Sunday, October 28, 2012

Jorge Lorenzo – 2012 MotoGP™ World Champion

 
Jorge Lorenzo journey to his two MotoGP™ premier class titles began on the age of three when he entered in minicross competitions in their native Mallorca, then junior motocross along with a 50cc Copa Aprilia title in the Spanish Championship – an entry he was just granted with special permission. Lorenzo subsequently was crowned youngest ever rider to enter a global Championship race. Turning fifteen – the minimum age for Grand Prix participation long ago - within the second day of practice to the 2002 Spanish race at Jerez, he made his debut aboard a Derbi 125cc at the track where yet enjoy much success above the next several years.

Within his second season he took his first Grand Prix victory at Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, where his impressive "about the outside" overtaking manoeuvre on Casey Stoner and Dani Pedrosa won him the nickname "Por Fuera". In 2004 he sealed an additional three triumphs, prior to the rise towards 250cc category annually later and taking four poles and six podiums in their maiden season. 2006 would have been to really do the coming-of-age year with the Mallorcan, who switched to Aprilia machinery and immediately took over as the favourite for your World Championship. He justified the hype with the impressive eight victories, equalling the pole position record at the same time with ten, and lifting the title within the emotional final race of the year at Valencia.


Another dominant year in 2007 saw Lorenzo retaining the quarter-litre title, wonderful nine of his victories via pole. At only twenty years old, he would have been a two-time 250cc World Champion and took on his biggest challenge as of yet by signing with the Yamaha factory team in MotoGP alongside Valentino Rossi. Lorenzo made a sudden impact from the premier class that has a stunning first five races. He took pole on his debut - becoming the initial man to do so since Max Biaggi ten years previously - and finished second in the astounding performance in Qatar. He accompanied the feat with pole on the next two races, becoming the 1st rider to search ‘three from three’ as part of his rookie season and turning both top spots into podium finishes.

Thursday, October 25, 2012

Formula 1 Indian Grand Prix Start from Friday

The F1 race is critical for the home team Sahara Force India, which is protected in a battle with Sauber for the sixth place at constructors' table. Force India, deceitful seventh in the table, is trailing Sauber by 27 points and the lead is too tricky to overcome. The team is aspiring to get both the cars in the top-10 at this race. Last year, Adrian Sutil had completed ninth here. 

It will also be the last time when Indian fans will get to see the renowned Schumacher race in the country. The seven-time world winner will say good bye to F1 at the end of the period. For Narain Karthikeyan, the only Indian driver in F1, a conclude inside top-20 would be a good result allowing for the issues he has with his HRT car. He had finished 17th last year and wants to superior his presentation before the home crowd.

Indian Grand Prix

The Jaypee Sports International (JPSI) had transport an improbable race in 2011 and they are predictable to do better, having personalized the facilities a bit. The drivers had accepted the track and even termed it as one of the most demanding, but there were complaints of dust on it. The organizers have tried to make it a dust-free ability and the drivers will find a lot of greenery approximately the BIC. 

The superior Noida-based Buddh International track is 5.14 km long and it has 60 laps. The cars will cover a space of 308 kms and the maximum speed of the track is 320 kmph. The Buddh International track will host first Indian Grand Prix on October 30. The Buddh International F1 track was built by Germany's Harmann Tilke in an approx price of USD 400 million.

Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Vettal the Man of the Beat at Buddh International

Just as at the opening race here in 2011, Sebastian Vettel has to start favourite in New Delhi after Red Bull’s current astonishing run of form has yielded three successive victories and moved him into the lead of the world championship for the first time since Bahrain. “I loved the track layout last year, but not presently because I won the race,” Vettel says of the Buddh International track. “With an normal speed of 235 km/h, the itinerary is the second quickest of the year after Monza. 

Vettel

There is a lot of altitude change approximately the lap which adds to the fun, from as much as 8 percent downward and up to 10 percent uphill it’s like a roller coaster. It really has appeared as one of the most demanding circuits on the calendar for the drivers. “As for the championship, it’s rough but that’s what it is about. I’m looking onward to the next couple of races. We had a good last couple of races but you know, we’ve seen the challenge is pretty much up and down, a lot of possessions can happen. 

What do we do? I think we have to center on ourselves we need to have our best probable results and then we go from there. “I think at the end of the year if we have enough points there’s a lot of people are effective us so we don’t have to do the mathematics ourselves!” Ferrari is a very long way from generous up, however. After behavior divide wind tunnel tests away from their own anxious facility, they consider they have made some significant steps forward. 

"The wind subway can only ever be a model of what things are like in realism and can never be totally real," chief designer Nicolas Tombazis thought this week. "The information we saw in the wind tunnel did not match 100 percent the data we were receiving from the track. We had some disagreeable surprises from some of the updates we brought to the last couple of races, so instantly, we wanted to attach that and appreciate where it had gone wrong. 

