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Showing posts with label F1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label F1. Show all posts

Friday, 5 July 2013

Sky Sports F1 Germany sneak peak

Above A sneak peak to another installment of the Closer To The Cockpit series.
Below  Michael Schumacher takes on the 'Ring in a 2011 Mercedes Formula One car

 

The German Grand Prix is exclusively live on Sky Sports F1 HD from 5-7 July. Only with Sky Sports can you watch 116 live Barclays Premier League matches, the Lions Tour, the Ashes, Formula 1 and US Open tennis in HD and on mobile and tablet devices.


Friday, 28 June 2013

Interview with David Croft - Part One.



Croft (second from right) is one of the Sky Sports F1 mob for 2013.

 'Ah, Daniel Puddicombe, the one who had a photo taken with Natalie Pinkham. If you keep that picture as your Twitter avatar for much longer you’ll be causing a divorce in the Pinkham household’.

I knew it that speaking to David Croft – or Crofty as he is better known as – would be fun, and the above line from him confirmed it. Witty, insightful and always up for a laugh, it was interesting to hear his take on all things Formula One.  In the first of two parts, we talk Mark Webber, Lewis Hamilton and next year's regulations.

With Infinity sponsoring the Lotus Formula One team along with Infiniti sponsoring the Red Bull Formula One team, I wondered how hard it will be for David, as a commentator, not to get muddled up between the two. As it turns out, he won’t have a problem differentiating between the two as he won’t mention it. ‘It’s not going to be at all; I never refer to Red Bull as Infiniti Red Bull Racing and I’m not going to refer to Lotus as Lotus F1 Infinity – in my mind, they’re called Red Bull Racing or Lotus’. 

Right, that’s cleared that one up, then. He continues, ‘you’ve got Lotus the F1 team that’s got nothing to do with the Lotus car company anymore sponsored by Infinity who are nothing to do with the Infiniti car company. So I suppose they need to drag up a few other company names that have nothing to do with car companies and sell it with stickers on the side’.   

Next up, Mark Webber. At the time, we didn’t know where he was going, but now we know that he’ll be joining Porsche’s LMP1 programme, but that of course leaves a Red Bull sized open door for someone to step in to. Who will that person be? ‘If he left Red Bull [which we now know he is going to do], who would be the best candidate? Kimi Räikkönen has been talked a lot purely because he’s the best driver out of contract and you can understand why people would put Kimi and Red Bull together as they sponsored his rallying commitments for Citroen, but I’m sure that Lotus will want to keep him and will have said “look, come and stay with us”, but let’s face it, he isn’t exactly unhappy at Enstone at the moment’.
 Webber's chariot for 2014, but who will drive next year's RBR alongside Vettel?

‘Of the Red Bull drivers that are coming up, John-Eric Vernge is starting to get together and Daniel Riccardo is another good driver who is showing better form this year and has shown consistently better form in quali and therefore, in the races on Sunday afternoon. They’re both handicapped a bit because the car that they’re driving isn’t as competitive as the Torro Rosso that Vettel drove for when he was driving for the team'.

Lewis Hamilton was high on the agenda again – at the Sky F1 Media Day, Croft revealed that he doesn’t like dogs, and therefore Roscoe – but this time, minus the chat about his pet pooch. ‘I think we’re slap-bang in the middle of a Vettel era’ he said on Lewis’ comments that he fears he may not win a world championship again.

‘McLaren didn’t really give him the car, and circumstances helped him not to add to that one world title, but will we see Lewis Hamilton win again? I think we will, I think he’ll be world champion again, because next season we press a reset button on Formula One and we’re coming to the end of the V8 era, and next year it is going to be all about which power unit is the best and might not be that Red Bull have got the upper hand and it might be that Mercedes design a very good power unit and it’ll give Lewis an excellent chance to go out there and challenge again but, because of the reset, and because of that I don’t think Lewis should worry too much – at times in his career he will have the car and he has the talent to challenge for a world championship and I don’t see any reason why he couldn’t be a two or three time world champion’. 

A pause. ‘I remember when I was on Five Live in 2008 when he won his first title, I was asked live on air how many titles I thought Lewis could win and I said “when he retires, he’ll be a three-time world champion”, and I still don’t think we’re running out of time to see that’.

Moving neatly on, what are his thoughts on next year’s regulations? ‘It’s a bit of a hole, isn’t it Daniel?’ David answers with a laugh. ‘But I can understand the need for a change and Formula One should be pushing the tech, pushing the boundaries and should be coming up with coming up with a formula that can be equated to road cars and tech that can be equated  to road cars, which I can see nothing wrong with, but did we need to change the V8s to V6s, does it keep the manufactures happy, it might just do that – we’re seeing Honda come back into the sport and V6 turbos are what Honda do, so from that point of view, I don’t see a problem with it’.

