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Red Bull’s F1 2011 champion Sebastian Vettel and team driver Mark Webber both take to the streets of Milton Keynes in their F1 cars to wow the crowds with plenty of street racing, burnouts and donuts. This video was taken in the donut area barely more than a meter from the cars as they perform. Check out the epic donut from Vettel half way in.

This is from Nigel Mansell’s IndyCar Diary

Please Read: Another milestone reached, 30 videos. And what better way to mark the occasion than to pay tribute to one of the most entertaining drivers of all time, Nigel Mansell? While I’m certainly not a fan of Mansell, you’d have to be a complete fool to write off his talents and abilities, even in 2005 and 2006 he was still quick in the the GP Masters Series. He is regarded not only as one of the quickest drivers of all time but also as one of the best overtakers, a point proven by his uncanny control offline while flinging it down the inside of multiple great drivers and his spellbinding moves around the outside at 200mph+. Whatever way you cut it, Mansell is a true great of the sport. Thanks for watching, hope you enjoyed it, please subscribe.

Jann Mardenborough was a shy Cardiff teenager who loved his Gran Turismo computer game. So imagine his parents’ surprise when he won a place in the Dubai 24 Hour race

Jann Mardenborough grew up dreaming of driving racing cars. It was an infatuation that had begun with the gift of a Matchbox toy as a baby, but which he pursued with such quiet intensity that even his father Steve discovered only a year ago that motor racing – not football – was Jann’s first love. Jann was quiet. To his mother Lesley-Anne he was “not particularly outgoing and quite a home boy”. Often too shy to answer the front door, he’d spend time in his bedroom, where he played video games. Yet this reserved, awkward teenager from Cardiff had a big surprise in store for his parents.

At eight, Jann thought he might have a chance of making it as a racing driver. Steve, an ex-professional footballer, had taken him to a kart circuit, and before long the owner took notice and told Steve his son was a natural. But finance proved the stumbling block. The local track closed down and the nearest alternative was in Bristol. “I stopped when I was 11,” says Jann, “because it got too expensive.”

He returned quietly to his bedroom, where he took to the next best thing – virtual racing on the video game Gran Turismo. It was the perfect release for the racing-obsessed teen: a singular pursuit offering a test of individual skill in which he could lose himself.

“One day,” says Steve, “he came downstairs and said: ‘Dad, I’ve qualified.’ I said: ‘Qualified for what?’”

In the middle of 2011, Mardenborough had entered an online competition on Gran Turismo 5 that offered one final shot at the real thing. Out of 90,000 other virtual racers, he made it into the top eight in Europe and won the chance to test himself against other gamers in a real car at Brands Hatch. That he had kept it to himself for so long was entirely in character for a boy who did not like to make a fuss. “At that point we had no idea what it was,” admits Steve.

Seven months later, in January this year, Mardenborough, who’d never set foot in a racing car, was at the wheel of a serious piece of kit in the Dubai 24 Hour race – and at the beginning of what appears to be a very exciting career.

The video-game franchise in which Mardenborough began his journey, Sony’s Gran Turismo, was originally designed by Japan’s Kazunori Yamauchi in 1997. In an industry often (unfairly) accused of infantilism, Gran Turismo stands out for its quest to mirror a physical rather than fantastical reality. This is a racing “simulator” and its success (more than 60m sales worldwide) owes everything to how well it measures up to the real thing. Its sports cars may be but virtual creations, yet everything about them is designed to behave as closely as possible to the genuine article.

The level of accuracy now available in computer modelling means Formula One drivers, as a matter of course, do laps on simulators in preparation for races. Lewis Hamilton himself admitted to learning tracks during his rookie F1 year playing PlayStation with his brother.

Visually, the game is stunning. In cockpit mode, with a virtual dashboard at the bottom of the screen, the bonnet and track stretching to the fore and the claustrophobic confines of the interior rendered on the periphery, there is little or no conscious need to suspend disbelief. The pedal goes down and players are “in” the game – unconsciously leaning into corners and breathless while trying to thread through a pack of competitors.

