9.4.09
The Spanish GP was notable for two main reasons: a consummate performance
by Messrs. Button and Brawn to win, and it was generally a boring race,
I actually fell asleep at one point - just like the good old days! There
were a couple of flashes of action and I do not include the multiple pile-up
on the opening lap which elimated Trulli's Toyota, Sutil's Force India and
both Tori Rossi.
Rubens Barrichello had been one fire for much of the weekend but Jenson
Button nicked pole on the very last lap of qualifying, crossing the start
finish line just 1.6 seconds before the chequered flag which signals the
end of session, which Ross admitted was a bit too close. Ferrari got it
wrong again, with Raikkonen eliminated in Q1 and starting in P16 after a
decision not to go out again, or maybe he fancied another ice cream.
At the start, a pumped-up Barrichello took the lead from the second row
passing Sebastian Vettel, who made a poor start, and Button. KERS whirred
Massa past Vettel, who fuel corrected had the quickest car. The shunt brought
out the Safety Car for three laps and at the green flag the Brawns made
a clean getaway. Fernando Alonso used KERS and the grass to get past Webber's
Red Bull on the startline straight, but the Aussie wasn't having any and
firmly re-took the place up the inside of turn one and kept it all together,
so lots of cojones all round.
The Brawns pulled away in front as Massa struggled to stay ahead of the
Red Bulls. After the first stops Barrichello got away from Button. This
revealed one of the factors which decided the race. Brawn GP's original
intention was to three-stop both cars. Button started lighter and when he
failed to take the lead and draw away his strategy was compromised, so Ross
decided to change him onto a two-stopper. Critically, Button emerged from
the pits ahead of Massa and Vettel.
Ruben's stayed on three stops and with his lighter car pulled away from
Button, but by no means enough and at his second stop he fell behind not
only behind Button, but Massa and Vettel too. Ruben's last chance of a win
finally disappeared when he had bad understeer on his last set of tyres.
Post-race he clearly wasn't happy and the toys came whizzing out of his
pram. Later he threatened to quit immediately if there was any hint of the
team favouring the Briton. Ross was quick to re-assure him, but Rubens is
clearly still harboring a lot of resentment from his Ferrari days where
he was forced to play second fiddle to Michael.
Massa and Vettel were eliminated from contention as the Brawns blew them
off in the final stint. This was partially due to the Ferrari and Red Bull
being on the hard tyres, but tyre choice and the car's ability to use them
is as much of the race as the driving bit. It wasn't quite all over as Mark
Webber had taken on a big fuel load at his first stop and he struggled to
keep the heavy car in contention. This he did and it enabled him to leapfrog
Massa and his team-mate at their second stops. He closed up to Barrichello
but could not get past; the Barcelona circuit design defeating even the
mighty brains of the FIA's Overtaking Working Group, but he was on the podium
for the second race in a row.
Massa was already struggling to fend off Vettel, when we heard Rob Smedley
instructing him to save fuel. It seems there had been a glitch at his last
stop and he couldn't be sure of (enough) Shell, actually running out on
the slowing down lap. He finished sixth. Raikkonen had retired early on
and, although an upgrade had given Ferrari better performance at this race
it's clear there is a very long way to go. Massa says there is no hope of
the titles. A small consolation is that he did set the fastest non-Brawn
race lap.
Fernando Alonso drove his heart out in his Renault tank to finish fifth,
overtaking poor Massa on the last lap. Heidfeld passed Rosberg in the pits
to take seventh, leaving the latter with the last point. The Williams is
a Double Diffuser car, but they just do not seem able to convert speed into
results. Speaking of which, the other "DD" team Toyota's early
challenge seems to be wilting. They qualified sixth and seventh, Trulli
was eliminated in the opening lap shunt and Glock got stuck behind Hamilton.
McLaren's recovery faltered too as they were miles off the pace all weekend.
Off-track, the war for the future of F1 has gone very serious with Toyota
saying that they were considering their position in the light of the £40m
budget-capped/two-tier F1. Dietrich Mateschitz went one better when he announced
that his Red Bull teams will not enter any cars next season unless the rules
are changed. This was followed on Tuesday when the Ferrari Board confirmed
that it too will not enter the championship next year unless the rules are
changed. Renault followed them the next day.