"Therefore we have had an aero test previous to heading off to India, where we ran manage tests on these updates to really appreciate what the problem was. We got some very fascinating answers which we consider will allow us to recuperate from those problems and so, our aim in this approaching Indian GP, will be to make up the ground we have vanished.”

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

A Season of Surprises F1 2012

Unpredictable is how one would describe 2012 Formula One period. Yes, Sebastian Vettel has won three races in a row to fortify his chances but so shut this season has been that something is probable. At present, it may seem like a two-horse race but with still four to go, it’s going to be far from simple for Vettel and his adjacent competitor Fernando Alonso. Meanwhile, others like Kimi Raikkonen, Mark Webber and Lewis Hamilton, who at one position posed a real hazard, have fizzled out. 

Sebastian Vettal

It has been one of the tightest seasons the sport has seen in a even as with first seven races won by an equal quantity of dissimilar drivers. The events may have normalized since then but no driver, before Vettel, had handled to win back-to-back races. The ban on bluster diffuser, introduced by Red Bull last season to sweep up the season, and the changeable nature of Pirelli tyres have been the two most persuasive reasons for this being such a topsy-turvy season. 

The diffuser exit has abridged the gap between teams and not like last season when Vettel’s Red Bull was much better to even the Ferraris and McLarens. For example, the gap between top 10 through qualifying at the Korean Grand Prix was less than one and half second even as at the same GP last year it was two and half seconds. For example, the gap between top 10 during be eligible at the Korean Grand Prix was less than one and half second whereas at the same GP last year it was two and half seconds. 

Same is the container of tyres. Pirelli introduced tyres that last only about a third of the race aloofness, roughly 60 miles, before the lap era would begin to drop off to the summit where the tyres desirable to be replaced. The idea was to force teams to moreover retain vanishing tyres or make a pit stop for a lightning-fast final push on fresh ones. Williams’s driver priest Maldonado’s win at the Spanish Grand Prix was based on similar principals.

Saturday, October 20, 2012

Pirelli prepared F1 Race in Austin

Pirelli & Cie SpA and its supplementary, Pirelli Tire North America Inc., have been association simulations on the new F1 track using data obtained from a visit to the track through its building. Pirelli is the sole dealer of tires to F1 racing. Pirelli says track of the Americas in Austin is more multifaceted than the other new F1 track, Hockenheim in Germany, because it has not at all been raced on before. Understanding the scenery of a new outside is always complex, particularly when there is no preceding data. 

“There’s no hesitation that preparing for a track that is totally new is more complicated than going to one of the recognized venues," says Paul Hembery, Pirelli’s motorsport manager. "However, we now feel fully prepared for this glorious track, where we will bring the P Zero Silver hard and P Zero White intermediate tires. The expertise and know-how that we have at our removal means that we can estimate some very precise predictions without actually having raced at a track these days, thanks to the preparation work from our engineers.” 

 They brought with them complicated laser measuring apparatus in order to evaluate the abrasiveness of the track by investigative closely the spacing and shape of the stones that make up the collective. Several readings were taken from the mechanism in order to ensure a precise demonstration. Using these readings an essential demonstration of the track from the tire’s point of view can be created on computer. 

Together with some blacktop samples from the new location, this allowed Pirelli to compute the likely wear rate and the effect of the blacktop and ambient temperatures on the tires at dissimilar points on the track. "Their investigation of our brand new track can help afford race strategy predictions that should assist drivers and teams near achieving achievement at our track," says Steve Sexton, Circuit of the Americas president.

Thursday, October 18, 2012

Mercedes Benz not Writing Off 2012 F1 season yet

Mercedes is not yet prepared to write off the rest of the season in favour of focusing its possessions on to its 2013 contestant. Although the German car manufacturer has approximately no chance of closing behind the 119-points gap to Lotus in the constructors' championship, it does face a clash to hold off Sauber, which is just 20 points at the back. That is why team major Ross Brawn has said that the outfit needs to together keep approaching for this year, while not homicide effort that could be put to better use ensuring its 2013 competitor is a step forward. 

"We need a impartial move toward I think," he said when asked by AUTOSPORT about how it was splitting efforts between this year and next season. "Our chassis teams are conniving next year’s car and there are assured directions they want to confirm. The aero changes you saw on Friday morning [in Korea] with the back wing [double-DRS] are mainly for next year. So present is a mix. 

"We don't want to give up the residue of this year while operational for next year, but there is a strong feature [of looking to 2013].”At Suzuka we had two rear dissimilar suspension geometries, and we had some other essential differences, so we are plug those things into the programme. But we still want to have a reputable presentation for the rest of the year." 

Although Mercedes has resist for results in recent races having not scored any points since the Singapore Grand Prix Brawn thinks that place coming up should suit its car enhanced. "I think these next few tracks coming up, even though we don't know concerning Austin, will tend to come a bit towards the scenery of our car," he said.

