Saturday, January 30, 2010

International GT Open season taking shape

Post a comment GT Open - Kessel Racing - Spa-Francorchamps - Marcel ten Caat

© Planetlemans - Marcel ten Caat

With all the announcements coming from the Le Mans Series, the American Le Mans Series and the various SRO championships one seems to forget that Europe has another major GT2/GT3 series, the International GT Open. And that series had quite some interesting updates as well.

After changes on the provisional calendar meant that the Imola and Portimão swapped places and the proposed Donington round was replaced with a weekend at Brands Hatch GT Sport announced two pre-season collective test sessions. On March 2-3 the teams will have the opportunity to test their cars on the Barcelona circuit, with the second two-day session taking place on March 25-26 at the Spa-Francorchamps circuit in Belgium.

GT Sport meanwhile expects enough cars to run separate Super GT (GT2) and GTS (GT3) races on Sunday at most race weekends. In recent weeks several British, French and German teams have shown their interest in competing in the International GT Open series, mostly due to the fact that little is known about the 2010 FIA GT2 European Championship.

One of the first new arrivals for the 2010 season is CRS Racing. Having announced a two-car entry for the Le Mans Series the British squad will also field two cars in GT Open. One Ferrari F430 GT2 will be entered for team owner Chris Niarchos (CAN) and Tim Mullen (GBR), while the second car will be driven by Klaas Hummel (NED) and Chris Goodwin (GBR).

2009 GTS champions, Philipp Peter (AUT) and Michal Broniszewski (POL) will move up into a Kessel Racing Ferrari F430 GT2. The Swiss team is also looking at running a second GT2 car in the championship, as well as its GT3 Ferrari 430s.

Another International GT Open regular is Villois Racing. The Italian team will return to the series to defend its GTS Team Championship with a pair of Aston Martin DBRS9 GT3 cars. Team owner Chicco Villois was unable to confirm any drivers for his cars yet, but did reveal that his team is also looking into the options of running an Aston Martin Vantage GT2. Talks with potential drivers and sponsors for all of his cars are still underway.

The most recent addition to the International GT Open field was British GT team RPM. It will enter its Ford GT for Alex Mortimer (GBR) and Peter Bamford (GBR). “I wanted to stage another full time campaign in Europe” said team owner Robin Mortimer, “and the GT Open is a perfect opportunity and I am sure we have a strong package”. With Alex Mortimer, who won the title in British GT and who won races in FIA GT3, Peter Bamford, a race winner in GT Open, and the Matech-built Ford GT he is right about having a strong package.

All the season dates:

2-3 March // Circuit de Catalunya, Montmelò (Spain) - Testing
25-26 March // Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium) – Testing

16-18 April // Autódromo Internacional do Algrave, Portimão (Portugal)
30 April – 2 May // Nürburgring GP Circuit (Germany)
21-23 May // Autodromo Enzo & Dino Ferrari, Imola (Italy)
25-27 June // Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (Belgium)
9-11 July // Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours (France)
3-5 September // Brands Hatch Grand Prix Circuit (England)
1-3 October // Autodromo Nazionale di Monza (Italy)
29-31 October // Circuit de Catalunya, Montmelò (Spain)

F1: Good Week - Bad Week

We're into launch mode ahead of the countdown to February testing and though Ferrari are making confident noises about the F10 there are rumours swirling round the Italian media...

Good Week: Ferrari launched their stunning new F10 car in Maranello and beat McLaren by a day. "This championship will be very important for us," said team boss Stefano Domenicali. "The last championship, for different reasons, was not very positive, that is why we are dealing with this one looking to be competitive - and this is what Ferrari deserves to have." On paper, the combination of Alonso and a car that has had more development time than all its major rivals should be quick out of the box...

Bad Week: ...but according to The Times newspaper, things aren't looking quite so rosy behind the scenes in Maranello. They report that "rumours are sweeping the Italian media that the performance estimates for the machine are not as good as the team were hoping for and that a "B-spec" version is being prepared to try to move it a stage farther on." Added to that they couldn't even shake it down at Fiorano when they wanted to because of the weather.It may be more difficult to see teams' true pace in testing this year. When testing begins in earnest next week, the huge volume of fuel they could be carrying means that test times will be far less revealing.

Good Week: Argentina got their first serious F1 driver since Norberto Fontana this week. Or should that be since Carlos Reutemann? Jose Maria Lopez has got some big bucks behind him for his first season with USF1. If the sport is second only to soccer with Argentinians then let's hope he does well.

Bad Week: Campos Meta still haven't had the cash injection they were hoping for to boost their confidence of making the 2010 grid. Italian chassis manufacturers Dallara have successfully crash-tested the car they are building for Adrian Campos's team, but presumably the bill for it remains unpaid. Campos revealed that Bruno Senna is not a pay-to-drive driver, so he must have been counting on the Senna name to lure in a major sponsor.

Good Week: The new McLaren MP4-25 looks stunning - not as pretty as the Ferrari, but an automotive work of art nonetheless. If only the designers could give the cars proper rear wings. Interesting to see that the design team have finally given in and copied former employee Adrian Newey's shark's fin engine cover.

Bad Week: Red Bull admitted that in 2009 they lost vital early ground by not launching their car sooner. They announced this week that they have already lost two weeks on Mercedes, Ferrari and McLaren by debuting the car on February 10th and skipping next week's Valencia test. Groundhog day anybody?

Good Week: Silverstone announced they are confident that the new modified 'Arena' circuit they are building for the 2010 Moto GP race in June will be available for the F1 race in July.

Bad Week: Singapore admitted that they are still not satisfied with their race track and are looking to shorten the distance to speed up the lap time. The zig-zag from Turns Seven to Nine is the most likely candidate for the chop which organisers believe could be turned into a less challenging 90-degree left-hander around the War Memorial, instead of inside it. And presumably the shorter the lap distance the less they'll money they'll have to bung in the meter for all that electricity (plus replacement bulbs)

Good Week: Nico Rosberg says he will have parity of equipment and treatment at Mercedes: "to be very honest, recently I had a lot of discussions with Norbert and Ross and I'm very, very confident and comfortable that we will both have the same opportunities, same car, same everything. So that's fantastic. "

Bad Week: Rosberg may think that, but here's what Martin Whitmarsh revealed when talking about the possibility of Button and Hamilton taking points off each other in their fight against Michael Schumacher."I think we have got two drivers who are very honest, and very open. They both want to beat each other, and I would be worried if they didn't. But I think it is going to be clean, it is going to be open and it is going to be co-operative. Inevitably, if they are nip and tuck and are taking points from each other, if you are fighting a one-man team, then it becomes difficult."So clearly MW thinks the 'parity' angle is just lip service.

Good Week: Fernando Alonso showed another side to his personality at the Ferrari F10 launch in Maranello this week. We know he's a superb driver and athlete, but he also revealed himself to be a clairvoyant. We may be sitting here at the end of January, but already Fernando has seen ahead and knows what will happen in the month ahead. "We have the best technicians in the world. The work we're doing in February, with Felipe's and my suggestions on the car, makes me really confident as far as the first race is concerned.

Coulda, Shoulda, Woulda

updated: Jan 30, 2010, 8:51 AM

By David Powdrell

You ever kick yourself for missing a great financial opportunity? I seem to do it all the time. Coulda, shoulda woulda hung on to the old house back in 1981, coulda shoulda woulda bought Apple stock at the initial offering price.

My biggest regret, however, involves a car. An old car.

Back in 1975 while a student at the University Colorado business school, the class assignment was to research and hypothetically invest $10,000 in something interesting, something different and something that brought you joy.

I chose a 1964 Ferrari 275 GTB. I've always had a love for rolling art in fire engine red.

I'm 55 now and have never owned a Ferrari. But my wife recently bid and won an auction item, the opportunity to ride to Ojai in a shiny red 1967 Ferrari, one of Jack Bianchi's incredible cars.

The roar of a Ferrari engine is explosive. There are few interior amenities; no soda can holders, no CD player, and the gauges are small. Like a fighter jet from an earlier era. It's an experience I'll never forget.

I don't know what the car sells for today because they're rarely available for sale. But by the estimates I've heard, a good quality 1964 275GTB would fetch something in excess of $750,000 today.

Oh well on the investment. But I will still always stop and stand still when I hear that unique sound of an old Ferrari coming down the street. If it's red, I'll smile really big.

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New Formula 1 rules see cars changing dramatically

Formula One will be quite different in 2010 thanks to a number of changes to the rules. The Kinetic Energy Recovery System is gone, front tires will be narrower (from 270mm to 245mm) and most significantly, there will be no refueling during races which will mean fuel tanks will need to be roughly three times larger than 2009. The changes have bred a different size and shape of car, as was evidenced over the last two days when we saw the first of the serious contender’s cars – the 2010 McLaren MP4-25 of Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton and the Ferrari F10 of Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso. Demonstrating the drawing power of the Prancing Horse, Ferrari attracted an audience of three million unique visitors to its web site for the launch. The season gets underway tomorrow when …

The first test of the season is scheduled for Circuit de la Comunitat Valenciana Ricardo Tormo tomorrow, February 1 and we’ll see the majority of the cars for the first time.

