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  • Moto2: Baldassarri Takes Inaugural Triumph Powered Win

    Moto2: Baldassarri Takes Inaugural Triumph Powered Win

    The 2019 Moto2 World Championship began under the lights in Qatar to the soundtrack of 765cc Triumph three-cylinder motors, and Lorenzo Baldassarri (Flexbox HP 40) came out on top in a last lap duel with Tom Luthi (Dynavolt Intact GP).

    Xavi Vierge (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) made the holeshot from Baldassarri, but it took the Italian only one lap before he assumed the lead.

    After a few laps, Vierge dropped another spot to Marcel Schrotter (Dynavolt Intact GP) – the polesitter – and the attack from the German was enough to destabilise the #97 rider to the extent that Remy Gardner (ONEXOX TKKR SAG Team) and Alex Marquez (EG 0,0 Marc VDS) soon found their way through as well.

    From this point, Baldassarri and Schrotter engaged in a cold war, trading lap times but Schrotter was never able to get within range of Baldassarri.

    As the race settled down, Tom Luthi started to make his charge from the back half the top ten. He had a lot of pace, but took his time in passing people. By the halfway point, though, Luthi had passed Alex Marquez for fourth place, and was setting on after Gardner for the final podium spot. With three laps to go, the Swiss veteran of the Moto2 class had seized second place from teammate Schrotter and by the end of the penultimate lap he had caught Baldassarri.

    Thomas Luthi (Dynavolt Intact GP)

    It was clear that Luthi had a large advantage in edge grip, able to carry significantly more corner speed than Baldassarri, and this was especially noticeable through the three fast right-handers towards the end of the lap.

    However, despite showing a nose in turns fourteen and fifteen, Luthi was unable to make a pass stick on Baldassarri, and the Italians snaking on the run to the line was enough to keep the 2005 125cc World Champion at bay, as Balda took the first win of the Triumph era of Moto2, a year on from being beaten to the Qatar victory by Pecco Bagnaia.

    It was a stunningly metronomic ride from Baldassarri, consistently lapping in the mid-1’59s, dipping into the low-‘59s when he needed to. Against a more aggressive rider, maybe he would have lost out on the final lap, but the Italian did what he needed to do to go to Argentina leading the Moto2 World Championship for the first time in his career.

    Tom Luthi’s return to Moto2 was last than half a tenth of a second away from being precisely perfect. If he hadn’t been considered already, Luthi has, with this ride, announced his intentions of winning his first world title in fourteen years. The Swiss held on impeccably to his tyre, something which his rivals were unable to replicate. This could prove to be a critical advantage throughout this season.

    Marcel Schrotter hung on to the last podium position on the final lap from Remy Gardner, the German just running out of pace at the end. It has deserted him so far but Schrotter seems to be edging closer to that first Moto2 win.

    Having stolen third place from Schrotter in turn one on the final lap, Gardner lost it again towards the end. He arrived in Qatar as one of the favourites for the win, so disappointment from the Aussie would be understandable. However, it was perhaps the best dry performance of the #87 in his entire grand prix career, and a fourth place is a good beginning.

    Marcel Schrotter in the Qatar Moto3 race. mage courtesy of Dynavolt Intact GP

    Augusto Fernandez (Flexbox HP 40) had a quiet but impressive first ride of the season in fifth place, easily clear of those behind and closing in on the podium battle towards the end.

    Behind Fernandez was Sam Lowes (Federal Oil Gresini Moto2). If Remy Gardner arrived in Qatar as one of the favourites, Sam Lowes arrived as the absolute favourite, and by a chunk. However, several mistakes when overtaking people hampered his progress from the second row, and it is difficult to avoid the fact that the Brit missed out on a lot of points at the season opener. Luckily for Lowes, the season consists of nineteen races, not just one.

    Seventh place went to Alex Marquez, who like Lowes will be disappointed with his result, having felt he had a strong race pace for the season opener.