Wednesday, October 17, 2012

Massa will Stay at Ferrari 2013 Season

Felipe Massa will stay at Ferrari for the 2013 period in an unaffected arrangement with Fernando Alonso, the Italian Formula One team said in a statement on Tuesday. The Brazilian has struggled for form in current years but has decided a one-year addition amid continued conjecture that world champion Sebastian Vettel could join Alonso at Ferrari starting 2014. Alonso’s agreement runs to the end of 2016. 

 “The team and also all the fans can rest guaranteed that I will do all in my authority to help the Scuderia accomplish the targets it sets itself each year,” Massa said on the Ferrari website. Massa’s prospect has been unsure all period, with the 31-year-old anguish an abject run until he completed second at this month’s Japanese Grand Prix for his first platform finish since 2010. 

Felipe Massa

The Sao Paulo driver was fourth in South Korea on Sunday, round 16 of the contest, a result that intended he had scored more points in his last two races than he had in the first 11 of the time. Ferrari’s conclusion was not a great revelation, with Alonso clearly favoring the Brazilian as his team mate having recognized himself as the clear center of the sport’s most winning team. 

 “I am so happy to persist one more year with Felipe1Massa as a teammate. I’m sure we are the most excellent team. ForzaFerrari,” Alonso said on Twitter after a declaration that Ferrari said they had intended to make next week but had brought forward to end all the conjecture.

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

NBC Sports signed with F1 Race on 2013

NBC Sports Group signed a four-year deal with Formula One for the elite U.S. media rights to the world's most accepted worldwide motorsports series. The deal, which begins next period, will give over 100 hours of programming crossways NBC and cable channel NBC Sports Network. 

Jon Miller, president of indoctrination for NBC Sports and NBC Sports Network, told The Associated Press on Sunday night it gives the network happy to grow its motorsports company. NBC Sports Network owns the rights to the bulk of the IndyCar Series agenda. 

"This is an occasion for us to get further occupied in open wheel racing and actually obtain some great live first run content," Miller told the related Press on Sunday night. "This gives us excellence proceedings to put on our air, and this is a sport with a enormous following around the world that we feel we can grow in this country." 

 The agreement between NBC Sports Group and Formula One Management convey an end to the 17-year run cable channel Speed had as the U.S. rights owner to F1. A spokesman for parent corporation Fox Sports told The AP on Friday that Speed had been outbid by one more network during contract conference.

Miller said only that NBC Sports Group had made "a important monetary commitment" and that a conversation that began several months ago with FOM rapidly came mutually in this four-year agreement.

"NBC and its variety of media property have a huge profile all through the United States and I am clearly delighted to have completed this agreement," Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One Group CEO, said in a declaration.

Monday, October 15, 2012

McLaren Want to Feel the Hamilton Love

McLaren has left Lewis Hamilton in no hesitation that he will sense the love when he goes rear to the Formula One team's factory this week for the first time while his move to Mercedes was announced last month. The 2008 world champion, who returns to Working on Friday for a few work in the simulator before the Indian Grand Prix, affirmed his title hopes over for one more period on Sunday after final 10th in the Korean Grand Prix. 

His grainy presentation in wrestling a injured car to the finish encouraged team boss Martin Whit marsh to dig bottomless into his bag of superlatives, though, in declaring it perhaps the most hard-fought single point he could remember in his decades at McLaren. Hamilton has had a tough time of late, on and off the path. His choice to leave and his postings on Twitter, for some of which he has had to express regret, have intensified medium inspection of his state of mind. 

He has been depict as ever more inaccessible, a feeling unbreakable by his exposure that an effort to take his workings bowling on the Saturday evening at the Japanese Grand Prix had been skittle by them as they had previously conventional an request to go running with colleague Jenson Button. Whit marsh and Button, talking alone to Reuters, were obstinate that was not the case and Hamilton would get a proper send-off. 

"Of course people were dissatisfied to lose someone like Lewis but Lewis has been here a long time and each one is going to be charitable all for him," Whit marsh said of a 27-year-old who has been part of the McLaren relations since he was 13. "One way or another I'm sure we'll get jointly and memorize lots of fantastic success, many contest wins, many poles, many great races and a great world contest in 2008.

Sunday, October 14, 2012

Vettal Wins from Alonso to seize F1 at Korean Grand Prix

World champ Sebastian Vettel won the Korean Grand Prix in a Red Bull one-two finish on Sunday to get the overall Formula One lead from Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso with four races outstanding. Vettel’s third win in a line, fourth of the period and 25th of his career, left him on 215 points with third-placed Alonso at the present on 209. Australian Mark Webber, who had in progress on pole location but was overtaken by his squad mate off the grid into the first corner, completed second to fasten the first one-two of the period by any team. 

South Korea’s ‘Gangnam Style’ rapper Psy gesticulate the chequered flag as Vettel crossed the finish line and thanked his squad for a “great race, great job on the pit wall” before loud in enjoyment. “The start was very significant. We started from the filthy side,” said Vettel. “I had a very good begin and might see that Mark was stressed a little bit. I was able to get side by side and then had the within into turn one. 

