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Formula One 2010

Zulu Romeo

World Famous Starship Captain
Admiral
The start of testing in Valencia for the forthcoming 2010 Formula One season is as good a time as any to start the brand new, non-refuelling, no-shortcuts :p Formula 1 thread here. :)

And it's looking like a grand line-up so far. Michael Schumacher has indeed promised that long-awaited comeback by joining up with Mercedes - formerly Brawn GP and still managed by Schumi's old friend Ross Brawn - alongside fellow German Nico Rosberg.... while in the chrome silver corner we have the all-British line-up of the last two World Drivers Champions, Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton, at McLaren. And of course, Ferrari attempting to make a mini-comeback of their own with a distinctively Latin line-up in former WDC Fernando Alonso and nearly-WDC Felipe Massa, who will hopefully be ready for Bahrain.

It seems the Sauber name, while strictly not really gone anywhere, is now back, having taken up the ashes of the BMW team, and picking up McLaren stalwart Pedro de la Rosa and (in my opinion) last year's top rookie Kamui Kobayashi, while Renault are hoping to put a tumultuous 2009 behind them with a distinctly East European line-up in lead driver Robert Kubica and GP2 runner-up Vitaly Petrov (the first Russian in F1).

It's business as usual for Red Bull, Toro Rosso and Force India, retaining their driver line-ups as seen at the end of 2009, while Williams opt for F1's most experienced man (and last year's runner-up) Rubens Barrichello and GP2 champion Nico Hulkenberg.

As for Toyota drivers Timo Glock and Jarno Trulli, with Toyota no longer a F1 team, they have moved onto the new teams, Glock to Virgin Racing (formerly Manor GP) with GP2 veteran Lucas di Grassi, and Trulli joining Heikki Kovalainen at the Anglo-Malaysian Lotus F1. (Yes, Lotus are back... kind of. ;)) Then of course there are the other new teams, US F1 and Campos Meta 1, the former featuring former Renault test driver Jose Maria Lopez (backed by the entire Argentinian government, it seems) and latter featuring a certain Bruno Senna.

For me, it'll be great to see 13 teams on the grid once again, something I hadn't seen since the early to mid 90s. Sure, it's not a patch on the late 80s when dozens of teams fought in prequalifying before the actual qualifying session, but I get the feeling that there'll be a very interesting, new feel to this season compared to the previous ones.
 
Great to see the first of the 2010 cars rolled out, and the driver line-ups taking shape. At last, It feels like F1 is back!:techman:

Looking forward to seeing the German Silver Arrows take on our British boys in the other Silver Machines! At Ferrari, the Alonso-Massa partnership could be the best on the grid. Renault going all eastern European with Kubica joind by some Russian kid, and an old-school yellow & black livery! Great to see lotus Back, both they & Virgin have excellent line-ups for new teams. I'm still not sure about Campos & USF1, there are still a lot of people saying the will not make the grid, but good to see the are anouncing drivers, and I hope the make it.

So, just over a month to go. My very early prediction is Lewis Hamilton will take the WDC, but I'll be hoping for Alonso or Button to win it.
BRG
 
Yeah the Virgin care definitely looks great. Anyway, I'm seriously looking forward to this season.
 
I like the Renault livery this year - it reminds me of Jordan during the late 90s.
 
Weeelll.... it's not looking good for US F1 - looks like they won't make the grid this season... and if rumours are true, Campos could therefore be looking towards taking US F1's driver Jose Maria Lopez, although they're also keen on taking onboard Karun Chandhok as well, making things crowded over there with Bruno Senna.

And if US F1 fold, could this pave the way for Stefan? And a comeback for Jacques Villeneuve?!

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/8536567.stm
 
Well, the last series of testing seems to be pretty exciting stuff, with several teams posting favourable times and reporting good results on the test tracks, although the amount of fuel they carry is an issue of course - both in terms of lap times and wear and tear on the car components and tyres.

Schumi reckons Ferrari are still the team to beat. I think most of the teams seem much closer so far, with little of the vast chasm in performance as a result of last year's diffuser row and other rules changes.
 
Only a few days to wait!:)

It really does have the buzz of a classic season. It looks like a genuine 4-way fight for the titles with Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes, and Red Bull all looking very strong. Williams & Renault could spring an odd suprise, and it will be very interesting to see how the 3 new teams cope in the top formula.

I'm still tipping Hamilton to win the WDC, with Alonso running him close.

BRG
 
I'm not so sure this time. I have a feeling that this year will be Alonso's year.

Anyway, it looks like there will be just 12 teams starting this season, with only Lotus F1 and Hispania (formerly Campos Meta 1, and indeed consisting of Senna and Chandhok) being the new additions. It seems the FIA decided not to let Stefan GP become the 13th team following the loss of US F1.

