Saturday, October 31, 2015

Gutierrez seals 2016 F1 return with Haas



Esteban Gutierrez will return to the Formula One grid in 2016 after signing for the new Haas team. The Mexican will partner Romain Grosjean at the American squad.


Haas unveiled former Sauber racer Gutierrez as their second driver on the Friday of this weekend's Formula 1 Gran Premio de Mexico 2015 - which will be Gutierrez's home event when he lines up for the team next year.

"This is an excellent opportunity that builds on my time with Ferrari and I will make the most of it,” Gutierrez, the current Ferrari reserve driver, said.

"Gene Haas believes in me and I believe in how he's going about competing in Formula One. To have a race seat in a competitive car with Ferrari power is very special, and I appreciate the faith he has in me. I trust we'll be able to achieve great things together.

Commenting on Gutierrez's appointment, Haas said: "I got to know Esteban through our relationship with Ferrari, and after looking at the success he's had to earn his role there, it became clear he was an excellent choice for our race team.

"He's young and hungry, but not inexperienced. His two years running a full F1 schedule has given him some very good race experience, and having spent this season at Ferrari as their third driver allowed him to see firsthand the methodology that makes Ferrari such a power in Formula One.

"We're very happy to have Esteban as a part of our race team. Between him and Romain, we have a strong driver lineup that will help us develop our car and, ultimately, score some points in our inaugural season."

Gutierrez, 24, made his F1 debut with Sauber in 2013, taking a season-best result of seventh in Japan. He stayed at the Swiss team the following year, but failed to score a point as they struggled for form.

His deal with Haas means Marussia are now the only team with likely vacancies for 2016.

(source: f1.com)

2015 Mexican Grand Prix - Qualifying


2015 Mexican Grand Prix - Third practice session


Friday, October 30, 2015

2015 Mexican Grand Prix - Second practice session


Drivers hit record speeds in Mexico

Formula One cars reached their highest top speeds of the season in the very first practice at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez, with Lewis Hamilton breaking the 360 km/h (223 mph) barrier on Friday morning in Mexico.





While the redeveloped circuit boasts a main straight more than a kilometre long, it is Mexico City's altitude that has the biggest effect on overall speeds. With the track 2,200 metres above sea level, the air is less dense - which means less drag. And while there is less oxygen in the air for the internal combustion engine to feed off, the turbocharger spins faster to compensate.

The upshot means some of the highest speeds of the season - indeed Hamilton's Mercedes clocked 362.3 km/h, or 225.1 mph, in the opening session. With track conditions set to improve, that figure may well increase further as the weekend progresses and teams hone their set-ups.

By comparison, Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen clocked 358.3 km/h earlier this year at Monza, which traditionally produces the highest top speeds given the special low-drag configurations teams choose to run at the Italian Grand Prix venue.

(source: f1.com)

2015 Mexican Grand Prix - First practice session


Thursday, October 29, 2015

2015 Mexico - Thursday Drivers Press Conference


The press conference in three parts. Enjoy!



MiniDrivers - 2015 United States Grand Prix



1992 Mexican GP (full race)


I promised this in my preview so here it is!

2015 Mexican Grand Prix preview



Wow! What year is this? The Mexican Grand Prix? I am seriously happy the Formula One circus is returning to Mexico! The last time they hosted a Grand Prix was in 1992 if I remember correctly.

The race in 1992 was all about the two Williams drivers and one other who became a legend through the years. I am of course talking about Nigel Mansell, Riccardo Patrese with Williams and Michael Schumacher with Benetton. Young Schumacher took his maiden podium here. Take a look:


I also found BBC's preview for Mexico that was released earlier this year:


I will post the 1992 race also later on so please check that out if you are interested.


Now let's see my predictions:

Pole position: Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes

Race:
  1. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
  2. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes
  3. Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari

Fastest lap: Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes

Surprise: Sergio Perez and Felipe Massa might get good results here.


Post your own predictions to our F1-4-LIFE PREDICTORS LEAGUE!




The rules:

POINTS:  1st - 3  2nd - 5  3rd - 10 

HOW IT WORKS: the aim of the game is simply predict who comes where in the race (top3). A total of 18 points can be won on a race day. If you get winner and and 3rd place right but 2nd wrong you get 13 points same if you get 1 correct. eg. 2nd you get 5 points. If a driver wins the race and you said he would come 2nd or 3rd no points would be awarded. Same if he came in another position, and you predicted that wrong. A table will be posted up every race weekend. The point scoring system will change once the cars become more competitive. Everyone will say a merc 1,2 so it won't be close or fun. 

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR PREDICTIONS: send an email to f14lifeblog@gmail.com or message the Facebook page to submit your predictions. You have until lights out to make them. If you submit them when the race has started they won't count. So be quick! like the Mercedes. 

THE PRIZE: the winner of the league will win themselves a admin place on the F1 4 LIFE page along side AE, JT, MW, MH and JI. If you don't want to be an admin you are welcome to participate anyway. We may also come up with some other prize if it helps. 

That's it for today and if you want to send me feedback then email me: f14lifeblog@gmail.com

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

FIA press conference schedule - Mexico








Newly-crowned world champion Lewis Hamilton and home hero Sergio Perez will be amongst thew driver facing the press in Mexico City on Thursday, while on Friday Ferrari’s Maurizio Arrivabene and Honda’s Yasuhisa Arai will join other senior team personnel in answering questions from the media. The line-ups in full…


Thursday, October 29, 1100 hours (1700 GMT)
Fernando Alonso (McLaren), Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes), Pastor Maldonado (Lotus), Sergio Perez (Force India), Carlos Sainz (Toro Rosso), Will Stevens (Marussia)

Friday, October 30, 1600 hours (2200 GMT)
Yasuhisa Arai (Honda), Maurizio Arrivabene (Ferrari), Robert Fernley (Force India), Claire Williams (Williams), Toto Wolff (Mercedes)

The qualifying and post-race conferences with the top three drivers will take place immediately after the respective sessions.


(source: f1.com)

The Mexican Grand Prix - did you know?

Mexican driver Esteban Gutierrez is rumored to get the second seat of Haas F1 Team for 2016.


Did you know that Sergio Perez will be just the third Mexican driver to start a race on home soil, or that the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez is located at over 2,200m above sea level? Ahead of the first race in Mexico City for 23 years, we present some of the more obscure facts and figures about the race...