    Equally disappointed will be Luca Marini (Sky Racing Team VR46). He had not looked to have the pace to fight at the front for the whole weekend, or even in the test.  Luca who is both expected and expecting to fight for the title this season, when his supposed main rivals Lowes and Brad Binder (Red Bull KTM Ajo) were struggling he would have hoped to take advantage, especially at a track where he has gone well in the past.

    Brad Binder, Qatar Moto2 race 2019. Image courtesy of Gold and Goose/KTM

    But, for Binder, the race was even worse. He started by climbing four places to fourth place, but slowly slipped back from there, and appeared to run completely out of tyre at the end, haemorrhaging positions in the last couple of laps to: Enea Bastianini (Italtrans Racing Team), Xavi Vierge – who suffered massively mid-race – and Fabio Di Giannantonio (+Ego Speed Up). Whilst it was a disaster for Binder, to beat such a recognised championship favourite in their first race would have been something to smile about for the rookies, Bastianini (finished ninth) and Di Giannantonio (finished eleventh).

    Despite starting the weekend in a good way and with some good speed, Andrea Locatelli (Italtrans Racing Team) could only manage thirteenth in the race, ahead of Jesko Raffin (NTS RW Racing Team) who replaced Steven Odendaal and reigning Moto3 World Champion Jorge Martin who was the final points scorer.

    Most of the retirements came on the first lap, as Nicolo Bulega (Sky Racing Team VR46) collected Iker Lecuona (American Racing Team) on the way into the first corner, and Jorge Navarro (+Ego Speed Up) got caught up in the melee as well. Marco Bezzecchi (Red Bull KTM Tech3) had a disappointing start to his Moto2 career as he crashed at turn six on the first lap after some contact with Jake Dixon (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team), who crashed at turn four early in the race as well.

    Featured image  courtesy of Dynavolt Intact GP

  • Moto3: Toba Takes First Moto3 Win for Japan

    Moto3: Toba Takes First Moto3 Win for Japan

    The opening round of the Moto3 World Championship in Qatar is the only twilight race of the year, and the 2019 edition of the race was spectacular in vistas, but even more so in on-track action.

    Aron Canet (Sterilgarda Max Racing Team) made the holeshot, with fellow front row starters Lorenzo Dalla Porta and Kaito Toba (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) close in tow. When Albert Arenas (Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team) made his way into fourth at the end of the first lap, there started to become a gap between the top four and the pack behind. This gap was soon closed, and a nineteen-rider front group proceeded to battle it out for the podium.

    Aron Canet, Qatar Moto3 race 2019. Image courtesy of Gold and Goose/KTM

    Over the course of the race it became clear that the Honda of Lorenzo Dalla Porta was particularly quick, as was that of Kaito Toba. In comparison, Aron Canet’s KTM could not live with the two riders who started alongside him on the front row when it came to the front straight.

    As such, Canet’s time was completely made in the corners, his laps spent recovering positions he had lost on the straight, before losing them all again between turn sixteen and turn one.

    After a mistake in qualifying that prevented him from having a final push at the end of Q2 for pole position, Romano Fenati (Snipers Team) made quite a poor start from the fourth row, and slipped towards the back of the top fifteen. Eventually, though, he started to make his way through the pack and towards the front, with tremendously adventurous lines, characteristic of his previous season in the lightweight class back in 2017, as he seemed to have the ability to ride around the outside of almost anyone at almost any time. Fenati also had the ability to carry seemingly significantly more corner speed than any of his rivals, especially those riding KTMs, and could turn tighter than even any of his Honda stablemates. He looked nailed on for the win, until he received a track limits warning with three laps to go, and proceeded to, by mistake, take the long lap penalty, putting him out of contention.

    With Canet written off from the race win by virtue of his lack of straight line speed, the victory candidates were left at three: Kaito Toba, Lorenzo Dalla Porta and Marcos Ramirez (Leopard Racing) who had come from twentieth on the grid to fight for the win.

    In the end, Dalla Porta entered the final corner first, and looked good for the win – such was his straight line speed – but Toba lined up turn sixteen beautifully to carry substantially more exit speed from the final corner than Dalla Porta. A small dose of slipstream from the Leopard rider ahead was then enough to take Toba into the lead, and despite tucking back into the Japanese’s slipstream, there was nothing Dalla Porta could do to stop Toba taking his first win in grand prix racing, as well as becoming the first Japanese rider to win a Moto3 grand prix.