But however accurately the game mimics reality, there is one crucial difference: simulations still lack movement – the sensation of the car reacting, grip felt through the seat of the pants, acceleration that compresses the body, and the forces generated in cornering.

Sensing a marketing opportunity, Sony teamed up with Nissan to form the GT Academy in 2008. It was a one-off project created to answer a simple question: could you take a gamer and put them in a real racing car? A 23-year-old Spaniard, Lucas Ordoñez, who was just beginning a business degree, won the online and then real-world challenge. After intensive training, he raced as one of a team of drivers in the 2009 Dubai 24.

With the marketing objectives achieved, it could have ended there. Except, much as he was just a gamer, Ordoñez was good. “I’m not a nervous guy, but I was physically sick with worry that we were sending this guy out to his death,” said Nissan’s Darren Cox.

But the way the driver dealt with a problem calmed his nerves. “I remember hearing the radio: ‘Left rear puncture, coming into the pits; please change left rear.’ He’s in a 400 horsepower Nissan 350Z, he’s got a crash helmet on, he’s got the car moving around underneath him, but he’s calm. And at that point I knew we had something,” says Cox.

The programme was extended to see if this unorthodox method could uncover further talent. French gamer Jordan Tresson won a GT Academy place in 2010 and Ordoñez himself went on to race for the professional Signature Nissan team, taking a podium at sports car racing’s most important meeting, the Le Mans 24 Hours, in 2011. From this came the concept of a car driven only by computer gamers entering this year’s Dubai 24. Two new candidates were needed to be brought up to speed and the academy opened its online competition again. Which was how Jann Mardenborough found it.

The transition from computer-generated racing to hard, cold, dangerous steel ought to be both difficult and potentially terrifying, yet for Mardenborough it was instinctive: “It felt completely normal,” he says. How to read racing lines – correct entrances and exits to corners; hand-eye co-ordination and a visual sense, plus the ability to look ahead of the car into breaking zones, had all been learned in the bedroom. “I’d never power-steered a car before,” says Mardenborough. “I had only ever done it in a game. I was controlling it just with the throttle and it was completely natural to me.”

He passed the test at Brands Hatch and later, at Silverstone, beat 11 other finalists to the place as a GT Academy driver. “My mouth was hurting because I was grinning from ear to ear so much,” he says. “I met Bob [Neville], my team manager, straight after. That was the moment I realised I was a racing driver.” Mardenborough was placed on a driver-development programme at Silverstone. In six months he and the winner of the US GT Academy, Bryan Heitkotter, gained their international racing licences, a process that normally takes three years.

The gamers are young, malleable and without ego. Even the lack of racing experience has a positive side-effect. Mardenborough’s mentor Rob Jenkinson, a former racer himself, was sceptical of the academy concept but became convinced after seeing it in action. He explains that drivers entering through the traditional route have longer to pick up bad habits, sometimes taking years to correct. “With this, in six months we eliminate mistakes,” he says. “We make good decisions on their behalf immediately.”

What cannot be eliminated is the danger. Accidents now mean more than just hitting the restart button. “I know there’s a dangerous side to it, but it didn’t really cross my mind,” Mardenborough says, despite having rolled the car at a race in Holland.

The Dubai MotorCity circuit forms part of Dubailand, which was to be a vast theme park stretching into the desert, featuring Tiger Woods’s first golf-course design. Today sand blows across empty lots and cranes loom over half-finished buildings, exactly as they were in 2008 when the financial crisis stopped the project in its tracks – reminders of the dangers of expecting too much, too soon. It’s a lesson not lost on the gamers and their RJN Motorsport team.

