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Picture of the Day #003

The opening lap of yesterday’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix saw a truly terrifying crash between Michael Schumacher and Vitantonio Liuzzi. Thankfully both emerged unhurt from the wreck and even managed to raise a smile when they returned to the pits later on.

They say motorsport is dangerous. © Karim Sahib / AFP

2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Yas Marina, Round 19, November 14th)

Abu Dhabi track layout. © FIA

The 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix may have been a frustrating watch, but it was certainly a tense affair.

On one hand, Sebastian Vettel drove the absolutely perfect race to win at the Yas Marina circuit and become the youngest ever Formula 1 World Champion, but Ferrari did their best to make it easy for the 23-year-old. Indeed, one could argue that Fernando Alonso’s battle was lost before the erroneous pitstop.

The Spaniard had qualified 3rd, but lost that position off the line as McLaren’s Jenson Button shot passed him – meanwhile Vettel made a good start from pole, keeping 2008 World Champion Lewis Hamilton behind him. As for the other title contender, Mark Webber had qualified in Red Bull in 5th …and stayed there.

A frightening start.
Things were not so clear-cut for Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver found himself squeezed to the outside of turn 5 by Nico Rosberg, causing the veteran to spin on his own. The German driver faced oncoming traffic, until the worst happened and Force India’s Vitantonio Liuzzi hit Schumacher head on in a terrifying accident. Safety car. Upon reflection, Schumacher told the media:

“I went off the line, spun and because of the dirt there, the back of the car just came around. It’s a shame obviously as I would have liked to finish the season with a more positive ending but I am already looking forward to fighting again next year.”

For a moment, it was difficult to tell the outcome as shards of metal and carbon fibre littered Schumacher’s sight line, compounded further by a stray wheel that nearly found its way into the Mercedes cockpit. A scary situation and a reminder of how exposed the drivers are in open cockpit racing. Thankfully both were unhurt. With the field bunched up Rosberg, Vitaly Petrov (Renault), Lucas di Grassi (Virgin), Jaime Alguersuari (Toro Rosso) and both Hispania Racing cars use this time to pit for new tyres. For Alonso, the rejigged strategy for Rosberg and Petrov would soon wreck his day.

The safety car came back in at the start of lap six with Vettel still heading Hamilton, Button, Alonso, Webber and the second Ferrari of Felipe Massa in 6th. While the leading group were certainly static, those behind making the best of the conditions while the pack was still together – indeed it allowed Kubica to take 9th from Sutil and for Kobayashi to bonsai Barrichello for 7th, only for the Brazilian to fight back and repass the Sauber moments later.
Meanwhile Nico Rosberg – misplaced by his pitstop – sliced his way through the new teams with ease before ten laps had been completed.  Next up was the Williams of Nico Hulkenberg. It had not been a good weekend for Hulkenberg – having secured pole position last week at Interlagos, the 23-year-old was sadly mute at the Yas Marina circuit as he struggled in his Cosworth-powered machine. It showed as Rosberg forced a way through very quickly leaving him sitting in 13th.

Bad calls and strategic errors.
Webber on the other hand, couldn’t find a way around Alonso’s Ferrari – if anything; Alonso had pulled away ever so slightly. With little to lose, the Australian played the strategy card and pitted on lap 12.
Suddenly, a reaction. Spooked by Webber’s stop, Ferrari team strategists called in Massa two laps later and then Alonso on lap 16 – in doing so took their eyes off the ball in dramatic style. Both Webber and Massa found themselves trapped for a time behind Alguersuari with only Webber being allowed to pass the Toro Rosso driver – life would be tougher for Massa, as he would forced to stare at Alguersuari’s rear wing for the duration. More important was that both Rosberg and Petrov had jumped Alonso, leaving the Ferrari outside of the top ten and in trouble.
It would the beginning of a battle that Alonso was never going to win and with him losing nearly a second per lap behind the Russian, the title was slipping away.

The next title contender to stop was Lewis Hamilton on lap 24 with Vettel pitting one lap later, giving Button a temporary lead. Whereas Kamui Kobayashi almost threw himself off the road to let Vettel by, Hamilton would soon find himself locked up behind Robert Kubica’s Renault. Having started all the way down in 11th, the long running Pole had brought himself into a significant position and wasn’t about to let Hamilton pass.
Kubica wasn’t holding back though. Keen to get by Kobayashi, the Pole tried a tough move around the outside at the end of the longest straight in Formula 1, but to no avail. However, with a stumbling Kobayashi coaxing his struggling Sauber onto the next straight, Kubica was able take both the advantage and 3rd place. Within a lap, Hamilton had relegated Kobayashi a further position and set up the Renault just ahead.

While Hamilton pressed one Renault, Alonso was pressurising the other – neither were relenting and as each lapped passed, both were getting frustrated and desperate. With 40 laps down, Button finally stopped for fresh tyres, giving the lead back to Vettel, with the Kubica and Hamilton battle further behind – the 2009 Champion emerged in 4th – a further nail in Alonso’s Championship chances.  Alonso was not the only driver experiencing mid-race woes though – while not battling for any sort of championship, Timo Glock’s race was nailed on lap 44. The Virgin racing driver became the race’s third retirement when a gearbox breakage put a stop to his run.

Both Kubica and Adrian Sutil finally stopped for new tyres on lap 47 – whereas it dropped the quick running Sutil down to a point-less 13th place, Kubica rejoined in 5th ahead of the Petrov / Alonso battle. Game over. With Alonso down in 7th and Webber in 8th, the two favourites had seen their title hopes fall out of their grasp. Hamilton, meanwhile, in 2nd was not looking close to Vettel today; despite some late race fastest laps.
It would need something amazing to take this away from Vettel and it nearly came in the shape of Jarno Trulli. For the rear gunners it had generally been a quiet run to flag, only for the Lotus man to have his progress denied twice by broken wings. The Italian changed his front wing just after the halfway session, but that was nowhere near as dramatic as when his rear collapsed with two laps remaining. Once again, shards and clumps of carbon fibre littered the Yas Marina circuit, but Vettel saw just enough to take avoiding action.

A new Champion.
And with the last two laps rolled off, Sebastian Vettel took the chequered flag and with Alonso mired in 7th – still behind Petrov – the 23-year-old became the youngest World Champion in the history of Formula 1. It was Vettel’s fifth race victory of the season and was enough to give him a four-point advantage when it mattered most. The German was unstably ecstatic with the result:

“I’m speechless. I don’t know what you are supposed to say in these moments, it has been an incredibly tough season for myself and all of us, physically and mentally. We always kept believing in ourselves – no matter what people said – in the team and in our car. I kept believing in myself and today was a special day all round.”

Lewis Hamilton needed the victory, but 2nd place ahead of teammate Jenson Button was the best he could manage. A disappointed Hamilton was pragmatic afterward:

“I was able to match Sebastian’s pace in the early part of the race – but, after my pitstop, I was stuck behind Robert (Kubica). It was just impossible to get past him – he made no mistakes – so it wasn’t possible to resume my attack on Sebastian. But that’s the way motor racing goes sometimes.”

It had been a decent season for the McLaren team, but several mistakes and a car that was slightly off the pace, meant they were always just going to fall short.

Nico Rosberg followed up in 4th with a spirited drive with the Renault’s of Robert Kubica (5th) and Vitaly Petrov (6th). Next across the line was a clearly angry Fernando Alonso, who seemed to take his frustration out on Petrov on the slow down lap – as the two came side-by-side, an animated Alonso shook his fist in the direction of the Russian, but an unperturbed Petrov veered towards Alonso in a move of counter-intimidation.  Following the race, the Russian remained stoic:

“I had a long battle with Fernando, but the car had good top speed today so I was able to control the situation: I just did my job.”

A downhearted Alonso followed up with:

“everything went wrong today, from the start itself to the strategy. With hindsight, it would have been better not to pit so soon, but it’s easy to say that when you have all the facts…”

Mark Webber ended his day in 8th place. It really wasn’t a Champions performance from the Australian – three consecutive mediocre races had seen off his 2010 title chances.

“Earlier in the race we knew we had to roll the dice and go for it with the strategy, but it left us exposed and Fernando (Alonso) covered us. I tried my absolute hardest and we did everything we could, but in the end it wasn’t enough.”

Jaime Alguersuari (9th) and Felipe Massa (10th) rounded off the point scorers; although this is not a race (or a season) that the Brazilian will want to remember.  Nick Heidfeld finished 11th in what may well be his final Grand Prix. The Sauber driver beat Rubens Barrichello (12th) and Adrian Sutil (13th) to the line, with Kamui Kobayashi (14th), Sebastien Buemi (15th) and Nico Hulkenberg (16th) the last of the drivers on the lead lap.

Heikki Kovalainen took the chequered flag in 17th for Lotus – it was a result that means Lotus are the best of the “new” teams; a result that left team boss Tony Fernandes ecstatic:

“I am completely relieved, completely ecstatic, completely happy and completely vindicated in making the decision to go into F1. What we have achieved today is what dreams are made of. To complete 19 races after having just five months to build a car and finish in tenth in style is something that is truly magical. It shows you that even in the modern age where money and power counts for so much, there is a chance for ambition and dreams to shine.”

The Finn crossed the line ahead of Lucas di Grassi (18th) and both Hispania Racing cars, headed by Bruno Senna. Jarno Trulli was classified 21st, despite not seeing the flag.