    Whilst it was ultimately defeat for Dalla Porta, second place was a good way for the Italian to begin his campaign, in which he will aim to fight for the championship. From this weekend he can take many positives, and if he can match the speed he showed in the opening race with the consistency of 2018, he is sure to be a formidable title contender.

    That will not have gone unnoticed by Aron Canet, neither will his straight line disadvantage. Nonetheless, the Spaniard came home in third place, again a strong way to start his season, and will hope to build on that in the races to come. However, the speed of the Hondas will be a concern for him – when the straights are as long as they are on Moto3 bikes, straight line speed is critical. If you can’t stay in the slipstream of your rivals, you can find yourself defenceless.

    Marcos Ramirez’s impressive fightback ended with fourth place – a good way for him to mark his return to the team with which he fought for the Moto3 Junior World Championship in 2016, a title which he ironically lost to his teammate, Dalla Porta.

    Celestino Vietti , Qatar Moto3 2019.Image courtesy of Gold and Goose/KTM

    Celestino Vietti (Sky Racing Team VR46) looked strong for the whole race, never slipping outside the top ten, and eventually finishing in fifth, where he had spent most of the race. Like Canet, Vietti had to battle with bikes which were faster than him in the straight, but he didn’t have the same speed in the corners to fight back. Nonetheless, fifth place is an impressive ride from Vietti, in his first race as a full-time GP rider.

    Albert Arenas, like Vietti, had looked strong all race, and came home in sixth place ahead of his Sama Qatar Angel Nieto Team teammate Raul Fernandez, who was also making his debut as a full-time grand prix rider, and impressed with seventh place – again, on an apparently under-powered motorcycle.

    Niccolo Antonelli (Sic 58 Squadra Corse) had looked on for a podium for a lot of the race, but fell back towards the end and finally came home in eighth place, ahead of Fenati who only partially recovered after his apparently self-enforced long-lap penalty. Jakub Kornfeil (PruestelGP) rounded out the top ten.

    Jakub Kornfeil , Qatar Moto3 2019. Image courtesy of Gold and Goose/KTM

    Ai Ogura (IDEMITSU Honda Team Asia) was another impressive full-time debutant in eleventh place, and stayed amongst the leading group for the whole race, coming home just ahead of Alonso Lopez (EG 0,0 Monlau Competition), John McPhee (Petronas SRT), Andrea Migno (Bester Capital Dubai) and Gabriel Rodrigo (Gresini Racing) who completed the points.

    There were several fallers. The first came on the first lap, with Ayumu Sasaki (Petronas SRT) and Jaume Masia (Bester Capital Dubai) getting caught up with Tom Booth-Amos (CIP Green Power) and Makar Yurchenko (BOE Skull Rider Mugen Race). The latter two continued to finish last and second-last respectively.

    Darryn Binder (CIP Green Power) crashed with seventeen laps to go in the second of the fast rights towards the end of the lap. The South African was joined on the side lines a couple of laps later when Dennis Foggia (Sky Racing Team VR46) was tagged by Rodrigo, fell and collected Kazuki Masaki (BOE Skull Rider Mugen Race) and Tatsuki Suzuki (Sic 58 Squadra Corse) on the way. Masaki continued to finish nineteenth, but Foggia and Suzuki retired on the spot.

    Featured Image courtesy of Gold and Goose/KTM

  • Phil Hall’s Junior WRC Rally Sweden Diary

    Phil Hall’s Junior WRC Rally Sweden Diary

    It might sound obvious, but Rally Sweden is cold!

    I know this year there has been a lot of talk about ‘the conditions’ in the stages, how temperatures were quite warm and there was a fair amount of gravel in places, but that doesn’t mean the event was what you’d call tropical.

    Everything you do has to take into account the environment in which you are competing – the low sun of the Scandinavian winter, finding an ice-free spot to jack the car up to change the wheels around (so you can stand up!), or even just not bringing snow into the car on your boots (which then melts and turns the footwell into a swimming pool).

