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2011 Chinese Grand Prix (Rd 3, Qyalifying, April 16th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel recorded his third pole of the season and the 18th pole of his short career in Shanghai on Saturday.

The Red Bull driver put his RB7 on the top spot with a stunning lap of 1:33.706 – some seven-tenths quicker than the McLaren pairing of Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton.
It could not be ignored that Red Bull excelled in the cooler conditions of Shanghai, just as they did in Melbourne.

“We have done it again, but every single time is tough. In Q3 I was confident that we were able to improve quite a lot. Obviously today we did a good job, but it’s just eight metres on the track tomorrow. We did some good long runs on Friday and so we have a reason to feel good, but it’s also a threat to feel too good – so I pay attention that doesn’t happen.”

It was not the most nail biting of Q3’s – indeed Vettel went out early to set his fastest run and while he took to track for a second run before the clock ticked down, it was clear no one was going to touch the German.
Button was also out early for a single run, while Hamilton’s only timed lap came late on in the session. Afterwards, the 2009 World Champion was pragmatic about the session:

“After Q2, I thought we’d have a shot at pole today, but, looking at Sebastian’s final laptime, second place was realistically all we could do. Overnight, we made some improvements to the car; I think there are still areas where we need to improve to challenge Red Bull… This is my best grid position of the season; the car felt really consistent all afternoon and I got pretty much everything out of it.”

Nico Rosberg took an encouraging 4th in his Mercedes. After a tough race weekend in Malaysia, the cooler conditions helped the MGP-W02 to a faster pace and a second row slot.
Fernando Alonso led the Ferrari’s on the third row of the grid, although neither Alonso, nor Felipe Massa would be happy to be 1.4 seconds down on Vettel.

Both Toro Rosso’s made it to Q3 for the first this season, with Jaime Alguersuari (7th) ahead of Sebastien Buemi (9th). They squeezed Force India’s Paul di Resta in 8th place – the Scot out-qualified his teammate Adrian Sutil for the third consecutive Grand Prix weekend.
Renault’s Vitaly Petrov made the third stint of qualifying; however his R31 suffered an hydraulics failure at the tail end of Q2, leaving the Russian stranded for the final session and understandably disappointed.

“I am very disappointed with what happened after having just completed a very fast lap which put me in fourth position at the end of Q2. The car lost power so I stopped on the side of the track. Because of the power failure, I couldn’t move off the track and so that was the end of my qualifying.”

On the sixth row is the under pressure Force India of Sutil. The German just missed out the final qualifying run by 0.16 of-a-second, following a flying run his his teammate.
Sutil pipped the Sauber duo of Sergio Perez (12th) and Kamui Kobayashi (13th), although both of the Swiss machines qualified ahead of ahead of seven-time champion Michael Schumacher, although the German’s quick lap was ruined by a malfunctioning rear wing yet again.
In 16th place, Nick Heidfeld became a Renault filling in a Williams sandwich. The German veteran arguable suffered greatly when Petrov stopped out on track in Q2 – the red flags appearing just as Heidfeld was to embark on his quick lap.
The Renault man just lost out to Rubens Barrichello (15th), but was slightly quicker than Pastor Maldonado (17th).

Mark Webber was a shock exit in the first stint of qualifying. The Red Bull man struggled on hard tyres, three-tenths shy of the cut-off point. With the KERS unit not operational, Webber found himself vulnerable.

“It’s a very frustrating day. We didn’t have a smooth P3 (practice) or Q1 and we paid the ultimate price at end of the day. We thought we had enough to get through on the prime tyres – we have the pace, but I couldn’t get the tyre working on my second run. I can’t remember the last time I was out in Q1; it was a long, long time ago, so it was a bad day for us.”

Behind Webber, the Lotus pairing of Heikki Kovalainen (19th) and Jarno Trulli (20th) had a tough time in the cooler conditions. The Anglo-Malaysia team were unable to get heat into their Pirelli’s, yet were still able to stay ahead of the Virgin’s and Hispania’s – all of whom beat the 107% cut-off point easily.

Pos Driver Team Time Gap 
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     1m33.706s
 2.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m34.421s  + 0.715
 3.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m34.463s  + 0.757
 4.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m34.670s  + 0.964
 5.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m35.119s  + 1.413
 6.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m35.145s  + 1.439
 7.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m36.158s  + 2.452
 8.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m36.190s  + 2.484
 9.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m36.203s  + 2.497
10.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault              No time
Q3 cut-off time: 1m35.858s Gap **
11.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes 1m35.874s  + 1.388
12.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m36.053s  + 1.567
13.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m36.236s  + 1.750
14.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             1m36.457s  + 1.971
15.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth    1m36.465s  + 1.979
16.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault              1m36.611s  + 2.125
17.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth    1m36.956s  + 2.470
Q3 cut-off time: 1m36.147s Gap *
18. Mark Webber            Red Bull-Renault     1m36.468s  + 1.196
19. Heikki Kovalainen      Lotus-Renault        1m37.894s  + 2.622
20. Jarno Trulli           Lotus-Renault        1m38.318s  + 3.046
21. Jerome D'Ambrosio      Virgin-Cosworth      1m39.119s  + 3.847
22. Timo Glock             Virgin-Cosworth      1m39.708s  + 4.436
23. Tonio Liuzzi           HRT-Cosworth         1m40.212s  + 4.940
24. Narain Karthikeyan     HRT-Cosworth         1m40.445s  + 5.173

107% time: 1m41.941s
* Gap to quickest in Q1
** Gap to quickest in Q2

2011 Chinese Grand Prix (Rd 3, Free Practice 3, April 16th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel topped the third and final free practice session in China on Saturday morning.

The reigning champion planted his Red Bull on top of the pile, despite having little use of his KERS unit.
During the session Vettel ran 13 lap, with a best of 1:34.968 – some two-tenths quicker than McLaren’s Jenson Button in 2nd.

Lewis Hamilton made it a trio of champions at the head of the pile. The McLaren pilot set his best lap at the tail end of the session; however an off course excursion took the best from his Pirelli rubber leaving the Briton unable to challenge harder.

Nico Rosberg pipped Ferrari’s Felipe Massa (5th) and Fernando Alonso (6th) in the time sheets. Rosberg’s veteran teammate Michael Schumacher could only manage a best of 9th, sandwiched by the Force India duo of Adrian Sutil (8th) and Paul di Resta (10th).
Fronting the Renault charge was Vitaly Petrov in 7th. The Russian completed 18 laps with a best of 1:36.098 – just over tree-tenths quicker than teammate Nick Heidfeld. Admittedly, Heidfeld was the cause of his own woes – his two Friday accidents meant the German had to revert back to the old specification front wing on his R31.

Following a less than successful test on Friday, Sauber reverted to their original exhaust system; the new design caused burn issues around the suspension. Kamui Kobayashi and Sergio Perez finished 12th and 13th respectively, some 1.6 seconds off of Vettel’s pace.

If Sauber had reason to be disappointed, then Mark Webber was truly disgusted. The Red Bull driver only registered five laps as problems with the electrics and his KERS unit severely hampered his session, leaving the Australian in 16th spot.

Near the back of the pile, Jerome d’Ambrosio’s indifferent start to his Formula 1 career continued. The Belgian ran wide at turn 13, wrecking his front wing over the jagged kerbs.
D’Ambrosio finished the morning in the pitlane with the 22nd best time.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m34.968s            13
 2.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m35.176s  + 0.208s  15
 3.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m35.373s  + 0.405s  14
 4.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m35.677s  + 0.709s  18
 5.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m35.818s  + 0.850s  17
 6.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m35.971s  + 1.003s  15
 7.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m36.098s  + 1.130s  18
 8.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m36.125s  + 1.157s  15
 9.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m36.141s  + 1.173s  14
10.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes   1m36.370s  + 1.402s  18
11.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m36.404s  + 1.436s  16
12.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m36.582s  + 1.614s  18
13.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m36.596s  + 1.628s  17
14.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m36.717s  + 1.749s  16
15.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m36.896s  + 1.928s  5
16.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m36.953s  + 1.985s  14
17.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m37.007s  + 2.039s  20
18.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m37.304s  + 2.336s  18
19.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m38.176s  + 3.208s  12
20.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault          1m38.739s  + 3.771s  12
21.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m39.938s  + 4.970s  17
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m39.998s  + 5.030s  16
23.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth           1m40.593s  + 5.625s  17
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth           1m40.881s  + 5.913s  18

2011 Chinese Grand Prix (Rd 3, Free Practice 2, April 15th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel topped the second free practice session at the Shanghai International Circuit in China.

The German completed 34 laps, with a best of 1:37.688, only just over one tenth ahead of the McLaren of Lewis Hamilton.
Vettel spent a period of the session working on long stints, as Red Bull continue to gather information on the new Pirelli rubber.

Hamilton for his part clocked up 22 laps, heading off teammate Jenson Button, who registered the 3rd quickest time.
The Mercedes duo followed in 4th and 5th with Nico Rosberg leading Michael Schumacher as the pair concentrated on long runs under high fuel loads. While the pair showed better pace, question marks still remain over the true quality of the MGP-W02.

Felipe Massa was the quicker of the two Ferrari’s come the chequered flag; however the Brazilian took advantage of being the afternoon’s busiest runner.
Massa’s 36 laps contrast with the 17 that fellow Ferrari pilot Fernando Alonso banked. The Spaniard missed much of the session due to an hydraulics problem.

Several drivers had offs during the session. Many were caught out by the excessively dusty conditions – none moreso than Renault substitute Nick Heidfeld.
The German veteran suffered his second accident of the day on the long spiralling run through turn 2. Upon losing traction, Heidfeld’s R31 careered off the road and slammed the barrier, destroying another front wing.
Heidfeld eventually finished 8th in the session – just one place and 0.056 ahead of his Russian teammate Vitaly Petrov.

Mark Webber could only manage 10th quickest in the second session. The Australian struggled with poor low fuel form, although the RB7 displayed solid pace on longer stints.
Rubens Barrichello tested a new exhaust system on his FW33 during the session. The Williams driver could only manage 16th place after complaints that the car actually lost some performance.

Vitantonio Liuzzi only managed three laps for Hispania following an hydraulics failure. Despite that, the Italian still jumped both Virgin racers in the time sheets.
Force India could not get Paul di Resta out in second practice – the young Scot was ruled out due to a fuel pressure problem.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m37.688s            34
 2.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m37.854s  +	0.166  22
 3.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m37.935s  +	0.247  31
 4.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m37.943s  +	0.255  34
 5.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m38.105s  +	0.417  29
 6.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m38.507s  +	0.819  36
 7.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m38.735s  +	1.047  35
 8.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m38.805s  +	1.117  26
 9.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m38.859s  +	1.171  31
10.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m39.327s  +	1.639  33
11.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m39.538s  +	1.850  33
12.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m39.667s  +	1.979  37
13.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m39.771s  +	2.083  18
14.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m39.779s  +	2.091  17
15.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m39.828s  +	2.140  25
16.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m39.925s  +	2.237  32
17.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m39.953s  +	2.265  30
18.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m40.476s  +	2.788  30
19.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault          1m41.482s  +	3.794  32
20.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth           1m42.902s  +	5.214  25
21.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth           1m43.850s  +	6.162   3
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m44.008s  +	6.320  35
23.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m44.747s  +	7.059  12

2011 Chinese Grand Prix (Rd 3, Free Practice 1, April 15th)

Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Free Practice 1
Sebastian Vettel set the quickest time in Friday’s first practice session for the Chinese Grand Prix.

The reigning champion set his quickest lap of 1:38.739 – some six tenths quicker than Red Bull teammate Mark Webber after a 23 lap run. Webber put in several more laps, showing some solid long run pace; however – as in Australia and Malaysia – the Australia suffered from KERS problems.

The McLaren pairing of Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button were next up on the timing sheet, albeit over two seconds off the leading pace. Both had offs during the session; yet neither were as dramatic as Nick Heidfeld’s practice ending slip up.
The German veteran slid off on the exit of turn ten, pitching the Renault into the barrier head on. With wing and suspension damage, Heidfeld’s morning was over early – he would eventually claim 5th position.
Down in 10th place was Williams’ Pastor Maldonado. The Venezuelan also suffered from a spin during the session, although his was a gentler slide as his Pirelli’s gave up their life after a long run.
Both Sauber’s had vastly different stints – Sergio Perez (7th) ran new bodywork components, while Kamui Kobayashi (14th) tried a new exhaust layout.

Luiz Razia’s practice was brief. The Lotus reserve sat in for Jarno Trulli, but a suspension failure at the midpoint tore off his front wing, ending the day for the Italian in 23rd. Razia’s teammate, Heikki Kovalainen completed thirteen laps to get 14th spot, but did so with a lighter pocket – the Finn sped through the pitlane just after the session started, earning him a €2,700 fine.
A hydraulic problem stopped Vitantonio Liuzzi’s running right at the death – the Hispania pilot secured 21st after eighteen laps in the F111 machine.