Mardenborough bounces through the paddock and pit lane on his toes, ready for the Dubai 24 Hour race. He shares with Hamilton not only the sculpted good looks but the calm self-assurance the McLaren driver displays. There’s no sign of the shy teenager. Motor racing is all about focus, and before he steps into the car Mardenborough has it in spades.

For the first part of the race, the crew and drivers are struggling with mechanical gremlins, and tension suffuses the coarse desert air.

Endurance racing is like no other. It is a bewildering assault on the senses. The noise never abates and the cars spread out until there seems to be an endless stream streaking past, the atmosphere thick with the smell of rubber and oil. Each team races flat-out stints interspersed with furiously quick pit stops, looking to eke out tiny advantages that over a full 24 hours can make the difference between winning and losing. Through all this, the overriding aim is to at least finish the race – to see the chequered flag come down – and fortunately the early fears that technical problems might signal game over are dismissed as the car settles down into quick, trouble-free racing through the night and into the morning.

With an hour and a half to go, one driving stint remains and now, in third place, Neville chooses Mardenborough to take the wheel. Having raced so hard for so long, a mistake at this stage would be heartbreaking. The pressure is immense. Mardenborough brings the car home with ease and the team is on the podium.

“When I was 17 or so I was afraid to answer the phone,” he tells me afterwards. “I’ve come a huge, long way.” His mother calls it a “fairy story”. Perhaps, as the academy opens its doors again on Tuesday to search for further young talent, it is also a fable for the modern age – where video gaming isn’t all bad.

Just over two weeks after the race Nissan confirmed Mardenborough as its full-time driver for the season in the Blancpain Endurance Series – a full-scale, six-race, professional racing competition that visits some of the most famous circuits in Europe. It might be the start of something great. “Jann’s 20 and there’s a very wide sphere ahead of him,” says Neville. “We have to just keep the lid on him…”


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Sport: Motor sport | guardian.co.uk

Sky Sports’ F1 team are joined by Red Bull driver Mark Webber who discusses the Exhaust evolution & how the changes to the RB8 will affect this season. *NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED*
Video Rating: 5 / 5

• Ferrari tweet: ‘An off track from Fernando hampered session’
• Alonso had recorded the fastest time of the morning

Fernando Alonso has driven his Ferrari into a barrier during the third and final day of Formula One testing at the Mugello circuit, but appears to have escaped uninjured.

Ferrari wrote on their Twitter feed: “An off track from Fernando hampered morning’s session. At least two hours to repair the damages. It is a shame but that’s testing!”

Alonso had recorded the fastest time of the morning session when he lost control of his F2012 and damaged a wing on a track owned by Ferrari, near Scarperia in Tuscany, central Italy.

These are the first in-season tests in Formula One in four years.

The next race is the Spanish Grand Prix on 13 May. Alonso, who won the Malaysian Grand Prix, the season’s second race, is fifth in the standings.


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For anyone who wants further details go to www.institutequarterly.com A test by the FIA Institute to find out what happens when you fire a Formula One wheel and tyre into a jet fighter canopy at 225km/h
Video Rating: 5 / 5

• Win moves Stoner to within four points of Lorenzo in standings
• Britain’s Cal Crutchlow finishes in fourth spot in Jerez

The world champion, Casey Stoner, held off a determined challenge from Yamaha’s Jorge Lorenzo to claim victory in the second race of the season at the Spanish Grand Prix in Jerez on Sunday.

Stoner started from the second row after the rain-affected qualifying on Saturday but the Australian rider took advantage of the drier conditions for the race and soon snatched the lead from his Honda team‑mate Dani Pedrosa.

Lorenzo, another Spaniard who won the season-opener in Qatar and started from pole position again on Sunday, pursued Stoner doggedly but could not find a way past and his challenge faded on the final lap.

“At the beginning of the race we didn’t get such a good start and it was really difficult to stay out of trouble and try to stay with the front,” Stoner said. “When I started to push I noticed that myself and Jorge were able to take a little bit of an advantage over the others so I continued to go and continued to push. It was a very, very difficult race today but to hold on for the entire race in near-enough to dry conditions was really a great day for me.”

