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GRAND PRIX:
Malaysia: F1 Born Again?
by Arthur Beattie |
22.3.05
In Malaysia the new F1 regulations began to make sense. The changes have
introduced uncertainty and therefore variety, not only by upsetting the
status quo, but also by imposing new demands on the teams and drivers.
Unfortunately for Ferrari fans this has come largely at the Scuderia’s
expense, with their cars qualifying 12th and 13th. In the race, Rubens
retired an otherwise healthy car because his softer tyres were totally
shot and Schuey struggled to 7th place and suffered the indignities of
being beaten and lapped by a Toyota and finishing behind the rejuvenated
Coulthard in his Red Bull, who are now ahead of Ferrari in the Constructors'
Championship!
Q1 made sense because everyone was running low fuel and we again had
a measure of the absolute speed of the cars and drivers. I enjoy the one-at-a-time
format, but a return to the old free-for-all would demand more skill and
introduce more uncertainty but make it harder to follow on TV - which
incidentally was much better than Oz. I still don’t like the aggregate
system because the grid is determined largely by Q1, the teams would have
to decide how much fuel they were going to start with anyway, so Q2 is
largely redundant.
Renault was on top again in qualifying though this time it was Alonso’s
turn. Trulli qualified his Toyota second. He does have a reputation as
a single-lap specialist but his car did look good and sharp, in marked
contrast to the Ferraris which looked lethargic, both drivers suffering
from a lack of rear-end grip. The heat of Malaysia brought home Ferrari’s
disadvantage in being the only decent team on Bridgestone tyres –
how much worse would it have been if they’d acceded to the testing
limitation?
Alonso won the race, leading throughout, but increasingly troubled by
oversteer as his rear tyres wore out. This was revealed by the pit-to-car
radio as they offered to take front wing off and reduce rear tyre pressure
at the pit stop. The broadcasting of these snippets does add another element
to the race, introducing such esoteric delights as “Turn 6 in 5th
gear is better for crankcase pressure”, or something. They’ll
have to produce a glossary.
Neither BAR lasted long enough for the drivers to be troubled by such
concerns, with synchronized Honda blowing-up on lap 3. This was appallingly
bad luck for Davidson as he had been given a race chance at last, substituting
for Sato who was ill. The engine failures must be particularly galling
for the team after the stick they took following their decision to retire
otherwise healthy cars in Australia so they could start with fresh engines
in Malaysia! An angry Button said afterwards that the team had taken a
huge step backwards. One wonders whether the absence of Dave Richards’
leadership is a contributory factor, particularly as the Prodrive Aston
Martin DBR9 took a class win in a dream debut at the Sebring 12 hours
this same weekend.
What must have made it even worse for Honda was that Trulli confirmed
the potential shown in qualifying by their arch-rival Toyota and raced
to second in the race, the previously underachieving team’s first
podium. Just to rub it in, Ralf finished in the points too.
The mention of Schuey Jnr. brings us to the second major breakthrough
brought about by the new regulations - there was actually some racing!
As the tyres wore the cars' balance changed, the grip went away and the
drivers had to adapt to it, rather than diving into the pits for a fresh
set of boots.
On lap 32 Ralf made a lunge up the inside of Webber, out braked himself
and the two cars touched. In the confusion Heidfeld in the second Williams
piled in, passing the Toyota and attacking his team leader. Webber defended,
which allowed Ralf to re-pass his countryman, but Heidfeld kept his cool
and got him back!
Ahead of this brawling bunch Fisichella was in third place, but was clearly
struggling and once they’d sorted themselves out, they quickly reeled
him in and Webber saw an opening at Turn 14 and dived opportunistically
up the inside to snatch third place. Fisi defended and after much slithering
and sliding on worn out tyres, the two cars tangled and both retired.
Then it came to me in a blinding flash - this generation
of drivers just doesn’t know how to race ! It’s not
a lack of talent; it’s just that they’ve never learned how
because they’ve never had to! They have been driving sophisticated,
sensitive cars for their whole careers, with data loggers recording every
split-second and engineers analyzing the data, adjusting the cars and
coaching them to produce perfect times. Add to this most of them came
through control formulae, where the cars are fundamentally the same, with
endless testing on new tyres and billiard-table smooth circuits. They
qualify within 100ths of each other and then follow each other round at
high speed. The final element in the equation is that the strength of
the cars and the excellence of safety equipment means that they can pretty
well crash into each other with impunity.
In the past, the cars and the circuits meant that this sort of behavior
would have resulted in injury or death to both parties. I’m not
suggesting that this was a good thing, far from it, but modern drivers
have to re-learn the old adage, that “To finish first, first you
must finish”; to race without crashing into each other and to adapt
to and compensate for a car which changes throughout the race and becomes
less than perfect.
It’s early days yet, but if the new regs have re-introduced racing
then bravo for Max! I’m more excited about F1 than for a long time.
Now we just him need to get rid of most of the manufacturers, get Cosworth
V8s into most of the cars, get rid of more downforce and get them back
on slicks...
