September 30, 2009
Which means that Kimi Raikkonnen is out at Ferrari.
Of this, we shall speak no more, unless it is to heap derogatory comments upon it.
Speaking of Felipe Massa, however, he got back behind the wheel for the first time since his horrible accident in Hungary. Sure, it was in a Kart, but it's still the first step in getting back to F1 trim. He turned more than 60 laps on the kart track at his home circuit of Interlagos on Tuesday.
He did manage to beat Baby Yoshi and Diddy Kong, but lost to Mario.
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September 29, 2009
But that's okay, because the Grand Prix of Japan is returning to Suzuka!
Understand, this is kinda like trading the Hungaroring and getting Spa in return. The Mt Fuji circuit is nice, but Suzuka is the one track that every driver loves. The only figure-of-eight layout on the calendar, it might have the best balance between manueverability and speed as well. The turns are challenging, but they're placed just right so they don't mickey-mouse the track.
Which is not to say the circuit is perfect. No, the powers-that-be took the Legendary Turn known as 130R and mangled it into Turn 14 15, now a double-apex left-hander. 130R (so-called for its radius of 130 meters) used to be, like Eau Rouge, a test of a driver's manhood: only the bravest could take it flat-out. In 2003, however, it was broken up into two separate turns for safety's sake, as it had been extremely dangerous. Allan McNish's crash in 2002 turned out to be the final straw. While he walked away with minor injuries, everybody concerned knew that it was only luck that he wasn't killed. In a cruel twist of fate, motorcycle racer Daijiro Kato was killed in the reprofiled turn in 2003.
As a high-speed circuit, don't be surprised if we see a return to prominence by the Force India cars, by the way. While manueverability is important at Suzuka, it's high-speed manueverability we're talking about (unlike, say, Singapore or Monaco), and FI has shown that it can do that.
There's plenty of elevation changes through the length of the track, so the drivers feel like they're actually going somewhere, too. Downforce levels are expected to be medium-to-high.
SPEED'll be bringing us all the usual action, but NOT at the usual times. Yes, Japan is one of the few races we here in the US can actually watch live without waking up waaaaaaaay too early! Practice 2 comes to us from midnight to 140am Friday morning, with Quals starting at the same time and going until 130am on Saturday morning.
For the race, however, SPEED is pulling out all (well, most) of the stops. From 10p to 11p on Saturday night, we get to see "F1 Rocks!", a three-night concert during the Singapore GP. From 11p to 1130p, they'll show us "Inside Grand Prix," the promo show brought to us by Allianz ("Doing stuff with other people's money: Allianz") and Mr Snooty-Voiced Guy. Finally the race coverage proper begins at 1130pm and goes until 2am.
There'll be a replay from 9pm to 1130pm Sunday night. All times are, of course, Pond Central time. Add one hour for Eastern, subtract two hours for San Francisco time (you listening, Vauc? Maybe find a sports bar or something!), and minus several million hours if you're a time traveler.
This time around, I expect to provide my usual coverage, so we'll see you here!
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September 27, 2009
*MCLAREN MASSACRE: Lewis Hamilton got a gift pole on Saturday when Rubens Barrichello's crash brought out a red flag just as everybody was beginning their final runs. The McLaren driver took full advantage of his present, running away with the victory. The only time the reigning world champion didn't lead was when he was in the pits. If only their car had been this good at the beginning of the season, he'd be a legit contender now. Instead, he's just looking for as many points as he can get.
*BRAKES BOLLIXED: Singapore's Marina Circuit is known to be hard on brakes. Lots of turns mean they got hot quickly, and essentially never cool down. As they get hotter and hotter, the carbon starts to fail, slowly sloughing away in ever-increasing clouds of brake dust. This has the effect of causing them to go into a death spiral: the loss of mass means they have less ability to radiate away the heat, causing them to fail faster, sending more dust into the air, and losing more mass. To make things worse, the carbon discs get so hot that the aluminum brake calipers actually begin to deform, meaning the drivers have to stomp on the brakes even harder to get them to work... and that increases the heat even farther. Today, both Toro Rosso chargers withdrew with brake problems, as did Renault's Lettuce Grosjean. Red Bull's Mark Webber saw his slim championship hopes disappear when his front-right brake disc exploded, sending him into the wall in a lurid skid. His teammate, Sebastien Vettel dialed his bias nearly all the way to the rear in an attempt to keep his front brakes from a similar fate. Championship leader Jensen Button had to slow down late in the race for the same reason. All of these cars use Brembo brakes. The other teams, users of Hipco or Carbon Industry brakes, certainly had brake wear but nowhere to the extent of the Brembos.