With in-race refueling banned, all cars will need significantly larger fuel-tanks and whereas most race stragety during the last few years has focused on fuel stop strategy, and leapfrogging drivers in the stops, races will become much more dependent on tyre strategy from now on, as no-one will know when the tyre changes will occur.

With no refueling through fixed width nossles, pitstops will become significantly quicker and we’ll see some lightning pit work, with four tyres being changed in under four seconds.

Though more race cars on the grid will mean slightly different qualifying rules (eight cars will be cut in Q1 and Q2, leaving ten to fight out Q3), all qualifying will be done on light fuel loads and then everyone will fill their cars to the maxium for the race.

This will mean that all cars will be very heavy and much slower at the start of races, and as none of these cars have been tested on track before now, the full effects of this enormous weight increase are not yet clear. Almost certainly, we’ll see a major impact on tyre wear, and brake longevity.

Other changes which have impacted the teams include narrower front tyres, the banning of aerodynamic hubcaps and the banning of wheel rim-heaters.

Tyre-warming blankets will still be permitted, but the inner core that heats the wheel rim will make tyre warm-up far more critical in 2010, particularly given the weight teams will be starting with on the grid.

The final major change in the car rules has been that the minimum weight of cars has been increased from 605kg to 620kg for 2010, which will give teams the opportunity to move ballast around the car to give optimum weight distribution.

One other factor which should see some desperate driving moves in the latter part of races has been the reordering of the points system, which now runs all the way to tenth place, but rewards a win with five extra points over second, with a similar margin to third. Hence instead of last year’s 10, 8, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1 point distribution to the top eight finishers, this year will see the winner take 25 points, with second getting 20 and third awarded 15 points. The next seven finishers will score 10, 8, 6, 5, 3, 2 and 1 points respectively.

Fernando Alonso was the focus of most attention at the Ferrari launch, and surprisingly, when asked about the likelihood of who will win the championship, Alonso commented, "every season is exciting and interesting at the start; even last year I was very confident. It’s the same this year, although there are the expectations regarding Schumacher’s comeback, which is very good for F1, which might be well received by TV viewers. I think that there will be two teams fighting for the Drivers’ Title and two for the Constructors’ Title. Let’s hope we’ll be there. Winning the title. I’m not making a bet here, right now everything is too open.”

Alonso’s prediction is interesting, in that the book makers, the most accurate assessors of the odds, believe there will be three (Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes), maybe even four teams (Red Bull) fighting for the constructors title and five serious contenders for the drivers title (Hamilton, Alonso, Schumacher, Vettel and Button).

Quite clearly the new rules will make a world of difference and the die may already be cast in terms of the reliability of cars for the season as the new rules don’t allow modifications of internal parts during the season.

The Vodafone McLaren Mercedes 2010 car unveiled at Vodafone UK's headquarters on Friday looks noticeably different from last year's race-winning MP4-24. The most obvious features of the new MP4-25 are a radical aerodynamic overhaul and a significantly larger fuel tank.

Horsepower once again comes from Stuttgart in the form of a Mercedes-Benz's FO 108X V8, reportedly a subtle improvement upon an engine that has become the benchmark in Formula 1, winning the last two drivers' world championships.

The driving looks to be adequately catered for with the pairing 2009 world champion Jenson Button and 2008 world champion Lewis Hamilton – this is the first time in Formula 1 history that the sport's two most recent world champions have been partnered. It is the first time since 1988 and 1989 - when McLaren ran Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna - that the team has fielded a joint-world champion driver line-up, and it should be noted that the marque enjoyed championships both years, with the 1988 year going down as the most dominant in F1 history.

McLaren was keen to point out that the driver line-up is more than just supported by the team's remarkable depth. Members of the design team who contributed to the development of MP4-25 can also trace their involvement back through seven of the team's 12 drivers' world championships, five of the team's eight constructors' world championships and 112 of the team's 164 grand prix victories.

Both the Marlboro Ferrari and Vodafone McLaren Mercedes team begin pre-season testing with MP4-25 at the Circuit de la Comunitat Valenciana Ricardo Tormo on Monday (tomorrow).

Ferrari To Make Hybrid Version of 599 Coupe

Ferrari 599 (2009 model)

In brief: Ferrari CEO Luca di Montezelmo announced that a prototype hybrid Ferrari 599 will be displayed at the Geneva Motor Show in March and the hybrid 599 will see production.

Vehicle in the news

Make/Model: 599 Hybrid
Manufacturer: Ferrari

The word

2009 Ferrari 599

Although the car won't likely be a gas-sipper, Ferrari does hold patents on several all-wheel-drive hybrid power trains.

The surprise announcement came at the Ferrari Formula One presentation to kick off the 2010 season.

The current 599 GTB uses a 620hp engine that gets 8.7mpg in city driving. A hybrid version may boost that by 35%, so the resulting 11.75mpg isn't exactly competition for the Prius.

And so ...

In looks, though, it will be all Ferrari, something that no other car company can match.

Photo credits: Ferrari

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Ferrari F10 Racing Car Raises Expectations

MARANELLO, Italy — Hopes for another championship are high at Ferrari, which unveiled its 2010 racing car, the F10, on Thursday.

Sadly, snow and ice in Maranello meant Felipe Massa didn't get to take it out for a turn on the track, where Scuderia Ferrari had planned to shoot some promotional video. Instead, Ferrari said Friday that Massa will wait 72 hours and take the F10 out on the Ricardo Tormo circuit near Valencia, Spain, on Monday.

Development of the new car began early last year, when the company — the only brand to compete in F1 every year since the modern series' inception in 1950 — essentially abandoned hope to make the 2009 car competitive after its designers missed the mark in adapting to rules changes.

Teams that adopted a double diffuser proved to hit the sweet spot of the new technical format.

"It revolutionized and changed the design of the cars," technical director Aldo Costa said of the double diffuser, "and we had to start it from zero, from scratch."

Ferrari never quite caught up, although Kimi Raikkonen did score one victory for the team.

Ferrari was not the only team caught out. McLaren and reigning champion Lewis Hamilton were equally outclassed in the beginning, as the new Brawn GP team — formerly Honda, and now branded by its new owner as Mercedes Grand Prix — and surprising Red Bull rose to the top of the hierarchy.

The new car "is substantially different from the previous cars," Costa said.

Acknowledging the rapid-fire technological development of the sport, Ferrari is already engaged in tweaking the new car and has an itinerary for modifications to be made as the season progresses.

"We are very much satisfied with the work we have done," said Chief Designer Nikolas Tombazis, "although we are very aware of the fact that we will see on track if we have worked enough."

Inside Line says: Optimism among the tifosi is enhanced by the drivers who will be wheeling the new F10 — two-time champion Fernando Alonso and Felipe Massa, who lost the 2008 championship by a single point to Lewis Hamilton. — David Green, Correspondent

Friday, January 29, 2010

The ride improves at the top end of the auto market

nside the Houston Auto Show, local corporate banker Michael Tribolet was in the driver's seat of a BMW 335i.

“This is a fabulous car,” said Tribolet, who has owned numerous luxury cars.

Currently he drives a Porsche 911 that he bought slightly used last July. He chose one in slate gray, he said, because it was the same color as the Porsche he traded in. Given the economy, he explained, he didn't want people to know that he purchased an expensive car.

Many high-end car buyers understand his sentiments, according to an auto analyst. Well-to-do consumers did not feel comfortable buying high-priced cars during a recession, said Jesse Toprak, vice president of industry trends at TrueCar.com, a new-car-pricing Web site.

“Over the past year there was a major sales decline for higher-priced luxury cars, and not only because of the downturn,” he said. Even if a person did have the funds to buy a high-end car, it “just didn't feel right,” knowing so many people were hurting, he said.

In the last couple of months, however, their attitude has shifted, he believes: “In fact, we are seeing the higher-priced luxury cars outperforming the rest of the market.”

Guilt factor

With the economy improving, wealthy consumers don't feel as guilty, he said. If the guilt factor in buying a high-end luxury car was a 10 in the fall, it is now a 7, he said.

There is a strong correlation between the Dow Jones industrial average and luxury vehicle sales, Toprak said, adding that the stock market “sets the mood.”

For January, sales at Mercedes-Benz are projected to climb 32 percent year over year, with Lexus up 30 percent and BMW up 13 percent, Toprak said. In comparison, the overall auto market is projected to go up 11 percent for January.

He expects “higher-priced luxury” and “super-luxury” cars to continue to outperform the industry.

Toprak defines higher-priced luxury cars as those costing $55,000 to $90,000 and super luxury as those selling for more than $90,000.

Among the luxury and super luxury vehicles at the Houston Auto Show, which runs through Sunday at Reliant Center, are Acura, Aston Martin, Audi, BMW, Cadillac, Infiniti, Jaguar, Land Rover, Lotus, Lexus, Lincoln and Mercedes-Benz. Many visitors were posing for pictures with them.

Luxury models having their Texas debut at the show include the Audi A8 and the Jaguar XJ.

“There is pent-up demand for luxury cars,” said David Cutting, senior manager of North America forecasting at J.D. Power and Associates. The recovery in the luxury car market will be gradual, he said.