This year is the 16th occasion that Mexico has featured on the world championship calendar, but the first since 1992. All 15 previous races have been run in Mexico City, at the circuit now known as the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez.


Nigel Mansell was the victor in that last race in Mexico, 23 years ago - his second victory in the country. Only two other drivers have won as many races in Mexico - Jim Clark (who won the inaugural race in 1963) and Alain Prost.


Richie Ginther is one of nine other drivers to have won once in Mexico, the American claiming his only - and Honda’s first - Grand Prix victory in 1965. In fact, the Japanese manufacturer has always fared well in Mexico, with Honda-powered cars having taken a record four victories and four pole positions in the country. However, given McLaren’s current form there seems little hope of them adding to that illustrious tally this weekend…
A number of other milestones have taken place in Mexico: Mike Spence, Jackie Oliver and Michael Schumacher scored maiden podium finishes in 1965, 1968 and 1992 respectively; Jo Siffert and Clay Regazzoni captured their first pole positions in 1968 and 1970; and Gerhard Berger claimed his - and Benetton’s - first F1 win in 1986. Berger’s triumph, incidentally, was Pirelli’s first in Mexico, and was achieved on a zero-stop strategy.


The aforementioned Jim Clark is the only driver to have completed a ‘Grand Slam’ (pole position, fastest lap, led every lap, victory) on Mexican soil, doing so in the inaugural event in 1963 in what - at 2h 9m 52.1s - remains the longest race in the country to date. The legendary Scot came close to another slam in 1967, taking pole, fastest lap and the win, but failing to lead from flag to flag.


Speaking of Clark, the Lotus driver was responsible for the biggest margin of victory in Mexican Grand Prix history when in 1963 he beat Jack Brabham by 1m 41.1s. In fact, four of the first six races in Mexico were won by over a minute, which is very unusual. On the flip side, the smallest margin of victory came in 1991 when Riccardo Patrese defeated Williams team mate Mansell by just 1.336s.


The 1968 race was one of those won by over a minute, though it was also notable for the lead changing five times between Graham Hill, Jackie Stewart and Jo Siffert, with Hill eventually emerging victorious (and claiming his second world title to boot). No other race on Mexican soil has seen P1 switch as many times.
The newly modified circuit runs clockwise and has 17 corners - seven left and ten right - which is three more than the version raced in 1992. The pit straight, meanwhile, is one of the longest in F1, and with the low altitude (and therefore lower drag) brake suppliers Brembo reckon the drivers should hit around 361km/h (224mph) before braking to 101km/h (62.7mph) for Turn 1 - a hefty 4g deceleration.


Located at over 2,200m above sea level, Mexico City is easily the highest altitude venue on the F1 calendar. To put it in perspective, Brazil’s Interlagos - the second-highest race location - is around 800m above sea level.


Guadalajara-born Sergio Perez will be the only ‘local’ driver on the grid for this year’s race, and just the third Mexican driver after Pedro Rodriguez and Moises Solana to start a world championship Grand Prix in his homeland.


Rodriguez - Mexico’s only F1 race winner - finished in fourth place in the 1968 race - the best result for a Mexican on home soil to date. Solana, meanwhile, was notable for having raced with the number 13 in his home race in 1963. The so-called unlucky number wasn’t used again for another 51 years until Lotus’s Pastor Maldonado selected it as his designated race number ahead of the 2014 season.


Finally, looking to the present day, Hamilton took his tenth win of the season in the United States, and thus, with three races to go, remains on course to equal Sebastian Vettel's single-season record of 13 victories, set in 2013. On a related note, the British driver needs to lead for just 23 more kilometres to break through the 3,000km barrier for 2015 - a truly astonishing feat when you consider the next best driver - Sebastian Vettel - has racked up just 866km in the lead.

(source: f1.com)

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Rosberg totally mystified by late mistake



Nico Rosberg says he is at a complete loss to explain the error that handed Mercedes team mate Lewis Hamilton the lead - and ultimately the win and championship victory - in Sunday's 2015 Formula 1 United States Grand Prix.

Race leader Rosberg slid off-track at Turn 12 with seven laps to go, handing Hamilton first place and paving the way for the Briton to seal his second title in a row with his tenth win of the season.

"I just got wheelspin," Rosberg explained. "It's never happened to me before, not even in testing. I can't explain it. It's unbelievable. To nearly spin by myself coming off a corner- I don't understand it.

"Obviously that was really, really tough at the time to lose the lead and the win like that. I was feeling really good - it just went wrong. My mistake cost me the win."

Polesitter Rosberg had worked his way back into the lead after slipping to fourth place at the start following contact with Hamilton in Turn 1. Speaking before he had seen a replay of the incident, the German said he believed his team mate had been 'too aggressive' into the uphill right-hander.

"I was ahead mid-corner, and I have a right to the track there," he said. "Lewis was too aggressive, one step too far, and that's not okay."

He also played down the significance of an incident in the post-race podium room, in which he tossed a cap back in Hamilton's direction after the Briton had thrown it onto his lap.

"The cap was nothing, just typical games," Rosberg said.

Rosberg eventually came home in second place after seeing off a late challenge from Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel. However, he remains four points behind his compatriot in the standings with three races to go.

(source: f1.com)

Winners and Losers - United States



Sunday in Austin saw triumph for Lewis Hamilton, but frustration for fellow podium finishers Nico Rosberg and Sebastian Vettel, who both came oh-so-close to keeping their title dreams alive. But what about further down the order? We take a team-by-team look at who was on the up and who hit misfortune at the Circuit of The Americas…


Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton, P1
Nico Rosberg, P2

Mercedes were vulnerable on the intermediate tyres in the early laps, once Hamilton had taken the lead in Turn 1 and eased Rosberg wide before they made slight contact. But after the first pits stops Rosberg took charge as the track began to dry and should have won easily but for subsequent safety car interventions.

He controlled the race after the first, but ran wide in Turn 12 after the second and handed victory to Hamilton. As he headed another Mercedes one-two, the latter achieved his goal of outscoring Vettel by nine points, to win his third drivers’ world championship.

There were suggestions afterwards, however, that his tactics in the first corner may have opened a fresh rift with Rosberg, even though the latter lost the win because of his own error.