Pos Driver Team Time Laps
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault       1m38.739s		23
 2.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault       1m39.354s   + 0.615   27
 3.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes       1m40.845s   + 2.106   21
 4.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m40.940s   + 2.201   22
 5.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault                1m40.987s   + 2.248   5
 6.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari                1m41.046s   + 2.307   25
 7.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m41.189s   + 2.450   20
 8.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m41.222s   + 2.483   20
 9.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault                1m41.231s   + 2.492   16
10.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m41.328s   + 2.589   21
11.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes               1m41.361s   + 2.622   23
12.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari                1m41.434s   + 2.695   15
13.  Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes   1m41.494s   + 2.755   20
14.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault          1m41.579s   + 2.840   13
15.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes   1m41.610s   + 2.871   18
16.  Daniel Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m41.752s   + 3.013   20
17.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m41.939s   + 3.200   25
18.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes               1m42.301s   + 3.562   23
19.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari         1m43.792s   + 5.053   20
20.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m44.089s   + 5.350   20
21.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth           1m44.359s   + 5.620   18
22.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth        1m44.438s   + 5.699   11
23.  Luiz Razia            Lotus-Renault          1m44.542s   + 5.803    9
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth           1m45.019s   + 6.280   23

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Race 3, April 17th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Felipe Nasr took an emphatic victory at the final race of this weekend’s British F3 round at Monza.

The Brazilian started from 8th on the grid, but dropped as far as 11th before picking off opponents one at a time time.
After spending many scything through the field, Nasr engaged Lucas Foresti (Fortec) in a hard fought battle for several laps – a battle that Nasr was destined to win.
To top off a top day for the Carlin runner, Nasr also nailed the race’s fastest lap and was nominated as Sunoco’s Driver of the Weekend.

“This race was really exciting for me. I lost a lot of places on lap one so I had to try to stay out of trouble and take each car one by one. I was really quick so I saw the win was possible. I had a great battle with Lucas; he was the hardest one to pass. This has been a really great start to my season, I am very pleased.”

Foresti shouldn’t be too disappointed. Having started 2nd, the Fortec pilot battled for a time with Jazeman Jaafar, with the Malaysian eventually taking the final podium position ahead of a close pack of drivers.
Foresti commented that:

“Felipe was very tough to keep behind me and in the end he passed me, but this is a great result for me and for Fortec.”

William Buller had a fascinating race, although the Northern Ireland man may be somewhat disappointed with his final position. Having started from pole, Buller lost out to Kevin Magnussen off the line before throwing his Fortec car off course at the second Lesmo.
Buller fell to 10th, but a determined comeback made sure that he came away with at least 4th, although he did not have much clearance ahead of Carlos Huertas (Carlin). Unfortunately for the County Down man, Buller would later be hit with a double whammy of penalties – first Buller was dropped to 7th for corner cutting and was then hit with 10-place grid drop for the Oulton Park event for banging wheels with Jazeman Jaafar.
Also penalised for corner cutting were Rupert Svendsen-Cook (Carlin), Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec), Scott Pye (Double R), Hitech’s Riki Christodoulou and Adderly Fong (Sino Vision).

It would promote Huertas to 4th. The Carlin driver was in the midst of a gaggle of cars that all cross the line separated by mere tenths. Next up was the later-to-be-demoted Rupert Svendsen-Cook (Carlin), with Pietro Fantin (5th, Hitech) and Magnussen (6th, Carlin).
Magnussen spent much of the event running in the top four, until a mistake saw the Dane off at turn 1 and dropping down the order.

Double R’s Pipo Derani also faced a multi-car battle with Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec), Scott Pye (Double R) and Riki Christodoulou (Hitech) – Derani eventually claimed 9th.
Menasheh Idafar recovered from an early off to record 10th, while Yann Cunha (T-Sport) led yet another close group of cars at the flag. Just under Cunha’s rear wing at the finish was Hywel Lloyd (15th, Sino Vision).
Harry Tincknell was next up. The Briton stalled his Mercedes-powered Fortec machine on the grid and was unable to charge through the field thereafter.

Jack Harvey didn’t have the best of days. The ex-Formula BMW Europe contender suffered a poor start and spent much of the duration battling with the Sino Vision pair and Tincknell.
Bruno Mendez capped off his début British F3 weekend with an 18th place finish in race 3, followed by the sole Rookie Class entry, Bart Hylkema. Adderly Fong got a good start – jumping to four spots to 13th, but was unable to hold that position as the race aged.
Race Rating: 4.5 out of 5

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Race 3, April 17th)
Pos  Driver                   Car           Time/Gap
 1. Felipe Nasr      Dallara/Volkswagen   40m 37.942s (21 laps)
 2. Lucas Foresti    Dallara/Mercedes        + 2.114
 3. Jazeman Jaafar   Dallara/Volkswagen      + 5.542
 4. Carlos Huertas   Dallara/Volkswagen      + 6.437
 5. Pietro Fantin    Dallara/Volkswagen      + 8.707
 6. Kevin Magnussen  Dallara/Volkswagen      + 9.473
 7. William Buller   Dallara/Mercedes       + 11.125*
 8. R.Svendsen-Cook  Dallara/Volkswagen     + 12.879*
 9. Luis Derani      Dallara/Mercedes       + 13.602 
10. Menasheh Idafar  Dallara/Volkswagen     + 21.375 
11. R.Christodoulou  Dallara/Volkswagen     + 21.884*
12. Fahmi Ilyas      Dallara/Mercedes       + 24.152** 
13. Yann Cunha       Dallara/Volkswagen     + 25.481 
14. Scott Pye        Dallara/Mercedes       + 25.589** 
15. Hywel Lloyd      Dallara/Mercedes       + 26.166
16. Harry Tincknell  Dallara/Mercedes       + 26.481 
17. Jack Harvey      Dallara/Volkswagen     + 28.014 
18. Bruno Méndez     Dallara/Volkswagen     + 40.745 
19. Bart Hylkema     Dallara/Mugen-Honda    + 41.861 
20. Adderly Fong     Dallara/Mercedes       + 47.557* 
DNS Kotaru Sakurai   Hitech-Mugen Honda        --
* 5-second penalty
** 10-second penalty

Provisional championship standings
1 Nasr           51 points
2 Jaafar         33
3 Huertas        27
3 Buller         24
5 Svendsen-Cook  21
6 Foresti        17
Rookie class:
1 Hylkema        33

© Leigh O Gorman

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Race 2, April 17th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Rupert Svendsen-Cook took a commanding victory in the second of this weekend’s British Formula 3 races at Monza.

The Carlin pilot snatched an early lead from polesitter Riki Christodoulou (Hitech), remaining virtually unchallenged thereafter.

“I overtook Riki into the first chicane and then really pushed hard to break the tow. All I focused on after that was pushing hard, no mistakes, and consistent lap times and I got a good gap to break the tow so they couldn’t catch me.”

Race 1 winner Felipe Nasr took the runner-up prize in his Volkswagen-powered Dallara, thanks to a a move on William Buller on the eighth lap.
The Fortec runner had sustained a large amount of pressure from Nasr until then; however the Briton stayed in Nasr’s eye-line for the duration. Afterwards, Buller seemed pleased with his efforts:

“To finish on the podium is what we are here to do. I got the fastest lap, so I took the same total points as Rupert.”

Christodoulou eventually fell to 4th. The 22-year-old did not have the pace to keep with the top three once they had passed, yet had the measure of Jazeman Jaafar (5th, Carlin).

Carlos Huertas took a quiet 6th place finish having started on the second row. The Colombian was a clear four seconds in front of a stellar battle for seventh spot headed by Sino Vision’s Hywel Lloyd.
The Welshman led a gaggle of cars across the line, with Kevin Magnussen (8th, Carlin), Pietro Fantin (9th, Hitech) and Lucas Foresti (Fortec); however Foresti would later be penalised 25 seconds for causing a collision with Menasheh Idafar on the final lap – a penalty that would drop the Brazilian to 17th.
It would promote Carlin runner Jack Harvey to 10th and Fortec’s Harry Tincknell to 11th. It was a six car battle separated by just two seconds come the chequered flag.

Reigning British Formula Ford champion, Scott Pye made for an anonymous figure in the race, falling half-a-minute behind after the twelve lap event. The Australian assumed 12th ahead of Yann Cunha (13th, T-Sport), Bruno Mendez (14th, Hitech), and the sole Rookie Class entrant, Bart Hylkema (15th, T-Sport).

Adderly Fong limped home 16th following a late race collision with Pipo Derani (Double R). Menasheh Idafar was 18th and last thanks to crash damage from his shunt with Foresti. The T-Sport pilot was running with Huertas for much of the event until a late rear-end tap, sent the Briton into a spin.

Fahmi Ilyas found the Monza gravel trap inviting on the fourth tour around, while Kotaru Sakurai did not even start following his smash in the first race.
Race Rating: 3 out of 5

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Race 2, April 17th)
 1  Rupert Svendsen-Cook Carlin-Volkswagen 21:30.188 (12 laps)
 2  Felipe Nasr          Carlin-Volkswagen     1.045
 3  William Buller       Fortec-Mercedes       1.568
 4  Riki Christodoulou   Hitech-Volkswagen     6.636
 5  Jazeman Jaafar       Carlin-Volkswagen     7.713
 6  Carlos Huertas       Carlin-Volkswagen    15.692
 7  Hywel Lloyd          Sino Vision-Mercedes 20.050
 8  Kevin Magnussen      Carlin-Volkswagen    20.506
 9  Pietro Fantin        Hitech-Volkswagen    22.013
10  Jack Harvey          Carlin-Volkswagen    22.205
11  Harry Tincknell      Fortec-Mercedes      22.397
12  Scott Pye            Double R-Mercedes    28.940
13  Yann Cunha           T-Sport-Volkswagen   31.305
14  Bruno Mendez         Hitech-Volkswagen    31.651
15  Bart Hylkema         T-Sport-Mugen Honda  32.581
16  Adderly Fong         Sino Vision-Mercedes 43.369
17  Lucas Foresti        Fortec-Mercedes      22.030 (**25-sec penalty)
18  Menasheh Idafar      T-Sport-Volkswagen   53.212
R   Pipo Derani          Double R-Mercedes    3 laps
R   Fahmi Ilyas          Fortec-Mercedes     10 laps
DNS Kotaru Sakurai       Hitech-Mugen Honda       --

Provisional championship standings
1 Nasr           30 points
2 Jaafar         21
3 Buller         20 
4 Svendsen-Cook  18 
5 Huertas        17 
6 Christodoulou  13
Rookie class:
1 Hylkema        12

© Leigh O Gorman

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Race 1, April 16th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Carlin’s Felipe Nasr took a well fought victory in the opening race of the 2011 British Formula 3 season at Monza.

The Brazilian crossed the line with a three second advantage over Jazeman Jaafar in what was crash infested affair that saw three safety car period in the thirty minute sprint.

Nasr ran in 6th for much of the race, before moves on teammate’s Carlos Huertas and Rupert Svendsen-Cook brought him into the top four. Nasr swept by Jaafar on the 9th tour.
A clash between then leaders Kevin Magnussen (Carlin) and Lucas Foresti (Fortec) handed Nasr the race.

“It was a great race, but I was a bit concerned from the start. …at the chicane I was on the outside which wasn’t the best place to be and I dropped to sixth. After the first safety car I climbed to fifth and then after the second safety car I climbed another two places. When I caught up with Kevin and Lucas I knew something was going to happen as they were pretty close. After they touched I had the opportunity to be in front and I just did the best I could to break the tow from the cars behind.”

Jaafar did lead the race temporarily. A stellar start elevated the Malaysian to the front of the pack, only to lose the advantage to Magnussen and Foresti upon the first restart. The Carlin runner stayed in the running for the rest of the event.

Huertas made it a Carlin 1-2-3, while polesitter Will Buller claimed 4th. Buller had something of a dreadful opening, as he and several others – inexplicably – did not make it to the grid on time, relegating them to a pit lane start.

Rupert Svendsen-Cook (Carlin) took 5th ahead of Riki Christodoulou (6th, Hitech). Hywel Lloyd (Sino Vision), Menasheh Idafar (T-Sport), the recovering Foresti and Bruno Mendez (Hitech) rounded out the top-ten.

Harry Tincknell brought his Volkswagen-powered Fortec home 11th, with British F3 débutante Fahmi Ilyas safety behind in 12th. Adderly Fong and Yann Cunha trailed home in 13th and 14th respectively, while the wounded Kevin Magnussen crossed the line 15th and last.

The season started with a smash for Pipo Derani. The Brazilian collided first with Jack Harvey and then the barrier off the start line, bringing out the first safety car; however that mishap could not compare to accident that claimed the Rookie Class drivers, Bart Hylkema (T-Sport) and Kotaru Sakurai (Hitech).
Approaching the Variante della Roggia, Sakurai slammed into the rear of Hylkema, leaving Sakurai sliding down the escape road on his roll hoop bar. Hylkema returned to the pits with a sliced rear tyre and damaged rear wing, but rejoined with half the race run.