Currently, luxury cars make up 6 percent of the market, and by year's end it will be 8 percent, he said.

Among luxury cars, Audi, BMW and Mercedes are showing the most growth, Cutting said.

Audi has done “extremely well” in recent years, gaining ground on BMW and Mercedes-Benz, according to Karl Brauer, editor in chief of Edmunds.com.

Important to Group 1

Noting that U.S. sales of Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Lexus were up in December, year over year, Pete DeLongchamps, vice president of manufacturer relations and public affairs at Houston-based Group 1 Automotive, said that luxury brands “are an important part of our business, and we remain positive about our investment” in them.

Group 1 owns 11 BMW dealerships in the U.S., including two in the Houston area, as well as six Mercedes dealerships; four Lexus, including two in the Houston area; one Audi; one Infiniti; and one Porsche dealership.

Group 1 also owns a Maybach dealership in Beverly Hills. A super premium car, the Maybach starts at $358,000 and moseys on up to $1,380,000.

At Porsche Cars of North America, there is “guarded optimism that the worst is behind us, but it's still a tough market out there,” said Tony Fouladpour, business communications manager for Porsche Cars of North America.

In 2009, Porsche sales dropped 24 percent, he said.

Houstonian Jack Hunt was at the auto show eyeing the new Jaguars, while confessing he was a loyal “Lincoln guy.” He drives a Lincoln MKX and said his wife drives a Lincoln Navigator. A commercial laundry equipment salesman, Hunt drives a lot and wants to make a good impression on clients, he said.

He comes in contact with wealthy people, many of whom drive luxury cars, Hunt said, noting: “They like to show their success in the car they drive.”

Expanded portfolios?

Sales of the extremely expensive exotic cars such as the Ferrari and Aston Martin all fell dramatically last year, Toprak said. He predicts that some makers of exotic cars will expand their portfolios by introducing less expensive models.

For example, he speculated, a “little brother” Ferrari could cost $100,000 instead of $200,000 or $300,000.

david.kaplan@chron.com

Driven: 2010 Ferrari 458 Italia

George shuts down vision IRL team

+ What are these?

INDIANAPOLIS -- Tony George is out of the racing business -- for now.

The man who spent 20 years as president of Indianapolis Motor Speedway and founded the Indy Racing League told his Vision Racing team Thursday he was suspending operations because he lacked enough sponsors.

"He had a meeting with all of his staff this morning and he was fairly emotional," team spokeswoman Pat Caporali said. "The reality of the situation was that we had not secured sponsorship for 2010."

George was not available for comment.

The decision to suspend operations means his primary driver, Ed Carpenter, is now looking for a new ride and that about 10 to 15 other employees are out of work. Carpenter is George's stepson.

"We're not the only team struggling to secure sponsorship, but not having a sponsor a month before training was going to make it too difficult," Caporali said.

Danica's dozen dates

IndyCar star Danica Patrick will compete in at least 12 NASCAR races this season and could make her debut in the season opener.

JR Motorsports announced Patrick's schedule Thursday. Her first race, though, is still uncertain. Patrick is waiting to decide whether to race in the Nationwide Series opener at Daytona International Speedway on Feb. 13.

The team says it will decide after shee makes her stock car debut in the Feb. 6 ARCA race at Daytona. If she feels comfortable, she could race the following week in NASCAR's second-tier series.

"Like I've said before, we just want to be smart and calculative about this process," Patrick said.

Ferrari unveils F10

MARANELLO, Italy -- Ferrari launched its car for the upcoming Formula One season Thursday, calling it the F10 in hopes of restoring the team's winning tradition.

For years Ferrari named its cars with an "F" for Ferrari followed by the year, but last year's uncompetitive car was called the F60 to honour Ferrari's 60th year in F1.

Last season, Ferrari finished fourth in the constructors' standings.

Filipe Massa will return to the team after the Brazilian nearly lost his life in a crash at the Hungarian Grand Prix and Fernando Alonso has been hired to replace Kimi Raikkonen.

McLaren reveal the MP4-25

Hot on the heels of Ferrari, McLaren presented their 2010 car to the world on Friday, when the MP4-25 was unveiled at the UK headquarters of sponsors Vodafone. The team hope the new machine will maintain their strong momentum from the latter part of 2009 and put them firmly back in title contention.

With its dramatic looking engine-cover fin, the car will bear the prestigious number one, thanks to reigning world champion Jenson Button joining McLaren from the former Brawn team to partner fellow Briton - and 2008 champion - Lewis Hamilton.

“I’m incredibly proud to be standing here today knowing I’ll be carrying the number one for the whole season: that’s a great responsibility but also a great honour,” said Button. “It’s something I’m relishing. From the very first day of testing, I’ll be working with the team to learn about the car and to develop it ahead of the first race. I’ve said it before: the pace of development in those opening tests could well determine the outcome of the championship.”

The 2010 McLaren looks noticeably different from last year’s race-winning MP4-24. It features a radical aerodynamic overhaul and a significantly larger fuel tank to take full advantage of this year’s new regulations, and its design team is confident it has explored every possible avenue to maximise the car’s performance. Horsepower once again comes from a subtly improved Mercedes-Benz FO 108X V8 engine.

“I’ve seen just how much effort and attention has gone into making this car what it is,” commented Hamilton. “We’ve been pushing like crazy to find the performance and the result is something that looks very special and very uncompromising. Both Jenson and I are world champions, and we both want to add to the team’s incredible winning legacy.

“I think a strong driver line-up will be very important this year as there are a lot of very competitive teams and drivers - and the stronger we can be, the better chance we’ll have of winning races. We all understand that. Obviously, I want to win the drivers’ world championship, that’s clear. But, just as important, I want to help the team win the constructors’ world championship. I think it’s set to be a great year for Formula 1 - it should be brilliant.”

McLaren’s 2010 line-up marks the first time since 1989 - when the team ran Alain Prost and Ayrton Senna - that they have fielded a joint-world champion driver line-up, and marks the first time in Formula One history that the sport’s two most recent world champions have been partnered together.

Members of the design team who contributed to the development of MP4-25 can also trace their involvement back through seven of the team’s 12 drivers’ world championships, five of the team’s eight constructors’ world championships and 112 of the team’s 164 Grand Prix victories.

“At Vodafone McLaren Mercedes, we’ve demonstrated that strength in depth is the best approach to take in Formula One,” said team principal Martin Whitmarsh. “The group of engineers, designers and strategists we’ve assembled demonstrates how much can be achieved by a very focused team operating at the very limit of their abilities.

“In Jenson, we saw a champion driver hungry for more success. We’ve already seen those qualities in Lewis, too. I’m convinced that we have one of the very strongest driver line-ups in Formula One, and that both Jenson and Lewis are committed to working together to enhance the team’s prospects in what promises to be a fiercely competitive season.”

Like most of their rivals, McLaren begin pre-season testing at the Spain’s Valencia circuit on Monday.

Ferrari F1 2010 car launch notes 2010-01-28

Luca di Montezemolo: "The team worked with great determination and unity I haven't seen for a long time"

"The presentation was very emotional, because I was excited. For me, Ferrari, together with my family, is the most important thing in my life." With these words Chairman Luca di Montezemolo opened the press conference held in Fiorano at the presentation of the F10 this morning.

"This is a very emotional moment I'm confronting with anticipation, but I won't know where we stand before the Saturday of the qualifying in Bahrain. The team worked with determination and unity I haven't seen for a long time."

The numerous journalists present at the press conference asked him about his point of view regarding Schumacher's comeback and the Chairman replied: "I like Schumacher and I'm this misdeed's author. It was me who woke his desire to come back to racing and honestly I never thought I'd see him in a car that wasn't a Ferrari. He's a competitor, an opponent, like many others. I'm not worried about the possibility that he might have taken material from our development."

Regarding the situation of the Scuderia Ferrari drivers the Chairman confirmed: "When Ferrari decided in 2005 to take Raikkonen the alternative was Alonso, who now finds himself in a fundamental moment of his life. He's matured, young and strong; he has won two World Championships, one in 2005 and one in 2006, beating us 100%. We don't have any problem as far as our drivers are concerned. We have Massa, who is back with further enthusiasm, we have Alonso I just told you about and then we have Fisichella as the third driver and two very experienced test drivers: Marc Gene and Luca Badoer."

The journalists asked many questions regarding renewals and stability for Formula 1: "Formula 1 needs a season of great renewal with three main objectives: technology, because it has to become the avant-garde to anticipate extreme and innovative technology for road cars; it has to regain credibility and it needs justice to guarantee stability. Furthermore the cost is an important factor - I don't want a Formula 1 with lower performance -- and also stable rules.

As far as the rules are concerned the Ferrari Chairman said he was "very much in favour of qualifying without full tanks like in the past and the choice of tyres. This is a start, with the collaboration from all of us. I think that teams and Federation can look ahead and do many things."