These things - next year's power units - have caused a lot of discussion.
Croft continues: ‘there is a lot of money being spent on these power units, it may be a reset button and it may be that certain teams are disadvantaged because of their power unit and they’ve got a year to put it right before 2015. I don’t think share the view that it will sound horrible – you’ll still be able to feel these engines rattling your ribcage as they go past as that’s part of the thrill of going to see Formula One’. 
  
He adds a cautionary note though, ‘but to have a reliance for 33 seconds [a lap] on energy recovery systems, I hope they’re going to work and we’re going to have enough testing so we don’t have multiple retirements in races, because nobody wants to see that’. 


But are the regulation changes worth it? David sums it up perfectly: ‘In my heart, I think it is a bit of a shame that we’re losing the V8s at a time where the stable rules and regulations have actually given us some really exciting racing in recent years’. A pause. ‘But do you know what Daniel? It might be that we’ll sit here this time next year and think “Blimey, these new engines are great, aren’t they? These new energy recovery systems are fab and it gives people the chance to overtake” I hope that’s the case, but we’ll have to wait and see’. 

Look out for part two soon where we’ll talk Silverstone, sausages (yes, really), next year’s calendar and a whole lot morebesides.

The British Grand Prix is live on Sky Sports F1 HD from 28-30 June. Only with Sky Sports can you watch 116 live Barclays Premier League matches, the Lions Tour, the Ashes, Formula 1 and US Open tennis in HD and on mobile and tablet devices.





Friday, 21 June 2013

Twenty minutes with Allan McNish.




Ahead of this weekend’s Le Mans 24 Hours endurance race Audi organised the chance to interview one of their star drivers – two-times winner and former Toyota F1 driver and BBC Five Live commentator Allan McNish. He had a packed schedule with 28 interviews to do over two days, but thankfully I was one of the first to get in.  

Earlier in the day, he tweeted a question a journalist had asked him previously. Knowing that had many interviews to complete, I wanted to make an impression right from the start so asked him how he deals with stupid questions. After a long laugh, he replied by saying ‘you give a stupid answer’ before pausing and adding ‘you then phone up their editor and say “what the hell is going on?”’

‘It happens’ he recalls, ‘it was a journalist covering a lot of different sports who hadn’t done their homework, hadn’t even read a press release and I’d done an unprofessional job – I don’t mind journalists asking questions they don’t know the answer to, which might seem silly to initiated people, but what I do mind is if someone pretends to be really good at something and then does a pretty shit job at it. If it’s something that’s on a public situation, like TV or Radio you have to be professional and give a nice, polite answer with a hint of sarcasm in there, but if it’s a one-on-one, I’ll point them towards AUTOSPORT or something’. My reputation for doing my homework is safe as I wasn’t told to go and read AUTOSPORT.

 I then asked what the 27 other journalists probably asked: how he feels ahead of the centrepiece of Sportscar racing. The weekend before the interview took place Audi thrashed Toyota in the test day. ‘There’s no question about it; the car’s strong and I think we’ve made a big improvement from last year with quite a few areas in the car – the aerodynamics are better; through the Porsche Curves, the car was awesome, like it was on rails, really, really impressive and it actually took my breath away’.
‘Then you look at the engine guys and they’ve done a lot to try to reduce the negatives on the regulation changes and I think they’ve done a good job and on the other side, I think we understand the hybrid system and the e-tron Quattro aspect’. 


‘At the test day we had every sort of condition possible: it was wet, it was dry, it was inbetween, and it was greasy. The only thing it wasn’t, was dry for a long period of time so we didn’t get all of the information on the dry tyre’s endurance and we didn’t get information on what it’s like when it is hot as it was 15 degrees, as the tyres work a lot better than at say 35 degrees, which it could also be as it was 30 degrees. So therefore, we got good information about the track from what we had but I still think there’s a bit of work to be done’. I found this particularly interesting as generally Formula One tyres work better at a hotter temperature – but then again, the differences between the two are huge in every sense of the word. 

You would think therefore that the two cars – his Audi and an F1 car - are miles apart from each other, but you would be wrong. Allow Allan to explain all: ‘In the high-speed corners it was better than any other car I’ve ever driven. The balance, the amount of steering needed to put into it through the Porsche Curves was minimal, as when it caught the grip you come off the road section and onto the track section it was just like the left two wheels clicked into a rail and it shot through the corners. There was no real feeling for where the grip was as it was there instantly and it kind of gave me the impression of what the Red Bull looked be on Sunday night [in Canada] to be honest. It looked to be very much in its operating window and it was the best high-speed car I’ve ever driven’.



