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A Tribute to Macau

Something that I came across the other day that really caught my eye was this fabulous homage to this year’s Macau Formula 3 Grand Prix. 

Directed by Sergio Perez (not the Formula 1 débutante), the tribute was shot by Perez alongside cohort Antonio Espadinha Soares during the weekend’s running. This film, mostly shot on a Canon 7D and 1D Mark IV and an XF300 with EOS lenses is also mixed with clips from the local TV station’s broadcast.
Race commentary is from Jonathan Green. The songs are “Beauty Never Fades” by Junkie XL, “November” and “Last Days” by Max Richter, and “Furious Angel” by Rob Dougan.

Macau Grand Prix Formula 3 2010 from Toze Soares on Vimeo.

Staying with British Formula 3: Cooper Tyres

Ricciardo is a previous British F3 Champion. © http://www.britishf3international.com

It is good to know that at a time when industries are still facing difficulty, there are still those that are strong enough to get behind a series like British Formula 3.

Taking over from Avon in 2009, Cooper have been providing British F3 with quality tyres that have been taking punishment from some of the finest young drivers around. With the announcement today that Cooper Tyres are set to back the British F3 series for a further four years, stability has been provided to one of the strongest junior categories in motorsport.

Also announced were the dates for the 2011 British F3 calendar. Previously the exact dates had been left blank; however the 2011 schedule has since been solidified.
As with previous seasons, the Championship will remain on MotorsTV, where it will be broadcast as a highlights package. MotorsTV will also be broadcasting their 2010 British F3 season review on December 1st.
Mainly be acting as a support to the British GT series, the Formula 3 races will be maintaining their revamped weekend layout of three races, as opposed to two, as was the case in previous years. The series will also be venturing outside of British shores with races at Monza supporting the GT series, Paul Ricard (supporting GT1), Spa-Franchorchamps (supporting the Spa 24 Hour sportscar race), before heading to the Nurburgring as a lead in for the Nurburgring 12 Hour race.

Recent champions include Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne. Both of the Red Bull junior drivers are moving up the racing ladder – Vergne will be taking part in next year’s World Series by Renault Championship, while Ricciardo will be running as Toro Rosso’s reserve and may yet still confirm a GP2 seat.
Other notable title winners include Rubens Barrichello, Mika Hakkinen, Emerson Fittipaldi, Nelson Piquet and the late Ayrton Senna.

2011 Cooper Tires British F3 International Series (provisional calendar)
08 March – Silverstone, UK (Media & Test Day
)
——–
14-16 April – Monza, Italy (GT Endurance Series)
23 & 25 April – Oulton Park, UK (British GT & UK support package)
14/15 May – Snetterton 300, UK (British GT & UK support package
)
18/19 June – Brands Hatch GP, UK (British GT & UK support package)
15-17 July – Paul Ricard, France (FIA GT1 World Championship)
28-30 July – Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium (Spa 24 Hours
)
03/04 September – Rockingham, UK (British GT & UK support package)
09-11 September – Nürburgring, Germany (Nürburgring 12 Hours)
24/25 September – Donington Park GP, UK (British GT & UK support package)

A Plug

In a brief moment of self-plugging, yours truly will be making a brief appearance on Trackside tonight on 1070 The Fan.

Broadcast live from Indianapolis with journalist and commentator Kevin Lee and IndyStar scribbler Curt Cavin, there will be a bloggers special this evening.
I – along with the brilliant George Phillips from OilPressure and Pressdog amongst others – will launch the frighteners on the air as I talk about the site and motor racing in general.  If anyone cannot understand my accent, please seek subtitles; they may be provided.

If you are in Indianapolis, the show can be caught on 1070 WFNI or if you are not in the area (or even the US), the show is also broadcast live via Trackside’s home page, where it will also be stored as a podcast for the rest of time.
The show airs from 8-10pm Eastern time US (1-3am GMT), but I have no idea what time I will be on the air at.

GP2 Winter Test (Yas Marina, November 24th)

On this, the second day of GP2 winter testing, Swiss driver Fabio Leimer topped both the morning and afternoon sessions at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina circuit. 

The Rapax driver registered his quickest times, despite only completing thirty-two laps over the course of the day. It is a promising sign for Leimer. After a difficult début season in the category, the 21-year-old will be hoping that his second year garners brighter results.
By the drop of the chequered flag, Leimer headed veteran Luca Filippi in the morning (0.2 of-a-second faster) and GP2 returnee Josef Kral in the afternoon. Král also recorded a quick time in the morning – his fastest time was only just shy of fellow Addax runner Charles Pic. Regardless of set-ups and fuel loads (etc), these sessions can also be valuable confidence boosters.

For the afternoon, Filippi fell to 7th in the timings; however their show of single lap pace today and yesterday may also be a boost to the Scuderia Coloni squad, who showed well yesterday with James Jakes.
Jakes’ himself registered the 16th and 11th quickest times in the morning and afternoon respectively for the Spanish squad, Racing Engineering; although the Briton was slower than rookie team mate Andrea Caldarelli in both sessions.

Fellow rookie Joylon Palmer also had a good morning, before dropping down the order somewhat. The son of former-F1 racer, Jonathan, tested with iSport today alongside Roberto Mehri. Fastest rookie of the day was Esteban Gutierrez – the Mexican ran with ART Grand Prix today, securing 5th in both sessions.

Michael Herck didn’t have as good a day today as he did yesterday; however that did not stop the Romanian setting some vaguely competitive times in his DPR machine. Once again Camilo Zurcher had a difficult day– the 30-year-old only completed a single lap in the morning, but did not run at all during the afternoon session.

Day 2; Morning times
Pos Driver              Team                  Time      Laps
 1. Fabio Leimer        Rapax                 1m47.867s   16
 2. Luca Filippi        Coloni                1m48.054s   32
 3. Charles Pic         Addax                 1m48.141s   19
 4. Josef Kral          Addax                 1m48.171s   19
 5. Esteban Gutierrez   ART                   1m48.183s   28
 6. Sam Bird            DAMS                  1m48.261s   22
 7. Michael Herck       DPR                   1m48.570s   13
 8. Joylon Palmer       iSport                1m48.614s    8
 9. Dani Clos           Ocean                 1m48.731s   16
10. Andrea Caldarelli   Racing Engineering    1m48.766s   15
11. Nicolas Marroc      Ocean                 1m48.731s   14
12. Roberto Mehri       iSport                1m49.025s   21
13. Julian Leal         Trident               1m49.037s   19
14. Nathanel Berthon    ART                   1m49.098s   23
15. Stefano Coletti     Trident               1m49.120s   20
16. James Jakes         Racing Engineering    1m49.357s   12
17. Simon Trummer       Arden                 1m49.377s   32
18. Jake Rosenzweig     Super                 1m49.537s   14
19. Rodolfo Gonzalez    Super                 1m49.631s   11
20. Armaan Ebrahim      Arden                 1m49.946s   32
21. Pal Varhaug         DAMS                  1m49.949s   34
22. Kevin Ceccon        Coloni                1m49,971s    6
23. Daniel Mancinelli   Rapax                 1m50.780s   19
24. Camilo Zurcher      DPR                   2m10.469s    1