One journalist asked about Valentino Rossi's possible arrival at Ferrari: "I want to be a little more general: I spoke about the possibility of a third car, but I didn't say that Ferrari needs to have three cars. I'm well aware of the objections coming from the small teams. I was talking from the point of view of the interest of Formula 1 and of potential new entries in Formula 1. The third car could also be helpful for young drivers, to let them grow. It's not right that a boy, who has never driven in Formula 1 starts into a race without training and tests. Here's the idea: I would happily give a Ferrari to an American, German or Australian team and let the car be managed by them. They would definitely spend less than if they had to build a car on their own from scratch. They could hand it over to a talented and strong driver or try it with a young driver with a certain potential. I told Domenicali to work on the possibility that some teams, like ours, could hand over cars to other teams."

Talking about Valentino the Chairman said: "He's a friend and an undisputed champion, from Emilia-Romagna, a great fan of Formula 1 and engines, and also a potential Formula 1 Champion. If there was the possibility in 2011 and he wanted to do it and had the possibility for testing and adapting to F1, then why not?"

Ferrari Drivers Academy - Ferrari investing in the future

At the convention centre at the Fiorano race track, after the appearance of the Chairman, the drivers and the technicians, talking about the F10 single-seater on the day of its presentation, Ferrari presented a new and very important initiative for young drivers: the Ferrari Drivers Academy -- a programme Ferrari uses to invest in the future.

"For the first time Ferrari is concentrated on the precise goal of looking for new talents," Luca Baldisserri said in front of numerous journalists, interested in this new project. "The programme, which will start this year, includes several activities -- from scouting to training to a driving school, to find new talents and let them grow to be part of Formula 1 with Ferrari one day. At the moment we have 12 young drivers and a further selection will follow." Where is Ferrari looking for the future drivers? "We're starting with karts and then other formulas such as Abarth, Formula 3, GP3, but also Formula 2, GP2 and the World Series."

Very important for the scouting is the close collaboration with CSAI. "CISAI organised a first meeting with the 12 drivers this week in Forl�, where the drivers will take a first medical and psychological check up, which is the base of our selection process."

"We are also relying on many prestigious consultations," Baldisserri continued, "such as Minardi, Andrea Bertolini in the area of karts and other professionals in Italy and abroad. Ferrari is the last team taking part in projects dedicated to young drivers and I really believe in this project, because the drivers' motivation is fundamental as of the start of the career. It's worth a lot that the drivers not only learn how to drive but also how to talk to the sponsors, to the press and that they know several languages. The programme for professional drivers also includes 5 training periods during the year in Fiorano, Mugello and Vallelunga as well as a final event of the season and an evaluation at the end of the year."

The programme will last for 5 or 6 years, but it's not said that a driver, who starts with the Ferrari Drivers Academy will stay in the course over the whole period; the contract is renewed every year.

Is there a name of a driver taking parting in the current programme Baldisserri could mention? "There's Jules Bianchi, who will race in GP2 next year, but there are several drivers we're looking at and not only in Italy."

New F10's presentation live on the internet breaks record of previous editions

The new Scuderia Ferrari's single-seater already broke its first record: the connections to the www.ferrari.com website.

More than three million users were connected to watch the presentation, which let the website freeze for a couple of seconds in several moments.

-source: ferrari f1

Wednesday, January 27, 2010

Guy Cosmo Daytona preview

Guy Cosmo Teams Up With Orbit Racing for The Rolex 24 at Daytona Double Duty with BGB Motorsports for Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge

With the 2010 GRAND-AM Rolex Sports Car Series presented by Crown Royal Cask No. 16 season having it's annual kick-off at Daytona International Speedway, Guy Cosmo will lend his driving talents to Orbit Racing for the Rolex 24 at Daytona driving the No. 88 Orbit Racing GT3 Porsche Saturday, Jan. 30 and Sunday, Jan. 31. He will be teamed up with drivers John Baker, Johnny Mowlem, Tom Papadopoulos and Lance Willsey.

"On a personal level, this will be my first time driving competitively in the Rolex GT class," noted Cosmo. "I'm looking forward to adding to my already wide range of experience. In addition, I'm really happy to be back with the Orbit team and joining John Baker. I like being a part of John's exploits behind the wheel and helping him with this next big step. It's a great experience for him."

"I should also point out," said Guy, "we're with a good line up of drivers, so we're looking for a solid finish. After all, Orbit has WON this race in the past with Johnny Mowlem; I hope we'll have a shot at another victory for Orbit, while getting my first at Daytona."

Cosmo will also drive the No. 83 911 Porsche with BGB Motorsports in the Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge Fresh From Florida 200 on Friday, Jan. 29.

"Friday I'll be in BGB Motorsports No. 83 911 Porsche," Cosmo continued. "It's the familiar Orange car I've made guest appearances in over the past two seasons and I'll be driving with Stuart Tetreault, another former BGB driver. I really enjoy racing with the crew at BGB. They always put a car on the grid that is capable of winning. I think we've got a genuine shot at getting BGB's 2010 Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge season off to a good start with a win on Friday."

Guy Cosmo is one of the most successful and versatile young racing drivers of his day. Guy is recognized as a first-class professional racer in the sports car road racing industry, having won the 2005 American Le Mans Series Rookie of the Year award and positioning himself as a proven front-runner in the Grand-Am Rolex Sports Car Series Daytona Prototype category. Guy's success stems from supportive family, friends and fans that have helped him through race wins and championships from Kart Racing, Formula Ford, Formula 2000, Star Mazda and Toyota Atlantic, to his professional endeavors in the Grand-Am and American Le Mans Series. Guy's extensive background between open-wheel formula cars, sports prototypes and GT sedans make him one of the most diverse and accomplished young drivers in the world. You can read more about Guy at http://www.guycosmo.com

In recent news, Guy has been signed to drive with Extreme Speed Motorsports in a Tequila Patron Ferrari GT car. He will join Scott Sharp, Ed Brown and Johannes van Overbeek in the two car effort. The team will campaign the full 9-race 2010 season across North America in the American Le Mans Series.

The 2010 Continental Tire Sports Car Challenge gets underway with the Fresh From Florida 200 at Daytona International Speedway on Friday, Jan. 29. The Rolex 24 At Daytona is scheduled for Saturday, Jan. 30 and Sunday, Jan. 31 on the 3.56-mile Daytona International Speedway infield road course in Daytona Beach, Fla.

-source: guy cosmo PR

Dirty cash cars are seized

Dream cars worth a total of £385,000 have been seized by police investigating a major underworld fraud gang in the West Midlands.

Three suspected members of the racket have been arrested and charged as officers today unveiled the cars as their latest trophies in the war against organised crime in the region.

Among the haul is a Lamborghini worth £135,000, a £75,000 Bentley and a BMW X6 valued at £45,000. The most expensive car seized is a £140,000 Ferrari California, which police say is too valuable to be moved from the secret location where it is currently parked.

The others are all being held by West Midlands Police and were today on show outside the force’s headquarters at Lloyd House in Birmingham. Officers are not revealing details of the car’s owners as they are under investigation.

The racket has been operating from the centre of Birmingham and has links across the country, police said today. The vehicles have been recovered under Proceeds of Crime legislation, which allows officers to seize cash and assets which they believe to have been bought with “dirty money”.

New figures released today showed that officers have forfeited or confiscated more than £15million worth of assets in the West Midlands over the past 18 months.

They have also seized more than £5m in cash, while more than £30m is restrained through the courts as its sources are investigated by police.

Det Insp Andy Bannister, who specialises in recovering criminal’s ill-gotten gains, said: “The purpose of today is simple. We want to let the public know that we are working really hard to make sure that crime does not pay.

“These cars are restrained whilst we carry out our investigations into what we believe has been criminal behaviour. We are committed to using the Proceeds of Crime Act to full capacity, seizing cash and goods that we believe have been funded from illegal operations.

“This in turn disrupts and helps to dismantle serious and organised crime networks, as well as showing honest citizens that criminals are not enjoying their ill-gotten gains.”

Mr Bannister said some of the profits recovered through the courts was ploughed back into the fight against crime. Money also goes to victims who have been directly affected. He added: “We have listened to those in the community who are telling us that someone is leading a criminal lifestyle. We will pursue those who are leading a criminal lifestyle – we are taking the cash out of crime.”

The three men held in connection with the operation have been charged with fraud and deception.

Stig lookalike chauffeurs Ferrari wedding car for lucky groom in Derby

Stig lookalike chauffeurs Ferrari wedding car for lucky groom in Derby

Posted by Trudi Johnson on January 26, 2010 · Leave a Comment 

Lookalike Stig chauffeur drives Derby groom on his wedding day

One groom from Derby received an extra memorable wedding gift on his big day. Bride Jennifer Skidmore arranged for a Stig lookalike, the character famous for test driving fast cars on TV show Top Gear, to chauffeur her husband-to-be in a sleek red Ferrari as a special surprise.

The novel gift came as a complete shock to groom Richard who hadn’t a clue he was about to be chauffeur driven in a Ferrari by a well-known face from, British TV, albeit a lookalike. Richard travelled in the Ferrari wedding car along with his best man and his 7-year-old son Joshua. The groom said that both he and his son are big fans of Top Gear so it was the perfect way to arrive at the church.

The groom and his attendants were completely unaware of what was about to happen after they were instructed by the bride to be in their local pub at 10am. 34-year-old Richard said the Ferrari and its famous driver certainly gained them plenty of attention from the other drinkers at the pub in Ripley.