There has been talk in the specialist media of the FOTA teams racing elsewhere,
and even buying out A1GP, which is basically skint, binning the cars and
running their own cars to that calendar. I cannot imagine the FIA and Bernie
making such a move easy! Older readers may remember that when Group C sportscar
racing rivaled F1 in popularity in the '80s a rule change to F1 spec. 3.5
litre engines, rather than production-based ones, effectively destroyed
the category. Thus "encouraged" the manufacturers went into F1,
taking with them the money which made some so rich.
BMW are yet to decide on their position, but Mercedes-Benz have said they
will not withdraw next season. Brawn, Williams and Force India would be
there too. Given the modern motor racing infrastructure, a bunch of additional
Cossie-powered cars with Ricardo gearboxes could soon be knocked up to make
up the numbers. Such a scenario would prolong the current breath of fresh
air blowing through F1. It might even be more exciting as long as the new
teams have sufficient freedom of regulations to prevent a rout by the establishment.
Also the Brawns might have to be handicapped a touch - like Ross being locked
up for the weekend.
I really enjoyed the late '80s where there were 1.5 turbo 4 cylinders and
V6s and 3.5 V8s and V12s, with a host of small teams coming and going and
fun and farce and pre-qualifying. The earlier 'DFV era' was OK too, though
we did get very excited whenever the odd Matra V12 or Tecno flat 12 appeared.
However, throughout all this, F1 only really worked because Ferrari was
there as a constant force and the benchmark against which all others were
measured. Even when they were going through one of their bad periods, the
others could revel in our suffering, but we knew our day would come again.
Unlike the last time this flared up, Ferrari seems to be with most of the others The fact remains
that Ferrari is the only team F1 needs to be credible. Who really gives
a damn about the others, especially as most are remote badge-engineered
satellites? When you own, drive or even ride in a Ferrari you can feel that heritage, that passione. The rest is all corporate vanity,
BS and marketing hype. Long term, a budget-capped F1 might even be to Ferrari's
advantage, as long as their budget is suitably adjusted to reflect their
importance to the sport.
It might not even be a bad thing for Scuderia Ferrari to miss F1 next year.
It would give them time to re-group and "do a Brawn". "But
what of Ferrari's continuous history of participation in F1?" I hear
your anguished cry. Lending a couple of cars to someone like Prodrive or
Litespeed would provide an answer. There is a historical precedent when
John Surtees and Lorenzo Bandini were entered for the 1964 US and Mexican
GPs by the North American Racing Team. Who knows, the Factory might even
benefit from some fresh Anglo-Saxon input.
A budget capped F1 would allow Ferrari to pursue a more diverse competitions
programme. We Tifosi could enjoy howling V12 Scuderia Ferrari 666SPs thrashing
the rattly diesels of Audi and Peugeot. Luca di Montezemolo starting this
year's Le Mans 24hr race might well also signal the start of Ferrari's triumphant
return to La Sarthe. Now that little lot would give Schuey something proper
to get his teeth into!
In reality, this is of course a complete fantasy. It will all be sorted
out by Bernie and, significantly, he is attending the FIA/FOTA meeting today
(15th). He has already confirmed Ferrari is the key.
Finally. A plea to the BBC on behalf of race fans everywhere:
Get
rid of Eddie Jordan!
I've never heard such a load of egotistical, incomprehensive, psychobabble
in all my life!
Stefano Domenicali |
: “We can
take some satisfaction from this weekend, but at the same time, it has thrown
up further concerns. On the one hand we saw that the effort expended in
recent weeks has born fruit in terms of improving the performance level
of the car. Both in yesterday’s qualifying and today, Felipe was competitive
at the highest level, as was confirmed on the clock: it’s not by luck
that we got the third fastest time in the race, which would have been far
out of our reach in previous races this year. Once again, the downside comes
from the reliability side. Again today, we had problems which forced Kimi
to retire and cost Felipe two places in the final stages, having also robbed
him of the chance of getting to the podium, which would have been well deserved.
This is unacceptable for a team like Ferrari: we must all react to get back
to our usual standard, as indeed we have partially managed on the performance
side. There is much to do on all fronts and we will tackle it with our usual
absolute determination.”
