Wednesday, April 30, 2014

A racer through and through - Ratzenberger remembered


Roland Ratzenberger embodied the spirit and drive that often define sporting greats. While not blessed with the same natural gifts as Ayrton Senna, the man he will forever be linked with following that tragic weekend at Imola, he made a virtue of his unyielding commitment and enthusiasm to ascend into the highest echelons of his field. He was that rarest of characters: charismatic, yet humble; shy, yet vivacious; able to climb the ladder without breeding enmity. His was a life dedicated, and ultimately surrendered, to a singular passion - motor racing.

Ratzenberger was born in Salzburg, Austria, on 4 July 1960. A relative latecomer to motorsport, he only began establishing his name 23 years later in various Formula Ford championships. He achieved notable success, and by 1985 had won the Austrian, German and European titles. A year later, he added the prestigious Formula Ford Festival crown, qualifying on pole and holding off a dogged, race-long assault from Philippe Favre. Two seasons of British Formula Three followed, the first of which was with a West Surrey Racing (WSR) team that had won the title with Mauricio Gugelmin in 1985 and, two years prior, with Senna.

"Roland was a very good guy, and fitted in with everyone," WSR team principal and managing director Dick Bennetts reflects. "Not for the first time, he didn't have enough budget for the full season, but he was so driven that he didn't let that affect him. 

"He was no slouch - anyone who wins the Festival is clearly very good. He had a particularly good feel in adverse conditions, so he was very quick in the wet. The highlight of the year was him winning at the Nurburgring in July, which was part of the 1987 F3 Euroseries. He started sixth, but came through to win the first race and finished runner-up in the second, in which he also set the fastest lap. He was so delighted.

"He didn't have the natural talent of a Senna, a Hakkinen or a Barrichello [WSR took the latter pair to subsequent F3 titles], so he worked that much harder to make things happen. He was a good all-rounder and very adaptable as a driver, but he made it because of that work ethic."

Ratzenberger would prove that versatility throughout his career. He branched into the World Touring Car Championship in 1987, while two years later he combined a race-winning season in British Formula 3000 with two races in the DTM and the first of what would become routine visits to the Le Mans 24 Hours. His best result in the legendary endurance race came in 1993, when he finished fifth - just four laps off the podium - in a SARD Toyota 93 C-V shared with Mauro Martini and Naoki Nagasaka.

Faced with the dilemma of how to further his career, Ratzenberger headed for Japan, where he raced in sportscars, touring cars and F3000. Success would again follow: he swept to victory in the Fuji 1000km in 1990 and won the prestigious Suzuka 1000kmsthe following season - which he supplemented with a podium in the Daytona 24 Hours classic in 1992.

At the end of 1991, he tested IndyCar champion Michael Andretti's Lola at Laguna Seca and lapped within fractions of a second of the American. Formula One racing remained his ambition throughout, however, thoughplans for an F1 debut with Eddie Jordan's emergent, eponymous team went awry due to his sponsor withdrawing.

His chance would finally arrive in 1994 with the fledgling Simtek squad, where he would partner David Brabham. Not for the first time, Ratzenberger did not have the budget sorted for a full season's racing. 

"We spent some time together early on, training together and also going down to Monaco," recalls Brabham "The thing about Roland was he was immediately easy to get on with - he was a great guy. For me he was the model racer: fit, good looking, and someone who lived life to the full.

"He struggled for money - he always had to find it and raise it by himself. He didn't have a silver plate; it was always a personal battle. That was why he'd gone to Japan, because he could make money. He would go wherever he could to drive. He and I had both raced at Le Mans and were now in F1, which was something fairly unique to us really. Reaching F1 had always been his goal though, and he achieved it."

Ratzenberger failed to qualify for 1994's opening race in Brazil. He missed dry practice due to mechanical issues and was then prevented from setting a competitive time as rain washed out final qualifying. He did, however, make the grid for round two in Japan where he would finish 11th, despite a less than compliant car.

"He was struggling and I remember him complaining about his brakes," says Brabham "The team asked me to try them at Imola so I went out, did two laps and came in - they were complete junk. He improved after that and was right with me; suddenly the gap was slashed to a few tenths and he got more and more confident. Everyone was encouraged."

