Thursday, December 25, 2014

F1 presents for Christmas

Yesterday I promised to show you guys some pictures if I got anything F1 related for Christmas. So here goes...

A Ferrari fleece quilt, blanket or what ever you wanna call it.

Michael Schumacher's biography. The book is from 2014 so there's everything about the accident as well.

That was all for me but look at this picture! My son got another F1 toy:


If you got something Formula One related then please share it on the Facebook page for everyone else to see! If you only want me to see then send the pics to my email f14lifeblog@gmail.com

Wednesday, December 24, 2014

Happy holidays from F1-4-LIFE!



The season starts in 78 days at Melbourne, Australia's Alber Park. It's a looooong time if you ask me. Before that I am getting the 2014 season review when it comes out and I'm gonna watch as many old races I have time to see. It's the only way I'll manage without F1.

Christmas is almost here so that means that I might get something F1 related from my family. Usually someone gets me something. I'll show you some pictures here if I get anything.

I don't have much to say but wanted to wish you all a merry christmas or happy holidays if you don't celebrate christmas :)

If you get anything F1 related for christmas please share on the F1 4 LIFE Facebook page for everybody to see.

Tuesday, December 23, 2014

Ferrari: Two wins the minimum for 2015




Ferrari’s new team principal Maurizio Arrivabene has set his Italian squad a minimum target of at least two Grand Prix victories for 2015, in what the Scuderia admit will be ‘a year of reconstruction’ as they bid to return to title contention.

Following a difficult 2014 campaign - their first winless season since 1980 - and the exit of Fernando Alonso, Ferrari have undergone a comprehensive management restructure, including the departures of former engineering director Pat Fry and chief designer Nikolas Tombazis.

“We will look towards 2015 with some optimism,” Ferrari President Sergio Marchionne said at a Christmas media lunch this week. “In the last few days we have made some sharp decisions on the make-up of the team and we know exactly who the key people are for development. We have taken away all the baggage of uncertainty which harmed the start of the work on the 2015 project.”

One of the biggest changes has been the arrival last month of Arrivabene, who took over from Marco Mattiacci (who in turn replaced Stefano Domenicali back in April), and the internal reshuffle he initiated, designed to provide ‘a flat structure and clear assignment of responsibilities’.

“I bring experience that has matured in my last company, the fact of knowing how to motivate people and to get the best out of them,” said Arrivabene. “In the company I’ve seen plenty of will to get things done: I am here to give the people my trust and to streamline the team. We won’t get anywhere individually, we have to work as a group.”

Replacing Alonso for 2015 is four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel who, like Ferrari, suffered a difficult 2014 season, failing to win for the first time since 2007. Marchionne insisted the former Red Bull star is very much aware of the challenge that awaits him in Maranello.

“I don’t think he’s naive, he knows our level of performance but this is the power of Ferrari: it manages to attract people even just based on its potential,” said Marchionne. “Our job for 2015 is to set this potential free. Vettel’s big gamble is ours too, to reconstruct the team and to make it grow.”

Vettel will partner Kimi Raikkonen, making Ferrari one of two teams - the other being McLaren - with two world champions in their 2015 line-up. On top of their obvious talent, Arrivabene believes the pair’s friendship will also prove an asset.

“I think Sebastian is well equipped for the job that awaits him,” he said. “He gets on very well with Kimi and this is a positive element, even if I hope that they won’t get on quite so well on the track, because the rule must remain that your team mate is your main opponent.”

On Ferrari’s 2015 prospects, Marchionne concluded: “I can guarantee the team is putting in a phenomenal effort. We have people here who are giving their absolute best and they have my full support. The important thing for us now is to give them courage and all the resources necessary to move forward and make the Scuderia grow.”

Ferrari finished fourth in the 2014 constructors’ championship, with Alonso’s second place in Hungary their best result of the year.

(source: f1.com)

Friday, December 19, 2014

Vital Statistics: The 2014 season in numbers



Did you know that McLaren's Jenson Button completed more laps than any other driver in 2014 or that Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo had the most consecutive points finishes?

As the year draws to a close, we look back over some of the amazing facts and figures that helped make this season one of the most exciting on record...

HEADLINE STATS

Number of races: 19 (in 19 different countries, across five different continents)

Total number of drivers who raced: 24 (of which four were rookies and five were world champions) 

Average age of the grid: 27 years 4 months

Longest race: Great Britain (2h 26m52.094s)

Shortest race: Italy (1h 19m10.236s)

Number of wins from pole: Nine from 19 races

Lowest winning grid position: Sixth (Daniel Ricciardo in Canada and Lewis Hamilton in Britain)

Record breakers (drivers): Lewis Hamilton's six-year gap between titles equals the second longest such period in F1 history. Niki Lauda holds the record: he clinched his third drivers' crown in 1984, seven years after his second championship triumph. 

Hamilton became Mercedes' first F1 champion since Juan Manuel Fangio in 1955, and the first British multiple champion since Jackie Stewart in 1971.He also moved on to 33 Grand Prix triumphs, overhauling previous British record holder Nigel Mansell's long-standing tally.

Daniil Kvyat, meanwhile, became the youngest points scorer in F1 history when he finished tenth in Australia at the age of 19 years and 322 days.

