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Archive for April, 2010

Quali - April 3, 2010

Wet Wonder Webber

Three for three. The charge of the Red Bull continues in Kuala Lumpur in qualifying for round three of the 2010 World Championship, the Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix.

Heavy downpour was already falling by the time Robert Kubica led nine other drivers to start Q3. The session was red flagged before the end of the first timed lap, and Race Control announced “Indefinite delay”.

Michael Schumacher asked his Mercedes team for a seat change and Vettel was left wondering why his Red Bull was cold inside the cockpit despite a hot driver at the wheel.


When the spray had settled Webber’s gamble on intermediates paid off as he secured his second career pole position, a stunning 1.3 seconds faster than Nico Rosberg, who will start alongside on the front row in his Mercedes. More importantly, this is the third straight race in which he has out qualified his renowned “Rain Meister” teammate, Michael Schumacher.

The seven times world champion will start eighth alongside a very familiar face, Rubens Barrichello in his Williams.

Sebastian Vettel, the moral winner of the first two races, qualified third, same as last year at Sepang. His German compatriot Adrian Sutil will start fourth for Force India.

Starting fifth and making it four Germans in the top six of the grid, and in only his third F1 start is the next Willi Weber wunderkind, Nico Hulkenberg for Williams.

Robert Kubica, who was on the podium a week ago in Australia, will start sixth.

The top ten was completed by Kamui Kobayashi in a Sauber and the second Force India car of Vitantonio Liuzzi.

Could have been contenders. Three world champions, Button, Alonso and Hamilton, plus Massa, paid the price for staying in the pits for the first eight minutes of Q1. Their hopes for conditions to improve were drowned as the downpour intensified.

Button, winner of last year’s rain shortened Malaysian Grand Prix, will start 17th in his McLaren, behind the Virgin of Timo Glock.

Ferrari’s new signing Fernando Alonso, championship leader and winner of season opener in Bahrain, will start 19th, behind the Lotus of Jarno Trulli.

The second McLaren of Hamilton will start 20th ahead of the second Ferrari of Massa.

– Nasir Hameed

Showers in Sepang regards.


Motorsports Mondial - April 2, 2010

Bibendum

Time to come back! Michelin, people who brought radial tires to Grand Prix motor racing, may be back on the grid next season. New rubber supplier is required following the conclusion of this season as Bridgestone has decided to pull the plug on its F1 involvement.

Michelin’s relationship with FIA deflated after the 2005 US Grand Prix fiasco, which saw teams on French rubber pull into the pits after the warm-up lap, leaving six Bridgestone shod cars to battle in front of 100,000 plus very dejected spectators. Then came the FIA tender for single tire supplier which the company rejected as it wanted competition on the track. Company’s legal action against the FIA failed to gain any grip with the legal system.

The regime change at FIA has no doubt opened the door for the return of the manufacturer that rode into victory lane in the very first Grand Prix in history, the 1906 French event at Le Mans.

Michelin is based in Clermont-Ferrand, home of the Charade circuit which is known as Nurburgring of France.

Photo: www.alanraine-graphicillustration.co.uk

The town is also the birth place of one time Tyrrell driver, the late Patrick Depailler.

Michelin first arrived in F1 in 1977 with Renault, but it was Ferrari’s Carlos Reutemann who gave them their first victory in the 1978 Brazilian Grand Prix at Jacarepagua. Their last win was at Suzuka in 2006 with Fernando Alonso in a Renault.


The iconic Michelin Man “Bibendum” logo was first created in 1898 by the Michelin brothers and poster artist Marius Rossillon, aka O’Galop.

– Nasir Hameed

Radial regards from Californie


F1weekly podcast # 417 - April 1, 2010

Smooth sailing -  Sepang 2009. Button and Brawn boat sailed to an easy wet victory in the Malaysian Grand Prix last year. This year the charge of the Red Bull brigade has been derailed by mechanical issues, handing Fernando Alonso debut win for Ferrari in Bahrain, and last weekend Button was the beneficiary when Vettel dropped out while leading.

This weekend’s race at Sepang is expected to have showers again, thus increasing the possibility of an unexpected winner.

Michael Schumacher and Nico Hulkenberg, the experienced and rookie rain meisters of Germany, could sure use a slippery advantage for a better showing.

Remember Monza 2008? Vettel’s sheer brilliance in the wet and Red Bull’s speed should allow the young German to notch his first win of the season. Still waters run deep and so does the talent for wet weather driving with Barrichello and Hamilton.

Alonso scored his first career pole position here in 2003 and scored an impressive victory in the 2007 race with McLaren, when the sun was still shining both on the track and driver/team relationship.

The inaugural Malaysian Grand Prix in 1999 was won by Eddie Irvine “with a little help from my friend”. Schumacher started from pole and allowed Irvine to take the lead, hoping to help his teammate for the championship against Mika Hakkinen.

Kimi Raikkonen, the “Ice cream man” from last year’s event won his first F1 race here in 2003. The Schumacher brothers bagged four wins at Sepang, three for Michael and one for Ralf.

F1weekly podcast will bring you season long coverage of F1 and feeder series like F2, F3 and GP2 & 3 championships.

– Nasir Hameed

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