The breakthrough would go unfulfilled. During qualifying Ratzenberger ran wide and off the road at Acque Minerali, apparently damaging the front wing of his car. He opted to stay out, but approaching the flat-out Villeneuve kink on the next lap his wing failed, and he was pitched into the barriers at over 300km/h.

"There are parts of Imola I can't remember, for obvious reasons," Brabham recalls. "Like anything in life, you can't fully understand the experience before you actually go through it. It was devastating, there is no other word. I was numb. 

"The whole team was the same; we had a huge black cloud hanging over all of us. In the end I decided to have a go in the warm-up, and felt okay. When I came in, though, I could sense the cloud had lifted ever so slightly, and that prompted the decision to race. 

"It was a fight to continue, and there were probably parts where I wasn't fully there, but it was all done in respect to Roland. I'll forever remember his smile. He was a very committed driver, and very honest both on track and off, but it's his smile that is my enduring memory. He was a racer through and through; he lived and loved the sport. I've never once regretted racing that day in tribute to him."

Just one day later, Senna's fatal accident would send shockwaves around the world. It later emerged that the Brazilian had been carrying a furled Austrian flag in his cockpit, in planned tribute to Ratzenberger. 

"Saturday was terrible. After Sunday, we were all completely stunned," Bennetts says.

"Even when he was with us, Ayrton had an attitude that he was the best. He had so much talent, but that had certain implications too, and he could be a tough cookie to deal with. Roland never had that. He was a more quiet type, a lovely guy who lived for racing. We will always remember them. It was a tragedy for motorsport. More importantly, it was a tragedy for two young men."


(source: f1.com)

AYRTON SENNA WEEK: 2nd qualifying of the 1994 San Marino GP (Imola)

Roland Ratzenberger, MTV Simtek Ford

It's Senna week but let's not forget Roland Ratzenberger who passed away one day before the great Ayrton Senna.

Roland Ratzenberger was a young driver who had been a part of only 3 gp weekends. He had raced in one single race only so it was very sad indeed that he died.

Ayrton Senna's reaction when he saw Ratzenberger's crash:


Here is some footage of the 1994 San Marino (2nd) qualifying session.



Ayrton Senna planned to win the race on Sunday and wave the Austrian flag for young Ratzenberger. They found the flag in Senna's car later on Sunday after he also had crashed.

Rest in peace Roland and Ayrton. You are both missed in the motor racing world.

If you believe in god like Ayrton then you should think about the two of them up there somewhere racing each other.

I am not a religious man but when people die I sometimes like to think like a religious person. It brings a smile on my face for a second or two.

We should not just remember how they died. We should remember how they lived.

Monday, April 28, 2014

AYRTON SENNA WEEK: Ayrton Senna at the 1991 AUTOSPORT Awards



This week is dedicated to Ayrton Senna. 

He passed away 20 years ago in Imola and he is the greatest driver of all time if you ask me and almost anyone else.

I will post stuff about Senna every day this week. Here is the first thing - a video:

Sunday, April 27, 2014

De Silvestro makes F1 test debut for Sauber


Former IndyCar racer Simona De Silvestro enjoyed her first day of Formula One testing with Sauber on Saturday, as she completed 112 laps of Ferrari’s Fiorano circuit in Italy. De Silvestro, who joined the Swiss team as an affiliated driver in February, was at the wheel of a two-year-old Sauber C31, without KERS and using special Pirelli tyres.

The 25-year-old Swiss driver, who is undergoing an F1 preparation programme at Sauber with a 2015 race seat in mind, used the opportunity to become familiar with the specifics of a Formula One car and according to the team was able to improve constantly during the day.

“Although it’s something very special to drive a Formula One car, I was not too nervous in the morning,” said De Silvestro. “I was more focused on what my job would be. But, after completing the installation lap, I realised that this was my first lap in a Formula One car, and that this was something really special.

“What impressed me most was the downforce of the car and the braking. When I did my first lap the brakes were cold, but even then the decelaration was beyond what I had experienced before. The g-forces are significantly higher compared to what I was used to in IndyCar. 

“Overall, I’m happy with my first day in a Formula One car. I concentrated mainly on understanding the tyres and finding out how to get the best out of them. And with every outing I learned more about the behaviour of the car. I can feel now where there is more potential and how I can use it. Physically I feel quite good, which is definitely a result of my preparation in recent months. I have been training really hard and this paid off.”

