Whilst backstage at the Autosport International show, Vicki Butler-Henderson puts these two legends of racing on the spot with a quickfire automotive Q and A session. For more videos, news and reviews go to fwd.five.tv
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Fifth Gear – Ferrari Enzo vs McLaren F1
Video Rating: 4 / 5
I wore black on St-Germain de prés Feelings in the air they love today It’s true, I don’t believe in love beyond the grave, But then I listened to a trumpet play You were black on St-Germain de prés I can still hear you miles away I wore black, you were black The trumpet answered back Jazz is Paris and Paris is jazz I wore black, you were black I wore black, you were black Jazz is Paris and Paris is jazz I wore black on St-Germain de prés Feelings in the air, they love today I wore black, you were black Sat naked on your lap Like a child, I feel love coming on I travel miles and miles in bed Miles of miles playing in my head I wore black, you were black It makes me cry to think like that Jazz is Paris and Paris is jazz I wore black, you were black I wore black, you were black Jazz is Paris and Paris is jazz I give you kisses In all the secret places Miles and miles of miles Your profile, like an Egyptian queen The best looking man I’ve ever seen I wore black, you were black I wore black, you were black Jazz is Paris and Paris is jazz
Video Rating: 4 / 5
Red Bull F1 driver Mark Webber takes us on a tour of Belgium’s most famous track, Spa-Francorchamps aboard RBR’s high-tech full motion simulator.
Video Rating: 5 / 5
There are good reasons why Spa has become a favourite of recent generations of grand prix drivers
The majestic circuit of Spa-Francorchamps looked much the same at the weekend as it did the last time I visited it in 1967 – the year of Sgt Pepper and the assassination of Che Guevara. But that’s one thing about great race tracks. You can spend 43 years smoothing out the trickier corners, replacing earth banks with run-off areas, moving the pits and the start-finish line from one bit of straight road to another and erecting new grandstands here and there, yet the essential character of the place – its integrity, you might say, as well as its ambiance – will usually survive.
Generally speaking, this is because the older circuits followed two patterns: that of the public roads on which the earliest motor races were held, and that of the land itself. Spa is a particularly good example, since a track laid out on what were originally public roads also follows the hills and valleys sculpted over millennia by wind, water and geology among the pine forests of the Ardennes.
It is no accident that Spa has become a favourite of recent generations of grand prix drivers. As grateful as they may be for the safety precautions introduced over the past half-century, they still relish the challenge offered by corners that do not conform to the regular geometry usually produced when a circuit architect fires up his computer, and they are not entirely impervious to a sense of history.
The longest track currently used in Formula One, at 7km, it was twice as long back in 1967. The old Masta Straight and its legendary kink may have disappeared in the intervening years but surviving features such as Eau Rouge and the hairpin at La Source retain a shape that was originally dictated by custom and nature.
A week before the race in Belgium, and about 150 miles south-east of Spa, I stopped on a straight piece of road cutting through agricultural land outside the city of Rheims, where long-disused whitewashed pits and grandstands still mark the location of the circuit that hosted important races between 1926 and 1966, including the French grand prix on 14 occasions. It was not hard to imagine the crowd in the tribunes rising to their feet as Mike Hawthorn’s Ferrari and Juan Manuel Fangio’s Maserati roared neck and neck towards the finish line in 1953, the bow-tied Englishman becoming the first British winner of a round of the world championship. If the long-silent Rheims circuit is a well-known place of pilgrimage, the fine memorial at the junction of the D937 and the D1029, on an otherwise featureless plateau south of the town of Péronne, came as a complete surprise. It commemorates the deaths in June 1933, during the Picardy grand prix meeting, of a pair of Bugatti drivers.
The first, Louis-Aimé Trintignant, one of five sons of a Vaucluse vineyard owner, died during practice after losing control at high speed when a gendarme wandered into the road. The second fatality came the following day, during the race itself, when Guy Bouriat, a French count and a talented driver, was attempting to retake the lead from Philippe Etancelin. As the two of them came up to lap a slower car, its driver spotted Etancelin’s Alfa Romeo and let him through but then moved back on to his original line and collided with Bouriat, whose car left the road and burst into flames.
Trintignant was 30 years old, Bouriat 31. The last race at Péronne was held in 1939, and the memorial, once pockmarked with the evidence of fighting in the second world war, has been carefully restored. No other trace of the triangular circuit, which passed through the villages of Brie and Mesnil-Bruntel, remains.
