Showing posts with label Lotus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lotus. Show all posts

Sunday, 1 December 2013

F1 2013 - Sebastian crushes the opposition

By Simon Wright - Follow me on Twitter @Siwri88


One man and one team completely dominated the 2013 Formula One World Championship as the invincible Sebastian Vettel (pictured) stormed to a fourth successive title, breaking more records in the process. His 13 wins in the season equalled Michael Schumacher’s mark from 2004 and he strung together nine successive victories, matching the record set by Alberto Ascari all the way back in 1952/1953. He simply crushed the opposition and proved why he is the best – his points total would have won the constructors’ championship on its own.

Sadly while Vettel and his Red Bull Racing team deserve all the plaudits for their almost unbeatable campaign, the spectacle disappointed. Races failed to live up to their potential, with tyres often dictating pace and putting safety at high risk. TV viewing figures dropped considerably as the season progressed and off-track politics took centre stage with team orders, illegal tyre tests, unpaid drivers and tyres blowing up left, right and centre often taking the headlines over quality driving and wheel-to-wheel combat racing. F1 2013 won’t be remembered as a classic season after the epics of recent years, especially 2007, 2008 and 2012.

Multi-21 madness in Malaysia
2013 would be the driest F1 season since 1987 but it started with a downpour in Australia that delayed the majority of qualifying until race morning. Vettel started the season with pole position but he was beaten into third place in the race itself as the Australian Grand Prix became an intriguing battle of tactics and playing the waiting game. It was the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen who eventually prevailed, with his two-stop strategy outsmarting the three-stop efforts from Vettel and Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso who chased Raikkonen home in second. Lewis Hamilton finished fifth on his Mercedes bow and Adrian Sutil had a strong return after a year out of the sport, leading a portion of the race on his way to seventh. It was round one to Raikkonen and Lotus but that was as good as it was going to get for this relationship.

A week later in Malaysia, the word Multi-21 became the talking point in the F1 paddock. After a wet start, Mark Webber had gained the upper hand on team-mate Vettel as he had pitted earlier for slick tyres. Vettel wasn’t happy with this and despite being issued instructions to hold station behind the Aussie; he ignored team orders and proceeded to race Webber in a ferocious battle with 10 laps to go. Vettel eventually got past around the outside of turn four and went on to controversially win the race. His actions though were disapproved by his team and angered many fans and F1 journalists. A more ruthless character had emerged and his relationship with Webber all but broke down after this incident. The Mercedes duo of Hamilton and Nico Rosberg finished third and fourth, although Lewis made an embarrassing pitstop in the box of his old team McLaren during the race! Alonso crashed out on lap two after his front wing failed following damage on the opening circuit.

The Red Bull team orders row rumbled on into China, with Vettel defending his actions in a highly charged press conference pre-event, accusing Webber of not helping his title bid at the end of the previous season in Brazil and indicating: “Bottom line was, I was faster, I was racing, I passed him, I won.” For once, Red Bull didn’t have the ultimate pace with Sebastian having a quiet weekend to finish fourth from a lowly ninth on the grid. Webber had a miserable time as he was disqualified from qualifying as he couldn’t provide a fuel sample, then he collided with Jean-Eric Vergne in the race and later lost a right-rear wheel, finishing his afternoon prematurely. Alonso won comfortably from Raikkonen and pole-sitter Hamilton. Jenson Button was an encouraging fifth for McLaren but already, their season looked doomed with an uncompetitive car that left them scrapping for a distant fifth in the constructors’ championship.

The final event of the early season flyaways occurred in Bahrain and it was a case of déjà vu to the 2012 race. The podium was exactly the same as Vettel became the first repeat winner of the campaign. The Lotus pair of Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean completed the rostrum. There were more team squabbles in the desert and this time it was at McLaren. After being accused of lacking aggression by team principal Martin Whitmarsh in his first three races for his new team, Sergio Perez responded with some robust driving which led to contact with team-mate Button and Jenson to shout on the radio: “He’s hit me up the back, calm him down.” Perez finished a strong sixth, while Button faded to tenth. Paul di Resta had a fabulous weekend, qualifying fifth and matching his best ever career result with fourth for Force India.