The final safety car period was instigated by Pietro Fantin (Hitech) and Scott Pye (Double R). The duo removed eachother approaching the Variante del Rettifilo on the 9th tour, ensuring the race was neutralised once more.
Race Rating: 4 out of 5

Results - 14 laps:
Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
 1.  Felipe Nasr           Carlin Dallara-VW          30m56.691s
 2.  Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin Dallara-VW            + 3.116s
 3.  Carlos Huertas        Carlin Dallara-VW            + 3.166s
 4.  William Buller        Fortec Dallara-Merc          + 4.103s
 5.  Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin Dallara-VW            + 5.140s
 6.  Riki Christodoulou    Hitech Dallara-VW            + 6.674s
 7.  Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision Dallara-Merc     + 9.995s
 8.  Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport Dallara-VW          + 10.018s
 9.  Lucas Foresti         Fortec Dallara-Merc         + 10.137s
10.  Bruno Mendez          Hitech Dallara-VW           + 11.324s
11.  Harry Tincknell       Fortec Dallara-Merc         + 11.447s
12.  Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec Dallara-Merc         + 13.553s
13.  Adderly Fong          Sino Vision Dallara-Merc    + 13.857s
14.  Yann Cunha            T-Sport Dallara-VW          + 14.121s
15.  Kevin Magnussen       Carlin Dallara-VW         + 1m21.068s
Retirements/Not classified:
     Bart Hylkema          T-Sport Dallara-Mugen         10 laps
     Pietro Fantin         Hitech Dallara-VW              9 laps
     Scott Pye             Double R Dallara-Merc          9 laps
     Kotaro Sakurai        Hitech Dallara-Mugen           2 laps
     Jack Harvey           Carlin Dallara-VW               1 lap
     Pipo Derani           Double R Dallara-Merc           1 lap

Provisional championship standings
1 Nasr         21 points 
2 Jaafar       15 
3 Huertas      12 
4 Buller       10 
5 Svendsen-Cook 8 
6 Christodoulou 6

Rookie class:
 1 Hylkema     21

© Leigh O Gorman

2011 British F3 Round of Monza (Rd 1, Qualifying, April 16th)

Monza. © Will Pittenger / Creative Commons

William Buller took a narrow pole position for tomorrow’s British Formula 3 feature race at Monza.

The County Down native set his quick lap early in the session – his time of 1:45.491 was enough to fend off the advances of Carlin’s Kevin Magnussen.
The Fortec pilot also took pole position for the opening race this evening, shadowed by Magnussen and and Fortec teammate, Lucas Foresti.
Buller was reasonably ecstatic:

“It’s a great way to start the season. It just shows that it’s the first qualifying session that matters and not all the pre-season testing times. The whole team has put in a massive amount of hard work to get us here, and I’d like to thank each and every member for their dedication. Qualifying is all about managing your tyres and I nailed it today.”

Magnussen came close to Buller’s ultimate lap, falling short by a mere five-hundredths of a second, while Foresti assumed 3rd on the grid for the main event, albeit 0.443 shy of the pole man.
The next two places were filled by Carlin-prepared machinery as Jazeman Jaafar beat Carlos Huertas to 4th on the grid. Hitech’s Riki Christodoulou secured 6th with a best of 1:46.130.

Christodoulou narrowly headed Harry Tincknell (7th, Fortec), Felipe Nasr (8th, Carlin) and Pietro Fantin (9th, Hitech), while Rupert Svendsen-Cook rounded out the top ten, nearly one second off of Buller’s pace.

Pipo Derani pipped Double-R teammate Scott Pye to 11th on the grid. Menasheh Idafar missed out on the sixth row by the narrowest of margins, with a quickest turn 0.001 slower than Pye.
Jack Harvey (Carlin) will line up 14th. The runner-up from last year’s Formula BMW Europe Series may be somewhat disappointed with that result – it leaves him last of the Carlin sextet.

Fahmi Ilyas qualified his Hitech Mercedes machine 15th, one-tenth ahead of Hywel Lloyd (Sino Vision). Adderly Fong (Sino Vision) and Bruno Mendez (Hitech) secured the ninth row ahead of Rookie Class contender Bart Hylkema (19th, T-Sport).

Yann Cunha will line up 20th, with only Kotaru Sakurai behind him. Sakurai only managed six laps in the session – the 16-year-old spun midway through the session, collecting gravel from the Parabolica.

Qualifying Race 1
 1. William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes      1:45.750
 2. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.022
 3. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes      1:46.056
 4. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.102
 5. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.106
 6. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.174
 7. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen    1:46.215
 8. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes      1:46.316
 9. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen    1:46.318
10. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.544
11. Jack Harvey           Carlin-Volkswagen    1:46.743
12. Scott Pye             Double R-Mercedes    1:46.754
13. Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport-Volkswagen   1:46.925
14. Pipo Derani           Double R-Mercedes    1:46.965
15. Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec-Mercedes      1:47.138
16. Adderly Fong          Sino Vision-Mercedes 1:47.403
17. Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision-Mercedes 1:47.509
18. Bruno Mendez          Hitech-Volkswagen    1:47.701
19. Yann Cunha            T-Sport-Volkswagen   1:47.960
20. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport Mugen-Honda  1:48.053
21. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech Mugen-Honda   1:49.608

Race 2 will line-up with a partial reverse grid.

Qualifying, Race 3
 1. William Buller        Fortec-Mercedes      1:45.491
 2. Kevin Magnussen       Carlin-Volkswagen       0.053
 3. Lucas Foresti         Fortec-Mercedes         0.443
 4. Jazeman Jaafar        Carlin-Volkswagen       0.484
 5. Carlos Huertas        Carlin-Volkswagen       0.509
 6. Riki Christodoulou    Hitech-Volkswagen       0.639
 7. Harry Tincknell       Fortec-Mercedes         0.654
 8. Felipe Nasr           Carlin-Volkswagen       0.671
 9. Pietro Fantin         Hitech-Volkswagen       0.683
10. Rupert Svendsen-Cook  Carlin-Volkswagen       0.965
11. Pipo Derani           Double R-Mercedes       1.049
12. Scott Pye             Double R-Mercedes       1.095
13. Menasheh Idafar       T-Sport-Volkswagen      1.096
14. Jack Harvey           Carlin-Volkswagen       1.121
15. Fahmi Ilyas           Fortec-Mercedes         1.391
16. Hywel Lloyd           Sino Vision-Mercedes    1.505
17. Adderly Fong          Sino Vision-Mercedes    1.904
18. Bruno Mendez          Hitech-Volkswagen       2.185
19. Bart Hylkema          T-Sport Mugen-Honda     2.248
20. Yann Cunha            T-Sport-Volkwagen       2.370
21. Kotaru Sakurai        Hitech Mugen-Honda      3.695

The Art of Preparation

Rarely has the field of preparation been one that I have excelled in. A lifetime of being comfortably last minute has seen me craft a skilfully shambolic disposition. No matter.

Surely packing and whatnot can be left until five minutes after the door has been shut and I’m on my way. Never mind. Not one to be fussy, the random collection clothes will surely fold themselves neatly in my bag mid-flight. Probably.
Some tapping may keep me alert, while also systematically fanning flames of those around. Many have told of people’s inner werewolves that come out at night – remember to bring garlic. Technically I can’t stand the stuff, but then neither can the creatures of the night.

One cannot go on any trip without some sort of head synchronisation though. So in short – pair of socks, one underwear, spare trousers, shirt, t-shirt, notebook, suntan lotion, various cleaning assortments, electronic gadgets and my wits. Simple.

Regardless, by the time Monza is graced, my body will already be creaking and eyes will be bloodshot. A late night walk, followed by a very late bus journey, to a death hours wait in a white-walled lounge, leading to an early morning flight, bringing me to a mid-morning bus journey and a late morning taxi, which will unload me at the historic gates of the circuit (hopefully) just prior to midday tomorrow.

Door-to-door in just under twelve hours – and then the day begins. Beautiful. I should be used to this by now.

2011 IndyCar Honda GP of Alabama (Rd 2, April 10th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

IZOD IndyCar Honda GP of Alabama (Round 2)
Will Power took his first IndyCar win of the 2011 season and also the points lead following a dominant display at Barber Motorsports Park in Alabama.

The Penske driver led from flag to flag as he laid down his championship marker and although Power held the lead for the duration, Chip Ganassi’s Scot Dixon kept the Australian honest throughout.
Although the event was certainly more exciting than last year’s race, numerous full course cautions dragged the pace of the Grand Prix down to a slow grind.Those in attendance did not have to wait long for the first stoppage. As Power shot away from his well earned pole position, Raphael Matos (AFS) and JR Hildebrand banged wheels pitching the former off the circuit. Feeling the severe understeer, Hildebrand would eventually pit for a new nose on the ninth tour.
IndyCar débutante James Hinchcliffe (Newman-Haas) also spun separately and with little hesitation, the first full course caution was engaged.

Amongst the melee, KV Racing’s Tony Kanaan made a stunning start – the Brazilian veteran qualified a lowly 24th, yet had gained ten spots prior to the fifth turn. Hinchcliffe’s Newman-Haas partner, Oriol Servia, also got off the line well, with a jump to 4th from the third row.
It wasn’t all clean for Ganassi wunderkind Graham Rahal. An off track excursion exiting turn one, left the American fighting for grip and lowly positions – it would be just the start of a troubling day for Rahal.

Rookie Trouble
The yellow was brief and by the fourth circulation of the leafy Alabama circuit, the race was go again, staying green despite a spin from rookie James Jakes. The Dale Coyne runner beached himself softly into the turn one gravel trap, losing a lap as he was restarted.
Regardless, it would still be a shortened day for the Briton – following his restart, the oil pressure lights on his dashboard displayed worrying signals. By the 30th lap, Jakes’ car sat motionless in the pitlane – its pilot frustrated by lost track time.

Whereas Jakes fell off the radar, Conquest’s Sebastian Saavedra was on the move. The Colombian qualified his Honda-powered Dallara last, but had assumed seven spots by the 5th lap. EJ Viso (KV Racing) and Sebastien Bourdais (Dale Coyne Racing) were also on the charge early, having moved to 16th and 17th in the initial stages.
However, Saavedra’s day would not end with such a positive note. As the laps passed, his Conquest machine developed a sick note and the Colombia stuttered to a halt on the back section of the circuit 27 laps in.

Takuma Sato race day also resembled something of a yo-yo in action. The Japanese driver planted his KV Racing machine 11th on the grid and as the race began to age, Sato grew with confidence, eventually joining the top ten on the 26th lap following a move on Rahal.
That confidence was soon to dissipate – eyeing up a potential 9th spot, the KV racer threw his Dallara down the inside of Helio Castroneves (Penske) at the tempting fifth turn. Wheels bashed briefly as understeer grabbed Sato, sending him into a polite spin. After a solid start, Sato emerged from the incident undamaged, albeit down in 15th.
Castroneves was also slightly damaged, but his bruise (torn front wing endplate) came earlier in the event – he too was showing signs of understeer.

Power, meanwhile, kept plugging and pulling away from Briscoe. An effortless start saw the Australian eke out a small lead from his teammate – a lead that was five seconds when the pair pitted on lap 29 (Briscoe) and lap 32 (Power).
For Power, even the pitstops were effortless – Briscoe and his crew were not so swift and as the field sorted itself out, the Penske stronghold had been infiltrated by Dixon. Briscoe – now 3rd – had the attentions of Dario Franchitti (Ganassi) upon his rear.

Indeed, it had been something of an anonymous weekend for the St Petersburg victor. Having started 7th, the Scot made moves beyond Castroneves, Justin Wilson (Dreyer & Reinbold) and Oriol Servia in his Newman-Haas machine; however even Franchitti had no answer for Power’s pace.

As if things were not bad enough for Rahal, the day was getting worse for the American. The Ganassi driver had qualified 10th, but a poor early stint leaving him 15th by the lap 36, when he chanced upon the lapped Hildebrand.
An ill-considered attempt to lap the Panther runner at turn five, saw Rahal slam into Hildebrand’s sidepod, causing the Panther car to spin Rahal for his trouble received slight suspension damage. Following a long stop, Rahal rejoined the race, albeit three laps behind. Realistically, the Ganassi was nowhere near close enough to try such a move – another lesson for Rahal to take into the future.

Yellow after yellow after yellow..
Rahal probably would have lost more laps had it not been for a full course caution, although this was brought on by a spinning Alex Tagliani rather than anything Rahal did.
Coming to the end of his 37th lap, the Canadian lost the rear of his Sam Schmidt Motorsport machine, stalling his car just off the racing line. Yellow. Until that point, Tagliani had run a canny race on the edges of the top twelve.