Standing in these places, listening to the echoes of heroism and tragedy, it made me laugh to think that Hermann Tilke, Bernie Ecclestone’s pet circuit designer, has apparently been asked to incorporate the outlines of famous corners from historic tracks into a new Formula One facility in Austin, Texas. Just what the world needs: the first karaoke grand prix.
Even lifelong cynics are experiencing a sense of profound disillusionment following the allegations of spot-fixing in the Lord’s Test. My own preferred antidote is to attend Thursday’s 60th Church Times Cup final, the climax of a competition between cricketing clergymen representing the various geographical subdivisions of the Church of England. The match takes place, as it always has, at the attractive Southgate ground in north London, and this final pits Litchfield against Bath & Wells, neither of whom has appeared in any of the previous 59 finals. It is almost certain that any no-balls will be the consequence of excessive exertion rather than skulduggery.
Over the past few years it has been customary to compare Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton in terms of Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna, the smooth approach shared by Prost and Button contrasting with Senna and Hamilton. The comparison has been even more tempting this season, in which they are both driving McLarens, as Senna and Prost did 20 years ago. But on Sunday Hamilton turned that comparison on its head. Once he had taken advantage of Mark Webber’s poor start, he drove with an air of calmness that Prost would have recognised. Now all we want to see is Button performing a similar volte-face, taking a race by the scruff of its neck, and reminding us of the great Brazilian.
Lassana Diarra was the outstanding performer in Real Madrid’s weekend draw with Mallorca, the Frenchman moving easily from midfield to full-back when José Mourinho brought on Sami Khedira for the last 20 minutes. Diarra now rivals Javier Mascherano for the title of the world’s most effective holding midfielder, and how Arsène Wenger should be regretting the decision to let his compatriot leave the Emirates two years ago.
Formula 1 2010 – Track Simulation Spa – Sebastian Vettel
• Championship leader claims Red Bull’s 12th pole of season
• Lewis Hamilton will start second, Jenson Button in fifth
Rain and heavy traffic brought chaos to the serenity of Spa’s breathtaking circuit today but by the end of the qualifying session for Sunday’s Belgium Grand Prix, a familiar pattern had emerged.
Lewis Hamilton, with a thrilling final thrust, placed himself on the front row but pole position went to the championship leader Mark Webber for the fifth time this season.
It was the 12th occasion in 13 attempts that pole position had gone to Red Bull. But as only 13 drivers have converted that advantage to win the race on the 43 previous occasions it has been held here at Spa, it can hardly be claimed to be a decisive edge.
Renault’s consistent Robert Kubica was third, ahead of Sebastian Vettel and Jenson Button. But it was a disappointing afternoon for Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, who will start in 10th place on the grid – four places behind team-mate Felipe Masse – having dominated both practice sessions yesterday. Today he failed to post a competitive time in Q3 before the rain came.
Alonso is the last placed of the five drivers who can win this year’s title and, as he is 20 points behind Webber, he can scarcely afford to lose more ground.
But if it was a challenging session for the Scuderia, it was even more disappointing for Mercedes as for only the second time this season both Michael Schumacher (11), the six-times winner of this race, and Nico Rosberg (12) failed to qualify for Q3.
Schumacher’s 11th place means he will start 21st in light of a 10-place grid penalty following the Hungarian Grand Prix four weeks ago when he almost put Rubens Barrichello into a wall.
Rosberg collected a five-place penalty for a gearbox change before qualifying, meaning he will start 16th.
There were raised eyebrows when Webber marked his 34th birthday by finishing 18th in yesterday’s practice session. But in the third practice, he was fastest, just ahead of Hamilton, and that was how it finished in qualifying.
Webber said afterwards: “It’s certainly a nice venue to get pole position, but the conditions were difficult and we were all tested. It was a good lap but you never know whether it’s going to be enough, and Lewis did a pretty good lap to get second when La Source [turn one] was pretty greasy. But the race won’t be won on the first lap tomorrow.”
Once Webber had put in his fast lap, the circuit was transformed into a rain forest for the umpteenth time this weekend, as if a curtain had fallen on proceedings. But Hamilton was not finished and, just before the end, he put in a flyer which might have brought him pole in more favourable conditions.
He said later: “There was a big cloud coming over just before the last run was starting, and it was so tricky because the rest of track was dry but there was one corner that was a bit damp.