The surprise certainly had the desired effect, and the new Mrs Skidmore was delighted she’d managed to pull off the stunt, as she said: “I wanted to get a wedding present Richard would remember forever and having The Stig lookalike there was brilliant.”

Lopez has power of a nation behind him

This is a big week in Formula 1. The new Mercedes team was launched on Monday, and new cars from Ferrari and McLaren are due to break cover on Thursday and Friday. But another development that has made less of an impact could prove a seminal moment in a different way.

The announcement on Tuesday that the little-known Argentine Jose Maria Lopez will drive for the new US F1 team in 2010 has made minimal impact compared to the fanfare afforded Mercedes's public presentation of their new livery and Michael Schumacher.

The general perception will be that this is just another pay-driver getting a seat with a struggling team, neither of which are likely to make much impact in 2010.

That assessment may well turn out to be factually correct - but the Lopez deal is rather more interesting than that. He has secured his drive thanks to backing from the government of Argentina itself. His appointment was announced by the president, Crista Fernandez de Kirchner.

As far as I am aware, this is the first time a national government has ever financially supported a driver's entry into F1 to any significant degree.

"He has got the nation behind him," US F1 sporting director Peter Windsor told me from Buenos Aires on Wednesday. "This has all come through the president's office. The government decided to get behind him and take him into F1, and when they did that a lot of other companies looked at it and decided to do the same. It's snowballed since then."

US F1 team boss Peter Windsor, an interpreter, Jose Maria Lopez and Argentine president Crista Fernandez de Kirchner Argentina's President Kirchner (right) announced Lopez's (centre) new drive herself

This is information that a lot of struggling young racers around the world, scrabbling to raise the money to further their careers, will find quite hard to take.

That, though, does not make it any less remarkable.

Argentina has had a very tough time economically in the last decade and, although things are improving from the lows of 2001, times are still hard for many Argentines. F1's popularity remains high, though - even though it is 12 years since the country had a race or a driver.

"Obviously football is huge, but motorsport is the number two sport in Argentina," Windsor says, "even with Juan Martin del Potro and Angel Cabrera winning majors in tennis and golf. Jose is huge here.

"A lot of people will say, 'Oh, it's a driver with money.' But that sidesteps the issues of how much time it takes to raise that money - and it's still government money they are spending. I'm very proud of that.

"My feeling is that the thinking is: 'Let's take a driver into F1; it'll be good for the country's morale.'

"They want to win in big sports - that's very important, just as it is in Australia. Here, it doesn't take much to trigger a spark of enthusiasm. Who's to say that the fact they are in economic recovery isn't even more reason to get behind a driver? It's a very optimistic attitude - very different from Europe where it tends to be all doom and gloom."

The chances of Lopez winning in F1, of course, are not great, at least in the immediate future.

US F1 are battling to get their debut car ready. Windsor says he and co-owner Ken Anderson haven't yet decided whether they will make any of the four pre-season tests in Europe, but he says it's likely the car will run only in the US. He insists, though, that they will be ready for the first race in Bahrain on 14 March, while admitting: "It's going to be tight."

And then there's the question of whether Lopez is any good. He did not exactly set the world on fire in the European feeder formulae, but Windsor says he always believed Lopez had talent; the respected driver coach Rob Wilson agrees - and so does Argentine F1 legend Carlos Reutemann.

Reutemann, now an influential name in Kirchner's Peronist party, is an old friend of Windsor from the 1970s and early '80s, when Reutemann was one of F1's leading drivers and Windsor a journalist. Although Windsor says the now Argentine senator - a member of Kirchner's party, but not exactly an ally - "is not really involved at all, other than he thinks Jose is very talented and very fast".

Whatever, all this is further evidence of a major shift that appears to be happening in F1 - as the car manufacturers leave, teams are increasingly taking on national identities, whether by accident or design.

So Brawn has been bought out by Mercedes, who are running two German drivers in Schumacher and Nico Rosberg. McLaren have two English drivers, Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button. Ferrari have long been considered in Italy as the national team, even if they do little to promote Italian drivers. The new Lotus outfit are effectively a Malaysian team. Then there's Force India - explicitly Indian, even if based at Silverstone. And now US F1, with backing from the Argentine government.

Windsor says he and Anderson chose that name for their team because of exactly this shift.

"The thinking was always, it's beyond car companies and the future will probably be an international element," he says. "And it's possible if we weren't called US F1, we wouldn't be here."

It looks incongruous, then, that there will not be an American driver in the team, but Windsor says the explanation for that is simple.

"No American driver has [the necessary F1] super licence," he says, "apart from maybe [GP3 driver] Alexander Rossi - but that was very recent.

"We had to draw a line. [IndyCar front-runners] Graham Rahal and Marco Andretti haven't got one. They may have been given one, but we couldn't take the risk of finding in the third week of February that they'd been turned down.

"We want to be in F1 for a long time. We'll build a stable platform and then do it [get an American driver] - we've got plenty of time."

"We're going to be doing quite a lot to promote American drivers this year, which we'll announce quite soon. But even though we're US F1, we don't have to have American drivers. We're in a global market place - there are also people who want to promote their company in the US. F1 is very international, but laying claim to a country is quite cool."

Windsor and his team can now lay claim to two.

A tuned-up Ferrari Enzo: for those who thought the original a bit tame

The Edo Enzo XX Evolution - it would take a track and no small shortage of nerve to find the limit of this machine In this section »

A racing car softened for the road, the Enzo is pulsating to drive, writes NICK HALL 

THE FERRARI FXX Evolution is the ultimate track car. But the problem is Ferrari keeps them on the circuit, under lock and key. So even paying €1.5 million and joining this most exclusive club doesn’t mean you can take it home to impress your friends.

Unless you take a base Enzo and build your own, which is precisely what Edo Karabegovic has done for partner and Canadian importer Zahir Rana. As Christmas presents go, it’s right up there with the best of them.

The Edo Competition Enzo XX Evolution waits inside his Ahlen firm, the end result of months of work and glorious in the less familiar yellow finish. This is the Enzo taken to the absolute limit and it should soon become the fastest road-going Ferrari in the world when it goes beyond 390km/h with the timing gear attached. Considering the speeds Edo himself has achieved on the Autobahn late at night, it could be even faster than that and don’t be too surprised if this joins the Bugatti Veyron in the 400km/h-plus club before too long.

As Edo fires up the now 6.3-litre V12, the explosion of noise is so utterly, ear-splitting obscene that the police stop by to take a look and somewhere a kid starts to cry. And that’s at idle. When I roll on to the industrial estate’s outer road the car barks with every touch of the throttle and pulsates with racing tech and latent power.

The Enzo is a racing car softened for the road, that’s how Ferrari built it, the Maserati MC12 was built on the same platform and that was a ground-up racer, but the Enzo was carefully considered, the edges were filed down, the spikes capped with cork. Edo, though, has thrown all that moderation in the bin and gone back to raw, race car brutality.

I flatten the throttle for the few seconds it takes for the first straight to disappear, it is an epiphany. There is a jolt, a shimmy from the rear as the tyres find traction on the cold, wet tarmac and then the car bolts forward like the lever in the rifle and just arrives at the braking zone. It demolishes straights with the same verve as the Bugatti Veyron and will rev all the way to a window smashing 9,600rpm.

The new Enzo XX comes with 840bhp and 779Nm of torque to play with, and a new triple plate clutch that Edo designed himself and can take full bore starts all day long.

It breaks 100km/h in 3.2 seconds, 200km/h in nine seconds and 300km/h in 19 seconds, on a dry day and an open road. Even here, in this windswept and wet corner of Germany, the sheer insanity of the acceleration leaves an indelible impression as cars and buildings turn into instant blurs with a squeeze of the right pedal. This car has Veyron pace, although it will be a little trickier on the limit.

He upped the displacement to 6.3-litres, fitted new camshafts, new titanium valve spring retainers and connecting rods, modified cylinder hears while exhaust headers, high flow catalytic converters, mufflers and air filters are all part of the supporting cast. The main trick here are the solid lifters that lets Edo rev the engine to 9,600rpm – like the FXX. A monstrous Capristo rear silencer box sits on the rear and it features butterfly valves that open to give the full bore noise effect. With a touch of a button on a keyfob the noise quietens just enough, although it’s still right on the limit of the law even in mute mode. Without the muffler, incidentally, Edo reckons the car is good for 860bhp and will match the FXX step for step.

He stripped 90kgs from the kerbweight with lightweight components and fitted the same KW horizontal dampers that go on to the FIA GT MC12 Corse. So the car can be as hard and as sharp as the most demanding driver could ever want, but thankfully it comes with Ferrari’s front-end hydraulic lifter system to get over high kerbs. With the nose airborne we roll into the broken, rutted-to-hell carparks of the old colliery with almost no fear of scraping the expensive paint, which means it can handle anything the city streets could throw at it. If you could handle the power and the outrageous fuel consumption it could really be a daily driver.