After a DRS failure wrecked his race chances in Sakhir, Alonso was slightly on the backfoot as the Grand Prix circus returned to Europe. His response was magnificent on his home turf in Barcelona. Despite lining up fifth, the Spaniard produced a breathtaking double pass on Raikkonen and Hamilton around the outside of turn three on the first lap and managed the high degradation Pirelli tyres perfectly to win in Spain for the third time in his career. Raikkonen split the Ferrari’s, as Felipe Massa finished a fine third from ninth on the grid. Pirelli were left under the microscope with tyre delaminations for di Resta in practice and Vergne in the race, following three previous incidents in Bahrain. Mercedes had a nightmare on Sunday afternoon with a lack of tyre grip. Despite locking out the front row, Rosberg and Hamilton slipped horribly back to sixth and twelfth. The next storm was about to brew.

It emerged on race morning in Monte Carlo that Mercedes had done a three-day tyre test after the race at the Circuit de Catalunya with Pirelli, using their race drivers and in its 2013 car. Both Red Bull and Ferrari made an official protest against the team which would lead to a hearing before the British Grand Prix at the FIA Court of Appeal. In Monaco, Mercedes managed their tyre wear life and Rosberg drove exceptionally to win around the streets from his third straight pole position. He achieved the victory on the 30th anniversary of his father’s victory for Williams at the same event. It would have been a 1-2 but for a misjudgement behind the Safety Car from Hamilton which dropped him behind the Red Bull cars and ruing his error as he finished fourth. There was a red flag during the race after Pastor Maldonado crashed heavily at Tabac following contact with Max Chilton which moved the trackside barriers onto the racing line. Maldonado was unhurt and so was Massa, who had two almost identical accidents in two days at Ste Devote, the second in the race.

Tragedy in Canada
The Canadian Grand Prix often delivers excitement but that wasn’t the case in 2013 with the race turning into a dour affair. Vettel took pole and won at a canter, with Alonso making up for his lacklustre seventh place finish in Monaco to finish second holding off Hamilton in a late tussle. Rookie Valtteri Bottas made the F1 fraternity sit up and take notice in qualifying as he made the most of mixed conditions to start a fabulous third in an uncompetitive Williams. The event was overshadowed though by a tragic accident after the race that claimed the life of track marshal Mark Robinson. He was run over by a moving crane as Esteban Gutierrez’s Sauber was being recovered from turn two. His death was the first at an event since the 2001 Australian Grand Prix.

Regular tyre blowouts ruined the British Grand Prix at Silverstone
After the tragic events of Montreal, Formula One was lucky to have no more injuries at Silverstone. Tyres had controlled the season and the whole issue about their reliability blew up dramatically as the British Grand Prix turned into an farce. Six drivers including early race leader Hamilton, Vergne (pictured) and Massa had tyre blowouts, whilst the most terrifying incident was a failure for Perez that had Alonso cheating serious injury as he ducked out of the McLaren’s slipstream at 180mph. It marred another great drive from Rosberg who held off a charging Webber to claim his second victory in three events. Webber had taken the opportunity earlier in the weekend to announce his retirement from the sport at the end of the season. Vettel chalked up a rare DNF when his gearbox broke with 11 laps to go; to the delight of many of the British fans while Hamilton recovered brilliantly from his early tyre failure to finish fourth.

In the aftermath of the Silverstone debacle, the blame game began with Pirelli accusing the Northamptonshire circuit of ‘high kerbs’ and the teams for ignoring their tyre pressure recommendations. Ultimately the Young Drivers Test became a three-day tyre test at the home of British motorsport with race drivers included and the 2012 structure returned in a mix with the 2013 compounds. It would have a major impact on the destiny of where the championship would go from this point onwards. Mercedes weren’t at this test as they had been banned by the WMSC following the Barcelona tyre test against regulations in May.

