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• ‘I feel well inside the car,’ says Button
• Red Bull suffer test day to forget

The first day of testing in Formula One, perhaps the phoniest of all phoney wars in sport, still saw McLaren emerge as the clear winners over Red Bull in brilliant Andalusian sunshine.

Jenson Button’s carefully understated satisfaction with his new McLaren disguised a private delight and excitement; the Woking team suspect that they could be on to a winner here or at least a car capable of challenging Red Bull’s swaggering dominance of last year, when Sebastian Vettel won 11 of the 19 races.

Red Bull, meanwhile, had a day of almost comedic mishap. Last season’s double world champions were frustrated for more than three hours after a flight into the town containing the rear-wing assembly had to be diverted to Seville due to early morning fog. They were further delayed when one of their truck drivers was stopped for alleged speeding. Designer Adrian Newey – eight times a constructors’ championship winner with three different teams so do not write them off just yet – shrugged: “The car didn’t catch fire and at least we did manage a few laps.”

This season – which starts in Melbourne on 18 March – will see cars with noses uglier than a warthog’s. So McLaren had already won the beauty contest by avoiding what has come to be known as the “platypus effect”.

Noses have been lowered for safety reasons in a redesign which should also help to restore some of the downforce lost through the banning of the exhaust-blown diffuser. But McLaren’s good looks were more than skin deep. A year ago both Button and Lewis Hamilton were desperately disappointed with the car with which they started the season.

On Tuesday, though, even a cautious Button’s eyes were gleaming. “Yes, it does feel very different to testing last year,” he said. “It’s been a good starting point. What we wheeled out this morning was a great base. I don’t know where it’s going to end up by the time we get to the first race but the important thing is the balance feels all right.

“So it’s a good starting point. I’m looking forward to working with it and I’m happy. There are no niggly areas with the car, it’s still the starting point and we didn’t do any set-up work to improve the balance. And you’re never going to start with a perfect car. It was just putting some miles on it really.

“But I’m very happy in the car. I’m in a good position. I’m really low, which I always like, trying to get as low as possible, the way that the car is. I’m much lower than last year. I can just about see out. I love that position. I feel well inside the car. I feel I’m part of it. Promising times. But we don’t know where we stand and we won’t do until the first race.”

Button, who went past the returning former world champion Kimi Raikkonen in one particularly impressive move going into the second turn, also predicted a more competitive season ahead when he said: “I think you are going to see the cars a lot more bunched up this season, especially at the start of the year and racing gets under way. As we improve throughout the season the field will split a little more but at the start of the year you are going to have a lot of cars that are within a few 10ths.”

Red Bull, however, remain the team to beat. They had the best car in 2010 and last year, with remorseless professionalism, they widened the gap. After his run on Tuesday Mark Webber said: “It was a shame we were a little late out. But we had a good run out.

“I’m not a big fan of the noses this year. Formula One cars should look beautiful and generally they do. I still think ours looks nice. Adrian always builds beautiful cars.”

They say it will be closer this year. But then they said that last year, too. Last year the brilliant Newey was linked with Ferrari and again he was asked about the prancing horse on Tuesday. But the most successful designer in F1 history said: “To be perfectly honest I can’t see myself going anywhere else. I’ve been very centrally involved with the team from very early on and proud we’ve been able to get from where we were, and the ashes of Jaguar, to where we are today.

“That in itself brings a huge amount of satisfaction and kind of a slightly paternal feeling of wanting that to carry on. To now leave for another team would feel a little like walking out on your children in a way.”


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Sport: Motor sport | guardian.co.uk

Through a combination of carbon fibre expertise, innovative Formula 1-inspired technologies and development programmes, and a desire to launch a range of ‘pure McLaren’ road cars, the groundbreaking new McLaren MP4-12C has redefined high-performance sports car benchmarks.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

• Ex-champion admits he was trying to juggle too many issues
• Jenson Button has private dinner with McLaren team-mate

Lewis Hamilton, who admits he was “battling everybody” last season, and Jenson Button have had a private dinner for only the second time since their intense rivalry at McLaren started two years ago.

A relaxed-looking Hamilton has come to terms with the fact that he had too much on his plate on some occasions last year.

“I wasn’t operating on all cylinders,” he said. “There were times when – such as Abu Dhabi – I was on good form, but still not 100%. And that’s where I want to be this season.

“There were times last year when I was juggling too many things. There were too many things hanging over me, too many things which were unfinished, questions in my mind, whether it was purchases, investments, management, lawyers or family.

“There were lots of things and I didn’t have the pieces of the puzzle in the right place. I was all over the place last season. I didn’t think anything was a positive. But I’ve corrected things and now I’ve got a clean slate. I’ve got nothing worrying me.

“Last year I was battling everybody. I was having trouble with stewards, I was having trouble with many different people. I want to fix that. I’m looking forward to having a good relationship with Felipe [Massa] and from the end of last year I’ve been working on my relationship with the stewards. I’ve got to stay out of trouble so I don’t have to visit them so much.”