Formula One these days is a huge pull, but back in the ‘80s and the Group C era some argued that it had the same allure to Formula One in the same era and with the WEC [World Endurance Championship] gaining more and more fans as time goes on I was curious to hear whether it could match Formula One for prestige in time. ‘I don’t think Sportscars has equalled Formula One for 40 years since Bernie got involved’. McNish pauses. ‘And I think that’s because of Bernie: he grabs a whole band of men and dragged them in a direction by offering TV packages and has made the sport it is today’. 

Allan is quick to add on that Formula One has done a lot of good for other sports too: ‘there has been times such as when it was said that Formula One killed Group C, but I think right now Formula One has given a higher focus on other areas of motorsport too – just look at the amount of motorsport is on TV and you can see it. I feel now that there is a divide as manufactures on the whole are looking to other forms of the sport to look to race their cars and improve their tech as opposed to F1 as F1 is taking teams’. 

He then proves his point perfectly. ‘Let me ask you a question Daniel: how many championships has Renault won in the last three years?’ 

After a lot of stumbling as I was trying to remember what year Alonso won for Renault, Allan chipped in. ‘It’s a simple question but the exact answer you gave me [of “not sure”] is the right one. Renault supplies the engines to Red Bull but nobody thinks Renault have won anything in Formula One and it’s because of Red Bull. Red Bull is a drinks maker and Renault is a car supplier’. 

‘Interestingly, the fastest car in LMP2 was an Alpine, which is basically Renault and in that side of things I see the manufactures looking to Sportscar racing as a place where they can get their cars out there and show their tech and do what they want to do. So I think it [the WEC] is in a very good shape with Porsche coming in this year and very strong rumours another is about to be rubber-stamped in LMP and you’ve got the GT grid which is quite wide and varied with manufactor involvement so  it looks to be quite strong’. 

Allan adds a note of warning though. ‘It could be 10 years before it gets anywhere near the level of F1 in terms of global presence but then again you never know where Formula One will be in 10 years’ time’. 
 

‘I’ll ask you another question: how many engines do you hear that rev to 18,000 rpm down Croydon high-street?’ Not wanting to jeopardise my chances of ever speaking to Allan again I decided not to answer that I had in fact never been to Croydon before or mention the word ‘motorbike’ but in fact confirm that no, no road car engines rev to 18k. 


‘You’ve got V8s, V10s; you’ve got diesels so therefore it’s got that physical relevance. The hybrid systems used in F1 have no relevance to those used in a road car. Ours [Audi’s] have got more and are totally relevant but the mentality relevance is there; the involvement between the hybrid departments of Audi and Audi Sport is close as it is with various other things’. Allan then goes on to explain how the headlights of his R18 are same as those used in say an A4 or A6 and also points to the engine: a sister of the race car’s engine now sits in the Q7. 


McNish has been involved in a few big incidents over the years – most notably at Le Mans in 2011. I was curious to know how he came back from incidents such as that one mentally. ‘It can take a long time to recover; most took 3 months for everything to be back to normal. Beyond that, when you get back in the car you’ve got to be very, very hard about it, focused and clear and push yourself through to make sure you’re fast straight away because there’s none of this “oh, I’ll be OK next week”, you’ve got to be on it straight away and some drivers have trouble with that. The day that I don’t is the right time I stop, but I certainly hope it isn’t due to any incidents’.

 Allan joined the BBC 5 Live F1 coverage for this season and by the sounds of it, he’s having a ball. ‘It’s quite fun. I like James Allan’s style and Jennie [Gow, pitlane reporter] – who I met for the first time this year – is fantastic: she’s so bubbly; if you saw her on camera doing what she does it would be fantastic as its all arms and action and she’s so enthusiastic and I’ve known Gary Anderson for 30 years’. 


‘It’s funny – I see us talking on 5 Live and we’re talking about “yeah, what about this, what about that?” and it is just as if we’ve got a cup of tea talking about it on the sofa! We’re like a driver and a designer and it’s fun, very interesting along with a great group of people doing a fantastic job, but it’s different to TV as you can’t say “Did you see that?” or “Look at his front wheel!” and you have to actually describe it’.
 

McNish has been a steward and as revealed last week he is tobe the fourth member for Budapest and explains what goes on behind the closed doors. ‘There’s four people in a room – usually a local steward, two main stewards who do five or six GPs each year and then you’ve got a driver steward’. Not ground-breaking insider info, but the next bit does give a good chunk of information about it: ‘the driver steward is one of the four. So therefore, you all have an equal vote and you have to come to a common consensus on matters, and that can be as clear and as obvious as a speed-limit infringement, but obviously a bit trickier such as when Tom Kristiansen had to sit in and hear Ferrari, Red Bull, Mercedes and Pirelli about the tyre issues. It can be wide and varied – sometimes in your area of expertise and sometimes not. From a driver’s point of view as a steward there are a number of things but one point is that you can speak on a level playing field as we know the other person in that situation has been there and knows what’s going on and therefore it’s more of a mind-to-mind thing and the second thing is that it brings a sense of consistency to the decision-making process as well through the course of the year’. 