Felipe Massa |
“It’s
a real shame to have lost two places in the final stages, even if we’ve
finally made it to the scoreboard. We knew we couldn’t match the pace
of the Brawns but we had managed to get ahead of the Red Bulls and, but
for the fuel problem, I could have certainly stayed ahead of Vettel and
Alonso. The final part of the race was a pain. I was already struggling
on the harder tyres and then I had to try and save fuel as much as possible,
while at the same time staying ahead of Vettel. Then the team told that
if I wanted to make it to the finish, I would have to let Vettel by and
slow down a lot: if I had made another pit stop I would have finished out
of the points. Today, the car’s pace on the softer tyre was reasonably
good, even if we’re still lacking a few tenths, but at least we are
back to fighting for the top places.”
Kimi Raikkonen |
“I am very
unhappy because I could have finished in the points. Unfortunately, I had
a hydraulic problem linked to the control of the accelerator which meant
I had to retire. At the start I managed to make up a few places but then,
I found myself behind Heidfeld’s BMW. The car is better, but we must
fix these reliability problems. Obviously, when you have to make up ground
you can end up making avoidable errors, as has happened to us in this first
part of the season, but that doesn’t mean to say the team has lost
its way. We are the same people who over the past two years have won three
world titles out of the four available.”
THE SPANISH GRAND PRIX, CIRCUIT
DE CATALUNYA, BARCELONA, SPAIN.
66 LAPS: WEATHER: SUNNY. |
Classified: |
Pos |
Driver |
Team |
|
Time |
1. |
Button |
Brawn |
|
1.37:19.202 |
2. |
Barrichello |
Brawn |
|
+ 13.056 |
3. |
Webber |
Red Bull |
|
+ 13.924
|
4. |
Vettel |
McLaren |
|
+ 18.941 |
5. |
Alonso |
Renault |
|
+ 43.166 |
6. |
Massa |
Ferrari |
|
+ 50.827 |
7. |
Heidfeld |
BMW |
|
+ 52.312
|
8. |
Rosberg |
Williams |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Retd. |
Raikkonen |
Ferrari |
|
Lap 18 |
|
Fastest lap: Barrichello, 1:22.762 |
World Championship Standings, Round 5 |
|
|
|
Drivers: |
|
Constructors: |
1. |
Button |
41 |
|
1. |
Brawn GP |
68 |
2. |
Barrichello |
27 |
|
2. |
Red Bull |
38.5 |
3. |
Vettel |
23 |
|
3. |
Toyota |
26.5 |
4. |
Webber |
15.5 |
|
4. |
McLaren |
13 |
5. |
Trulli |
14.5 |
|
5. |
Renault |
|
6. |
Glock |
12 |
|
6. |
BMW Sauber |
6 |
7. |
Alonso |
|
|
7. |
Ferrari |
6 |
8. |
Hamilton |
9 |
|
8. |
Williams Toyota |
4.5 |
9. |
Heidfeld |
6 |
|
9. |
Toro-Rosso-Ferrari |
3 |
10. |
Rosberg |
4.5 |
|
|
|
|
11. |
Kovalainen |
4 |
|
|
|
|
12. |
Massa |
3 |
|
|
|
|
13. |
Raikkonen |
3 |
|
|
|
|
14. |
Buemi |
3 |
|
|
|
|
15. |
Bourdais |
1 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Brawn
front wing endplate detail |
|
|
Toyota
moveable front wing flap actuator, courtesy J Trulli |
|
|
Rubens
made a great start and Felipe's KERS has whirred him into third |
|
|
Alonso
was very brave in passing Webber, but couldn't make it stick |
|
|
The
Brawns pull away |
|
|
Massa
bullfighting |
|
|
Heidfeld
finished.... |
|
|
....Kimi
didn't |
|
|
Martini on the trackside, but
not on the Ferrari. That whole episode was weird
|
|
|
Ross
got it right again... |
|
|
....although
Rubens wasn't happy |
|
|
Click
for FIA lap chart |
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile.... |
|
|
In
the 'DFV era' we delighted at exotica like the Tecno flat 12 |
|
|
Use
of this picture is obligatory whenever there is mention of a possible
Ferrari withdrawal from F1 |
|
|
Could
we see them battling Peugeot and Audrey at Le Mans? |
|
|
Last
win was 1965 - Rindt/Gregory in a 275LM |
|
|
Could
a sportscar programme provide a meaningful Ferrari role for Schuey? |
|
|
There's
a busy time ahead for Bernie |
|
|
Lewis
had a bad race, but at least Nicole was there to console him |
|
|
|
|
|
|
pics by
Ferrari Media, FIA, Reuters, XPB, LAT, Sutton & unkown |
|