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.
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.
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 — (—)
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
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. | Signature | 39:30.753 | |
| 2. | Signature | +2.120 | |
| 3. | Prema Powerteam | +3.156 | |
| 4. | Signature | +6.230 | |
| 5. | Motopark Academy | +10.631 | |
| 6. | Carlin | +13.173 | |
| 7. | Carlin | +16.508 | |
| 8. | Prema Powerteam | +19.313 | |
| 9. | Performance Racing | +20.343 | |
| 10. | Hitech Racing | +21.362 | |
| 11. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +22.994 | |
| 12. | Toda Racing/KCMG | +23.926 | |
| 13. | Hanashima Racing | +25.486 | |
| 14. | Carlin | +25.989 | |
| 15. | Fortec Motorsport | +31.563 | |
| 16. | Tom’s | +36.143 | |
| 17. | Tom’s | +36.621 | |
| 18. | Fortec Motorsport | +41.413 | |
| 19. | Carlin | +41.753 | |
| 20. | Three Bond Racing | +46.198 | |
| 21. | Sino Vision Racing | +46.336 | |
| 22. | Fortec Motorsport | +46.731 | |
| 23. | CF Racing/Manor Motorsport | +49.720 | |
| 24. | Motopark Academy | +52.555 | |
| Did not finish | |||
| 25. | Signature | +13 Laps | |
| 26. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +15 Laps | |
| 27. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +15 Laps | |
| 28. | Hitech Racing | +15 Laps | |
| 29. | Prema Powerteam | +15 Laps | |
| 30. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +15 Laps | |
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. | Signature | 22:14.842 | |
| 2. | Signature | +2.342 | |
| 3. | Signature | +9.414 | |
| 4. | Prema Powerteam | +9.647 | |
| 5. | Signature | +18.766 | |
| 6. | Motopark Academy | +20.001 | |
| 7. | Carlin | +20.709 | |
| 8. | Hitech Racing | +21.312 | |
| 9. | Carlin | +26.268 | |
| 10. | Prema Powerteam | +27.576 | |
| 11. | Performance Racing | +31.265 | |
| 12. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +35.510 | |
| 13. | Carlin | +36.516 | |
| 14. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +43.046 | |
| 15. | Fortec Motorsport | +50.375 | |
| 16. | Hitech Racing | +50.894 | |
| 17. | Tom’s | +51.266 | |
| 18. | Tom’s | +52.066 | |
| 19. | Fortec Motorsport | +53.481 | |
| 20. | Three Bond Racing | +53.732 | |
| 21. | Hanashima Racing | +53.956 | |
| 22. | Prema Powerteam | +55.035 | |
| 23. | Sino Vision Racing | +56.503 | |
| 24. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +1:03.691 | |
| 25. | Motopark Academy | +1 Lap | |
| Did not finish | |||
| 26. | Toda Racing/KCMG | +2 Laps | |
| 27. | CF Racing/Manor Motorsport | +8 Laps | |
| 28. | Fortec Motorsport | +10 Laps | |
| 29. | Carlin | +10 Laps | |
| 30. | Raikkonen Robertson Racing | +10 Laps | |
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.

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.
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
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.
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
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
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.