Vettal Championship

“It was a great start for me,” added the German, who spent the final laps fretting about the tyres and creation sure they detained up. With no need to assault his title-chasing squad mate in the concluding stages, Webber finished 8.2 seconds behind Vettel. Preliminary fourth, Spaniard Alonso got ahead of McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton at the create but could not shut the gap with the Red Bulls on an afternoon where the conclusion was efficiently determined in the first few seconds. He crossed the line 13.9 seconds after Vettel. 

 “I think we have to be happy with the presentation today,” said Alonso, whose Ferrari team (290 points) overtook McLaren (284) for next place in the constructors’ standings after Red Bull (367). “We are touching in the right way. We just need a little last step to be as spirited as Red Bull.”

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Fernando Alonso says F1 Title Race Wide Open

Championship head Fernando Alonso of Ferrari said on Thursday in front of the Korean Grand Prix that the title competition was still wide open, warning Lewis Hamilton remnants a threat. Alonso saw his lead over the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel slashed to just four points in Japan last week when the Spaniard was enforced out moments after the start with a stab, leading some to propose it was now a two-horse race.With five grand prix to go, Alonso has 194 points, Vettel 190, Kimi Raikkonen 157 and Hamilton of McLaren 152. 

Speaking at a press discussion in Yeongam, Alonso confessed he did not know how far Hamilton was after. Told it was extra than 40 points there are 25 points for a pursuit win he said: "It's more difficult but it's not over."For sure the possibility is a little bit lower, but the form of McLaren and Lewis previous to Suzuka means they still have a opportunity." Hamilton, who will move to Mercedes next year, completed fifth in Japan to keep his finals hopes just about alive. Despite having Vettel inhalation hard behind his neck, Alonso said there was no basis to panic. "We all need a few points this weekend. 

It's the same for each one. We've been approaching from the first week and nothing changes now. We need to keep responsibility the same things." He added: "I remain certain we will be spirited. We've been more or less spirited the last eight or 10 races. We've not been the best, but we are in location."Vettel, who has stormed into argument after victory in the previous two races in Singapore and Suzuka, echoed Alonso's sentiment. "We should be sensibly spirited here," said the German. "But this year has been very random. We will try our best to get a very sturdy result.

It's been quite up and down for all of us. We've seen this year a lot of cars that can revelation. There are more than one or two cars that can win. It's been the narrative of the finals, it's been up and down and things can modify rapidly. "Hamilton, who did not finish in Singapore, previous to Japan, because of a technical burden, said: "It should have been 35 points (from those two races) but that's race and there are still 125 points to go. We've got to keep approaching and intent on those 125 points that are left. You have to make your own luck in this commerce. We are still in it and we are still hostility."

Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Korean GP F1 Lead to Vettal and Alonso

Heading into this weekend's Korean Grand Prix, the Formula One drivers' challenge is determining up as a duel between suspicious winner Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull and head Fernando Alonso of Ferrari. Vettel took his second successive plaid flag at the Japanese GP on Sunday to shift within four points of Alonso with five races left. Alonso's lead was additional battered after he stopped on the first turn in Suzuka. Vettel's dominating win from the pole at Suzuka made him the first driver this phase to record back-to-back victory, and he joined Alonso and Mercedes-bound Lewis Hamilton as the only drivers to win three times this period. 

Despite his current achievement, Vettel said a lot of things can modify among now and the end of the period. "Things can modify very rapidly," said Vettel, who also won last year's Korean GP. "It's a great deal closer now but each weekend can be dissimilar. It's a very new schedule for all of us this year with back-to-back races in Japan and Korea and then in America and Brazil, so we just have to focal point on each person race and see what happens." Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo said Alonso has been a wounded of bad luck and, if not for the mistakes of additional drivers, would be in an improved location. 

"We know we can calculate on the strongest driver approximately at the second, and it's only mistakes from others at Spa and again at Suzuka that have prohibited him from having a more contented lead over his rivals," Montezemolo said. Alonso was powerless to finish the Belgium GP after a stunning crash caused by Lotus driver Romain Grosjean. The Spaniard also not working at the Japan race after Lotus driver Kimi Raikonnen completed contact with his Ferrari at the first twist. "Let's not recall that," Montezemolo said. "But for those two collisions, today Fernando would contain had at least 30 points more and that's a traditional approximation." 

Hamilton remains hopeful he can declare himself in the title pursue following his fifth-place finish in Japan reserved the McLaren driver fourth in the standings, 42 points off the guide. "I think we've had the possible to win together Korean races in the past," Hamilton said. "But I've never had a race weekend there on which all has gone quite right for me. We've got impetus on our side once again, so I head to Korea resolute to fight for victory." Raikonnen is still in disputation in third, 37 points back, in spite of not having won a race all period.

Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Japanese Grand Prix at F1 Diary

The impression at the Japanese grand prix at Suzuka more than made up for a minor need of exploit on the track, says our F1 diarist. The Japanese Grand Prix is the first of six in eight weekends and I'm still four chapters drifting with Auto course better to be busy than not, I estimate, but the future Text Mountain appears yet steeper. Emirates' flights characteristic electrical sockets as average and the adjacent seat are free seven hours should be adequate to catch up with some work, but I complete only wreckage. 

Land in Dubai soon after midnight and hook up with Mark ahead of the linking leg to Osaka. He has previously spent air miles on a trade upgrade and I do similarly. The benefit is a appropriate bed for the next nine hours, the problem that we'll be landing only a few hours previous to the rest of Japan turns in. It's a bit like race approach, in that a workable equilibrium must be realizable, but I'm knackered and the enticement to lounge is enticing. I fall asleep not counting touching the glass of Sauvignon blanc that has kindly been poured and know naught more of the world until a tap on the accept alerts me to the nearness of breakfast.

Japan GP Track

Upon clearance migration, we're approached by two serious looking men in suits presumptuous they work for a rip-off cab lease company; I try to shrug them off. I memorize that Japan doesn't have taxi hawkers just as one of them reveal a police brooch. It's just a arbitrary confirm entirely polite and friendly and it takes only a combine of minutes to supply all requisite particulars. Our first job is to position Tony. Having not worried recurring to Europe in the slipstream of Singapore, he exhausted a week in Kuala Lumpur before soaring on to Osaka and is previously ensconced in a hotel room "with adequate beds", by which he means two plus a sofa. 

Having in use a train and a taxi from the airdrome, we catch up with him just after 7pm, about two hours after twisted eggs, and head out to eat once more. The eatery is recognizable enough two years earlier; Mark and I ate here while Tony wandered off to find a burger, and then came to sit with us as he ate it. This time he opts for a more conservative move toward and orders from the menu. The pizzas are scrumptious, but small: always best to have two in such situation. Turn in when Japan switches off and sleep roughly as soundly as I had during the flight eccentric, but true.

Monday, October 8, 2012

Sebastian Wons the F1 Race in Japan

In a race in which most of the accomplishment was over within the first half-lap, Sebastian Vettel moved in four points of Fernando Alonso in the fight for the world finals. While the Red Bull driver conquered the Japan GP, Ferrari's head found himself a first-corner fatality for the second time in three races. As Vettel sped into a lead he not at all relinquished, Alonso had a argument with Kimi Raikkonen and spun out of the race with a punctured back tyre. 

At the equal occasion, bad boy Romain Grosjean strike Vettel's colleague Mark Webber. "I had no gap on the right, I had [Jenson] Button there I think on the left I had Kimi and I don't realize why Kimi didn't lift off as there was no room and it was only the first spot," Alonso said. Webber was luminous about Grosjean, who was just debarred after causing the accident at the first corner in Belgium in which Alonso was also taken out. 

 
Sources say the Australian even made an annoyed visit to the Lotus hospitality cabin. "It was the first-round nutcase over, Grosjean," Webber said. "The rest of us are trying to fight for honest results each weekend but he's trying to get to the third angle as fast as he can at every race. It makes it annoying because a few big guys perceptibly suffer from that today. Maybe he needs a new holiday. 

"He needs to have a appear at himself. It was entirely his fault. How many mistakes can you make, how many period can you make the same error with first-lap incidents?” The safety car was deployed for just two laps, and afterward Vettel was impervious as he scored a triumph that brought him level with the Argentina fable Juan Manuel Fangio's 24 and his points compute this period to 190 compared to Alonso's 194.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Sebastian Wons Japanese Grand Prix

Japan has proved a happy hunting ground once more for Sebastian Vettel, having won at Suzuka in 2009 and 2010 and claimed the world contest here last year, he has now ensured this year's title race approximately begins again from graze after a flag-to-pole win that puts him four points after the contest leader Fernando Alonso, who was knocked off at the first corner.

Vettel's drive was peaceful but while he takes the season's first back-to-back wins and impetus into the final five races, it was the other collide, instantly after Alonso's, yet again involving Romain Grosjean, and Lewis Hamilton's tussle with his McLaren substitute, Sergio Pérez that involved most observation.

Sebastian Vettel

 Already under fire for his driving, Grosjean did himself no additional favors in the race, having only made it to Turn Two before shunt into Mark Webber's Red Bull, responsible of watching Perez who was flanking him, rather than the Australian who was in front.

He has previously been punished with a one-race ban after causing the crash that knocked out Alonso and Lewis Hamilton at the first turn at Spa. But that was just the most impressive (and potentially dangerous) of a period besieged with errors. This marks the eighth time the Frenchman has been occupied in an occurrence in 15 races and, more disturbingly for the other drivers coming up for the lights to go out, it is the fifth time it has happened on the first circuit.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

Michael Schumacher Retires From F1 Race

The 43-year-old luminary driver will go away at the end of the period. His final race in Brazil will be six years to the day he announced his first retreat. "Basically I've determined to retire by the end of the year," the seven-time world victor said.

