Red Bull, Sebastian Vettel and Adrian Newey are top F1 team

Thursday, June 20, 2013

12 June 2013Last updated at 21:11 GMT

Red Bull, Sebastian Vettel and Adrian Newey are top F1 team

The break before the British Grand Prix at the end of the month gives us a chance to look back at the season so far after seven of the 19 races and analyse the performance of the teams.
These are the reasons I believe the top six teams in the constructors' championship are where they are - and how I think they can move forward.

RED BULL

Red Bull: 201 points, 3 poles, 4 fastest laps, 3 wins.
Sebastian Vettel: 132 points, 3 poles, 3 fastest laps, 3 wins.
Mark Webber: 69 points, 0 poles, 1 fastest lap, 0 wins.
Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz has very deep pockets, but the team's success is about more than money. Red Bull spend their budget wisely.

Clocking up the points

Sebastian Vettel
Sebastian Vettel has finished in the top four in every race this season, with five podiums in seven events
The key to their recent record was bringing in Adrian Newey, without doubt the inspiration behind this team and any other for which he has worked over the last two decades.
Red Bull have succeeded with Newey in a way McLaren did not because they have given him the space to work in the way that gets the best out of him.
He is chief technical officer, but that doesn't mean he should sit behind a desk and shuffle paperwork around all day. Red Bull have other very competent engineering and system managers who allow Newey to do what he likes - get his hands dirty and think about racing cars.
Would Red Bull perform as well if Newey left? The answer is no. Would they perform as well if team principal Christian Horner was to move on? Probably. He does a very good job at keeping it all together but there are many other people out there who can do that job. There are very few capable of sitting in Newey's hot seat.
Sebastian Vettel is also a major asset.
Anyone who thinks he is not the real deal and only successful because he has the best car is missing the point.
Vettel is part of a big team of people and his feedback has allowed Newey to focus on the development direction required to continually move forward. What impresses me most is that Vettel seems to come back each year mentally stronger than the previous season.
I have compiled some statistics that compare Vettel's career success to date with a few other leading names from down the years, as well as his current main rivals.
RacesPolesFastest lapsWinsAverage (%)
Jim Clark
72
33 (45.8%)
28 (38.9%)
28 (38.9%)
39.8%
Sebastian Vettel
108
39 (36.1%)
18 (16.7%)
29 (26.9%)
26.6%
Ayrton Senna
161
65 (40.4%)
19 (11.8%)
41 (25.5%)
25.9%
Michael Schumacher
306
68 (22.2%)
77 (25.2%)
91 (29.7%)
25.7%
Jackie Stewart
99
17 (17.2%)
15 (15.2%)
27 (27.3%)
19.9%
Lewis Hamilton
116
27 (23.3%)
12 (10.3%)
21 (18.1%)
13.9%
Kimi Raikkonen
181
16 (8.8%)
38 (21.0%)
20 (11.0%)
13.6%
Fernando Alonso
203
22 (10.8%)
19 (9.4%)
32 (15.8%)
12.0%
Felipe Massa
179
17 ( 8.4%)
14 (7.8%)
11 ( 6.1%)
7.4%
Mark Webber
203
11 (5.4%)
15 (7.4%)
9 (4.4%)
5.7%
Jenson Button
235
8 (3.4%)
8 (3.4%)
15 (6.4%)
4.4%
Nico Rosberg
135
4 (3.0%)
4 ( 3.0%)
2 (1.5%)
2.5%
Some drivers have spent their whole career in good cars and some haven't - and Vettel is luckier than most on that front. But even so it is clear he is mixing it with some of the big boys from previous decades.
What do Red Bull do now? More of the same, from an engineering perspective and management style.

FERRARI

Ferrari: 145 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 2 wins.
Fernando Alonso: 96 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 2 wins.
Felipe Massa: 49 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.
This year's Ferrari is a step forward from last year's but they still seem to struggle to get the best out of it in qualifying. And if you are always coming from behind, as Fernando Alonso is in races, it makes the job more difficult.