Vettel started his march to the title again with a hard-fought win at his home event at the Nurburgring, his first win on home soil. The Lotus drivers of Raikkonen and Grosjean pushed him hard as they completed the podium picture after three difficult events for Lotus that had seen them pick up just 13 points. There was another scary incident when a wheel detached itself from Webber’s car in the pits and struck an FOM cameraman in the back; knocking him to the ground and sending him to hospital with severe bruising. Webber fought back to seventh after a mid-race Safety Car for Jules Bianchi’s Marussia that caught fire, then rolled back across the track, almost taking out race leader Vettel in another bizarre incident.

Hamilton’s emotional dedication
Lewis Hamilton's only 2013 win came at Budapest in a tough year
The final race before the summer break was the Hungarian Grand Prix at Budapest and it is becoming Hamilton’s happy hunting ground. The Brit (pictured) recorded his fourth victory at the Hungaroring from pole position, his first for Mercedes. It was an emotional success for the 2008 world champion who had to deal with yet another painful breakup in his relationship with X-Factor judge Nicole Scherzinger in the summer. Hamilton dedicated the win to his former girlfriend but it seems like this separation is for good. Raikkonen came second, while Vettel had to settle for third, delayed in traffic behind Jenson Button after the first round of pitstops. After finishing an uncompetitive fifth, Alonso received a rebuke from Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo when he suggested he would like “someone else’s car” for his birthday. It suggested things weren’t rosy in the Ferrari camp anymore; with noises being made of a possible move to Red Bull for 2014.

The Austrian team based in Milton Keynes though would eventually choose Daniel Ricciardo to be Webber’s successor for next season after negotiations with Raikkonen’s management broke down. Four weeks after Budapest, F1 returned with a belting qualifying session at the daunting Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium. A gamble on slick tyres in Q1 saw both Marussia cars and Giedo van der Garde’s Caterham escape the session, whilst di Resta almost got pole after a well-timed lap in the dry part of Q3. Unfortunately for the Scot he was bumped down to fifth as the weather changed again in the dying stages and Hamilton achieved his fourth successive pole. However that was as good as it got for the Brit’s season. Vettel overwhelmed him into Les Combes on the first circuit of the race and drove into the distance, with Alonso second and the Mercedes man third. Raikkonen’s run of 27 consecutive points finishes ended with a brake problem on his Lotus just after half-distance.

By now, Alonso was the only driver who looked remotely close to challenging Vettel should his form suddenly capitulate. That hope ended at the final European event of the season at Monza. On a track that has normally exposed Red Bull’s weaknesses, Vettel was fastest in every single session and won the race at a stroll. Alonso did manage to spilt the Red Bulls, helped by a demon overtake on Webber in the early laps. Nico Hulkenberg reminded everyone of his quality after he qualified third for Sauber then finished a strong fifth in the race. Raikkonen missed out on points again following contact with his Perez on the first lap, while Hamilton rescued ninth place from a dire weekend that included elimination in Q2.

Flaming Webber
Formula One’s worst kept secret was revealed to the public between Italy and Singapore, as Ferrari confirmed Raikkonen was returning to the team for 2014 alongside Alonso. Kimi stated it was to do with money, suggesting there were severe financial issues at Lotus. The news meant Felipe Massa’s eight-year stay at Maranello was drawing to a conclusion but he would be announced as a Williams driver for 2014 before the season’s end. Under the lights at the Marina Bay, Vettel made it three wins in a row at the event, with Raikkonen defying the aggravation of an old back injury in qualifying to finish a fine third from 13th on the grid. Webber retired on the last lap with a gearbox problem and then copped a 10-place grid penalty for getting a lift back to the pits on the back of Alonso’s car on the slowing down lap.

