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Posts Tagged ‘Monza’

Motorsports Mondial - May 16, 2012

Photo: williamsf1

WILLIAMS F1 SPANISH GRAND PRIX REVIEW

Pastor Maldonado won the Spanish Grand Prix on Sunday, giving Williams F1 its 114th victory in Formula One. He came home 3.1s ahead of Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso. Our Chief Operations Engineer, Mark Gillan, sums up the weekend.

Mark Gillan, Chief Operations Engineer:
Q: Mark, how much satisfaction do you derive from Pastor Maldonado’s victory in the Spanish Grand Prix?
MG: This is a massive result for Williams and of course it is incredibly satisfying, especially given the tribulations of the 2011 season.  However, this business is all about continuous improvement and it is important that we continue to deliver.

Q: How would you describe Pastor’s personal performance in qualifying and the race?
MG: Simply stunning – a master class from start to finish.  He was strong all weekend, winning the race from pole despite a strong challenge from Alonso.  One can’t ask anymore from a driver.

Q: Going into the race weekend, were you confident that the FW34 was a race-winning package?
MG: We were confident that the FW34 was an improved package but of course you never know what upgrades other teams have made for their European upgrade packages. 

Q: Pastor did 25 laps on his final set of tyres. How critical was tyre wear during the race?
MG: Managing tyre degradation was the key to the race, so a long final stint was a calculated strategy decision, but we were reasonably confident based on our Friday data that this stint length was possible.

Q: Bruno Senna struggled for pace relative to Pastor. Did he have any particular technical issues?
MG: No there were no technical issues with the car.

Q:  After the race a fire broke out in the Williams F1 pit. First, is everyone okay? Second, do you know what caused it? Third, what was the extent of the damage?
MG: I would like to reiterate our thanks to everyone in the paddock who helped the Williams team on Sunday to control the fire.  There were a number of people who attended the circuit medical centre, mostly as the result of smoke inhalation. One team member remains in hospital having suffered burns, but he is in a stable condition and in good spirits and has returned to England today for further medical care.

Investigations into the actual cause of the fire are ongoing and are being performed in collaboration with the local authorities and the FIA. The extent of the damage is still being accessed and will not become fully clear until both the cars and equipment have returned to the factory. What is clear is that our garage IT equipment and infrastructure have been badly damaged.

Q: Monaco comes next. What chance Williams F1 can score its first win in the Principality since 2003?
MG: On the back of a win we go to Monaco with high hopes but there is a prodigious amount of work to be done prior to the event to recover from the fire. 


Motorsports Mondial - May 13, 2012

Daly secures maiden win in Barcelona

Lotus GP’s Conor Daly victorious in Race 2 of the 2012 season

American Conor Daly proudly celebrated with the stars and stripes flag aloft after claiming his first win in the GP3 Series with a faultless display in Race 2 at the Circuit de Catalunya. It was the first podium finish of his GP3 career and he was joined by Robert Visoiu (Jenzer Motorsport) and Matias Laine (MW Arden).

The race started under menacing dark clouds but the rain stayed away for the race with cooler temperatures than yesterday. Reverse Pole man was Visoiu but he was beaten at the start by a fast charging Tio Ellinas from the front row. Unfortunately for the Marussia Manor Racing driver, stewards found him to have made a jump start, therefore Ellinas served a drive through penalty and sacrificed the lead of the race. Carmen Jorda was also given a penalty for making a jump start.

Lap one was eventful with four cars retiring from the race after clashing at turn 4. Dmitry Suranovich, Robert Cregan, Antonio Spavone and Tamas Pal Kiss were all involved in the incident. Mitch Evans also suffered a rear left puncture in a separate incident and had to make a quick dash into the pitlane which cost him valuable positions after victory in yesterday’s opener.

The first few laps were close with Ellinas leading Daly, Visoiu, David Fumanelli and Aaro Vainio. The son of former F1 driver Derek Daly then took over P1 and had a half a second advantage over the Jenzer Motorsport rookie.

Throughout the field there were many fierce battles, the most intense was between William Buller and Kevin Ceccon for P9. It was the Carlin driver who managed to hold off a very determined Italian until the end, with the Ocean Racing Technology driver collecting 2 points however for setting the fastest lap.

Fumanelli was the next driver to pay a visit to the pitlane after being penalised for ignoring yellow flags. The MW Arden driver was in P4 at the time the penalty was given. Lap 12 and Fabiano Machado’s race was brought to a premature end after trying to initiate a pass on Status Grand Prix’s Kotaro Sakurai and the Brazilian spun off into the gravel. There was also a titanic tussle for the final points on offer in the top 8 between Daniel Abt and Alex Brundle.