*BUTTON, BARRICHELLO BATTLE: WIth his fifth-place finish, Championship leader Jensen Button added another point to his lead over teammate Rubens Barrichello, who finished in 6th. Increasing his total to 84, he's nearly eliminated Seb Vettel and his 59 points as well. With three races left, Rubens is 15 points adrift. As a team, BrawnGP has a 42.5 point lead over Red Bull for the Constructor's Championship as well.
*DRIVER OF THE RACE: His career is in jeopardy. His team is desperate for a good result. Today, Toyota's Timo Glockenspiel announced that he needs to be looked at for 2010 by bringing his TF109 home with a strong 2nd place finish after starting 6th. He's proven that he's a good driver this season with repeated points-scoring results after starting waaaaay down the grid (and sometimes from the pit lane), and today it all came together.
*TEAM OF THE RACE: No one team really distinguished itself today, so we'll give the award to BrawnGP. They finished 5th and 6th, and nearly clinched the Manufacturer's Championship in the process. Not bad for a first-year team.
*MOVE OF THE RACE: None whatsoever. After the opening lap, if there was an on-track pass, we never saw it. Oh well. So, instead, we'll give it to the unnamed trackworker who braved oncoming cars to dash onto the circuit and remove a piece of bodywork from the racing line. A dangerous move indeed, despite the local yellow flags. Well done!
*MOOOOOOO-OOOVE OF THE RACE: Force India's Adrian Sutil had been desperate to get past NKOTT for a few laps. He could get close, but couldn't quite make a move. On lap 21, however, he seemed to see something open up and made his try. It didn't work, and in an almost comical result the Force India performed a slow-speed pirouette as NKOTT continued on his merry way. Sutil, however, quite used to watching the world go spinning around his helmet, kept his foot on the gas pedal and kept the car rotating without coming to a stop and immediately began to advance back onto the track...
...right into the side of the BMW of Grizzly Nick Heidfeld.
Heidfeld was out on the spot. Sutil managed to limp back to the pits despite having the entire nose back to the suspension removed, though he would retire from the race four laps later. Whoops.
*DRIVER QUOTES OF THE RACE:
more...
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September 26, 2009
A big thank you needs to go out to you folks, too. It's only fitting that the post a few days ago about her passing has the most comments in the history of The Pond.
It's gonna be tough around here for a while, but y'all will make it a little easier.
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September 23, 2009
This time around, we head to Singapore, a track with a difference. And what difference is that?
Yep, it's the only night race on the F1 calendar. Oh, make no mistake, Abu Dhabi will have part of their inaugural race at night, it's true, but Singapore is entirely without sunlight. Last year's race had some... um... interesting moments in it, for which Renault received a two-year suspended ban, but will the second year match up? Let's take a look at the track map, shall we?
The street circuit at Singapore (and it is a true street circuit, unlike Valencia) is probably the most interesting track on the calendar to my eyes. Oh, don't get me wrong, it's not as fun as Spa, or as difficult as Monaco, or anything like that, but it's full of... um... easter eggs for the watcher.
The cars race past some interesting buildings, including the legendary Raffles Hotel and the Fullerton Hotel as well. There's a straightaway that's actually a bridge (between turns 13 and 14). It actually runs beneath the some grandstands in the short chute between 18 and 19. It passes under a highway near turn 1. There's a shorter bridge between 12 and 13. All in all, it's a fun track to look at.
To drive, however, not so much. To a man, the drivers decried the circuit, calling it dangerous and unforgiving. Felipe Massa called the curbs around the track "little tortoises that would wreck the car if you get something wrong." Lewis Hamilton said that it was twice as hard to drive as Monaco, particularly when you take into account the hot and humid Singapore weather. The release point for the pit lane was also a major accident waiting to happen, as it had cars rejoining the track just before the entry to the first turn. Some points of the track were also incredibly bumpy, to the point where drivers were concerned that their suspensions were at risk just from driving on the circuit.
