Monday, September 24, 2012

Night Fever: The 2012 Singapore GP In Review


It’s a spectacle truly like none other in Formula 1. So when the calendar reaches Singapore after a two week layoff, there isn’t a whole lot of letdown in the paddock coming off of the Spa-Francorchamps-Monza back-to-back.

Ever since its inception to the schedule in 2008, it’s built an image different from that of its sister track of many ways, Valencia. From the outside, it’s easy to tell the differences, the most obvious being the nighttime and the even more so festive atmosphere that it brings.

But that’s not the only difference, nor is it the only thing that makes the streets of Singapore so special. There’s a concert, this year headlining Katy Perry. There’s the location itself, Singapore, a place as exotic as any other locale on the Formula One calendar. There’s the fact that it’s a street race, a true street race, with little to no runoff whatsoever with an exception of only a few corners. And for goodness sake, the circuit goes under a grandstand. How the fuck do they even do that?

There are a few words that come to mind when I think of the Grand Prix of Singapore, but honestly the only one that I keep coming back to is spectacle. The aerial footage of the Flyer, one of the world’s largest Ferris Wheels, illuminated in use as the cars glimmering the blurred reflections of the floodlights storm past it in the final complex of the track at nearly 170mph is absolutely stunning. The skyline is lit up not too far away from the action, complete with a skyscraper connected by a boat-shaped lounge at the top. All of these things and more make the Marina Bay Circuit one of the finest in the world.

In only five years, it has become one of the ‘Crown Jewels’ of any driver’s career. I wouldn’t hesitate to say that in the grand scheme of things, the circuits that are most important to a driver include Marina Bay now, along with the mainstays, tracks with such historical significance, like Monaco, Monza, Silverstone and Spa-Francorchamps. Although it has a history that pales in comparison to the GP’s I just mentioned, the glitz and glamor of the place has truly made it the Monaco of the Far East.

The race weekend itself started off somewhat unusually, with Free Practice 1 being held on a dampened circuit, and seeing reigning Double World Champion Sebastian Vettel claim one of his few practice fastest laps of the season.

On a thoroughly dried second practice, Bruno Senna managed to bring out a red flag as he bumped the wall out of Turn 19, spinning out down the short straightaway, before coming to rest in the middle of the following chicane. Vettel again claimed fastest lap.

The next morning, FP3 was again topped by Vettel, although slightly shortened by Vitaly Petrov breaking his suspension on the turn leading into the main straight with two minutes remaining.
Sebastian Vettel: On an issue
of GQ Magazine near you.
#Fabulous

Heading into qualifying it seemed that the Red Bull’s held the upper hand, Vettel especially. But his luck soon ran short at the hands of Lewis Hamilton, claiming his second consecutive pole with an absolutely blistering Q3 run, finishing nearly half a second in front of the overachieving Pastor Maldonado in his Williams. Vettel and Button made up row two, Alonso and Di Resta on row 3, Webber and the unsuspended Grosjean on row 4, and the Mercedes’ of Schumacher and Rosberg on row 5, after both did not attempt a run at pole in Q3.

Hamilton publicly warned the oft-troubled but blindingly quick Maldonado to avoid confrontation on the narrow run down to the first corner, and rightfully so, seeing that both are sometimes overly-aggressive, and have been involved some pretty major incidents (including one together at Valencia) over the past two seasons.

Someone locks up at the first
corner, resulting in madness
for those behind.
But as expected, when it came down to business on the start, Maldonado quickly filed in behind Hamilton, braking a little too deep, and running wide in the first left-hander. This opened to door for Vettel to overtake him on the outside, and seeing as turn one is more than just one turn but a complex, Maldonado’s mistake cost him in Turn 3, as Button took advantage of his faulty line choice while accelerating out of the hairpin.

                Felipe Massa picked up a puncture soon thereafter, most likely from the first corner shemozzle in which Petrov’s Caterham emerged without its front wing. This put him in an interesting spot strategy-wise although running well behind in last place before the first string of pit stops.

                The first stint went relatively to plan for all outside of the first corner incident, with the bumpy metropolitan street roads eating up the tires. Within lap 12 of the 61-lap affair, Alonso and Vettel pitted from fifth and second respectively, with Vettel being released behind Kimi Raikkonen’s Lotus. Without that misfortune, Vettel could have possibly cycled through ahead of Hamilton, who let his tires degradate for an extra lap before pitting on lap 13. But unfortunately for Hamilton, that would shortly become irrelevant.
This motherfucker. 