Keeping in touch

Felipe Massa
Felipe Massa has managed just one podium to team-mate Fernando Alonso's two wins and two second places
From a technical point of view they are in better shape this year and the developments they are bringing to the track seem to be working.
But they are only small developments giving the 0.1-second improvement per race for which every team strives.
To give Alonso a better chance, Ferrari need a step to bring them in line with the fastest team. That will have to be a fairly major aerodynamic package as they are something like 0.5secs off the ultimate pace. That is never easy to achieve mid-season, so they are probably stuck more or less where they are for this year.
In race conditions, though, they have generally been as strong as anyone and they seem to have a handle on how to get the best from the tyres on a consistent basis. This, combined with Alonso's determination, will always bring him big points.
Felipe Massa is inconsistent. When he is good he is good but if there is any aggro around he seems to get in the thick of it too easily. So relying on him for constructors' championship points that will allow them to battle with Red Bull seems unrealistic.
Ferrari need a stronger technical team with more ideas to put on the table. What they are doing now they are doing well, but they need to do more of it.
The best information we have suggests Ferrari is going to be where James Allison ends up now he has left his role as Lotus technical director. I rate Allison very highly and he could be the man to provide that.

MERCEDES

Mercedes: 134 points, 4 poles, 0 fastest laps, 1 win.
Lewis Hamilton: 73 points, 1 pole, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.
Nico Rosberg: 57 points, 3 poles, 0 fastest laps, 1 win.

Points mean prizes

Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes have secured four poles but have managed to convert those into just one win
Mercedes' overall performance is a major turnaround from the previous three seasons - although less so from the corresponding period last year - and bringing in Lewis Hamilton was a statement of intent that success is a must.
With the driver and technical line-up they have, winning races is a minimum - and if they win enough races then the championship will follow.
They are the opposite of Ferrari - fast over one lap but falling away over a race distance. Rear tyre degradation - a problem for the last few seasons - is their Achilles' heel. They seem incapable of making any progress on it.
Sometimes you need to take a step backwards in the short term to go forward overall.
I would suggest a set-up change that sacrifices some of their one-lap performance and then find an overall aerodynamic step that will bring back that lap time in both qualifying and the race.

LOTUS

Lotus: 114 points, 1 poles, 0 fastest laps, 1 win.
Kimi Raikkonen: 88 points, 1 poles, 0 fastest laps, 1 win.
Romain Grosjean: 26 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.

Dropping off the pace

Kimi Raikkonen
Kimi Raikkonen finished in the top two in four of the first five races this season, but crossed the line 10th and ninth in the last two. Romain Grosjean, meanwhile, has not scored in the last three races
Lotus are very similar to Ferrari, in that they struggle to get the tyres working over one lap in qualifying but generally have good race pace.
Technical director James Allison has left. Losing the guy with the vision that got them where they are makes it very difficult to set the development direction and with apparent money problems the funding for this is not going to be easy.
The bigger problem is that if performance drops off this year then Kimi Raikkonen may leave and I don't think Roman Grosjean has what it takes to lead a team. If this happens, as I expect, they will be on the hunt for a driver with the necessary credentials but there aren't many of them around.
For Lotus to keep what they have and improve, they need to find some development money and allow their very competent team of engineers to get their heads down and find more speed from the car in qualifying.
With current component costs, this could mean something in the region of £1m a race but if you want to play with the big boys you have to pay the price.

FORCE INDIA

Force India: 51 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.
Paul di Resta: 34 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.
Adrian Sutil: 17 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.

Di Resta is Mr Consistent

Paul di Resta
Paul di Resta has finished in the points in six of the seven races so far this season and just missed out on a podium in Bahrain
Force India are the first team of what can be classified as the midfield bunch and they are punching above their weight.
Over the last couple of seasons they have developed the car quickly after a slow start. This year they focused on improving their start, so if they can keep the same development rate, it could be their best season in F1 to date.
The car is very good on tyres - in Montreal Paul di Resta opened everyone's eyes by completing 56 competitive laps on one set of medium tyres, a feat most others can only dream of.
They don't have the out-and-out pace of the front-runners but pound-for-pound they are achieving more than most.

MCLAREN

McLaren: 37 points, 0 poles, 1 fastest laps, 0 wins.
Jenson Button: 25 points, 0 poles, 0 fastest laps, 0 wins.
Sergio Perez: 12 points, 0 poles, 1 fastest laps, 0 wins.
McLaren's statistics do not make good reading and the biggest problem is they don't seem to have a clue where they are going.
They are sixth in the constructors' championship, but their budget is that of a front-running team.

