Tumgik
#and Valtteri is just a fun reliable driver
vroomvroomvroommf · 18 days
Text
Listen I know we have 2 seats left to be announced to set the 2025 grid but I’m genuinely starting to prematurely mourn the loss of Bottas and Magnusen. They may not be my favorite drivers but I’m struggling to imagine f1 without them. I know there is a chance Sauber could keep Valtteri for next year (DO IT) and Nico has said he’d like to stay teammates with Kevin but I KNOW we’re going to lose at least one if not both of them and I’m not ready.
33 notes · View notes
race-week · 3 years
Note
Thought experiment for you if you’re interested: If F1 teams were chosen like the American football draft (with the current constructors standings), what do you think the choices would be for the 2022 teams? (So Haas would pick 1st and 11th, Alfa Romeo would pick 2nd and 12th, Williams 3rd and 13th, etc all the way to Mercedes picking 10th and 20th.)
Hi anon - I absolutely love this and put a lot of thought into this; I’ve tried to justify some of my reasons but some just felt right.
This is really long hence it’s under the cut
Thank you so much anon - I had a lot of fun 💕
Haas
1st: Max Verstappen - I could just see them throwing all their money to get him
11th: Nikita Mazepin - Haas spent all their money on securing Max and as such need a driver that comes with a lot of funds.
Alfa Romeo
2nd: Charles Leclerc - they loved him at Sauber and I think they’d love to have him back
12th: Kimi Räikkönen - he’s not ready to retire I’d think he’d give it one more year and Alfa will give him the car
Williams
3rd: Sergio Perez - a super talented driver who also brings in a lot of helpful sponsorship money
13th: Carlos Sainz - another incredibly talented, consistent driver who will help develop the team but also comes with the added benefit of some sponsors
Aston Martin
4th: Sebastian Vettel - I think they are really happy with Seb and would want to keep him
14th: Lance Stroll - he’s a good consistent driver who can pull off some incredible drives and his dad owns the team.
Alpha Tauri
5th: Pierre Gasly - of course they would want to keep him, he’s having one of the best runs of his career
15th: Alex Albon - he was really strong in the Toro Rosso and Tost had a bit of a soft spot for him and I have a feeling that AT given the choice would go for two more experienced drivers
Alpine
6th: Daniel Ricciardo - I think that they would want to take Daniel back into the team, he was strong there.
16th: Fernando Alonso - I mean how could they not want to take on Alonso, the experience is such a helpful development tool
McLaren
7th: Lando Norris - I couldn’t really imagine them going another direction really.
17th: Kevin Magnussen - maybe this is just me but I’d love to see Kev get a second chance in a decent team; he has what it takes
Ferrari
8th: Lewis Hamilton - realistically all of the teams before would have wanted him but would have struggled with budget, but I think Ferrari would be more willing to flash the cash
18th: Mick Schumacher - I mean he’s their protege and the idea of seeing him paired up with Lewis at Ferrari is insane and I need it to happen
Red Bull
9th: George Russell - they are in the fortunate position of picking right before Mercedes so what do they do; steal their protege
19th: Nico Hulkenberg - I mean he was rumoured to be taking the other Red Bull seat, so with dwindling numbers it could make sense.
Mercedes
10th: Valtteri Bottas - He’s a solid reliable driver who has been at Mercedes since 2017 and is an asset to them; they’d keep Valtteri.
20th: Nyck de Vries - I was going to initially say Stoffel as he has F1 experience but I think Nyck could handle it and be a good choice. Another potential one was Nico Rosberg comes out of retirement but that was too unlikely.
23 notes · View notes
thisdaynews · 5 years
Text
Formula 1 testing: Mercedes in form; Ferrari in trouble?
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/formula-1-testing-mercedes-in-form-ferrari-in-trouble/
Formula 1 testing: Mercedes in form; Ferrari in trouble?
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Hamilton is a six-time Formula 1 world champion, one behind Germany’s Michael Schumacher
The Formula 1 teams are half way through their pre-season testing programmes and world champions Mercedes could hardly have had a more impressive start to 2020 if they had tried.
That’s not to say they will necessarily start the season in their familiar position at the front of the field, but they have certainly underlined their status as favourites.
Mercedes drivers Valtteri Bottas and Lewis Hamilton ended the test with the two fastest times – by a huge margin – and the car ran consistently and almost completely reliably throughout.