                On lap 23, while leading Vettel at the same 1-2 second gap that he had been for most of the race, Hamilton lost all gears while entering the first chicane, as denoted by the big ‘0’ on his steering wheel. Although cycling feverously up and down the paddle shifters, no gear was available and he was forced to retire. This gave Vettel all he needed, coasting at a comfortable distance until Narain Karthikeyen stuffed his HRT into the barrier at the incredibly tight corner that goes under the grandstand on lap 32.

                This brought out a Safety Car, which coincidentally led to another retirement while the cars paraded behind it following many well-placed pit stops immediately after the SC was deployed, this time; a hydraulics issue for Pastor Maldonado meant that his day in podium contention was over.

                But even once the Safety Car came in and the race resumed, it didn’t last for very long. In the manic laps following the drop of the green flag, Michael Schumacher locked up his brakes, scrubbing little speed, and rammed into the rear wing of the unexpecting Jean-Eric Vergne’s Toro Rosso, who was engaged in a side-by-side battle further up the track.  Schumacher has adamantly insisted that there was a fault with his car, stating that he couldn’t slow down. Both drivers walked away from this somewhat scary incident, but yet again the Safety Car was deployed. (Link below)

                From then to the end, the result never seemed much in doubt for the newly-invigorated Vettel, who’s victory would bring him to second in the championship, within a stone’s throw of Alonso, who ran in 3rd following the retirements of Hamilton and Maldonado.

                That’s not to say that the final third of the race was without excitement, however. Felipe Massa was involved in a scrum with Bruno Senna while challenging for P9, leading to quite possibly one of the best saves and overtakes of the season, and possibly a job-saving drive (link below). Kimi Raikkonen, who had been stricken by a 12th place result in qualifying, finished 6th, and Paul di Resta came home in a career-best 4th.  Timo Glock also had a race to note, finishing a remarkable 12th in his Marussia, ahead of the likes of Kamui Kobayashi and Nico Hulkenberg.

The 2012 Formula 1 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix Podium.
Vettel, Button, Alonso.
                

            But in the end, it all came down to Sebastian Vettel, and the brightening of his once-darkened hope of a third consecutive world title. Leaping over Hamilton and Raikkonen in the championship table, he now holds 165 to Fernando Alonso’s 194 points, and has issued a warning shot to the rest of the contenders as the 2012 season reaches its homestretch, and packs up for Suzuka in two weeks’ time.








As stated in the text, here are links to the Schumacher-Vergne crash, and Massa's big save, in that order. 


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrF9PYou6ZE


Included: Lewis Hamilton interview after his disappointing race.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=92XG1RwDens


Wednesday, September 19, 2012

To Silly Season, and Beyond...


As if Silly Season ever officially ends, it unofficially begins--- or at least picks up--- every calendar year as soon as the Formula 1 circus sets down their cargo in the hauntingly beautiful Royal Villa of Monza.

The ever-pristine Autodromo Nazionale Monza
 In the midst of the beautiful woodlands sits a piece of history itself, a name synonymous with motor racing: Monza. The sheer speed of this Northern Italian masterpiece is enough to send quivers up any Formula 1 fan’s spine, let alone the driver's themselves.

In the paddock, it’s almost as if you can hear the whispers of F1 past, those who showed up in hopes of Grand Prix glory only to never again return home. Ascari, von Trips, Rindt, Peterson: A list of legends who were lost on the fastest track in the entire world, names that will forever go down in history not for their mortality, but for their courage and tenacity in attempts to conquer this concrete jungle.

On a circuit with so much history taunting at every corner, chicane and straightaway, the ghostly chill that sweeps over you isn’t so much the drivers of the past, but the drivers of the present, and the drivers of the future. Those whispers you hear aren’t from the championed souls of Alberto Ascari or Jochen Rindt. Nor are they from would-be champions like Count Wolfgang von Trips or Ronnie Peterson. Instead, those whispers are replaced by current drivers, team principles and sponsors, and to an even more amplified extent, the journo's and the exuberant crowd.


The only given on a season-to-season basis at Monza is that nothing trumps Scuderia Ferrari, especially amongst the Tifosi, their raging fans who clammer into it's rusted confines each and every year, hoping to catch a glimpse of the Prancing Horses galloping to victory in their own backyard. But this year, the mere sight of a Ferrari automatically segues into a question about Felipe Massa’s tumultuous season, and what may lay ahead in his future with the team, if there even is one.

Felipe Massa is slowly
falling from Ferrari's
good graces.
 Sitting in 10th place on the points table, Massa came into the Italian Grand Prix well over 100 points behind teammate and current championship leader, Fernando Alonso. Despite Alonso being the clear-cut number one in the Ferrari garage, to say that Massa is underperforming is a gross understatement. Ever since returning from the freak accident that nearly ended his life at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, he hasn’t been the same---gone is the Massa that came within a corner of winning the 2008 Championship, in is the careful Massa---one who cannot find pace in the same car that Alonso has found success in.