Day 2; Afternoon times
Pos Driver              Team                  Time      Laps
 1. Fabio Leimer        Rapax                 1m47.401s   16
 2. Josef Kral          Addax                 1m47.517s   16
 3. Dani Clos           Ocean                 1m47.827s   21
 4. Sam Bird            DAMS                  1m47.887s   13
 5. Esteban Gutierrez   ART                   1m47.913s   31
 6. Andrea Caldarelli   Racing Engineering    1m47.939s   16
 7. Luca Filippi        Coloni                1m47.944s   17
 8. Charles Pic         Addax                 1m47.972s   18
 9. Stefano Coletti     Trident               1m48.016s   26
10. Kevin Ceccon        Coloni                1m48.156s   13
11. James Jakes         Racing Engineering    1m48.189s   24
12. Michael Herck       DPR                   1m48.294s   23
13. Roberto Mehri       iSport                1m48.387s   21
14. Jolyon Palmer       iSport                1m48.406s   22
15. Nathanael Berthon   ART                   1m48.759s   28
16. Nicolas Marroc      Ocean                 1m48.831s   15
17. Simon Trummer       Arden                 1m48.874s   25
18. Pal Varhaug         DAMS                  1m48.891s   27
19. Rodolfo Gonzalez    Super Nova            1m49.008s   19
20. Julian Leal         Trident               1m49.085s   19
21. Armaan Ebrahim      Arden                 1m49.262s   31
22. Daniel Mancinelli   Rapax                 1m50.102s   13

GP2 Winter Test (Yas Marina, November 23rd)

Only nine days after the 2010 season was wrapped in Abu Dhabi, the GP2 field returned to the Middle East circuit to commence their winter test program. 

The first of the four-day run saw James Jakes make the most of the conditions, setting the second best time in the morning (less than 0.1 of-a-second shy of GP2 veteran Michael Herck) and the fastest lap in the afternoon for the Scuderia Coloni squad.
There were several red flags for spins, but no crashes occurred.

Admittedly, it can be very difficult (if not impossible) to judge these tests, without any inkling of set up or fuel weights.
What is impressive though, is that Jakes is a GP2 débutante, having run in the GP3 Series earlier this year. Other GP3 runners to join the test were Robert Wickens, Roberto Mehri (who performed so well at Macau over the weekend), Simon Trummer, Stefano Coletti and GP3 champion Esteban Gutierrez.
It was not a good day though for Camilo Zurcher in the second DPR machine – the 30 year-old Colombian managed only one flying lap over the course of a day punctured with problems.

This is a crucial year for Herck and several other GP2 veterans – should they find themselves outpaced by the incoming talent, it may make it difficult for them to continue their run in Formula 1’s top feeder category.
The test continues tomorrow, with two further test days been conducted on Saturday and Sunday.

Day 1 (Morning Session)
1.  Michael Herck      DPR                  1:48.447 (28)
2.  James Jakes        Scuderia Coloni      1:48.530 (21)
3.  Robert Wickens     iSport International 1:48.761 (19)
4.  Andrea Caldarelli  Racing Engineering   1:48.869 (25)
5.  Josef Kral         Barwa Addax Team     1:48.889 (27)
6.  Esteban Gutierrez  ART Grand Prix       1:48.955 (20)
7.  Sam Bird           Ocean Racing Tech    1:49.106 (18)
8.  Stefano Coletti    Trident Racing       1:49.137 (15)
9.  Roberto Mehri      Arden International  1:49.164 (19)
10. Rodolfo Gonzalez   Racing Engineering   1:49.194 (25)
11. Marcus Ericsson    Super Nova Racing    1:49.217 (19)
12. Charles Pic        Barwa Addax Team     1:49.288 (13)
13. Joylon Palmer      iSport International 1:49.764 (25)
14. Jan Charouz        ART Grand Prix       1:49.970 (27)
15. Kevin Ceccon       Scuderia Coloni      1:49.981 (30)
16. Fabio Leimer       Rapax                1:50.112 (10)
17. Nathanael Berthon  Dams                 1:50.254 (25)
18. Ivan Samarin       Dams                 1:50.470 (30)
19. Julian Leal        Trident Racing       1:50.684 (12)
20. Nicolas Marroc     Ocean Racing Tech    1:50.757 (25)
21. Jake Rosenzweig    Super Nova Racing    1:51.440 (20)
22. Simon Trummer      Arden International  1:51.593 (20)
23. Armaan Ebrahim     Rapax                1:53.914 (28)
24. Camilo Zurche      DPR                  2:33.817  (1)

Day 1 – Afternoon session
1. James Jakes         Scuderia Coloni      1:47.790 (19)
2. Esteban Gutierrez   ART Grand Prix       1:48.209 (27)
3. Charles Pic         Barwa Addax Team     1:48.302 (36)
4. Rodolfo Gonzalez    Racing Engineering   1:48.302 (20)
5. Robert Wickens      iSport International 1:48.408 (20)
6. Stefano Coletti     Trident Racing       1:48.413 (27)
7. Josef Kral          Barwa Addax Team     1:48.426 (24)
8. Michael Herck       DPR                  1:48.555 (19)
9. Andrea Caldarelli   Racing Engineering   1:48.635 (26)
10. Marcus Ericsson    Super Nova Racing    1:48.657 (16)
11. Joylon Palmer      iSport International 1:48.836 (21)
12. Sam Bird           Ocean Racing Tech    1:48.849 (19)
13. Kevin Ceccon       Scuderia Coloni      1:48.870 (13)
14. Roberto Merhi      Arden International  1:48.947 (27)
15. Jan Charouz        ART Grand Prix       1:49.575 (28)
16. Nathanael Berthon  Dams                 1:49.767 (31)
17. Ivan Samarin       Dams                 1:49.950 (25)
18. Julian Leal        Trident Racing       1:50.050  (8)
19. Simon Trummer      Arden International  1:50.056 (29)
20. Nicolas Marroc     Ocean Racing Tech    1:50.651 (15)
21. Armaan Ebrahim     Rapax                1:51.073 (23)
22. Jake Rosenzweig    Super Nova Racing    1:51.419  (8)
23. Fabio Leimer       Rapax                1:51.605  (3)
24. Camilo Zurcher     DPR                         —  (—)

Auto GP steps into F2 slot

© AutoGP.org 2010

Single-seater series, Auto GP, has been announced as the main support category for the World Touring Car Championship in 2011. 

The series, which has had painfully little exposure in recent years, replaces Formula 2 as WTCC’s lead in event, earning itself a contract with sports cable channel Eurosport in the process.

Kicking off in May at Italy’s famous Monza circuit, Auto GP’s 2011 season will also support the WTCC at Marrakech (Morocco), Brno (Czech Republic), Donington Park (England), Oschersleben (Germany) and Valencia circuit (Spain). The championship will also run its own stand-alone event on the streets of Bucharest in Romania.

Formerly known as Euroseries 3000, the rebranded Auto GP débuted earlier this year as a simple low cost formula that offers a fund of €200,000 to be split between the top 6 at every race. It’s race weekend is similar to that of GP2, with a feature race that offers points to 8th, before reversing the top-8 for a sprint race. The sprint race pays to 6th position.

Made up of Zytec-powered Lola machines, the cars boast 3.4 litre V8 engines, that produce an output of 550 bhp. Former-Renault Formula 1 driver, Romain Grosjean was the first recipient of the Auto GP crown; he took the prize ahead of Edoardo Piscopo and Duncan Tappy. Another notable past victor is Ferrari pilot Felipe Massa, who took the series in 2002.