Michael Schumacher

But at some tip it's good to articulate goodbye. And that's what I'm doing together with this by the end of the period, and it strength this time even be perpetually. For the duration of the past month I was not sure if I still had the inspiration and power which is indispensable to go on. It is not my technique to do incredible that I'm not 100% sensation for. With today's resolution I feel release, apparently from those uncertainties, and in the end my objective to fight for victories and the delight of driving is nourished apparently by competitiveness.

"It is lacking doubt that we did not accomplish our goals to expand a World Championship warfare car. But it is also very obvious that I can still be very glad about my overall achievements in the entire time of my occupation."

HISTORY OF MICHAEL SCHUMACHER:

Michael Schumacher in progress out his racing profession in the similar way as all the great drivers, in karting. At four years mature his father built him a kart and rapidly behind enrolled him in the local kart club Kerpen Horrom. Michael's problem was that in Germany the system stated the smallest amount allowable age to acquire a kart permit was 14. To get approximately this he obtains a Luxembourg permit (obtainable from the age of 12). However in 1983 he obtain his German authorize and the year after he win the German Junior Kart finals.

In 1989 Michael signed with Willi Weber, whose group WTS he would drive for for the period of 1989 and 1990 in the Formula 3 contest. Weber paid the expenses for together seasons (approximately 1 million DM). During 1990 and 1991 Schumacher enthused into sports car racing, as an alternative of the more customary step up to Formula 3000.

Many managers understood this would block his succession to Formula 1, but Weber believed that exposure to certified press conferences and dealing with the cars of 700bhp would be advantageous.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

Alonso wins remarkable European Grand Prix

Fernando Alonso took a extraordinary victory at the European Grand Prix as the Valencia street circuit finally provided a thrilling and impulsive race.

Alonso finished 6.4s clear of Kimi Raikkonen in second as tyre management became critical towards the end of the race and Lewis Hamilton, who had been running second but struggling with degradation, was taken out by Pastor Maldonado on the penultimate lap. Michael Schumacher inherited third - and the first podium since his return to F1 racing - ahead of Mark Webber, who came through went from 19th on the grid to fourth.


For the first 28 laps of the race it looked like Sebastian Vettel would win with ease, but a safety car period eliminated his early lead and then his chances evaporated completely with a consistency problem. Romain Grosjean was also in contention until a faulty alternator brought him to a halt on lap 40 as he closed on Alonso for the lead.

The surprise finish also provided a good points haul for Force India, with Nico Hulkenberg finishing fifth and Paul di Resta seventh, split by the Mercedes of Nico Rosberg in sixth. Jenson Button struggled to eighth position in front of Sergio Perez and the recovering Maldonado in the final two points-paying positions.

At the start the race looked as though it would take a familiar path with Vettel streaking away into a 20-second lead as he chased his third uninterrupted victory at the street circuit. But the first sign he wouldn't have it all his own way came on lap 27 as Jean-Eric Vergne mysteriously veered into the Caterham of Heikki Kovalainen, causing both cars to suffer punctures. The resulting rubber and debris brought out the safety car, and in the push of a button in race control Vettel's lead over Grosjean was abridged to nothing.

At the restart Alonso moved past Grosjean for second and he didn't have to wait long for a clear track to materialize ahead of him as Vettel's Red Bull came to a halt in the third sector of the lap. From that moment the race was all about tyre management, with the lead drivers all taking on a new set of tyres under the safety car and then faced with the confront of making them last to the end.

The Lotus of Grosjean looked best equipped for the task, but on lap 40 it dropped off the back of the Ferrari and eventually came to a halt on the straight following the swing bridge. That promoted Hamilton to second, but he had to manage his charge in the knowledge that Raikkonen was looming behind. In the end the McLaren proved hardest on its tyres and Raikkonen pounced, finding a way past under traction out of turn 17.

By that point Alonso's race was safe and the focus switched to Maldonado who was closing fast on Hamilton. After Raikkonen's easy pass it seemed predictable that the Williams would follow, but Hamilton was not going to grant the position easily. With just one and half laps remaining, Maldonado tried to find a way past Hamilton on the outside of turn 12, but he couldn't make it stick and found himself marooned on the kerbs on the inside of turn 13. As he rejoined the track he broadsided Hamilton in what was an unnecessarily-clumsy collision that pitched Hamilton into the barriers. Maldonado limped to the finish minus a front wing but was given a 20-second post-race penalty, demoting him to 12th and handing tenth to his team-mate Bruno Senna. The impact allowed Schumacher to finish on the podium for the first time since 2006 as he kept out of problem to come through from 12th on the gird.