Lagging behind

Jenson Button
McLaren have scored 37 points this year and have yet to finish higher than fifth after seven races. At the same point last year, they had 133 points following two victories and four other podiums
If they cannot improve, it will mean a major reduction in prize money - as much as £40m. Finding a sponsor to make up that shortfall will be no easy task.
No team deliberately builds an uncompetitive car. At the launch they were all very happy that it was a step forward and I agreed. I still think the concept is an improvement but the devil is always in the detail and somewhere in there they have lost themselves.
The research they do before signing off components is not showing up the potential problems. They need to look outside the box and reassess how they are looking at their data analysis.
To recover from this in the short term they need someone to stick their head above the parapet and make some changes based more on gut feel than the big in-word, 'data'. How many times this year have I heard, "Well, we have generated lots of data to analyse tonight"?
I have said many times that, in my opinion, the front wing assembly is not current thinking. Until they change this they will get very little - if any - response from their current development direction.
For the longer term, they also need a change in management structure.
McLaren seem from the outside to have the opposite in engineering direction and management style from Red Bull. The car has a different philosophy and it is technical management by committee rather than one visionary leader.
They need a defined leader on the engineering side - someone with vision.
They had that with Newey and let it slip away. They made an offer to Allison this year but it looks like they have missed out on him.
They need someone like that - and when they find him, they need to let him do the job his way.

Murray Walker: F1 commentator diagnosed with cancer


Murray Walker pictured while commentating for the BBC
17 June 2013Last updated at 19:14 GMT

Murray Walker: F1 commentator diagnosed with cancer

Legendary Formula 1 commentator Murray Walker has been diagnosed with cancer.
The 89-year-old said he had a form of lymphatic system  cancer, which was diagnosed during tests after a fall in which he broke his pelvis last month.
"They've caught it incredibly early. It's treatable, the doctors say my condition is mild and I'm very hopeful," Walker said.
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Walker is to have a programme of chemotherapy over the next few months in an attempt to cure the disease.
He has cancelled his plans to attend the British Grand Prix at Silverstone over the weekend of 28-30 June.
"I was looking forward to going to Silverstone, but I have really got to concentrate on getting the chemicals inside me, getting over it and getting back into form as quick as I can," Walker added.
"I fell over on holiday in Germany and fractured my pelvis, which I thought that was pretty rotten luck. But if I had not had that, I would not have had all the blood tests and they would not have found out about the cancer. It was a blessing in disguise."
BBC F1 editor Mark Wilkin said: "I spoke with Murray this afternoon and it's good to hear he's in good spirits. Our thoughts are with him and we're all really hopeful he can make a full recovery."
Walker has become synonymous with F1 over more than 30 years of commentary, first with the BBC and then with ITV.
He retired from full-time commentary after the 2001 US Grand Prix but has continued to work in F1, where he is regarded with great affection and admiration.
Since the BBC regained the television rights to the sport at the start of the 2009 season, he has been involved in a series of features on the BBC Sport website.
These have included Classic F1, F1's greatest drivers and, this year, Murray's Memories.
Murray Walker
Murray Walker enjoys legendary status with British motorsport fans for his eccentric commentary style
As a broadcaster, he is famous for his high-energy commentary style and his propensity to mis-speak in an amusing manner.
He has been a regular feature in Private Eye's "Colemanballs" column and is the subject of a number of websites that have collected his most famous sayings. 
His most famous catchphrase is: "Unless I am very mistaken… and yes, I am very much mistaken."
Walker was also well known for his enthusiastic shout of "Go, go, go, go!" at the start of many grands prix.

Jenson Button: Lewis Hamilton pace will 'shock you all'


Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button
17 June 2013Last updated at 11:07 GMT

Jenson Button: Lewis Hamilton pace will 'shock you all'

Jenson Button says it is only a matter of time before Lewis Hamilton shows his true speed for his Mercedes team and that it will "shock you all".
Hamilton has struggled for pace more than expected compared to team-mate Nico Rosberg since joining Mercedes this year.
But his former McLaren team-mate Button said: "For Lewis, it is the same as it is for all of us - if he does not have a car balance that suits him, then it is not easy.
"And, of course, Nico is fast. But Lewis has not lost his speed. It is still there. He will come back and then he will shock you all."
Button was talking in an interview with the German magazine Auto Motor Und Sport  conducted at the Canadian Grand Prix, the day before Hamilton outqualified Rosberg for the first time in four races.