And that was it for 2010. With his five wins, Sebastian Vettel can look back and count himself a worthwhile champion, while those behind will have to try again next year. Next season, the Championship ends at Interlagos – it can only be a blessing; Abu Dhabi may look stunning, but as a racetrack, it doesn’t really work. That so many drivers were unable to make overtaking moves today is further proof of that.
2011 also brings new challenges. While KERS and movable rear wings make a return, both the F-duct and double diffuser are banned. As Bridgestone exit stage left, Pirelli enter as the sole tyre supplier, with testing to begin on Tuesday morning – yes, Formula 1 takes one day off before the 2011 season begins again behind the scenes.
Will 2011 be as epic as this season? We will just have to wait to find out…
Race Rating: 2 out of 5
*All quotes courtesy of Formula1.com.
——–

Yas Marina, Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Round 19, November 14th)
1  VETTEL       Red Bull
2  HAMILTON     McLaren      +10.1s
3  BUTTON       McLaren      +11.0s
4  ROSBERG      Mercedes     +30.7s
5  KUBICA       Renault      +39.0s
6  PETROV       Renault      +43.5s
7  ALONSO       Ferrari      +43.7s
8  WEBBER       Red Bull     +44.2s
9  ALGUERSUARI  Toro Rosso   +50.2s
10 MASSA        Ferrari      +50.8s
11 HEIDFELD     Sauber       +51.5s
12 BARRICHELLO  Williams     +57.6s
13 SUTIL        Force India  +58.3s
14 KOBAYASHI    Sauber       +59.5s
15 BUEMI        Toro Rosso   +63.1s
16 HULKENBERG   Williams     +64.7s
17 KOVALAINEN   Lotus        +1 lap
18 DI GRASSI    Virgin       +2 laps
19 SENNA        HRT          +2 laps
20 KLIEN        HRT          +2 laps
21 TRULLI       Lotus        +4 laps
R  GLOCK        Virgin       +12 laps
R  SCHUMACHER   Mercedes     +55 laps
R  LIUZZI       Force India  +55 laps

Driver Team Points
1. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 256
2. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 252
3. Mark Webber Red Bull Racing 242
4. Lewis Hamilton McLaren 240
5. Jenson Button McLaren 214
6. Felipe Massa Ferrari 144
7. Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 142
8. Robert Kubica Renault 136
9. Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 72
10. Rubens Barrichello Williams 47
11. Adrian Sutil Force India 47
12. Kamui Kobayashi Sauber 32
13. Vitaly Petrov Renault 27
14. Nico Hulkenberg Williams 22
15. Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India 21
16. Sebastien Buemi Scuderia Toro Rosso 8
17. Pedro de la Rosa Sauber 6
18. Nick Heidfeld Sauber 6
19. Jaime Alguersuari Scuderia Toro Rosso 5
Constructor Team Points
1. Red Bull Racing 498
2. McLaren 454
3. Ferrari 396
4. Mercedes GP 214
5. Renault 163
6. Williams 69
7. Force India 68
8. Sauber 44
9. Scuderia Toro Rosso 13

2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Yas Marina, Round 19, November 13th)

Yas Marina track layout. © FIA

Free Practice 3
For the second session this weekend, Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel topped the timing sheets in Saturday afternoon practice; Vettel only secured the practice honours by 0.133 of-a-second over his Australian teammate, Mark Webber.

McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton suffered from overheating rear tyres under the afternoon sun – it did not stop the former Champion from setting the 3rd fastest time ahead of Fernando Alonso (4th) and Jenson Button (5th). It was quite a good display by Hamilton having missed much of the session, while he was garage bound.

Both Michael Schumacher (Mercedes) and Nico Hulkenberg (Williams) suffered minor front wing cracks during the sixty-minute stint, requiring those parts to be changed. It was clearly an irritant for the German pair that eventually registered the 7th and 11th quickest times of the session.
Heikki Kovalainen also stayed in the garage for much of the session, while the team worked on extensive set up changes. It resulted in the Lotus driver not getting many laps together; however the Finn still set the 19th fastest time.

Qualifying
It is the first blow for the season; a step closer to tentatively touching the world championship trophy. That is how much pole position means for tomorrow’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and for Sebastian Vettel, the advantage suddenly swung his way.

Championship challenger Lewis Hamilton scored a front row, but with his points position so dire, the 2008 Champion will need something special to grab his second crown tomorrow evening. Vettel still sees threat from his rear as Championship leader, Fernando Alonso will start from 3rd on the grid, with the second McLaren of Jenson Button alongside.
It was a disastrous session for fan favourite Mark Webber. The Australian, who needs to win, found himself mired in 5th – albeit on the racing line from the start. Webber must watch out for the other Ferrari of Felipe Massa, who will go from 6th.
Behind the title protagonists, Rubens Barrichello’s strong end to the season continues with a 7th place position ahead of former ‘teammate Michael Schumacher. Renault’s Vitaly Petrov (9th) and Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg (10th) will line-up from the fifth row.

Indeed the shock exit of the second qualifying session was Renault’s Robert Kubica. The Pole made several errors on his fastest lap on his way to the sixth row. Alongside him in 12th is the Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi – the Japanese driver slots in one row ahead of his experienced teammate, Nick Heidfeld (14th).
Adrian Sutil was the faster of the Force India’s in 13th place – Sutil’s teammate Force India Vitantonio Liuzzi, ended up three places further back in 16th, just ahead of Jaime Alguersuari’s Toro Rosso. From pole position in Brazil, to 15th spot seven days later, Nico Hulkenberg fell down to earth with a bang – his Williams not making it to the final ten-minute session.

The second Toro Rosso of Sebastien Buemi was the sole established car to not make it passed the first session of qualifying. The young Swiss driver made an error on his final run, nearly oversteering into the Armco on the exit of turn nineteen. It would leave Buemi just ahead of Jarno Trulli (19th), Heikki Kovalainen (20th), Timo Glock (21st), Lucas di Grassi (22nd), Bruno Senna (23rd) and Christian Klien (24th).

Abu Dhabi, 3rd Free Practice (November 13th)
1  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m40.696s
2  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m40.829s
3  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m41.280s
4  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m41.490s
5  BUTTON        McLaren       1m41.578s
6  PETROV        Renault       1m41.689s
7  SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m41.690s
8  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m41.729s
9  KUBICA        Renault       1m41.877s
10 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m41.893s
11 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m41.934s
12 MASSA         Ferrari       1m41.978s
13 BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m42.316s
14 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m42.566s
15 SUTIL         Force India   1m42.587s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m42.858s
17 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m42.993s
18 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m43.344s
19 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m44.876s
20 TRULLI        Lotus         1m45.048s
21 GLOCK         Virgin        1m45.050s
22 SENNA         HRT           1m45.490s
23 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m45.629s
24 KLIEN         HRT           1m46.464s

Abu Dhabi, Qualifying (November 13th)
1  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m39.394s
2  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m39.425s
3  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m39.792s
4  BUTTON        McLaren       1m39.823s
5  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m39.925s
6  MASSA         Ferrari       1m40.202s
7  BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m40.203s
8  SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m40.516s
9  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m40.589s
10 PETROV        Renault       1m40.901s
11 KUBICA        Renault       1m40.780s
12 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m40.783s
13 SUTIL         Force India   1m40.914s
14 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m41.113s
15 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m41.418s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m41.642s
17 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m41.738s
18 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m41.824s
19 TRULLI        Lotus         1m43.516s
20 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m43.712s
21 GLOCK         Virgin        1m44.095s
22 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m44.510s
23 SENNA         HRT           1m45.085s
24 KLIEN         HRT           1m45.296s

IndyCar and Chevrolet: Together Again

Members of the ICONIC committee with Chevrolet execultives and Mary Hullman-George. © indycar.com

This afternoon, the IZOD IndyCar Series received a major boost when American car manufacturer General Motors, announced that they are rejoin the series in 2012 under the Chevrolet banner.

Chevrolet left the series when it was still the Indy Racing League at the end of 2005, leaving Honda to be the sole engine supplier; however rumours began to spread on Monday evening that General Motors were interested once again.
In the press conference today, GM official Tom Stephens told the gathered media that:

“…re-entering Indy-style racing will help us take our advanced engine technology to the upper bounds of what’s possible. And it will also provide a dynamic training ground for engineers, who’ll transfer the technologies […] to the products we sell to our customers.

The company intend to provide purpose-built Chevrolet twin-turbocharged, direct-injected V6 engines to be jointly developed with Ilmor Engineering. Chevrolet will also be committing an aero-package for the new rules once they have been finalised – it is highly suspected that both Dallara and Lotus will also provide aerodynamic packages for the 2012 season.

Chevrolet already has quite a history in the sport, having taken seven Indianapolis 500 victories, four of which were with Penske Racing.
Rumours have also been spreading about the possible entry of FIAT as an engine supplier to the IndyCar Series; however these rumours have been much more vague and without any basis in fact.

The Bashing of Emanuele Pirro

Pirro drove for Audi in 2008. © http://www.audi.ma

Not content with bashing regular folk when they have the chance, British tabloid nonsense peddler, the Daily Mail, went on the warpath today against one of motorsports true gents.

Writing in today’s edition, Jonathan McEvoy saw fit to tar the legendary Emanuele Pirro with its own fanciful piece of subtlety.
Noting that Pirro is the driver steward for this weekend’s Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, McEvoy has targeted Pirro for another of their garbage campaigns that generally revolve around the theme of “they’re not English, therefore they’re against us”.
It would seem that the Daily Mail have noted that that Pirro is Italian… and therefore he must be – quite obviously – be angling a way to make sure Ferrari win both the race and the World Championship.

Tosh.

Pirro who (ironically enough) drove a McLaren F1 GTR in the 1998 Le Mans 24 Hour Race, claimed five Le Mans victories with German giant, Audi. Having graduated from the International Formula 3000 Championship in 1986 with Onyx Racing, the Roman racer went on to drive for two Italian other squads in a brief Formula 1 career – namely Benetton and Scuderia Italia.
Yet it would seem that the Daily Mail’s ire is that Pirro has Ferrari road car – he must therefore be heavily biased towards the Prancing Horse. In their rather short-sighted view, this can only be a case of the FIA trying to organise the final Grand Prix of the season, so that Ferrari can be victorious.