With his two closest championship rivals failing to finish, Alonso now leads the drivers' title chase by 20 points from Webber. Hamilton is now 23 points off the Ferrari driver with Vettel 26 adrift.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Stoner not concerned by championship deficit

Following Jorge Lorenzo's British MotoGP win the Spaniard has opened a commanding 25 point championship guide over Casey Stoner.

With six races concluded in the season, and 12 remaining, it is far from what had been predictable from the reigning world champion - but Stoner was eager to stress that it was far too early to view the championship momentum as having swung determinedly in Lorenzo's favour.

“It's too early [to worry about the championship.] I'm more concerned about our pace to be honest,” said the 26 year old Repsol Honda rider. “That's the thing that has dissatisfied me a lot.

“Championships can turn just about in one race. Definitely the way Jorge is going it's not going to occur, but one DNF and a win for myself and we're equivalent on points and it's game on again.

"So we don't know what can occur later on in the season, but we have got to keep fighting and moreover try and close the gap or not let it enlarge too much."

With the Silverstone weekend having been run in unreliable weather conditions, Stoner was keen to stress that second place was a strong result.

“Today might have gone either way and I could have lost a lot more points than we did so I'm happy to have held on for second. Things could have disappeared a lot better too so we've got to turn ourselves around,” concluded the Australian.

Stoner led laps 5-10 of the 20-lap race, ahead of being passed by Lorenzo. Stoner then spent the left over laps holding off team-mate Dani Pedrosa.

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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Fernando Alonso predicts injure limitation for Ferrari at Bahrain Grand Prix

Fernando Alonso says there is no reason to anticipate anything but another weekend of damage limitation for Ferrari at the Bahrain Grand Prix.

The Spaniard lost his Formula 1 points lead in China last weekend, when he might only finish ninth as Ferrari's lack of pace proved insurmountable in dry conditions - preventing a repeat of Alonso's surprise Sepang win.


In his diary column for Ferrari's website, Alonso warned the team's supporters to anticipate more of the same at Sakhir, both due to the nature of the track and the lack of time to make progress stuck between the back-to-back races.

"I am well aware that in Sakhir, we can be expecting another difficult weekend, which is only natural, partly because of the track characteristics and also because the car is the same one we had in Shanghai," Alonso wrote.

"Both the Scuderia and I have a good record in Bahrain: the team has four victories here and I've got three, the last of which was also my first appearance race for the Prancing Horse. But the past counts for nothing in this sport and this weekend will be all concerning damage limitation for us."

Nicky Hayden gets MotoGP test time at Mugello

This Wednesday and Thursday, Ducati MotoGP star Nicky Hayden will join the factory's Test Team during the last two days of a three-day test at Mugello.

The aim of the test is to permit the American, who finished sixth and top Ducati at round one in Qatar, to make up for time lost during winter testing due to injuries at the 2011 Valencia Grand Prix and then in a December training event.

Hayden is thus predictable to use the time as an opportunity to carry out set-up tests that he wasn't able to complete prior to the start of the season. The 2006 world champion will join official test rider Franco Battaini, who is previously on track today (Tuesday) as he continues his development work on the GP12.

Those updates will be tried by Valentino Rossi and Hayden during future tests.

Round two of the 2012 MotoGP season takes place at Jerez, Spain, from April 27-29.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Lorenzo wins first race of the season

Jorge Lorenzo (Yamaha Factory Racing) took his first premier class conquest at the Losail International Circuit to open the 2012 MotoGP season in the best probable manner, after battling reigning World Champion Casey Stoner and the Australian's Repsol Honda team-mate Dani Pedrosa for the period of the 22-lap race. It was as well a superb start to the new 1000cc era in MotoGP, as the CRT machines also made their debut in an action-packed race.


Starting from pole for the first time because the US Grand Prix last July, Lorenzo held the lead until the third lap before Stoner tacit first position with a pass on the start/finish straight. Lorenzo then followed Stoner for the majority of the race earlier than passing his rival with three laps to go, and he finally crossed the line 0.852s ahead of Pedrosa who placed second as Stoner ended the race third.

After a complicated weekend which had seen Pedrosa succeed in seventh the Spaniard shot from row three of the grid into third location on the opening lap, and on lap 20 passed his team-mate Stoner with a superb move on the brakes leaving into Turn 1 to take second. Stoner, who had won in Qatar for four of the past five seasons, took his 16th consecutive podium finish as he got his title defence underway.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Stoner and Pedrosa geared up for Qatar

The 2012 MotoGP™ World Championship publicly starts this weekend in Qatar, the small Peninsula off the Persian Gulf, noted for hosting the only race of the calendar under floodlights. The Commercial bank Grand Prix of Qatar is, without any doubt, one of the most impressive races of the season.

Months of development, testing and hard work have gone into the training for this season which sees a switch to 1000cc bikes. In adding up to this change the Repsol Honda Team faces another challenge; defending the Triple Crown they achieved in 2011 when they won the rider, team and constructor titles.