Ferrari

Sebastian Vettel, P3
Kimi Raikkonen, Retired lap 26, brakes

Ferrari did everything right with Vettel. He was already seventh at the end of the opening lap after starting 13th because of his engine penalty, then climbed quickly to sixth. He then took a set of soft tyres and later tried to make it to the end on a set of mediums. The safety cars stymied that, however, but after a switch to another set of softs he was challenging Rosberg for second place all the way to the flag.

Raikkonen was less impressive and after a fight with Verstappen the Finn went off at the esses on the 20th lap, and had to fight his way out of the gravel and contact with a Rolex advertising hoarding. He retired his damaged SF15-T five laps later with right-front brake temperature problems.


Toro Rosso

Max Verstappen, P4
Carlos Sainz, P7

Verstappen was mighty yet again on his way to fourth place, racing hard with Vettel and overtaking the four-time world champion a couple of times. He made it through with a set of intermediates at the start then two sets of soft slicks, to take a superb fourth.

Sainz started from 20th after crashing in qualifying in the morning, but made amends with a strong drive to sixth on the road. Unfortunately, he dropped to seventh when a five-second penalty was applied for speeding in the pits after the speed limiter had failed, but the double points finish put the team within seven points of Lotus with three races left.


Force India

Sergio Perez, P5
Nico Hulkenberg, Retired lap 36, collision with Ricciardo

Perez was in contention for points all afternoon, though there was a spell when he was really struggling to generate tyre temperature when he fell back. A strong drive took him to fifth, however. Hulkenberg also looked good after a slow start on intermediates turned into a challenging pace on slicks. But on the 36th lap a section of his front wing broke (probably as a result of previous impact in traffic) just as he was trying to overtake Ricciardo. He understeered into the Australian, damaging his own right-front suspension and forcing him into retirement.


McLaren

Jenson Button, P6
Fernando Alonso, P11

McLaren nearly got both cars home in the points. Alonso collided with Bottas in the first corner and lost time in the pits, but made all that up under the safety car and was holding fifth place when his Honda engine began to lose power - possibly due to a fuel sensor problem. By the time he had reset that he had dropped to 10th and Ricciardo took the final point from him just before the finish.

Button, however, made all the right strategic choices, being the first man to stop for slicks to make them work and then calling for a third and final stop which gave him the rubber to take seventh on the road. That became sixth with Sainz’s penalty.


Lotus

Pastor Maldonado, P8
Romain Grosjean, Retired lap 11, brakes

Maldonado drove a relatively subdued race, which included only one brush with Button, to take eighth place, but Grosjean was an early retirement when a damaged duct overheated the rear brakes.


Sauber

Felipe Nasr, P9
Marcus Ericsson, Retired lap 26, electrics

On their 400th Grand Prix weekend, Sauber’s race started badly when Nasr and Ericsson collided, delaying the Brazilian. The Swede was a candidate for points until his C34 quit with electrical failure, while Nasr battled back, making full use of the safety cars, to take two points for ninth.


Red Bull

Daniel Ricciardo, P10
Daniil Kvyat, Retired lap 43, accident

For a while Red Bull looked a definite contender for the win, as Kvyat and Ricciardo took the fight to Mercedes in the slippery early going on intermediates. The Australian led from lap 15 to 22, but faded thereafter as the track dried. He also got knocked about a bit, first by Hulkenberg, later by stablemate Sainz. That dropped him back to a 10th place finish on a day when he deserved much more.

Kvyat challenged Hamilton hard early on, but made mistake that cost him time and places before losing control on lap 43 and crashing hard into the inside wall on the approach to Turn 20.


Marussia

Alexander Rossi, P12
Will Stevens, Retired lap 1, accident damage

Rossi inadvertently hit the back of Stevens in the first-corner melee, putting his team mate out. But he made amends by equalling the team’s best result of 2015 with 12th in his home race.


Williams

Felipe Massa, Retired lap 23, damper
Valtteri Bottas, Retired lap 6, damper

Bottas collided with Alonso in the first corner and had to pit for a new nose. He risked switching from intermediates to slicks then, but was in four laps later to revert to intermediates. A lap later he was in again to retire with a recurrence of the damper problem he’d encountered in qualifying that morning.

Massa got held up in the melee too and sustained damage, but he would also retire with damper problems. It was the first time Williams had suffered a double retirement since Brazil in 2012.

(source: f1.com)

Monday, October 26, 2015

FIA to consider reduced-cost customer engine for 2017



Formula One racing’s governing body, the FIA, is to investigate the possible introduction of a new customer engine, to be made available to teams at a much lower price than the current F1 power unit.


It comes after an inconclusive FIA study into potential cost reduction measures - including cost capping, revised rules, and increased parts standardisation - and after Ferrari vetoed proposals to set a maximum price for customer engines and gearboxes, as is the Italian team’s right under agreements governing the sport.

The FIA will now consult with the teams and other F1 stakeholders regarding a standard customer engine, with a view to choosing a supplier ahead of a possible introduction for the new unit in 2017.

The FIA says the move is part of its ongoing efforts ‘to ensure the sustained long-term development’ of the Formula One world championship, and urged the teams to make a ‘positive contribution’ to the process.

The FIA’s cost reduction statement in full:

The FIA has studied cost reduction measures for teams participating in the FIA Formula 1 World Championship which were not conclusive, including:

- a global cost ceiling

- a reduction in costs via technical and sporting regulations

- an increased standardisation for parts

The FIA, in agreement with FOM, suggested the principle of setting a maximum price for engine and gear box for client teams at the last Strategy Group meeting.

These measures were put to the vote and adopted with a large majority.

However, Ferrari SpA decided to go against this and exercise the right of veto long recognised under agreements governing F1.

In the interest of the Championship, the FIA has decided not to legally challenge Ferrari SpA’s use of its right of veto.

Therefore the FIA will initiate a consultation with all stakeholders regarding the possible introduction of a client engine, which will be available as of 2017. Following this consultation a call for tenders for this client engine, the cost of which would be much lower than the current power unit, could be undertaken.

Supported by FOM, the FIA will continue in its efforts to ensure the sustained long-term development of the Championship and look for solutions enabling it to achieve this. It asks all of the teams to make a positive contribution to the success of this approach through proposals and initiatives in the interest of the Championship and its continuation over the long term.