Mark Webber can only watch as his Red Bull burns in Korea
It was now a question of when, rather than if Vettel would become champion once again. He reigned supreme as ever in Korea which arguably was a contender for race of the season. While he dominated, team-mate Webber went up in flames – quite literally (pictured). He was clobbered by Adrian Sutil after a mid-race Safety Car period. The connection with the Force India cracked an oil line and it wasn’t long before the back of the car went up in flames pretty spectacularly. The appearance of a fire truck before the Safety Car returned to the circuit saw the organisers get a hefty slap on the wrist afterwards. The Lotus pair of Raikkonen and Grosjean finished second and third, while Hulkenberg produced the drive of the season to come home fourth, keeping both Hamilton and Alonso at bay for the majority of the race due to his car’s strong straight-line speed.

The only time Vettel looked like he might be beaten in the run-in was at the Japanese Grand Prix. Romain Grosjean and Lotus asked a serious question which was responded in confident style by Red Bull. Webber had edged into pole position after a KERS problem for Vettel in qualifying but both were beaten off the line by a lightning Grosjean. Slight contact with Vettel’s car punctured a tyre on Hamilton’s Mercedes and ended his day early. The Lotus man kept Vettel behind for nearly 40 laps but eventually had to give best to both RBR machines. His third place though was richly deserved. Alonso came fourth followed by Raikkonen and Hulkenberg. The paddock was stunned though at Suzuka by the tragic death of ex-Marussia test driver Maria de Vilota who had been found dead in a Seville hotel as her injuries from the dreadful testing accident suffered last summer ultimately proved fatal.

Vettel does it in style
Fourth place in Japan for Alonso had kept the championship mathematically alive but all Vettel needed on the sport’s last visit to India for a year was a top five finish. This he achieved in style with a sixth straight victory and sealing both a fourth successive drivers title for himself and constructors championship for the team. Webber was nailed on for a certain second place until an alternator issue grounded his car on lap 40. That allowed Nico Rosberg to finish a strong second but some half a minute behind and Grosjean charged through from 17th to take third again. That was only after a near altercation with team-mate Raikkonen in the closing laps that forced Lotus chief race engineer Alan Permane to leave some brutal words in Kimi’s radio – shouting: “Kimi, get out of the f####ng’ way.” Afterwards, Vettel treated the Indian fans to some doughnuts in his car, before bowing down to his monster of a chassis and leaving it on the start-finish straight. Rather than accept the reasoning for this, the FIA fined the team and driver to the chagrin of many paddock insiders.

Following the stiff row that broke out at Lotus after India, Raikkonen almost didn’t turn up in Abu Dhabi and only arrived at the last minute to drive. He expressed his dissatisfaction to the media and claimed that he hadn’t been paid a single euro for the season. He threatened to go on strike but an agreement was eventually reached for his rightful salary to be paid. In the UAE, Kimi was thrown out of qualifying for a technical infringement then hit van der Garde on the first corner, retired, left for the airport and wasn’t to be seen for the rest of the year as he underwent a back operation shortly afterwards. For the record in a forgettable race, Vettel won by nearly half a minute from Webber, Rosberg, Grosjean and Alonso.

If Abu Dhabi had been a tedious race, the spectacle in Austin, Texas was one of the most boring events of the past 20 years in the sport. Overtaking was limited, Pirelli brought tyres that were way too conservative and action on-track was non-existent. Vettel became the first man to win eight races in a row in a season, while a fast start from Grosjean saw him beat Webber to second and continue his rise in reputation. Valtteri Bottas scored the first championship points of his career with a fine eighth place in a desperate year for Williams.

So it came to an end in Brazil and it was a predictable end to the championship. Vettel won the race again to ensure he remained unbeaten at any event since late July. However the day wasn’t about him equalling records. It was about Webber, who bowed out of the sport by taking off his crash helmet on the slowing down lap and a pirouette on the rostrum as he finished his career with second place in the race and third in the championship. Massa might have made the podium in his final Ferrari race until he collected a drive-through penalty that left him screaming on the radio: “Unbelievable, unbelievable decision FIA!” With Hamilton also receiving a similar sanction for needless contact with Bottas on lap 47, Alonso took the final podium of the season. Jenson Button offered McLaren a crumb of comfort with fourth place and Perez came through from 19th to sixth but had already been fired for next season.