Casey Stoner, the current MotoGP World Champion, has also been the man to beat in pre-season, dominating both tests in Malaysia and Jerez, where his team-mate, Dani Pedrosa, also established himself as one of the fastest riders in the top class.

Stoner’s record at the Losail circuit is impressive: he is the main position with four pole positions and four wins out of six in the MotoGP class. Pedrosa has visited the podium three times in MotoGP and will be fighting, like the Australian, for a strong start to the season.

Casey Stoner:

“After good pre-season Tests in both Sepang and Jerez, we head to Qatar feeling positive, but still have some work to do. This will be the first time with the new bike on this circuit so we will need to expend some time on the set-up to put ourselves in the best position. We've constantly enjoyed good results at the Losail circuit but this is a new season and there are more competitors contesting for victory this year. I'm keyed up to get the season started and fight for another World Championship.”

Dani Pedrosa:

“Each year is different and there are always a variety of obstacles to go through during a season. I’ve had good and bad races in the past, but a big part of these results are resolute by how you have prepared yourself in the winter. I’ve worked very well this year, I had a good pre-season with the bike and with my physical training; I hope that luck is on my side this time, so we can have a good championship. Qatar is significant because it’s the first race of the season, but you have to minimize risks. If you don't win this race you can at rest win the championship, but on the other side, a mistake can make difficult the year. I’m ready. Let’s see how everything goes and where each person is.”


Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Announcement regarding Formula One finances

Formula One Group has launched a process to expand its current financing facilities. This will involve raising $2.27bn of new services with maturities in 2017/18, replacing the company’s accessible $2.92bn facilities which are due to full-grown in 2013/14. The new facilities will offer the business with a secure, long term capital structure.


Proceeds raised will be kept within the Group for general business purposes and the company has no current plans to pay a bonus.



Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Raikkonen targets Malaysian podium

Kimi Raikkonen says he is confident of scoring his first podium since returning to F1 in this weekend's Malaysian Grand Prix after picking up points in his maiden outing for Lotus in Australia.

The Finn suffered in qualifying at Albert Park and failed to make it past Q1, even though he came through the field to finish seventh and give Lotus its first point’s finish of the year.

Having managed to come from side to side the field on race day down under, Raikkonen said he was happy with the concert shown by the E20 and felt confident that he could he could fight for more during the second round of the year at Sepang.

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“The car feels very good,” he said. “In the race I was wedged in traffic a lot so it didn't show so much, and who knows what strength have happened if we had a better grid a slot. There is a lot of speed in the car.

“We'll be trying to get better our performance in Malaysia for sure. We don't know how the car will behave there but it's been good everywhere so far so hopefully it'll be the same there. It'll be hot and humid which is a confront but we have a good car. As long as qualifying goes well we might be fighting for podiums. We'll have to wait and see.

“There's much more to come. We're learning concerning the car all the time and the last race didn't really give us the chance to use its full possible. Hopefully Malaysia will be a bit more straightforward.”

Raikkonen's seventh place stop in Australia came in his first F1 start since Abu Dhabi 2009, but the former Ferrari driver insisted he felt at home straight-away in spite of the changes that have taken place over the past two years while he has been competing in the WRC.

“To be honest it didn't feel any dissimilar to when I last raced,” he said. “There have been a few rule changes but the racing itself is very similar. The DRS is easier to use in the race than in practice or qualifying because there are only certain places you can set in motion it, whereas in the other sessions people will try to push the limits of how early they can use it which can easily lead to a mistake if you are too destructive.”


Thursday, March 15, 2012

MotoGP: Filling the grid

While the new group of privateer 'Claiming Rule Teams' has arrived just in time to fill the 2012 grid, discussions are underway to point MotoGP in a clearer way for 2013 and beyond.

Following Suzuki's departure and a decrease in satellite entries, full prototypes have been abridged from 17 to 12 for this season - each of the remaining manufacturers (Honda, Yamaha and Ducati) supplying two factories and two satellite bikes.

But the network will still rise to 21 courtesy of the nine new CRT entries, running Superbike-based engines in a prototype chassis.

Extra fuel and engine concessions will be obtainable to help the CRTs compete and the controversial Aprilia project has set lap times that propose its top riders will be in touch with slowest satellite machines.

However other CRTs have far less possessions and the difference in technology between the front and back of the 2012 grid might be greater than at any point in premier-class history. As a result, track performance is likely to be just as wide-ranging.

“The concept of CRT we agree with… but the lap time difference is too big at this instant,” said HRC executive vice president Shuhei Nakamoto, who has previously stated that Honda test rider Kousuke Akiyoshi was only one second slower on a Superbike than on an 800cc RC212V at Suzuka.

But none of the three factories are next to the CRT concept. After all, where would the 2012 MotoGP World Championship be without it? Nevertheless, this season is very much middle, with May targeted as the deadline for agreeing the full set of proposals for 2013 and beyond.