‘The other little aspect to it is that you’ve  got significantly – significantly – more information to you, far more than any television; you’ve got the radio, you’ve got the live data, you’ve got the data from the team and you’ve got various camera angles – in Monaco, you’ve got the street camera angles too – and you can pull up any piece of data and look at it until you’re all sure that the decision is correct, and from that point of view, and when you understand some of the background behind it, you realise that the stewards have got a pretty difficult job but you realise that they do a pretty bloody good job’.

We round off the interview by Allan saying ‘Great questions chap’ perhaps in reference to the first point he made.  Thanks again to Allan for taking out the time to include me in one of the 28 interviews and for Audi Sport for organising the interview.

Monday, 6 May 2013

A quick Q & A with Alice Powell

Alice Powell is Britain’s leading female racing driver having won the Formula BARC championship aged 18, and last year becoming the first female to score a point in GP3. Now aged 20, she’s racing in the F3 Cup this season and is deciding to thrash everyone – at the time of writing, her results so far this season total three wins and a second place. Not bad, eh? Who better then to ask a few questions about females in motorsport, F1 and Sir Stirling Moss?

Normally I wouldn’t put an interview in a question and answer format (like the feature I did with Natalie Pinkham), but this was done over an email, which makes things a lot harder. It is also worth noting that the questions were sent after the first weekend of the F3 and answered after the second weekend. Enjoy!

This year you took a sidestep into the F3 Cup from GP3 and won the first two races of the championship. Does this set you up for a good season, and can you see yourself competing in back in GP3 or GP2 next season?

Yes, it has set the season up very well! I just have to make sure that I am consistently up there, getting good results. I wanted to stay in GP3 this year, but the budget wouldn't allow me to do so. However, I have set my sights on racing in either GP3 or GP2 for 2014.

 You've had quite a diverse career with both tin-tops and single seaters. Would you ever consider racing at Le Mans for instance, or is Formula One your single goal?

Formula One is my goal. Some drivers who are racing in F1, I have beaten, so I know that I am good enough to compete in F1. If, for whatever reason, I didn't get to F1, then yes, I would consider Le Mans or even going to the USA.

What are your thoughts on Sir Stirling Moss's recent comments?

Well I have a lot of respect for Sir Stirling. I have met him on a couple of occasions and he was very nice and supportive. However, I don't agree with his comments! I know women can compete in F1 against men, it is just a female needs the opportunity to do so.

 If you could drive for any team in Formula One, regardless of budget, which one would it be and who would your ideal team-mate be and why?

Ah that's a tough one! To be honest, F1 is F1 and I would not mind who I drove for! But that is a rubbish answer, so if I had to pick one it would be Lotus F1. They are only 15mins from my house and I am on their fitness training programme and the trainers and team there have helped me so much. The members of the team are also lovely people, plus they have a quick car! As for my team mate, I would say Sir Stirling, so I can race against him and show him what us females can do!

What do you make of this season in Formula One, and what are your thoughts on the 2014 regulations? A good change or a change for the worse?

I think this season is going to be so, so exciting! I really do think the championship will go down to the wire this year. Regarding the regulations, we will just have to wait and see what it is like.

Do you have any tips and advice for any young female racing drivers (or even any females wanting to work in motorsport in general), and do you think that the recent success of Danica in the US and yourself in the opening rounds will inspire a new generation to be more interested in motorsport? 

Just keep pushing for your goal, whatever it is in life. I go by that if a door closes, another one opens! Females are starting to get noticed in Motorsport now, which is fantastic!

Danica has done a superb job in the US. When she moved to NASCAR, the viewing figures increased by 15%, so imagine the viewer increase if a female were to race in F1. Saying that, I feel that females should be in F1 on merit (ie, a good driver), not just to help TV increase media. F1 needs a female role model to help bring more young female drivers into the sport.

And finally: your favourite racing circuit and why?

Wow, I have a few, but Monaco has to be near the top, if not at the top. Racing round a circuit which has such character, no room for error and travelling over 140mph out of a tunnel and an inch from the barriers is mind blowing. I am so fortunate to have raced there.

Thanks to Alice for taking the time out to answer my questions. You can follow her progress in the F3 Cup this season by following her on Twitter here,  taking a look at her website here and finding out more about the championship here. She also writes a piece each month for my friend Jack Leslie which you can find here.

I urge you to go to at least one meeting this year; for peanuts you can watch some wonderful racing and witness one of the UK’s hottest talents doing her thing: winning.