Well, well, well! McLaren Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton has surprised many by saying "Auf Wiedersehen" to McLaren by inking his signature to a three year contract with German F1 team, Mercedes. This effectively leaves seven time champion Michael Schumacher without a confirmed F1 drive for 2013. At this point Schumi has not announced his plans for the future. Should he continue in Formula One? Michael will be 44 before the start of next season, and despite a few great drives this season, there's been more evidence to suggest that he's definitely past his prime. That horrific shunt in Singapore springs to mind. Time will tell.
Mercedes team principal Ross Brawn recently announced that Lewis Hamilton's people instigated negotiations with Mercedes about Hamilton joining the team. Did this suggest some unrest in the Hamilton- McLaren relationship? Lewis' recent tweet of his and team mate Jenson Button's qualifying telemetry, whilst not overly damaging, would hint towards this. McLaren have often stated that they know how to handle, shall we say, high maintenance drivers and ultra competitive team mates. Perhaps we should ask Alain Prost, Juan Pablo Montoya, Fernando Alonso, or even Kimi Raikkonen for that matter, whether they agree? However, McLaren always build race winning cars, whereas Mercedes at this stage, do not. Yes they are towards the front end of the grid, but they don't punch on with McLaren race by race do they? Will Lewis Hamilton's frustrations compound with a Mercedes that may not be able to challenge for race wins event after event? Or is the challenge of helping push Mercedes to the very front of the F1 grid a task he'll relish? Will a fresh start at Mercedes rejuvenate Lewis? It'll be interesting to see how talented team mate Nico Rosberg stacks up against Hamilton. McLaren have quickly signed impressive Sauber driver, Sergio Perez, to a multi- year contract. What a fantastic opportunity for the young Mexican partnering Jenson Button next year. McLaren undoubtedly will be fighting for race wins and the championship. Will Perez rise to the challenge of driving for one of F1's top teams? Leave formulafrontrow.com a comment or send us an email at: greenflag@formulafrontrow.com. Final thought though. Perez is a member of the Ferrari Young Driver Academy. Have Ferrari made a master stroke allowing Perez to race for a frontrunning team with the option of recalling a more accomplished, mature Perez to lead Ferrari post- Alonso? Interesting....
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With the European F1 season wound up and the final flyaway races commencing starting with next weekend's glamorous night race at Singapore, we thought it would be prudent to ask which team has improved the most?
There's no doubt that KERS, DRS and the Pirelli tyres have spiced up the racing making it extremely difficult to predict a winner race to race, but as all teams push themselves to improve their packages, patterns and form emerge. The cream always rises to the top and the big teams are the big teams. But which other F1 teams have caught your eye with their form? Lotus seem to be loitering around that first win under their new guise with Kimi Raikkonen quietly featuring regularly on the podium. Team mate Romain Grosjean whilst still raw, has also scored podiums. His stint in the "sin bin" during the recent Italian GP will only help him to mature. A team to watch. Mercedes? Well what can you say? Still a lot of talk of grand things, but whilst Nico Rosberg won in China and scores well, still only have one win; there's speculation of Michael Schumacher's future; speculation whether they've signed Lewis Hamilton; some weekends they're fast; the next they're nowhere. Sigh! Force India is an exciting team. Just watch Paul di Resta's race-cam to witness his fluent style with minimal steering input. Nico Hulkenberg is unquestionably quick and is no stranger to top ten qualifying sessions. Both are evenly matched and have a great future in F1. Williams have definitely improved, but by how much compared to the other teams? Bruno Senna is racing well, but has conceded that his qualifying needs to improve. Even though Pastor Maldonado won in dominant fashion in Spain, he still seems to be involved in too many contentious issues on track, revealing a still evident impetuous nature. The team that seems to have improved more than even they could have imagined is the very efficient Swiss F1 team, Sauber. Having been in F1 for almost 20 years, Sauber have always built tidy cars, but fell behind in the development race. This year they are regular Q3 contenders and have started on the front row of the grid. The car is easier on the tyres enabling them to run longer stints. Sergio Perez could very well have won in Malaysia. To go with that 2nd place, he's also scored podiums at Canada and Monza. Exciting Japanese driver Kamui Kobayashi has featured in Q3 and with a bit more luck would have more points. The car seems competitive in all circuit configurations. Do you think Sauber are F1's quiet achievers? Will Sauber overhaul Mercedes in the constructor's championship for fifth place? Let us know which team you think is on the up going into the season ending flyaways. Leave a comment or send formulafrontrow.com an email at: greenflag@formulafrontrow.com. Can't wait for Singapore... R.I.P. Professor Sid Watkins. You will be missed. Thank you. Formula One returns after the summer break this weekend at Belgium at the legendary Spa- Francorchamps circuit. The summer break quite often conjures up speculation of driver's contracts and which F1 team they'll drive for the following season. Regarding some of the top teams, it seems 2012 is no exception.
Whilst 2012 frontrunners Red Bull Racing have understood that continuity is high on their agenda by retaining proven race winners Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber, McLaren have Jenson Button confirmed, but have yet to sign Lewis Hamilton. Does anyone think that Lewis would find pastures greener elsewhere than with the team he's effectively grown up with? We suspect he will stay with McLaren. However, over at Ferrari, speculation continues to mount over the seat of Brazilian, Felipe Massa. With a dual world champion in Fernando Alonso, who could well be on his way to a third title this year, as his team mate, expectation is high. Both the Ferrari team and the "tifosi" expect both their drivers to deliver. Having been with the team since 2006, Massa has not been a championship contender since 2008. Who could ever forget his emotional home victory at Interlagos in 2008 only to see Lewis Hamilton snatch the title at the last corner on the last lap? Or Massa's utter dominance of the Turkish GP three years in a row? Unfortunately he has not been the same potent force since. But what are Ferrari's options? Maybe either Force India duo, Nico Hulkenberg or Paul di Resta, perhaps Sauber's Sergio Perez, or maybe promote one of their young drivers? Could they sign someone from left field, such as Caterham's Heikki Kovalainen, whose off contract this year? Alternatively, would Ferrari be better off retaining Felipe Massa? The team know how to work with him and is a proven team player, highlighted by moving over for Alonso at Hockenheim a couple of years ago after receiving the now infamous radio message, "Fernando is faster than you". A charge in the back half of 2012 could persuade Ferrari to retain his services. But if Ferrari choose to end their relationship with Massa, what will this mean for his F1 career? Will he find a new team and reinvigorate himself becoming a race winner again? Let formulafrontrow.com know what you think. Send us an email at: greenflag@formulafrontrow.com or simply leave a comment. A five place grid penalty for Aussie, Mark Webber at Spa for an unscheduled gearbox change. Ouch.... |
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