In the latter part of the 16 lap race, Daly increased his advantage at the front and achieved his debut win by 3.2s over Visoiu with Laine 4.1s behind the race winner. P4 went to Daly’s Lotus GP teammate Vainio, ahead of Patric Niederhauser and Antonio Felix Da Costa (the latter will be investigated after the race for an incident before the start). Abt and Brundle completed the top 8. Visoiu becomes the youngest driver to step onto a GP3 rostrum at just 16 years old (beating a record previously held by Evans).

Evans holds the lead in the GP3 Series standings on 25 points, with Daly and Vainio hot on his heels with 23 points each. GP3’s next stop is Monaco on the 24-26 May when the Series makes its first appearance at the Principality, it’s going to be one to watch!


Motorsports Mondial - May 12, 2012

Lewis Hamilton takes his first Spanish pole position number 150 for McLaren.

Pastor Maldonado puts his Williams on the front row.

Lewis Hamilton: “It was a fantastic qualifying session for me, very very happy with it – one of the best I ever had,” said Hamilton. “Amazing job by the guys in the garage and thanks to guys in factory who have brought upgrades.

The car feels great. It is a great day for the team I think. I really feel fantastic. I feel very, very happy.

You can normally be happy with a position but for some reason this feels better than other pole positions because you are looking for a perfect position. It is an incredible feeling you have.

I am very much aware that I have incredibly tough race tomorrow with these guys who are massively quick and how tricky it is in general,” he said. “It will mean a lot to me to win in Spain.

It has always been a good place for me, beautiful weather and people are incredible and the support I have continues to grow year by year and it has become such a pleasure. To win where you have such a big fan base will be fantastic.”

Pastor Maldonado: We have been working so hard all year to understand these tyres and with the updates we have brought to this race we have made a very good step forward.

The car is very consistent and its race pace is good so I am really looking forward to the race tomorrow. There has been a really positive atmosphere in the team all season and this is a great result for them and Venezuela.

Frank Williams: On the face of it, the regulations aren’t a myriad of high class mathematical problems; they are quite straightforward engineering problems. We’ve done it before and we just have to be more clever and more organised, maybe get one or two people in. We can make better cars than we have done. My job is to find the money; the engineers’ job is to make racing cars.”

“Do we have the right people? Well, the proof of the pudding is the proof of the pudding. I don’t think we lack very much. We have people with strong ambitions and good, strong optimism too. We’re proud of what we do.

“We make good racing cars, coupled with a good engine. We have the same engine as three or four other teams. We have the same tyres as all the other teams. It’s a bunch of human beings. The trick is to get the best group.”

Pos Driver Team Time Gap

 1.  Lewis Hamilton        McLaren-Mercedes     1m21.707s
 2.  Pastor Maldonado      Williams-Renault     1m22.285s   + 0.578
 3.  Fernando Alonso       Ferrari              1m22.302s   + 0.595
 4.  Romain Grosjean       Lotus-Renault        1m22.424s   + 0.717
 5.  Kimi Raikkonen        Lotus-Renault        1m22.487s   + 0.780
 6.  Sergio Perez          Sauber-Ferrari       1m22.533s   + 0.826
 7.  Nico Rosberg          Mercedes             1m23.005s   + 1.298
 8.  Sebastian Vettel      Red Bull-Renault     No time
 9.  Michael Schumacher    Mercedes             No time
10.  Kamui Kobayashi       Sauber-Ferrari       No time

Q2 cut-off time: 1m22.904s Gap **
11.  Jenson Button         McLaren-Mercedes     1m22.944s   +  0.839
12.  Mark Webber           Red Bull-Renault     1m22.977s   +  0.872
13.  Paul di Resta         Force India-Mercedes 1m23.125s   +  1.020
14.  Nico Hulkenberg       Force India-Mercedes 1m23.177s   +  1.072
15.  Jean-Eric Vergne      Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.265s   +  1.160
16.  Daniel Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari   1m23.442s   +  1.337
17.  Felipe Massa          Ferrari              1m23.444s   +  1.339
Q1 cut-off time: 1m24.362s Gap *
18.  Bruno Senna           Williams-Renault     1m24.981s   + 2.398
19.  Vitaly Petrov         Caterham-Renault     1m25.277s   + 2.694
20.  Heikki Kovalainen     Caterham-Renault     1m25.507s   + 2.924
21.  Charles Pic           Marussia-Cosworth    1m26.582s   + 3.999
22.  Timo Glock            Marussia-Cosworth    1m27.032s   + 4.449
23.  Pedro de la Rosa      HRT-Cosworth         1m27.555s   + 4.972
24.  Narain Karthikeyan    HRT-Cosworth         1m31.122s   + 8.539

Pau novice Raffaele Marciello claims Pole-Position

Italian Raffaele Marciello (Prema Powerteam, 1:11.600 minutes) was fastest in qualifying for the Grand Prix de Pau, which was split up into two groups. At the 2.76 kilometres long street circuit at the foot of the Pyrenees, another driver from the Formula 3 Euro Series, Carlos Sainz (Carlin, 1:10.802 minutes) topped the time sheets in the other group. Accordingly, Marciello and Sainz will be on the front row for Sunday’s 71st Grand Prix de Pau, which counts towards the FIA European Formula 3 Championship.