That new back end is an exact recreation of the FXX’s created from photos and measurements, you can’t just ring up and order one from Ferrari. There are no moulds, it took three months to make and Edo swears he won’t make another. But then the extra downforce of the huge diffuser and small wings transform the car and plant the rear to the deck at outrageous speed.

There’s a custom set of SportMaxx tyres on the car and Dunlop is working hard with Edo on a set of tyres that will support the new top end speed in all conditions. It’s a big commitment, but they kind of like the idea of this road-going FXX and have given their full support for these high-performance tyres.

So on the road it feels scalpel sharp, the steering is synapse direct, the suspension rock steady and the standard Ferrari ceramic brakes are more than enough to hold 2,800lbs of pin-sharp supercar.

All we can do here is marvel at an apex predator on the public road and drink in the experience, but it feels confined by these limits. It’s like a great white shark swimming in a paddling pool.

It would take a track and no small shortage of nerve to find the limit of this machine, even pressing on a public road is barely tickling the surface of its amplified skills. And therein lies the quandary. The Enzo is more than enough car for the public road and this car’s true talents will only shine at a speed that will put you in prison. So nobody needs the €1.5 million Edo Enzo XX Evolution, but the fact that it is as hard, fast and outrageous as a car that Ferrari insisted would only ever see action on the track means people will want it.

They live in a different stratosphere to the rest of us, but there are people who have tired of the impact of their Enzo. Think of it as a long term smoker that is suddenly offered a super cigarette that gives them that rush of the first puff.

It’s just as politically incorrect and yet equally just as addictive. The lucky few that can afford the kind of headrush that goes with the fastest Ferrari in the world will emerge from their first drive sweating, giddy and unable to speak thanks to the sheer brutal speed of this thing.

And, having driven it, it’s an addiction I wish I could afford to share.

Power: 840bhp @ 9,600rpm

Torque: 779Nm @ 5,800rpm

Performance: 0-60mph: 3.2secs

Top speed: 390km/h

Price: €1.5 million (before taxes)

Schumacher ready to flex Brawn at F1 Mercedes

Schumacher ready to flex Brawn at F1 Mercedes

BERLIN, Germany — Mercedes GP launched their new Silver Arrow car on Monday, but the real fire-power in the German team's camp is set to be the renewed partnership between Michael Schumacher and Ross Brawn.

Brawn was in Schumacher's pits for all seven of his world title wins - two at Benetton and five at Ferrari - and Brawn's involvement at Mercedes was a significant factor in enticing Schumacher back to Formula One.

Having retired in 2006, the 41-year-old Schumacher has broken his three-year hiatus to sign a three-year contract to race for Mercedes which will reunite him with Brawn ahead of the new season which starts in Bahrain on March 14.

Schumacher has made no secret of his desire to win an eighth world drivers' championship title with Brawn as team principal at Mercedes and Nico Rosberg as his team-mate.

"We have everything it takes to succeed, but it is one thing to have the correct ingredient and another to manage it," he said.

"With the experience of Ross and with all the know-how of Mercedes: I am sorry, but there can only be one target for us to achieve."

Even though Schumacher retired after the Brazilian Grand Prix in 2006, he stayed in touch with Brawn and the chance to work together again proved too strong.

"We have been in contact almost every year, when Ross went to Honda (in 2007 as team principal), he sort of suggested there was an option, but I wasn't ready for it," said Schumacher.

"We always kept in contact: sometimes he asked serious questions (about working together) sometimes it was a joke.

"When he called me at the end of last year, I knew why."

Brawn will be responsible for making sure the Silver Arrow car is in perfect condition when the season starts and the 55-year-old Briton said he is excited about the chance to work with Schumacher once again.

"Working with Michael again is a treat, it is something I didn't think would happen again and it is something I am excited about," said Brawn.

"Nico is an exciting prospect and I think he will be good for Michael - it will also help him to see how a world champion operates."

Mercedes face stiff opposition in their assault on the world drivers' championship from McClaren's Lewis Hamilton and current champion Jenson Button, as well as Red Bull pair Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber.

"We are looking forward to closing the gap behind the other teams and we hope to have success in our cars, that is the aim," said Schumacher.

"It is rare to have two or three teams in close competition like last year, but this year might also be an exception again.

"It doesn't really matter honestly: we are there to win whoever we are up against."

And in terms of his advancing years, Schumacher says he has nothing to prove.

"I just want to prove to myself that I am still able to do it," said the German.

"The main reason I am doing it is because of the thrill.

"I feel a huge sense of excitement just to drive and compete at the highest level.

"It was great to have a three-year break, but now I see no reason why I can't do it again at the highest level.

"Whether a driver is young or experienced, it doesn't matter really.

"When you are in the car, you don't look how old or who he is, you just look at doing better than he does."

Having won five consecutive world titles with Ferrari, Schumacher says there will be no divided loyalties when the racing begins.

"There is quite a lot of my history and a part of my heart is (Ferrari) red and you can't forget all the good moments we have had together," he said.

"I am really looking forward to seeing some of my friends who I worked with for so long.

"I am still friends with them, we can compete, but it doesn't mean we have to forget what has happened in the past. It is still deep in my heart."

Mercedes Q&A

Team bosses Ross Brawn, Nick Fry and Norbert Haug discuss Mercedes GP's goals for the 2010 Formula One season and beyond.

Ross, can you say something about the challenges of designing this year's car. There haven't been so many regulation changes except for the refuelling ban?

"It's true, the changes between 2008 and 2009 were much bigger than we've had this season from 2009 to 2010. The two major differences are the tyre sizes - the fronts are smaller and the rear construction has changed - and of course there is no refuelling. I think all the cars will be longer this year to accommodate the extra fuel. The aerodynamic regulations have largely stayed the same, so there are no major changes on the aero side - and it means the work we did during 2009 can carry through to 2010. But the major challenge was accommodating the fuel. The cars will have upwards of 165-175 kilos on board this year, so that was the main challenge to come to terms with.

When did you start designing the new car?

"In the spring of 2009. Obviously we knew what the regulations were so we started to lay out the concept of the 2010 car. We had a group that was growing during the year, and we had the nice challenge of balancing a championship effort in 2009 against a new car. In fact, we made a tiny change in the programme of the 2010 car. We took one week out of the wind-tunnel programme of the 2010 car and gave it to the 2009 car to keep the challenge going for the championship. That was the only slight compromise we made. But as I said, the aero regulations carried over from 2009 to 2010, so unlike the beginning of last year where it was a really dramatic change, I was less concerned about that. We've been working on the car for nine months now. That should be good enough."

What was the reason for not launching the new car in Stuttgart and waiting instead for Valencia?

"It's not ready! It's simply not ready. It is a very tight programme for everybody with the new car. We've only got four tests and we need to make the maximum amount of time prior to the first test. The performance of the car is the most important thing for all of us. So we have launched the team here, and you've seen the new colour scheme. And we will have the new car in Valencia in a week's time. But it is giving total priority to the performance of the car, and we wanted to give the team the maximum time to get the car ready for the first test. The car we have at the first test won't be the final definition of the car. We will have a major upgrade before Bahrain. That is something that perhaps will be common, but what we launch in Valencia will be the chassis and fundamentals for 2010, but with a new aerodynamic package in time for Bahrain."

Who will have the honour of doing the roll-out?

"Nico (Rosberg) will start with the car. What we want to try and do is give both drivers a drive on the first day. The first day is about checking the car, inspecting all the pieces, and there will be several strip downs of critical parts. So during that period we will swap drivers and we want both drivers to get a run in the car on the first day to give us their impressions. Nico will probably do the second day and Michael (Schumacher) the third day. But it will be split on the first day."

So far there has been mention of your third driver yet, despite rumours that Nick Heidfeld will get the job. Can you confirm that?

"We are working on that. It's not finalised yet. So it would be premature to say where we are. It has not been the greatest priority for us, to be honest, but we are working on it and there should be some news in the next week or so."

Traditionally - maybe not last year- but usually you have had a number one driver. How will you deal with that this season given that your star driver is the man who for years has been your outright number one?

"I would dispute this title of the number one driver. The number one driver is the fastest one. Whoever is the fastest driver and winning the most races, you can argue is the number one driver. We will give maximum support to both drivers. Of course if a championship starts to develop, where one driver has a greater chance of winning the championship, or it becomes numerically possible only for that driver to win the championship, then there may be different priorities. It will be absolutely evenly split and I think we demonstrated this past season that we gave both Jenson (Button) and Rubens (Barrichello) absolutely equal support. That will be the case this year and it is there for both drivers to establish their positions, beat each other, compete with each other but do it in the correct fashion and in a constructive way. That will be the strength of the team to achieve that. We don't have a number one driver and we don't intend to have a number one driver."

Did you explain to both your drivers how fair you are going to be?

"Yes. It is something that you always reinforce with the drivers. Of course I have a long-standing relationship with Michael, and I've spent some time with Nico and we cannot ignore that. Beyond that, there will be complete parity for the drivers in terms of equipment and support. Both drivers have had discussions about who will be the most suitable engineers, which worked out very nicely. Nico will have Jock Clear and Michael will have Andrew Shovlin. And both are very happy with that, as it suits their stages of their career and suits what they need to achieve. We've discussed it and been completely open."