Sauber test engineer Paul Russell was clearly impressed with De Silvestro’s first outing, commenting: “Simona did a very solid job today. It was immediately clear that she is an experienced driver. It was as good a start in a Formula One car as you could hope for, and you couldn’t really ask for more today.”

De Silvestro will continue testing with Sauber at Fiorano on Sunday.


(source: f1.com)

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Secret Life Of Formula 1 - Technology Documentary

I had to repost this documentary because the other one got erased from YouTube. I hate it when they do that!

Friday, April 25, 2014

Rossi to drive for Caterham in Montreal and Austin



American racer Alexander Rossi will drive for Caterham in the opening Friday practice sessions of this year's Canadian and United States Grands Prix, the team have confirmed.

Rossi, 22, has been a reserve driver at Caterham since 2012, and is also one of the team's primary simulator drivers. 

While Montreal will represent his first Grand Prix action of 2014, he has previously completed numerous FP1 and test runs, including driving in the same sessions last year. He was 20th fastest in Canada and then 19th in the US, just over seven-tenths of a second slower than the Red Bull of four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel.

Rossi, who is also competing for Caterham's junior team in GP2, said: "Each time I step into F1 machinery there is an important job to do. Montreal and Austin are important races for me and I want to thank Caterham for the opportunity to continue my development to a full time race seat in F1. 

"My GP2 program combined with my F1 team reserve driver duties give me invaluable insight and experience for my future. I've built up a lot of hours in the F1 simulator already this year, but Montreal will be my first visit behind the wheel of the CT05 on track. 

"I look forward to a positive run plan for both the Canadian and USA sessions."

Caterham F1 team principal Cyril Abiteboul added: "Alexander will be continuing his development with two more FP1 sessions for us in Canada and the USA. 

"While his focus this year is firmly on GP2 we are pleased to give him more opportunities to play an active role in the F1 team's race weekends and to have him help us develop our car at two races that are very important for us, both in terms of our season overall and with the strong support we have commercially in the North American continent."


(source: f1.com)

Thursday, April 24, 2014

The 1991 Grand Prix of Belgium



The quality is a bit bad but the video is pretty cool. This is Michael Schumacher's first race ever in Formula One.

The race is narrated by Murray Walker and James Hunt.

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

1996 - Monaco GP [FULL RACE]

This man won the championship in 1996 but who won the race in Monaco?

This is one my favorite races ever. I'm sorry it's not in english but the race is the thing that matters.

Monday, April 21, 2014

2014 Chinese Grand Prix review


Lewis Hamilton, Nico Rosberg and Mercedes continued proving that they are unstoppable. Nobody had a chance! The only way that the 1st and 2nd places will be different if there is an accident or a technical problem.

Right at the start Hamilton took a strong lead from the others, Rosberg got stuck in traffic and smashed into Valtteri Bottas' Williams. Both of the drivers could continue the race without making a pitstop.

The other Williams driven by Felipe Massa had a small crash with Fernando Alonso's Ferrari. They both blamed each other but later Alonso said that it was a racing incident. Massa continued blaming Alonso.

The other Ferrari driven by Kimi Räikkönen was much slower all weekend and Kimi was very frustrated:


Kimi managed to overtake one car in the start though.. In the end he was 8th so a little better than last race but still. 



Why can't they get the car as he wants it? His driving style is totally different to Alonso's and the car is mainly built for the spaniard. He has been working on the car since last year and Kimi has had his first chance to work in January. In the last tests Alonso tested both cars and Kimi wasn't even there. Alonso said that there was something strange with Kimi's car and it was more difficult to drive for him as well.

Back to the race! Kevin Magnussen smashed his front wing again in the beginning of the race. He has complained that he can't see it from the cockpit which makes it more difficult to protect.

What about Williams' pitstop with Massa? That was just terrible to watch! I mean come on guys! How hard can it be to take the right tyres to the "box"? Ever heard of double checking? But mainly it ruined Massa's race and he stayed the whole race at the back.

One good thing about Williams though, they finally managed to get their tyres right in the qualifying session. They even showed some improvement in wet conditions.