Well, they can't do anything about the weather, but modifications to the circuit have been made for 2009. The pit exit has been repositioned to come after turn 1, and the entry is now before turn 22, instead of actually in the turn. The tortoises have been filed down, and some curbs have been repositioned to boot. As a result, the track has been slightly lengthened, from 5.067km to 5.073km. The turn 10 chicane, which was named "Singapore Sling" in a poll of local F1 fans, has been tightened up a touch, so as to slow it even more. Finally, the worst of the bumps in the street have been resurfaced.
As one would expect with a street circuit, Singapore is a high-downforce track, much like Monaco in that regard. It's also a very tough track for brakes, maybe as hard as the Canadian track (though in a different way). With 23 turns, they get hot fast, then stay that way for the whole race, meaning heavy wear. Canada has slow turns coming after long straights, meaning the brakes get too cool and don't work as well. That means they're used harder for those turns, meaning more wear.
The good folks at SPEED will be mostly bringing us their usual sterling coverage, of course. Friday's second practice comes to us live from 830am to 1010am. Saturday's coverage of Quals is scheduled from 9am to 1030am, but may be shortened by a half-hour due to conflicting coverage of the American LeMans Series "Petit LeMans" race, which begins at 10am. If that's the case,expect them to show only the last few minutes of Q1, if at all. The race comes to us LIVE on Sunday from 630am to 9am, with a replay from 130pm to 4pm.
A programming note: there will probably be no Quals post on Saturday here at The Pond, and any post on Practice will come very late, if at all. The F1 Update! will, however, arrive as usual on Sunday.
See you then!
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September 21, 2009
The doctors had stayed encouraged regarding a liver transplant on Saturday. Everything was progressing as they expected, though the dialysis that day hadn't pulled out as much fluid as they had hoped. It wasn't a problem, per se, just added another day or two to the wait for being put on The List.
I had spent the entire day with her in the ICU ward, then Ph.Duck and I went back to his apartment to get some sleep. We got there around 1030pm, and fell asleep almost immediately thereafter.
At 1130pm, we got a phone call from the ICU, asking us to come back immediately. When we got there, we found her room filled with doctors and nurses, all of whom were moving quickly and talking in clipped, professional tones. Two of the doctors took us into a conference room to explain what had happened.
When the nurses began to turn her (so as to prevent bedsores), her heart went into Ventricular Tachycardia, which was very much like what I had during The Cardiac Incident, except that where my heart sped up to about 250bpm, hers had stopped beating and started quivering uncontrollably. They shocked her with the paddles, which did regain a pulse. Just a minute or so later, however, her heart stopped again. This time, shocking her didn't help, so they began chest compression and various drugs. After 10 minutes or so of this, her heart restarted.
When we asked the doctors what this would do to her chances for a liver transplant, they replied frankly and honestly: "We won't know for sure until the Liver team comes in, but it probably will prevent her from being considered a viable candidate."
When the Liver team leader confirmed that, we made the decision to withdraw life support, for that was, in fact, what she was on at this time. She had been essentially comatose for the previous three days as a result of an encephalopathy attack, aided by some light sedation to prevent her from tearing at her feeding tube and the ventilation hose (she had managed to remove the feeding tube during the onset of the encephalopathy).
Unfortunately, during the resuscitation attempts, they had to withdraw the sedation, as it would interfere with bringing up her blood pressure to minimum levels... and it was obvious during the time she was without it that she was in some serious discomfort from the hoses, needles and wires. As this was all being done to get her to a new liver, which now was never going to arrive, we knew that she wouldn't... didn't... want to suffer any more.
The ventilation hose and the final drugs were removed at 915am. At 918am on Sunday morning, September 20th, 2009, the woman that I was honored to call my mother, Judy Engblom, Momzerduck, passed away.
She was so much more than I deserved.
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September 19, 2009
I'm unsure when I'll be back, as things will probably be progressing VERY quickly over the next few days. My computer access will be limited to a visitor-access system that only has IE on it, so no other posting after this one... my uncle JoeDuck is loaning me his macbook for a few minutes.
Ironically, I wound up as a patient here for a few minutes. I'm afraid I went into shock when I saw Momzerduck for the first time in a week... sedated, ventilator and feeding tubes, dialysis shunts and a christmas tree worth of IV bottles.
I'm fine now, but a classic case of shock.
So, I'll try to keep everybody updated as much as I can, but for now, everybody, send good wishes this way, as many as you can spare. We're needing them.