Of course, this leaves Formula 2 with something of a problem. Although the F2 organisers have announced an eight-race calendar, it appears to be mainly stand-alone events. It has also lost the contract it had with Eurosport and may suffer further from running most of its events opposite Formula 1 race weekends.

The new Formula 2 schedule takes in five current Formula 1 circuits (Silverstone, Spa-Francorchamps, Nurburgring, Monza and Barcelona), while also visiting three former Grand Prix venues – Magny Cours, Brands Hatch and the newly re-opened Red Bull Ring (formerly the A1 Ring).  There are also be two test sessions on the horizon at the magnificent Portimao circuit in Portugal and at the Grand Prix track in Barcelona.
With limited popularity and exposure, Formula 2 runs the risk of dropping of the face of the earth. If it wishes to remain a credible prospect, Motorsport Vision may need to act fast.

2011 Auto GP Calendar
23-24 March; Barcelona test, Spain
——–
13-15 May; Monza, Italy
3-5 June; Marrakech, Morocco
17-19 June; Brno, Czech Republic
15-17 July; Donington, UK
29-31 July; Oschersleben, Germany
19-21 August; Bucharest, Romania
2-4 September; Valencia, Spain

2011 Formula 2 Calendar
2-3 December 2010; Portimao test, Spain
9-10 December 2010; Barcelona test, Spain
——–
15-17 April; Silverstone, UK
20-22 May; Magny-Cours, France
24-26 June; Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium
1-3 July; Nürburgring, Germany
22-24 July; Brands Hatch, UK
26-28 August; Red Bull Ring, Austria
30 Sep-2 – October; Monza, Italy
28-30 – October; Barcelona, Spain

2010 Formula 3 Grand Prix of Macau (Feature Race)

Macau circuit layout.

Edoardo Mortara wrapped up a perfect Macau weekend with victory in the Sunday morning feature race.

On his way to the chequered flag, the Italian driver also took the fastest lap in his Signature Racing machine, to go along with the pole position and Qualifying Race victory – both of which he claimed yesterday.
He didn’t have it all his own way – early on challenges from team mate’s Daniel Abt and Laurens Vanthoor made sure that Mortara was kept busy at the front.

As per usual, there were messy scenes in the pack. As the lights went out, Michael Ho stalled on the grid, only to be hit by the unsighted Alexander Sims, giving the race an early safety car period – but not before Daniel Juncadella stuck his Prema Powerteam car into the fences at Lisboa.
For Sims, it had been something of a luckless weekend – the young Briton also suffered a first lap accident in yesterday’s Qualifying Race. In the mess, Sims’ Raikkonen-Robertson Racing team mates, Carlos Munoz and Rio Haryanto also retired.

Short-lived restart
The race got going again at the start of lap 3, but not for very long. While the field stormed into the slow and longing Lisboa turn, both Abt and Vanthoor jumped ahead of Mortara with Abt leading the trio.
Sadly for the 17-year-old, excitement got the better of him as the youthful German speared his machine into the barrier at the exit of Maternity Bend. Another safety car.
With Abt’s wreckage laid bare at a difficult part of the circuit, the race was held stationary it until the beginning of lap 7. Seeing only Vanthoor ahead of him, Mortara knew that would be his chance to retake the lead and he did so, slipstreaming aggressively by the Belgian prior to Lisboa.
From here Mortara extended his lead over his fellow Signature runner, making sure that he would not be caught again.

While things remained all square out front, behind the leaders drivers were still pushing hard for places – including Valtteri Bottas. The Finn had a difficult qualifying race, as his car struggled with poor straight-line speed, but a reconfigured car allowed him to lunge passed the half-asleep Marco Wittmann for 3rd.
Bottas would soon pick up the rear of 2nd place Vanthoor, but the Signature man always had just enough to stay ahead of the Finn; although it was close, Bottas was always 0.5 of-a-second too far behind – never close enough to make a decisive move.
More impressive was GP3 regular Roberto Mehri. The Spaniard was left to start from 22nd position following a last lap car failure in yesterday’s Qualifying Race; however by the 9th lap Mehri had already moved into the top 12. He would continue to slice through the pack, starting with Hideki Yamauchi (lap 10), Felipe Nasr (lap 11), Carlos Huertas (lap 13) and Felix Rosenqvist (lap 15) to steal a stunning 8th place.

Effortless
Regardless of Mehri’s efforts, it was Mortara that took the spoils and the headlines with an emphatic run to the flag, having never looked threatened once he reclaimed the lead from Vanthoor. Mortara was, quite reasonably, delighted with the result:

“It’s a great feeling and a great honour for me to be in the history books, but all I have done is win this Grand Prix twice. We don’t have to forget that every year, it’s a tough competition. This year it was a big fight too. We were pushing really hard and I was really pushing hard. It was really tough for me.”

With this, not only does the Italian becomes the first driver to win two single-seater races at the prestigious Macau Grand Prix since Geoff Rees was victorious in 1980, but Mortara also becomes the first to achieve this feat in a Formula 3 years.

Laurens Vanthoor claimed 2nd just ahead of the feisty Bottas, but they were some way ahead of lonely Marco Wittmann in 4th. Neither Vanthoor nor Bottas were too disappointed with their podiums though:

“I am happy with my second place, it is a really good result for this kind of race. I really wanted to win but I must admit that Edoardo was stronger than me. He was faster and did a better job – and he deserves the win, and deserves to be in the history books as a two-time Macau winner,” said Vanthoor.

Bottas added that:

“I was catching him lap-by-lap a little bit, but it was just not enough. On the second last lap, when I would have had a chance to catch him at the end of the straight, it was not a perfect lap and I didn’t catch him enough. I am happy for the team and happy for Mercedes-Benz, as it was quite short notice that we came here, that we got on the podium.”

Renger van der Zande made a late move for 5th passed Antonio Felix da Costa; however neither felt worried by the presence of 7th place Jean-Eric Vergne.
Behind the 8th place Mehri were Felix Rosenqvist (9th), Carlos Huertas (10th), Felipe Nasr (11th). Alexander Imperatori came home a wonderful 12th after starting 26th – late moved passed Yamauchi (13th) and Jazeman Jaafar (14th) were enough to him a credible finish.
Will Buller was first home of the British runners; albeit a disappointing 15th and only 0.3 of-a-second ahead of James Calado (16th).

2010 may not have given us a classic Macau Grand Prix by any stretch of the imagination, but it would be hard to not have been impressed by Edoardo Mortara today. The Italian kept his composure when behind his teammates and equally kept his head when he was ahead of them.
With this year’s F3 Euroseries title also in his back pocket, it should be interesting to see what he does next.
Race Rating: 3 out of 5

——–

Feature Race, Formula 3 Grand Prix of Macau (November 21st)