                Due to Massa’s shortcomings on a week-to-week basis, Ferrari find themselves in third place in the Constructor’s Championship, well off the pace of frontrunner Red Bull, which opens up an interesting dilemma in the Scuderia’s overwhelming quest for the WCC: Can they win with only Alonso keeping the team's hope alive?

                In short, no. In long, maybe, but only if Alonso puts together an ungodly string of results with help from others’ misfortune. If anyone in the paddock is capable of shouldering the load, it is Alonso, arguably one of the greatest to ever get behind the wheel of a race car. But this leads me into my next question: What happens if he can’t?

                If he can’t, Felipe Massa’s seven year tenure at the Scuderia is almost certainly over. If any team loves having a bonafide support driver to their ace, it is indeed that damned red team from Italy. But at a certain point, if that support driver can’t be the Barrichello to their Schumacher, can't contest for race victories and pole position's, or most importantly can't even help claw the points away from the team leader's closest of challengers, there is no point to retain him for 2013. And this, ladies and gentlemen, is where Silly Season begins.

                Given the hypothetical (although perhaps not, his contract expires at the end of this season) that Massa is unfit to support Alonso in the Constructor’s and Driver's Championship charge, who does Ferrari turn to? There are options.

                Example A would be the hottest commodity on the grid at the moment, Sergio Perez. The young Mexican burst onto the scene in Round 2 at Malaysia. On a drying Sepang International Circuit, Perez came from anonymity to challenge Alonso’s then-sluggish Ferrari in an even sluggish-er Sauber, in what was one of the most exciting battles of the 2012 season to this point. Since then, he has routinely qualified higher than he should be, and found himself competing for positions that, in actuality, he shouldn’t even be near. 


               Monza marked his third podium of the season following a brilliant, late one-stop strategy employed by Sauber, charging from fifth to second in the dying laps, flying past both Ferrari’s stricken by tire wear. His cool head and even cooler approach to tire management could be just the anti-Massa Ferrari need, and his youth may provide them with a driver they can build around for the future, in the post-Alonso days.

                However, signing Perez could prove to be hazardous. Alonso’s first go-round with an exciting young phenom as his teammate didn’t go so well, and if the two end up competing for a championship, things could take a turn for the worse. But buyer beware, if Ferrari don’t sign the upstart Perez this offseason, there is a very, very good possibility another top-tier team will. And why’s that?

Not the brightest of ideas to Tweet this, Lewis
                Rumors were abound at Monza that following his tantrum at Spa-Francorchamps, which included the old ‘TwitPic-ing of a highly classified graph of team information’ stunt, Lewis Hamilton may have worn out his welcome with the very outfit that signed him before he hit puberty. Hamilton would move down a step from McLaren to team with Mercedes and Nico Rosberg, filling in Michael Schumacher’s disappointing, post returning from retirement, shoes.

                Although replacing, statistically speaking, the greatest driver to ever slide himself into a Formula 1 cockpit would be quite the challenge, it wouldn’t be as much of a culture shock as one would think. Hamilton and Rosberg are close friends, amongst the closest on the grid, and, not to be overlooked, Team Principle Ross Brawn is nothing short of genius. Mercedes have won a race this season, their first since leaving the sport in the 1950’s, and have all of the necessary components to turn their team into a perennial championship contender.

                The funds that the most popular driver on the grid would bring to MercedesGP could be endless. Two brand names in the racing world, Mercedes and Hamilton, together, under the guidance of one of the greatest bosses in the history of F1. That’s a marketers dream for a team that already has pretty good financial backing. But could this dream become reality, is the real question.

                Considering the source of the rumors are none other than Eddie Jordan, notable shit-stirrer and Irish hero, the answer to that, at least from me, is a resounding no. McLaren are still in with a shot at both championships, and if they can bring at least one home, it’d be silly to handoff one of the most talented drivers we’ve seen in quite a while, simply for his off-track social media journal entries. But, again, hypothetically if they did, Perez would likely be one of their top prospects to replace Hamilton, possibly snatching him away from Ferrari’s iron fist and putting him in a spot that he could thrive in immediately, equal status to Jenson Button.

                If not Perez, one of the youngsters at Force India, who have become McLaren’s junior team over the recent years, Paul di Resta or Nico Hulkenberg, would certainly both be viable options to help Button take on Red Bull and Ferrari. Di Resta, a former DTM driver, has impressed in his transition to open-wheelers, routinely running in the points. His teammate, Hulkenberg, has been no less impressive, following a season-long testing solace with the team last year after a notable rookie season with Williams in the year prior. Both are quicker than most, but I feel Hulkenberg is a star in the making.