(source: f1.com)

Austin Stats - Hamilton becomes F1’s tenth triple champion

Lewis is now a three time world champion just like his idol Ayrton Senna.


Lewis Hamilton scored his tenth win of the season in Austin on Sunday, but more importantly he became just the tenth driver in history - and the first Briton since 1973 - to become a three-time world champion.


Hamilton, also the first of Britain’s 15 world champions to claim back-to-back crowns, joins Jack Brabham, Jackie Stewart, Niki Lauda, Nelson Piquet and his childhood idol Ayrton Senna on three titles, with only Michael Schumacher (7), Juan Manuel Fangio (5), Alain Prost and Sebastian Vettel (both 4) having tasted championship glory more times.

It’s the second time in a row that Hamilton has sealed the title with victory, and he now has 43 career triumphs, moving him ahead of Vettel for sole possession of third place on the all-time wins list. Only Schumacher (91) and Prost (51) have more victories.

Meanwhile it’s the seventh time in history that the title has been decided on US soil, but the first time since 1982 when, somewhat ironically, Keke Rosberg - father of Hamilton’s title rival Nico - sealed the championship in Las Vegas.

Away from Hamilton’s achievements, Sebastian Vettel’s third place was not enough to extend the title fight to Mexico, but it was enough to keep him just ahead of Rosberg in the drivers’ standings and to help Ferrari secure second place in the constructors’ championship - the Scuderia’s best result since 2012, when they were also second.

Further back, Max Verstappen equalled his career-best result with fourth place for Toro Rosso. The Dutchman’s team mate Carlos Sainz finished seventh in the sister STR10, meaning the Italian team leave Texas with 18 points - their biggest haul of the season so far.

Elsewhere, Jenson Button benefited from Sainz’s five-second time penalty for pit lane speeding to record his best finish of the year - sixth. But McLaren were denied what would have been just their second double points finish of 2015 when Daniel Ricciardo passed Fernando Alonso for P10 on the final lap.

Alexander Rossi - the first American driver to start a Grand Prix on home soil since Scott Speed in 2007 - was the only other classified finisher not to score points in Austin, though the GP2 racewinner’s 12th place equals Marussia’s best finish this year.

Just in front of Ricciardo, Felipe Nasr came home ninth to ensure Sauber scored points in their 400th Grand Prix, just as they did in their very first race in South Africa back in 1993. But whilst there were smiles for Sauber, there were only grim faces at Williams as the Grove-based team recorded their first double DNF since the 2012 Brazilian Grand Prix.

On the plus side, the next race is in Mexico, and Williams dominated the last race there, even if it was 23 years ago…

(source: f1.com)

FIA post-race press conference - United States



Drivers: 1 - Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes); 2 - Nico Rosberg (Mercedes); 3 - Sebastian Vettel (Ferrari).


PODIUM INTERVIEWS

(Conducted by Sir Elton John)

Q: Lewis, amazing. For me to be English and to be here today is an amazing feeling. Congratulations on everything.

Lewis Hamilton: I can’t believe you're here. It’s Elton John!

Q: No, there you go, I am! What a wonderful crowd, what a great support, you guys – thank you. What a race! How are you feeling?

LH: Amazing! Firstly, thank you so much for coming up here today and being here. I want to say a huge thank you to the whole crowd, for coming out and staying through the rain and staying with us. I hope we put on a good show for you today. But I can’t really find the right words right this second to tell you how amazing this feels. I couldn't have done it without this team who have empowered me for the last three years and really taken me on board and really helped nurture me with the car and just faultless. I love you guys, thank you so much for everything you do for me. And all the guys back at home. And then, my family who are watching. I love you all. And team LH – still I rise.

Q: Nico, congratulations, but you must be disappointed though right?

Nico Rosberg: Yeah, for sure, very disappointed with that, unbelievable. I don’t know what happened. But anyway, you’ve been great. Thank you so much, you’ve been awesome this weekend, with all this bad weather… to come out here so numerously, thanks a lot for that. Yeah, just very disappointed.

Q: Sebastian, you started off 14th [13th] on the grid – congratulations – and finished third. You drove an amazing race. And at one point you were going faster than anyone else. Does that give you encouragement for the rest of the grands prix and for next season?

Sebastian Vettel: Yeah, it does. We have a great car; we have exceeded all expectations. But yeah, it doesn’t feel great when you cross the line and you know that you can’t fight for the championship anymore, so congratulations to Lewis, he did a superb job all year round. Congratulations to his team as well, but we are getting closer and hopefully next year we can give them a very, very hard time.

Q: I think you are getting closer and it’s going to be very exciting, congratulations. And Lewis, celebrations tonight?

LH: Are you throwing a party?

Q: I’m going to party; I’m playing tonight later.

LH: I’m going to be here, I wouldn’t miss it for the world.

PRESS CONFERENCE

Q: Lewis, many congratulations, a classic grand prix, one of those days when you’re up, you’re down, you’re never quite sure which way it’s all going to end. I’m sure for you personally a day of great emotion, given the journey you’ve made and I guess the best way to sum it up is: is this a boyhood dream fulfilled?

LH: It really is. I’m just overwhelmed at the moment. It’s difficult really to find the words. I’m just sitting here thinking about… I remember my first British championship where my dad and I drove home singing ‘We are the Champions’ – at the time of Great Britain – and you know it’s just crazy to think that now I’m a three-time Formula One world champion. I owe it all to my dad, to my family who supported me all these years and sacrificed so much for me to be here. And then the really positive energy I get from my fans who travel around the world to see, that is, I get messages… I really do realise that whilst I get to enjoy driving a Formula One car this is really a platform for me to inspire young people and I hope that if there is any inspiring from today it’s just that: never give up on your dreams, on your hopes and on your desires. Just keep working at it. Today, there were so many times I thought I’d lost the race. I’d fallen back and then Nico pitted under the safety car and he was really quick at one stage but I never for one second believed that I couldn’t second and then we pushed and pushed… You know, Nico drove a fantastic race, he really has done…. since I’ve been with this team he’s been driving fantastic well. So mad respect for him as my team-mate and otherwise, as I said, a very humbling experience, especially to equal Ayrton Senna who meant so much to me and still does today. So, yeah, I feel very, very blessed today.