Pos. Driver Team Time
1. Edoardo Mortara Signature 39:30.753
2. Laurens Vanthoor Signature +2.120
3. Valtteri Bottas Prema Powerteam +3.156
4. Marco Wittmann Signature +6.230
5. Renger van der Zande Motopark Academy +10.631
6. Antonio Felix da Costa Carlin +13.173
7. Jean-Eric Vergne Carlin +16.508
8. Roberto Merhi Prema Powerteam +19.313
9. Felix Rosenqvist Performance Racing +20.343
10. Carlos Huertas Hitech Racing +21.362
11. Felipe Nasr Raikkonen Robertson Racing +22.994
12. Alexandre Imperatori Toda Racing/KCMG +23.926
13. Hideki Yamauchi Hanashima Racing +25.486
14. Jazeman Jaafar Carlin +25.989
15. William Buller Fortec Motorsport +31.563
16. Yuji Kunimoto Tom’s +36.143
17. Rafael Suzuki Tom’s +36.621
18. Oliver Webb Fortec Motorsport +41.413
19. James Calado Carlin +41.753
20. Yuhi Sekiguchi Three Bond Racing +46.198
21. Adderly Fong Sino Vision Racing +46.336
22. Lucas Foresti Fortec Motorsport +46.731
23. Hywel Lloyd CF Racing/Manor Motorsport +49.720
24. Kimiya Sato Motopark Academy +52.555
Did not finish
25. Daniel Abt Signature +13 Laps
26. Rio Haryanto Raikkonen Robertson Racing +15 Laps
27. Michael Ho Raikkonen Robertson Racing +15 Laps
28. Carlos Munoz Hitech Racing +15 Laps
29. Daniel Juncadella Prema Powerteam +15 Laps
30. Alexander Sims Raikkonen Robertson Racing +15 Laps

Formula 1 Test (Yas Marina, November 20th)

So, the 2010 Formula 1 season finally ended this afternoon in the dipping evening sun in Abu Dhabi.

Today, saw the last day of testing at the expansive Yas Marina circuit also bore witness to Ferrari topping the time sheets once again, as the teams try to get used to their new Pirelli rubber. As pointed out yesterday, the registered lap times don’t actually mean that much, but it is all about the detail that engineers can bank.
Drivers, too, play their part, as the Formula 1 pilots feed information to their team as they effort to understand what the new tyres are doing.

On track Fernando Alonso registered both the fastest time and the most laps, as the twice World Champion clocked up 105 tours of the track – a distance only just shy of two full Grand Prix. Newly crowned World Champion, Sebastian Vettel was next up, three-tenths of-a-second shy of the Spaniard. Vettel managed 66 laps during the day’s running, following a tyre failure similar to the one he suffered yesterday – it is thought both failures were caused by cuts from debris.
Rubens Barrichello also got in a solid 101 lap run, setting the 3rd fastest lap in the process – the Brazilian had an advantage of four-tenths of-a-second over Renault’s Robert Kubica and the McLaren pair of Gary Paffett and Oliver Turvey.
Michael Schumacher eventually ended up 7th on the timing list after his fastest lap was disallowed, after it was judged that the German veteran had severely cut a corner.
There was an early red flag for Force India’s Paul di Resta when his Mercedes-powered machine ground to halt on track with a sensor failure; however the young Scot still managed to notch up a fastest lap 0.6 of-a-second quicker than team mate Vitantonio Liuzzi.

Of the so-called “new teams”, Jarno Trulli was the quickest in his Lotus Cosworth. In his 83 lap run, the Italian managed a lap time of 1:44.521 – some two-tenths faster than Hispania’s Pastor Maldonado (65 laps), with Virgin’s Timo Glock only just last on the timing sheets after his 83 laps.
Despite all his criticism, Maldonado has actually been quite impressive in terms of some raw speed this week; although it remains to be seen if he can keep whatever car he ends up driving out of barriers and walls.

And that is it. Formula 1 has officially finished for 2010. There will be no more testing until the first week of February when the new cars will roll out of their garages for the first time in Spain.
Until then, there will be stories, news, rumour, hype and Christmas, but truthfully, nothing ever stops in this sport.

Abu Dhabi, Pre-Season Test (November 20th)

Pos  Driver              Team         Time       Laps
 1.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari      1m40.529s  105
 2.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull     1m40.825s  66
 3.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams     1m41.294s  101
 4.  Robert Kubica       Renault      1m41.614s  91
 5.  Gary Paffett        McLaren      1m41.622s  46
 6.  Oliver Turvey       McLaren      1m41.740s  30
 7.  Michael Schumacher  Mercedes     1m41.757s  74
 8.  Paul di Resta       Force India  1m41.869s  35
 9.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber       1m42.110s  43
 9.  Sebastien Buemi     Toro Rosso   1m42.145s  98
10.  Tonio Liuzzi        Force India  1m42.416s  47
11.  Sergio Perez        Sauber       1m42.777s  46
12.  Jarno Trulli        Lotus        1m44.521s  83
13.  Pastor Maldonado    Hispania     1m44.768s  65
14.  Timo Glock          Virgin       1m44.783s  83

2010 Formula 3 Grand Prix of Macau (Qualifying Race)

Edoardo Mortara cruised to an easy victory at Macau in this morning Formula 3 qualifying race.

The Italian had qualified his Signature Racing machine on pole position in the delayed qualifying session ahead of Valterri Bottas.
The 21-year-old Finn attempted a short-lived attack on Mortara into the opening couple of kinks, but as they approached the tight Lisboa corner, Mortara had the lead sown up.
Bottas’ run in 2nd place was short lived though as Germany’s Daniel Abt nosed his way passed the Finn on the circuits fast straights.

Things were rather less calm behind the leaders. As field stormed through the opening fast section, both James Calado and Alexander Sims lost their rear ends exiting Mandarin Bend, causing both to spin and hit the wall – Calado especially hard. The British Formula 3 runner gave the Armco a hefty whack, leaving him with a stiff neck, but thankfully no other injuries – both drivers retired on the spot. Following the wreck, Calado concluded that:

“I came through the fast right kink before Lisboa, which is usually easy flat – like Woodcote at Silverstone – and just lost the rear at 160mph. I went into the barrier and don’t know what happened. There was a big impact, which launched me 200m further down the road, and left me and Sims with half a car each. It caught me by surprise. I shunted into the barrier at one of the easiest corners on the track.”

Sadly, Calado’s rear wheel was stripped from his Formula 3 machine and smashed into the front wing of Oli Webb’s Fortec Motorsport car. With no front end grip, the British driver ploughed helplessly into the barriers at Lisboa.

On a circuit where grip was not a premium, the Formula 3 youngsters were certainly being caught out. By the third lap, Britain had lost the fourth of its five entrants, as Hywel Lloyd planted his Manor car into the barriers – again at Lisboa corner.

One man who was certainly not being caught out was Laurens Vanthoor. The Signature driver had been running 4th by the end of the first tour, but moves on Bottas (lap 2) and Abt (lap 3) saw the Belgian move into the top 2.
Abt defended his place vigorously – perhaps too vigorously as the he weaved across the front of Vanthoor on the fast Mandarin Oriental straight. It would earn Abt a warning for dangerous driving. Bottas, meanwhile, fell further down the order, while GP3 ace Roberto Mehri sneaked passed the Finn into 4th position – it was clear that while Bottas had a good car through Macau’s tighter sections, there simply wasn’t enough speed on the straights. Bottas later reflected that:

“We got a bit unlucky with the slipstream. We need to find a solution with the straight-line. In the mountain section I was really quick, but there is nowhere to overtake. The car felt really good; there are no problems.”