Hamilton v Rosberg

  • Australia: Hamilton 5th, Rosberg DNF
  • Malaysia: Hamilton 3rd, Rosberg 4th
  • China: Hamilton 3rd, Rosberg DNF
  • Bahrain: Hamilton 5th, Rosberg 9th
  • Spain: Hamilton 12th, Rosberg 6th
  • Monaco: Hamilton 4th, Rosberg 1st
  • Canada: Hamilton 3rd, Rosberg 5th
Button added: "You have to be fair. He has at least scored significantly more points than Nico. Lewis is incredibly fast."
Button was asked whether he thought Mercedes had been helped by the controversial 1,000km tyre test the team did with Pirelli before the Monaco Grand Prix, and for which Mercedes and Pirelli face a hearing of the FIA international tribunal on Thursday.
He said: "Both drivers say no. You have to believe them. Otherwise they would be liars. So I believe them."
Button's McLaren team have had a disappointing year, with a best result of fifth place, but he said it was important to keep trying to develop their current car rather than give up on 2013 and focus on 2014, when F1 will introduce a new engine formula and some revisions to the chassis rules.
"The cars in 2014 are slightly different, but we must first understand the current car to make a step forward in the car for next year," he said. "And also we want to win races this year."
He said he was looking forward to next year's introduction of 1.6-litre V6 turbos with extensive energy recovery, which will replace the current 2.4-litre naturally aspirated V8s.
"2014 will be completely different for all of us," he said. "Already this year, every driver has to learn a whole lot about how a Formula 1 car works and how to take care of the tyres. This is bad for me because I've always worked on such things.
"Next year is again a lot of new things: The new powertrain, the new aerodynamics, such as the Kers (energy recovery) and how the turbo works.
"We get power from three different sources (the engine, the energy recovery and the turbo). The speeds will be unfamiliar.
"It is probably the biggest change we've had in Formula 1. So we have to cope."

Mercedes did not get permission to take part in F1 tyre test, says FIA


Lewis Hamilton
20 June 2013Last updated at 15:09 GMT

Mercedes did not get permission to take part in F1 tyre test, says FIA

Mercedes did not get permission to take part in the test in which they are accused of breaking Formula 1's rules, according to governing body the FIA.
Mercedes and Pirelli are facing the FIA's international tribunal over athree-day 1,000km tyre test last month.
FIA counsel Mark Howard said Mercedes did ask in general terms about using a 2013 car at the test.
But he said any permission given was conditional on the other teams being informed, which they were not.
Howard said: "There was no attempt whatsoever by Mercedes to involve the other teams in order to ensure that no perception of an advantage was obtained."
But Mercedes' counsel Paul Harris said Mercedes could not have broken the rules because they did not conduct the test.
He added: "The Pirelli test was not a test undertaken by Mercedes. It is irrefutable it is a test undertaken by Pirelli."
Pirelli's counsel Dominique Dumas argued that as a supplier the company was not subject to the FIA's authority or jurisdiction.
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Eddie Jordan and Ross Brawn
Mercedes test based on 'privacy not secrecy' - Ross Brawn at the Canadian GP
The FIA said the evidence would be re-read on Thursday before the publishing of the verdict on Friday.
The tribunal heard that Mercedes sporting director Ron Meadows spoke to FIA race director Charlie Whiting on 2 May to ask whether testing with a 2013 car was permissible. Team principal Ross Brawn then made a similar enquiry in a telephone call later that day.
Howard, for the FIA, said: "Whiting was asked a general and non-specific question - the general question on the permissibility of using a 2013 car.
"His preliminary response was that such a test would comply with article 22 [of the sporting regulations] providing the purpose was for Pirelli to test its tyre and he would check."
Whiting's advice from the FIA legal department was that it could be possible to allow a team to use a 2013 car to test, but it would be subject to Pirelli inviting all the other teams to test and to demonstrate it had done so. This did not happen.
Howard said Whiting told Brawn about the FIA's legal position but added that it was not binding.
Howard added: "What is very odd about all of this is that, on the basis of the telephone calls, both Mercedes and Pirelli went ahead without getting back to Mr Whiting and making clear precisely ultimately what they were intending to do."
He added: "Without the knowledge, consent and participation of other competitors, Mercedes and Pirelli may have engaged in activity that was prejudicial to the competition."
Howard also said that Mercedes could not prove their claims they did not gain an advantage from the test.
Brawn insisted that while it was "inevitable" Mercedes would have gained some knowledge from the test it would not have been a competitive advantage because they did not know what tyres they were testing.
"We didn't know what the tyres were; we didn't know what the detail objectives were of what Pirelli were doing," he said.
Mercedes argued that if their test was illegal so was one done a few weeks previously by Ferrari with a 2011 car.
Harris, for Mercedes, said: "We argue their [Ferrari] car followed substantially with the regulations...
"There was only half [a second] difference between the 2011 cars and 2013 [Ferrari] cars, showing the changes between 2011 and 2013 are minuscule in terms of performance."
Mercedes said it regretted - and apologised for - the decision to have race drivers Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg wear plain black helmets at the test.
"We had our reasons," said Harris. "It was about the lack of bodyguard and security personnel. We do acknowledge that this part of the test aroused suspicions and it is regrettable."
Pirelli cited the case against former Renault team boss Flavio Briatore - whose FIA ban from motorsport for fixing the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix was overturned by the French courts - as evidence that as a supplier/third party they cannot be subject to the regulations.
Harris later added: "We acted in good faith. If there is to be any sanction it has to be a minor one taking that into consideration."‬
The FIA said in response that Pirelli's contract with the governing body made it clear it was bound by the F1 regulations.
A guilty verdict for Mercedes or Pirelli could have far-reaching consequences.
Pirelli is considering suing F1's governing body the FIA if the company is hit with a heavy penalty.
And Mercedes may feel it would have to consider its F1 future if the company's integrity is impugned in any way.

