• ‘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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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…

The exceptionally stunning “Waltz Darling” from Malcolm McLaren & The Bootzilla Orchestra album release “House of the Blue Danube”.

Vodafone McLaren Mercedes Formula 1 (MP4-22) vs. Mercedes Benz CLK 63 AMG Black Series vs. DTM Mercedes vs. Mercedes Benz C350 at Silverstone Circuit Bernd Mayländer, Fernando Alonso, Jamie Green, Susie Stoddart

Video Rating: 4 / 5

Cine experimental
Video Rating: 4 / 5

Great footage of Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button arriving for the opening of McLaren London!

Ex-Stig drives McLaren 12C vs Ferrari 458, Porsche GT3 RS, Mercedes SLS, Lamborghini Gallardo Performante, Audi R8 V10 – click here for more information, wallpapers and videos of the McLaren MP4-12C – www.carmagazine.co.uk

A song from KILL BILL 2.
Video Rating: 4 / 5

McLaren’s Jenson Button believes that despite being quickest in practice in Japan, there are areas of the car’s performance that “need improvement” if they are to challenge the race pace of Red Bull. The 31-year-old Briton is second in the driver standings and is the only person who can prevent Sebastian Vettel from becoming the youngest back-to-back world champion, although the German needs only one point from the season’s remaining five races to win the title.
Video Rating: 5 / 5

Jenson drives the MP4-23 Formula 1 car and does some doughnuts and burnouts through Deansgate in Manchester. It won’t go in gear and he has to get out and walk at around 1:20 Sorry about the shakeyness.

• Driver pledges future to British-based Formula One team
• ‘I’ve never felt more at home at a team than I do here’

Jenson Button has pledged his future to McLaren by agreeing a new “multi-year contract” with the British-based Formula One team.

The 2009 world champion joined McLaren at the start of the 2010 season, recording two wins on the way to finishing fifth in the championship.

This season the 31-year-old has enjoyed the upper hand on his team-mate Lewis Hamilton and lies second in the drivers’ championship behind the seemingly impregnable Sebastian Vettel with five races remaining.

The team said in a statement: “Jenson’s re-signing is a move that will strengthen Vodafone McLaren Mercedes’s long-term stability as it continues to grow and develop its race-winning form into further world championship successes.”

Button, who famously won the 2009 title with Brawn GP after ending 2008 with his F1 career in tatters following the withdrawal of Honda, said he was delighted to commit his future to the team.

“I’ve never felt more at home at a team than I do at Vodafone McLaren Mercedes,” said Button. “I’ve won four of the greatest races of my life here, I’m currently lying second in the drivers’ world championship, and I feel that I’m driving better than ever.

“You can only achieve that with the right level of support – and I truly believe that the passion and determination to win are stronger here at Vodafone McLaren Mercedes than anywhere else.

“As a grand prix driver, those are incredibly powerful feelings to share and be part of, and they’ve only reinforced my desire to commit my long-term future to this team.

“I’ve made no secret of my ambition to continue winning races and world championships, and I fully believe this is the place where I can achieve those aims.”


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