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GRAND PRIX:
France : The Long Haul Continues
by Winston D'Arcy |
5.7.05
Following the farcical US GP, Formula 1 has once again been mired in controversy
with vitriolic comments flying about in all directions. The seven Michelin
teams were "tried" by the FIA and found guilty of "not being
in possession of suitable tyres" and "wrongfully refusing to start
the race"; a number of other charges were dismissed.
Punishment has been suspended until September and now hangs over the teams
like a sword of Damocles - presumably as a guarantee for future good behaviour.
The teams have appealed against the decision; however, as things calmed
down, it became clear that there was no way that they could have raced in
litigation-frenzied America.
Ron Dennis revealed that if they had raced without a chicane they would
have been subject to criminal prosecution whether there was an accident
or not, because Michelin had advised that the tyres were unsafe. The proposed
chicane was a red herring, because the FIA would have had to break their
own rules to install it. Apart from this, it would have meant the cars racing
on a circuit on which they had not tested - one for which they were not
set-up. Bernie Ecclestone has said that the Michelin teams not racing was
really the only choice, as who could have really known whether
the tyres would have been safe with a chicane or not?
Michelin have put their hands up and admitted they made a mistake, shouldered
the blame and offered to compensate the fans. They pushed the envelope too
far - but this is inevitable if racing's more than just an empty show.
What was noticeable during the whole episode was the total lack of goodwill
and willingness to sacrifice self-interest and make the slightest compromise
for the good of the "sport"; but the episode had nothing to do
with trying to find a solution - it was and is about the battle for control
of F1. The Michelin 7 have offered to stage a non-championship race at their
expense (rejected by IMS boss Tony George). One wonders whether postponing
the GP itself would have been possible - it never seems to have been even
mooted, neither does the possibility of all the teams running on Bridgestone
tyres. This would have depended on whether Bridgestone could supply enough
tyres, if the necessary testing time could have been arranged and any contractual
problems sorted out. It would have been great to see and great for the sport
- but no chance.
The USGP certainly gave Ferrari a massive leg-up in the Championships, with
Schuey jumping up to third place, just three points behind second place
Raikkonen in the drivers' and left Ferrari tying with McLaren in second
place in the constructors'.
The other big news was the purchase of Sauber by BMW. It'll be interesting
to see if they can make a better job of running a GP team than Williams.
It's going to be tough getting over all the penalties their cars incur
for overtaking on the warm-up lap, parking in other people's pit slots,
pulling out on them from the pit lane, and cutting them up.
Anyway, on to Magny Cours, I enjoy single-lap qualifying (though
not the race fuel bit) as you can focus 100% on one car and Martin Brundle's
insight and the in-car stuff is great, but you do have to concentrate.
However, it's increasingly spoiled by a constant stream of irrelevancies
and drivel from James Allen. By all means fill in when appropriate, but
when the cars are on their hot laps he should just SHUT UP and let Brundle
get on with it!
Alonso's Renault looked fabulous, the way it turned in and changed direction.
Montoya's McLaren looked like it had got loads of grip, but his time was
poor, he ended up ninth. Team-mate Raikkonen qualified third fastest,
but dropped 10 places on the grid as an Ilmor engine had expired in free
practice. Trulli was second for Toyota and Schuey 4th and Ruben's 6th,
though of course they would go up a grid position because of Kimi's demotion.
We'd have to see what the fuel strategies were, but the Scuderia looked
good for a podium.
Allen shouted "GOOOOO" at the start of the race (again) - and
Alonso simply blasted off into the lead and left everyone for dead. He
pulled away at about a second and a half a lap until he had a 30 second
lead in time for his first pit stop on lap 20. He re-joined still in the
lead and that was that. He led throughout, adjusting his pace as necessary,
giving Renault their first French GP win as a constructor since Alain
Prost's in 1983. They had, of course, won it several times as an engine
supplier including Schuey's 1995 victory for Benetton - the team which
was to become Renault, who do seem to have done the best job of the various
manufacturers who have bought into teams.
Interestingly, new Renault boss Carlos Ghosn said that Formula One is
an investment if you do well and know how to exploit your success, and
a cost if you don't. This is exactly the reason to be wary of manufacturers
running F1 teams - for them (quite rightly) it is a means to an end, not
an end in itself. When business priorities change, or it simply doesn't
suit anymore, they will pull out. The real danger is that when
one does, it is very difficult for them to be replaced because of the
expense - Peter Sauber citing the huge cost of competing in F1 today as
a major reason for his decision to sell up.
Back on track, Schuey got stuck behind Trulli, who held him up badly.
He pitted on the same lap but was short-filled to get him in front of
the Toyota driver. Meanwhile, the McLarens were carving their way through
the field and Raikkonen, on a two-stop strategy, made his first stop last
of all the runners. He emerged in second place which he held to the end.
So, he qualified third, started 13th, stopped last, but still had the
pace to finish second. Schuey ran fourth behind Alonso and the two McLarens
until Montoya retired on lap 46 with hydraulic failure and he inherited
3rd. He set the fourth best average lap of the race, behind Alonso and
the two McLarens, so this suggests the race result was a true reflection
of Ferrari's pace at the moment. Worryingly, he was only able to set the
seventh fastest lap behind the three previously named, Button's BAR and
Coulthud's Red Bull.
