Sunday 28 July 2013

2013 Hungarian Grand Prix - Hungry Hamilton triumphs in beautiful Budapest

By Simon Wright

The British summer of sporting success continued this afternoon at the Hungarian Grand Prix, as Lewis Hamilton reminded everyone of his class to win his first race of the 2013 season.

The 2008 world champion has taken time to adjust to his new surroundings at Mercedes GP, but he showed his hunger on a circuit where track temperatures nudged 50 degrees.  The excessive heat though didn’t provide any issues on his tyres as he charged to a fourth victory in Budapest.

Hamilton overcame personal issues to win in Hungary once again
Hamilton (pictured) finished 12 seconds clear of the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen, with defending world champion Sebastian Vettel having to settle for third, but once again increasing his championship lead as the sport heads for its official summer break.  Jenson Button had an action-packed drive to seventh place, but it was a tough day for several teams including Ferrari who simply couldn’t live with the ultimate pace at the tight and twisty Hungaroring.

This event was the first since Pirelli went back to a new construction of tyre following the constant failures in the first half of the season, and it has to be said that they passed the test with flying colours, especially with air temperatures hitting 35 degrees Celsius on raceday, only comparable with races in Dallas in the 1980s and the 2005 Bahrain Grand Prix.

A sterling lap from Hamilton in qualifying once again meant he took his third successive pole position, and that was the first ingredient of a perfect weekend for the Stevenage-born driver.  He made a great start too and comfortably led into the first corner.  Fellow front row starter Vettel had a tardy getaway, but just managed to hold off the Lotus of Romain Grosjean, giving the Frenchman very minimal space to work with.  Further back, the sister Mercedes of Nico Rosberg went backwards.  After being squeezed out in the first corner shuffle, he had contact with Felipe Massa at turn five on the opening circuit and went off-track, leaving him stuck in the midfield in 12th place at the end of the lap.

The option tyre lasted longer than many expected, with Hamilton not peeling in for his first stop until lap 10.  His lead was only slender over Vettel and Grosjean, but it was at this point that won him the race.  Rejoining behind former team-mate Button, he quickly utilised the strong straight-line speed on his Mercedes to pass Button a lap later into the first corner.  When Vettel and Grosjean rejoined, they got stuck behind the former double winner of the Hungarian event.

Vettel spent 12 frustrating laps behind the McLaren, and ended up conceding a costly 13 seconds to Hamilton, who was able to build up a gap and maintain decent levels of cooling and tyre temperature in the process.  During the battle, there was contact between Vettel and Button at one point, leaving the German with minor front wing damage.

Team principal Christian Horner admitted afterwards that this element of the race was what denied his driver a chance at a first victory in Budapest.  As quoted by Planet F1 afterwards, he said: “I think the most damage to us was emerging from the pits behind Jenson and not being able to pass him, then damaging the front wing.

“I think that released Lewis and put us back into the realms of Kimi.  Nonetheless it was still a very strong podium finish and we extended our lead in the Drivers’ Championship.”

Romain Grosjean and Jenson Button both had lively races
Vettel eventually found a way through on lap 25 as Button’s tyres lost their edge.  Two corners later, Grosjean (pictured with Button) tried to follow through but a clumsy misjudgement of spacial awareness once again led to contact between the two drivers. 

The Lotus man admitted he was at fault afterwards.  He told Sky Sports F1: “With Jenson I was a bit too much on the left.  The track goes narrow uphill and I was wider than that so I want to apologise.

“We were fortunate that none of us got anything (damage), so that was good.”

The race stewards investigated the incident, and Grosjean received a 20-second time penalty, though that didn't affect his final finishing position.

However, he did get a harsh drive-through penalty soon afterwards.  After an early second stop, he rejoined behind Massa’s sluggish Ferrari and pulled off what looked like one of the best overtaking passes of the season around the outside of turn four.

Television replays later showed Grosjean had put all four wheels off the track by a couple of centimetres, but that was only to avoid contact with his rival.  The stewards disagreed and handed him a penalty which ruined his chances of fighting for the victory.  He ultimately finished sixth.

With a safe 13-second lead, Hamilton looked strong and he made some bold passing when he needed to, including two decisive overtakes on Mark Webber who was running a different strategy after a qualifying session beset with KERS and electrical issues.