    Recce on Sweden is logistically quite straight forward, however the days are quite short because of the day light. You have to get a lot done in a reasonably short amount of time – you aren’t pushed for time but you need to remain focussed. We had a good recce and really saw the work we had put into our pacenotes over the winter start to show.

    The event starts with a long drive down to Karlstad for the opening super-special, which is always packed with fans. I really enjoy the whole atmosphere at Rally Sweden, and this is where it all starts – live acts, lots of entertainment, and hugely enthusiastic crowds.

    The Rally itself was not only a test of speed, but also of tyre strategy. There was quite a lot of gravel in the stages, and this meant the tyre preservation was absolutely key. We were moving tyres around on the car after every stage to maximise the studs we had between each service. It also meant we had to plan where we pushed and where we saved our tyres.

    Phil Hall and Tom Williams tackle the amazing Colins Crest! Photo credit M-Sport

    A characteristic of Sweden which is not always noted is that it has some very long days. On most competition days we would be up for 6.00am to go to get the car from Parc Ferme, and we might not be back to our hotel until around 11.00pm in the evening. It’s a physically and mentally demanding rally, and it’s one I remember for a lack of sleep.

    We came away from the event with our first top 3 time in the JWRC, and 4th overall in the JWRC – which we are really happy with. It’s been a great start to our season and hopefully we can keep building and improving throughout the year – next stop, Corsica!

  • MotoGP: Dovizioso Defeats Marquez in Stunning Qatar Season Opener

    MotoGP: Dovizioso Defeats Marquez in Stunning Qatar Season Opener

    On Sunday, the 2019 MotoGP World Championship began under the lights in Qatar at the Losail International Circuit. There was much anticipation regarding some outstanding rookies and also how Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) and Jorge Lorenzo (Repsol Honda Team) would fair from the fifth row of the grid. The other interest circled was around Maverick Vinales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) ability to cope with the pressure of pole position. In the end, though, the race boiled down to that contemporary duel: Marc Marquez (Repsol Honda Team) versus Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati).

    Ducati’s new ‘holeshot device’ had been seen clearly in action for the first time this weekend, with the world feed cameras picking up Ducati GP19s making unusual movements as they prepared for practice starts throughout the free practice sessions. Andrea Dovizioso proved the device works, by making the holeshot ahead of fellow GP19 rider, Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing), who came from the second row to beat both Marc Marquez and polesitter Maverick Vinales to the first corner.

    Unfortunately for Miller, his race soon came undone when his seat came loose through the fast right-handers of turns twelve, thirteen and fourteen. The Australian tore his seat away between turns fifteen and sixteen, but the lack of grip he had without an actual seat meant it became impossible to rider quickly and consistently, and so eventually the #43 retired.

    Miller left behind a group of around fifteen riders at the front, although that number soon dropped to ten as the field settled, and those incapable of keeping the front pace were dropped.

    Andrea Dovizioso 1st, Marc Marquez 2nd and Cal Crutchlow third at the Qatar GP 2019. Image courtesy of Ducati

    It was not long until the tactics of Dovizioso became clear. He would try to sit at the front of the race and control the pace, saving the tyre and taking few risks, knowing that he had the power on the straight to keep himself clear of any pursuers, as well as being safe in the knowledge that Marquez – the one rider in the group who could pass him in a straight line bar Dovizioso’ Mission Winnow Ducati teammate Danilo Petrucci – had no intention of leading the race himself.

    It was not an easy task for Dovizioso, though, to stay in front. The Suzuki of Alex Rins (Team Suzuki Ecstar) soon made his presence known, and was able to pass Dovizioso on several occasions throughout the main portion of the lap, but was never able to hold Dovizioso’s Desmosedici at bay once they got to the straight. He did, however, lead three laps in the middle of the race, which showed the improvements Suzuki have made to the power of the GSX-RR over the winter.

