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4/1/2008
Location
Indianapolis, IN
US
Edited Date/Time
1/25/2012 10:00pm
Remember that it is on Fox this week at Noon Eastern
Preview from
autosport.com
At the end of the 26th lap of the British Grand Prix, the 19-race Formula 1 season will hit its halfway mark. By then, we should have a very good idea of how the balance of power will stand for the rest of the year as Red Bull, which has already blown Ferrari's upgrade out of the water with its own frantic optimisation process, hopes to hold off McLaren.
Fresh from Woking, the MP4-25 will feature a major upgrade package that includes the exhaust-blown diffuser, and this gives a team that has been neck-and-neck with Red Bull for the past few races the chance to pull clear. Whichever team leads at the start of lap 27 will be in very good shape for the rest of the season.
Complicating the equation for McLaren is the fact that Silverstone is very much suited to the RB6. It was at Silverstone last year that Red Bull's strong second half of the season kicked off in earnest with a dominant one-two led by Sebastian Vettel. It's a testament to how far McLaren has come since then that on that day Lewis Hamilton was getting cheered for taking 16th place off Fernando Alonso. If McLaren is on level terms this weekend, it bodes well for Martin Whitmarsh's team, if it's ahead, then it means that Red Bull could face an uphill struggle.
But if Valencia taught us anything, it's not to dismiss Red Bull's ability to develop every race, as a raft of aerodynamic tweaks are added to the car. Invariably, they work and the team takes a step forward, making it very difficult to catch up - even with a major upgrade. Alonso knows all about that after having his victory hopes dashed in the European Grand Prix when it turned out that the Ferrari F10 hadn't made a big enough stride.
The intra-team battles will also be gripping. Hamilton leads team-mate Jenson Button by just six points at the top of the standings, while Vettel has retaken the lead in his scrap with Mark Webber and now has 12 points over him. Chances are, one of these four drivers will win the world championship, and as the season moves into its second half there are no signs that either half of either team is ready to settle into a supporting role.
Perhaps the only driver who has the potential to interrupt the Red Bull/McLaren hegemony at the top of the standings is Alonso. It seems unlikely that the car will be able to fight for victory on pace at Silverstone – although it will be interesting to see how the upgraded machine performs on a very fast circuit – but with a fair wind he should be a podium contender. If he can keep that up for the next few races, perhaps if Ferrari can close the gap to the front later in the season all hope might not be lost.
For the rest, Silverstone is likely to be more of a battle. Mercedes continues to struggle with tyre warm-up, something that wrecked the team's British GP weekend in its Brawn GP guise last year. Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher could be anywhere between the third and seventh row this weekend, such is the competitiveness of the midfield pack.
The other players in this battle will be Renault, Force India and Williams. Robert Kubica has generally been the strongest of the drivers from that trio, although Adrian Sutil and Vitantonio Liuzzi - who was revitalised in Canada by a switch to his original chassis after the one introduced in Spain was found to have a manufacturing weakness - should be back on form after getting caught out by the rising temperature in qualifying at Valencia.
But the one to watch at Silverstone will be Williams – for better and worse. An overhaul of the way it was utilising its downforce package made a big difference in Valencia and allowed both Rubens Barrichello and Nico Hulkenberg to make Q3. At Silverstone, there will be an upgrade package featuring a Red Bull-style exhaust-blown diffuser that the team has been working on since late last year, as well as other aero revisions that are expected to be worth well over half a second. If it works, it could re-establish Williams as a regular top 10 runner.
Revised track
Ever since it first held a grand prix race back in 1948, the Northamptonshire airfield track has had a habit of reinventing itself. This year, the new Arena section has been added, turning into a very fast right-hander at what was the Abbey chicane and rejoining the track via the old National Straight at Brooklands.
The new section of track will be something of an unknown quantity – although plenty of simulator work will have been done by the likes of McLaren and Ferrari to absorb the set-up implications.
With the profile of Club Corner also slightly changed, and the flat kerbs at Becketts likely to make one of F1's best sequence of corners even faster, it will add some extra excitement to the weekend.
Strategy
For Silverstone, Bridgestone has allocated soft and hard tyre compounds, which adds up to a likely one-stop race. There could be a little more variation than we saw in Valencia, where most started on the option tyre and pitted early - largely because the harder tyre compound sometimes works better at Silverstone because it offers greater lateral support in the fast corners.