“When we came back out I asked if it was dry, and they said yes, and I went for it and hit the brakes. I went straight on and lost three and a half tenths there, so pole would have been possible.
“These conditions are the toughest for racing because you’re constantly having to re-evaluate your grip levels. It’s an art and you can get caught out so easily.
“But the good thing is the car is handling very well, and I’m excited about the race. I’m on the front row and in for the fight.”
On a track known for its long straights and with only medium downforce, the McLarens could thrive here and Hamilton will feel he has a great chance of pulling off his third win of the season.
Having said that, more rain is forecast to sweep through the Ardennes, so it could be lottery Sunday yet again. Since the tedium of the opening race in Bahrain in March, a compelling narrative has unfurled and it would be a surprise if that did not continue in one of the most keenly awaited fixtures of the season.
Vettel, the marginal title favourite, has work to do from fourth but he said: “My first try in Q3 wasn’t good enough, simple as that, but the car was good enough to be ahead of everyone else.”
A delighted Kubica, one place ahead of the German, played down his chances of winning tomorrow but said: “We have been in the top five in every session, in all conditions, this weekend, and going into qualifying we were hoping that it might be possible to get third place.”
It was another successful outing for Williams, who struggled at the start of the season but who here had both drivers in the first 10 for the fourth time and for the third time in five races.
Barrichello, who will celebrate his 300th race tomorrow, said: “We were struggling a bit with the set-up but the team came up with some great ideas after practice to get the car in better shape for qualifying and they paid off.
“I’m delighted to be seventh and am having a great weekend celebrating with my family and the team.”
1 Mark Webber (Aus) Red Bull 1min 45.778sec
2 Lewis Hamilton (GB) McLaren 1:45.863
3 Robert Kubica (Pol) Renault 1:46.100
4 Sebastian Vettel (Ger) Red Bull 1:46.127
5 Jenson Button (GB) McLaren 1:46.206
6 Felipe Massa (Br) Ferrari 1:46.314
7 Rubens Barrichello (Br) Williams 1:46.602
8 Adrian Sutil (Ger) Force India 1:46.659
9 Nico Hulkenberg (Ger) Williams 1:47.053
10 Fernando Alonso (Sp) Ferrari 1:47.441
11 Michael Schumacher (Ger) Mercedes GP 1:47.874
12 Nico Rosberg (Ger) Mercedes GP 1:47.885
13 Jaime Alguersuari (Sp) Scuderia Toro Rosso 1:48.267
14 Vitantonio Liuzzi (It) Force India 1:48.680
15 Sebastien Buemi (Swi) Scuderia Toro Rosso 1:49.209
16 Heikki Kovalainen (Fin) Lotus F1 1:50.980
17 Jarno Trulli (It) Lotus F1 2:01.491
18 Kamui Kobayashi (Jpn) BMW Sauber 2:02.284
19 Bruno Senna (Br) HRT-F1 2:03.612
20 Sakon Yamamoto (Jpn) HRT-F1 2:03.941
21 Pedro de la Rosa (Spa) BMW Sauber 2:05.294
22 Timo Glock (Ger) Virgin Racing 1:52.049 (five-place grid penalty)
23 Lucas di Grassi (Br) Virgin Racing 2:18.754
24 Vitaly Petrov (Rus) Renault no time
Great and rare video of the F1 Gp Detroit 1986. Ayrton Senna ( Lotus Renault Turbo JPS ) and Nigel Mansell ( Williams Honda Turbo )!! Comment from Murray Walker
Video Rating: 5 / 5
My tribute to the best, most exhilerating, determined and aggressive overtaker F1 has ever known.
• Ferrari to face hearing over team orders furore
• Team in the dock over Fernando Alonso victory in German GP
Ferrari are to appear before the World Motor Sport Council only four days prior to their home grand prix next month as they look to avoid further punishment over the team orders furore.
Motor sport’s world governing body, the FIA, has confirmed Ferrari will face a disciplinary hearing in Paris on 8 September, four days before the Italian grand prix the following Sunday. Due to an obvious conflict of interests, the FIA president and former Ferrari team principal Jean Todt will not stand as chair, the position falling to Nick Craw, the FIA deputy president for sport.
The Maranello team were fined 0,000 (£62,945) by the stewards who ruled over the German grand prix on 25 July. The stewards declared Ferrari in breach of article 39.1 of the FIA 2010 regulation that states: “Team orders which interfere with a race result are prohibited.”