The racing quality in 2013 was uninspiring and the results fairly predictable but no-one can take away Sebastian Vettel’s amazing achievements. He now has to be ranked alongside the likes of Fangio, Schumacher and Senna with his record-breaking campaign.

2014 brings a whole new raft of changes. We say goodbye to Mark Webber, Ross Brawn, probably Paul di Resta, the Indian Grand Prix and V8 engines and say hello to the V6 turbo engine, bigger KERS units, Dane rookie Kevin Magnussen at McLaren, Daniel Kvyat at Toro Rosso and a new race in Russia as well as a welcome return to the calendar for the Austrian Grand Prix. Let’s hope this mixture will shake up the competition and make 2014 a more memorable championship than the one served up in 2013. This year will be known as the year where Vettel crushed the opposition. Enjoy next season and for the last time writing for Formula One on Viewing Perspectives, thank you for reading and goodbye.

FINAL STANDINGS
Drivers’ Championship: 1. Sebastian Vettel 397, 2. Fernando Alonso 242, 3. Mark Webber 199, 4. Lewis Hamilton 189, 5. Kimi Raikkonen 183, 6. Nico Rosberg 171, 7. Romain Grosjean 132, 8. Felipe Massa 112, 9. Jenson Button 73, 10. Nico Hulkenberg 51, 11. Sergio Perez 49, 12. Paul di Resta 48, 13. Adrian Sutil 29, 14. Daniel Ricciardo 20, 15. Jean-Eric Vergne 13, 16. Esteban Gutierrez 6, 17. Valtteri Bottas 4, 18. Pastor Maldonado 1

Constructors’ Championship: 1. Red Bull Racing 596, 2. Mercedes GP 360, 3. Ferrari 354, 4. Lotus 315, 5. McLaren 122, 6. Force India 77, 7. Sauber 57, 8. Scuderia Toro Rosso 33, 9. Williams 5


Wednesday, 1 May 2013

Ayrton Senna - Was the Brazilian the greatest of all-time?

By Simon Wright

Today marks the 19th anniversary of the passing of one of Formula One’s greatest ever drivers, Ayrton Senna (pictured).

The three-time world champion was a national hero in Brazil, at a time where the country wasn’t experiencing the best of periods.  For many locals, he brought the nation together, and his 41 Grand Prix victories all had their own special moments.

Not everyone endeared themselves to Senna’s ability.  His ruthlessness and determination to win led to some high-profile controversial moments.

The feud with Alain Prost pushed Grand Prix racing into the sporting limelight in the late 80s and early 90s.  There were the regular run-ins with the flamboyant FISA president Jean-Marie Balestre, and raging battles with the likes of Nigel Mansell, Nelson Piquet and in his final days, Michael Schumacher.

One of F1’s unanswered questions we will never know will be whether Senna at his peak, aged 34 could have defeated the young wonder in Schumacher.  Certainly, the Benetton Ford package at the start of 1994 had the upper hand on the evil-handling Williams Renault FW16.  It was Schumacher 20, Senna 0 in points heading to Imola.

However, the Brazilian persisted with a car that was certainly not to his liking, and was dominant all weekend at the San Marino Grand Prix meeting.  He was leading going into lap seven and then, he perished at one of F1’s most feared corners at the time, Tamburello.


What made him so great?
There were two great qualities for me that made Senna stand out from the normal driver.  They were the wet weather ability and the amount of pole positions he collected in his career.

When the rain comes down, some drivers have the ability to make the genuine difference.  Jean Alesi, Wolfgang von Trips, Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton have shown their quality in tricky conditions throughout their careers, but there was something uniquely different about Senna.