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September 16, 2009
In other words, someone at Renault, the company, has decided that someone high up in the Renault, the team asked Piquet Jr to crash, and has taken steps to try and minimize the overall damage. Since the two most likely candidates for the order have now left F1, the team is probably hoping that the World MotorSports Council (WMSC) will be lenient in whatever penalties they hand down.
Fortunately for us, a lot of evidence has been leaked to the media over the past few days. Everything from a copy of Piquet Jr's statement, telemetry data from his car during the crash (which shows that he accelerated through the crash, instead of braking as one would normally do when control is lost), transcripts of Renault's radio conversations during the incident, to a transcript of Symonds' interview with FIA investigators have all come to light, and it isn't a pretty picture for the team.
For example, here's a snippet from the Symonds' interview:
Investigator: "Mr Symonds, are you aware that there was going to be a crash on lap 14?" Symonds: "I don't want to answer that question."
Investigator: "Mr Piquet Jr says, having had the initial meeting with you and Flavio Briatore, you then met with him individually with the map of the circuit. Do you remember that? Symonds: "I won't answer. Rather not answer that. I don't recall it, but it sounds like Nelson's talked a lot more about it."
Investigator: "Mr Piquet Jr also says that at that meeting, you pointed out a specific place on the circuit where he was to have the accident and said it was because it was the furthest away from any of the safety or lifting equipment, and gave the most likely chance of a safety car being deployed."
Symonds: "I don't . . . I don't want to answer that question."
Ouch. Penalties could range anywhere from a slap on the wrist to full exclusion from the season.
In other news, Team Lotus is back in F1! They were awarded BMW's spot on the grid for 2010 since the German manufacturer withdrew from the sport after the announcement of the three new teams. The brand is currently owned by a Malaysian consortium, though the company itself is still based in Norfolk, England. For the time being, the team itself will stay in England until a new technical center is built at the Sepang raceway. In a statement, the team announced that "the car will be made in Malaysia by Malaysians," and will name their drivers by October 31st. They'll be using Cosworth engines, like the other three new teams.
Finally, BMW has been given the 14th spot on the grid. I can hear you thinking "huh? Didn't they quit the sport?" Well, yes, they did... but nobody wanted a F1 team that wasn't going to be allowed to actually race in F1, so the team duly reapplied to be accepted for the 2010 season. The FIA hasn't actually given them the right to race in 2010 yet, though. At the moment, the 14th slot only means that if any other team drops out of the Championship *coughRenaultcough*, the team that was BMW will get their spot. In addition, there is some speculation that the FIA will allow all 14 teams to run in 2010 anyway. At the same time, BMW announced that the team had been purchased by Swiss company Qadbak Investments, and it appears that the Sauber name will still be associated with the team.
So, there's the latest news from the F1 World.
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September 13, 2009
The swelling in her legs had gone down substantially. In fact, they looked pretty normal, all in all, though some still persisted. Even better, the rash/infection was much reduced. When I last saw her on Monday night, pretty much from her knees down was a bright, fierce red. Now it looks like a fading sunburn and is obviously going away.
Unfortunately, that infection is the one thing keeping her from going on the transplant list at the moment. Doctors won't perform ANY surgery if the patient has an active infection going, let alone something as major as a transplant. I know someone who needed to have a tooth pulled once, and they made her wait a week while a minor infection went away.
The bad news is that, because her liver isn't doing its job, her kidneys are being pummeled by the crap it isn't filtering out. As a result, now they're beginning to go south. Now, normally that's a worry, but really not all that much of one. A liver transplant will fix the filtering problem and the kidneys usually just bounce right back. The docs, though, are concerned that they've been damaged enough that the belief is that they won't come back.
Okay, well, the "good" news in that case is that a dual liver/kidney transplant is pretty much the most common dual transplant there is... and if there's a liver available, a kidney is usually there, too. Another bit of "good" news from this is that all of this will put her even higher on The List once she gets on it. Maybe not at the very top, but close enough that she'll be able to see it from where she'll be.
But all is not wine and roses. Because her kidneys are like a boxer that's taken one too many shots to the head at the moment, they're not doing much in the way of ANYthing. Even being cathed didn't help matters... and by Saturday night, the docs were hearing fluid buildup in the lungs. So her liver is going south, her kidneys are going south, and now she's got all the symptoms of pneumonia (without actually having pneumonia, if you get what I mean).