The likes of the Daily Mail must really be missing Max Mosley right now. An intriguing man that garnered far too many of his own headlines in the latter years of his tenure as FIA president; he gave the paper far too many stories to pen.  Sadly, now that Mosley has departed, the Daily Mail still appears to be stuck in some alternative universe, where ignorance is king and differing accents are not to be trusted.  How incredibly sad.
Thankfully, most Formula 1 and motorsport fans are intelligent people with a slightly better grasp of reality.

Perhaps someone should tell the Daily Mail that former Ferrari team principal Jean Todt is currently president of the FIA and that this is also a conspiracy to decide who wins the title. Somehow I can’t imagine them being able to spell “Jean Todt” properly.

Who is John Todd anyway?

Get Well Soon Christian Vietoris

© Gravity Sports Management

GP2 race winner Christian Vietoris will be leaving hospital tomorrow following an operation to have his appendix removed yesterday.
Ho-Pin Tung – another driver from the Gravity Sports Management table, has replaced the Racing Engineering man for this weekend’s GP2 finale in Abu Dhabi.

Vietoris has had a solid début year in GP2, if at some times at a little frustrating. While speed was often present during the first half of the season, poor luck was also in abundance.
However, since the Hungarian Grand Prix weekend, the German driver has picked up three podiums (including a victory) and a 4th place – these scores have helped propel Vietoris into 8th spot in the Championship standings.

In July, Christian was kind enough to take part in a Q&A session with the F1 Archive at which time he answered briefly about his difficult start to the season.

Tung, on the other hand has had an altogether more difficult season. The former DAMS driver struggled against team regular, Jerome d’Ambrosio, before suffering a fractured vertebra at the Hungaroring in August.

Vietoris’ Racing Engineering team mate, Dani Clos is fighting for 3rd overall in the GP2 Driver’s Championship; however a poor run of results in the last three race weekends has left the Spaniard some way adrift of his target.
Clos will start with something of a handicap though – the Spaniard, along with d’Ambrosio, Jules Bianchi, Sam Bird, Giedo van der Garde and new GP2 Series Champion Pastor Maldonado, has been given a ten-place grid penalty for tomorrow evening’s Feature Race.

I wish Christian all the best with his recovery and his eventual return to racing.

2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix (Yas Marina, Round 19, November 12th)

Abu Dhabi track layout. © FIA

Free Practice 1
In what was a largely quite morning session at the Yas Marina circuit, Sebastian Vettel fired the first shot across the bow of the Championship contenders.
The 23-year-old Red Bull driver clocked up a fastest lap of 1:42.760 – a stunning 0.6 of-a-second faster than 2nd fastest Lewis Hamilton.

Hamilton’s McLaren team had been busy working on updates right up until the last moment – indeed they cut it very fine.
The team were bringing their new rear wing upgrade to the circuit, but were stopped by customs; thankfully through some quick negotiations, the parts made it to the track in time. Fellow title challengers Mark Webber (4th) and Fernando Alonso (6th) also registered times a long way off of Vettel, with Jenson Button (3rd) heading the Webber and Renault’s Robert Kubica (5th) quicker than the Spaniard.
Alonso’s Ferrari teammate, Felipe Massa, was having problems with his telemetry feed during the 90 minutes – it would park the Brazilian for part of the session, leaving him to secure the session’s 11th best time.

Of the midfielders, Rubens Barrichello morning finished with a stutter. The Williams car stopped at the tail end of the morning run with an engine problem, necessitating an engine change for the later session.
There were also problems for Force India’s Adrian Sutil – the German lost time with brake problems; with little track time, Sutil registered the 14th best lap. His Italian teammate, Vitantonio Liuzzi took a new chassis for the final race of the year, having destroyed his previous car in Brazil. Liuzzi got in slightly more running than Sutil, but was less than a tenth-of-a-second slower on the time sheets at the chequered flag.

Fairuz Fauzy sat in for Heikki Kovalainen at Lotus for the first practice session; the Malaysian was one of the few to have a spin in the tricky conditions in opening minutes. The Malaysian driver would later lose further time with overheating issues leaving last on the time sheets with precious little running.
Christian Klien keeps his seat at Hispania Racing for the final weekend of the year in place of Sakon Yamamoto; however the Austrian driver found himself slower than teammate Bruno Senna at the end of running – albeit still a long way behind the front-runners.

Unusually for the region, there was some light rain prior to the morning session, leaving the track somewhat greasy. With very little in the way of drainage at the track, circuit remained slick for the early part of the day.

Free Practice 2
McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton topped the early evening session at the Yas Marina circuit, heading the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel. The 2008 World Champion registered a time of 1:40.888; some 0.257 quicker than his German rival.

Hamilton received a reprimand following the session after he swung across the front of Bruno Senna’s Hispania at the entrance of the pitlane. Hamilton felt that Senna had sent him wide in the final few turns and decided to make his feelings known to the Brazilian rookie.
Reigning World Champion, Jenson Button spent the session suffering from front-end imbalance, causing the Briton to lock his front brakes repeatedly. At the chequered flag, Button’s best lap was 1.2 seconds slower than that of his McLaren teammate – a laptime that left him down in 8th position.

A number of drivers had slight offs at various points of the circuit during the ninety-minute stint; however Felipe Massa was the first of the front-runners to have a full spin. Massa kept his Ferrari going, but it was not to last – with twenty minutes of the session remaining, the Brazilian driver pulled off at turn ten with a fuel problem, leaving a forlorn Massa to watch the rest of the session from the side of the track. Before stopping, Massa set the 6th fastest time.
Jaime Alguersuari also spun, but was unable to continue – the Spaniard stalled his Toro Rosso machine, finishing his practice run thirty minutes early.

Heikki Kovalainen found himself back in his seat at Lotus and was the quickest of the new teams. The Finn was classified in 19th, 4.3 seconds off the pace of Hamilton.

Abu Dhabi, 2nd Free Practice (November 12th)
1  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m40.888s
2  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m41.145s
3  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m41.314s
4  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m41.315s
5  KUBICA        Renault       1m41.576s
6  MASSA         Ferrari       1m41.583s
7  PETROV        Renault       1m42.096s
8  BUTTON        McLaren       1m42.132s
9  LIUZZI        Force India   1m42.203s
10 ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m42.222s
11 SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m42.246s
12 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m42.449s
13 SUTIL         Force India   1m42.535s
14 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m42.768s
15 BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m42.914s
16 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m42.950s
17 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m43.128s
18 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m43.584s
19 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m45.180s
20 GLOCK         Virgin        1m45.259s
21 TRULLI        Lotus         1m45.612s
22 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m46.053s
23 KLIEN         HRT           1m47.210s
24 SENNA         HRT           1m47.434s

Abu Dhabi, 1st Free Practice (November 12th)
1  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m42.760s
2  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m43.369s
3  BUTTON        McLaren       1m43.785s
4  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m43.840s
5  KUBICA        Renault       1m44.080s
6  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m44.121s
7  SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m44.199s
8  KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m44.604s
9  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m44.718s
10 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m44.737s
11 MASSA         Ferrari       1m45.160s
12 PETROV        Renault       1m45.445s
13 BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m45.474s
14 SUTIL         Force India   1m45.552s
15 LIUZZI        Force India   1m45.585s
16 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m46.003s
17 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m46.644s
18 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m47.105s
19 GLOCK         Virgin        1m48.450s
20 TRULLI        Lotus         1m48.472s
21 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m49.375s
22 SENNA         HRT           1m49.590s
23 KLIEN         HRT           1m50.274s
24 FAUZY         Lotus         1m51.705s

Král Returns to Super Nova

Josef Král returns to his Super Nova seat this weekend following his recovery from a dreadful mid-season accident at Valencia in June. 

In an accident that was eerily similar to the famous one suffered by Mark Webber at the European Grand some hours later, the Czech driver was following Rodolfo Gonzalez down one of the circuit long straights, when Král clipped the rear of the Arden International machine and flew over the top. Král then momentarily came down on his gearbox, before landing hard on all four wheels and slamming the barriers. The 20-year-old suffered two fractured vertebrae in the accident and was replaced for the following races by GP2 veteran Luca Filippi.

Thankfully the two-month gap between Monza and Abu Dhabi has afforded Král the opportunity to fully recover from his injuries and race again.

Mark Webber Drives the Yas Marina Circuit

And then it came to the final race… After eighteen races in the 2010 Formula World Championship, four drivers still stand with a mathematical chance of taking the crown. 

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso still leads the charge with an eight-point gap ahead of Australia’s Mark Webber with his Red Bull team mate, Sebastian Vettel bringing up third spot, some fifteen points shy of Alonso. McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton also has an opportunity to claim the title, but with a 24-point deficit, the 2008 Champion would need an absolute miracle to claim the crown at the final hurdle.
One very interesting aspect about the current standings is that should Vettel be ahead of Webber with Alonso in 3rd in Abu Dhabi, the title would be handed to the Spaniard. Considering the work and effort that has gone into this season by Red Bull; that would be an absolutely absurd result for the Anglo-Austrian team.

For a Red Bull to stake a claim on the Driver’s Championship, it would require orders for Vettel to let Webber claim the race win and eventually the Championship. Red Bull’s owner, Dietrich Mateschitz, has stated that his team would not impose team orders; however it is not beyond the realms of possibility that a deal could be brokered by the driver’s pre-race that would allow just such a situation to play out.
If Red Bull were to lose out on a Driver’s Championship considering the advantage their car has had through much of the season, it would be a great embarrassment to the squad. Sometimes playing it fair is simply a short cut to defeat and it would go some way to proving Ferrari right following the scandal at the Hockenheimring in July.

The midpack sees something of a warm contest between Williams and Force India as they battle for sixth in the Constructors Championship. Williams jumped Force India in the standings following Nico Hulkenberg’s run to 8th place at Interlagos last week and now lead the Silverstone-based team by a single point.
While on paper, this might not seem like the most interesting of fights, a good result for Williams could change their current status somewhat. The team has reportedly been on the poorer end of the scale for some time, but recent dealing with Porsche and Hispania Racing have shun a light for the squad and with Pastor Maldonado waiting in the wings, things are brighter still – at least financially.