The yellow was brief – only four laps, but then so was the following green flag stint. As the field ran double-file into the opening curve, Franchitti banged wheels with Briscoe, but it was enough to give the Scot the advantage and 3rd place – Briscoe would drop to 5th behind the silent, but solid Servia.
Before the Penske runner had any opportunity to retake his lost places, Viso was tapped into a spin by Simona de Silvestro (HVM) into turn five. Spinning his wheels hard to keep his motor running, Hinchcliffe clipped Viso’s left rear with his left rear, eliminated both on the spot. Yellow (again). De Silvestro in the meantime would pit once again.

Racing returned momentarily on lap 46, only for the yellows to returns once again. In old adage, yellows breed yellows and this certainly seemed to be the case at Barber, as the Andretti-Autosport pair of Danica Patrick and Mike Conway collected eachother exiting the second turn. Whereas Patrick escaped with just dimmed acceleration, Conway was pitched hard into the Armco.
Within a few hundred yards, Sato connected with Wilson’s rear, damaging Sato’s front wing and giving Wilson a puncture.

There would follow a short spell of racing once the green flew on lap 50, although Servia probably wished it had stayed yellow. The Spaniard dropped to 7th in the swift stint, with the Andretti-Autosport pairing of Marco Andretti and Ryan Hunter-Reay fighting their way passed the Newman-Haas runner.
Andretti would also take Briscoe, but Hunter-Reay’s attempt on the Penske was rather more clumsy. Seeing an impossible gap on the approach to the turn 7/8 chicane, Hunter-Reay launched over the kerbs, spearing Briscoe’s sidepod.
With his suspension damaged in the resulting spin, Briscoe’s day was done. Hunter-Reay escaped damage, but did receive a penalty for his troubles, dropping him to 18th.

Patrick Takes a Gamble
As the counter registered 59 completed tours, the yellows emerged again, encouraging much of the field to pit once more. Unlike those around her, Patrick took just fuel feeling her Firestone’s would last the distance.
It was a brave tactic that gave her 3rd spot behind the Power / Dixon battle, but would backfire as the race wore on and her ageing tyres wore out. Nothing venture, nothing gained – or lost. Until then, it had been a credible performance from the part-time NASCAR Nationwide pilot – after starting 22nd, an understated run brought Patrick into the top-ten.

Green flags flew again come lap 63 – and again the race would be neutralised several corners later. Once again, it was turn five, but this time Wilson locked wheels with Matos – as the dust settled, both Dallara’s were wounded beyond repair.
In the time it took to get from the start / finish to the end of the lap, Patrick had already fallen behind Franchitti, Andretti and Servia leaving the American precariously in 6th.

Come the next restart on the 69th lap, Patrick’s strategy began to falter as her tyres ebbed away. Lacking the necessary traction, the Andretti-Autosport driver dropped down the order, as first Kanaan got by (lap 72) and then Castroneves (lap 75). By the time Dreyer and Reinbold substitute Simon Pagenaud slotted passed Patrick, the strategy had unravelled.
Indeed Pagenaud was having a quiet, but positive day. The former-Champ Car driver had been drafted in to replace the injured Ana Beatriz, impressing first time out. Having started the day in 23rd, the Frenchman had steadily moved up to 8th place by the 75th tour.

As the laps ticked away, Patrick was in big trouble. Soon de Silvestro and Charlie Kimball were also through (both lap 76), with Bourdais dumping Patrick outside the top-ten a lap later. By the time the Andretti-Autosport crew brought her in for new tyres on lap 84, Patrick had already descended to 16th position.
Bourdais for his troubles would blot his own copybook in a wheel-banging move on Sato, that would leave Sato lingering in 15th spot. A late, late splash ‘n’ dash pitstop for the KV Racer would eventually drop him to 16th.

Super Power
Yet amongst all this minor chaos, Will Power ‘powered’ on. After the final yellow, the Australian made small gains out front, but it was more than enough – as solid as Scott Dixon was today, the Ganassi pilot simply had no answer for Power’s might.

At times Dixon applied pressure – realistically though, this race was Power’s and deservedly so. The pair exchanged words after the race, with Dixon accusing his Penske foe of blocking heavily and chopping the Ganassi driver off at the restarts; however chief steward Brian Barnhart saw no reason to investigate the claims.
Dario Franchitti was not quite as persuasive today. Although the Scot did jump from 7th to 3rd during the event, it was not with the usual panache that the three-time IndyCar champion normally exudes.

Marco Andretti and Oriol Servia both did solid jobs to secure top five finishes, but the real mover was Tony Kanaan. Having started down in 24th, the Brazilian tore through the field to claim 6th, leaving him 3rd in the title hunt.
Helio Castroneves took 7th with an uninspired drive. The same could not be said for Simon Pagenaud – the Dreyer & Reinbold substitute made his way through the pack with little fanfare, but did so with pace and consistency.
Simona de Silvestro took 9th to add to her big score at St Petersburg, while Charlie Kimball picked up his first top ten finish in only his second race.
Sebastien Bourdais assumed 11th in his IndyCar series début, while, Vitor Meira gave his entry further good points with a run to 12th place. JR Hildebrand and Ryan Hunter-Reay took 13th and 14th respectively following their days in the wars.

Although certainly not a spectacular race, it was an interesting one, yet much of its appeal was lost in the spate of mid-race cautions.
But…. for this level of racing, there were simply far too many silly mistakes and stupid half-hearted moves for position – again a nod to the fact that double-file restarts are not the problem. The drivers are.
Race Rating: 2 out of 5

Results - 90 laps:

Pos Driver Team Time/Gap
 1.  Will Power           Penske             2h14m42.9523s
 2.  Scott Dixon          Ganassi                + 3.3828s
 3.  Dario Franchitti     Ganassi               + 15.5243s
 4.  Marco Andretti       Andretti              + 28.9601s
 5.  Oriol Servia         Newman/Haas           + 29.8817s
 6.  Tony Kanaan          KV                    + 30.3853s
 7.  Helio Castroneves    Penske                + 30.7807s
 8.  Simon Pagenaud       Dreyer & Reinbold     + 31.2095s
 9.  Simona de Silvestro  HVM                   + 32.5812s
10.  Charlie Kimball      Ganassi               + 35.0038s
11.  Sebastien Bourdais   Dale Coyne            + 35.9883s
12.  Vitor Meira          Foyt                  + 42.6440s
13.  JR Hildebrand        Panther               + 44.2950s
14.  Ryan Hunter-Reay     Andretti            + 1m00.7427s
15.  Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt         + 1m10.6879s
16.  Takuma Sato          KV                  + 1m12.1719s
17.  Danica Patrick       Andretti                 + 1 lap
18.  Graham Rahal         Ganassi                 + 2 laps
Retirements:
     Justin Wilson        Dreyer & Reinbold        62 laps
     Raphael Matos        AFS                      62 laps
     Ryan Briscoe         Penske                   57 laps
     Mike Conway          Andretti                 45 laps
     EJ Viso              KV                       40 laps
     James Hinchcliffe    Newman/Haas              40 laps
     James Jakes          Dale Coyne               30 laps
     Sebastian Saavedra   Conquest                 27 laps

2011 IZOD IndyCar Series (Round 2)
 1 Will Power           Penske                  94 points
 2 Dario Franchitti     Ganassi                 87
 3 Tony Kanaan          KV Racing               63
 4 Scott Dixon          Ganassi                 54
 5 Simona de Silvestro  HVM                     54
 6 Oriol Servia         Newman-Haas             52
 7 Marco Andretti       Andretti-Autosport      44
 8 Takuma Sato          KV Racing               44
 9 Alex Tagliani        Sam Schmidt Motorsport  43
10 Vitor Meira          Foyt Enterprises        42
11 Helio Castroneves    Penske                  38
12 Raphael Matos        AFS                     38

2011 British Formula 3 Season Preview, Part 2

© FOTA

With the first green light of the 2011 British Formula 3 series drawing ever closer, twenty-one aspiring talents from six teams will be challenging for the championship.
But who will be the one to lift that precious crown, as the series celebrates its 60th anniversary.

At this early stage, there is little doubt as to which team are the early favourites.
Having carved out three consecutive Formula 3 Champions, Carlin Motorsport once again bring several serious title contenders to the fore; however this season the famous blue and yellow decals – as worn by the Red Bull Junior drivers – will not adorn any of the Carlin cars, or any other machinery for that matter.
So who will be the ones to beat and more importantly, who will be the driver that defeats all. Let’s have a look.

Championship Contenders
31) Felipe Nasr (Carlin Motorsport)

At this stage, Carlin’s Felipe Nasr is my out-and-out title favourite. Having won the 2009 Formula BMW Europe Series, Nasr finished a very strong fifth in his debut British F3 season last year. Pre-season testing has seen the quick Brazilian further showing his colours with some devastating runs and with Carlin on his side, he may be tough to be beat.
Verdict: A bright prospect and one to follow. Championship favourite without a doubt.

21) Rupert Svendsen-Cook (Carlin Motorsport)
Another star with potential, Rupert Svendsen-Cook made his mark last year with a win in his first F3 weekend at Oulton Park. Thereafter, the Briton clocked up numerous points finishes during the guts of the season, but he knows there will be some very strong competition for the title – especially from within the Carlin camp; however the 20-year-old is fully aware of the task at hand.

“I really want to win the championship and I’ve prepared really, really hard over the winter to achieve that. I am with the best team, with the best people, so now it’s down to me to do the job.”


Verdict: A title contender – and a strong one at that.

Potential Spoilers
1) Carlos Huertas (Carlin Motorsport)

This could be a make-or-break year for the 19-year-old as he enters his third British F3 season. In two full seasons, Huertas has recorded six podium finishes from forty-nine starts and while the Colombian has shown a good deal of speed in the pre-season tests, he still has no race victories in junior formulae. It is a statistic that will continue to dog him until it is broken.
Verdict: Regular in points with the occasional win, but not much else.

2) Kevin Magnussen (Carlin Motorsport)
The young Dane possesses plenty of promise – an element shown repeatedly in last year’s German Formula 3 series, where he finished 3rd overall. His attitude in the run-up to the season starter has been impressive, but there are still questions as to whether he can emulate his father’s 1994 British F3 success.
Verdict: He’ll be a big winner; but remains to be seen whether he can do it this season.

6) Scott Pye (Double R Racing)
Double-R Racing’s new signing, Scott Pye, enters the British F3 fray fresh from taking the British Formula Ford title; however as has been seen many times, Formula Ford success has not always led to results in F3. The Australian will be out to make his mark, but his pre-season form, though, was inconsistent at best.
Verdict: A danger – when he’s on it.

7) Pietro Fantin (Hitech Racing)
Pietro Fantin is something of a curiosity. The 17-year-old from Curitiba has had only one previous year in cars, taking 9th overall in the F3 Sudamericana Series, with three wins; however the Brazilian only competed in nine of the twenty-four races. He made several invitational appearances in British F3 last year, but without the same level of results.
Verdict: An unknown element in the mix, but one that has shown pace on occasion.

22) Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin Motorsport)
Following a promising F3 rookie in 2010, Jaafar enters this year brimming with confidence, and while he may not be in the title running come October, expect him to take several race wins.
Verdict: Quick, with the potential to disturb the championship fight. His role in the outcome of the series could be pivotal.

32) Jack Harvey (Carlin Motorsport)
Despite an excellent run in last year’s Formula BMW Europe category, Jack Harvey lost the title on the final day to Robert Frijns. He will be out to make his mark as soon as possible and with the talent he has displayed in the very recent past, he may do just that. He turns 18 the day before the first race at Monza – he’ll be hoping to celebrate with a good early showing.
Verdict: Expect Harvey to interrupt the title runners on occasion with some strong results.

5) Pipo Derani (Double R Racing)
One of the little surprises of pre-season running has been Pipo Derani. The former Brazilian Karting Champion has struggled somewhat since his move to cars, but signs of improvement are showing – so much so, he may occasionally rob valuable points off of the title contenders. Like Harvey, Derani won’t be champion this year, but there may well be plenty of silverware in the near future.
Verdict: His improvement in F3-type machinery is there, but there is still some way to go.

Further Contenders
3) William Buller (Fortec Motorsport)

Following on from his début year at Hitech, Buller moves to Fortec looking to step up the order. Too many races in 2010 ended with the Northern Irishman claiming the final point scores, but this year he will need more than that – much more – and he knows it.

“I have prepared as well as I can and it’s been going quite well. I’m in my second year, so I know I should be strong in the championship. The title is the only aim: it’s my second year so there are no excuses.”

Verdict: 2011 may be an improvement on last year, but by how much?

4) Lucas Foresti (Fortec Motorsport)
“Blips of speed” is probably the best way to describe 18-year-old Lucas Foresti – indeed, last year the Brazilian recorded too many off days, though occasionally punctuated by solid points scores. He is mentored by ex-F1 and CART driver, Roberto Moreno, so it will be interesting to see if Moreno’s extensive knowledge rubs off.
Verdict: Inconsistent. May lie behind the main challengers, while occasionally pipping them too.

8.) Riki Christodoulou (Hitech Racing)
New Hitech signing Christodoulou originally took to British F3 in 2009, before a short transfer to Formula Renault UK. Although the Briton scored a win and four podiums two years ago, it is difficult to see how much of an impact he can make with his Hitech Dallara this year.
Verdict: There may be point scores in 2011, but it may also be difficult to sustain a season long challenge.