Monday, they're going to start her on dialysis to take the strain off her overtaxed kidneys. This is a GOOD thing, as she should be feeling better almost immediately, but it's still a traumatic thing to think about.
Finally, her neck is starting to suffer from the effects of having been flat on her back for the past month. The docs have had her lie down with her feet elevated, and while you might not notice at first, that position does put a strain on the neck and shoulders. Now try it for a month straight. If her hospital bed is flat, it really begins to hurt... and then she begins to scream; it's that bad. The only position truly comfortable is sitting up in a chair... which doesn't do the swelling in her legs any good.
From an emotional standpoint, that's what got to me the most. They've got her on a good painkiller, but even that doesn't take away all the pain (they can't give her morphine; too hard on the liver and kidneys). I know what real pain is like... 13 kidneystones and falling off a loading dock and dislocating your ankle badly enough that the foot ends up pointing backwards will do that... but I can deal with my own pain.
I spent 14 hours with her on Saturday, about 4 hours on Friday, and about the same Sunday before I had to come home, and I'm exhausted. So exhausted that I burned the hell out of my right arm on a pizza pan making dinner. And I feel guilty that I'm not there with her right now.
She's in the right place, with the right doctors and nurses, doing the right things for her. I know all that. But a part of me thinks... knows... that I've failed, somehow.
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The Brawns came up off the mat and just pummeled the field today, finishing 1-2, with Barrichello taking his third career Italian Grand Prix. The beauty of the race was that it was, first and foremost, a strategy win.
The first brilliant move was that Ross Brawn, certified F1 genius, sent his boys out onto the track in quals with a snootful of fuel, enough to run a one-stop strategy on a circuit that rewards such things, and trusted them to make it work... which they promptly did, ending up fifth and sixth on the grid.
The second brilliant move was that the drivers, Rubens Barrichello and Jenson Button, managed to make their tires last while still going fast, despite having heavy loads of gas. On a day when the "bogie time" for a pitstop was 25 seconds, only pulling a single stop on the fastest track of the series while the other leaders were going for two meant that the Brawns basically had a 25 second lead to start the race... if they could make it work. They did.
The third brilliant move was Jenson Button managing to keep calm under the pressure of Lewis Hamilton in the closing laps of the race. Hamilton was faster and had KERS to help him take advantage of any mistake Button made. The problem is, Button didn't give him that chance, and it eventually was Hamilton that made a mistake, going a little wide in the Lesmos, catching a little too much curb, and winding up sploinking into the tire barrier on the last lap. Button didn't win the race, but it was a great performance for the driver leading the Championship points, and who may have been feeling a lot of pressure because of it.
The story of the day, though, has to be Adrian Sutil. Qualified second in the Force India, turned fast lap in the race, and just missed a podium by ending 4th. Only a bad entry into his pit box (running down two FI mechanics in the process) while Kimi Raikkonen stalled his car during his simultaneous stop kept him from leapfrogging the Ferrari for 3rd. It's no longer a secret that the Force India is a fast, fast car... lets just see if it's still quick on a track that requires manueverability.
Fun race, and I'd like to thank Steven for his impromptu coverage of Quals. We'll make a F1 fan out of you yet, Steven!
One thing, though: Vitantonio Liuzzi isn't a new NKOTT, just for this season. He drove for Toro Rosso in 2006 and 2007 (not to mention a few races in 2005 for Red Bull proper), so he can't qualify for NKOTT status. He DID show that he's the real deal, though, and I honestly didn't think that before today. He qual'd 7th, and was running very nicely until he ended up with a gearbox full of neutrals early in. No question he would have been in the points, and possibly right behind his teammate, if that didn't happen.
Sorry for the unF1U!, folks... hope it was a little entertaining at least.
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September 10, 2009
This past Saturday, she went to the ER with terribly swollen legs... so swollen that they hurt quite badly, and they also had a bad rash (we thought). It turns out the fluid built up so much in her legs that they became infected; that was the rash-like substance.
She wound up staying in the local hospital until Tuesday afternoon, at which point the docs decided two things: A) she was going to be hospitalized at least through the weekend, and 2) she'd be better treated if she was moved to a hospital in Chicago, where her liver specialist was based... and the Transplant Board (the keepers of The List) was located.