This could mean that you see the odd Q3 qualifier option to run on the hard tyres on Saturday afternoon and create a few strategic variables for the race on Saturday afternoon. Just don't count on there being more than one pitstop each.
Preview from
autosport.com
At the end of the 26th lap of the British Grand Prix, the 19-race Formula 1 season will hit its halfway mark. By then, we should have a very good idea of how the balance of power will stand for the rest of the year as Red Bull, which has already blown Ferrari's upgrade out of the water with its own frantic optimisation process, hopes to hold off McLaren.
Fresh from Woking, the MP4-25 will feature a major upgrade package that includes the exhaust-blown diffuser, and this gives a team that has been neck-and-neck with Red Bull for the past few races the chance to pull clear. Whichever team leads at the start of lap 27 will be in very good shape for the rest of the season.
Complicating the equation for McLaren is the fact that Silverstone is very much suited to the RB6. It was at Silverstone last year that Red Bull's strong second half of the season kicked off in earnest with a dominant one-two led by Sebastian Vettel. It's a testament to how far McLaren has come since then that on that day Lewis Hamilton was getting cheered for taking 16th place off Fernando Alonso. If McLaren is on level terms this weekend, it bodes well for Martin Whitmarsh's team, if it's ahead, then it means that Red Bull could face an uphill struggle.
But if Valencia taught us anything, it's not to dismiss Red Bull's ability to develop every race, as a raft of aerodynamic tweaks are added to the car. Invariably, they work and the team takes a step forward, making it very difficult to catch up - even with a major upgrade. Alonso knows all about that after having his victory hopes dashed in the European Grand Prix when it turned out that the Ferrari F10 hadn't made a big enough stride.
The intra-team battles will also be gripping. Hamilton leads team-mate Jenson Button by just six points at the top of the standings, while Vettel has retaken the lead in his scrap with Mark Webber and now has 12 points over him. Chances are, one of these four drivers will win the world championship, and as the season moves into its second half there are no signs that either half of either team is ready to settle into a supporting role.
Perhaps the only driver who has the potential to interrupt the Red Bull/McLaren hegemony at the top of the standings is Alonso. It seems unlikely that the car will be able to fight for victory on pace at Silverstone – although it will be interesting to see how the upgraded machine performs on a very fast circuit – but with a fair wind he should be a podium contender. If he can keep that up for the next few races, perhaps if Ferrari can close the gap to the front later in the season all hope might not be lost.
For the rest, Silverstone is likely to be more of a battle. Mercedes continues to struggle with tyre warm-up, something that wrecked the team's British GP weekend in its Brawn GP guise last year. Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher could be anywhere between the third and seventh row this weekend, such is the competitiveness of the midfield pack.
The other players in this battle will be Renault, Force India and Williams. Robert Kubica has generally been the strongest of the drivers from that trio, although Adrian Sutil and Vitantonio Liuzzi - who was revitalised in Canada by a switch to his original chassis after the one introduced in Spain was found to have a manufacturing weakness - should be back on form after getting caught out by the rising temperature in qualifying at Valencia.
But the one to watch at Silverstone will be Williams – for better and worse. An overhaul of the way it was utilising its downforce package made a big difference in Valencia and allowed both Rubens Barrichello and Nico Hulkenberg to make Q3. At Silverstone, there will be an upgrade package featuring a Red Bull-style exhaust-blown diffuser that the team has been working on since late last year, as well as other aero revisions that are expected to be worth well over half a second. If it works, it could re-establish Williams as a regular top 10 runner.
Revised track
Ever since it first held a grand prix race back in 1948, the Northamptonshire airfield track has had a habit of reinventing itself. This year, the new Arena section has been added, turning into a very fast right-hander at what was the Abbey chicane and rejoining the track via the old National Straight at Brooklands.
The new section of track will be something of an unknown quantity – although plenty of simulator work will have been done by the likes of McLaren and Ferrari to absorb the set-up implications.
With the profile of Club Corner also slightly changed, and the flat kerbs at Becketts likely to make one of F1's best sequence of corners even faster, it will add some extra excitement to the weekend.
Strategy
For Silverstone, Bridgestone has allocated soft and hard tyre compounds, which adds up to a likely one-stop race. There could be a little more variation than we saw in Valencia, where most started on the option tyre and pitted early - largely because the harder tyre compound sometimes works better at Silverstone because it offers greater lateral support in the fast corners.