What about Sebastian Vettel? Daniel Ricciardo has been much better than Vettel in every race!

It was embarrassing when Vettel disobeyed teamorders (didn't let Ricciardo through) and then he got overtaken anyway. Later he confessed that he didn't wanna let him pass but after he thought about it he changed his mind. I guess he changed his mind when Ricciardo was overtaking him.

Later Kamui Kobayashi overtook the champ with his Caterham and Vettel got really pissed off. He shouted on the radio that it's easy to overtake when his tyres are newer. So what? He was still one lap behind and Vettel had to make his pitstop anyway.

What else happened? Adrian Sutil retired again which means that he has finished only one race for Sauber this season. When he was interviewed he said that he isn't worried because it can't get any worse than this. He knows that everything that happens after all of this must be an improvement.

The race ended 1 lap earlier because someone counted the laps wrong. Hamilton was going on his final lap and they already waved the flag. He asked on the radio about it and Mercedes told him to finish the last lap and ignore the error.

The FIA changed the results so that the last lap didn't count because according to the rules if you wave the checkered flag it means the race is over.



The last thing, my guesses and the actual results:

Pole position: Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes - RIGHT

The race:

  1. Nico Rosberg, Mercedes - WRONG. Rosberg was 2nd.
  2. Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes - WRONG. Hamilton was 1st.
  3. Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull - WRONG. Ricciardo was 4th and Alonso was 3rd.
Fastest lap: Nico Rosberg, Mercedes - RIGHT

Surprise: Nico Hülkenberg, Force India - For me the biggest surprise was probably Ferrari's pace.. well.. at least one of the Ferraris. Fernando Alonso was 3rd!

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

Sunday, April 20, 2014

FIA post-race press conference - China


Drivers: 1 - Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes), 2 - Nico Rosberg (Mercedes), 3 - Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)

PODIUM INTERVIEWS
(Conducted by Martin Brundle) 

Q: Three consecutive for Lewis Hamilton - how about that? Great stuff, Lewis. That looked, from where we were sitting, incredibly easy. How was it for you? 
Lewis Hamilton:
 Ni hao. The fans have been incredible this week, so I really felt a lot of energy but I really couldn’t do this without all the hard work from the team, it’s incredible. Honestly, I just can’t believe how amazing the car is, and how hard everyone has worked. The results we’re getting is a real true showing of all the hard work.

Q: Absolutely incredible. You were radioing in and saying ‘my tyres feel good’ and everybody else was screaming to come into the pits. The first stint was just beautiful for you. 
LH:
 Yeah. Surprisingly, again, as I said, after P2 I had to make a lot of changes in anticipation of today, even though yesterday was wet, but it worked perfectly and I was able to look after the tyres. After that I was just really racing myself. I did lose a lot of time after the first stop but still it was great. I am really happy that Nico is up here with us, it’s great points for the team and they really deserve it.

Q: You had one little trip off the circuit, obviously when the front tyres were finally going away. A little fright there for you? 
LH:
 No, no, fortunately there’s lots of run-off area. Basically the left front is the one that’s graining and wearing and I’d gone quite a lot longer than I’d planned and eventually the tyre was dead so I locked it, but it was OK and I recovered.

Q: Nico, you still lead the Formula One World Championship so some consolation in that respect? 
Nico Rosberg:
 Yeah, definitely. That’s there. I’m not going to use the word still because I plan to keep it that way. Definitely in the lead and that’s good. Especially considering that the whole weekend was really, really bad for me. It went completely wrong in so many different respects. Also, in the race we had no telemetry so there was no communication between the car and the pits, so they had no idea what was going on on track and that’s why the start was also so bad and a lot of things came together. So I’m pleased with second and I just look forward to a normal weekend again in Barcelona, full attack again.

Q: Yeah it was a bad start. Take us through that first corner when you had contact with Valtteri Bottas in the Williams. 
NR:
 It was just very close, there were cars all over the place. Just had a bit of contract there and it was great that my car held on.

Q: Then you had to make your way back through the field. You had a little bit of fun coming through? 
NR:
 It’s really a pleasure to drive this car at the moment. It’s incredible the car that the team has built - fantastic. So thanks to the whole team. And Mercedes. This thing is so quick. It really increases the enjoyment level even further.