The two former world champions have always enjoyed a good, though very competitive, professional relationship at the Woking-based factory. But last season was Hamilton’s most difficult in Formula One and he finished second to his team-mate.

As the two men prepared for the first testing session of the season in Jerez this week, Button said: “We went out for dinner after the Brazilian Grand Prix at the end of last season.

“We had some steak and it was fun. The only other time we have dined together was when I signed the contract. It was good. We have spent two long years together and most of the time it has been behind the wheel or in the engineer’s office and we’re always in uniform or answering questions about each other.

“So it felt good to have dinner together and look at the past couple of years and have a laugh about it.” Speaking about his relationship with other drivers, Button added: ” I’m all right with other drivers. I don’t hold a grudge with drivers. If I do something wrong I go and get it out with them immediately.”

The new Formula One season gets under way in Melbourne in six weeks.


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Sport: Motor sport | guardian.co.uk

They won ROC like a team
Video Rating: 5 / 5

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Video Rating: 5 / 5

Footage from a test day in 1998, during which XP5 set the world recoerd for highest speed in a production car. 241 MPH (391 KPH)

Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren MP4-12C Grip: Das Motormagazin – McLaren…

• McLaren launch new car at Woking base
• Sutil’s comments are given the brush-off

McLaren launched their new Formula One car before a global audience on Wednesday. And the global audience dutifully gawped in wonder, even though the new creation, the MP4-27, motionless and driverless and tilting sharply to the right, looked as if it had just come off the track at Suzuka’s notorious 130R turn.

McLaren’s more significant relaunch at their glitzy Technology Centre in Woking came in the shape of the sport’s most vivid driver, Lewis Hamilton, who looked a revitalised figure after the most difficult season of his career last year, when he was beset by problems on and off the track.

Hamilton, who was beaten by his team-mate, Jenson Button, for the first time in his McLaren career in a season marked by clashes with stewards and other drivers, has spent much of the winter among the mountains of Colorado.

“I feel fresh,” he said. “I had a really good winter. The team gave me a good bit of time off after such a long season, and obviously we went through a lot. I had friends and family there and was able to find out what they thought and how I could improve. I knew where things were wrong and it’s not easy to clarify them in the mind but I was able to do that. There are still things I’m working on.”

Hamilton, 27 last month, added: “There have been lots of highs and lows but last year was definitely one of he toughest years, personally. And also with the racing. I had a low moment when I lost the championship in 2007 but that was just one moment.

“A lot of it is in the mind. And if you’re clogged up with a lot of things and operating at only 60% there’s a loss of time. But I feel as though I’m back to 100% right now. Last year was one of those years where I had a lot of less energy and less focus where it needed to be. But now the focus is where it needs to be.”

Meanwhile, the 2008 champion has put as much clean air as possible between himself and his former close friend Adrian Sutil after the German driver described him as “a coward”. Sutil was upset by Hamilton’s decision not to testify at the former Force India driver’s two-day trial in Munich this week and hit out after being convicted for causing grievous bodily harm to Eric Lux, chief executive of the Lotus team owners, Genii Capital. After being given an 18-month suspended sentence and fined €200,000 (£167,000) Sutil said: “Lewis is a coward. I do not want to be friends with someone like that. He is for me no man. Even his father sent me a text message and wished me luck for the process. Lewis came with nothing. He has changed his phone number. I could not reach him any more.”

But Hamilton, who did offer a statement for use at the trial, refused to get involved when the issue was raised at Woking on Wednesday. Before Hamilton could answer a question relating to Sutil’s remarks a McLaren spokesman said: “We’ve been told Lewis shouldn’t really go there because it might go under appeal, so can we move on to the next question?”

Hamilton nodded in the direction of the spokesman and said: “I’ll listen to him.”


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A host of familiar faces help Jenson Button celebrate as before he competes in his 200th grand prix in Hungary, at the circuit where he won his first race at in 2006. A number of Button’s fellow drivers, including Fernando Alonso, and his former team bosses popped down to the McLaren compound to celebrate the milestone.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Onboard start, overtaking cars, team radios finally We are the champions, We are the champions!
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Williams chief operations engineer reveals that FIA has declared the innovation illegal for 2012 season

Lotus’s pioneering reactive suspension system has been banned by F1′s ruling body. The Williams chief operations engineer, Mark Gillan, revealed on the The Flying Lap webcast that the FIA had declared the innovation – which regulates ride height under braking to aid aerodynamic performance and stability – to be illegal for the 2012 season. Gillan said the clarification had been made in a new technical directive issued by the FIA on Friday evening. “The FIA has just banned that particular type of system.”