However, it does leave Williams with a conundrum – they have potentially three drivers for next year with Rubens Barrichello, as well as Hulkenberg and Maldonado. With Williams supplying gearboxes and hydraulics to Hispania next year, it is not inconceivable that the English team may desire Maldonado to be “farmed-out” to Hispania for a season.
It would give Hulkenberg an opportunity to get into his stride alongside the veteran Barrichello and affords the 23-year-old time to gain vital experience. As quick as Maldonado is (and he is), he is also somewhat prone to finding himself involved in accidents – allowing him to gain time in a Formula 1 car. It may be detrimental to the team if he were to replace either of its current drivers.

It is not only the front of the grid where things are hotting up. At the tail end, new teams Lotus, Hispania and Virgin go into the final race of the season battling for their own respective honour.
After eighteen events, Lotus lead the trio for tenth place in the Constructor’s Championship. For much of the year, it was thought their battle for the prized spot would be with Virgin Racing, but while the Richard Branson-branded squad has just behind Lotus in terms of pace, they still rank behind Hispania in the tables due to the Spanish team having better finishes earlier in the season.
This would be an embarrassing defeat for Virgin – Hispania have had much publicised financial problems throughout the year; something that has left them unable to develop their Dallara constructed machine. In fact, the car that Hispania will be taking to Abu Dhabi is nearly the same machine they raced in Bahrain way back in March.
What has been truly remarkable about the Spanish team’s effort is that despite their lack of updates, they have for the most part remained well within the 107% ruling that is the perceived cut-off point for competitiveness. Considering the sheer amount of updates that the likes of Red Bull, Ferrari and McLaren have poured into their cars this year; that is a stunning achievement.

The close of the 2010 Formula 1 season also marks the final race for Bridgestone as the tyre company ends its involvement in the sport following a fourteen-year spell. Although the Japanese company initially supplied the 1976 and 1977 Japanese Grand Prix respectively, the 1997 season was the company’s first year as a full-time supplier.
Bridgestone will be replaced by the Italian tyre company Pirelli, who will be making their return to Formula 1 following an absence of nineteen years.

No F3 Euroseries for ART Grand Prix in 2011

© Ronald Wittek / http://www.art-grandprix.com

Top junior series team ART Grand Prix announced today that they will not be taking part in any Formula 3 series from next season onwards.
They revealed that their plan is too fully concentrate on their GP2 and GP3 participation.

The French team joined the Formula 3 Euroseries in 2003, claiming six drivers and seven team’s championships, including titles for current Formula 1 stars Lewis Hamilton and Nico Hulkenberg. However, with the emergence of GP3 this year and the strengthening of the British Formula 3 Championship, the Euroseries has witnessed a serious dip in stature and draw. Indeed, the Euroseries has seen such a dramatic shrinking of field size in recent years, it is questionable how long the series can survive.

ART were very successful off the bat at the beginning of the GP3 Series, eventually taking the title at Monza with young Mexican driver, Esteban Gutierrez. Indeed, Gutierrez is moving up to GP2, starting with the brief Asia Series in February. In September, ART Grand Prix were bolstered by the announcement that they will be backed by Group Lotus in both GP2 and GP3 from next season onward.

The group had originally applied to join Formula 1 for next season, but withdrew from the process due to “unfavourable economic conditions.”

Where to, Felipe?

Is Massa's time in red up? © http://www.ferrari.com

When Felipe Massa pull aside for Fernando Alonso at the Hockenheimring in July, it signalled more than just an unwilling acceptance of team orders at Ferrari, but may indeed have signposted the end of Massa’s time as a driver in a top team.

Ever since the controversial move, rumours in the media have been rife regarding Massa’s future and speculation that he would be out of the team as soon as 2011 have steadfastly refused to go away. It is unlikely that such a drastic move will be made with one of the leading players this late in the season; however, it leaves the Brazilian in something of a conundrum as to what happens next. Where can Felipe Massa go from here?

To understand this, one must examine how Massa is now perceived. Where only two years ago, the Brazilian fought a tooth and nail with Lewis Hamilton in a thrilling title battle, the Massa of today has being left to feed on scraps left by the Championship contenders. That the Brazilian has been beaten by Alonso is not such a bad thing, but that he has been beaten so thoroughly, is.
Now add to that a race that Massa had dominated and the Brazilian is ordered to move aside – where once a true Championship fighter, a pushover now sits. Some may argue that Massa moved aside to appease the team and help secure his seat, but in my eyes, it has probably only hastened his departure from the Scuderia.
Of course, there is always his accident from last year – how much has that affected Massa and how much has the presence of Alonso damaged Massa’s mental recovery. When Mika Hakkinen suffered a near fatal accident at Adelaide in 1995, he returned to a team that had David Coulthard as its second driver. No offence to Coulthard, but he’s no Alonso and never was.

No longer the bullish contender in the eyes of some, but a quality driver with broken confidence that can occasionally secure decent results – it is not exactly the unique selling point that squads will seek out. It is also a factor that could instantly rule Massa out of a driver with a top-level team. So what’s left?

Massa’s biggest possibility is Renault. The team currently runs with Robert Kubica and Vitaly Petrov and by 2012, both drivers may have left the team for very different reasons. Kubica has been linked to Massa’s Ferrari seat a number of times in the last eighteen months, although it would not be unreasonable for the Pole to turn down a drive in light of Alonso’s demands for inter-team dominance.
Petrov, on the other hand, has struggled occasionally during his début season with a lack of pace – he has also had several avoidable accidents. It has left question marks about his ability to stay in Formula 1; however the Russian is backed by a large amount of sponsorship from his homeland and it is dollars and cents that keep Petrov there for another year.
There is also a level of uncertainty regarding discussions with Group Lotus / Proton. Should the Malaysian company take over the team, it would change the face of the squad completely. This could either leave Massa being an in demand veteran to lead the Malaysian venture, or he could end up being shunned altogether.

There is slim potential for a seat with the Mercedes squad; however this depends on when exactly Schumacher finally retires and the status of Paul di Resta is at that time. In Massa’s favour, there is the presence of former Ferrari technical director, Ross Brawn as Mercedes team principal. Brawn already has a relationship with Massa’s manager, Nicolas Todt; son of former-Ferrari boss and current FIA president, Jean Todt, but even that connection may be too tenuous to guarantee a seat for the Brazilian.
Also, it may be unlikely that Massa quite fits the team’s desires – the team has thus far maintained quite a Germanic stance since it bought out Brawn last winter and may wish retain that. Initially there had been talk of Force India’s Adrian Sutil replacing Schumacher, but with the seven-time World Champion staying on, Sutil may stay with Dr Vijay Mallya’s squad for another season. Sutil may yet still be a factor at Mercedes for 2012.

Openings could free up at he likes of Williams or Force India, but Massa’s pay demands may push these teams out of the Brazilian’s reach.

Massa will not be the first driver to have been devalued by team orders. When Rubens Barrichello left the Ferrari fold at the end of 2005, his best option at the time was a seat with the works Honda team with future World Champion Jenson Button. Honda had limited success in 2006, but much of the following two seasons was quite barren as the Japanese company floundered under a top-heavy management structure and a series of poor handling machinery.
By 2007, Honda were in such disarray that even obtaining points was out of the question. When the Japanese squad pulled out the sport at the end of 2008, it was assumed that Barrichello would fall by the wayside too, until the team was famously saved by Ross Brawn’s buy out just prior to the start of the 2009 season.

Massa may well find himself in the same situation soon, but may not have Rubens’ luck when it comes to rejuvenated teams.

Mario Romancini

Romancini was the highest finishing rookie at Indy this year.

I do hate seeing tweets like these. 
While Mario Romancini may not have been a star in the IZOD IndyCar Series, the 22-year-old has acquitted himself quite well in the eleven races his drove with Conquest Racing.

The young Brazilian was dropped when funding for his seat ran out – for the rest of the year, his drive at Conquest was taken by Tomas Scheckter, Francesco Dracone, Sebastian Saavedra and Roger Yasukawa.
In his first attempt at the Indianapolis 500, Romancini was the highest finishing rookie with 13th place; a result he also achieved at St Petersberg at the beginning of the year.  Now Romancini is heading back to Brazil and hopes to return to the United States one day.  I hope he makes it too.


On my way to Brazil… Thanks for your support during these 2 years racing here guys! Maybe one day I can come back and race here again!

The 2011 Star Mazda Championship Calendar

Star Mazda will finish 2011 at Laguna Seca. ©www.starmazda.com

The schedule for the 2011 Star Mazda Championship has just been released. The US-based junior series features eleven events over a ten race weekends, while playing a supporting role to the IZOD IndyCar Series, the American Le Mans Series and one with USAC.

It will run on four street circuits, three ovals and three road courses, starting the final weekend of March in St Petersberg. The season will then reach a climax in September at the wonderful Laguna Seca circuit in California and will also take in a mid-season double header at Quebec’s Trois-Rivieres circuit.
The calendar has some changes to what was run this year: 2011 has seen the addition of the Milwaukee Mile, Sonoma Raceway and Baltimore, but has lost Sebring, New Jersey, Autobahn Country Club (Chicago), Road America and Road Atlanta.

Star Mazda counts itself as part of the Road to Indy campaign to encourage young drivers on a path to the IndyCar Series. Since taking the 2010 title, Juncos Racing man Conor Daly has recently tested in GP3 and will be testing the Indy Lights program with AFS/Andretti-Autosport later this week.
One date in April has still to be confirmed, but may well be Barber Motorsports Park as a support to the IndyCar Grand Prix of Alabama.