The only downside is that Ferrari is suffering. We have the F2005 to look
forward to and see if the current super-successful but mature regime can
find the motivation to meet this new challenge after having things their
own way for so long. I’m sure they will, but I’ll bet that
there are a few older Ferrari fans who are quietly pleased. Pain and pleasure
are all part of the traditional Ferrari masochism, so they tell me. The
F1 team wins most of the time, the current generation of road cars start
on demand, run on all cylinders, are quiet, comfortable, easy to drive,
reliable and don’t go rusty – where’s the fun in that?
Vittorio Meldrew will be digging out the SWB keys this week...
''There can be no excuses after a race like this. After qualifying, we knew
the race would be one of fighting our way up the order and so it turned
out. We were beaten by opponents who proved to be stronger than us. We have
won so often thanks to the work of the team and our partners and now we
have to work together to turn the situation around. Our will to win and
our readiness to work hard remain the same as ever. "
"Of
course, seventh place is not exactly worth celebrating, but I feel that
I did the best I could have done today, coming up from 13th on the grid.
My car ran reliably and with no problems. I was a bit conservative in the
early stages, to be sure of having a competitive car in the closing parts
and, given the situation I can be happy with two points. A Formula 1 car
is very complex and there is not one single factor to blame for our poor
performance. We are simply not strong enough in several areas at the moment.
Now I head to Mugello to drive the F2005 for the first time. "
"The
race was going quite well at first and I was able to fight for at least
sixth place. All of a sudden the car developed quite a lot of oversteer.
I radioed the team and they told me that they could tell that there had
been a change to the aerodynamics on the car and the handling was transformed:
it was very bad. Then, when I pitted again, they found that a piece of rubber
had got attached to the wing. But, because I had run ran for at least 20
laps with too much oversteer, it ruined my rear tyres. It’s a shame,
because until then the balance of the car was good. I wasn’t quick
enough to win of course, but I could have ended up in the top six.
"
RACE
RESULTS - MALAYSIAN GP
56 Laps. Weather : |
Classified: |
Pos |
Driver |
Team |
|
Time |
1. |
Alonso |
Renault |
(M) |
1h31:33.736 |
2. |
Trulli |
Toyota |
(M) |
+ 0:24.327 |
3. |
Heidfeld |
Williams |
(M) |
+ 0:32.188 |
4. |
Montoya |
McLaren |
(M) |
+ 0:41.631 |
5. |
R. Schumacher |
Toyota |
(M) |
+ 0:51.854 |
6. |
Coulthard |
Red Bull |
(M) |
+ 1:12.543 |
7. |
M. Schumacher |
Ferrari |
(B) |
+ 1:19.988 |
8. |
Klien |
Red Bull |
(M) |
+ 1:20.835 |
9. |
Raikkonen |
McLaren |
(M) |
+ 1:21.580 |
10. |
Massa |
Sauber |
(M) |
+ 1 Lap |
11. |
Karthikeyan |
Jordan |
(B) |
+ 2 Laps |
12. |
Monteiro |
Jordan |
(B) |
+ 3 Laps |
13. |
Albers |
Minardi |
(B) |
+ 4 Laps |
14. |
Barrichello |
Ferrari |
(B) |
+ 7 Laps |
World Championship Standing, Round 2 : |
Drivers: |
|
Constructors: |
1. |
Alonso |
16 |
|
1. |
Renault |
26 |
2. |
Fisichella |
10 |
|
2. |
Toyota |
12 |
3.= |
Trulli |
8 |
|
3. |
Red Bull |
11 |
3.= |
Barrichello |
8 |
|
4.= |
Ferrari |
10 |
3.= |
Coulthard |
8 |
|
4.= |
Williams |
10 |
3.= |
Montoya |
8 |
|
6. |
McLaren |
9 |
7. |
Heidfeld |
6 |
|
|
|
|
8.= |
R. Schumacher |
4 |
|
|
|
|
8.= |
Webber |
4 |
|
|
|
|
10. |
Klien |
3 |
|
|
|
|
11. |
M. Schumacher |
2 |
|
|
|
|
12. |
Raikkonen |
1 |
|
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Click here
to return to the Ferrari Happenings page.
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Schuey and Rubens look
a bit glum |
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Bridgestone manfully shouldered the blame
for Ferrari's poor performance
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Red Bull had another great
weekend |
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Alonso was the class of
the field |
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Both (new) Hondas went
bang... |
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...whereas Trulli scored
Toyota's first podium |
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The Williams's fight with
Ralf's Toyota... |
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...then Fisi's Renault |
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Hero to zero in a fortnight |
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Drivers don't learn racing
in the junior formulae |
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Schuey has been getting
a bit of stick from ungrateful compatriots... |
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...but he'll fight back
- Forza Ferrari! |
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pics by Ferrari Media, Schlegelmilch, Pitpass,
Sutton, British F3 & Bild Zeitung
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