Premier League fixtures: Man Utd, Chelsea, Man City openers


Michael Carrick and Rio Ferdinand of Manchester United
19 June 2013Last updated at 08:33 GMT

Premier League fixtures: Man Utd, Chelsea, Man City openers

Manchester United manager David Moyes has been handed a first match in charge at Swansea as the full 2013-14 football fixtures are announced.
Jose Mourinho starts his second spell at Chelsea with a home game against newly promoted Hull on 17 August.

Opening Barclays Premier League games

Arsenal v Aston Villa
Chelsea v Hull
Crystal Palace v Tottenham
Liverpool v Stoke
Man City v Newcastle
Norwich v Everton
Sunderland v Fulham
Swansea v Man Utd
West Brom v Southampton
West Ham v Cardiff
Manuel Pellegrini's first game in charge of Manchester City is against Newcastle at the Etihad Stadium.
Following their promotion from the Championship, Cardiff travel to West Ham and Crystal Palace host Tottenham.
Relegated QPR start life in the Championship with a home game against Sheffield Wednesday on 3 August.
In Scotland, Celtic begin the defence of their SPL title with a home game against Ross County. Rangers begin life in the Scottish Second Division at home to Brechin.
Meanwhile, the FA Cup final has returned to its place at the end of the domestic season, with the match scheduled for 17 May, a week after the end of the Premier League season. The 2010 season was the last time the match took this slot.
New Everton boss Roberto Martinez takes his team to Norwich on the opening weekend, while Liverpool host Mark Hughes' Stoke at Anfield.
Arsenal start with a home game against Aston Villa, Sunderland host Fulham and Southampton travel to West Brom.

Moyes's first five league games

17 August: Swansea (away)
24 August: Chelsea (home)
31 August: Liverpool (away)
14 September: Crystal Palace (home)
21 September: Manchester City (away)
After the game at Swansea, Moyes's United host Chelsea at Old Trafford before the former Everton manager returns to Merseyside to face Liverpool the following weekend.
City host United in the first Manchester derby of the season on the weekend of 21 September and they travel to Old Trafford for the return game on the weekend of 1 March.
Cardiff's first Barclays Premier League derby against Swansea takes place at the Cardiff City Stadium on 2 November and the Welsh sides meet again at the Liberty Stadium on 8 February.
On Boxing Day, Chelsea host Swansea, Manchester United head to Hull and Manchester City face Liverpool at the Etihad Stadium.
Arsenal entertain Cardiff on New Year's Day, Manchester United face Tottenham at Old Trafford, Pellegrini's City travel to Swansea and Chelsea head to Southampton.
The season ends on 11 May, with Manchester United travelling to Southampton, Chelsea at Cardiff and Arsenal at Norwich, while Manchester City host West Ham.
Club-by-club fixtures for the new season:
Follow your football team with BBC Sport throughout the summer. To read the day's transfer rumours, visit our gossip column.
For all the breaking football transfer news follow Sportsday livethroughout the day.
For a list of confirmed transfers you can check out our transfers page.
 
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