2011 Star Mazda Championship Schedule
March     26-27: Grand Prix of St. Petersburg with IndyCar
April          : TBA
May       27-28: O’Reilly Raceway Park with USAC
June      18-19: The Milwaukee Mile with IndyCar
June      24-25: Iowa Speedway with IndyCar
July      22-23: Mosport with ALMS
August        6: Trois-Rivieres
August        7: Trois-Rivieres
August    26-27: Infineon Raceway with IndyCar
September   3-4: Baltimore Grand Prix with IndyCar
September 16-17: Laguna Seca with ALMS

2010 Brazilian Grand Prix (Interlagos, Round 18, November 7th)

Interlagos track layout. © FIA

And so it goes to Abu Dhabi. After eighteen races, the Championship will be decided at the final turn at the plush Yas Marina circuit thanks to a stellar driver from Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel.
If one were to search or a definition of control, one would only need to look to Vettel’s performance at Interlagos.

Of course, there was the small matter of qualifying. The Red Bull driver found himself on the outside of the front row thanks to a stunning pole effort by Williams’ Nico Hulkenberg.
The 23-year-old may have snatched the top spot by 1.1 seconds in changeable conditions on Saturday afternoon, but Hulkenberg’s Cosworth-powered machine was never going to hold Vettel back off the line. It was unfortunate for the Williams driver – as solid as their qualifying pace has been in 2010; the early race pace has simply not existed, with positions often evaporating in a race’s opening sequence.

Falling backward
This was the case again today. As soon as the lights went out, Vettel had muscled his way into the lead into turn 1, before Vettel’s Red Bull teammate, Mark Webber had also manoeuvred his way by three turns later.
Fernando Alonso would also shove his way passed Hulkenberg on lap 7, but not before he made a decisive move on McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton on the second lap. The McLaren driver tried desperately to hold off Alonso’s more powerful Ferrari on the start / finish straight; through the next couple of turns, Hamilton was tailgated by the Spaniard, only to eventually lose the position when he went wide in turn four.
Like Hamilton, Hulkenberg was no pushover – the young German defended vigorously where he could, only to lose out to more powerful and better-balanced machinery. With one-tenth of the race in the bag, Vettel had a 2.3 second gap over Webber and Alonso nine seconds adrift. Behind the Ferrari, a queue of cars was forming behind the struggling Hulkenberg.

Whereas Hulkenberg was having difficulties racing faster cars, Hispania’s Christian Klien was having issues just getting out on track. The Austrian had suffered a fuel pressure failure prior to making the grid and only joined the race four laps in. Later, Klien would reflect that:

“Unfortunately, the car stopped on the way to the grid due to fuel pressure problems. But the mechanics did a very good job and managed to fix the car so that we could go in the race after four laps. The race was a test for us in order to gain some race kilometres. The lap times were good and we could keep up with the pace of the other new teams.”

Klien would eventually feed into the path of the leaders early on and thankfully pulled his Hispania to one side without blocking.

That’s not to say Hulkenberg was blocking – in fact, the young German was defending impeccably; however it was clear a queue was forming behind him. One of those cars in the queue was reigning Champion, Jenson Button. A good run in the race would surely only improve Button’s morale – the Englishman, his father and several McLaren team members escaped an armed ambush following Saturday’s qualifying session.

On the verge of losing his crown, the former Brawn pilot started from 11th, but had only made his way to 10th place when he pitted on lap 12. It would be an inspired move. The McLaren driver emerged from the pits down in 18th, but in clean air. When the Ferrari of Felipe Massa changed tyres a lap later, Button had made enough ground to pounce on the Brazilian as he took to the track.
A difficult weekend was about to get worse for Massa. The Brazilian was back in his pitbox again on lap 14; his right front tyre had not been properly fitted, leaving the Ferrari to hobble lamely back for new rubber – he exited 23rd.

Massa’s Brazilian counterpart, Rubens Barrichello was busy maintaining his string of poor luck at Interlagos. Williams, like McLaren, sensing an opportunity to gain some ground, brought Barrichello in for new tyres, only to for to go awry with a painfully slow stop.
As if things could go not get worse for Williams, the team pitted Hulkenberg a lap later, but the car’s poor race pace was proving to be very costly. As the 2009 GP2 Champion rejoined the circuit, Button had made his way passed Hulkenberg and into the top 12. That became 11th on lap 17 when the Englishmen strode down the inside of Renault’s Vitaly Petrov into turn four.

Button coming through the field, passed the pits
With the field beginning to pour in for fresh rubber, Hamilton decided lap 21 would be his time. Pursued down the slow lane by the veteran Michael Schumacher, Button would hit the track in 6th place – only just ahead of Button. It seemed like such a simple act, but those few laps the Champion had in free air was enough to jump him four places.
Schumacher on the other had a good stop ruined when he exited the pitlane right behind Adrian Sutil’s Force India. Sutil had decided to go for a long opening stint in an attempt to counter his low starting position. While he may have had older tyres, his Mercedes-powered machine was displaying fantastic straight-line speed. This and a solid defensive performance would keep Schumacher behind his fellow German for quite some time.
With those behind all fulfilling their required stops, Fernando Alonso became the first of the leaders to change tyres on lap 25. Within two laps, both Red Bull’s had also committed to swapping rubber – a set of clean stops ensuring that the status quo at the front remained intact.
As the halfway point approached, Vettel led comfortably from Webber, Alonso, Hamilton and Button – the five title protagonists, appropriate in the top five positions.

Schumacher’s Mercedes team mate Nico Rosberg was once again having a solid, if unspectacular day. Not quick enough to stay with the leading trio, yet faster than those behind had left the 25-year-old in racing limbo – it was not to last too long; pitting on lap 27, Rosberg emerged behind Button, but crucially just ahead of Sutil.
Hamilton, meanwhile, set about registering fastest laps, eventually stealing 4th off of a struggling Kamui Kobayashi into turn one; by lap 30, Button pulled a similar move on the Japanese rookie bringing him into the top five. The Sauber man would lose another place on lap 38, when Rosberg forced his Mercedes through a gap in the first turn. It would be a further ten laps before Kobayashi would pit for tyres – a move that would drop the Sauber driver to 15th spot.

Following his slow stop earlier in the event, Rubens Barrichello found himself in the wars once more. Battling to get around the outside of Jaime Alguersuari into the turn one for 13th place, the Toro Rosso driver clipped Barrichello’s left front wheel, instantly puncturing his Bridgestone tyre and leaving the 38-year-old mired near the rear of the field.
Fellow Brazilian Lucas di Grassi was also having something of a nightmare home race. The Virgin Racing driver was having a horror of a home race as once again reliability problems plagued the Nick Wirth designed machine. After pitting several times, di Grassi was seemingly parked for good on lap 44, only to be released back on track at the beginning of the 47th tour.
Indeed the Virgin driver fed into a steady stream of traffic that contained around eight cars – amongst this gaggle of Formula 1 machinery were the Red Bull’s. As they sliced through pack, the gap remained steady at two seconds.

The Vitantonio Crunch
It would be a gap that proved to be crucial. While the leaders found themselves temporarily slowed, Force India’s Vitantonio Liuzzi had stopped altogether with a smash on lap 51. With failing brakes, the Italian attempted to guide his Mercedes-powered car around the famous Brazilian track, only for them to let go and throw into the turn three barriers. His machine lifeless and stripped of its left-front wheel; carbon fibre shards dirtying the graceful Senna esses would be enough to bring out the safety car.
Afterwards, a clearly disappointed Liuzzi claimed:

“…I had been struggling with the brakes all race and then going into the second corner something on the car let go and I couldn’t turn in. The car just went straight on and into the barriers.”

Twenty laps remained and the race was neutralised, yet before the pack could be caught by the safety car, Lewis Hamilton, Adrian Sutil, Nick Heidfeld, Vitaly Petrov and Felipe Massa dived into the pitlane for fresh rubber. Rubens Barrichello, Christian Klien and Nico Rosberg also took advantage of the slowed speeds at this point to change to fresh tyres.
Jenson Button would also change to fresh Bridgestone’s on lap 53, but he would be joined again by Rosberg. Confusion in the Mercedes crew saw the incorrect tyre attached to Rosberg’s machine, yet a quirk of his on-track position would see him only drop one place to 7th, despite two extra stops.

The safety car pulled in on lap 56, but while Webber was technically close by on the timing screens, in reality there were three lapped cars standing in between the leading pair. It was enough for Vettel – as Webber negotiated traffic, Vettel sauntered off into the distance. This was also true for those who followed – as the field became more spread out as the final laps counted by.
In amongst this lapped battle was Felipe Massa. Still determined to make something of his home race, the Sao Paulo native jumped from 15th to 13th with moves on Nick Heidfeld (lap 57) and Adrian Sutil (lap 58); however an attempt to go around the outside of Sebastien Buemi turn 4 resulted in both going off circuit, dropping Massa back to 15th.
Buemi had to defend vigorously again on the following lap – this time to try and hold off Sutil; however this time the young Swiss driver could not hold off the attack, as Sutil seized 12th spot. In the midst of these battles, a warning shot was made clear to the backmarkers, as Heidfeld found himself penalised for blocking the leaders, although considering the sheer amount of traffic in the pack, one can sympathise with the Sauber driver.

Taking the victory; Seb style
Sadly, the fate of his fellow German mattered little to Sebastian Vettel. Once the slower traffic was cleared, the Red Bull driver disappeared into the distance in what was a near flawless driver. Mark Webber rolled home 2nd, some 4.2 seconds behind his team mate; however late race overheating issues with his Renault engine meant that the Australian would never have gotten close in the final stages.
Webber had enough left in him to hold off 3rd place Fernando Alonso – this Red Bull 1-2 finish secured the team’s first Constructor’s Championship and the ninth title for Renault as an engine supplier. An ecstatic Sebastien Vettel declared:

“We are the 2010 constructors’ champions! It has been a pleasure for me so far this year to drive that car. Everyone matters in this team and I’m proud of them and also of myself today – we had a straightforward race, no issues and we were able to control it. There are a busy few days before the next race, but I think back in Milton Keynes and here in Brazil, there will be a couple of drinks tonight.”