It’s notoriously difficult to get any accurate sense of true form in testing – as Ferrari found out last year, when they headed to Australia for the first race thinking they were ahead, only to be thrashed by Mercedes in Melbourne.
Nevertheless, what are the key takeaways from the first three days of testing in Spain?
World champions in good shape
It’s well known in Formula 1 that headline lap times in testing should be largely ignored as a means of judging true competitiveness – there are just too many variables at play.
But the fact is, no matter what tyre they were on, the Mercedes was the fastest car in Barcelona this week.
This is unusual for Mercedes, because they usually take a very low-key approach to winter testing, running heavy on fuel and just getting on with their programme, with the reassurance that they will be there or thereabouts when it matters and therefore have no need to stretch the car at this stage.
There is no reason to believe Mercedes have changed their approach to pre-season – so to see Bottas and Hamilton sitting so convincingly at the top of the times is a worrying sign for their rivals.
Bottas said the car was doing exactly what the drivers wanted.
“The main improvements are the stability we’ve had with the car,” he said. “Actually the rear end of the car feels really stable and makes it very drivable.
“I would say the balance through the entire speed range, from high to low-speed corners, is more together than in last year’s car. That’s what we were aiming for and I don’t want to say much more about it. At the moment we have found no negatives compared to last year yet and that’s positive.”
F1 testing live text schedule
Too skint to win?
F1’s new cars gallery
Mercedes confident new steering ‘trick’ within rules
On top of that, the team seemed to be buzzing about their development of a new technology, known as ‘dual-axis steering’, which caught all their rivals on the hop.
When the existence of this device emerged on Thursday, technical director James Allison could hardly keep the smile off his face, his delight at stealing a march on their rivals clear to see.
“It’s an innovative idea which allows the drivers an extra dimension of control on the steering system,” Allison said. “Why we do it, exactly how it works and all those sorts of things, we’d rather keep those to ourselves. But we hope it’s an innovation that will bring an advantage during the season.
“It’s an example of how this team is always pushing to try to find new ways to make our quicker and it’s just great fun having it at the track.”
Hamilton made the same point – and he also seemed enthusiastic about the way things were going on a personal basis.
“I really do feel the best I’ve ever felt,” said the 35-year-old, after completing a race-distance run on Thursday. “I’ve never done the race run and got out and asked if we could keep going. We just ran out of tyres.
“That’s the first time in 13 years that I’ve asked to continue testing – because I don’t like testing. I race because I love racing other cars. I don’t like driving around on my own on the track.”
Despite impressions, Hamilton said he believed the opposition would provide him a sterner test this season as he bids to equal Michael Schumacher’s all-time record of seven world titles.
“I’m hopeful that in this last year of this era of car, the gap has closed,” he said. “You saw it at the end of last year – the gap was closing between Ferrari and Red Bull and I anticipate that will be the same this year. We’re going to have a closer battle and I’m down for that.
“That’s what I think everyone wants to see and, from my point of view, it makes it more rewarding when it goes the way that I want it to go.”
Concern for Ferrari?
The signs coming out of Ferrari were not good from the very start of the test.
While Mercedes hit the ground running, the red cars were not doing anything like the same pace. And the impression that they were struggling was confirmed by team boss Mattia Binotto on Friday.
“The others are faster than us at the moment, I believe,” Binotto said. “How much faster I think it’s really difficult to judge and we’ll go through all the data in the next days, but I don’t think we are as fast as them at the moment.
“Do we have any concerns? Certainly, yes, when you are not as fast as you would like to be. I’ve seen certainly Mercedes, and Red Bull, very fast in these first days.”
Binotto admitted he was “not as optimistic as last year”. But the caveat here is that Ferrari’s optimism was misplaced in 2019.
They – and Mercedes, too, it has to be said – left Spain last year believing that the Italian cars had an advantage over the field, only to find when they arrived in Australia that in fact Mercedes were in front and Ferrari lagging well behind.
As a result of that, Ferrari have changed their approach to testing this year, deciding to spend this first week fully understanding the car before exploring its performance at next week’s second test.
But Binotto said he had concerns that if they had gone for performance this week, it would not have been there.
He said that last year “the lap time was easier to find”, adding: “While it is true we did not focus on set-up work or performance, it seems it is more difficult. The competitors apparently are very strong but we should not forget the story of last year and let’s wait until next week and Australia to better understand the true picture.”
The controversy of ‘the pink Mercedes’
Lewis Hamilton’s Mercedes of 2019 against Sergio Perez’s Racing Point for this season
The Racing Point drew a lot of attention.