Q: Let’s talk to Fernando Alonso, third for Ferrari. I know there are a lot of Ferrari fans out there and of course Fernando Alonso fans. Fernando, you beat the Red Bulls and you’re third only behind the Mercedes Benz cars. You must be really satisfied with that. 
Fernando Alonso:
 Hello everybody, first of all. It was a good weekend. We did improve the car a little bit compared to the first three races, so we felt more competitive and now in the race being here on the podium is some kind of surprise for us, a nice surprise finally. Happy with a podium finish today. I think I’m third in the Drivers’ Championship behind these two guys. So we didn’t have the start of the season that we would like but at the end of the day we’re still in the fight.

Q: Just briefly you had a big contact with Felipe Massa going into the first corner. You were lucky [there] with no suspension damage. 
FA:
 Yeah, it was a big contact. I asked on the radio ‘can you check the car’, because it felt OK but I don’t know how it looks from the outside, but it was OK and we managed very lucky to finish the race and hopefully next one it will be a clean start.

Q: Lewis, we’re back to tracks you know well, obviously Barcelona, you’ve got some testing coming up. Surely you can’t keep improving this car? 
LH:
 Well, this team is a on a roll that’s for sure. The team have done a great job, as I said. We’re going to keep pushing; we’re going to keep moving forwards. That’s what Mercedes Benz want to do. They want to keep moving forward, developing, hopefully improving the engine, also the car. But as I said, I’m going to be working hard, we’re going to keep working hard because obviously the others are pushing to catch us up. So I hope it continues.

PRESS CONFERENCE

Q: Lewis, congratulations, a three-time winner here. How does that feel?
LH:
 It feels incredible. I just have to shout out a big thank you, thank you so much to the team, firstly for embracing me into the team last year and for all the hard work and for them continuously pushing forward. I really hope that the guys back at the factory are enjoying this and really have a great week. I’m so, so happy. I had such a great race, really enjoyed it, particularly the last few laps, y’know? Really trying to keep temperature in the tyres, pushing a little bit more, just to keep temperature up and the car was great.

Q: You spoke about the work being done in FP2 and then of course the car was good enough for pole in the wet and then good enough to win in the dry. How perfect was it?
LH:
 The car was really good. As I said, made lots of changes overnight on Friday night and obviously it was wet for qualifying. So I didn’t get to feel… I didn’t know what it was going to be like today. And really just that hard work sitting down with the engineers, really choosing… we didn’t guess, we really made those steps in anticipation for today and it worked perfectly. I couldn’t really have asked for more.

Q: The only really big surprise I guess was getting the chequered flag a lap early - which could have tripped you up.
LH:
 That was very strange! I was thinking ‘am I seeing things?’ I looked up, I was coming across the line expecting to do another lap and all of a sudden I looked for a split second and I saw the flag, I lifted for a second and I saw there was no-one on the wall, so then I just kept going. I did lose a second or so. I asked the team, they said no, so I just kept going. Very, very strange. It was good to do another lap.

Q: Nico, you said so many things went wrong. What was your set-up like from Friday FP2 though to the race itself?
NR:
 It was all OK. Set-up-wise it was a good team effort this weekend. Because it’s a very unique track here with the understeer being the main problem and the front-left tyre, so you really have to change everything, adapt to the needs of the track and we did well as a team. It wasn’t perfect in the race but it was definitely… pretty good.

Q: As you played catch-up from the start you could really see what your strengths were in comparison to other cars. 
NR:
 Yeah, definitely. We have the best car, y’know, and that makes it more enjoyable then to do catch-up, even though of course don’t want to do any catch-up - but I was back there so then catching up was nice with this fast car. It’s a good weapon.

Q: Then we heard you not entirely happy giving a fuel report every lap.
NR:
 No! My telemetry failed, yeah? So I was completely on my own out there. The team then never… doesn’t see any information from the car, so they have nothing to do. Er… well not… they do have things to do! So I had to do all the things on my own out there and, for example, it was then telling the team what my fuel level is so that they could judge if I was using too much fuel or if I’m safe - and I had to do that in Turn One y’know and Turn One is a difficult corner anyways, so yeah, didn’t enjoy that point.