While the FIA was not available for comment, other sources confirmed the news. Lotus, previously Renault, had tried out their system at a test in Abu Dhabi last year. Several other teams, including Williams, were also believed to be looking into similar devices while awaiting an FIA ruling. Anything that uses a driver’s movement to gain performance by altering the aerodynamic characteristics of a car is banned but the Lotus one device was reportedly reactive to brake torque and formed part of the suspension. “We have been investigating that type of system for a while,” Gillan said. “It is obviously an impact on the aerodynamic platform of the car.

“Anything that gets the ride-height lower, particularly the front ride-height lower, is beneficial from an aerodynamic perspective.”


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Sport: Motor sport | guardian.co.uk

Al Unser Jr claimed his third pole of the season. The first turn, which usually provides the most dramatic action at the Burke Lakefront Airport Circuit, saw Michael Andretti (who qualified a lowly 17th place) and Scott Goodyear spin. Bobby Rahal and the team had not yet eradicated the engine gremlins in the still-new Honda powerplant. Mario Andretti, whose season started well, had more struggles with a failed suspension after 31 laps. Emerson Fittipaldi, in desperate need of points to kep up with Unser, retired with a small fire in the rear of his car. Michael Andretti’s engine quit with just eight laps remaining, and Al Unser Jr won his fifth race of the year; the seventh in a row for Penske. Runner-up Nigel Mansell had competed in the French Grand Prix for Williams during the off-weekend, with speculation that he may return to Formula One full time for 1995. Tracy, Villeneuve, and Johansson completed the top five. Unser more than recovered what was lost at Detroit with a gruesome 41 point advantage over Fittipaldi, 55 over Mansell, 61 ahead of Gordon, and 63 points ahead of Tracy at the halfway point of the season.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

The former athlete Michael Johnson has been helping the Williams F1 team by looking for ways to speed up their pit stops

When Williams announced that they had signed Michael Johnson to help their Formula One team the first reaction was that the great American athlete would be employed to push their jalopy round the track.

Williams, after all, were the most disappointing of the 12 F1 operations last year. The once dominant team finished ninth, ahead of the three minnows on the circuit. They were the weakest of the midfield outfits, scoring only five points – and four of them came from their departing veteran, Rubens Barrichello.

The car’s tiny gearbox appeared to symbolise the team’s meagre ambition and only three times did one of their cars make it through to Q3 on Saturday afternoon.

However Johnson, four-times winner of Olympic gold and famous for his upright and short-stepping style, has rather been brought in to sharpen up the Williams pit crew.

This may sound about as important as touching up the livery and logos – and Williams certainly have bigger issues to concern them as they work to improve on last year’s desperately disappointing FW33 – but last year Red Bull, followed by Mercedes, were the sharpest operators in the pitlane and, in a sport where fractions are famously vital, this is an area that cannot be ignored.

The problem is that mechanics and engineers are not necessarily renowned for their physical fitness, outside getting down to the Ferret and Firkin for a pint and pie and double chips. Johnson may have his work cut out.

Watch out, then, for the first Williams tyre change in the opening race of the new season, in Melbourne on 18 March; it could be deeply impressive or tummy-slappingly hilarious. But at least the move does win originality points for Williams.

Johnson, who has been following Formula One since 1996 – the year Damon Hill won the world title with Williams – says: “I feel extremely confident in myself and my staff in terms of what we have put together in training methodology and biomechanical efficiency. I don’t think anybody knows it better than us. There is a tremendous amount of biomechanical movement going on in the pit stops so it stands to reason we can make that quicker.”

Johnson, who owns one of Michael Schumacher’s old helmets and was once introduced to a number of drivers by Bernie Ecclestone, the sport’s supremo, warms to his subject at the team’s Oxfordshire headquarters.

“The amount of steps that it is going to take for the guy that has got that tyre and has got to put it on – it makes all the difference in the world which is his lead leg to how many steps he is going to take.

“And the guy with the gun – it jumped out at me immediately that you can do it two different ways. You can take it off the wheel and bring it straight back into your chest or you can take it off and point it upwards to get it out of the way [he looks a little like Clint Eastwood in Dirty Harry at this stage]. What has never been done is to evaluate the guy from a sensory stand-point to see how accurate can he be.”

And what does the guy himself think? Ben Howard, who has been with Williams for three years and works on the left front wheel, says: “I think everybody was excited, but possibly a little bit apprehensive as well. Michael is well known and trains top-level sports people but we’re not professional athletes so there was some nervousness as to what he might make us do.

“To be honest not everyone goes to the gym to train because we use our own activities and hobbies outside of work to keep fit. It’s been good, though, really interesting, and obviously a privilege to be working with someone of his calibre.

“At the track you have teams either side of you doing their practice stops so you’re always watching to see if you can learn anything. We’re fighting each other all the time, in a friendly way, but we’re not going to be showing them any of the new secrets we learn from Michael.”

Johnson is already talking about working with Williams again next year. So how long is his deal? “We’ll be going until it gets done,” he says. But something tells you that this particular job may not feature among his world record times.


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