Q: Very well done. Nico, as we said, a crazy race. You seemed to have the advantage when you went onto slick tyres initially and then at restarts and after stops you seemed to have great performance in that condition, you seemed to have the race under control. But it looks like one slip got it away from you. Tell us about that but also about the start.

NR: Yeah, I just got wheels pin. It’s never happened to me, ever. Not even in testing or racing, never, ever something like that. I can’t explain it; it’s unbelievable. I don’t know. Just need to look into it afterwards but obviously that was really, really tough at the time, to lose the lead like that and to lose the win, because I was feeling really good at that point and it just went wrong. Turn One for sure was very aggressive… What am I going to say? I haven’t seen it again, so how the hell… I can’t comment yet. I need to see it, as always. For sure it was extremely aggressive, we hit each other, or I would say Lewis came into me, so obviously that’s not good. I can’t say more than that.

Q: Thanks for that. Sebastian, this is one of those races… I’ve seen you sitting here and I can tell you’re thinking about all the things you’ve been through in the last few hours. There’s so much to go through and analyse and understand from a race like that, but basically you took a gamble at the safety car to go onto the medium tyres, intending to go to the finish, and it looked like it might work, except that then there was another Virtual Safety Car and then another Safety Car. Did you believe it was one and that without those two events you might have won this grand prix? Were you feeling good about your gamble?

SV: Yeah, I think it was the right thing to do, given where we were, given that we wanted to make our chance last as long as possible and I think there was a chance definitely to do it. Obviously when the safety car came that was gone, because we’ve seen that with the option tyre everyone one of us was in the same boat with a lot of graining. First laps amazing and then the laps after that falling off quite dramatically. With a green track that’s what happens. So I think I had a good chance. Already after four or five laps on the medium tyre, six laps, I don’t know how much it was, I was doing more or less the same pace as the guys in front. A shame to lose out, but on the other hand in a race like this I think all three of us in a way at some point in the race we got lucky with timings, because it can also work against you. But yeah, a bit mixed. Thinking a lot about the season, what we could have done better here and there to squeeze even more out. I think we did a fantastic job, much better than everyone expected, but still it’s not great when you lose the fight for the world championship. But, as I said, this is Lewis’ day, congrats to him, he deserves to win the championship. The race we had, there’s not much to add. It was every exciting – I started 14th, had an average start and then we had a very, very good opening lap and after that we did the right things. Amazing pace when we switched to dry tyres, closing to the field. And then I think it was very close with Nico in the end but not close enough, so that was it.


QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Dan Knutson – Honorary) For Lewis and Seb. You’ve both won multiple world championships – but what does it signify for any driver to win even one world championship? What does it mean?

SV: It’s your day…

LH: For any driver I think it’s the pinnacle. There’s no further you can go. Your ultimate goal is to win in everything you compete in. It’s to perform at your best and hopefully better than everyone else, so when you do win a world championship it signifies at that particular time your greatness and the people around you. The whole unit. The teamwork. The greatness of that partnership as well. I remember when I got my first one. I was just grateful for the first one. I told Ron when I was ten that I wanted to be world champion in his car and it’s kinda crazy to think that ten years after he signed me I was. Yeah.

SV: One thing is to be able to perform on that level, that’s a big achievement already if you’re in a position to be able to win races. Then obviously if you can crown that with winning the championship… it’s very difficult to describe. I think the first championship is probably the most powerful. But then it’s not like you have a head start for the next year’s. It all starts from zero again. In the end I think you have something inside you that drives you to keep doing it. As long as you have that hunger, you’re into probably fight for it again. And if you manage to do it more than one time, obviously that’s a big bonus. So, it’s an incredible feeling. And that’s why I can only underline, this is Lewis’ day and obviously I’ve been in his seat before. It’s a great feeling. Especially the nights after you win the championship. They’re quite good!

Q…but you have to be generous buying everybody drinks.

LH: No problem man! No problem.

Q: (Seff Harding – Xiro Xone Radio) This question’s for Lewis, first off, congratulations for winning the championship – and thanks for winning it here in the US. Last year when you won this championship you talked about the Hamilton legacy and what you’re doing, what your brother’s doing. Now having won a third world championship, how does it feel continuing to add to that legacy?

LH: Yeah. As I said, I’m not the only one who’s been achieving great things in the family. Firstly my Dad, coming from nowhere, he never wanted his kids to struggle the way he did, so the effort that he put in was just remarkable. I’ve got my younger brother who’s seven years younger than me who’s one of the first disabled individuals to be racing cars and again his motivation is to inspire. He never wants anything coming off my success, he wants to do it all on his own, and he’s inspiring young kids also to exceed expectations – that’s his hashtag, #ExceedExpectations – and so hopefully I can be a mascot for my brother Nick. To be able to add to that, to know that our Hamilton name will be here past our lives. I’m super, super proud about it. And, as I said, while I’m standing here, and I’m here in front of the cameras, I’m a small kink in a much, much larger chain which is pretty strong.

Q: (Graham Harris – Motorsport Monday) Congratulations Lewis. Between Lewis and Sebastian you have seven world drivers’ titles, emulating Michael Schumacher. Question to both of you: do either of you ever see yourselves emulating Michael’s total or, if not, do you think it’s just not possible anymore?

SV: If we managed together it’s a good thing already! That’s how big Michael is.

LH: For Sebastian, being from the same country I think that would be, for sure, I would imagine, Sebastian’s target. As for me, as I said, it was always to get the three that Ayrton had. Of course, he wasn’t from the same country as me but he was the guy that inspired me as a youngster. Now I’m like… I don’t know where it’s going next. There is no-one else I look to, that I want to equal or emulate now. I’m just going to start… as I said one race ago or something like that, I feel like I’ve got the baton now for myself and Ayrton and I’m going to carry it as far as I can, as strong as I can and keep building and see where I take it.

Q: Sebastian?

LH: I’m going to do everything to stop you getting seven, don’t worry!

SV: Yeah, you can try!

SV: To be honest, no, it’s not really part of my thinking. I think it’s because, the way I think of Michael is with massive respect for what he has achieved. He is my childhood hero. In many ways still my hero. Especially since the day I joined Ferrari – to know what he did with the team and what especially he did to be that successful makes me respect him even more. So, yeah, I don’t really want to go near… I think I’m very, very happy to be in the position that I am – and of course my target is to win the championship with Ferrari – but I haven’t, y’know put a number to it and I wouldn’t dare to think about equalising Michael.