(So many name changes... hard to keep up sometimes. :lol:)

Bring on Bahrain! :D
 
Somebody tell Red Bull that you need to finish races to win.

Aside from that, an exciting race for once.
 
Yes.

I can understand the poor reception the Bahrain race got two weeks ago: me, I'm not really a fan of the Bahrain course, and wasn't so sure of the newer second sector, making it the second-longest track on the calendar. On the other hand, remembering life before refuelling was reintroduced, it was still a bit of a shock to see that race develop the way they did. On the other hand, I heard someone declare that the Bahrain race this year was the "second busiest Bahrain GP in terms of overtaking" in its short history, so I don't know what to believe.

But yes. Red Bull's reliability has been pretty rotten so far. Two races that Seb Vettel should have won.

That said, well done Jenson Button on some pretty reckless decision-making today that definitely paid off! :bolian: The same couldn't really be said about the other half of the McLaren garage, though.

Albert Park is usually one of the most exciting circuits to see racing (unlike Bahrain) and I'm glad it still didn't disappoint at all. Even Michael Schumacher declared today as "fun."
 
Somebody tell Red Bull that you need to finish races to win.

Aside from that, an exciting race for once.
I just wish the excitement wasn't as dependant on weather and tactical decisions...but I was glad that the boys were mixing it up on the track today. Hopefully it will be the norm this year instead of the woeful processional snoozefest we had last time out.

McLaren made a good call with Buttons' first stop - when he went wide on his out-lap I thought they'd blown it!

Good pit call + Red Bull problems + Buttons' smooth tyre-saving style = win!
 
Today's big surprise for me were the Renaults - Kubica and Petrov had great starts and maintained them well (well, until Petrov retired, that is).

And Chandhok was classed as a finisher, albeit 5 laps behind. Hispania can be proud of that. :D

Oh, and also the sight of Schumacher struggling to get past Alguersuari (who only turned 20 last week) and being challenged for position by Di Grassi... :guffaw:
 
I'm not so proud of my guy, Lewis, right now. I can't believe he actually thought he could manage his tires like Button did (which, BTW, was unbelievable). Everyone watching on TV could see Lewis' second set going away in the closing laps. He should be happy with what he got and for his teammate.
 
Great stuff from an unusually dry Malaysia today.

The race winners, for once Seb Vettel riding Luscious Liz (shocking that he could have so easily scooped three victories out of three by now), and Red Bull, finally got their waited-for victory, getting the jump on pole-sitter Mark Webber at the start and virtually staying there for the rest of the race. Webber must once again be kicking himself for letting the young German get the better of him again.

But the real excitement came from the McLarens, who got Saturday completely wrong with the rain, and it was great to see Hamilton and Button getting superb starts and continuing to charge as best as they could (especially Hamilton who made light work of the midfield in the first few laps). The Ferraris were also caught out by the weather, and Alonso had a particularly tough race - I think he had problems with his car, and then of course his engine blew towards the end during his heroic move on Button. That will not be good news for Ferrari, who usually have pretty robust engines. Massa did well once he got out of traffic, especially in the last few laps, catching up on Sutil and Hamilton.

Once again, the competitive midfield story got me interested, especially with good runs from the increasingly competitive Force India of Adrian Sutil, the young Alguersuari (deserved winner of two points) and the increasingly impressive Petrov (unfortunate not to finish). Good to see Nico Hulkenberg get a first point too. :) As for the new teams, the real delight was Lucas Di Grassi in his Virgin (you know, the one with the fuel tank that isn't big enough to last a full race) leading the way home, ahead of both HIspania cars and, notably, both Lotus cars (this being effectively their home GP, they must feel a little disappointed).

Apparently, Air Asia's Tony Fernandes (the owner of Lotus Racing) and Richard Branson of Virgin had a bet that whichever of the two teams finished below the other at the end of the season, the losing team owner had to serve in drag as a stewardess on the winner's airline. Can't wait to see the outcome of that. :guffaw:

But look at the table after three races: Felipe Massa leading the drivers, and the top 7 drivers all within 9 points of each other. In a season where the difference between first and second is 7 points, this means it could all so easily change again by China.
 
finally,vettel has won a bloody win and what a race it was,a redull 1-2,i was expecting it to rain after qualilying on saturday,china is next,think it will be a redbull weekend again.
 
During breaking from 300 km/h ...

fripic10.jpg


:eek:

Thankfully, no one was hurt, so I can post this as well:

captiong.jpg



Yep, he actually tried to steer at that point. :D
 
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Well, we certainly had our fair share of wheel-to-wheel racing today. Some of it even on the race track. :guffaw: :guffaw: :guffaw:

And a good, patient, shrewd win from Jenson Button once again, making good use of some early strategic decisions with the rain and tyres.

With 2 race wins so far this season, Button's now the championship leader, too! :bolian:
 
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