By the halfway point, Mortara had secured a 3.5 second lead and for the rest of the event, it would generally stay in that region – the Italian neither felt the need to extend, nor was he truly threatened by the following Vanthoor.
With the top 2 positions seemingly secured, Mehri made some very aggressive moves for 3rd on Abt, eventually gaining the place with two-and-a-half laps remaining.
The position was not so secure though. Within a lap, it was Mehri under pressure and the Spaniard relented on the approach to the braking point at Lisboa. Indeed Mehri lost not one, but two places – firstly to Abt and then Bottas as Mehri seemed to brake ever so softly into the turn.
Unfortunately for Mehri, outside circumstances had dictated his fall down the order – a slow puncture had also damaged his suspension and by the chequered flag, the Spaniard had dropped to 22nd position. A disappointed Mehri confessed:

“I don’t know what happened, we need to check the data. It’s a shame, because I was really quick and to win the race was not impossible, but now I’m starting from the back.”

Unaware and unconcerned by Mehri’s issues, Edoardo Mortara sailed to victory, leaving him to start on pole position for tomorrow’s Feature Race. A delighted Mortara said later:

“My start was really good, but at the same time Bottas was side by side with me on the first straight. After that, I was pretty safe. I was a bit pushed but nothing happened really – and I just put the cruise control on and went away.”

Vanthoor crossed the line 2nd to give him a front row start, while Abt (3rd) and Bottas (4th) claim the second row of the grid.
The race was quite uneventful for those that followed. Marco Wittmann secured an unperturbed 5th position ahead of Renger van der Zande (6th), Jean-Eric Vergne (7th) and Carlos Huertas. William Buller was the sole British runner at the end – the Formula 3 driver took the chequered flag in 19th.

The order of finishing will be how the grid lines up for tomorrow morning’s race.
Race Rating: 2 out 5
——–

Qualifying Race, Formula 3 Grand Prix of Macau (November 20th)

Pos. Driver Team Time
1. Edoardo Mortara Signature 22:14.842
2. Laurens Vanthoor Signature +2.342
3. Daniel Abt Signature +9.414
4. Valtteri Bottas Prema Powerteam +9.647
5. Marco Wittmann Signature +18.766
6. Renger van der Zande Motopark Academy +20.001
7. Jean-Eric Vergne Carlin +20.709
8. Carlos Huertas Hitech Racing +21.312
9. Antonio Felix da Costa Carlin +26.268
10. Daniel Juncadella Prema Powerteam +27.576
11. Felix Rosenqvist Performance Racing +31.265
12. Felipe Nasr Raikkonen Robertson Racing +35.510
13. Jazeman Jaafar Carlin +36.516
14. Rio Haryanto Raikkonen Robertson Racing +43.046
15. Lucas Foresti Fortec Motorsport +50.375
16. Carlos Munoz Hitech Racing +50.894
17. Yuji Kunimoto Tom’s +51.266
18. Rafael Suzuki Tom’s +52.066
19. William Buller Fortec Motorsport +53.481
20. Yuhi Sekiguchi Three Bond Racing +53.732
21. Hideki Yamauchi Hanashima Racing +53.956
22. Roberto Merhi Prema Powerteam +55.035
23. Adderly Fong Sino Vision Racing +56.503
24. Michael Ho Raikkonen Robertson Racing +1:03.691
25. Kimiya Sato Motopark Academy +1 Lap
Did not finish
26. Alexandre Imperatori Toda Racing/KCMG +2 Laps
27. Hywel Lloyd CF Racing/Manor Motorsport +8 Laps
28. Oliver Webb Fortec Motorsport +10 Laps
29. James Calado Carlin +10 Laps
30. Alexander Sims Raikkonen Robertson Racing +10 Laps

No Formula 3 for South Korea… yet

The 2010 Korea Super Prix has been cancelled, with the activation of Force Majeure being cited as a reason. According to the event organiser Barry Bland,

“KAVO have had to cancel the Korea Super Prix… We understand that this due to a legal technicality with the circuit, which appears to have been brought about by some objectors.”

It is expected that the event, which was pulled around the time of the Brazilian Grand Prix weekend, will finally return in 2011; however for this year, the international Formula 3 season will end this weekend in Macau.
I wrote about the original Korea Super Prix some weeks ago and thought back then that events like the Super Prix are absolutely vital if the likes of Formula 1 really wish to be successful in the future. A single race per year will struggle to germinate a fanbase, but an active junior competition with local and international drivers could go someway to drawing interest.
Let’s hone the race makes a belated start next year.

Lotus Dives in to IndyCar

Takuma Sato in a Lotus-liveried KV Racing machine at Indianapolis. © kvracingtechnology.homestead.com

Yesterday evening the IZOD IndyCar Series received further boost when it was confirmed that Group Lotus are to enter as an engine manufacturer from 2012.

They will join long-time partner Honda and series returnees, Chevrolet as the IndyCar’s power suppliers.
The Malaysian owned company has also revealed that they are to be an aero-kit designer for the 2012 season as well, running head-to-head with Dallara and Chevrolet; however it is thought that more aero-kit teams may join at a later date.
That Lotus are presenting themselves as an engine manufacturer is something of an unexpected move, as it was originally thought that they would be using Cosworth built power units.
The company has yet to release their proposed engine specifications; however it is a given that it will be a turbocharged V6 engine run on bio-fuel.

Lotus aligned themselves to KV Racing this season, covering Takuma Sato’s machine in their famous green and yellow colours; however the three-car squad suffered a torrid season. Sato, along with team-mate’s EJ Viso, Mario Moraes and part-time KV racer Paul Tracy notched up approximately forty accidents this season, including several incidents where they managed to take each other out. It is thought that KV will hold onto Sato and one of either Viso or Moraes, but regardless of who is driver, owners Jimmy Vasser and Kevin Kalkhoven are hoping for a better 2011 season.
The company has also announced racing programmes for Le Mans GT2 and GT4 as well as a tie-up with GP2’s ART Grand Prix team to run alongside its IndyCar programme. Although Team Lotus has a rich history at Indianapolis as a chassis supplier, this will be the first time that Group Lotus will enter its own engines.

Lotus ran at Indianapolis on multiple occasions during the 1960’s with victories from Jim Clarke and Graham Hill, as well as several notable entries from Jochen Rindt, Dan Gurney and Parnelli Jones.
Whether Group Lotus can live up to the history carved out by its other half remains to be seen. However, it can be agreed that this yet another step forward for the IndyCar Series, as the American single-seater Championship aims to build its shattered legacy.

Formula 1 Test (Yas Marina, November 19th)

With Bridgestone falling by the wayside, today marked Pirelli’s first day as Formula 1’s sole tyre supplier.
All twelve teams stayed behind at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina’s circuit this week, with the young driver test running on Tuesday and Wednesday; however Pirelli’s run will ensure that teams will not pack up until Saturday evening.

Jaime Alguersuari was the first driver to take to the track on the new rubber, but with only eight sets of tyres available to each team for the two day test, careful running may be at a premium – for this test, only soft and medium compounds will be in use. As with any test session, it is next to impossible to garner any worthwhile information from the laptimes – it is a pointless exercise akin to trying to bottle and sell air, but no doubt a few will try their best to sell their knowledge and a few will be willing to pay up for the pleasure.

Days like today and tomorrow belong to the engineers – the people in the garage who look at the information and characteristics while also listening to driver feedback, are the ones who truly know the score and will doubt make so much more of the detail. The average person (like me) simply has no idea the teams stand with the new tyres.

For the record, Ferrari’s Felipe Massa registered the fastest lap of the day, while also jointly covering the most distance with McLaren’s Gary Paffett. Rubens Barrichello was the only other driver to get in more than 90 lap; although Sauber’s Kamui Kobaysashi, Nico Rosberg (Mercedes), Heikki Kovalainen (Lotus) and Hispania’s Pastor Maldonado were also busy, each clocking more than 80 tours of Yas Marina.
Renault’s Robert Kubica ran only 39 laps, although the Pole got in far more time than the Force India pairing of Adrian Sutil and Paul di Resta with both getting only 20 laps each – all three suffered from mechanically hit runs.