    Whilst Rins and Dovizioso had been fighting over the lead at the front, the top group had been diminished to nine riders, as Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda IDEMITSU) started to fall away. That left the three Yamahas of Vinales, Rossi and Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) at the back of the front group which, once Dovizioso had dealt with Rins, was still headed by the #04 Ducati.
    Dovizioso, surprisingly, was somewhat assisted in his stronghold over the leadership of the race by Marquez, who passed Rins on lap eleven, preventing the Suzuki rider from mounting any further assaults on the Desmosedici. Marquez knew the game of Dovizioso, and he didn’t need Rins escaping at the front to complicate matters.

    In the final five laps, things started to heat up. Maverick Vinales made a failed attempt at passing the extremely impressive rookie Joan Mir (Team Suzuki Ecstar) on he inside at the penultimate corner on lap sixteen. That let Vinales’ teammate Rossi through into seventh place, and the Italian made his way past Mir on the next lap. A small gap had now appeared between Rossi and the front group. Vinales could see that, but again failed in passing Mir, sliding wide at turn four on lap seventeen, costing himself a further second, that he would not recover.

    Danilo Petrucci, Maverick Viñales and Valentino Rossi at the Losail GP 2019. Image courtesy of Ducati

    The gap Rossi suffered to the first five riders after passing Mir was overhauled by the Italian between turns five and seven, and with three laps to go he made his move on Petrucci for fifth place, a move which went without response from the factory Ducati debutant.

    At the same time as Rossi moved on Petrucci, Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda CASTROL) – who had been quietly sitting in a top six spot all race – made his move for a podium, passing Alex Rins for third, as the Dovizioso and Marquez started to construct a small gap, and gear up for a final lap duel.

    Marquez beat Dovizioso to the line on the penultimate lap, but Dovi out-braked him into turn one, and held the line, not allowing Marquez to slide through on the inside mid-corner.

    Knowing what happened the previous year when Dovizioso beat him when Marquez left his attack to the final corner, the #93 tried to pass at turn ten, but ran wide and Dovizioso squared him off through the sweeping turn eleven.

    Marquez tried to go to the inside of turn twelve, but Dovizioso did not allow the door to open, and after a good run through turn fourteen for the Italian, an attack into turn fifteen was impossible for Marquez. It had to be the last corner, but Dovizioso had a good exit from fifteen, and was exceptionally late on the brakes into sixteen. There was little Marquez could do, but anyway he let the brakes off and block passed Dovizioso. But, as one year ago, Dovizioso squared him off, and even despite the improved Honda engine for 2019 and a slipstream, Marquez could do nothing to stop Dovizioso from taking the win and the initial championship lead.

    Cal Crutchlow finishing 3rd behind Marc Marquez. Round One – Losail, Qatar MotoGP 2019. Image courtesy of Hondanews.eu

    Cal Crutchlow managed to hold off Alex Rins for what is in essence a second consecutive podium for the Brit, after his rostrum in Japan last year. It was a stunning comeback from a potentially career-ending injury for Crutchlow, one which surprised even him.

    Fourth place for Alex Rins was unfortunate, as he had ridden superbly for the whole race, but in the end it was horsepower that cost him. Suzuki have made gains in the top end of their GSX-RR motor over the winter, but they need more if they are to challenge Honda and Ducati on a circuit with a 1.1km front straight, with the finish line way over halfway down it.

    The same can be said for Yamaha. They have consistently been the slowest bike this weekend, and that cost Rossi, Vinales and Morbidelli. They all struggled to overtake anything which wasn’t a Yamaha and, to add insult to injury, Rossi was visibly weaker on traction compared to his rivals, especially through turn eleven where the bikes spin the rear tyre the whole way. Nonetheless, fourteenth to fifth was an impressive comeback from The Doctor, who is still without a podium since Sachsenring last year.

    Danilo Petrucci was visibly distraught with sixth place, after seeming to have the pace to win throughout the weekend. Maverick Vinales came home in seventh place ahead of Joan Mir, who had fought with Marc Marquez on his MotoGP debut for half the race, and finished ahead of Takaaki Nakagami (9th) and Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) who completed the top ten.