One reason was that it was setting pretty decent lap times. Sergio Perez was second fastest on the second day, the Mexican said the team had made “a very good step”, and a number of rival drivers and team bosses agreed that the car looked quick – Red Bull’s Alexander Albon said they were “looking very good”.
But the main talking point was just how much the car resembled the 2019 Mercedes – comparing pictures of the two cars, the Racing Point appeared almost a carbon copy in many areas, including the front wing, nose, front suspension and aerodynamic devices behind the front wheels.
Racing Point admitted that they had copied the Mercedes. The reasoning, they said, was that they were finding with their previous car concept – based on Red Bull’s design approach – that their development was slowing down.
They pointed out that they already bought the engine, gearbox and various aspects of the suspension from Mercedes, so why not copy that car instead, especially as it had won the past six world championships?
The issue was that it meant a complete change of car philosophy – Mercedes use a low-rake approach in contrast to Red Bull’s high rake, meaning the Mercedes runs flatter front to back in contrast to the Red Bull’s nose-down, rear-up stance. This means different airflow structures around the car.
“From the outside, it probably looks like ‘they have just copied a Mercedes’,” said technical director Andrew Green. “But to copy something means nothing unless you understand what you are doing, otherwise it doesn’t work. Unless you understand the philosophy behind every single component and what it’s doing, you’ll never get it to work.
“It was putting our faith in the aerodynamics team to say: ‘Go and understand this and let’s see if we can replicate it. Is it better than what we are currently doing? We will find out.’ I’m very proud of what the team have done.”
Both Green and team principal Otmar Szafnauer were adamant that the car was their own work, with no help from Mercedes, despite the commercial and technical relationship between the two. F1 rules define ‘listed parts’ that teams have design themselves, which are the chassis and aerodynamic surfaces, and this had been complied with, they said.
“I can tell you absolutely, categorically all those designs are Racing Point from absolute scratch,” Green said. “There has been no transfer of information on listed parts from Mercedes. They have never contemplated it; we have never asked for it.
“What you see is what people have drawn from looking at pictures of Mercedes. We’ve utilised what we can see. There’s other teams taking pictures. There’s a pit lane full of photographers employed by the teams to take pictures of other people’s cars. All we did was utilise that information.”
Nevertheless, the striking resemblance between the two cars has reopened a contentious debate within F1 about satellite teams and the degree of similarity that should be allowed between two cars produced by entities that, according to the rules, have to produce their own design.
This has been rumbling on and off since Haas entered the sport in 2016 with an approach that sees them buying every part of the car from Ferrari they are allowed to.
The question at the heart of the Racing Point controversy is this – philosophically, if a team produces an effective facsimile of another car, does that constitute it being “designed by” them, as the rules dictate?
McLaren and Renault are not happy about this situation. They are the teams that have most to lose as the ones who finished fourth and fifth last year, and Racing Point’s likely closest rivals, and they feel the FIA should be doing more to prevent it occurring.
It is a topic that will run and run as the 2021 rules continue to take shape in the background during the early months of this year.
*So far – the second phase of 2020 pre-season testing runs from 26-28 February
RENEWED HOPE FOR WILLIAMS
This time last year, Williams were in a dark place. They had missed more than half the first test because the car was not ready on time, and when it did run, it was miles off the pace of any other car.
This was a precursor to the worst season in their history, a year spent in a race of their own at the back, and which led to some major soul-searching.
The contrast this year was stark. For one, the Williams was the first car on track at the start of testing, something the team described as “cathartic”.
“I have a smile on my face and it hasn’t come off since Wednesday morning,” deputy team principal Claire Williams said. “Getting your car out first doesn’t win you any prizes but it was another milestone on our journey to recovery and it was important to return a bit of pride and dignity to the team after last year.”
Beyond the symbolism of that moment, though, restructuring changes made at Williams over the past year seem to have got the team back on track. When it was running, the Williams appeared to be in much better shape than last year, with George Russell in particular usually somewhere in the middle of the times.
“The drivers feel the car is a lot more balanced and stable than last year so we are in a good place,” Williams said.
She added that there was “a lot more work to do” but she felt confident enough to set a target of fighting for a place in the second part of qualifying and “a position in the race that brings our pride back and George and Nicholas (Latifi) have the opportunity to fight with the midfield competitors.”
Don’t expect miracles, but at this early stage it does at least look like Williams will be able to compete with other teams.