11) Hywel Lloyd (Sino Vision Racing)
A veteran of Formula 3, the 26-year-old Lloyd signed with Sino Vision Racing following several years with his own family squad. It could be a key move for the Welshman, who has struggled somewhat to adapt since his move up to the International Class in 2009.
Verdict: A decent runner, but not one that may touch the leaders in races.

12) Adderly Fong (Sino Vision Racing)
Lloyd’s teammate, Adderly Fong makes his second season appearance in British F3 with little fanfare. The 20-year-old has yet to win a race in car racing and will be hoping to break his duct this year.
Verdict: This may be a long season for the Sino Vision pair.

15) Yann Cunha (T-Sport)
The reigning F3 Sudamericana Champion has had a tough time during the pre-season running. Despite his South America success, Cunha has often trailed some way behind teammate Menasheh Idafar in the tests – something that will need a swift cure.
Verdict: A winner in Brazil, but can he replicate that form on European shores?

16) Menasheh Idafar (T-Sport)
The Anglo-Bahraini displayed excellent wet weather skills on his way to last year’s National Class Championship. Idafar does have pockets of occasional speed, but whether he can string results together through an entire season is the big question.
Verdict: There is a solid talent here; but it needs to be harnessed remains.

23) Harry Tincknell (Fortec Motorsport)
The Formula Renault UK graduate has shown a solid pedigree in the lower formulae, but the Exeter native will need to make his mark quickly if he is to underline his potential. It is a huge step up – his future may depend on how he deals with the promotion.
Verdict: May have a hard year ahead with Fortec, but future success is a possibility.

24) Fahmi Ilyas (Fortec Motorsport)
A completely unknown entity. The Malaysian did not take part in any pre-season running, but comes to F3 from two seasons in Formula BMW Europe where two podiums was his reward.
Verdict: Judging purely by results, Ilyas will need to step up to make the grade.

27) Bruno Mendez (Hitech Racing)
Like Ilyas, Bruno Mendez did not make an appearance during pre-season testing; however that’s not to say he does not have experience. As the 2009 European F3 Open Champion, Mendez took to the World Series by Renault category, only to struggle.
Verdict: The Spaniard will need a big year to repair his slightly battered reputation.

The Rookie Class
Only two runners will be taking the full season in the Rookie Class – Bart Hylkema (T-Sport) and Kotaru Sakurai (Hitech). Upon early inspection, Hylkema’s experience may be enough to give him this title in October, but the youthful Sakurai may not blossom until next year.
At 16, Sakurai has a long road ahead of him; however the 21-year-old Hylkema needs to start showing title winning form now.

The Teams
As for the six teams, it is difficult to see beyond Carlin right now. There successes in recent years have displayed a confidence that shows no sign of dissipating.
Double R Racing has also been Champions in recent years, but since the Raikkonen / Robertson group sold the squad in 2009, results haven’t been quite so forthcoming. Both Fortec Motorsport and Hitech may upset with occasional top results, while T-Sport and Sino Vision have work to do to join the likes of Carlin at the top on a regular basis.

——–

International Class Champion: Felipe Nasr
National Class Champion: Bart Hylkema

2011 British Formula 3 Season Preview, Part 1

© Jakob Ebrey Photography

This weekend sees the beginning of the 2011 British Formula 3 Series and where better than the historic motor racing temple that is Monza.

While not within the bounds of the UK, Monza is an almost fitting venue for a championship entering its 60th anniversary year – its own history apparent in some of the names that have graced British Formula 3 since its inception.
Over the last six decades, the series has born witness to some stunning talent and landmark battles.
When a formula can boast a history with names as evocative as Ayrton Senna, Sir Jackie Stewart, Nelson Piquet Sr., and Emerson Fittipaldi.

Other famous names such as Jenson Button, Rubens Barrichello, David Coulthard, Dario Franchitti and Will Power have also been notable competitors, while more recent graduates Sergio Perez, Jaime Alguersuari, Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne look set to star in the future.
Now as the field descend upon Monza, twenty-one drivers from six teams will be looking to make their own mark on that illustrious history.

Calendar
Beyond the Monza taster, the series moves to the Easter meet at Cheshire’s Oulton Park, before dates at the new Snetterton ‘300’ circuit and Brands Hatch. Come July, three rounds will follow on the continent as the series takes on visits to the Nurburgring (Germany), Paul Ricard (France) and Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium).
Thereafter, there will be a five week summer break, before the championship draws to a close with events at Rockingham, the revitalised Donington Park and Silverstone (October).

14-16 April      Monza, Italy
23/25 April      Oulton Park, UK
14/15 May        Snetterton 300, UK
18/19 June       Brands Hatch GP, UK
01-03 July       Nürburgring, Germany
15-17 July       Paul Ricard, France
28-30 July       Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium
03/04 September  Rockingham, UK
24/25 September  Donington Park GP, UK
07-09 October    Silverstone Arena, UK

Format
Lasting a little under six months, the British Formula 3 Series takes in ten rounds, each with three races.
The competitors will be faced with a busy opening day, comprising of an early practice and a pre-lunch qualifying session, before the first race the each weekend commences. This initial salvo – lasting 30 minutes – registers full points (20,15, 12, 10, 8, 6, 4, 3, 2, 1), with a grid formed by the second fastest time of each runner. The fastest lap will garner a further point.

The second race is formed from the finishing order of the first race with a reverse order of sorts, with the victor from race one drawing his starting position from lots – should he pick “6th”, then the top six will all reverse. This 20 minute sprint garners reduced rewards, although the top ten still score, with points dividends dished out in 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 format.
An extra two points will be awarded to the driver with the fastest lap.

In addition to this year’s British Formula 3 series will be pitstops taken during the second race, albeit only in four events. Between the second and seventeenth minute of the sprint races at the Nurburgring, Paul Ricard, Rockingham and Silverstone.
At least two tyres are to be changed in the stop, which may help give the competitors some scope of strategic analysis.

The final race of weekend – running to forty minutes – is designed to test stamina, racecraft and mechanical ease. Its grid is established by the fastest qualifying times and as with race 1, full points are awarded.

Awards
Although, drivers covet the trophies they win, for many a equally tempting end-of-season award will a test in a World Series by Renault car.
British Formula 3 teams such as Carlin and Fortec Motorsport are already well established in the category, which is also becoming recognised as one of the toughest junior formulae in the world.

More to come…
Come back tomorrow as I take a look at the challengers for the 2011 British Formula 3 series and their respective teams.

2011 IndyCar Honda GP of Alabama (Rd 2, Qualifying, April 9th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Will Power notched up the sixteenth pole of his IndyCar career on Saturday at leafy Barber Motorsports Park.

The Australian secured the top spot with a best quickest lap of 111.454, giving the Penske pilot a three-tenths advantage over 2nd place man Ryan Briscoe (Penske).

Scott Dixon broke the Penske stranglehold by taking 3rd spot in his Target Chip Ganassi machine. Helio Castroneves made it three Penske’s in the top-four, although the Brazilian may be dismayed to be nearly seven-tenths adrift of Power.
Dreyer & Reinbold’s Justin Wilson once again proved his worth on the road courses. The Englishman’s fastest lap was enough to a secure a top-five, just ahead of Oriol Servia (6th, Newman-Haas).

Dario Franchitti (Ganassi) was the shock drop-out from the second stage of qualifying. The reigning IndyCar Champion missed out on the “Firestone Fast 6” by just over one-thousandth of-a-second. Overtaking is difficult at Barber, so a fourth-row start could make for a frustrating race for the Scot.
Along side Franchitti was the impressive James Hinchcliffe. The Newman-Haas débutante beat a notable few in what was his first qualifying session, including Marco Andretti (9th, Andretti-Autosport) and Graham Rahal (10th, Ganassi).
Takuma Sato (KV Racing) and Alex Tagliani (Sam Schmidt Motorsport) made the sixth row all their own, as they aim for solid points in the race.

Simona de Silvestro (13th) topped the drivers knocked out of the opening qualifying stint. The HVM pilot will be taking the inside row, with JR Hildebrand (15th, Panther), Ryan Hunter-Reay (17th, Andretti-Autosport), Vitor Meira (19th, Foyt) and Charlie Kimball (21st, Ganassi) following suit.
The injured Ana Beatriz was replaced by Simon Pagenaud at Dreyer & Reinbold. The substitute took 23rd on his début, bettering fellow rookie James Jakes in his Dale Coyne pre-pared Dallara-Honda.

Raphael Matos heads the outside of row seven alongside “The Swiss Miss”. The AFS pilot will be aiming to keep up the strong display he showed at St Petersburg two weeks ago. Mike Conway (16th, Andretti-Autosport) will trail the Brazilian off the start, as will KV Racing’s EJ Viso (18th). Viso recovered from a Friday practice smash to pip the struggling four-time Champ Car title winner, Sebastien Bourdais (20th, Dale Coyne).
Danica Patrick (Andretti-Autosport) lines up 22nd ahead of former-teammate Tony Kanaan (24th, KV Racing). Sebastian Saavedra (Conquest) starts from 26th and last.

Pos  Driver               Team               Time        Gap
 1.  Will Power           Penske             1m11.4546s
 2.  Ryan Briscoe         Penske             1m11.7361s  + 0.2815s
 3.  Scott Dixon          Ganassi            1m11.8826s  + 0.4280s
 4.  Helio Castroneves    Penske             1m12.1247s  + 0.6701s
 5.  Justin Wilson        Dreyer & Reinbold  1m12.3085s  + 0.8539s
 6.  Oriol Servia         Newman/Haas        1m12.4394s  + 0.9848s
Q2
 7.  Dario Franchitti     Ganassi            1m11.7090s
 8.  James Hinchcliffe    Newman/Haas        1m11.8183s
 9.  Marco Andretti       Andretti           1m11.8672s
10.  Graham Rahal         Ganassi            1m11.9712s
11.  Takuma Sato          KV                 1m12.1667s
12.  Alex Tagliani        Schmidt            1m12.3485s
Q1(Group 1, Inside lane; Group 2 Outside lane)
13.  Simona de Silvestro  HVM                1m12.2559s
14.  Raphael Matos        AFS                1m12.4094s
15.  JR Hildebrand        Panther            1m12.2684s
16.  Mike Conway          Andretti           1m12.5191s
17.  Ryan Hunter-Reay     Andretti           1m12.3370s
18.  EJ Viso              KV                 1m12.6582s
19.  Vitor Meira          Foyt               1m12.5677s
20.  Sebastien Bourdais   Coyne              1m12.6896s
21.  Charlie Kimball      Ganassi            1m12.5857s
22.  Danica Patrick       Andretti           1m12.7257s
23.  Simon Pagenaud       Dreyer & Reinbold  1m12.5900s
24.  Tony Kanaan          KV                 1m12.8892s
25.  James Jakes          Coyne              1m12.7147s
26.  Sebastian Saavedra   Conquest           1m13.0858s

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix (Rd 2, April 10th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix
In the searing humidity of Sepang, Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel made it two wins out of two, as the German swept up the Malaysian Grand Prix.

Indeed, it will be a victory to raise broad smiles for those within the Anglo-Austrian team; however the towering advantage that Red Bull possessed in Melbourne two weeks ago, had clearly dissipated somewhat.

And like yesterday’s Qualifying session, it was a McLaren that trailed Vettel, only this time the players had switched roles, as Jenson Button led the silver and red charge.
Once again, the Renault’s proved their worth, but this time it was substitute pilot, Nick Heidfeld that grabbed the final podium spot.

All three had excellent jumps off the line with the Renault start system proving to be very effective. Once off the line, Heidfeld surged into 2nd place ahead of McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton, while Vitaly Petrov jumped to 5th from the fourth row.
Amongst the first lap shuffling, Red Bull’s Mark Webber lost the use of his KERS and as the field swept into the first turn, the Australian was a sitting duck. Short of his 80 bhp boost, Webber fell from 3rd down to 9th – a disaster for the veteran.
Fernando Alonso slipped down the order, as first Petrov and then teammate Felipe Massa demoted the Spaniard two spots to 7th. The Ferrari man was thankful not be stranded for too long behind Petrov – five laps in, the Russian ran well of the circuit at turn 13 gifting the two spots back to the red cars.

Strife at Williams
Yet if Alonso thought his weekend was difficult, the two-time should probably pay a visit to the Williams squad.
Both Rubens Barrichello and Pastor Maldonado had been suffering from a distinct lack of pace throughout the weekend. Maldonado lost a small section of his front wing in a light collision with Sergio Perez (Sauber) at the beginning of lap 3 – within one lap, his Cosworth engine began to misfire, signalling a short day for the Venezuelan. Come the 9th lap, Maldonado’s day was done.
Barrichello also suffered a puncture early on (pitting on lap 4); however his race would also draw to an early close, with the Brazilian citing a hydraulics failure on lap 23. Barrichello cast a despondent, if hopeful figure:

“This wasn’t the start of the season I was hoping for and we need to improve. Right now we don’t have a reliable car and we’re playing catch up, but the team back home are pushing hard to get things resolved and bring performance to the car. I believe they will be there soon.”