    Eleventh place went to Franco Morbidelli whose soft tyre gave up on him in the final part of the race, whilst Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) had a decent ride aboard the RC16, finishing twelve seconds off the win after a difficult weekend for the Austrian marque on a circuit which has been traditionally tough for them.

    Jorge Lorenzo at an uneventful Losail GP. Image courtesy of Hondanews.eu

    Jorge Lorenzo’s chances of a dream Honda debut went out of the window on Saturday, when he was hurt by two crashes in FP3 and then Q1. Fortunately for the factory Honda man, there is a three week break in which he can focus on recovering for round two of the season in Argentina. Behind him, Andrea Iannone scored points in fourteenth on his debut for Aprilia Racing Team Gresini, as did Johann Zarco in fifteenth on his debut for Red Bull KTM Factory Racing. It was also the closest top fifteen in MotoGP history, with just over fifteen seconds covering the points scorers.

    Perhaps the most heart-breaking moment of the race was when Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) stalled his M1 on the grid before the warm up lap. The Frenchman had qualified fifth for his debut MotoGP and had been brilliant all weekend. From the start, Quartararo started to set fastest lap after fastest lap, and at one point had passed Jorge Lorenzo, before his tyre gave up and he slipped back to eighteenth. Nonetheless, the debut weekend of Fabio Quartararo in the premier class was exceptional, and the moment when he is racing against the very best in MotoGP at the front of the field is surely not far away.

    There were only three retirements from the 2019 season opener, with Francesco Bagnaia (Alma Pramac Racing) joining his teammate Jack Miller back in the garage on his MotoGP debut thanks to having one of the winglets wiped off the GP18. It doesn’t sound like a big deal, but unbalanced aero would have made the bike un-rideable. Finally Bradley Smith (Aprilia Factory Racing) crashed in turn one on the penultimate lap.

    Although he was running last at the time, Smith’s crash on the RSGP caused some controversy post-race, as Suzuki protested the result of the race on two counts. Firstly, it protested that Cal Crutchlow had overtaken Rins under yellow flags – this protest was rejected.

    Secondly, together with Honda, Aprilia and KTM, Suzuki protested the Ducati’s new aerodynamics, in which one piece hangs from the bottom of the fork leg, whilst the other hangs from the swingarm. Dovizioso used this setup for the first time in the warm up session for the Qatar race, but Danilo Petrucci had been using it since the Qatar test two weeks previously. Again, the protest was rejected on a lack of evidence, but it has been referred now to the MotoGP court of appeal, meaning the result could be entirely different for the season opener once the paddock arrives in Argentina for the second round of the season in three weeks’ time.

    Featured image courtesy of Ducati

  • A First Run – Pierre Gasly Drives A Virtual Lap Of Albert Park Ahead Of The F1 Australian GP | M1TG

    A First Run – Pierre Gasly Drives A Virtual Lap Of Albert Park Ahead Of The F1 Australian GP | M1TG

    Check out the latest Mobil 1 The Grid video which features Pierre Gasly taking  on a lap of Albert Park in the simulator, as he looks ahead to the Australian Grand Prix.

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  • Hysteria in Hong Kong!: Mortara triumphant as Bird hit with penalty

    Hysteria in Hong Kong!: Mortara triumphant as Bird hit with penalty

    Edoardo Mortara scooped Venturi’s first ever win in the team’s history at the Hong Kong ePrix this weekend. The Swiss driver benefited from a late post-race penalty imposed on Envision Racing’s Sam Bird who won the race, but was given a five second time penalty after contact with Andre Lotterer which forced the Techeetah driver out of the race.

    Qualifying was blighted by the everchanging conditions of the Hong Kong climate, with Mahindra miscalculating the correct window in which to set a lap which left both Jerome D’Ambrosio and Pascal languishing at the bottom of the timing screens. Audi’s Lucas di Grassi was the first driver to make an impact, snatching P1 from under Sam Bird and Antonio Felix da Costa’s noses in the worsening weather.

    Mortara showcased his experience on street circuits by claiming P1, followed closely by Lotterer who made a mistake in his final sector. Jean Eric Vergne’s misery continued as he repeated history by sliding over the final line backwards, but could only manage P6 and suffered cosmetic damage to his Techeetah. His lap was later cancelled due to the incident.