Record breakers (teams):Mercedes secured 16 victories over a single season, breaking a record previously held by McLaren (1988) and Ferrari (2002 and '04). The Silver Arrows also claimed a record 11 one-two finishes over a single year, breaking McLaren's 1988 record.

QUALIFYING STATS

Most pole positions (driver): 11 - Nico Rosberg; 7 - Lewis Hamilton; 1 - Felipe Massa

Most pole positions (team): 18 - Mercedes; 1 - Williams

Front-row starts: 15 - Nico Rosberg, Lewis Hamilton; 3 - Sebastian Vettel; 2 - Daniel Ricciardo, Valtteri Bottas; 1 - Felipe Massa

Q3 appearances: 19 - Nico Rosberg, Daniel Ricciardo; 18 - Fernando Alonso; 17 - Lewis Hamilton; 16 - Valtteri Bottas; 15 - Kevin Magnussen, Felipe Massa; 14 - Sebastian Vettel; 13 - Jenson Button, Kimi Raikkonen; 8 - Daniil Kvyat, Jean-Eric Vergne; 7 - Nico Hulkenberg; 5 - Sergio Perez; 2 - Romain Grosjean; 1 - Adrian Sutil

Biggest pole margin: 1.620s (Great Britain, Nico Rosberg over Sebastian Vettel)

Smallest pole margin: 0.007s (Singapore, Lewis Hamilton over Nico Rosberg)

Best team mate head-to-head record: Fernando Alonso, Ferrari - out-qualified Kimi Raikkonen 16-3 over the season

RACE STATS

Most wins (driver): 11 - Lewis Hamilton; 5 - Nico Rosberg; 3 - Daniel Ricciardo

Most wins (team): 16 - Mercedes; 3 - Red Bull

Most podiums (driver): 16 - Lewis Hamilton; 15 - Nico Rosberg; 8 - Daniel Ricciardo; 6 - Valtteri Bottas; 4 - Sebastian Vettel; 3 - Felipe Massa; 2 - Fernando Alonso; 1 - Kevin Magnussen, Jenson Button, Sergio Perez

Most podiums (team): 31 - Mercedes; 12 - Red Bull; 9 - Williams; 2 - McLaren, Ferrari; 1 - Force India

Biggest winning margin: 30.135s (Great Britain, Lewis Hamilton over Valtteri Bottas)

Smallest winning margin: 0.636s (Spain, Lewis Hamilton over Nico Rosberg)

Most points finishes: 17 - Valtteri Bottas, Fernando Alonso

Most consecutive races in the points: 15 – Daniel Ricciardo

Most laps completed (driver): Jenson Button, 1,120 (98.8 percent of the season)

Most laps completed (team): McLaren, 2,231 (98.4 percent)

Fewest laps completed (driver)*: Pastor Maldonado, 847 (74.7 percent)
*Only taken from those who contested every Grand Prix

Fewest laps completed (team)*: Sauber, 1,790 (78.9 percent)
*Only taken from those who contested every Grand Prix

Most laps led: 495 - Lewis Hamilton; 483 - Nico Rosberg; 72 - Daniel Ricciardo; 32 - Fernando Alonso; 30 - Felipe Massa; 11 - Sergio Perez; 5 - Nico Hulkenberg; 4 - Valtteri Bottas; 1 - Jenson Button, Sebastian Vettel

Number of lead changes: 61 (based on official lap chart with lead changes taken at the end of each lap)

Best team mate head-to-head record: Fernando Alonso, Ferrari - beat Kimi Raikkonen 16-3 over the season, with DNFs included

Most places gained from Saturday to Sunday: 56 - Pastor Maldonado

Most penalty points: 5 - Pastor Maldonado, Marcus Ericsson

Sets of tyres used during races: 1,101

Most used tyre compound: Soft (463 sets)

Longest stint on one set of tyres: 304 kilometres (Nico Rosberg, medium compound, Russia)

Average stops per Grand Prix*: 44 (down from 51 in 2013)
*Dry races only

Race with the most pit stops: Bahrain, 58

Race with the fewest pit stops: Monza, 23

MILESTONES

- On top of claiming his breakthrough Grand Prix win (and three in total), Daniel Ricciardo earned Red Bull their 50th Formula One triumph in Belgium

Nico Rosberg became the first German to win the German Grand Prix driving for a German team and powered by a German engine

Marussia scored their first points when Jules Bianchi finished ninth at Monaco

Jenson Button reached 250 Grand Prix starts in Bahrain, and moved into third in the all-time appearances list on 266 starts - behind only Rubens Barrichello (322) and Michael Schumacher (306). Kimi Raikkonen and Felipe Massameanwhile reached their 200th Grand Prix starts in Austria and Britain respectively.

Kevin Magnussen became the second youngest driver in history to score a podium in F1 when he finished second in the season-opening race in Australia, at the age of 21 years and 162 days.

Lewis Hamilton's tally of 11 wins equals the second highest number scored over a single season. Only Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel, both with 13, have more.

Susie Wolff became the first female driver to take part in a world championship event since Giovanna Amati in 1992.

DID YOU KNOW…

- This was the first season since 1980 that neither Ferrari nor McLaren won a Grand Prix.

- Daniel Ricciardo's victory in Canada gave Renault their first turbocharged victory since Ayrton Senna triumphed in Detroit in 1986.

(source: f1.com)