It could be argued that the Constructor’s title should have been wrapped up some time ago – indeed, Red Bull have had the car to do it, but with McLaren fading towards the end of the season and only one Ferrari realistically challenging, this particular title was always going to be theirs.  Less clear-cut is the Driver’s Championship. Alonso’s finish in Interlagos means that the Spaniard now holds an eight point advantage over Webber and a fifteen point lead over Vettel as they head into Abu Dhabi next week.
When considering the result, a pragmatic Alonso said that:

“All things considered, I am pleased with this result. We have only lost three points to our closest rival and, given how things turned out yesterday in qualifying, it went well… We were very cautious in the very first corners, because everyone was very aggressive and we did not want to risk touching anyone. …it took me several laps to get past Hulkenberg, while passing Hamilton is never easy.”

Lewis Hamilton’s 4th place finish gives him a mathematical chance of claiming his second crown, but with the 2008 World Champion some twenty-four points adrift, it would require a miracle for him to overcome the deficit.
Reflecting on his race, Hamilton revealed that

“…this was a tough race for me. I actually feel quite lucky to have finished where I did. Fernando shot past me at the start, too – and it almost felt like my F-duct wasn’t working perfectly.”

Jenson Button’s hopes for retaining his title are now officially sunk. Despite driver a good race from 11th, the Briton was always going to struggle to get further up the order.  Afterwards, he didn’t seem too disappointed:

“We finally sorted the car out for the race, I had some pretty decent race pace, I made some great passing moves, and the team made a couple of perfect calls on strategy. From where I started, I couldn’t have done any better, so it feels good to have finished fifth.”

The last cars on the lead lap, Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher brought their Mercedes machines home next to a respectable 6th and 7th double-finish. It was enough to secure fourth in the Constructor’s Championship for the German squad – a poor showing considering their title winning form as Brawn only one year ago.

Polesitter Nico Hulkenberg eventually came home 8th ahead of Robert Kubica (9th) and final points scorer, Kamui Kobayashi (10th). Sadly, the Williams simply did not have the pace up front and the 23-year-old lost out badly in the early stages, although Hulkenberg did not seem too discouraged by the result.

“I was struggling quite a lot with the car, it really wasn’t easy to drive, but I kept Kubica behind me all the way. The team did a great pit stop and chose the right strategy; we just needed some more car pace.”

Jaime Alguersuari (11th), Adrian Sutil (12th), Sebastien Buemi (13th), Rubens Barrichello (14th), Felipe Massa (15th), Vitaly Petrov (16th) and Nick Heidfeld (17th) all finished one lap and relatively close together thanks to the late safety car.
Of the rear gunners, Heikki Kovalainen (18th), Jarno Trulli (19th), Timo Glock (20th) and Bruno Senna (21st) were all two laps down following relatively quiet races. Despite his pre-race set back, Christian Klien brought his Hispania home in 22nd, some six laps adrift; however Virgin’s Lucas di Grassi was less fortunate. The Brazilian suffered so many stoppages that he crossed the line nine laps adrift and unclassified as a finisher – the small team deciding to use the race as a test session instead.

Indeed, the 2010 Brazilian Grand Prix started off with plenty of action, but come the mid-point, field spread had suffocated much of the excitement. While the packed field may have made the later laps somewhat tense, the sheer number of back markers in between the leaders settled the race before the safety car had even returned to the pits.
One thing is for sure – the title run in is set up perfectly for Abu Dhabi next Sunday as the 2010 Formula 1 season reaches its climax.
Race Rating: 3 out of 5
*All quotes courtesy of Formula1.com.
——–

Interlagos, Brazilian Grand Prix (Round 18, November 7th)
1  VETTEL       Red Bull     1h33m11.8s
2  WEBBER       Red Bull     +4.2s
3  ALONSO       Ferrari      +6.8s
4  HAMILTON     McLaren      +14.6s
5  BUTTON       McLaren      +15.6s
6  ROSBERG      Mercedes     +35.3s
7  SCHUMACHER   Mercedes     +43.5s
8  HULKENBERG   Williams     +1 lap
9  KUBICA       Renault      +1 lap
10 KOBAYASHI    Sauber       +1 lap
11 ALGUERSUARI  Toro Rosso   +1 lap
12 SUTIL        Force India  +1 lap
13 BUEMI        Toro Rosso   +1 lap
14 MASSA        Ferrari      +1 lap
15 PETROV       Renault      +1 lap
16 BARRICHELLO  Williams     +1 lap
17 HEIDFELD     Sauber       +1 lap
18 KOVALAINEN   Lotus        +2 laps
19 TRULLI       Lotus        +2 laps
20 GLOCK        Virgin       +2 laps
21 SENNA        HRT          +2 laps
22 KLIEN        HRT          +6 laps
NC DI GRASSI    Virgin       +9 laps
R  LIUZZI       Force India  +22 laps

Driver Team Points
1. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 246
2. Mark Webber Red Bull Racing 238
3. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 231
4. Lewis Hamilton McLaren 222
5. Jenson Button McLaren 199
6. Felipe Massa Ferrari 143
7. Nico Rosberg Mercedes GP 130
8. Robert Kubica Renault 126
9. Michael Schumacher Mercedes GP 72
10. Rubens Barrichello Williams 47
11. Adrian Sutil Force India 47
12. Kamui Kobayashi Sauber 32
13. Nico Hulkenberg Williams 22
14. Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India 21
15. Vitaly Petrov Renault 19
16. Sebastien Buemi Scuderia Toro Rosso 8
17. Pedro de la Rosa Sauber 6
18. Nick Heidfeld Sauber 6
19. Jaime Alguersuari Scuderia Toro Rosso 3
Constructor Team Points
1. Red Bull Racing 469
2. McLaren 421
3. Ferrari 389
4. Mercedes GP 202
5. Renault 145
6. Williams 69
7. Force India 68
8. Sauber 44
9. Scuderia Toro Rosso 11

2010 Brazilian Grand Prix (Interlagos, Round 18, November 6th)

Interlagos track layout. © FIA

Free Practice 3
A wet and overcast morning greeted Saturday practice at Interlagos, with some overnight rain leaving the circuit sodden.  Initially Nico Hulkenberg set the early pace in his Williams, but was eventually topped by title challengers Mark Webber and Fernando Alonso.

However, by the end of the sixty minutes, it was the Renault of Robert Kubica that claimed the top spot, some 0.3 of-a-second ahead of Sebastian Vettel’s Red Bull.

Ferrari’s Felipe Massa ran an extra brake duct fin in his Ferrari as he searched for an advantage in the damp conditions – it would help the Sao Paulo native to 4th best on the sheets.
Another driver with slight changes was McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton – the 2008 World Champion changed his rear wing rear springs for the Saturday morning, eventually setting the 3rd best time of the session.  Alonso claimed 5th at the chequered flag, but fellow title challenger Mark Webber only did six laps – enough to secure 11th in the standings.

Qualifying
The qualifying hour may have started damp, but come the end of Q3, dry lines were beginning to appear all around the famed Interlagos circuit.

Indeed the Brazilian circuit has drawn up some scintillating scenes and only a few will compare with Nico Hulkenberg’s revelatory pole position for tomorrow’s Grand Prix.
The German rookie planted his Williams on top of the pile by a full second ahead of the Red Bull’s.
Initially his veteran team mate Rubens Barrichello was the first to switch to slick tyres as the track dried in the final ten minute stint, but it was Hulkenberg that made the most of the conditions.

An all-German front-row was set for the race. Sebastian Vettel will line-up alongside Hulkenberg tomorrow afternoon, with fellow title contenders Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton on the second row. Fernando Alonso was disappointed to only line up 5th, with Barrichello alongside him, but Alonso may be more than a little irritated that his rear gunner, Felipe Massa is only lining up 9th.
Robert Kubica was the first the Renault’s (again) in 7th place ahead of 10th position Vitaly Petrov, while Michael Schumacher was the quicker of the two Mercedes cars – the veteran will start in 8th.

Reigning champion Jenson Button had a dreadful second session – the McLaren found himself mired in 11th. He is ahead of the leading Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi (12th) and Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg (13th). Jaime Alguersuari set the 14th fastest time ahead of team mate Sebastien Buemi; however the Swiss driver carries a penalty over from Korea and will start 19th. Nick Heidfeld and Vitantonio Liuzzi fill out the eighth row.

Adrian Sutil was the big name to drop out of the opening qualifying stint – the German will also have to accept a four-place grid penalty from incidents in Korea two weeks ago, leaving him to start from 22nd position.
Timo Glock won the battle of the new teams, planting his Virgin Racing car in 17th just ahead Jarno Trulli’s Lotus. The slowest of the field were the Hispania pair – Christian Klien planting his car 0.7 of-a-second ahead of Bruno Senna.