Abu Dhabi, Pre-Season Test (November 19th)

Pos  Driver              Car          Time       Laps
 1.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari      1m40.170s  94
 2.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull     1m40.500s  77
 3.  Gary Paffett        McLaren      1m40.874s  94
 4.  Kamui Kobayashi     Sauber       1m40.950s  83
 5.  Robert Kubica       Renault      1m41.032s  39
 6.  Rubens Barrichello  Williams     1m41.425s  91
 7.  Paul di Resta       Force India  1m41.615s  20
 8.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes     1m41.778s  81
 9.  Jaime Alguersuari   Toro Rosso   1m42.019s  71
10.  Adrian Sutil        Force India  1m42.859s  20
11.  Timo Glock          Virgin       1m44.124s  78
12.  Heikki Kovalainen   Lotus        1m44.686s  88
13.  Pastor Maldonado    Hispania     1m45.728s  83


The 2011 Firestone Indy Lights Schedule

Indy Lights returns to Kentucky in 2011. © Ron McQueeney

After what has already been a busy week in the US for single-seater racing (and is about to get busier this evening), the Firestone Indy Lights Championship has released its racing calendar for the 2011 season.

Indy Lights, the primary junior category for IndyCar, has extended its schedule to twelve races, including the series’ first headline event since 2007.
As well as supporting the IndyCar’s at several of its events, the Indy Lights will lead the Star Mazda championship at Canada’s Trois Rivieres circuit at the beginning of August. Also next year, the Milwaukee Mile makes a return, while New Hampshire and Baltimore join the series; however Watkins Glen, Edmonton, Mid-Ohio, Sonoma, Chicagoland and Homestead have all disappeared.
As it stands, the 2011 calendar will take in five ovals, five street circuits and a single natural road course venue (Barber Motorsports Park).

There is expected to be a sixth oval race that will run at Las Vegas Motor Speedway, but that has yet to be confirmed although an announcement is expected soon. This is the busiest Indy Lights season since two years ago, when it ran fifteen races, including a double-header at the street circuit in St Petersburg.

2011 Firestone Indy Lights Championship

March 26-27, St. Petersburg, Fla.
April 9-10, Barber Motorsports Park
April 16-17, Long Beach, Calif.
May 27 Indianapolis Motor Speedway
June 18-19, The Milwaukee Mile
June 24-25, Iowa Speedway
July 9-10, Toronto, Canada
Aug. 6-7, Trois Rivieres, Canada
Aug. 13-14, New Hampshire Motor Speedway
Sept. 3-4, Baltimore, Md.
Oct. 1-2, Kentucky Speedway
Oct. 15-16, TBA

Goodbye Bridgestone, Hello Pirelli

Next year, those will be Pirelli signs. © Ercole Colombo

Today’s young driver test session marked Bridgestone’s final day as Formula 1’s sole tyre supplier.

The tyre company originally became involved in the sport with a couple of one-off appearances with Kazuyoshi Hoshino the 1976 and 1977 Japanese Grand Prix, but did not enter full-time until 1997. Bridgestone enjoyed a healthy competition with Goodyear for two seasons, until the American company left the sport, paving the way for Michelin to enter the fray in 2001.

When Michelin opted out of Formula 1 in 2006, it once again left Bridgestone as the sole supplier, before even they announced that they were to leave at the completion of the 2010 season. Today’s rookie test marked that end and come Friday morning, Pirelli will return to Formula 1 for their first official run following a nineteen-year gap. Pirelli will also supply the GP2, GP2 Asia and GP3 formulae.

In total, Bridgestone have competed in 244 Grand Prix, winning 175 of them; although 116 of those races went unchallenged. They also claimed 11 drivers and constructor’s titles each.

New Blood

There are times when the attention of the media and Formula 1 team bosses wander, as their eyes capture a precocious new talent coming into focus. 

These moments, when a new young hero makes themselves known to the paddock is often the same time an ageing animal begins to fall from view. It is the sport changing its guard.
Where at one stage, the presence of a driver could be the final jigsaw piece on the road to success, that same protagonist will eventually tumble down the order from smaller team to smaller team, as they become more and more desperate to stay in the top flight.
Some depart gracefully; others hang on for as long as possible, their reputation dented more and more with every 17th place finish. This situation is not new.

Alain Prost left Formula 1 at just the right time; indeed the Frenchman topped off his stunning career with a fourth title at the Williams team in 1993. On the other hand, the career of the late Michele Alboreto took a nosedive once he left Ferrari in 1988 – at one time a race winner, the Italian would later be subjected to seasons at Larousse, Footwork and Lola where he would often struggle just to qualify.
If one were to examine the 2010 field, it is difficult to see where Nick Heidfeld, Rubens Barrichello or Jarno Trulli go to once their current contracts expire.

When Sauber announced that their 2011 line-up would consist of Sergio Perez and Kamui Kobayashi, it was clear that Heidfeld would be battling for scraps in Formula 1. The likeable German has on occasion hinted at talks taking place with teams for a drive, but it is unclear as of yet who with.
At the weekend, Perez secured runner-up spot to Pastor Maldonado in the GP2 Series Championship and a very strong run this season has seen his stock rose significantly. No doubt four victories, including the GP2 Feature Race at Monaco were helped, but it is no secret that Perez brings plenty of backing from Mexican telecoms company, Telmex.
Unfortunately for Sauber, one thing that neither Perez nor Kobayashi have is experience – something that Heidfeld has in spades. In terms of development and feedback, 2011 could still be difficult for the Swiss squad.

Kobayashi’s former Toyota teammate, Jarno Trulli, also finds himself at something of a crossroads. The Italian has seen his career tail off in recent years and has struggled to be a consistent points scorer ever since he was dropped by Renault in 2004.  Now the Italian finds himself at Lotus and while the team has done relatively well on their return to Formula 1, he has generally been outpaced by his Finnish teammate, Heikki Kovalainen.
Neither Lotus driver has yet to be officially confirmed at the team for 2011; although it is widely believed that contracts have been signed, but where Kovalainen is still young and has quite good long term prospects, what of Trulli?  Rumours emerged at the Korean Grand Prix that former HRT pilot, Karun Chandhok, has been lined-up to eventually replace the Italian. Should the Indian driver be signed for a reserve position for next year, it may force Trulli’s hand for 2012.
Earlier this season, Chandhok notched up ten races for the struggling Hispania team, before being ousted for financial reasons. The Indian pilot has proved himself both popular and skilled behind the wheel and with the inaugural Indian Grand Prix next October, it may be beneficial for both Lotus and Formula 1 as a whole to have the 26-year-old in a seat, competitive or not.