Q: Fernando, first of all, first podium this year for Ferrari, how satisfying is that?
FA:
 It is. Obviously we had a difficult start of the season with some lack of performance in the first races and, y’know it’s good to be on the podium here on the fourth race after a not-easy weekend with changeable weather conditions and a difficult race as well, as Nico touched on. I think with the tyres, being a unique track with the front graining that you need to take care, plus some actions because we were not alone on the race. We managed, I think, quite well to get this podium and this is hopefully some boost of the team and some extra motivation y’know, to keep improving and to do even better in the next couple of races.

Q: And again, the set-up from FP2 to the race, how good was that?
FA:
 I think we make very few changes to be honest, from FP1 to now in the race. We brought some new parts here, a small step that probably we are a little bit more competitive now and we concentrate on Friday testing those parts and not much set-up work to be honest. Yesterday on the wet conditions, now in these days it’s not much to do, wet to dry anyway, so, as I said, the setup, my feeling was quite OK from Friday to now.

Q: The podium here, what can you promise your home fans at the next grand prix at home?
FA:
 We need to see. We need to remain very calm. It has been a very unique race, we make a step forward. We were ninth and tenth fifteen days ago and that was hard, pain a little bit. So, yeah, we need to remain calm. We are happy, we need to enjoy the result today but still a long way to go and we cannot promise anything for Barcelona. We will give 100 per cent again and we will fight - but in terms of result we need to remain very calm and see how development is these three weeks if we can bring some extra new parts for Barcelona.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Michael Schmidt - Auto, Motor und Sport) Nico, when you said that you had to report your fuel consumption or fuel level to the pit lane every lap, why is that? Wouldn’t it be easier that you saw on the dashboard a plus or minus and then you could drive on your own rather than talking to your pits? 
NR:
 Yeah, you’re right. Just that I didn’t have that function, probably because we don’t really need that normally. It’s fine like that, it’s just reporting once in a while to the paddock. It wasn’t every lap, you know, it was just once in a while so they can put a few dots and see where it’s going. That’s it. So that wasn’t a problem at all, it was just that I didn’t like where I had to do it because it was in turn one and that was not good.

Q: (Flavio Vanetti - Corriere della Sera) Fernando, you said several times that Ferrari needs a global improvement but is there a priority in this situation, to try to get closer to Mercedes?
FA:
 Well, of course it is a priority, we need to close, we need to catch them as soon as possible before the championship is over, so we need to keep scoring points, as many as we can now that we are not super-competitive, try not to lose too much ground on points in the championship, and if in one race we become as competitive as them, try to catch up in terms of points. At the moment, it seems very far away because they have a big advantage and we need to work really hard if we want to have that possibility. There is nothing really special we can do, just don’t give up; we’re in the fourth race in the championship, there ‘s still a long way go but being super-realistic, knowing that the gap is very very big it’s going to be very tough.

Q: (Livio Oricchio - Universo On Line) Fernando, how can you understand this race? In the last one, you finished a long way behind the Mercedes; this time you were seven seconds behind Nico. Is it the characteristics of the track or the new parts that you brought that has made the car so fast? 
FA:
 I think it was a combination. As I said, we brought new parts that feel a little more competitive - the car feels a little bit faster - we also tested in Bahrain, they felt OK and we confirmed that here. On the other hand, I personally have had an extremely good weekend, probably at the level of 2012 in terms of driving and feeling comfortable with the car, qualifying, Friday, today. In Bahrain, we were one minute behind the leaders, ninth and tenth and today we are on the podium, seven seconds behind Nico as I said, but Kimi’s one minute behind the leaders. I think it’s a combination. Hopefully I can keep going like this. I felt more comfortable with the car and we will not give up.

Q: (Alexander Aucott - China Radio International) Lewis, you mentioned the support of the Chinese fans on the podium. Have you seen an increase in support over the years here and is it something that makes them unique here at Shanghai? 
LH:
 Every year I come here, I feel that the fan base - at least my fan base - feels like it’s growing every year here. Growing up in Stevenage, I never ever thought that I would fly halfway round the world and have so many people who chose to wear my cap, to wear my top, to have my flag and really support me. It’s absolutely phenomenal, and here it’s maybe my second year, I think, that from the moment I’m at the airport - I don’t know how they know I’m there but they know I’m there - it’s almost like they radio to the guys at the hotel and when I get to the hotel - I don’t know how they know I’m at that hotel - but they’re there every morning, every evening, day and night and that’s why I always say we win and we lose together. This morning and on the way, one of my fans she gave me like a digital photo frame and on it, they did a special video for me from all the fan base here and for me, it’s touched my heart so much so I want to say a big thank you to all of them.