Former-Williams driver, Heidfeld was having no such ailments. Not only was the German holding off the rear guard advances of Hamilton, but the Renault kept Vettel faintly in sight.
For Vettel though, it was enough just to have Heidfeld in 2nd. As the tenth lap marker approached, Vettel headed the Renault by nearly six seconds – yes, things were going very well in Camp Vettel.

As for Webber, the Australian was toughing it out against Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi for 9th place — and it was quite a tussle too. Webber was having little issue with passing the Sauber using the DRS, only to lose the spot thanks to Kobayashi’s KERS-assisted Ferrari power. They didn’t just fight on the straights, as shown by five lap paint-swapping dual through the first five turns, settled in Kobayashi’s favour.
It was a battle that would finally be decided on lap 11 by Webber’s pit crew, with the Red Bull pilot pulling in the first of his stops. Kobayashi, meanwhile, continued to charge hard, taking a position out of Michael Schumacher (lap 13), before stopping five tours later.

Evolving Strategy
As one Red Bull pitted, the signal for the rest of the front runners came quickly. Next in was Hamilton (lap 13), followed by Vettel, Heidfeld, Button and Massa (all lap 14), Alonso (lap 15) and Petrov (lap 16).
All were clean bar, Heidfeld and Massa, both of whom dropped to 5th and 7th respectively, once the field had sorted itself out.

In between the pit lane melee, glances looked skyward as droplets of rain descended, although it lasted only a few moments – and with that, thoughts of a 2009-like deluge evaporated.
The circuit remained greasy for a time, but not perilously so.

With Heidfeld out of the way, Hamilton’s charge would begin, as the 2008 World Champion began to slowly reel Vettel in. Very quickly, the gap between the leading pair would shrink from 6 seconds to 3.9 by the 24th lap – the battle was on!

Alonso was also on a charge in his Italia 150º Ferrari. Having followed the Button / Massa pairing through the initial stint, the Spaniard slotted by Massa thanks to poor pit-work, while moves on Button (left the door open in turn one) and Kobayashi (struggling for grip), was enough to promote Alonso to 3rd.
Within a lap, the Ferrari pilot began pulling in both Vettel and Hamilton.

Webber, meanwhile running in 6th, was having an inconstant race. Now confined to a four-stop strategy (unthinkable less than a year ago), the Australian was left to deal with excessive front tyre wear and the heightened understeer that followed.
It would serve as an a catalyst for the recovering Massa to grab a top-six place from the Red Bull man and also as a notice to change rubber – only 23 laps in and Webber was already on his third set of Pirelli’s.

Another Reshuffle
Again, the Australian became the key to start the stops; however on this occasion Button was the next to pit (lap 24). Next in was Hamilton (lap 25), Vettel (lap 26), Alonso and Heidfeld (lap 27), followed by Massa (lap 28) and as the field settled down, it became apparent that McLaren were the big winners.
In the resultant shuffle, Button re-passed Alonso for 3rd and began a chase of the Vettel / Hamilton pairing. Admittedly, the front two lost time due to influences beyond their control – exiting the pits, Hamilton found himself temporarily baulked by Petrov, while Vettel emerged behind the then yet to pit Heidfeld and Massa – all of whom were easily dispatched.

For Vettel though, any thoughts of plain sailing to the flag quickly disappeared. A repeated message over the reigning Champion’s radio system at the half-way point betrayed the fact that the KERS had now failed on both Red Bull’s.
Changing the brake-bias to limit the damage of the now useless KERS unit, the young German went about setting several fastest laps, as he sought to put his Renault-powered machine beyond his rivals.
The gap was built quickly – from 3.7 seconds, Vettel had extended his lead over Hamilton to 5.4 seconds by the 32nd tour and then out to over 7 seconds by lap 34. Hamilton, on the other hand, was beginning to struggle on high-wearing tyres.

Amongst this, Webber took his third stop on lap 33; however his speed was such that the race was beginning to come back to the Australian. When Hamilton finally pitted five tours later (with a slightly sluggish stop), the Englishman possessed only a minor advantage over the second Red Bull.
In fact, Hamilton had lost so much pace, Button even beat the 2008 Champion out of the pits when the ex-Brawn driver pulling in on lap 39. Heidfeld, meanwhile made his next stop the following lap around, with Vettel and Alonso both stopping on the 42nd cycle of Sepang.

Impatience Wins Out
Just as the other leading runners were bedding in their fourth set of Pirelli’s, Webber returned to the pits on lap 44 for his fourth stop of the day, dropping the Australian behind the brewing Petrov / Heidfeld / Massa battle for 5th.
As the Ferrari stalked the Renault pair, Heidfeld pulled passed Petrov to lead the trio; however the Russian was unable to keep Massa at bay. As tyre grip fell away dramatically, Petrov made one final stop on lap 44. Sadly for the inexperienced Petrov, he would not take his R31 to the flag.
With only a handful of laps remaining, the Russian ran wide at a corner, hitting a rain gully as he rejoined the track. The lift was enough to launch the Renault into the air, breaking the steering column as it landed. After the race, Petrov concentrated on the brighter aspects of the event:

“I made a small mistake which shouldn’t have had the consequences it had. I went wide and the car took off on the curb, landing hard. Both cars should have been in the points today, but the good news is that we clearly have the pace needed to compete this season.

While Petrov flew, Vitantonio Liuzzi quietly parked his Hispania F111 in the pits – a rear wing problem eventually proved to be terminal, while water pressure issues ended Narain Karthikeyan’s day just prior to halfway. As their struggles continue, Liuzzi was pragmatic:

“It’s a shame we didn’t finish (…) because our target was to reach the chequered flag. It’s a shame because we had a really good start where I was able to pass a few cars (…) but then our pace wasn’t too competitive and those cars were able to overtake me. We knew we weren’t exactly where we wanted to be, but today it was important to achieve mileage and get some information on the car. So now we have some data to work with for the future”.

Alonso was also having difficulties. Ten laps remained when the Spaniard lost the use of his DRS – with Hamilton only just ahead, Alonso was showing signs of frustration.
As the Ferrari man ducked and dived on Hamilton’s tail, Alonso sheered part of his front wing off Hamilton’s rear end. A quick stop would drop Alonso to 7th behind Massa. It was a misjudged manoeuvre from a driver that should know better and a move that would garner Alonso a 20 second post-race penalty.
Hamilton would also garner a similar penalty for weaving in front of the Ferrari; however the pain did not end there for the Briton. The damage incurred in the slight collision denied the McLaren valuable downforce and pace, leaving Hamilton to destroy his tyres in the final laps. A late pitstop for new Pirelli’s became necessary, dropping the McLaren driver to 7th.

As Hamilton nursed his MP4-26 home, Button’s race was unfolding quite nicely in the sister McLaren.
Having driven a canny Grand Prix with few surprises, the former Champion was running in 2nd, only a few laps shy of Vettel. Button was catching the young German as the final laps flirted away, but by nowhere near enough of a margin to worry the Red Bull team.

Calm Under (A Little) Pressure
Alas, Sebastian Vettel wasn’t worrying – and why would he? His obvious talents behind the wheel, mixed in with the mastery of Adrian Newey’s RB7 are proving to be a formidable match.
On a day when virtually everything was perfect for one-half of the Red Bull garage, Vettel pulled off the twelfth victory of his brief career, giving the reigning Champion a 24 point-lead over Jenson Button. This was also Vettel’s fourth consecutive victory (going back to Brazil last year) and also his fifth win in six races.

“The entire race was quite different to what we saw two weeks ago – it was a lot closer and there were more pit stops due to the tyres. With the stops, you don’t want to be first in, as you want to do as few stops as possible, but also you don’t want someone else to go in, get an advantage with new tyres and undercut you. I’m very pleased with today’s result. I love what I do and don’t think I could be happier at this stage.”

Button meanwhile, took the second spot, albeit not a threat to Vettel, while not under any pressure from behind. For all his doubters, Button out-performed his more wily teammate today and runner-up spot is just rewards.

“This has been an extremely encouraging weekend for us. Today’s race was all about looking after the tyres. On the way to the grid, I purposely took a lot of front wing out of the car, which was a mistake because I had massive understeer for the first stint, which also hurt the rear tyres. So at each pitstop, I dialled in more front wing and my pace kept getting better and better. In the closing laps, the team told me to take it easy on the tyres, but I chased down Sebastian as much as I could all the same – still, it wasn’t quite enough. We should all feel very encouraged that we have a good, strong package.

Renault’s Nick Heidfeld completed the podium, thanks to a startling launch off the line and a solid race thereafter.
The German came under some late race pressure from the surging Mark Webber, while his Red Bull sang under the grip of newer Pirelli’s – indeed his stunning pass around the outside of Felipe Massa in the opening turn hammering home the Red Bull advantage over Ferrari.

Felipe Massa held off teammate Fernando Alonso over the line for 5th and 6th respectively. Lewis Hamilton initially took 7th ahead of the solid Kamui Kobayashi; however these positions changed once Hamilton’s penalty was applied.
It made up for some of the disappointment Sauber suffered following their disqualification in Melbourne. As a sign of how improved the Swiss team is, Kobayashi battled hard with the Mercedes of Michael Schumacher throughout the early stages, eventually winning out. A late fight with Vitaly Petrov came to nothing when the Russian took flying lessons.
Schumacher took 9th and while he was not spectacular, the veteran easily had the best of fellow Mercedes runner Nico Rosberg. A late race pass on Paul di Resta (Force India) while on fresher tyres, was enough to pull in an extra point for Schumacher.
Di Resta took the final score. The Scot drove a very good race, beating off early challenges from team mate Adrian Sutil, Rosberg and both Toro Rosso’s.

Sutil had a quiet run on his way to 11th – something that he cannot afford against a rookie teammate; however Sutil enjoyed a better run than Rosberg (12th).
The Mercedes driver suffered a dreadful weekend that lacked confidence and pace. Although Rosberg beat the Toro Rosso’s to the flag, there were occasions during the running when Rosberg’s pace was not much quicker than the Lotus’.
Sebastien Buemi (13th) and Jaime Alguersuari (14th) had virtually invisible runs to the flag, although Buemi’s early race was blighted by a stop / go penalty for pitlane speeding. Realistically, neither Toro Rosso had the speed where it mattered – on track.
Heikki Kovalainen (15th, Lotus) showed much improved pace from Melbourne, although the Renault-powered machine is still slightly shy of the midfield. Virgin’s Timo Glock came home 16th and last, with little pace or signs of improvement.

Jerome d’Ambrosio (Virgin) accidentally turned off his engine over a bump 43 laps in, while Jarno Trulli’s Lotus succumbed to a clutch failure. Sergio Perez couldn’t repeat his dream Melbourne run in Sepang – although the Mexican displayed solid race pace, an electrical problem ended the Sauber driver’s race after 24 laps.

It was an interesting, albeit somewhat confusing race to follow. With 56 pitstops and numerous strategies evolving and unravelling, the 2011 Malaysian Grand Prix proved to an memorable, if odd affair.
Race Rating: 3.5 out of 5

The Malaysian Grand Prix
Sepang, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;
56 laps; 310.408km;
Weather: Dry.

Classified:
Pos  Driver        Team                       Time
 1.  Vettel        Red Bull-Renault           1h37:39.832
 2.  Button        McLaren-Mercedes           +     3.261
 3.  Heidfeld      Renault                    +    25.075
 4.  Webber        Red Bull-Renault           +    26.384
 5.  Massa         Ferrari                    +    36.958
 6.  Alonso        Ferrari                    +    57.248 (*20 sec penalty)
 7.  Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari             +  1:07.239
 8.  Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes           +  1:09.957 (*20 sec penalty)
 9.  Schumacher    Mercedes                   +  1:24.896
10.  Di Resta      Force India-Mercedes       +  1:31.563
11.  Sutil         Force India-Mercedes       +  1:41.379
12.  Rosberg       Mercedes                   +     1 lap
13.  Buemi         Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +     1 lap
14.  Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari         +     1 lap
15.  Kovalainen    Lotus-Renault              +     1 lap
16.  Glock         Virgin-Cosworth            +    2 laps
17.  Petrov        Renault                    +    4 laps
Fastest lap: Webber, 1:40.571

Not classified/retirements:
Driver        Team                         On lap
Liuzzi        HRT-Cosworth                 47
D'Ambrosio    Virgin-Cosworth              43
Trulli        Lotus-Renault                32
Perez         Sauber-Ferrari               24
Barrichello   Williams-Cosworth            23
Karthikeyan   HRT-Cosworth                 15
Maldonado     Williams-Cosworth            9

World Championship standings, round 2:
Drivers:
 1. Sebastian Vettel       50
 2. Jenson Button          26
 3. Lewis Hamilton         24
 4. Mark Webber            22
 5. Fernando Alonso        20
 6. Felipe Massa           16
 7. Nick Heidfeld          15
 8. Vitaly Petrov          15
 9. Sébastien Buemi        4
10. Kamui Kobayashi        4
11. Adrian Sutil           2
12. Michael Schumacher     2

Constructors:
 1. Red Bull/Renault          72
 2. McLaren/Mercedes          50
 3. Ferrari                   36
 4. Renault                   30
 5. Toro Rosso/Ferrari        4
 6. Sauber/Ferrari            4
 7. Force India/Mercedes      4
 8. Mercedes                  2

Picture of the Day #006

It is all in the expression.