Unlike Heidfeld and Trulli, Rubens Barrichello has had a very good time of it lately. Following several barren seasons, the Brazilian was a Championship challenger with the high-flying Brawn team in 2009, while this year has seen Barrichello perform some excellent drives with a Williams squad that has been both stuck in mid-field and stuck for cash. Prior to Barrichello’s much-fancied young teammate Nico Hulkenberg leaving the squad, word had circulated that it was the Brazilian veteran that was in danger of losing his seat to Pastor Maldonado.
The Venezuelan driver is an interesting case. Much like Renault’s Vitaly Petrov, the 2010 GP2 Champion has reputation of finding accidents wherever he roams; although he can be very fast on his day. Yet it is often noted that it took four long years for Maldonado to be crowned GP2 Champion, whereas the younger Hulkenberg a single attempt.
Sadly, it appears that the balance books may have decided the driver situation at Williams and while Hulkenberg may have been unwilling become a pay driver, Maldonado has no such qualms. Maldonado, like Perez, brings valuable backing to the table, whereas neither Barrichello nor Hulkenberg have much in the way of sponsorship.

Beyond that, many organisations have spent time investing in junior categories and preparing their own drivers – Red Bull and Renault are just two examples of this formula. One only has to look at the extensive programs run by both squads to understand their forward-looking vision for the sport.
At Red Bull, that vision has just produced the latest World Champion, Sebastian Vettel and waiting in the wings are World Series by Renault runner-up Daniel Ricciardo and British Formula 3 Champion, Jean-Eric Vergne. A further look down their driver list will also reveal Formula BMW Europe peddlers, Carlos Sainz Jr and Daniil Kvyat. This is before one takes into account that Red Bull currently have a second Formula 1 team for their junior drivers – Toro Rosso. That team currently houses Jaime Alguersuari and Sebastien Buemi, although it is debatable as to whether they are close to quality of driver that Vettel is.
The Red Bull junior programme also bites hard, as Kiwi Brendon Hartley found to his cost late last year. Although solid in previous formulae, Hartley’s form suffered once he broached the Formula 3 Euroseries and two World Series by Renault campaigns. Poor form and errors in two separate GP2 appearances this year have also made his outlook somewhat bleak. As his results failed to reach Red Bull’s expectations, Hartley was cut adrift from the programme.

Renault are also running a junior programme; their young driver route currently hosts Jerome d’Ambrosio, Ho-Pin Tung and Jan Charouz; yet it is their World Series by Renault Championships that allow them greater scope through which to eye emerging talent. It helps also that Renault team principal, Eric Boullier, is also the CEO of Gravity Sport Management – a company that prepares young drivers for their individual motorsport assaults. Their catalogue of drivers currently includes Romain Grosjean, Jim Pla, Alexander Sims, Christian Vietoris and 14-year old French karter Esteban Ocon.

With every driver that falls by the wayside in Formula 1, they are replaced by new blood keen to impress and garner the ultimate success. It is one of the factors that keeps the sport fresh, as talents and personalities from across the globe battle on circuits spread far and wide.  Some will have tested at Formula 1’s young drivers test over the last couple of days; some may take to get – some however, may never make it.
With all due respect to Heidfeld, Barrichello and Trulli, they are unique individuals and well-respected talents, but they are not Champions of the future.

Formula 1 Young Driver Test (Yas Marina, November 17th)

For the second consecutive day, Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo topped the young driver test at the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi. The Australian set a time that was 1.2 seconds faster than Sebastian Vettel’s Saturday pole position and a full 0.7 of-a-second faster than Jerome d’Ambrosio – this bodes well for Ricciardo, who also topped the rookie sessions last year 

Next up were British pair of Sam Bird (Mercedes, 3rd) and Gary Paffett (McLaren 4th), while Jules Bianchi continued the programme his began yesterday, registering the 5th fastest time in the process in the midst of a 93-lap day. Pastor Maldonado had an interrupted session in his début with the Williams team – the Venezuelan secured the 8th quickest lap time, despite sensor failures in the afternoon. Next up was Jean-Eric Vergne in the Toro Rosso; although the new British Formula 3 Champion missed out on the final hours of the session; he has to begin a long journey to China for this weekend’s Macau Grand Prix.

Hispania Racing ran GP2 Asia champion, Davide Valsecchi in the afternoon, following on from Josef Král in the morning; while Luiz Razia completed a 70 lap run for Virgin Racing. The Lotus pairing of Rodolfo Gonzalez and Vladimir Arabadzhiev brought up the rear in terms of times – they notched up 90 laps between them.

There were several red flag stoppages today, most notably for a spin by d’Ambrosio in his Renault; however there were other red flags for either debris or cars being stopped on circuit. Once again, it is impossible to truly read much into the laptimes – each driver programme may entail vastly different projects, while there is no doubt that the circuit conditions are also changing on a consistent basis.

Abu Dhabi, Young Driver Test (November 17th)

Pos  Driver                Car          Time       Laps
 1.  Daniel Ricciardo      Red Bull     1m38.102s  77
 2.  Jerome D'Ambrosio     Renault      1m38.802s  83
 3.  Sam Bird              Mercedes     1m39.220s  82
 4.  Gary Paffett          McLaren      1m39.760s  84
 5.  Jules Bianchi         Ferrari      1m39.916s  93
 6.  Sergio Perez          Sauber       1m40.543s  91
 7.  Paul di Resta         Force India  1m40.901s  27
 8.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams     1m40.944s  81
 9.  Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso   1m40.974s  61
10.  Yelmer Buurman        Force India  1m41.178s  67
11.  Davide Valsecchi      Hispania     1m43.013s  32
12.  Luiz Razia            Virgin       1m43.525s  70
13.  Josef Kral            Hispania     1m44.143s  61
14.  Rodolfo Gonzalez      Lotus        1m44.312s  41
15.  Vladimir Arabadzhiev  Lotus        1m45.723s  49

Formula 1 Young Driver Test (Yas Marina, November 16th)

The first day of the two-day young driver test has been run at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina Circuit, with Red Bull reserve driver, Daniel Ricciardo coming out on top. 

It can be difficult to gleam any real information from these tests, as the teams will be running various different programmes for their respective driver; however it does give the young Australian early bragging rights.  Tomorrow Gary Paffett will be taking the Mclaren seat from Oliver Turvey; while at Force India and Sauber, Yelmer Buurman and Sergio Perez step into their respective seats.
Of the runners, Pastor Maldonado completed the most laps (108), while Paul di Resta, Jerome d’Ambrosio and Rio Haryanto all managing less than 40 tours of the course.
The young drivers test continues tomorrow.

Abu Dhabi, Young Driver Test (November 16th)

Pos  Driver                  Car          Time
 1.  Daniel Ricciardo        Red Bull     1m39.616s
 2.  Oliver Turvey           McLaren      1m40.725s
 3.  Antonio Felix da Costa  Force India  1m41.381s
 4.  Esteban Gutierrez       Sauber       1m41.432s
 5.  Dean Stoneman           Williams     1m41.522s
 6.  Mikhail Aleshin         Renault      1m42.073s
 7.  Jean-Eric Vergne        Toro Rosso   1m42.489s
 8.  Paul di Resta           Force India  1m42.736s
 9.  Sam Bird                Mercedes     1m42.985s
10.  Jerome D'Ambrosio       Virgin       1m43.518s
11.  Pastor Maldonado        HRT          1m43.750s
12.  Jules Bianchi           Ferrari      1m43.894s
13.  Rodolfo Gonzalez        Lotus        1m44.924s
14.  Rio Haryanto            Virgin       1m49.439s

Nissan GT-R vs. Formula 3

Recently British motoring magazine, Autocar, visited the Pembrey circuit in Wales test Jean-Eric Vergne’s recent British Formula 3 Championship winner against Nissan’s revised GT-R.
The test, with Autocar scribbler and former racer Steve Sutcliffe, set out to compare Carlin Motorsport’s lightweight F3 car with Nissan’s brutal, but powerful road goer. 