They were also charged with a breach of article 151c of the FIA International Sporting Code. That relates to “any fraudulent conduct, or any act prejudicial to the interests of any competition or to the interests of motor sport generally”.
The stewards were forced to investigate after Felipe Massa slowed on lap 49 of the 67-lap race at Hockenheim to allow his team-mate Fernando Alonso to pass. Alonso went on to claim victory. The manoeuvre followed what appeared to be a coded message from his race engineer, Rob Smedley, who slowly said to Massa: “Fernando is quicker than you.”
When Massa did nothing Smedley asked the 29-year-old whether he had heard the message, shortly after which he gave way. That prompted Smedley to apologise to Massa. After the race he declared the Brazilian had been “magnanimous” in his gesture. The Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner said what he had witnessed was “the clearest team order I’ve ever seen”.
Both drivers and the team principal Stefano Domenicali all declared their innocence prior to the stewards’ verdict. But following a judgment that stunned the team, Domenicali expressed confidence “that the World Council will know how to evaluate the overall facts correctly”.
Ferrari, however, have broken the rules before. The law relating to team orders was introduced after the 2002 Austrian grand prix, when Ferrari manipulated the result, with Todt ordering Rubens Barrichello to pull to one side and allow Michael Schumacher to take the chequered flag.
The WMSC have far-reaching powers at their disposal that include the possibility of excluding a team from the championship.
• Schumacher has apologised for dangerous move
• German received 10-place grid penalty for next GP
The former Formula One driver Derek Warwick, a steward at the Hungarian grand prix, has revealed he wanted to disqualify Michael Schumacher from the race.
Schumacher received a 10-place grid penalty for the next grand prix, in Belgium, after a dangerous move which saw him almost edge Williams’s Rubens Barrichello into the pit wall at 180mph during the closing stages of Sunday’s race. But Warwick believes showing the German the black flag would have sent a better message to young drivers that such behaviour would not be tolerated.
“I believe we had three laps to disqualify him from Budapest, and throwing a black flag would have shown a better example to our young drivers that we will not tolerate that kind of driving,” Warwick told Radio 5 Live. “But by the time we got the video evidence we ran out of time and we had to do it retrospectively.
“We inteviewed Rubens and Michael and it was kind of disappointing how Michael handled it, and we had no option but to give him a 10-place penalty. If we had enough laps [we could have disqualified him] but you have to have video evidence and make sure all four stewards are in agreement.”
After initially defending his move, Schumacher yesterday issued an apology to Barrichello, who partnered him at Ferrari from 2000 to 2005. Although Warwick, who was on the stewards panel in Budapest as part of the FIA’s decision to introduce former drivers to adjudicate on incidents during races this season, would have liked to have been able to take stronger action, he believes the penalty handed down still sends the right message.
“You have to view the evidence you have and you could disqualify him from the next grand prix, or two grands prix,” he continued. “But we felt a 10-place penalty is a big penalty to carry for Spa. It kind of puts him out of the race at Spa, and hopefully he will learn from that and remember that the new stewards will not tolerate that driving.”
After reviewing the incident, Schumacher said yesterday: “I have got to say that the stewards are right with their judgment: the manoeuvre against him was too severe. I obviously wanted to make it difficult for him to overtake me and I also showed him clearly that I did not want to let him past, but obviously I did not want to endanger him with my manoeuvre. If he feels this way, then sorry, that was not my intention.”
Following the race Barrichello was far from amused, claiming the 41-year-old had resorted to “a go-kart manoeuvre”. Barrichello added: “If he wants to go to heaven – in the event he is going to heaven – I don’t want to go before him.”
The race was won by Red Bull’s Mark Webber, with Schumacher finishing 11th and Barrichello 10th. The penalty marks the latest disappointment of Schumacher’s difficult return to the sport after three years in retirement. The seven-time champion had high hopes of challenging for an eighth crown with Mercedes, but he has been off the pace and failed to match his team-mate Nico Rosberg. Warwick thinks the 41-year-old is already looking towards next season.
He said: “He has been disappointed with the Mercedes and its performance. He is a winner and all he cares about is winning races and winning the world championship. I think his mindset is already looking to 2011 and winning his eighth world championship. This year will become a long season for him.
“I think his legacy is tainted with some of the moves he has had over his career but let’s not forget he has won 91 races and seven world titles and he is a great champion, a legend, and is up there with the greatest and we need to give him time. He has been three years out of the car and come back alongside Nico Rosberg who has done a great job.”
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