Q: (Jonathan Green – Speed City Radio / COTA) Lewis, just go through the gamut of emotions you must be going through because this morning after qualifying – or the lack of – we almost had a washout here. There was hardly anybody here and then at the end the British flags, the American fans celebrating a world championship. It could have been so different. Just describe your emotions on that last lap.

LH: The last 10 – 15 laps were the tough ones. What an extraordinary race. I just started out well, very, very close obviously with Nico at the beginning and that wasn’t intentional, we both broke very deep into it and I understood he was on the outside and in the wet that’s where the grip is, so he was turning and I wasn’t turning so we touched. After that just fighting for position, trying to stay ahead. Emotions were just up and down through the race because at one point I was in the lead but I knew I didn’t have it in the car. I was struggling and sliding all over the place and then I fell to fourth and the track was drying and just the most… the trickiest conditions for us. And these guys were all driving fantastically well. And then, as I said, the last ten laps really… I was behind the Safety Car and think ‘OK, I’ve got ten laps, the world championship is right there – how am I going to get it?’ And then I was just head down, everything that I’ve got from all these years. Everything that I’ve built up, everything that I’ve learnt comes into this. This is the defining moment really. Of course I could have gone on to other races but for me, I’m kind of like ‘now!’ It’s so close that I could smell it. I was pushing and I was looking forward to a race with Nico of course. I had the same issue as he did. Obviously I didn’t go off but I had a similar issue of wheelspin at that one point where I was changing a switch out, that same corner, and nearly lost it so I understand and sympathise with him but the emotions… I just can’t believe it. Honestly, I really, really can’t believe. It’s very, very strange sitting here after nine years and I’m… it’s not even the end of the season yet and I can’t believe how well this year’s gone; how amazing my team has been. Sitting in front of you guys for, God knows how many times I’ve been up here, but it never gets old and I just feel incredibly grateful right now and extremely humbled and excited. I have no idea what I’m doing next. I’m going out of here, I know I have to stand in front of some cameras, I’m going to hug lots of people, I definitely need to have a drink after that race. Yeah, just continue to enjoy this life and the many blessings that are around me.

Q: (Kwane Lillard - Tennessee Tribune) Winning today in the US, will that encourage more excitement about Grand Prix racing in this country? And with the new team coming from Haas, will that excite more people about Grand Prix racing in the US?

LH: I hope so, I hope the more and more we come here, the more it excites people. It’s such an exciting sport and for some reason at this track we always have good races. I can only imagine that it was an exciting race for you guys to watch because I saw the screens a couple of times and it looked... for me it was one of the most exciting races that I’ve had for a while and yeah, while we only have one race here, we’ve had an amazing turn-out with lots of Americans, people from different parts of the world have come here to enjoy Austin to see the town, great food, great ambience, great atmosphere. So hopefully every single person that comes here will infect someone else here, particularly in the States, whether they’re going to the airport, through the petrol station or wherever it is: ‘hey, did you see the race? You should watch it.’ Hopefully one by one, by word of mouth, it will catch on because it is an incredible sport and I think today maybe was a good race? Yeah, today it was one of the best so that’s a great. This track really is amazing and it’s enabled us to race which is what we all want.

I feel like I’m trying to compete with Sebastian when for all those years he was up here, Nico or whoever was up here with me, sitting here and it was again it was your day so we just sat there and enjoyed it, so I’m trying to exceed the length of time you were talking back then.

SV: You’re still behind.

LH: Yeah, I think I’m still behind.

Q: (Ted Kravitz – Sky Sports) Nico, I just wanted to ask: did you seem to feel that something went wrong on the car that made you go off the track like that and I know emotions were high in the cool-down room but why did you throw the hat back at Lewis?

NR: No, for sure I’m not saying there was something wrong with the car. For now, I’m assuming that it’s a mistake that I made, just getting too much wheelspin, going away on the cold tyres, the tyres weren’t fully up to temperature yet but it felt very very strange and it has never happened to me before like that, so it really is something that I definitely want to look into and try and understand. And that was just some games so nothing much, nothing more into that.

Q: (Tony DiZinno – NBC Sports) Lewis, how different does it feel to clinch a World Championship with multiple races remaining as opposed to doing so in the final race of the season?

LH: To be honest, last year or the last two times obviously was really climatic in the last race. One was 17 seconds before the end of the race, I think it was something like that, and obviously last year it was amazing but it took a lot out of us, that race, because obviously it was double points, anything could have happened. This one still feels just as special, if not more special. I think this has to have topped last year for me, being as it’s equalling Ayrton, as I said before. Of course, I drive every year and I believe that I have the ability to win but with the way life goes, sometimes you have the luck with you, sometimes it’s not. Sometimes you have a good car, sometimes you don’t. I really didn’t think a few years ago that I would be sitting here. I thought that I would win championships at this team and as I said, that is why I moved here. It was never ‘I’m just going to take a chance.’ I don’t think I really... I did my due diligence and I believed it was the right choice. As a kid, I just wanted to be World Champion and so it’s kind of crazy to think that me and Ayrton, in terms of championships, stand on the same line which is just the greatest.

Q: (Kirk Bohls – Austin American-Statesman) Lewis, you mentioned the popularity of the sport, I’m curious, football is on a pedestal in this country. What can Formula One do to enhance the appeal for the population in the US?

LH: I really don’t know what we need to do. I think lots of brain-storming and really just conversation with perhaps new people’s ideas. I’m assuming – because I don’t really know who makes the decisions – that it’s a group of people who have been there for some time, so always introducing new blood and new ideas and interacting with – I think they should really interact with people here in the States and try and figure out whether there’s something... Because for some reason, whatever it is, the Americans put on the greatest shows, whether it’s music, sports, games, whether it be basketball, NFL, they have the best games, the atmosphere, the way they put on the show is just outstanding and there’s something definitely that Formula One can learn from that. So as I said, maybe we need to hire some new people, I don’t know, but any ideas you guys have... I speak to Bernie and he’s like ‘yeah, any ideas you have’ so...

Q: (Kirk Bohls – Austin American-Statesman) Will having an American team help?

LH: I don’t really know. I definitely think it will and having an American driver would be good but I think having more races here. It’s such a big country, I think we have to have more races here. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t have at least two races here, it’s such a big place.