During the race, Hamilton was asked to change some settings on the differential, and the response on team radio was: “Hey man, I’m trying to drive here.  I’m happy with the way the car is.”

Mercedes were concerned about engine temperatures though and that was further highlighted six laps from the chequered flag when Rosberg’s engine blew up spectacularly in the 350th Grand Prix for the German manufacturer as an engine supplier in Grand Prix racing.

Hamilton was unfazed though, and reeled off the remaining few laps with supreme control and confidence to take his first Grand Prix victory outside of his happy spell with McLaren.  It is his first triumph since last November’s United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.

It has been a tough few weeks for Hamilton away from the circuit.  He has been left devastated by the end of his five-year relationship with X-Factor judge and pop superstar Nicole Scherzinger, and he has been fairly open about the pain of the split on his Twitter account.  This was even more in evidence in an interview with Sky Sports F1 anchor Simon Lazenby after the team celebration photograph when he had to stop himself from breaking down after mentioning the continued support he had been getting from his family.

When a bit more composed, he said: “It’s an incredible feeling.  My team did an incredible job.  We studied things a lot last night and were hoping the tyres would last.  We had no idea it would go that well.

“I was hungry for it today, I was going all out.  Usually I get stuck in traffic, but today I was going for every move I could.

“For the last 20 laps it was then about managing the tyres, but this is one of the most important wins of my career.”

As Hamilton controlled proceedings at the front of the field, the battle for second spot between Raikkonen and Vettel intensified.  Raikkonen aimed at a two-stop strategy and had to do a final stint on the medium compound tyre of 33 laps.

He had to hold off a quicker Red Bull and he managed to do this, despite one close call in the final three laps.  On the podium, Raikkonen admitted: “I knew it was going to be pretty tight so I saved the tyres with 10 laps to go a bit.

“I didn’t have any doubts I could keep him behind, I had good speed in the last sector.”

Webber made the most of his slightly different tyre strategy to finish an excellent fourth.  That was a notable result considering he had to settle for 10th on the grid.
 
Ferrari had another difficult day.  Fernando Alonso was hoping to give his country something to smile about after the tragic train accident in the country that claimed the lives of over 70 people in midweek.  However a decade on from his first Grand Prix victory, he was never in the fight for the win today.

Alonso revealed his chassis was “too slow” on both types of tyre and could do no better than fifth.  Massa struggled to eighth.  Ferrari are now the fourth fastest car in Formula One, and this event was the final nail in their coffin as far as a title challenge goes in 2013.  Alonso will never give up, but the car is lacking fundamental grip and the gap is looking too much, especially with strong Red Bull events like Singapore and India to come.  Focus at Maranello must now start shifting towards a more capable challenge in 2014.

It was another double point’s finish for McLaren with Button beating Massa fair and square for seventh.  Despite a crash in FP3, Sergio Perez did well to finish in ninth place, but did finish a full lap behind the winner.  Rosberg’s late withdrawal from proceedings was like gold dust for Williams.  It meant Pastor Maldonado crossed the line in 10th place, and meant they finally achieved their first point of the campaign after the worst start to a season in their illustrious history.

Force India had an event to forget.  Neither car finished, with both retiring thanks to hydraulics gremlins.  Paul di Resta never got higher than 13th following a disappointing Q1 elimination as the new specification of tyres seems to have hurt them the most.  There was another finish for Max Chilton in 17th spot, but three laps down as Marussia slip firmly behind Caterham in the battle to avoid being the main backmarker in the sport.

We are now officially halfway through the 2013 season, and while it hasn’t been the most intriguing campaign thanks to political matters and controversial issues such as team orders, tyre failures and illegal tests, there is a championship still to win.  

Vettel still has it all to lose, but both Lotus and Mercedes still have chances to capitalise on any mistakes.  Lewis Hamilton will believe he does have an opportunity to overturn his 48-point deficit to Vettel after this win.  The next event is in four weeks’ time at one of the championship’s most spectacular tracks, the daunting Spa-Francorchamps in Belgium.

