Derani           Double R-Mercedes     1:40.411
10. William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes       1:40.415
11. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes       1:40.515
12. Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport-Volkswagen    1:40.571
13. Scott Pye             Double R-Mercedes     1:40.603
14. Yann Cunha            T-Sport-Volkswagen    1:40.852
15. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes       1:41.117
16. Jack Harvey           Carlin-Volkswagen     1:41.229
17. Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec-Mercedes       1:41.622
18. Adderly Fong          Sino Vision-Mercedes  1:41.631
19. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport-Mugen Honda   1:42.531
20. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech-Volkswagen     1:43.836

Round 2; Race three grid: 
Pos Driver Team/Car Time 
 1. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.147
 2. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.486
 3. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.650
 4. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen     1:39.810
 5. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.817
 6. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen     1:39.883
 7. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen     1:39.990
 8. Pipo Derani           Double R-Mercedes     1:40.088
 9. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes       1:40.142
10. Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision-Mercedes  1:40.201
11. Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport-Volkswagen    1:40.305
12. William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes       1:40.339
13. Scott Pye             Double R-Mercedes     1:40.400
14. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes       1:41.647
15. Yann Cunha            T-Sport-Volkswagen    1:40.796
16. Jack Harvey           Carlin-Volkswagen     1:40.978
17. Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec-Mercedes       1:41.190
18. Adderly Fong          Sino Vision-Mercedes  1:41.510
19. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport-Mugen Honda   1:42.400
20. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech-Volkswagen     1:43.620