Brazil, 3rd Free Practice (November 6th)
1  KUBICA        Renault       1m19.191s
2  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m19.500s
3  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m19.536s
4  MASSA         Ferrari       1m19.735s
5  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m19.791s
6  PETROV        Renault       1m19.887s
7  BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m20.009s
8  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m20.056s
9  BUTTON        McLaren       1m20.164s
10 BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m20.320s
11 WEBBER        Red Bull      1m20.337s
12 SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m20.421s
13 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m20.452s
14 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m20.535s
15 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m20.541s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m20.546s
17 SUTIL         Force India   1m20.613s
18 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m20.985s
19 TRULLI        Lotus         1m22.326s
20 GLOCK         Virgin        1m22.449s
21 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m22.874s
22 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m23.194s
23 SENNA         HRT           1m23.358s
24 KLIEN         HRT           1m23.650s

Brazil, Qualifying (November 6th)
1  HULKENBERG    Williams      1m14.470s
2  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m15.519s
3  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m15.637s
4  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m15.747s
5  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m15.989s
6  BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m16.203s
7  KUBICA        Renault       1m16.552s
8  SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m16.925s
9  MASSA         Ferrari       1m17.101s
10 PETROV        Renault       1m17.656s
11 BUTTON        McLaren       1m19.288s
12 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m19.385s
13 ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m19.486s
14 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m19.581s
15 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m19.899s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m20.357s
17 GLOCK         Virgin        1m22.130s
18 TRULLI        Lotus         1m22.250s
19 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m19.847s (*4-place grid penalty)
20 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m22.378s
21 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m22.810s
22 KLIEN         HRT           1m23.083s
23 SUTIL         Force India   1m20.830s (*4-place grid penalty)
24 SENNA         HRT           1m23.796s

2010 Brazilian Grand Prix (Interlagos, Round 18, November 5th)

Interlagos track layout. © FIA

Free Practice 1
Under the searing Sao Paulo sun, the Red Bull pair of Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber led the standings in the opening session of the weekend.
Indeed the young German setting a fastest time 0.482 of-a-second ahead of his Australian counterpart.

McLaren arrived at Interlagos with various aerodynamic pieces – Lewis Hamilton with a new front wing; while Jenson Button utilised an old front, but a new rear wing.
The British team also brought an updated floor to Interlagos – all these additions would help Hamilton and Button register the 3rd and 4th best times respectively.

Mercedes spent the morning testing a 2011-spec rear diffuser. The German team remained some distance behind Red Bull and McLaren in laps times, with Nico Rosberg (6th) 1.1 seconds slower than Vettel and Michael Schumacher 1.3 seconds adrift (8th).
Ferrari arrived in Brazil with a new blown diffuser, with both red cars using the session to work on race set-up. The opening 90 minute stint concluded with Fernando Alonso shutting off his engine just prior to its failure. Thankfully for the Spaniard, it was on its final session and due to be removed regardless.

With only a few minutes remaining, Renault’s Vitaly Petrov suffered a minor rear wing failure, pitching his yellow and black machine into the barriers at turn 7. The young Russian was 15th best time in the session, while Renault team leader, Robert Kubica achieved the 5th best time – a clear one second faster – only adding to the pressure on Petrov’s shoulders.
Moments later, Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi suffered a left rear puncture at the same spot, sending him slightly further down the turn 7 run-off area.  Kobayashi finished the morning in 11th, a mere 0.004 of-a-second slower than team mate Nick Heidfeld.  Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari had more of a polite spin on the entry of turn 1. The Spaniard kept his Ferrari engine running and made his way back to his pit stall.

Lotus’ Jarno Trulli was the faster of the Lotus pair and indeed the fastest of the “new teams”, albeit 3.2 seconds off the leaders in 19th.  Jerome D’Ambrosio again sat in for Lucas di Grassi at Virgin for the first practice session. There are growing rumours that D’Ambrosio will be occupying di Grassi’s seat for 2011 and sessions such as this are vital mileage for the young Belgian.
Christian Klien has replaced Sakon Yamamoto at Hispania Racing for the weekend and possibly Abu Dhabi. The former Red Bull runner clocked the 23rd fastest time and was a clear half-a-second ahead of Hispania regular, Bruno Senna. This will be the Brazilian’s first time to ever race at his home circuit, but it is highly unlikely that he will be garnering points.

Free Practice 2
The afternoon practice session saw the Red Bull’s continue their timesheet domination, headed once again by Sebastian Vettel. Again Mark Webber was next up, with the Ferrari’s of Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa 3rd and 5th fastest respectively. The red duo squeezed Lewis Hamilton’s McLaren come the chequered flag.

As tyres began to fall off during the session, there were slight offs from Heikki Kovalainen (Lotus), Robert Kubica and Kamui Kobayashi and Massa – thankfully none of them suffered any damage. The session would only get worse for Massa. On his first run on the soft tyre later in the session, the Brazilian clattered the turn 3 kerbs heavily enough to shut down his gearbox, leaving the Ferrari man to sit out the the second half of the afternoon.
At the tail end of the session, an impatient Michael Schumacher launched a risky pass around the outside of a recovering Jaime Alguersuari on the approach of turn 1. The Spaniard had spun in the previous corner and the pair clattered eachother slightly, as the veteran shut the door hard on the Toro Rosso driver.

Lucas di Grassi found himself back in the driving seat at Virgin for the afternoon. The Brazilian driver registered the 21st quickest lap ahead of the Hispania pair and team mate Timo Glock.

Brazil, 2nd Free Practice (November 5th)
1  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m11.968s
2  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m12.072s
3  ALONSO        Ferrari       1m12.328s
4  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m12.656s
5  MASSA         Ferrari       1m12.677s
6  KUBICA        Renault       1m12.882s
7  BUTTON        McLaren       1m13.206s
8  HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m13.222s
9  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m13.333s
10 SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m13.346s
11 BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m13.520s
12 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m13.610s
13 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m13.725s
14 SUTIL         Force India   1m13.741s
15 PETROV        Renault       1m13.818s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m14.045s
17 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m14.304s
18 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m14.578s
19 TRULLI        Lotus         1m14.984s
20 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m15.101s
21 DI GRASSI     Virgin        1m15.433s
22 SENNA         HRT           1m16.070s
23 KLIEN         HRT           1m16.082s
24 GLOCK         Virgin        1m16.150s

Brazil, 1st Free Practice (November 5th)
1  VETTEL        Red Bull      1m12.328s
2  WEBBER        Red Bull      1m12.810s
3  HAMILTON      McLaren       1m12.845s
4  BUTTON        McLaren       1m13.267s
5  KUBICA        Renault       1m13.370s
6  ROSBERG       Mercedes      1m13.516s
7  BARRICHELLO   Williams      1m13.546s
8  SCHUMACHER    Mercedes      1m13.643s
9  SUTIL         Force India   1m13.918s
10 HEIDFELD      Sauber        1m14.000s
11 KOBAYASHI     Sauber        1m14.004s
12 HULKENBERG    Williams      1m14.155s
13 ALONSO        Ferrari       1m14.246s
14 MASSA         Ferrari       1m14.267s
15 PETROV        Renault       1m14.370s
16 LIUZZI        Force India   1m14.487s
17 ALGUERSUARI   Toro Rosso    1m14.618s
18 BUEMI         Toro Rosso    1m14.734s
19 TRULLI        Lotus         1m15.603s
20 GLOCK         Virgin        1m15.860s
21 KOVALAINEN    Lotus         1m16.057s
22 D’AMBROSIO    Virgin        1m16.707s
23 KLIEN         HRT           1m16.839s
24 SENNA         HRT           1m17.360s

The 2011 GP2 Asia Series

Sauber's Kamui Kobayashi was GP2 Asia Champion in 2009. © Toyota Motorsport

The GP2 Asia Series has just had its full calendar released… and it comes down to only three race weekends at only to circuits in the Middle East.

The series will begin on the weekend of February 11th/12th at Abu Dhabi’s Yas Marina circuit, before heading to the Sakhir circuit in Bahrain one week later. The series will then run its course three weeks later with another round in Bahrain, which will also act as a support race for the 2011 Bahrain Grand Prix.
The Championship build-up will consist of two official test sessions, both at Yas Marina, during the opening week of February. At this stage, 26 entries have been confirmed for the shortened championship, although drivers for those cars have yet to be named.

Part of the reason for the short calendar, is because GP2 is running with brand new machinery from next year onwards and rather than début the new car in the Main Series, organisers have chosen to give the new chassis a run in the Asia Championship.
That the GP2 organisers are launching the car in Asia is a particularly interesting move. Whereas past seasons have seen many higher regarded drivers skip the Asian rounds to concentrate on preparation the European races, débuting the new car at Abu Dhabi in February may wet the taste buds of young drivers looking to secure an advantage for the Main Series.
Other wise, a three round series holds little of any interest for anyone, especially when a much more highly rated Main Series begins less than two months later, with races consistently in front of the Formula 1 paddock.

The GP2 Asia Series has been run on three occasions, with its winners including former-Renault driver Romain Grosjean, current Sauber pilot Kamui Kobayashi and GP2 Main series competitor Davide Valsecchi.

GP2 Asia Series official test sessions
Feb 2-3 Abu Dhabi – Yas Marina Circuit
Feb 6-7 Abu Dhabi – Yas Marina Circuit
2011 GP2 Asia Series
Feb 11-12 Abu Dhabi – Yas Marina Circuit
Feb 18-19 Bahrain – Sakhir
Mar 12-13 Bahrain – Sakhir

“This Charming Man: Carlos Pace”

Something that is often lost in the grey, highly corporate world of modern motor racing is charm – that ability to please and appeal to all people with neither effort or force.

It was inevitable that as Bernie Ecclestone helped reshape Formula 1 into the mammoth global entity that it is today, much of the warmth found within smaller events dissipated as the sport drifted away from its core fanbase.

As with many globalised sports and entertainment franchises, it has resulted in many of its competitors appearing standoffish and distant, whereas generations gone by often dripped wonder, charisma and charm.  Born in the city of Sao Paulo on the 6th of October 1944, Jose Carlos Pace exuded just such charm.

Known to his close friends as Môco, Pace was the son of a wealthy textile industrialist. His first experience of motor racing was in karts, where week-after-week, he raced hard in local championships against names that would eventually become well known in motor racing circles.  At the age of 18, he  had moved up to cars and was competing in Brazilian touring-cars in a Renault Dauphine as well as single-seaters in Formula Vee.
Displaying sublime skill and speed, he was to become national champion for three consecutive years from 1967, pairing often with school friend Wilson Fittipaldi, brother of the legendary Emerson.