FORMULA 1 MAGYAR NAGYDIJ 2013 RESULT
Pos
Driver
Team
Laps
Time/Reason
Grid
1
Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes GP
70
+1hr 42min 29secs
1
2
Kimi Raikkonen
Lotus Renault
70
+10.9secs
6
3
Sebastian Vettel
Red Bull Racing Renault
70
+12.4secs
2
4
Mark Webber
Red Bull Racing Renault
70
+18.0secs
10
5
Fernando Alonso
Ferrari
70
+31.4secs
5
6
Romain Grosjean
Lotus Renault
70
+52.2secs
3
7
Jenson Button
McLaren Mercedes
70
+53.8secs
13
8
Felipe Massa
Ferrari
70
+56.4secs
7
9
Sergio Perez
McLaren Mercedes
69
1 Lap
9
10
Pastor Maldonado
Williams Renault
69
1 Lap
15
11
Nico Hulkenberg
Sauber Ferrari
69
1 Lap
12
12
Jean-Eric Vergne
STR Ferrari
69
1 Lap
14
13
Daniel Ricciardo
STR Ferrari
69
1 Lap
8
14
Giedo van der Garde
Caterham Renault
68
2 Laps
20
15
Charles Pic
Caterham Renault
68
2 Laps
19
16
Jules Bianchi
Marussia Cosworth
67
3 Laps
21
17
Max Chilton
Marussia Cosworth
67
3 Laps
22
Retired
Paul di Resta
Force India Mercedes
66
Hydraulics
18
Retired
Nico Rosberg
Mercedes GP
64
Engine
4
Retired
Valtteri Bottas
Williams Renault
42
Hydraulics
16
Retired
Esteban Gutierrez
Sauber Ferrari
28
Gearbox
17
Retired
Adrian Sutil
Force India Mercedes
19
Hydraulics
11

GROSJEAN PENALISED 20-SECONDS FOR CAUSING AN AVOIDABLE COLLISION WITH BUTTON, BUT KEEPS HIS SIXTH PLACE

Drivers’ Championship after 10 rounds: Sebastian Vettel 172, Kimi Raikkonen 134, Fernando Alonso 133, Lewis Hamilton 124, Mark Webber 105, Nico Rosberg 84, Felipe Massa 61, Romain Grosjean 49, Jenson Button 39, Paul di Resta 36, Adrian Sutil 23, Sergio Perez 18, Jean-Eric Vergne 13, Daniel Ricciardo 11, Nico Hulkenberg 7, Pastor Maldonado 1

Constructors’ Championship after 10 rounds: Red Bull Racing 277, Mercedes GP 208, Ferrari 194, Lotus 183, Force India 59, McLaren 57, Scuderia Toro Rosso 24, Sauber 7, Williams 1

Sunday 21 July 2013

Adapting to change and being yourself

By Simon Wright

It is a question that we have to deal with, dealing with change and sticking to your principals. However, how much do you need to change and do you need to make any compromises to fit into new surroundings, new environments and building new friendships. 

That is something I am about to express.

Character traits
As time develops, instincts get stronger and as people, we all quickly realise our strengths and weaknesses.  These can range from a type of food that has been sampled but the taste is disgusting to a personality trait that we simply can’t change.

There have been times where you get into difficult situations and you get trapped into a corner full of remorse, regret and hatred of your own characterisation.

Of course there are aspects that do change, from young age, through the often difficult teenage development and into the prime of our adulthoods.

Again that could be on a variation of levels.  It could be through a happy relationship, changing job roles on a constant basis, or falling to the often bad habit of peer pressure.

Take me as an example.  There are some character traits that I have picked up over recent years.  I would say that since 2007-2008, I am a more relaxed person, a more caring individual and I think more about others than what I ever did in my days in secondary school or before that.

This is called ‘growing up,’ an element where some of us just don’t want to do, or can’t do for whatever reason but is a part of the evolution of life.

Some things will never change, even if you want to try and change for the better.  In my case I’ve always been competitive and don’t enjoy losing at anything, whether that is in a debate or even at a computer game.  I also have a strong opinion on many features of life, but will accept and listen to both sides of the argument.  Another aspect is taking things personally and over-thinking elements of life.

It is a battle that I’ve often tried to take on and found difficult to adapt to.  However I am getting better at these aspects.  I take constructive criticism far better than I even did 12 or 24 months ago.  Admittedly though, over-thinking is probably a character trait that is part of me, and is something that just can’t be eradicated. 

Be yourself - it is far better than developing fake personalities
What I do know is I've never tried to hide anything about my personality.  I am who I am, and have found the right balance in adapting and being yourself (pictured).