FASTEST LAP TIMES PER TEAM, FIRST PRE-SEASON TEST
1 Mercedes (Valtteri Bottas) 1:15.732 (ultra-soft tyre)
2 Renault (Esteban Ocon) 1:17.102 (soft tyre)
3 Racing Point (Lance Stroll) 1:17.338 (soft)
4 Alpha Tauri (Daniil Kvyat) 1:17.427 (soft)
5 Alfa Romeo (Antonio Giovinazzi) 1:17.469 (soft)
6 Red Bull (Max Verstappen) 1:17.636 (hard)
7 McLaren (Carlos Sainz) 1:17.842 (medium)
8 Ferrari (Sebastian Vettel) 1:18.154 (soft)
9 Williams (George Russel) 1:18.168 (medium)
10 Haas (Romain Grosjean) 1:18.380 (medium)
Read More
0 notes
thisdaynews · 5 years
Text
Lewis Hamilton on German GP pole as both Ferraris break down
New Post has been published on https://thebiafrastar.com/lewis-hamilton-on-german-gp-pole-as-both-ferraris-break-down/
Lewis Hamilton on German GP pole as both Ferraris break down
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Sunday’s race is on 5 live and the BBC Sport website at 14:10 BST
Lewis Hamilton beat Max Verstappen to pole position at the German Grand Prix as the Ferraris hit technical problems.
Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc looked favourite for pole but was unable to take part in the top-10 shootout.
And team-mate Sebastian Vettel will start last after a turbo problem meant he failed to set a time for Sunday’s race at Hockenheim.
Hamilton took pole by 0.346 seconds, with only 0.022secs between Verstappen, Valtteri Bottas and Pierre Gasly.
Mercedes are celebrating 125 years in motorsport and their 200th Formula 1 start with a special white livery
German Grand Prix qualifying results
The story behind Leclerc’s journey to the top
Preview: Home comforts or more heartache for Vettel?
Can anything stop Hamilton?
It was a superb performance by Hamilton, who has been ill this weekend.
“Lewis, you never fail to amaze us,” team boss Toto Wolff said to him over the radio after the session.
Hamilton said: “The car has been feeling good, but the Ferraris have been on another level. If Leclerc had been there, it would definitely have been close between us.”
Even without the Ferraris in contention, the front row of Hamilton and Red Bull’s Verstappen promises a close battle in the race, especially as wet weather threatens.
There was a treat for fans at Hockenheim as Mick Schumacher took his father Michael’s championship-winning Ferrari F2004 around the circuit for a spin
Can anything stop Ferrari’s unreliability?
But in many ways the story of the session was Ferrari’s failure yet again to capitalise on what appeared to be an advantage.
Ferrari said Leclerc’s problem was with his fuel system, and it looked to have deprived him of what could have been his third pole position of his first season at Ferrari.
It was the latest in a series of issues for Ferrari, whether with reliability or operational or driver errors, that have blighted a season in which they could have had at least two wins so far, and possibly more.
After his disappointment in qualifying Vettel said: “Very bitter. I think the car is great. Lost out on a big chance but hopefully we’ll have a big one coming again tomorrow. It’s very painful here obviously. I was looking forward to having fun. Now we start last, it would have been nice to start first. I think the car has it.”
Vettel’s problem was different from Leclerc’s – his car had a problem with airflow to the turbo. It was the second reliability problem for the German four-time world champion in three races.
Ferrari’s problems mean the Alfa Romeo of Kimi Raikkonen will start fifth, ahead of Haas’ Romain Grosjean, McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg and Leclerc.
Sainz’s team-mate Lando Norris was 16th, just 0.2secs down in first qualifying, but small margins made a big difference on a relatively short track – for example, just 0.03secs separated Hulkenberg in eighth place from team-mate Daniel Ricciardo in 13th in second qualifying as the drivers battled for places in the top-10 shootout.
Williams’ George Russell starts 18th, ahead of team-mate Robert Kubica for the 11th race in a row, but this time just 0.118secs faster than the Pole.
Mercedes team dressed in 1950s costumes to celebrate the German marque’s milestone
“Hey, good lookin'” Mercedes boss Toto Wolff didn’t disappointment in the costume department
“How we getting on?” Meanwhile, as Mercedes enjoyed a fancy dress party, Ferrari CEO Louis Camilleri arrived in the paddock to find his team in disarray
Pierre Gasly crashed out in the Red Bull during second practice on Friday
Read More
0 notes