The first signs came in his debut season in 1984, when he charged around the streets of Monte Carlo in filthy weather.  From 12th on the grid, he took the underpowered Toleman unit into second place, with some brave and devilish overtaking.  Had it not been for a slightly convenient red flag, he probably would have caught Prost in the McLaren and won the race.

A year later, the Brazilian transferred to the Lotus stable and in Portugal, just his second race for them, he destroyed the competition in wet weather lapping all but one car.

It was the first of his victories, and he repeated his skill when the skies opened on several more occasions.

His first lap at Donington on a damp, dull Easter weekend in 1993 is in my mind, the greatest first lap I’ve ever seen in Grand Prix racing.  The skill, the commitment and the delicate approach he would take in the wet was masterful.

From the start of the Lotus days, Senna’s ability to be the fastest over a single flying lap became legendary.  There were times where he would still set laps much faster than other competitors, even when he had to deal with slow moving EuroBrun or Coloni cars infront (two of the hard-trying backmarker teams in the late 1980s).

He achieved 65 pole positions, the last one coming on Saturday, 30 April 1994 – a day before he paid the ultimate price.  Schumacher has beaten this figure, but it took him 15 years to do it, and Sebastian Vettel has every chance nowadays to top this list.

However, neither can compare to what Senna could do on a quick lap.  Don’t forget, these were the days of qualifying cars, monstrous V12 engines, and having to make manual gear changes on a regular basis.

And one record that still remains is his six victories around Monaco.  At Monte Carlo, he was almost virtually unbeatable.

The detractors
His ruthless approach to winning sometimes cost Senna, and it didn’t win him many friends.
The feud with Prost which started when they became McLaren team-mates in 1988 was gold dust for the race promoters and the neutral spectators.  At a time where if you weren’t in a McLaren, you could forget winning – they produced some classic battles.

Senna frightened Prost when he drove him towards the pitwall in Portugal in 1988, but that was only the start of things to come.

He didn’t make any friends for breaking an agreement made at his behest with Prost at Imola in 1989.

Senna wanted the pair to agree on whoever led off the startline to win the race.  On the restart after Gerhard Berger’s fiery accident, The Professor got the better getaway, but Senna broke the agreement into Tosa on the first circuit, broke away and won the race by miles.

Prost refused to attend the press conference and the cordial relationship was over – similar to what is happening at Red Bull in today’s paddock.

No-one will forget the clashes at Suzuka in 1989 and 1990.  Some feel Senna was harshly treated in 1989 when he was disqualified for receiving outside assistance.  In 1990, he had enough of the bickering, and pulled off a dangerous move that could have had worse consequences.

So annoyed the pole position had been moved onto the dirtier side of the track, he vowed to punish Prost if he turned into the first corner first.  That’s exactly what happened, and the result was catastrophic.

The pair ended in the gravel, and into the tyres.  They strapped themselves out of their cars, neither talking to the other and Senna was hiding a massive secret.

He had deliberately crashed into Prost, but that was something he only admitted after wrapping up his third title in 1991.

There will be those detractors, who will never forgive him for this act of frankly disgusting driving, but everyone has made mistakes, and most have some kind of darker side or done something we are not proud of, but at the time thought it was okay.

Was he the best?
It is almost impossible to declare who is the greatest Grand Prix driver of all-time?  

Schumacher might have most of the records, but then Prost was the most measured, Juan Manuel Fangio the best in an era where you had a 50 per cent of dying, Jim Clark was the best when it came to protecting an inter-team relationship, Fernando Alonso the best when it comes to consistently getting the job done, no matter the equipment at his disposal.

So I don’t want to make comparisons, considering these were different eras, different cars, different circuits and different safety regulations.  However, in his prime – Ayrton Senna was the best of his generation.

When he died at the wheel of the Williams on Sunday, 1 May 1994 – he became a legend that will never ever be forgotten, no matter of the legacy he left.

19 years on – F1 has moved on, but devoted fans will always remember Senna’s personality and genius behind the wheel of a racing car.