She's doing okay there, though she's not getting anywhere near enough sleep (a common complaint of hospital patients everywhere... everytime they doze off, another doctor or nurse comes in). They've put her on a new medication, which is already starting to show some good results in regards to her legs, but she's going to be in the hospital at least through the weekend dealing with this.
I am going into Chicago to see her after work tomorrow, and the earliest I'll be back is Saturday afternoon or evening. I might be staying through Sunday, we dunno yet. As a result, there's no way in the world I can do Friday Practice coverage, and likely won't do Quals, either, unless it's just a quick blurb Saturday night.
I'll be recording Sunday's race, but there's no way of knowing when I'll get a chance to watch it... it might not be until Monday or Tuesday night.
So, just wanted to warn y'all.
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Anyway, the whole second half of the series takes place in Monaco... at the same time as the Grand Prix of Monte Carlo. So of course, there must have been an episode showing F1 cars, right? Well, right! Episode 44 contains the relevant 26 minutes, and while I watched it for the F1 aspect, at least the first half of the ep was pretty decent if you like shonen-style shows.
"But what about the visuals", I hear you asking. A good question! Here's an example:
...yep, not only is it pretty clearly a F1 car, it's from the timeperiod appropriate to the production date of the show (2004). Not at all bad, actually.
But Avatar mentioned that David Coulthard's Chin makes an appearance, and while I'm sorry to say that he doesn't, there is a driver that does...
more...
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September 08, 2009
It appears that the main character, Jun, is something of a F1 fan! For instance:
-Rozen Maiden, ep03
Please notice the poster directly above his bed. Here's a better look at it:
While you can't see it too clearly in either shot, the poster shows the year of the race as being 1994. So, I looked up the poster for the actual 1994 Grand Prix of Monaco:
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Here's the map:
There was once a time when the various chicanes didn't exist, when a driver only had to move the steering wheel five times a lap. Those days are gone, sacrificed in the name of safety, and I think that's a good thing... though to be honest, I wouldn't mind seeing a F1 car go blasting around the circuit at full throttle. Still, Monza is the fastest track on the calendar.
In fact, it's so fast that the FIA has decreed that there's going to be new, higher, curbs at Variante del Rettifilo and Variante della Roggia this race, to prevent drivers from straightlining those chicanes. I'd also suggest landmines and deep pits with tigers at the bottom.
The Parabolica is the fastest turn in F1, nearly 180mph as you exit. You hit 210 just before the first chicane. Over three-quarters of a lap is done at full throttle. Just astonishing numbers in comparison to the rest of the season.
And SPEED'll be bringing us their usual coverage , starting on Friday with LIVE video from 2nd Practice from 7am to 840am. Saturday brings us Quals from 7am to 830am. The race itself is Sunday, from 630am to 9am, with a replay at 330pm (all times Pond Central).
Hopefully, I'll be bringing you the usual sterling reportage you've come to expect from F1 Update! on Sunday as well.
See ya then.
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September 07, 2009
A Working Class Hero is something to be...
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September 05, 2009
It's college football season once again, and today was the first home game for the Duck U Ducks! Beautiful weather, sunny, blue skies, just a hint of a breeze...
...and now, a screaming sunburn for yours truly. And I was under cover most of the day, to boot... just imagine what it would have been like without the roof over my head!
Oh, the game? The Ducks lost to the University of Duckbuque, 60-7. Mind you, Duckbuque was the national champion in our school size, so it's not that Duck U is bad, it's just that we were overmatched.
I hope.
(sorry the duckie is blurred... darn camera would focus on everything but him!)
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September 04, 2009
Today, the FIA officially charged Piquet Jr's former team, Renault, with 'fraudulent conduct' in relation to the 2008 Grand Prix of Singapore. In that race, you may remember, HWMNBN pitted early in the race (lap 14), and almost instantly after he exited the pit lane in 15th place, Piquet Jr spun and crashed, bringing out the safety car.
The charges levied against Renault stem directly from evidence provided by Piquet Jr, and read (in part): "The team representatives have been called to answer charges, including a breach of Article 151c of the International Sporting Code, that the team conspired with its driver, Nelson Piquet Jr, to cause a deliberate crash at the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix with the aim of causing the deployment of the safety car to the advantage of its other driver, (HWMNBN).â€
Article 151c reads as follows: "c) Any fraudulent conduct or any act prejudicial to the interests of any competition or to the interests of motor sport generally."