Q: (Luis Fernando Ramos - Racing Magazine) Nico, all the other teams have set their sights on the Barcelona race as their best chance to improve their performance with the novelties on their cars, so how confident is Mercedes that the things you’re going to bring to Barcelona will keep the gap or maybe even extend the gap you have to the other teams? 
NR:
 Hopefully, more than all the other teams; we want to go to Barcelona with the biggest step, that’s our ambition. Barcelona is a chance for us to extend the advantage that we have and that’s the approach that we have going to Barcelona, 100 percent.


(source: f1.com)

F1-4-LIFE PREDICTORS LEAGUE - ROUND 1 (CHINA)

  1. Apex Towing Corp: Hamilton, Rosberg, Bottas -> 8 points
  2. Peter McLaren: Hamilton, Rosberg, Massa -> 8 points
  3. Liutauras Raulynatis: Hamilton, Rosberg, Bottas -> 8 points
  4. JT: Hamilton, Rosberg, Hulkenberg -> 8 points
  5. Jonathan riggs: Hamilton, Rosberg, Button -> 8 points
  6. Rich Kewell: Hamilton, Rosberg, Ricciardo -> 8 points
  7. MW: Hamilton, Rosberg, Button -> 8 points
  8. Regina Ehrnrooth: Hamilton, Rosberg, Vettel -> 8 points
  9. Rab Mckinney: Hamilton, Rosberg, Hulkenberg -> 8 points
  10. Martin Francis: Hamilton, Rosberg, Ricciardo -> 8 points
  11. Elliott Robson: Hamilton, Ricciardo, Rosberg -> 3 points
  12. Shaun Magnano: Hamilton, Bottas, Ricciardo -> 3 points
  13. AE: Rosberg, Hamilton, Ricciardo -> 0 points
  14. Dylan Curry: Rosberg, Hamilton, Button -> 0 points
  15. Larry Gallagher: Rosberg, Hamilton, Ricciardo -> 0 points
  16. Richard Gehl: Rosberg, Hamilton, Vettel -> 0 points
  17. Jaakko livari: Bottas, Raikkonen, Rosberg -> 0 points
  18. Junaid Khan: Vettel, Alonso, Hamilton -> 0 points

If you don't see your result here it's because you posted your answer too late. Next time do it in time ;)


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 JT, AE & MW. 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.

2014 FORMULA 1 UBS CHINESE GRAND PRIX - Race results

144Lewis HamiltonMercedes541:33:28.338125
26Nico RosbergMercedes54+18.0 secs418
314Fernando AlonsoFerrari54+23.6 secs515
43Daniel RicciardoRed Bull Racing-Renault54+27.1 secs212
51Sebastian VettelRed Bull Racing-Renault54+47.8 secs310
627Nico HulkenbergForce India-Mercedes54+54.3 secs88
777Valtteri BottasWilliams-Mercedes54+55.7 secs76
87Kimi RäikkönenFerrari54+76.3 secs114
911Sergio PerezForce India-Mercedes54+82.6 secs162
1026Daniil KvyatSTR-Renault53+1 Lap131
1122Jenson ButtonMcLaren-Mercedes53+1 Lap12
1225Jean-Eric VergneSTR-Renault53+1 Lap9
1320Kevin MagnussenMcLaren-Mercedes53+1 Lap15
1413Pastor MaldonadoLotus-Renault53+1 Lap22
1519Felipe MassaWilliams-Mercedes53+1 Lap6
1621Esteban GutierrezSauber-Ferrari53+1 Lap17
1717Jules BianchiMarussia-Ferrari53+1 Lap19
1810Kamui KobayashiCaterham-Renault53+1 Lap18
194Max ChiltonMarussia-Ferrari52+2 Laps21
209Marcus EricssonCaterham-Renault52+2 Laps20
Ret8Romain GrosjeanLotus-Renault28Gearbox10
Ret99Adrian SutilSauber-Ferrari5Engine14