Nick, you guys signed Nico Rosberg quite some time ago. What were the qualities that made you want to sign him?

"The story with Nico in fact probably goes back two years. We have had a lot of discussions about the possibility of him joining our team in its previous guises. This year was the first real opportunity. I think he has got great raw talent, but he is also a very intelligent guy to work with. He works very well with the engineers, and with the level of the experience he has had over the last three or four years in F1, makes him a prime asset now. He has that experience and I think he will work extremely well with Michael and use that as an aid to his own learning. Driving alongside a seven-time champion is not only a challenge, but also a huge opportunity for him to learn for the future. I think because he is a very young, smart guy, he will take that opportunity in both hands and use it to improve his own skills for the future. For us, having an older driver with the huge experience that Michael has got and a guy who is much younger, who has got a lot of his career ahead of him, is the ideal position to be in."

Ross, on Fleet Street we might call this an English/German war between Lewis Hamilton and Jenson versus Michael and Nico. How does it feel to be an Englishman in the midst of that, especially as you are on the German side?

"I haven't genuinely considered that aspect. Having worked for an Italian team for 10 years, I tend to look beyond those things. It is a British-based team. There will be very close co-operation with the engine group, which is also British based. And also a lot of co-operation with Mercedes R&D to see how we can benefit from the partnerships with technology that is contained within Mercedes-Benz. I am sure there will be elements of the press who will like to accentuate that element, but as a team we don't think about that."

NF: "It is worth emphasising, this is by dint of circumstance, not by design. We have been talking to Nico for a substantial period of time. And although the things came together very well as a happy coincidence, it was in fact a coincidence. Nico was signed before the arrangement with Mercedes-Benz. They were not connected with each other. If we had stayed as Brawn, Nico would have joined Brawn - and that was pre-agreed. Obviously the opportunity that came along with Michael was a huge one, which we grasped when the opportunity was right. And if we were to end up with another German driver it will be because he is the best available in that position, so it is not something that any of us went out to achieve, but we have ended up with what will be a very strong line-up."

Ross, you said in a previous interview that you believed Michael Schumacher could be champion this year. What makes you think that he can be the same man that he was during his heydays with Ferrari?

"Well, thank you for reminding me of my earlier comments, but they came in the context of someone asking me to compare the four competing world champions and which one had the best chance. Among the competing world champions, I am naturally going to support Michael. But talking about Michael, I believe that raw talent doesn't disappear. What normally happens with drivers is they lose the physical ability to compete. F1 is a very physical sport, so they lose the physical capacity and they lose the determination that you need to compete at every race, every minute of the day, and every lap of the circuit. What I saw with Michael was that he had been refreshed by his break - and I've had that experience myself of having a sabbatical. I know that reminds you of the good things, the things you miss and he is refreshed from his break. And I think you have seen today he is looking incredibly quick and he is looking far younger than his 41 years. So I don't think the physical side is a problem. He has shown amazing determination and commitment already. He has been to the factory on many days, working with the engineers, and I don't think the talent disappears. If the talent eases off a little bit, you have the huge experience that he has to compensate. So I think put all those elements together. He has a tremendous work ethic, and he would not do this unless he was convinced that he can do the job. I am convinced he can do the job. And, I've seen already an amazing commitment and it reminded me of the old Michael Schumacher."

In 1998 in Hungary you were able to call on Michael to produce 19 consecutive qualifying laps to achieve what he wanted to achieve. He was in his 20s then, now he's in his 40s. Do you seriously think you could expect the same kind of thing from him in similar circumstances?

"I think so, yes. I think there's lots of analysis that show the peak of your physical condition is in your 30s. It depends on the sport and Michael is achieving the parameters he was achieving when he was younger, in terms of his training, endurance, stamina and strength. He's already reaching the parameters he was achieving many years ago, so I don't see any problem at all. He's an exceptional athlete! You must remember that. And because of the attributes you need to race a car, it's not like he's a runner or any other type of sportsman. There's nothing in a car that wears out parts of your body. It's just down to your stamina and strength, so I fully expect Michael to be able to cope with any demands I make of him."

Norbert, when did Michael say to you that he would race?

"He said it to Ross. It is very important in a team that we split what we are doing, so in that case Ross was responsible for contacting Michael. The idea was quite an old one, I have to admit. We always have had it in our mind, but to get it done was a different story. Ross was in contact with Michael and I think it was after the end of the season when a basic 'yes' was there."

Ross, is there a fear that maybe Michael would say that he is as good as he ever was, driven by the urge to race again, without knowing if he is really as good as he was?

"Well, yes, it's true that none of us will know until he starts competing again at what level he will be. But if you look at it the other way around, why shouldn't he be at the level he was at? In the latter part of 2006 he had some of his strongest races, so there's no reason not to believe. Every driver, when they finish a season and they go into the next season, they start again with the belief that they are going to perform, and we have absolute belief that Michael is going to perform. I don't know if it will take a race or two to get to the level he will want to achieve. I personally don't think so. I think Michael will perform at a very high level straight away. There is no reason not to believe."

Norbert, can you explain how Mercedes Benz's contribution will change the team now that you own the team instead of being a partner?

"First of all I have to stress we've had a lot of discussion about that. As a team we have worked very well together for 15 years and with McLaren we have been quite successful. And maybe let me take this opportunity to say thank you to them. Not a lot of the way we are co-operating will change. We are responsible for the engine, and I think we have a great team, a great partner. Of course, together with Aabar, we have the majority but as you can see, the management remains in place. Of course we will do some developments that are typical for marketing and media issues.

"Our plan in the middle term is to meld the two companies close together, the High Performance Engines and the Mercedes GP team in Brackley. They are just 40 miles apart from each other. This is the same area, and I'm sure we can create efficiencies. Our target is to save even more money in the future, and some functions of both companies will be brought together to avoid redundancies. So there will be an efficiency programme. We have a very good base...and the cooperation will be a very good one. I think we've had very intensive months behind us. Since November I think we accelerated in a very good way and in a very good direction, but of course there's much more to come. You can see the commitment from our house. You can see that the street cars are very much focused on Formula Green and we want to promote these products via motorsport - especially in the emerging markets who are passionate about F1. And so we think it's a great tool. We will save a lot of money compared to what we have had five years ago, so all is going in the right direction, unless we should not be competitive. Then it's a different story. We want to compete for very good results on a regular basis. But this will be a tough championship, probably tougher than even before, but our set-up should be light and I'm quite positive about the future."

Mercedes has been hugely successful in Formula One racing through the decades. To come back with your own team now - especially in the current climate - is there pressure to be successful immediately?

"I have to stress that in the last 12 years we have been, as a partner in Formula One and a 40 per cent shareholder of McLaren, successful. The Ferrari guys have been more successful, but no-one else has more victories, 60 victories in 223 races. It shows you are among the best ones. There was some dominance in the 1930s and the 1950s, but that's probably no longer (possible) to achieve. If you have a season like last year it's difficult to imagine that you are dominant over the course of a whole season. This is not a gamble. It's sheer work, at the end of the day. You just need to do a better job than the opposition, and it's a tough and stiff opposition, but this is our aim. We want to promote our products...and if you get a segment of an S-class this car just has to be the best one in the field. We are achieving that, and we try in F1, which is probably an even bigger task. All in all, I think we have been among the most successful ones and we most definitely want to continue in that direction. If that does not happen from the outset we will achieve it sooner or later - because we are going to go flat out. We will do whatever it takes and work harder."

Ross, before deciding to move elsewhere, Jenson said he was looking forward to the season and that he was involved in the development of your new car. Does he take with him any key ideas? Is that a concern to you?

"No. I think where a driver can help you is in helping identify the weaknesses of the car you have, and where you need to focus your attention. So Jenson was able to contribute in the objectives for the new car, but not in the solutions that we have to achieve those objectives. So there's no concern."

Who do you think will be your main competitors this year and have you had a chance to learn about their state of development?

"I think historically the teams with the strongest performance, Ferrari, McLaren, and now Red Bull has joined that group. There's all sort of reasons for that, the quality of the people they have, the resources they have, so these will be the obvious candidates, and there's always a possibility that there will be a resurgence from teams such as Renault or Williams because they are good teams. But we have no idea where our competitors are. We will have a little insight at the beginning of the testing, but we will have a major update before Bahrain, and I'm sure all the teams will, because it's five weeks before the first race. That's a long enough period to revise the cars. That will be the first snapshot of where our competitors are. This period between the end of the season and the start of testing is always done in a bit of a vacuum. You develop your own car, you progress the project you are working on, but you have little idea how much progress the opposition are making. We are pleased with where we are with the car and particularly pleased with where we will be in Bahrain. Whether it's enough, we don't know. If it's not enough, we'll work doubly hard to get back to where we want to be."

Is there any issue about Michael taking away the number three from Nico's car?

"No. It was a non-issue. Despite being a seven-time world champion Michael has a slight superstition about odd numbers, although I'm sure he won't be worried about that if number eight comes along. It was just a simple request and there was no reason to not give him what he wanted, because it made no difference to Nico. I think for both drivers the important number is number one, that's what they both want."

