Monday, July 13, 2015

Ricciardo laughs off Ferrari speculation



Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo says there is little substance in rumours linking him with a switch to Ferrari next year, and that he treats the media chatter as a bit of ‘fun’.

With speculation continuing to swirl around Kimi Raikkonen’s future with the Italian squad, Ricciardo’s name has been one of several put forward as a potential replacement. The Australian outshone current Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel when the two were team mates last year.

“I don’t even know where the rumours started actually - it’s really exploded,” Ricciardo said. “Ferrari is probably the only top team potentially with a seat open, which is why I guess my name and a few others have been linked to that.

“It’s a bit of a laugh. You know what, it’s fun - we talk about these things now, so it creates some variety in our conversations! Obviously it is nice to be regarded by a top team like that - it’s nice to know there is interest from other teams as well. But I am with a top team too.”

Asked if either he or his management had held talks with Ferrari, Ricciardo joked: “I am my manager. I haven’t had any talks - we’ve had indirect talks through the media I guess!”

Ricciardo was one of the stars of the 2014 season, taking three wins and finishing third overall in the drivers’ standings. However, he and Red Bull have struggled for form this season - he currently lies seventh overall, with his best finish being fifth at Monaco.

(source: f1.com)

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Power unit and penalty rule changes approved



Formula One racing’s governing body, the FIA, has approved the simplification of power unit penalties, as proposed by the F1 Strategy Group earlier this month.

It will mean the most a driver can be penalised at a Grand Prix for power unit changes is to be demoted to the rear of the grid. Unused portions of a penalty will no longer be converted into in-race time penalties.

The FIA’s World Motor Sport Council (WMSC) also ratified changes to the sporting regulations giving new power unit manufacturers an extra power unit for each driver to use throughout Grands Prix for the season, bringing the total to five - one more than the existing power unit suppliers.

This will be applied retrospectively to Honda, who returned to Formula One competition with McLaren this season.

Friday’s WMSC meeting in Mexico also saw the update of regulations relating to Super Licenses, with a view to increased flexibility for drivers who have qualified for one but do not have the opportunity to compete in F1 racing. Such drivers - for example, Formula One test drivers - will now keep this possibility for three years.

(source: f1.com)

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Baku included on provisional 2016 calendar



Formula One racing’s governing body the FIA has released the provisional schedule for next year’s world championship, with 21 rounds listed, including the inaugural race in Baku, Azerbaijan, in July.


The 2016 season is set to kick off later than usual, with the Australian opener on April 3, while Russia’s Sochi race moves forward from its current October slot to May 1. Malaysia shifts to the latter end of the year, back to back with Singapore, while Germany returns in July after its 2015 absence. The campaign is due to conclude in Abu Dhabi on November 27.

The provisional calendar in full:

April 3 - Australia
April 10 - China
April 24 - Bahrain
May 1 - Sochi
May 15 - Spain
May 29 - Monaco
June 12 - Canada
June 26 - UK
July 3 - Austria
July 17 - Baku
July 31 - Germany
August 7 - Hungary
August 28 - Belgium
September 4 - Italy
September 18 - Singapore
September 25 - Malaysia
October 9 - Japan
October 23 - USA (Austin)
October 30 - Mexico
November 13 - Brazil
November 27 - Abu Dhabi

(source: f1.com)

Friday, July 10, 2015

F1 2015 is released!




Friday sees the launch of F1™ 2015, the official videogame of the 2015 FIA Formula One World Championship, throughout EMEA territories. Arriving earlier in the season than previous Codemasters® F1 releases, it marks the award-winning series’ debut on PlayStation® 4 computer entertainment system and Xbox One. The game is also available for Windows PC.

F1 2015 delivers a truly immersive experience thanks to an all-new ‘broadcast presentation’ style that recreates the unique race day atmosphere of a Grand Prix, complete with introductory grid sequences, new motion-captured pit stops by a real world pit crew, and the iconic podium celebrations.

Using voice recognition technology available for Xbox One and PlayStation 4 consoles, players can become immersed in the cockpit, engaging with their race engineer through in-game voice commands with Kinect for Xbox One and the PlayStation®Camera or compatible headsets and microphones for PlayStation 4.

Players compete as their favourite Formula One star in the all-new Championship Season and push themselves to the limit in the challenging Pro Season mode. The game also features fully playable 2014 FIA Formula One World Championship bonus content.

To celebrate the game’s launch, Codemasters have released a new F1 2015 launch trailer that showcases how F1 2015 takes players closer to the real-world experience of racing in the world’s most glamorous, exciting and prestigious motorsport, thanks to a brand new version of Codemasters’ proprietary EGO game engine.

In addition to spectacular visual fidelity, F1 2015 offers a significant step forward in the physics-based handling model of the game, which is designed to be inclusive for both seasoned players and those new to the series. The handling model offers enhancements and additions in over 20 areas, including engine and transmission, aerodynamics, fuel tank, force feedback, suspension and most notably, a brand new tyre physics model, to recreate the breathtaking handling characteristics of the world’s fastest and most responsive racing cars.


Thursday, July 9, 2015

Get your tickets for the Hungarian GP!


Get your tickets for the Hungarian GP now before it's too late!