This could mean that you see the odd Q3 qualifier option to run on the hard tyres on Saturday afternoon and create a few strategic variables for the race on Saturday afternoon. Just don't count on there being more than one pitstop each.
The hotel I used to stay in, behind the legendary Green Man Pub right in Silverstone Village, was burned down this week by some scumbags.
Some poor bastards are scrambling now to find hotel rooms!
Why am I even paying for Speed channel anymore?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ENh0jNu8wM
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Here are the 1st session times
Pos Driver Team Time Laps
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1:32.280 22
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:32.614 + 0.334 16
3. Kubica Renault 1:32.725 + 0.445 21
4. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:32.747 + 0.467 23
5. Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1:32.968 + 0.688 18
6. Rosberg Mercedes 1:33.318 + 1.038 21
7. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1:33.377 + 1.097 19
8. Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:33.519 + 1.239 20
9. Schumacher Mercedes 1:33.955 + 1.675 18
10. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1:34.016 + 1.736 17
11. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:34.132 + 1.852 21
12. Petrov Renault 1:34.365 + 2.085 22
13. Alonso Ferrari 1:34.490 + 2.210 20
14. di Resta Force India-Mercedes 1:34.580 + 2.300 22
15. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 1:34.710 + 2.430 16
16. de la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 1:34.901 + 2.621 17
17. Massa Ferrari 1:35.037 + 2.757 21
18. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:35.318 + 3.038 27
19. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 1:36.747 + 4.467 16
20. Glock Virgin-Cosworth 1:37.330 + 5.050 11
21. di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 1:37.518 + 5.238 15
22. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth 1:38.735 + 6.455 21
23. Fauzy Lotus-Cosworth 1:39.510 + 7.230 11
24. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 1:39.673 + 7.393 27
Pos Driver Team Time Laps
1. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:31.234 15
2. Alonso Ferrari 1:31.626 + 0.392 26
3. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1:31.875 + 0.641 24
4. Massa Ferrari 1:32.099 + 0.865 25
5. Rosberg Mercedes 1:32.166 + 0.932 29
6. Schumacher Mercedes 1:32.660 + 1.426 27
7. Petrov Renault 1:32.745 + 1.511 28
8. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:32.757 + 1.523 22
9. Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1:32.787 + 1.553 27
10. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1:32.967 + 1.733 32
11. Kubica Renault 1:33.019 + 1.785 30
12. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1:33.164 + 1.930 28
13. Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:33.200 + 1.966 24
14. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 1:33.402 + 2.168 23
15. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 1:33.728 + 2.494 27
16. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:33.836 + 2.602 36
17. de la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 1:34.051 + 2.817 29
18. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:34.643 + 3.409 36
19. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 1:35.465 + 4.231 25
20. di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 1:36.237 + 5.003 24
21. Glock Virgin-Cosworth 1:36.553 + 5.319 21
22. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth 1:37.019 + 5.785 27
23. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 1:38.303 + 7.069 32
24. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 1:42.901 + 11.667 3
Damn they killed it out there in Quali's!
Pos Driver Team Q1 Q2 Q3
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1:30.841 1:30.480 1:29.615
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:30.858 1:30.114 1:29.758
3. Alonso Ferrari 1:30.997 1:30.700 1:30.426
4. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:31.297 1:31.118 1:30.556
5. Rosberg Mercedes 1:31.626 1:31.085 1:30.625
6. Kubica Renault 1:31.680 1:31.344 1:31.040
7. Massa Ferrari 1:31.313 1:31.010 1:31.172
8. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1:31.424 1:31.126 1:31.175
9. de la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 1:31.533 1:31.327 1:31.274
10. Schumacher Mercedes 1:32.058 1:31.022 1:31.430
11. Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1:31.109 1:31.399
12. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 1:31.851 1:31.421
13. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1:32.144 1:31.635
14. Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:31.435 1:31.699
15. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 1:32.226 1:31.708
16. Petrov Renault 1:31.638 1:31.796
17. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:31.901 1:32.012
18. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:32.430
19. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 1:34.405
20. Glock Virgin-Cosworth 1:34.775
21. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 1:34.864
22. di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 1:35.212
23. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth 1:36.576
24. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 1:36.968
What a disaster!
Rubens did a good job in the Williams. :Like to see him get on the podium tomorrow.
Red Bull looks good for a 1-2 tomorrow, that's for sure!
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