Source: Official Formula One website

Monday, January 25, 2010

Cars (Part I)

Finally, my parents felt bad about me always having to drive with a paper sack on my head to hide my embarrassment, and they bought me a new car (by new I mean one from the same decade). It was a powder-puff baby blue VW Rabbit. It wasn’t real sporty, but at least I could start going back to the Sonic and not have to worry about people flagging me down telling me about someone having a heart attack. The only thing that the Rabbit was missing was a tape player. Fortunately, I had a buddy that had one and was willing to install it along with a set of speakers. Life was beginning to look up. That afternoon, he returned my car and the smooth sounds of AC/DC were blasting. However, his installing technique was a little odd. First, the tape player was mounted underneath the glove box. Sure it was a little inconvenient but I could make it work. The biggest problem was the speaker system. I don’t know if one speaker in fact makes up a system, but there it was. I guess I am “old school,” I just assumed that the speaker would be mounted in either the dash or the door, wrong. The speaker was actually from an old stereo system and the big bulky box of sound was just lying in the passenger floorboard.  A little unorthodox, but what the heck, I had my tunes.

The VW carried Tammie and me to our first prom. This wasn’t an easy task since she had a dress that resembled something from Gone With the Wind. I had to stuff her into the car and continuously ask her to make sure she wasn’t putting a slipper through my “speaker system.” So here we were crammed into the tiny VW. Tammie was constantly trying to push her huge skirt, at least the part that wasn’t hanging out of the door, down out of the windshield so I could see. This really didn’t bother me since I was too busy trying to reach over and adjust my treble and bass settings on my “under the glove box” tape-player to ever notice the road. The part of her space in the car that wasn’t filled with dress was packed with hair. Ah, the eighties.

The VW carried us on many more dates up until the day, or maybe it was the year, that I forgot to check the transmission fluid in her. My Dad was always a stickler for maintaining the proper fluid levels in all of his cars. However, I never saw the importance of it until my transmission exploded. Tammie and I, along with her brother and another date decided to go to Six Flags. Being somewhat slow-witted, I volunteered to drive. With Six Flags in sight, the VW lurched and began making some noises that closely resembled the sound of someone’s nails on the chalkboard. I had to keep putting the gear shift into neutral, while redlining the engine, and then slamming it into drive for the car to even move. Being a responsible seventeen year old kid, I managed to get the wreck into the parking lot, and forget about it for the rest of the day. Hey, I reasoned, don’t worry about it until late at night when the park closes and you start to travel the hundred miles back home.

I did realize the folly of my thought process about an hour before we left. I started thinking about the ride home and the thorough lecture about fluid levels that would soon follow. At this point I began to unstrap all safety devices from the roller coasters I was riding and even tried to stand up on a few in hopes of getting hurt. My parents would be so pleased that I survived a horrific coaster accident, along with the possibility of a huge lawsuit to ever get upset about something as silly as a blown transmission. Well it didn’t work out quite like I had hoped. You know the safety reminders they always tell you about the necessity to keep all arms and legs inside the coaster at all times. It is a fallacy. Nothing happens. I am living proof. Since my coaster mishap didn’t pan out there was nothing left but to head to the parking lot and start the long drive home.

Car auctions bring in $122.6 mil despite storms, recession

Umbrellas and tornado warnings aside, the cry of "sold, sold, sold!" rang out hundreds of times this past weekend as the Valley's three largest car auctions finished with $122.6 million in sales, up 8 percent from a year ago.

Scottsdale-based Barrett-Jackson led the pack with $68 million in sales, followed by Gooding and Co. at $35 million and RM Auctions with just shy of $20 million.

Gooding scored the week's top-selling car, a 1956 Jaguar D-Type Sports Racer, at a revved-up price of $3.74 million.

The collector-car industry was pleased with the results of the year's first series of auctions in light of disruptions from flying tents and storm-battered auction sites.

"I think this weekend proved that the collector-car market is quite resilient and healthy," said Rick Carey, Car Collector Magazine auctions editor. "I don't think there were any cars that brought silly money. People were bidding with their heads and paying appropriate prices."

"Appropriate" is a relative term in the high-roller world of collector cars where the recession and one of the state's worst storms in memory failed to slow the sale of some of the world's most coveted automobiles.

Close to 3,000 bidders and 180,000 car enthusiasts turned out at the 39th annual Barrett-Jackson auction at WestWorld in Scottsdale, often braving the rain until the weather finally cleared Sunday.

A 1929 Hamilton Metalplane H-47 was Barrett-Jackson's top-selling vehicle.

Craig Jackson, Barrett-Jackson chairman, was pleased with the sales and that 40 percent of the bidders were new to his auction.

"I think everything has stabilized" in the collector-car market, he said. "It's the best thing to have a good stable increase and not huge spikes."

Barrett-Jackson managed to continue sales on Thursday night as the worst of the storms battered Scottsdale's tent at WestWorld.

Russo and Steele's auction site less than 3 miles away was not so lucky.

Two tents blew down, damaging dozens of cars and stalling traffic on Loop 101 when one of the tents landed like a crashed kite on the freeway.

Under sunny skies, Russo and Steele resumed sales on Sunday and continued through Monday.

Russo and Steele owners Drew and Josephine Alcazar did not have sales figures available. But they dropped the hammer on hundreds of cars, and Josephine's father, Steve Messana, peddled his coveted cannolis and cream puffs for the 10th straight year in the auction tent.

A controversial 1948 Tucker convertible was bid up to $1.5 million but did not reach the reserve price set by its owner, Justin Cole of Madison, Wis.

Russo and Steele did manage to sell a 1960 Ferrari 250 GT Pininfarina Series II for $797,500.

Everyone was pulling for Russo and Steele to pull out of the ditch after the storms shut down the auction, Carey said. "Nobody relishes that even for their competitors," he said, adding that he thinks Russo and Steele will survive the calamity.

Results from Silver Auctions at Fort McDowell were unavailable.

Schumacher returns to his spiritual home with Team Germany

�Compared to the past there was one team to compete with, now there are two or three more,� said Schumacher. �The drivers? It doesn�t matter if they are young or experienced because when you are in the car you don�t look how old they are, you just look at being better than whoever it is.�

He looks in great shape; age has not exactly withered the man and the talent will remain. Brawn said: �Michael is an exceptional athlete. He will cope with any demands we make on him. I have seen amazing commitment and he is like the old Michael.�

The big question is whether Schumacher retains the win-at-all-costs attitude which many former drivers feel has stained his great achievements. The answer is not forthcoming.

�Ninety-one victories, seven titles � yes, you win only in a bad way,� said Schu macher sarcastically. �I didn�t win them all in the manner in which is suggested. Let�s be sensible about this. Think about the reality and look forward to what we might all face and learn and enjoy together.�

Alongside him is Nico Rosberg, completing Team Germany, which is how they will be seen as they take on Team Britain with Hamilton and Button at McLaren.

Schumacher may find the new breed a bit tougher to intimidate but it will make for a fascinating season and he is not a man to have doubts about his abilities.

�I am sure,� he replied when asked if it was the right thing to risk his reputation and life by coming back in his forties. �I am hot. I am not used to having to sit around in January. It is taking far too long to get going but that is the way now in F1 and the test is next week.�

That is when Mercedes will roll out Brawn�s latest creation, for yesterday was simply an old model in new colours. �It�s not ready,� said Brawn. �We could not afford the time to bring it over.�

Schumacher�s car will display the No3, after he asked Rosberg to swap to No4 in the belief that racing with an even number is bad luck.

�Of course, the number they�re both interested in is No1, but they will have to earn that,� said Brawn.

Over the years, Mercedes have dreamed of luring Schumacher away from Ferrari and made several approaches. They have managed it now by circumstance and without having to pay him anything like the fortune Ferrari did of �25m a year.

They have their man now � to Ferrari�s discomfort � and they could not resist tweaking the nose of the Italians. As the audience waited for Schumacher to arrive on stage, Mercedes screened a TV advert which shows one of their sports cars, in red, driving along the roof of a tunnel.

The car screeches to a halt, the door opens and there is Schumacher in his silver racesuit.

He winks at the camera, grinning. It remains to be seen who will have the last laugh.


Revealed: Ferrari's 2010 colours

We weren’t supposed to see Ferrari’s 2010 F1 livery until Thursday, but here it is in all its red-and-white glory.

Well, nearly. This is, technically, the 2009 Ferrari car – the F60 – with the 2010 paintjob. The most obvious change is the whacking great Santander logo on the rear wing, which replaces the Marlboro bar code graphic of previous seasons. We liked the bar code graphic.

The new livery was revealed at a press event on the Paul Ricard circuit in France, with Scuderia new boy Fernando Alonso at the wheel. Alonso revealed that Ferrari’s 2010 car – codenamed 291 – is ‘almost ready’. Which is relieving news, what with the first race of the season less than two months away.

Ferrari will officially reveal their 2010 car on Thursday, with McLaren following suit on Friday. We hear rumours of a live video broadcast covering the unveil in Woking. We shall keep you informed.

So, before we’ve got any actual, y’know, evidence or somesuch, let’s have your thoughts. 2010: will it be a good year for good-looking F1 cars?