Admittedly, conditions for the test were hardly ideal – it had been raining heavily – but that was not to deter Sutcliffe as guided the pair of machines around Pembrey’s tight and twisty layout.  Unsurprisingly, the nimble Formula 3 machine was indeed quicker around the Welsh countryside circuit, but whether or not it handles as sweetly as the Nissan is another matter.
To be honest, I’d still rather have the Formula 3 car any day of the week.

2010 Young Drivers Test

With the competitive action summed up for 2010, tomorrow sees the Formula 1 world change focus, as the first post-season tests take place at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina Circuit.
Heading the charge for the two-day run will be Daniel Ricciardo (Red Bull), Jules Bianchi (Ferrari) and the McLaren pair of Garry Paffett and Oliver Turvey. Sam Bird will be stepping into the drivers seat at Mercedes, while Force India will have Paul di Resta, Yelmer Buurman and Antonio Felix da Costa.

Renault are running with Mikhail Aleshin. Last month Aleshin became the first Russian driver to win an international championship when he pipped Ricciardo to the World Series by Renault crown in Barcelona and he’ll be hoping to impress once more; as will his Renault partner Jerome d’Ambrosio. The Belgian driver is one of two drivers testing with two teams this week – the GP2 runner is also spending time with the Virgin Racing crew.
Red Bull’s sister team, Toro Rosso will be running British Formula 3 Champion Jean-Eric Vergne – the Frenchman cruised to victory in the famed series with Carlin and will be moving up to World Series full-time in 2011. Sergio Perez and inaugural GP3 Champion Esteban Gutierrez will be testing the wares at Sauber.

Newly crowned GP2 Champion, Pastor Maldonado will be the other driver to split his talents across two teams. The Venezuelan charger will be running alongside Formula 2 Champion Dean Stoneman at Williams, but not before partnering Josef Král and Davide Valsecchi in the Hispania Racing machine.
As for the other two “new” teams, Lotus will be running Vladimir Arabadzhiev and Rodolfo Gonzalez; while Virgin will be running with three drivers – Luiz Razia and Rio Haryanto alongside occasional Friday morning runner Jerome d’Ambrosio.
Of the young drivers testing, only Sergio Perez has a confirmed Formula 1 seat for 2011 – the Mexican will sit alongside Kamui Kobayashi at Sauber; however it is expected that Pastor Maldonado and Jerome d’Ambrosio may have race seats confirmed with Williams and Virgin Racing respectively.

Following the young driver test, Pirelli will commence their first test on Friday and Saturday. The teams will be running with their regular drivers for these sessions as opposed to McLaren, who will just be utilising the efforts of Gary Paffett.

Winners and Losers

Vettel with the winning trophy in Abu Dhabi. © http://www.sebastianvettel.de

The Champion: Sebastian Vettel
What is there left to say about Sebastian Vettel?

After playing a staring role in the wet Italian Grand Prix in 2008, there was little doubt that the young German would eventually be Formula 1 World Champion.
While the skills required to take the ultimate prize needed time to bed in and take shape, the talent was certainly present.

One could argue that this should not have gone down to the wire and that Vettel should have claimed the title some time ago. Failures in Bahrain and Spain dropped him down the order; while his races were ultimately ended in Australia and Korea through no fault of his own. On the other hand, valuable points were also lost following accidents in Britain, Belgium and most famously Turkey, where he collided with his Red Bull teammate, Mark Webber.
Yet one should not disregard the fact that Vettel drove some stunning races this season. While the first half of the year only garnered two victories, it was the wins at Japan, Brazil and Abu Dhabi that turned the Championship toward the youthful German.

Mark Webber
As for Webber, the Australian had something of a slow start to the season and an off-kilter title run-in. Despite being points leader with three races remaining, the Red Bull driver still slipped down to 3rd overall. Webber’s European run was, however, very impressive. Victories when under pressure in Monaco and Britain showed that on any given day, Webber could be the class of the field; yet this form has yet to displayed over an entire season – and for this reason, he may never be World Champion.
Despite his speed, a lack of mental toughness seemed evident when the pressure was really on – especially when running in front of his home crowd in Melbourne and at key late season events in Korea and Abu Dhabi. In tricky conditions at the new Yeongam circuit Webber spun out, before collecting Nico Rosberg, while during the final weekend, the Australian’s good form seemed absent. When it mattered most, Webber was always behind his teammate.

Fernando Alonso
Of Fernando Alonso, there were some truly mesmerising performances, curious mistakes and plenty of controversy. Class victories in Italy, Singapore and Korea struggled to mask a lucky win in Bahrain – of course, it would be difficult to forget the crass nature in which he won at the Hockenheimring, when team orders came into play at Ferrari. At the tail end of the European season, Alonso noted that podiums would secure him the title – unfortunately for the Spaniard, he did not secure a position in the top-three at the final round.
There were also mistakes at Monaco (that ruled him out of qualifying), Silverstone (ruled him out of the points) and in Belgium (that ruled him out of the race). His luck abandoned him at Valencia when trapped behind an ill-timed safety car and at Abu Dhabi, where a poor team decision left him stuck behind Petrov.

Lewis Hamilton
In the end, Lewis Hamilton finished sixteen points behind Vettel. A times a fabulous, yet frustrating year for Hamilton, was topped off by spending much of the final race stuck behind Renault’s Robert Kubica, while Vettel disappeared. There were some fantastic drives from the 2008 World Champion, but also a number of brain fades – perfectly measured wins in Canada and Belgium were equally matched by an anonymous run at Monaco and a dreadful error in Italy, when he speared into the back of Felipe Massa.
His luck swung like a pendulum too – he inherited a lucky win in Turkey, but also lost good point scores in Spain (wheel failure) and Australia where he was hit by Webber. Indeed a podium was probably lost in Singapore too thanks to another collision with the Australian, yet over the course of a whole season, Hamilton never looked a World Champion, but rather a race winner. A co-star rather than leading protagonist.

Jenson Button
Of the five Championship protagonists, it arguable that McLaren’s Jenson Button probably made the fewest errors, yet he also did not seem to have the raw speed to truly challenge late on in the title hunt. Having taken two early wins (Australia and China), the reigning Champion failed to visit the top step of the podium at any other point during the year.
As the year wore on, Button appeared to struggle more and more with the handling characteristics of his McLaren Mercedes and with every race, the 30-year-old lost ground on the leaders, eventually falling out of the title battle in Brazil. Upgrades brought to the car never seemed to agree with Button, with the former Brawn driver being hurt most in qualifying – races soon became an uphill battle on a consistent basis.
It was always going to be tough for Button, although he did prove many of his doubters wrong by taking the battle to Hamilton in what was perceived to be “Hamilton’s team”. Sadly for Button, he will (for now) join the list of British drivers to never retain their title.

The Future?
At 23-years-old, this is only Vettel’s first Championship. Undoubtedly he will add to this tally, as I’m sure both Hamilton and Alonso will too. Lingering in the background is Robert Kubica – the canny Pole who will surely be a title contender in the right car.

Much of the last decade was lost to Schumacher and Ferrari domination – the barren years of the sport. However Formula 1 may just be about to enter a golden age and one that could match the Senna / Prost / Piquet / Mansell era for ferocity, emotion, action, adventure and intrigue.

Bring it on.