Although much of his face is covered by his blue, yellow and red Schuberth built helmet, the giveaway is the small window that betrays his eyes. Combined with ever so downcast eyebrows and slightly slumped shoulders, it is clear that Fernando Alonso is a worried man.

As tails of woe continue to align themselves to Ferrari, it was quite apparent after qualifying for the 2011 Malaysian Grand Prix that not only were Red Bull a long way ahead of the Scuderia, so were McLaren.
Where Red Bull’s advantage was a known quantity, McLaren’s lead over the boys and girls in red must really hurt. Even the Renault pairing of Nick Heidfeld and Vitaly Petrov seem threatening in the distance.

Ferrari do appear to be somewhat lost as to where the Italia 150º is losing out and that is never a nice situation to find oneself in. Comments of going back to Fiorana to have a look at the data collected thus far is an obvious start, but if the team are struggling to suss out where exactly the car is going wrong, then 2011 may well be a long year for Formula 1’s most famous team.

© FOM

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix (Rd 2, Qualifying, April 9th)

Sepang. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Sebastian Vettel claimed the 17th pole position of his Formula 1 career.

The reigning World Champion stole the top spot from Lewis Hamilton at the death with a truly stunning lap around Malaysia’s Sepang circuit.

Both McLaren’s looked startlingly quick throughout qualifying, but it was Vettel that nailed the quickest tour when it mattered most – his time of 1:34.870 would prove to be unbeatable.

“In qualifying everything worked out straight away. It was very close in the end with the McLaren guys, so I’m happy to get pole.”

Vettel also had some positive notes about the work done since Australia two weeks ago:

“Big compliments to the guys in the team – especially those working on KERS, they did a lot of work since Australia. If we wouldn’t have had it today, we wouldn’t be sitting here now…”

Hamilton, meanwhile, appeared happier about his chances than he was in Melbourne, although the 2008 World Champion was still realistic about the task ahead.

“That was an almost perfect lap – I lost a tenth-and-a-half in Turn 14 – so we’re much closer to the front than we’d anticipated, which is positive for us. I’m really happy to be up on the front row. Hopefully, I’ll have a better start than I did in Melbourne, so we can have more of a fight and I’ll get a chance to compete with Sebastian at the first corner and for the first couple of laps.”

The second Red Bull of Mark Webber split the McLaren pair, although the Australian found himself a clear three-tenths shy of his teammate.

For Ferrari however, their disappointing start to the 2011 season continued. Leading Scuderia pilot, Fernando Alonso secured 5th on the grid, albeit a full second slower than Vettel; the Spaniard cut a forlorn figure following the chequered flag. As with last year, Alonso possessed a half-second advantage over teammate Felipe Massa, who qualified in 7th, while the Brazilian continues to struggle with the new Pirelli tyres.
The Ferrari’s were split by Nick Heidfeld, while second Renault pilot Vitaly Petrov secured 8th. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes) and Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber) claimed the 5th row.

Indeed, it was Rosberg who knocked Michael Schumacher out of qualifying at the tail end of the second session. The veteran missed out by two-tenths thanks – in part – to a malfunctioning rear wing, leaving the silver machines at the mercy of other competitors on the straights.
Following the session, a frustrated Ross Brawn made his feelings known.

“We had a difficult qualifying session today. We’re still struggling with the consistency of the car and are not giving Nico and Michael the best chance to show what they could achieve. There are times when the car is working well and the pace is evident, however there are too many occasions where things are not functioning properly. We’re quite clearly not where we want to be…

Schumacher pipped the Toro Rosso pair, led by Sebastien Buemi. The Swiss national suffered something of a fraught qualifying, having caused a red flag after his sidepod flew off his Ferrari-powered machine, yet despite his issues Buemi still outran Jaime Alguersuari. Paul di Resta took 14th to out-qualified his Force India teammate, Adrian Sutil (17th), while also squeezing Rubens Barrichello (15th, Williams) and Sergio Perez (16th, Sauber).

The surprise drop out from the first qualifying session was Williams’ Pastor Maldonado. The Venezuelan missed out by one-tenth following a poor final run. The Williams is to be joined at the rear by the usual runners headed by the Lotus pair of Heikki Kovalainen (19th) and Jarno Trulli (20th).
Timo Glock and Jerome d’Ambrosio secured the eleventh row, but the real success came on the final row as Hispania not only qualified for the race, but did so by quite a large margin. Indeed Vitantonio Liuzzi was two seconds inside the 107% rule, while Narain Karthikeyan lines up in last spot, albeit with one second in hand.
Afterwards, a relieved Hispania team principal Colin Kolles, was both proud and relieved:

“We made the next step by qualifying into the race. This was our target: to qualify and to be able to do more laps. Both drivers did a good job out there today…
Once more, I would like to thank the whole team for their massive effort. Now we have our next target in mind which is to keep doing laps and finish tomorrow’s race with both cars.”

Pos  Driver                Team                 Time         Gap   
 1.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     1m34.870s
 2.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m34.974s   + 0.104
 3.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1m35.179s   + 0.309
 4.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m35.200s   + 0.330
 5.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m35.802s   + 0.932
 6.  Nick Heidfeld         Renault              1m36.124s   + 1.254
 7.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m36.251s   + 1.381
 8.  Vitaly Petrov         Renault              1m36.324s   + 1.454
 9.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m36.809s   + 1.939
10.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       1m36.820s   + 1.950
Q3 cut-off time: 1m36.811s                                   Gap **
11.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             1m37.035s   + 1.466
12.  Sebastien Buemi       Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m37.160s   + 1.591
13.  Jaime Alguersuari     Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m37.347s   + 1.778
14.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m37.370s   + 1.801
15.  Rubens Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth    1m37.496s   + 1.927
16.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m37.528s   + 1.959
17.  Adrian Sutil          Force India-Mercedes 1m37.593s   + 2.024
Q3 cut-off time: 1m38.163s                                    Gap *
18.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth    1m38.276s   + 1.532
19.  Heikki Kovalainen     Lotus-Renault        1m38.645s   + 1.901
20.  Jarno Trulli          Lotus-Renault        1m38.791s   + 2.047
21.  Timo Glock            Virgin-Cosworth      1m40.648s   + 3.904
22.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth      1m41.001s   + 4.257
23.  Tonio Liuzzi          HRT-Cosworth         1m41.549s   + 4.805
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth         1m42.574s   + 5.830

107% time: 1m43.516s
* Gap to quickest in Q1
** Gap to quickest in Q2

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix (Rd 2, Free Practice 3, April 9th)

Sepang. © Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

In a change from yesterday, Lewis Hamilton ran quickest in this morning’s 3rd Free Practice session in Sepang.

Like many of the runners, the McLaren driver set his fastest runs in the final moments of practice, as they pushed their soft Pirelli tyres to the limit in qualifying simulations.
Hamilton had an eleven lap session, during which the 2008 World Champion notched a best lap of 1:36.340.

Mark Webber lined up three-tenths shy of Hamilton in his Red Bull RB7 following his 16 lap run, although the Australian spent much of the session of the harder compound Pirelli rubber.
Jenson Button made it two McLaren’s in the top-three, with Nick Heidfeld (Renault) registering the 4th best time.

Webber’s Red Bull teammate, Sebastian Vettel finished 5th – his best of was a 1:37.175; however the previous two sessions showed that there should well be a lot more pace in the Renault-powered machine.
Fernando Alonso (6th, Ferrari) and Vitaly Petrov (7th, Renault) found themselves one-tenth shy of Vettel, while still maintaining a half-second gap over Felipe Massa in the second Ferrari.
With Ferrari apparently lacking confidence in the performance of the 150º Italia, this so far does not look like a weekend to boost morale at the Scuderia.

Both Mercedes’ easily logged the busiest session with both Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg completing twenty laps apiece. Schumacher headed the pair in 10th, with Rosberg in 11th only 0.007 shy of the veteran.
Force India’s Paul di Resta had something of a nightmare session. The young Scot suffered throughout third practice from dire rear end tyre wear / grip, causing the reigning DTM Champion to spin on several occasions.
Both Hispania’s made it on track, but finished dead last and they suffered somewhat from a further lack of running. Vitantonio Liuzzi was the quicker of the pair, although the pair finished the session outside the 107% cut off point.

Pos  Driver              Team/Car              Time       Gap       Laps
 1.  Lewis Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes      1m36.340s            11
 2.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault      1m36.630s  + 0.290s  16
 3.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes      1m36.762s  + 0.422s  14
 4.  Nick Heidfeld       Renault               1m37.115s  + 0.775s  17
 5.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault      1m37.175s  + 0.835s  14
 6.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari               1m37.284s  + 0.944s  11
 7.  Vitaly Petrov       Renault               1m37.297s  + 0.957s  17
 8.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari               1m37.762s  + 1.422s  12
 9.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber-Ferrari        1m38.059s  + 1.719s  18
10.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes              1m38.300s  + 1.960s  20
11.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes              1m38.307s  + 1.967s  20
12.  Sergio Perez        Sauber-Ferrari        1m38.448s  + 2.108s  17
13.  Adrian Sutil        Force India-Mercedes  1m38.464s  + 2.124s  16
14.  Pastor Maldonado    Williams-Cosworth     1m38.597s  + 2.257s  15
15.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m38.665s  + 2.325s  14
16.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams-Cosworth     1m38.681s  + 2.341s  16
17.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso-Ferrari    1m38.716s  + 2.376s  14
18.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes  1m38.864s  + 2.524s  13
19.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus-Renault         1m39.260s  + 2.920s  19
20.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus-Renault         1m39.699s  + 3.359s  15
21.  Jerome D'Ambrosio   Virgin-Cosworth       1m41.215s  + 4.875s  17
22.  Timo Glock          Virgin-Cosworth       1m41.414s  + 5.074s  18
23.  Vitantonio Liuzzi   HRT-Cosworth          1m43.147s  + 6.807s  6
24.  Narain Karthikeyan  HRT-Cosworth          1m43.383s  + 7.043s  11

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix (Rd 2, Free Practice 2, April 8th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Mark Webber was quickest again in Sepang following the second free practice, although the apparent advantage was cut down from the opening session.

After a – lap session, the Red Bull driver assumed the head of the time sheets with a best of 1:36.876 as he headed the McLaren pair of Jenson Button (2nd) and Lewis Hamilton (3rd).
Button was the busier of the two silver and red cars, having registered – laps in his MP4-26, following several short runs.
While the McLaren’s closed much of the gap to the top spot (Button was 0.005 slower than Webber and Hamilton one-tenth slower), it is still raises questions regarding fuel load differences.
Sebastian Vettel was next up on the time sheets. His quickest run was 0.214 shy of Webber, although the reigning Champion ran a number of longer stints, showing some decent high fuel pace.

A large gap followed to Michael Schumacher in the Mercedes – one second of a difference in fact. The veteran headed his younger teammate, Nico Rosberg (7th), although the Mercedes pair appeared to suffer some dramatic tyre drop-off, despite having cured some of their balance issues.
Splitting the pair was Ferrari’s Felipe Massa – his fastest lap of 1:38.089 was good enough for a top-six placing.

Both Renault’s eventually took to the circuit following a tough first session riddled with failures. Vitaly Petrov emerged after 45 minutes, with Nick Heidfeld taking to the circuit with a half-hour remaining.
Heidfeld would prove to be quickest of the pair. A fast lap of 1:38.570 placed the German veteran just behind Rosberg, while Petrov slotted in 13th, albeit 2.3 seconds down on Webber.
Williams’ Pastor Maldonado registered a quicker time than veteran teammate Rubens Barrichello, however the Venezuelan suffered a deal of embarrassment went he pitched his FW33 into the barrier’s entering the pitlane.

The session was rather better for those at the rear of the field, bar a few bumps in the road. Timo Glock (Virgin) jumped Jarno Trulli’s Lotus, with Glock getting to within four seconds of the leading Red Bull. Unfortunately, Glock’s teammate – Jerome d’Ambrosio lost the second session due to his first practice crash, whiel Heikki Kovalainen in the second Lotus only completed four laps.
Narain Karthikeyan also put in a relatively decent pace for the Hispania team, despite having little running in the morning, although Vitantonio Liuzzi lost a good deal of time following an electrical issue.