Q: (Graham Harris – Motorsport Monday) Nico, this is the second time in two years that you’ve sat where you are sitting. You’ve beaten Lewis on a number of occasions, you’re in a winning car, where do you go next? Back to the planning board, what do you do for next year, where are you going to get your motivation from?

NR: I haven’t thought about that yet. I’m still in today and today’s a disappointment. I don’t know. What am I going to say to that? Whatever happens in the past doesn’t change me going forward. It’s always full attack, big push, that’s the way I am.

Q: (Christopher Joseph – Chicane) Lewis, you speak a lot about being inspired by Ayrton, not only as a childhood hero but in terms of driving style etc etc and he spoke often of the zone and being in that zone driving-wise. Over the past couple of years you seem to have gone into another zone, a more spiritual zone with your driving and your outside life. Do you feel that way now?

LH: Definitely. I think I’ve always had that but I think I express it a little bit more and I think having that freedom to be able to express myself in the way I want to and be who I want to be and who I am I think enables me to drive better than ever, than I have ever driven. It’s difficult to describe, the power that you feel from within, because it all comes from within in that belief and yeah, I think today is... I’m very very blessed to be able to do what I do and in the way I do it and to be here today, to have the experiences and opportunities that I’ve had in my life - you know, have my Dad stay around, good Mum, good friends. Yeah, very very very blessed.

Q: (Joseph D. Love - Tennessee Tribune) Once again I’d like to congratulate you on your third Formula One victory. You’ve broken all barriers...

LH: Would you just say that again? Sorry, I didn’t hear you!

Q: (Joseph D. Love - Tennessee Tribune) Congratulations, Lewis, on your third Formula One World Championship...

LH: Sounds good!

Q: (Joseph D. Love - Tennessee Tribune) Absolutely, absolutely. My question to you is: you’ve broken barriers, you done amazing things. Do you see yourself as a Formula One team owner in the future? Or as a musician?

LH: You know what, I don’t have any desires to be a team boss. I’ve witnessed great team bosses in Ron, in Martin Whitmarsh, in Ross Brawn and in Niki and Toto. And I think I will stick to what I do best. Would I like to be a part of a team in the future? I’m sure that at some stage when I stop I’m going to have massive withdrawal symptoms because I’ve been doing it pretty much my whole life so there’s going to be that desire to be around racing in some capacity. So I do know that it’s not behind a camera, that’s what I definitely definitely know but never say never, as I said. I hope that...

SV: In front of the camera!

LH: Music I will continue to do for as long as I live because it’s just fun and enjoyable but there are so many other things I can do, I think, outside of racing and beyond what I do today so I think it’s just going to be finding that next path, when the time comes, hopefully it’s a long long time away from now. Don’t know what else to say.

Q: (Adam Tate – tributeracing.com) Sebastian, Lewis was talking about all the times we were sitting here watching when it was your day. You’ve each publicly stated you want a showdown with the other next year; is Ferrari ready to make that step? How badly do you want it to be your day again this time next year?

SV: Well, on days like this, very badly. It’s a long way, for sure today it doesn’t feel as good as probably it should after a great race to be honest. When you start 14th and you finish on the podium that’s a pretty good. Equally, let’s not forget the targets that we set out in the beginning... it’s a new start for the entire team, with a lot of things changing. I think we’ve exceeded expectations this year by quite a lot so yeah, the target is to do better next year and to keep fighting until the end and be in a better position. Equally we have to be patient because it’s a big project, there’s a lot of effort that’s going in in Maranello and the people are really hungry and I think that probably the whole factory, the whole team here feels similar to me today whereas it’s great to know that we had a fantastic recovery and another strong race but equally it’s not so nice if you lose out on the championship, so the target is definitely to come back stronger next year and just to keep making progress. I think that’s the best medicine that we need to prescribe to us.

(source: f1.com)

2015 United States Grand Prix review

The weekend was very stormy but at least we got better weather for the race.


What a race! It was very exciting from the beginning till the end. The only boring fact was that the top3 was very familiar. This is just because these three drivers do a very good job every grand prix weekend and they deserve what's coming to them. A big hand and congratulations to Lewis Hamilton for his third world title in Formula One!

Let's talk about the race starting from the beginning..

Hamilton had a great start because he managed to get in front of his teammate (Nico Rosberg) who started from pole. It was a bit "rude" though how he overtook him. He pushed him off track and made him drop to 5th place. The Red Bulls of Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat got in front of Rosberg. Sergio Perez was the fourth driver who managed to pass him.

The Ferraris also had great starts. Sebastian Vettel started from 13th and Kimi Räikkönen started from 18th. After the first few corners they were 9th and 10th. Vettel did even better and was 7th before the second lap!

Valtteri Bottas, Fernando Alonso, Romain Grosjean, Felipe Massa, Felipe Nasr and Marcus Ericsson managed to break their cars at the start by crashing into each other but guess who was the only one to have problem with the pit crew? Same guy as always... Valtteri Bottas of course! Massa can thank god that he didn't have to pit because they would have ruined his race as well. I am so tired of talking about Williams' pit crew and their amateur mistakes so I wont do it this time. Well I must say this at least; after Bottas finally got a new nose on the car they changed regular soft tires on and he had to pit once more. I mean what the.... Later on Bottas had to pit for the third time and retired.

After the crashes and the safety car Rosberg overtook Ricciardo right away. It looked like Ricciardo didn't know what was going on. Did he even realize that the race had restarted? It didn't take long and Rosberg overtook Kvyat as well and was now 2nd. A few laps later Kvyat tried to take the position back but got overtaken by Ricciardo instead. Rosberg was defending against Kvyat and Ricciardo overtook Rosberg too and easily.

Lap 13 we could hear Kimi on the radio complaining that his DRS wasn't working. A couple of laps later Ricciardo overtook Hamilton for the lead! 

Meanwhile Kimi continued to share more problems; Max Verstappen. He said that Verstappen pushed him to the side every time Kimi tried to overtake and if that's legal then Kimi will do the same. Ferrari said that they will look what they can do about it. Nothing changed and now Verstappen tried his moves on Vettel in front and overtook him. This 18 year old is really something! Unfortunately it lasted just a few corners and Vettel took the position back when Verstappen went a little wide.