This is the same section the FIA used to hit McLaren with the Death Penalty back in 2007, by the way. In that case, the World Motor Sport Council essentially said that, while they could find no evidence that McLaren used any of Ferrari's designs in their car, they didn't need to have proof. McLaren was fined $100million, and the team was excluded from the results of the 2007 season.
While that penalty seemed harsh at best, and draconian at worst, I would have to assume that the FIA is looking at a similar penalty now for Renault. Unfortunately, they have only the word of a disgruntled ex-employee to go on... but they need nothing more, apparently.
If, in fact, Renault is excluded from the remainder of the season, don't expect to see their cars on the grid for the rest of the year. Unlike the McLaren Penalty, where the drivers were cleared of any wrongdoing in the matter, one would have to assume that HWMNBN would be slammed, since he benefited directly (and may have even come up with the idea) from the team's orders. Since Piquet Jr is already out of F1, the team's other car will probably be yanked by the FIA out of anger or spite.
The rest of the fallout could be even worse. Considering the rumblings coming out of Renault as of late (and, in fact, for the past few years), there's every chance that the team would officially withdraw from F1 and shut down.
I find it... interesting... that HWMNBN is involved with both of these cases. Unsurprising, but interesting. There's a reason HWMNBN is called HWMNBN, after all, and it all stems from the 2007 McLaren Debacle. He's already proven that he's not above trying to screw his teammate for an advantage, and with the backing of team principal Flavio Briatore, who knows what mischief he'd be capable of brewing.
Also interesting is the question of what will happen to Piquet Jr now? Will he be hailed as a whistleblower who got bent over by his more powerful teammate, with his driving suffering as a result? Or will he be forever known as a mediocre racer who ratted out the team that paid him megabucks while getting crap performances from him?
Time will tell, and we'll find out the result of the FIA's hearing on September 21st... ironically, the Monday before this year's Grand Prix of Singapore.
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September 03, 2009
"I’m in seventh heaven," said Fisichella in an interview with Ferrari.com. "I still can’t believe it that the dream of my life comes true and I want to thank Ferrari and Chairman Luca di Montezemolo. Over the last week some really incredible things happened to me: the pole position and then second place at Spa and now I’m called by Ferrari to race the last five races of the season for them. I’ll give my best to recompense the Scuderia for this great opportunity they gave me: I know that it won’t be easy, but I’ll give it everything to gain the best possible results." He then wiped the drool off his chin.
I suppose I don't blame Fisi. If I was handed my dream job on a silver platter, I'd likely quit whatever place I was working at so fast, I'd burn stripes in the carpet on my way out the door. Still, his incredible enthusiasm about leaving Force India for Ferrari seems... I dunno, unseemly.
Vijay Mallya said, "For Force India, this sport is a team effort and removing one part, even a major one, will not significantly affect our performance. The competitiveness of the team seen in Belgium was a result of hard work in the factory and wind tunnel and we have further developments coming for the final races, so we are confident this momentum can be sustained. We are now looking forward to a strong finish to the season."
There are rumors that Force India still owes Ferrari some four million dollars from last year's engine contract. Mallya (personal net worth: $1.4billion) denied, however, that there was any financial settlement between the teams for Fisi. Take that for what it's worth, I suppose.
And while I've been quite hard on him over the past two races, spare a moment's thought for Luca Badoer, the man Fisichella is replacing in the cockpit. Sure, Badoer was brutally slow during his two-race span for Ferrari, but he served the Scuderia well over the past 10 years as the team's primary test driver. He had an almost impossible task in front of him, being dropped into the seat of a F1 car that he hadn't driven and was expected to perform well when he hadn't driven in a race since 1999. When he, an Italian, got a chance to drive for the legendary Italian team, he peed the opportunity right down the leg of his firesuit, just in time to miss out on driving at his home track of Monza.
That's gotta hurt, and hurt bad. I hope Ferrari keeps him on as their test driver; he deserves that, at least.
Meanwhile, Force India has yet to name their replacement for the departed Fisichella. It's expected that their test driver, Vitantonio Liuzzi will be tabbed. He last drove in F1 during the 2007 season; Liuzzi was replaced at Toro Rosso by the now-fired SeaBass.
So... there you have it.
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September 01, 2009
Zsolt the Bolt is about to earn his first and only point, and the only point ever earned by a Hungarian driver in F1. Enjoy the broadcasters!
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