Stoner, who moved to within four points of Lorenzo in the championship standings, finished in a time of 45min 33.897sec, with the 2010 champion Lorenzo 0.947 behind. Pedrosa was third, just over two seconds adrift of Lorenzo, with Britain’s Cal Crutchlow fourth, just under half a second further back.

Pol Espargaró of Spain clinched his debut Moto2 victory in front of his home crowd earlier on Sunday in a race cut short by rain, while the Italian rookie Romano Fenati showed a glimpse of his potential with a maiden Moto3 win after almost half the field crashed out.


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MERCEDES GP PETRONAS driver Nico Rosberg can shift gears up to 3100 times during a Formula One race. He is able to change gears within a split second. In this feature, Nico and Ross Brawn explain how, and give an insight into how a Formula One gearbox really works.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Chris’ website www.christopherzoechling.com Chris is in the blue # 26 car Round 4 of season 2 Speed Car series in Dubai. Christopher Zoechling clocked the fastest lap during qualifying putting him on pole position in front of Jean Alesi and other famous and well known F1 drivers. Enjoy the race guys :D
Video Rating: 5 / 5

• Marketing expert says Formula One will not be affected
• TV viewing figures up for Bahrain Grand Prix

Formula One’s controversial weekend in Bahrain is unlikely to cause lasting damage to the sport, the 12 competing teams, their sponsors or viewing figures, according to a marketing expert with a background in F1.

Sunday’s grand prix was a public relations disaster for the sport, with none of the teams happy to compete against a background of violence as protesters against the ruling Khalifa family took full advantage of the strong media presence. Some teams even got caught up with the protests.

But Jim Wright, who has worked for Williams and Virgin (now Marussia) and has been finding marketing and sponsorship for 25 years, said on Monday: “I think many positives will come out of the Bahrain Grand Prix. I’m not commenting on the FIA and the commercial rights holder and the decision to go there but most teams handled a difficult decision very well. On that basis I think a lot of people would be pleased with that and happy to get involved with them.

“Some damage was done to Formula One, and some of the comments that were made out there were crass, but it’s nothing that can’t be turned around. Obviously there are areas of Bahrain where there are problems. But once the decision was made to go there everyone in the sport got behind it, which was right and proper.”

Another marketing man, who did not want to be named, said: “As an investible sport nothing has changed. Those who have an affinity with Formula One will still do so. As an entity on the track it is still strong. Whether it should look at events of the past week is another matter.”

The race may have been a blatant political exercise by the government of the Gulf state, who had posters put up around the island – including the Sakhir circuit – featuring the slogan “UniF1ed – One Nation in Celebration”, but even the resulting violence, which led to the death of one protester two days before the race, did not deter TV viewers from tuning in on Sunday. Sky Sports’ coverage of the event was third among the top 20 pay-TV programmes on Sunday and the BBC’s highlights were the fourth most successful among terrestrial channel offerings.

The BBC reported a 15-minute peak of 3.4m viewers for Saturday’s qualifying highlights and a 4.1m peak for the race , more than the peaks of 3.2m who watched the highlights of the first two races in Australia and Malaysia.

Bernie Ecclestone, the commercial rights holder, will not need any encouragement to keep Bahrain on the calendar next year, since the race brings him m.

Meanwhile the McLaren pair, Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button, are mystified by their lack of pace on Sunday, as Red Bull returned to the top of the drivers’ and constructors’ championships.

“It is hard to understand why we are slow,” said Button. “We seemed to be the only team over the first three races that was consistently competitive. In the races we were pretty damned good and in the last race I had a chance at victory, and in the second race, and the first one I won. But we were miles off [in Bahrain].”

Hamilton said: “We have a lot of work to do. There is no quick fix. We really have to make some big improvements to the car because the qualifying pace is there but the race pace, at least today, was miles off.”


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