European Adventures
The promise was there and at the dawn of the 1970′s, Pace left for Europe to join the British Formula 3 Championship. Despite the difficulties of finding himself in a foreign climate with little English and few friends, it would not take long for the 25-year-old to find success.  Indeed his first attempt at the series resulted in him taking the Forward Trust Championship in a Ford-powered Lotus 59 with the famous Jim Russell Racing School.

His début European year saw him post several points finished and take victory against a highly rated field at the Guards International Trophy in July. Amongst those left in the Brazilian’s wake were future World Champion James Hunt, as well as Wilson Fittipaldi and Tom Walkinshaw.  On his way to the crown, Pace took another win to claim the title by four points ahead of Australia’s David Walker.

Not content to stand still, the Brazilian moved up to the highly competitive Formula 2 series in 1971 where he raced for Frank Williams Racing for the first time.
Naturally, the competition that Pace faced had grown in stature, but it was not enough to stop him winning an aggregated non-championship race at Imola, while the likes of François Cevert, Emerson Fittipaldi and Carlos Reutemann fell by the wayside. It would be his sole Formula 2 victory of the season, but it was enough to convince Frank Williams to give him a Formula 1 drive for the following year.

Formula One, Williams and Surtees
For a man that bares the title of Interlagos, his statistics rarely portray an outstanding career in the top level.  As Pace débuted in Formula One in 1972, the great nation of Brazil watched Emerson Fittipaldi become World Champion for the first time. The Sao Paulo native knew now that he had much to live up to, yet despite flashes of speed, Pace’s début season was tempered with frustration.
Fittipaldi meanwhile, with his brilliantly woven hair and large finely sculpted sideburns raced to five victories at the wheel of the Lotus 72D, while Pace ran in the March 711 for Frank Williams’ fledging Grand Prix squad.

A 6th place at Jarama and a 5th at Nivelles were scant reward for the small team, while the rest of the season formed a story that told of car failures and poor speed. Pace was still running at the German and Austrian Grand Prix, but was not classified for either event – he was simply too far behind to be a listed finisher.
The year did bring some bright moments though – races at the wheel of a Ferrari at the Osterreichring 1000km and the Watkins Glen 6 Hours brought him 2nd and 3rd place finishes with Helmut Marko and Derek Bell respectively.

So impressed was he by Pace’s speed and temperament, that John Surtees signed the Brazilian for the 1973 Formula One season.  Pace actually drove his first race for the Surtees team somewhat early – only two weeks after the conclusion of the 1972 World Championship, Pace scored a popular podium for Surtees in a non-Championship race at Brands Hatch just behind the BRM of Jean-Pierre Beltoise.

However, as Pace took to the Cosworth-powered Surtees TS14A for 1973, it was clear that an improvement in results not forthcoming.  The season brought only six finishes in fifteen races; however the Brazilian managed to score his first podium at the Austrian Grand Prix, having achieved an impressive 4th at the Nordschleife two weeks earlier.
In fact, Pace set the fastest lap of both those races; even managing to lap the Nordschleife some seven seconds quicker than he had in qualifying!
A second season with the Surtees team was looking to offer more of the same. Although the car had displayed plenty of speed, piloting the TS16 proved to be a fruitless experience with race finishes a rarity.

Disappointment becomes success at Brabham.
With a lack of results coming through, Pace’s relationship with Surtees began to falter, but with half the 1974 season elapsed, the Brazilian was invited by Bernie Ecclestone to drive alongside former F2 rival Carlos Reutemann at Brabham. It was an opportunity Pace grabbed with both hands.
At the wheel of Gordon Murray’s Brabham BT44, results soon came for the Brazilian and he ended the season with a 2nd place at Watkins Glen, just behind Reutemann.

Pace started the 1975 season in an updated version of the BT44 and it instantly served him well. At the season opener, Pace qualified his Brabham on the front row and was running well until his engine gave way seven laps from the end, but two weeks later Pace would take his sole Grand Prix victory at Interlagos ahead of reigning World Champion, Emerson Fittipaldi.
It was a truly joyous occasion. For Pace to have won, not just his home race, but in the city of his birth elevated the 30-year-old to celebrated status amongst the local fans. The adoration foisted upon the victor was emphatic and the enigmatic Pace responded in kind.
It was his best season in the sport – with a further two podium and other point scores, Pace finished the championship in 6th position with 24 points; but once again, the inability to deliver cars to the chequered flag without a mechanical failure dented his potential.
If one were to look at cold statistics, it would tell you that Reutemann scored most of the points for Brabham during the season; although the canny Argentine driver registered only two retirements to Pace’s eight, it was the Brazilian that showed the way in terms of speed.

However rather than build on their 1975 success, Brabham only went backward. Pairing their new BT45 machine with the flat-V12 Alfa Romeo engine turned out to be a disastrous move, as the team suffered retirement after retirement. So disillusioned was Reutemann, that he left for Ferrari three-quarters of the way through the season – eventually ending up alongside the wounded Niki Lauda.
Pace notched up several points scores during this difficult year, but the team had fallen from second in the Constructor’s to ninth in one foul swoop.  As fast as the Alfa-powered car was, it mattered little if it couldn’t do the distance.

Death in the air
With Reutemann replaced by Penske-exile John Watson, it initially it seemed as if 1977 could be different for Pace. The opening race of the year at Argentina gave the Brazilian a 2nd place finish, behind future World Champion, Jody Scheckter. The reality was that this was false dawn – Pace did take the runner-up spot, but then again only five cars got to the end of the 53 lap distance.
Pace followed his Argentine success with a failure to finish at Interlagos and 13th place result at Kyalami, although few will ever recall Pace’s participation in that race or anyone else’s for that matter.  Sadly, the South African Grand Prix was marred by the tragic death of Tom Pryce and teenage trackside marshal Frederik Jansen van Vuuren in an appalling accident on the start / finish straight.

The next race for hero of Interlagos should have been at Long Beach, but by then Pace was already dead.  Thirteen days after the South African Grand Prix, Pace decided to miss the Race of Champions at Brands Hatch to conduct personal business in Brazil.
Flying in a light aircraft in a storm, the plane collided with a hill just outside of Mairipara, near Sao Paulo. He died instantly alongside fellow racer Marivaldo Fernandes and friend Carlos Roberto de Oliveira.
That Pace should lose his life outside the cockpit at a time when when injury and death at the track was all to common is tragic. That his life was cut down at the age of only 32 even more so.

Instantly recognisable in the car as he was outside it, Pace’s cool, swift handling ever present as was dark helmet, adorned with a yellow and red tinted “arrow” that pointed towards his eyes – it was a design that would influence Pedro Diniz some years later.  In 1985, Interlagos was renamed Autódromo José Carlos Pace as a tribute, while outside the grounds of the circuit, a bronze bust of the man stands proud.

Interlagos is a most stunning circuit for a most charming man and is a fitting theatre for Sao Paulo’s hero.  Somehow that just feels absolutely right.

Mark Webber Drives the Autódromo José Carlos Pace

How quickly it all changes… With only two races remaining in this stunning Formula 1 season, the pendulum has swung once more in favour of Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso.

Victory in Yeongam at the inaugural Korean Grand Prix gave the Spaniard a late lead in the World Championship standings, despite being virtually out of it following July’s British Grand Prix. Six podiums in seven races (including four victories) have taken Alonso passed both Red Bull drivers and the McLaren pair.
Alonso’s eleven point lead over Red Bull’s Mark Webber means the Ferrari will be declared Champion if he wins and Webber finishes fifth or lower. In short, Webber needs to win or finish ahead of Alonso at Interlagos to press into a fight at the Abu Dhabi finale.

The run-in is somewhat confused as the second Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel and McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton are only 25 and 21 points behind respectively. While still in contention, they need top results and for that Alonso/Webber pairing to fall by the wayside. Jenson Button meanwhile, is simply far too far behind to mount a realistic challenge. His gap to Alonso is 42 points and with only 50 available, he may suddenly find himself in support mode if he is one place ahead of Hamilton.

This is also going to be a hugely important race for Felipe Massa. The Brazilian has taken a huge amount of criticism from the Brazilian media since he stepped aside for Alonso at the Hockenheimring. A solid victory would go some way to silencing some critics, but should he be leading and find Alonso on his tail, team orders may destroy the spirit 29-year-old and ultimately decide his future – if it hasn’t been decided already.

With the title battle as close as it is, this may be the first title not decided at Interlagos since Michael Schumacher took his seventh and final crown in 2004. As for Interlagos itself, mixed weather conditions are expected at the weekend, so if that comes true, expect a fabulous race at one of the world’s finest circuits.
Webber won the 2009 Brazilian Grand Prix in difficult conditions and followed that up with 2nd at Abu Dhabi – he will have to do the same this time around if he wants the World Championship.

There are not too many other stories on the horizon. Renault’s Vitaly Petrov needs a good performance – and that does not include crashing while running 7th – and Williams’ Nico Hulkenberg could do with some points now that GP2 Champion Pastor Maldonado is foreclosing on his race seat for 2011.
Also, Hispania’s good result in Korea puts them further ahead of Virgin in the new team’s stakes, meaning Virgin will almost certainly have to go for a 13th place to finish ahead of the Spanish squad in the Constructor’s Championship.

Alexander Prémat

Earlier, DTM driver Alexander Prémat had a very lucky escape at Adria Raceway. As the pack crossed the start / finish line, the Frenchman was touched into a spin only to collect the full force of the barriers and be catapulted into a series of violent barrel rolls that tore much of Audi A4 apart.
Incredibly, Prémat jumped from his wrecked Team Phoenix prepared machine almost instantly, although he appeared to be – quite understandably – winded. Due to the severity of the accident and the large amounts of debris distributed across the track, the race was instantly red flagged.

The race was eventually won by ABT Sportline’s Timo Scheider ahead of championship challenger Gary Paffett, with series leader Bruno Spengler claiming the final podium spot. Force India reserve driver, Paul di Resta sits second in title race as the series heads to its final race of the season at Shanghai in four weeks time.