                That would leave Ferrari at an impasse, keep the fledgling Brazilian in Massa, or look elsewhere for a second driver.Which leads into Example B. 
"Heikki, Fernando is
                is faster than you."

                One interesting name to bring up as the heir to Massa's prince-hood is Heikki Kovalainen. Lewis Hamilton’s number two during his successful 2008 World Championship campaign, Kovalainen brings something young drivers cannot: Experience. His work in the research and development department at the newly-formed Caterham isn’t overlooked in the paddock, as he’s played an integral part in turning the young team into the best of the other two outfits that joined Formula 1 in 2010, Hispania and Marussia. Although he hasn’t finished in the points, he has turned heads, routinely outpacing his teammates while using his unique insight from being a part of McLaren to build the Caterham up from scratch into a fairly competitive car, reasonably speaking.

You know what you’re going to get from Kovy, that signature car control that all Fin's are apparently born with, and a heady racer who may not contest for wins, but will be on the podium and running in the top five regularly. That’s why I think he might be an even better fit at Ferrari than Perez, although passing on a future World Champion could come back to bite the Scuderia in their already red asses.

Ahhh, it’s all in the fun of Silly Season. You get a little bit of everything, aside from, of course, actual racing. A wannabe fortune teller like myself enjoys this part of the year, and it also relieves the tension on what has been a fantastic, but dramatic season on the track thus far.

Although the talk of driver lineups will be on the backburner until the end of the season, I always enjoy putting forth my predictions for next season a little bit earlier than most, just in case I actually get something right. There will be more updates as the season progresses. 

With that, I give you my preliminary predictions of what the 2013 starting grid will look like.
(Please disregard the order used, this is in no way a prediction of how this season will finish)

Might this be the next 'Superteam'?


Ferrari:
1. Fernando Alonso (ESP)
2. Sergio Perez (MEX)---I just think this fits, especially given his Ferrari background.

McLaren:
3. Lewis Hamilton (GBR)--I don't believe McLaren would sever the cords on this lovefest.
4. Jenson Button (GBR)

Red Bull:
5. Sebastian Vettel (GER)
6. Mark Webber (AUS)

Lotus:
7. Kimi Raikkonen (FIN)
 8. Romain Grosjean (FRA)---A bit controversial, but really all for one incident, everything else he's been caught up in have either been 50-50's or to no fault of his own. Talented driver.

Mercedes:
9. Nico Rosberg (GER)
10. Paul Di Resta (GBR)---One day he will be winning races at McLaren on a regular basis. That day won't come until Button retires or Hamilton moves out. A move to MercGP is a natural progression. 

Sauber:
11. Kamui Kobayashi (JPN)
12. Esteban Gutierrez (MEX)---Big, big sponsorship from TelMex like Perez. An alright season for him in GP2, but it seems that he is on the fast track to F1, with Mr. Slim spinning the wheels. 

Force India:
14. Nico Hulkenberg (GER)
15. Heikki Kovalainen (FIN)---He deserves a ride where he can compete for points, and I don't think Force India will hold onto both drivers. He would work well with a younger driver. Makes sense. 

Williams:
16. Pastor Maldonado (VEN)---I think in the end, the money he brings is too valuable to let go.
17. Valtteri Bottas (FIN)---One of the hottest prospects around as Williams' test driver this year. I think he'll make the jump into a race seat sooner rather than later. 

Toro Rosso:
18. Daniel Ricciardo (AUS)
19. Davide Valsecchi (ITA)---Not sure where he's at sponsorship-wise, but he will likely be GP2 champion and will likely get a ride out of it.

Caterham:
20. Felipe Massa (BRA)---He tried. 
21. Felipe Nasr (BRA)---Exciting young Brazilian, would be a stretch as he's barely out of his teenage-years, but undoubtedly quick and a decent Caterham with his countryman could be a stepping stone to bigger and better things. He can fund himself in if need be. 

HRT:
22. Narain Karthikeyen (IND)
23. Ma Quinghua (CHN)---Became the first Chinaman to participate in a race weekend at Monza, with more than likely tons of government-backed money behind him, ought to find himself in a race seat in the struggling Hispania. 

Marussia:
24. Timo Glock (GER)
25. Vitaly Petrov (RUS)---A driver that's never gotten his fair shake. Wouldn't be surprised to see him at Marussia for awhile, at least until the race at Sochi in 2014.