Pos  Driver               Team                     Time               Laps
 1.  Mark Webber          Red Bull-Renault         1m36.876s            24
 2.  Jenson Button        McLaren-Mercedes         1m36.881s  + 0.005   30
 3.  Lewis Hamilton       McLaren-Mercedes         1m37.010s  + 0.134   23
 4.  Sebastian Vettel     Red Bull-Renault         1m37.090s  + 0.214   30
 5.  Michael Schumacher   Mercedes                 1m38.088s  + 1.212   26
 6.  Felipe Massa         Ferrari                  1m38.089s  + 1.213   31
 7.  Nico Rosberg         Mercedes                 1m38.565s  + 1.689   25
 8.  Nick Heidfeld        Renault                  1m38.570s  + 1.694   16
 9.  Fernando Alonso      Ferrari                  1m38.583s  + 1.707   27
10.  Jaime Alguersuari    Toro Rosso-Ferrari       1m38.846s  + 1.970   31
11.  Pastor Maldonado     Williams-Cosworth        1m38.968s  + 2.092   25
12.  Rubens Barrichello   Williams-Cosworth        1m39.187s  + 2.311   30
13.  Vitaly Petrov        Renault                  1m39.267s  + 2.391   17
14.  Kamui Kobayashi      Sauber-Ferrari           1m39.398s  + 2.522   29
15.  Sergio Perez         Sauber-Ferrari           1m39.603s  + 2.727   34
16.  Paul di Resta        Force India-Mercedes     1m39.625s  + 2.749   31
17.  Adrian Sutil         Force India-Mercedes     1m39.809s  + 2.933   28
18.  Sebastien Buemi      Toro Rosso-Ferrari       1m40.115s  + 3.239   31
19.  Timo Glock           Virgin-Cosworth          1m40.866s  + 3.990   24
20.  Jarno Trulli         Lotus-Renault            1m41.890s  + 5.014   19
21.  Narain Karthikeyan   HRT-Cosworth             1m43.197s  + 6.321   15
22.  Tonio Liuzzi         HRT-Cosworth             1m43.991s  + 7.115   14
23.  Heikki Kovalainen    Lotus-Renault            1m44.886s  + 8.010    4

2011 Malaysian Grand Prix (Rd 2, Free Practice 1, April 8th)

© Creative Commons / Will Pittenger

Mark Webber topped a hot and humid first practice session at Sepang.

Indeed the Red Bull driver cemented his place at the head of the field with a best of 1:37.651 from a 22 lap session, leaving Webber a clear 1.6 seconds up on 2nd place Lewis Hamilton.
Like the first practices in Australia two weeks ago, Red Bull have KERS switched on, but appear more likely to use it this time around.

It was not all Red Bull’s way though. The victor of Melbourne, Sebastian Vettel, took 17th position, nearly four seconds down on Webber, although that will most certainly be rectified come qualifying and the race.

Hamilton meanwhile had to be content following his morning stint. The McLaren driver possessed a 0.5 second advantage over Mercedes’ Michael Schumacher (3rd), while Force India reserve Nico Hulkenberg was another six-tenths further back in 4th.
Pastor Maldonado (Williams) registered 5th at the tail end of a long run.  The Venezuelan fell only a few hundredths shy of Hulkenberg – however that the gap from 1st to 5th is 2.8 seconds is still quite startling, despite this only being a practice session.
Two-tenths of a second covered the following six machines, headed by Ferrari’s Felipe Massa. Indeed both Ferrari’s spent much of the session notching up a number of installation laps, before embarking on timed runs late on.

Trailing Massa in 7th was Nick Heidfeld. The Renault pilot set a quick early time; however his session was cut short by an apparent brake problem on his sixth tour. Having dragged his R31 much of the way around the lap, severe damage was discovered around the brake hub, rendering Heidfeld’s morning done.
Heidfeld’s teammate Vitaly Petrov had less luck. On his fourth lap, the Russian suffered a left front wheel failure, pitching the Russian into the gravel. Renault would later reveal that the failures were potentially linked to faulty suspension uprights. It may cost the Renault much of the afternoon.
The failures would not end there. The suspension on the right front Jerome d’Ambrosio’s Virgin sheered itself with only moments remaining, pulling the wheel only the MVR-02. There were several other offs, but nothing quite as dramatic as what befell Petrov and d’Ambrosio.

Unsurprisingly, Hispania found themselves at the tail of the pack, but amongst the adversity, there are slight glimmers of hope. Vitantonio Liuzzi completed 20 laps, with a best 7.5 seconds down on Webber, while teammate Narain Karthikeyan was a further 1.1 seconds down.
Karthikeyan’s running was severely limited due to an early oil line failure; yet the Indian did get out for at least ten laps. Their new front wing may not have clawed as much of an advantage as they initially assumed, but the Spanish squad are making small steps to the grid.
In one sense the Hispania was too quick – Karthikeyan pummelled the pitlane speed limit, earning himself a $2,800 fine.

Pos  Driver         Team                   Time              Laps
 1.  Webber         Red Bull-Renault       1m37.651s            22
 2.  Hamilton       McLaren-Mercedes       1m39.316s  + 1.665   16
 3.  Schumacher     Mercedes               1m39.791s  + 2.140   29
 4.  Hulkenberg     Force India-Mercedes   1m40.377s  + 2.726   23
 5.  Maldonado      Williams-Cosworth      1m40.443s  + 2.792   31
 6.  Massa          Ferrari                1m40.453s  + 2.802   22
 7.  Heidfeld       Renault                1m40.525s  + 2.874    6
 8.  Barrichello    Williams-Cosworth      1m40.581s  + 2.930   21
 9.  Alonso         Ferrari                1m40.601s  + 2.950   23
10.  Rosberg        Mercedes               1m40.646s  + 2.995   29
11.  Sutil          Force India-Mercedes   1m40.734s  + 3.083   21
12.  Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m40.748s  + 3.097   23
13.  Alguersuari    Toro Rosso-Ferrari     1m40.770s  + 3.119   24
14.  Kobayashi      Sauber-Ferrari         1m40.872s  + 3.221   27
15.  Button         McLaren-Mercedes       1m40.927s  + 3.276   16
16.  Trulli         Lotus-Renault          1m41.620s  + 3.969   21
17.  Vettel         Red Bull-Renault       1m41.627s  + 3.976   18
18.  Perez          Sauber-Ferrari         1m41.642s  + 3.991   24
19.  Glock          Virgin-Cosworth        1m42.154s  + 4.503   18
20.  d'Ambrosio     Virgin-Cosworth        1m42.540s  + 4.889   20
21.  Valsecchi      Lotus-Renault          1m44.054s  + 6.403   18
22.  Liuzzi         HRT-Cosworth           1m45.228s  + 7.577   20
23.  Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth           1m46.267s  + 8.616   10
24.  Petrov         Renault                1m47.932s  + 10.281   4

GP2 Pre-Season Testing (Silverstone, April 6th)

GP2 tested at Silverstone again yesterday.

iSport International’s Marcus Ericsson topped the second and final day of GP2 testing at the Silverstone Arena circuit yesterday.

The Swede topped the 26 car field in very warm conditions that contrasted heavily with Tuesday’s damp weather, although Ericsson would have to secede the morning session to Racing Engineering’s Christian Vietoris.
Indeed Vietoris’ best lap (1:40.218) would hold a quarter-of-a-second advantage over the ever quick Jules Bianchi in his Lotus ART Dallara, while Bianchi was one of several drivers that peaked with 36 laps in the morning.

Ericsson squeezed ahead of Dani Clos come the lunchtime curfew, the Spaniard trailing Ericsson by six-hundredths, although both would be pleased the amount of running they achieved.
It would be Ericsson’s iSport team mate, Sam Bird in 5th spot, some four-tenths down on Vietoris after a 29 lap session and like the quicker iSport runner, Bird would possess a tiny advantage over the nearest runners. In fact, Bird pipped Charles Pic (6th, Barwa Addax), Romain Grosjean (7th, DAMS) and Giedo van der Garde (8h, Barwa Addax) by one tenth.
Jolyon Palmer was one of the few that claimed 36 laps on his way to 9th on the sheets. The ex-Formula 2 racer finished ahead of Carlin’s Max Chilton – the Briton was the first to dip into the 1:41’s, leaving him on the perimetre of the top-ten.
Interesting, the morning alone saw five red flags, with the final one happening just prior to clock running out.

Ericsson would not be beaten in the afternoon, although he did leave it late, with a quickest Silverstone tour of 1:40.154 – two-tenths clear of Bianchi (again).
As with the morning, Bianchi ran 36 laps and is showing himself to be a model of consistency – a factor that will make him very dangerous come the season.

Pic marginally stole 3rd ahead of Vietoris (4th), Grosjean (5th) and Gutierrez (6th, Lotus ART) as the timing screen lit up repeatedly in the final hour, although all may be dismayed to find themselves half-a-second down on Ericsson.
Carlin’s Oliver Turvey entered the top-ten with a best f 1:40.772 following a 29 lap afternoon; however the Briton had a clear two-tenths advantage over Luiz Razia (8th, Team AirAsia), Chilton (9th) and Johnny Cecotto (10th, Ocean Racing Technology).
Rookie Kevin Mirocha made the best of the track time today. Having only tested a GP2 car for the first time on Tuesday, Mirocha ran 76 laps throughout Wednesday as he continues to acclimatise himself to the series.

The GP2 Series will see one final two-day test when hits Barcelona in two weeks time. Thereafter, the serious stuff really begins.

Morning times:

Pos  Driver                   Team                        Time      Laps
 1.  Christian Vietoris       Racing Engineering          1:40.218   31
 2.  Jules Bianchi            Lotus ART                   1:40.442   36
 3.  Marcus Ericsson          iSport International        1:40.505   34
 4.  Dani Clos                Racing Engineering          1:40.562   31
 5.  Sam Bird                 iSport International        1:40.653   29
 6.  Charles Pic              Barwa Addax Team            1:40.692   33
 7.  Romain Grosjean          Dams                        1:40.711   30
 8.  Giedo van der Garde      Barwa Addax Team            1:40.760   21
 9.  Jolyon Palmer            Arden International         1:40.840   36
10.  Max Chilton              Carlin                      1:41.024   25
11.  Oliver Turvey            Carlin                      1:41.027   21
12.  Fabio Leimer             Rapax                       1:41.153   20
13.  Davide Valsecchi         Team AirAsia                1:41.183   35
14.  Michael Herck            Scuderia Coloni             1:41.271   25
15.  Esteban Gutierrez        Lotus ART                   1:41.504   31
16.  Johnny Cecotto           Ocean Racing Technology     1:41.587   22
17.  Davide Rigon             Scuderia Coloni             1:41.591   31
18.  Luiz Razia               Team AirAsia                1:41.634   22
19.  Julian Leal              Rapax                       1:41.735   28
20.  Luca Filippi             Super Nova Racing           1:41.845   21
21.  Fairuz Fauzy             Super Nova Racing           1:41.905   22
22.  Stefano Coletti          Trident Racing              1:42.000   16
23.  Josef Kral               Arden International         1:42.010   23
24.  Pal Varhaug              Dams                        1:42.064   31
25.  Kevin Mirocha            Ocean Racing Technology     1:42.092   36
26.  Rodolfo Gonzalez         Trident Racing              1:42.107   26

Afternoon times

Post Driver                   Team                        Time      Laps
 1.  Marcus Ericsson          iSport International        1:40.154   31
 2.  Jules Bianchi            Lotus ART                   1:40.322   36
 3.  Charles Pic              Barwa Addax Team            1:40.586   29
 4.  Christian Vietoris       Racing Engineering          1:40.589   38
 5.  Romain Grosjean          Dams                        1:40.623   23
 6.  Esteban Gutierrez        Lotus ART                   1:40.645   30
 7.  Oliver Turvey            Carlin                      1:40.772   29
 8.  Luiz Razia               Team AirAsia                1:40.925   33
 9.  Max Chilton              Carlin                      1:40.929   27
10.  Johnny Cecotto           Ocean Racing Technology     1:40.936   30
11.  Dani Clos                Racing Engineering          1:41.019   28
12.  Giedo van der Garde      Barwa Addax Team            1:41.032   31
13.  Pal Varhaug              Dams                        1:41.133   33
14.  Stefano Coletti          Trident Racing              1:41.241   28
15.  Michael Herck            Scuderia Coloni             1:41.346   21
16.  Davide Valsecchi         Team AirAsia                1:41.375   38
17.  Davide Rigon             Scuderia Coloni             1:41.378   32
18.  Josef Kral               Arden International         1:41.416   16
19.  Luca Filippi             Super Nova Racing           1:41.432   34
20.  Sam Bird                 iSport International        1:41.503   16
21.  Julian Leal              Rapax                       1:41.600   33
22.  Rodolfo Gonzalez         Trident Racing              1:41.701   30
23.  Fabio Leimer             Rapax                       1:41.839   38
24.  Kevin Mirocha            Ocean Racing Technology     1:41.866   40
25.  Jolyon Palmer            Arden International         1:42.012   25
26.  Fairuz Fauzy             Super Nova Racing           1:42.240   27