In the first group, Carlos Sainz, Daniel Juncadella (Prema Powerteam, 1:10.826 minutes), Pascal Wehrlein (Mücke Motorsport, 1:10.853 minutes) and Jack Harvey (Carlin, 1:10.987 minutes) staged a thrilling battle for first place, which Sainz eventually secured with a tiny margin: his advantage on Juncadella was 0.024 seconds while third-placed rookie driver Pascal Wehrlein was only 0.051 seconds down on the fastest time. In the second group, fastest driver Raffaele Marciello had a bigger margin: he outpaced Jazeman Jaafar (Carlin, 1:10.864 minutes) by 0.254 seconds.

The starting grid positions for this afternoon’s first race are based on the second-fastest lap time by every driver. Here, Marciello also came out on top and as a result, he will be starting from the best grid position for race one as well. Danuel Juncadella and Pascal Wehrlein were first and second in their qualifying group. Thus, Formula 3 Euro Series drivers also locked out the front row of the starting grid for the first race.

Raffaele Marciello (Prema Powerteam): “I am really delighted by being on pole position for the Grand Prix de Pau and in fact, I am slightly surprised myself. After all, things didn’t go too well for me yesterday and moreover, this is my first time at Pau. In qualifying, I made a mistake on turn 1, but fortunately, the run-off area there is big enough.”

Carlos Sainz (Carlin): “I am absolutely delighted by being fastest of my group. As a novice at Pau, I hadn’t expected that. Only the fact that traffic on the track prevented me from driving a fast second lap is a pity.”


Motorsports Mondial - May 11, 2012

Photo: gp2media

James Calado storms to Barcelona pole

Englishman tops qualifying in style

James Calado claimed his maiden GP2 pole position with a controlled but aggressive lap in the opening minutes of this afternoon’s qualifying session at the Circuit de Catalunya, leaving his more experienced rivals in the shade as he took the top spot in the blazing heat ahead of Fabio Leimer and Stéphane Richelmi.

The Briton’s 1:30.655 lap gave him a two tenths cushion over his closest rivals, with the gap closing slightly late in the session when Leimer improved his time. Calado, along with most of the grid, chose to go out early on the soft compound tyre to take advantage of the F1 rubber on the circuit, and the only question after the first few laps was whether the gamble taken by the few remaining drivers would pay off.

This morning’s fastest driver Josef Kral took to the circuit as most of his rivals came back into the pits, but he was unable to match his earlier performance. Marcus Ericsson and Fabio Leimer also delayed using their single set of option: the Swiss driver was an impressive P4 on his first set, and while the Swede was unable to improve his times, Leimer pushed up two spots but was unable to match Calado’s best lap.

With little chance to improve, many drivers used the remainder of the session as a bonus practice session ahead of tomorrow’s feature race, which will see Max Chilton, Giedo van der Garde, Fabio Onidi, Davide Valsecchi, Stefano Coletti, Jolyon Palmer and Nathanaël Berthon line up behind the top three. With conditions forecast to be much the same as this afternoon’s session, the race promises to be a scorcher.


F1Weekly podcast # 573 - May 10, 2012

F1weekly podcast number 573

With special Interview British F3 driver Felix Serralles

Felix Serralles began his racing career in karting at the age of ten and was runner-up in the Caribbean Championship in both 2004 and 2005.

After winning a scholarship in 2009 Skip Barber Shootout, Serralles become a Mazdaspeed Development Driver and had a season in Skip Barber National Championship, where he finished third with two wins.

In 2010, Serralles decided to race in Europe, taking part in the Formula Renault UK Winter Cup for Fortec Motorsport as a guest driver. Serralles continued his collaboration with Fortec into 2011 and the Formula Renault Eurocup, scoring eight points-scoring finishes on his way to twelfth place in the series standings. He also appeared in Formula Renault UK in twelve of the season’s twenty races as a guest driver and the Formula Renault UK Finals Series, where he claimed two podiums and finished eighth overall.

Serralles contested the Toyota Racing Series in January and February 2012 with Giles Motorsport, finishing ninth in the championship with a win at the New Zealand Grand Prix meeting at Manfield.

On 4 January 2012, it was announced that Serralles had rejoined Fortec Motorsports for a season in the British Formula Three Championship. At the opening round of the season at Oulton Park, Serralles qualified on the front row for the third race of the meeting, and after beating Carlin’s Jack Harvey off the grid, Serralles held his own in the lead and eventually claimed victory, becoming the first Puerto Rican to win in the series. He added a second victory a week later at Monza, winning the second race of the meeting in torrential rain.

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