I was sure that when Ricciardo overtook Hamilton we would see Rosberg do the same in a few laps. This happened just as I had thought and Kvyat almost overtook him too. Hamilton pitted just before that could have happened though. He got the regular soft tires and was sure that now was the time for "dry tires".

Ricciardo, Rosberg, Kvyat, Vettel and Räikkönen got the soft tires as well and when they were back on track Hamilton was 4th. Kvyat had now also got in front of him.

Räikkönen went off track with the new tires and crashed. It seemed that the tires weren't good for him just yet. Maybe he should have stayed on the intermediates for a little while longer? He managed to get the car to the pits but had to retire from the race after a few laps.

On lap 22 you could see how the regular soft tires started to work for the Mercs; Rosberg overtook Ricciardo for the lead and Hamilton overtook Kvyat for third almost at the same time. Then Hamilton overtook Ricciardo for 2nd place. It was beautiful work from the Mercedes drivers! Vettel also got more speed on the dry track and overtook Kvyat for 4th. 

On lap 27 the safety car was deployed again because Marcus Ericsson had left his Sauber on track after he retired from the race. He could have gotten a penalty for leaving the car like that.

Rosberg had a 10 second lead already over Hamilton but lost it due to the safety car. It was now getting much easier for Hamilton. He could already taste the world championship title.

When the race continued on lap 33 Vettel overtook both Red Bulls and was now 3rd.

A lap later Verstappen overtook Kvyat for 5th and a few laps later Nico Hulkenberg crashed with Ricciardo. It didn't look so good for Red Bull. They were leading at one point and now it looked like that. Then it got even worse when Kvyat crashed his car on lap 43 and the safety car was deployed again.

When the race continued Hamilton started chasing Rosberg and overtook him after two laps. The top3 was now Hamilton, Rosberg, Vettel and it stayed like that till the end.

All in all it was an interesting race and I am really starting to enjoy Verstappen's driving. Sometimes he makes amateur mistakes but then in some races he drives better than anyone! He has a great career ahead of him.




Now let's see my predictions and the results:

Pole position: Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes - WRONG. His teammate Nico Rosberg got pole when the qualifying session was stopped after Q2.

Race:
  1. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes - CORRECT
  2. Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari - WRONG. He was 3rd and Nico Rosberg was 2nd.
  3. Kimi Räikkönen, Ferrari - WRONG. He retired from the race.

Fastest lap: Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes - WRONG. Nico Rosberg got this one.

Surprise: Keep an eye on Nico Hulkenberg. He has been pretty good in Austin with Sauber and Force India - He retired from the race but drove pretty well till that point.


Post your own predictions to our F1-4-LIFE PREDICTORS LEAGUE!




The rules:

POINTS:  1st - 3  2nd - 5  3rd - 10 

HOW IT WORKS: the aim of the game is simply predict who comes where in the race (top3). A total of 18 points can be won on a race day. If you get winner and and 3rd place right but 2nd wrong you get 13 points same if you get 1 correct. eg. 2nd you get 5 points. If a driver wins the race and you said he would come 2nd or 3rd no points would be awarded. Same if he came in another position, and you predicted that wrong. A table will be posted up every race weekend. The point scoring system will change once the cars become more competitive. Everyone will say a merc 1,2 so it won't be close or fun. 

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR PREDICTIONS: send an email to f14lifeblog@gmail.com or message the Facebook page to submit your predictions. You have until lights out to make them. If you submit them when the race has started they won't count. So be quick! like the Mercedes. 

THE PRIZE: the winner of the league will win themselves a admin place on the F1 4 LIFE page along side AE, JT, MW, MH and JI. If you don't want to be an admin you are welcome to participate anyway. We may also come up with some other prize if it helps. 

That's it for today and if you want to send me feedback then email me: f14lifeblog@gmail.com

Sunday, October 25, 2015

2015 Driver standings after the US GP


2015 Constructor standings after the US GP


2015 PREDICTORS LEAGUE standings after the US GP

1. Peter McLaren - 122 points
1. Leonardo Machado - 122 points 
3. James Redman - 120 points
4. Jonathan M Yountz - 109 points
5. Ryan Lane - 102 points
6. Larry Gallagher - 92 points
7. JT (F1-4-LIFE) - 75 points
7. AE (F1-4-LIFE) - 75 points
9. Shaun Magnano - 59 points
10. Rich Kewell - 53 points
11. MW (F1-4-LIFE) - 44 points
12. MH (F1-4-LIFE) - 40 points
13. JI (F1-4-LIFE) - 38 points
14. Tim Saunders - 36 points
15. Elliott Robson - 31 points
16. David Perry - 26 points
17. Dylan Curry - 24 points
18. Daniel Vanderburg - 23 points
18. Archie Donato - 23 points
18. Neil Marchant - 23 points
21. Abijith Kv - 18 points
21. Marcel Kircher - 18 points
23. Yõrt Martö - 13 points
24. Richard Gehl - 10 points
24. Chris Kemp - 10 points
24. Eric Lemens - 10 points
27. Rodrigo Gonzales - 8 points
27. Corey Lea - 8 points
27. Vitor Lobo - 8 points
30. Anthony Brian Ayrton Senna - 6 points
31. Todd Steinberg - 5 points
32. Белмин Aљоски - 3 points
32. Tom Maw - 3 points
32. Haresh Reddy - 3 points
32. Paul Beecham - 3 points
36. Steven Peli - 0 points
36. Daniel Kelleher - 0 points
36. Martin Hubbard - 0 points
36. Sharon Walmsley - 0 points
36. Alexandre Langlois - 0 points

We have had 40 different predictors this season.




POINTS: 1st - 3

2nd - 5
3rd - 10

+ possible bonus points


HOW IT WORKS: the aim of the game is simply predict who comes where in the race (top3). A total of 18 points can be won on a race day. For example if you get winner and and 3rd place right but 2nd wrong you get 13 points.

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR PREDICTIONS: send an email to f14lifeblog@gmail.com or message the Facebook page to submit your predictions. You have until lights out to make them. If you submit them when the race has started they won't count. So be quick!

THE PRIZE: the winner of the league will win themselves a admin place on the F1 4 LIFE page along side AE, JT, MW, MH & JI. If you don't want to be an admin you are welcome to participate anyway.

2015 United States Grand Prix - Race


2015 United States Grand Prix - Qualifying