The race was largely a matter of waiting for the pit strategies to unravel
- a bit like watching the hand-overs and staggers evolve in a 4x100m relay
race. Disappointingly, there was little on-track action and there wasn't
even any telescoping-up of the cars as their tyres wore out.
At the end Schuey, in third, was the last un-lapped runner, Button scored
the first points for BAR this year, both Toyotas were in the points, Fisichella
was 6th for Renault, after a stall in the pits and Villeneuve took the last
point for Sauber. Rubens was 9th, suffering from brake problems and traffic.
This time, it was a Bridgestone team's turn to suffer tyre problems. Both
Minardis retired when their left rears collapsed. It later emerged that
both cars' valve caps had not been re-fitted following a pit stop - a pretty
girl must have walked past their pit, and back again. The cars looked "difficult"
throughout the weekend too, so maybe Paul Stoddart should attend to his
own business rather than everyone else's.
" This weekend we were among the best in qualifying, but we were unable
to match that in the race. Michael finished third and clearly could not
have done better. The cars ahead of him were simply quicker. After just
a few laps, Rubens found he had a problem with the brakes, which made his
race very difficult. As the laps went by, he kept dropping down the order,
ending up outside the points. We are disappointed because we hoped to be
much more competitive."
"
It is true that I lost a lot of time stuck behind Trulli for eighteen laps
and that meant that Montoya got past me. Without that early delay, our strategy
might have put me ahead of Kimi. In fact this race was all about different
drivers on different strategies, but today we did not quite match the pace
of the leaders. I had one moment when I ran wide at Turn 3 and then I also
came under a bit of pressure from Fisichella, when he was running lighter
than me, but he never got too close."
"It
was a terrible race for me. After four or five laps, I began to have a problem
with the brakes which meant the car was hard to drive. Then, in the first
run of pit stops, I was unable to get ahead of Trulli and so I always found
myself behind cars that were potentially slower than me. The brake problem
got progressively worse and I kept slipping back so that I wasn’t
even able to pick up a single point. I am very disappointed."
RACE
RESULTS - FRENCH GP
70 Laps. Weather, Hot, dry |
Classified: |
Pos |
Driver |
Team |
|
Time |
1. |
Alonso |
Renault |
(M) |
1h31:22.233 |
2. |
Raikkonen |
McLaren |
(M) |
+ 0:11.805 |
3. |
M. Schumacher |
Ferrari |
(B) |
+ 1:21.914 |
4. |
Button |
BAR |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
5. |
Trulli |
Toyota |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
6. |
Fisichella |
Renault |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
7. |
R. Schumacher |
Toyota |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
8. |
Villeneuve |
Sauber |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
9. |
Barrichello |
Ferrari |
(B) |
+ 1 Lap |
10. |
Coulthard |
Red Bull |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
11. |
Sato |
BAR |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
12. |
Webber |
Williams |
(M) |
+ 2 Laps |
13. |
Monteiro |
Jordan |
(B) |
+ 3 Laps |
14. |
Heidfeld |
Williams |
(M) |
+ 4 Laps |
15. |
Karthikeyan |
Jordan |
(B) |
+ 4 Laps |
World Championship Standing, Round 10 : |
Drivers: |
|
Constructors: |
1. |
Alonso |
69 |
|
1. |
Renault |
89 |
2. |
Raikkonen |
45 |
|
2. |
McLaren |
71 |
3. |
M. Schumacher |
40 |
|
3. |
Ferrari |
69 |
4. |
Trulli |
31 |
|
4. |
Toyota |
53 |
5. |
Barrichello |
29 |
|
5. |
Williams |
47 |
6. |
Heidfeld |
25 |
|
6. |
Red Bull |
22 |
7.= |
Webber |
22 |
|
7. |
Sauber |
13 |
7.= |
R. Schumacher |
22 |
|
8. |
Jordan |
11 |
9. |
Fisichella |
20 |
|
9. |
Minardi |
7 |
10. |
Coulthard |
17 |
|
10. |
BAR |
5 |
11. |
Montoya |
16 |
|
|
|
|
12. |
Massa |
7 |
|
|
|
|
13.= |
Monteiro |
6 |
|
|
|
|
13.= |
Wurz |
6 |
|
|
|
|
15.= |
Villeneuve |
5 |
|
|
|
|
15.= |
Button |
5 |
|
|
|
|
15.= |
Karthikeyan |
5 |
|
|
|
|
18.= |
Albers |
4 |
|
|
|
|
18.= |
de la Rosa |
4 |
|
|
|
|
18.= |
Klien |
4 |
|
|
|
|
21. |
Friesacher |
3 |
|
|
|
|
22. |
Liuzzi |
1 |
|
|
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Ferrari 1-2 again! |
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Schuey assures the customer that it's
not the 430's fag lighter
|
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Alonso was in a class
of his own, giving Renault their first French GP win as a constructor... |
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...since Alain Prost's
in 1983 |
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Renault boss Ghosn said
stern words about their future involvement... |
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...but today they could
celebrate |
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Schuey got stuck behind
Trulli's Toyota |
... |
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Raikkonen's second place
was hard earned |
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Schuey's third was about
right |
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Rubens got home, but out
of the points |
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Button scored BAR's first of the season
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Minardi had a finger problem... |
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...so that's how that
corner got its name! |
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pics by Ferrari Media, Nissan, XPB, LAT, &
Sutton
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