Sympathy and greed
I don’t like politics that much, and when I’ve even tried to listen to policies on the news, it is difficult to pay much attention to particularly when you think of some of the current senior figures in government roles.

This is where I do feel some sympathy for our prime minister.  David Cameron has his allies, and his non-supporters who will simply disagree with everything he says, but his personality traits don’t change just because he is the occupant of the most important role in British politics.

In debates and whenever a new policy is voted or considered, Cameron simply can’t win.  He will get attacked by the leader of the opposition, will face fierce fire from some of his own backbenchers and there is then also the various groups in society and of course the inevitable media divide.  He is trying to do the best for our country, and if he just sticks to being himself and not hide behind a shell, then he will still have his strengths in politics. 

Cameron can’t help the background he came into before becoming the main man for the Conservatives after the 2005 General Election.  Sure he has made mistakes but then who hasn’t.  And it is worse if he tried to be a fake person.

This is something I simply can’t stand and despite my passion for the game, Premier League footballers fit into this equation.  The modern day professional gets stereotyped as a greedy, manipulative individual because of the simply ridiculous pay packets they get from their clubs.  You have to be good enough to make the grade, but the perks have now gone into the realms of fantasy.

You do get your good guys in football, just like in any other form of life.  The recently retired Paul Scholes and Jamie Carragher were tremendous role models for kids, as you rarely saw them get into any antics off-the-field that put their reputations in jeopardy.  Others like former England skipper John Terry are not a good role model for the youth of today’s generation.

Another player who it is difficult to find too much sympathy for is Manchester United striker Wayne Rooney.  The England international is reportedly unhappy at Old Trafford once again, and news organisations have seen it to be so important they class it as ‘news.’  It isn’t news, when was Rooney last happy?  Unless he scores an important goal, Rooney is just about as likely as comedian Jack Dee to have a smile on their face.

Plus when you earn the money like he does, he should think about his situation.  Imagine what it is like for the everyday person, even those who work really hard to try and find a job, but constantly get frustrated by rejected applications.  Personally I've always believed Rooney is one of football’s most over-rated players of recent times.  He has produced moments of quality, but to earn the money he does per week for only occasional flashes of brilliance boggles the mind.  

Rooney is the best example I can think of being a fake individual.  He kicks a football, looks like a miserable person most of the time and is somehow idolised by kids all over the land.  That I think is slightly concerning.  It is people like him which put some off following football and rightly so.  My love of the game won’t change, but I would rather praise and respect our brave soldiers sacrificing their lives for our country than worship a Premier League footballer earning more than £200,000 a week!

Be ready to adapt, but don’t change completely
In my circumstances, I have entered many new environments and phases.  This Tuesday is the fourth anniversary of the most traumatic experience of my life.  On the way home from a night out in my hometown in July 2009, I was attacked by a gang of youths.

My injuries were fortunately light to what it could have been.  On another instance and another night, I could easily have been another statistic.  Though the scars have mentally healed, some of the psychological parts of this will never go away because it is not something you can easily forget.

I had to make changes to myself after this, and while it is no good to sit depressed in a corner and watch the world go by, I had to adapt to not taking so many risks.  I developed a cautious approach to many elements of my life, and it is one thing I’m glad I’ve done.  Sometimes it might not be the right way to approach things, but it is a safer and easier way to for me to live my life.

The one main lesson I took from that night was to understand that every second of my life is precious now and not to take everything for granted.  Sure the extra aspects such as fast cars, a load of cash, and all the flashiest jewellery that can be bought are lovely accessories to have, but I’d trade all of that in when it comes between choosing between security and fortune. 

I’m happy as long as I have a roof over my head, clothes to wear, food to eat, support from friends and family and some form of daily income.  With my recent new position having started last week, I can say all of these boxes are safely ticked.  Some of us are not so lucky, especially in far lesser developed countries in the world.

When it comes to personality and characterisation of yourself, I believe you must be prepared to adapt in certain situations.  However don’t lose all of the principles that make you the person you really are.  Happiness is more important than progressing up the career ladder, but feeling sad and sorry along the way.

There is no need to change as a person completely.  Having a fake personality will win no friends.  Just be strong in difficult situations, and be yourself.  Have a flexible approach but stick to the majority of your own principles in life.