The link will send you to the right page where you can place your order.

Wednesday, July 8, 2015

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Winners and Losers - Great Britain



The 2015 Formula 1 British Grand Prix saw Silverstone - and the fickle English weather - throw up a typically unpredictable race. Lewis Hamilton made all the right calls to secure a well-deserved - and very popular - home win, while Williams somehow went from P1 and P2 to missing the podium completely. There were mixed fortunes for Ferrari and Red Bull, but it was an afternoon of disaster for Lotus. We take a team-by-team look at Sunday's action...


Mercedes

Lewis Hamilton, P1
Nico Rosberg, P2

For a while, things looked a bit tense for Mercedes as the Williams duo leapt into the lead at the start, and then Bottas reclaimed second from Hamilton on the fourth lap restart when the latter’s attempt to wrest the lead from Massa went awry at Club. Thereafter Hamilton bided his time before jumping both with a perfect first pit stop. Later he called the switch to intermediate tyres just as perfectly on the 43rd lap, and thereafter it was plain sailing - almost literally - to a third British Grand Prix triumph which brought him level with the Silverstone scores of legends Jim Clark and Nigel Mansell, and broke Jackie Stewart’s 45 year-old record of leading 17 consecutive races between 1968 and 1970.

Rosberg got trapped behind both Williams for the first half of the race, but finally got by them when the rain came. Then he was really flying, slashing Hamilton’s lead as the latter had lost front tyre temperature during the Virtual Safety Car period necessitated by Sainz’s retirement. But just as the Austrian Grand Prix winner was looking very dangerous, Hamilton pitted for intermediates at exactly the right moment, leaving an initially sceptical Rosberg to do another lap. After that his hopes were dashed, and he had to settle for second.


Ferrari

Sebastian Vettel, P3
Kimi Raikkonen, P8

In the early stages Ferrari looked a mess, with Raikkonen sixth and Vettel eighth after starting fifth and sixth respectively. But a good early pit stop for Vettel, allied to his own sound call to stop for intermediates on lap 43rd, secured him a deserved podium finish. Raikkonen looked more like his old self, but lost out on a likely fourth or fifth when he came in five laps too soon for inters, which meant he had to stop again for more as the rain intensified and thus dropped to eighth.


Williams

Felipe Massa, P4
Valtteri Bottas, P5

At one stage Williams seemed a potential winner after Massa and Bottas made brilliant starts to get ahead of the front-row Mercedes. Even when the two of them were fighting one another the red, white and blue cars looked strong, but things began to go wrong when Hamilton jumped both of them in the first pit stops, and then the rain sealed their fate. A podium at the least had looked certain until then, but they were beaten by their own strategy, Ferrari’s and the FW37’s dislike of the wet.


Red Bull

Daniil Kvyat, P6
Daniel Ricciardo, Retired lap 22, electrics

Ricciardo lost a lot of time after nudging the Lotuses into one another at the start, and later retired with electrical gremlins, but Kvyat had a great race to sixth, right on Bottas’ tail. The Russian said his RB11 was handling really well - in stark contrast to his post-race comments in Austria - and suggested that without a spin he could have fought for the podium. He was, after all, running ahead of Vettel in the early stages.


Force India

Nico Hulkenberg, P7
Sergio Perez, P9

Force India looked great as Hulkenberg sat fifth behind the Mercedes and Williams until his pit stop, but he lost three places there and fought back to gain one on his way to seventh. Perez was ninth, giving them a decent haul of points, and overall they came out of the race highly encouraged by the heavily revised VJM08’s debut.


McLaren

Fernando Alonso, P10
Jenson Button, Retired lap 1, accident/engine switch off

Things just don’t get any better for McLaren. This time they lost an innocent Button on the opening lap, after Alonso inadvertently clobbered his team mate while trying to avoid the Ricciardo melee with the Lotuses. After a stop for a new nose the Spaniard scored his first point since rejoining the team, when he lucked into 10th after Ericsson’s four stops.


Sauber

Marcus Ericsson, P11
Felipe Nasr, Did not start, gearbox

Ericsson would have been the recipient of the final point, had Sauber not got themselves muddled to the point where he made four pit stops, two within a lap of each other. A tough race also saw them lose Nasr even before the start, after his car stopped at Stowe, stuck in sixth gear.


Marussia

Roberto Merhi, P12
Will Stevens, P13

Merhi once again led Stevens home in the upgraded MR03Bs, after a prolonged run on worn intermediates saw the Briton slide off the road and damage his front wing on the 47th lap. It was a case of so close and yet so far as they needed three more retirements to reach the points.


Toro Rosso

Carlos Sainz, Retired lap 32, engine cut out
Max Verstappen, Retired lap 4, accident

What had seemed such a promising weekend on Friday ended in disaster for Toro Rosso, as Verstappen crashed out early and was unable to reverse and get back into the race after damaging his front wing, and Sainz suffered complete engine shutdown.


Lotus

Romain Grosjean, Retired lap 1, accident
Pastor Maldonado, Retired lap 1, accident

The race was a catastrophe for Lotus, as an impact from Ricciardo pushed Grosjean into Maldonado on the first lap and resulted in both cars retiring. Shades of Melbourne!

(source: f1.com)