    Times soon began to tumble as the session approached the halfway stage with Oliver Rowland and Felipe Massa slotting themselves into the top six. However, it was HWA that impressed in the storm with Stoffel Vandoorne taking provisional pole by over half a second from teammate Gary Paffett who managed to snatch his debut in superpole. They were joined in superpole by Rowland, Mortara, Lotterer and di Grassi.

    Photo by Sam Bloxham/ LAT Images

    The weather continued to wreck havoc on superpole as di Grassi set a time of 1.14.177, only to be displaced by Lotterer a few moments later by a difference of 1.3 seconds. Mortara thrived in the difficult conditions, claiming P1 with a time of 1.12.310, half a second up on Lotterer. However, after the session ended, he was hit with a three place grid penalty for ignoring red flag conditions and dropped out of contention. Times continued to tumble as the track conditions became more favourable with Rowland disposing of Mortara by two tenths of a second. The two HWAs remained and Paffett locked up into turn one, forcing him into P4 behind Lotterer, but Vandoorne impressed once again, claiming his first ever pole position for HWA with a 1.11.580.

    Rowland wasted no time at the start of the race, snatching P1 away from Vandoorne in the opening lap who was then passed by Bird, dropping the HWA rookie down to P3. Mahindra’s terrible luck continued as Felipe Nasr tagged the wall into turn two, collecting both Wehrlein and D’Ambrosio along the way, sending both cars out of the race with suspension damage. The race was red flagged in order to collect all three cars stranded in a precarious position with Rowland still leading the race.

    Photo by Steven Tee / LAT Images

    As the race got underway once more, most of the drivers armed themselves with their first attack mode as Lotterer pounced on Vandoorne immediately for P3. Out of turn one, Rowland slowed and dropped down the order, losing the lead at the expense of Bird. Lotterer began to press Bird for the top spot, finally forcing the Brit into a mistake to snatch the race lead away. However, Bird continued to fight back and kept the pressure on the German who began to struggle with energy consumption in the latter stages trying to keep Bird behind. Whilst one Techeetah dominated, reigning champion Vergne’s bad luck continued as he cut the chicane at turn one, earning a penalty.

    Rowland continued to carve his way back through the field muscling his way past Daniel Abt for P9, whilst Alex Sims tagged the wall, forcing him out of the race. Bird continued to press Lotterer, and attempted a move into turn two, passing the German for a moment, before Lotterer reclaimed the lead. The battle at the front as Vandoorne’s car stopped on track, whilst Buemi was forced out of the race with damage.

    As the race restarted with over ten minutes left on the clock, Bird continued to pile the pressure on Lotterer for the lead with Mortara holding di Grassi for P3 as Rowland’s hard work on climbing up the order was undone when he made contact with the wall, and stopped on track, bringing out a third safety car. With two minutes remaining, the race was restarted and the battle at the front came to a head as Bird made contact with the back of Lotterer’s car, causing a puncture which subsequently ended the German’s race. A subdued Bird claimed P1 but celebrations were muted after the announcement that there was an investigation of the incident between himself and Lotterer. After the race, Bird was handed a five second time penalty which dropped the Brit down to P6 and Mortara inherited the win, his and Venturi’s first win in the series. Di Grassi moved up to P2 and Envision Racing’s Robin Frijns inherited third.

    Formula E will continue in Sanya on March 23rd.

  • Renault driver line-up ‘perhaps the strongest on the grid’ according to Abiteboul

    Renault driver line-up ‘perhaps the strongest on the grid’ according to Abiteboul

    Renault’s managing director Cyril Abiteboul has said he believes the team’s 2019 line-up of Nico Hulkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo to be ‘perhaps the strongest on the grid’.

    Ricciardo will be making his Renault race debut at this weekend’s Australian Grand Prix alongside Hulkenberg, who starts his third year with the team, and Abiteboul is optimistic about what the pairing can deliver.

    “The first race of the year, the Australian Grand Prix, is a high point of the season,” Abiteboul said, “but even more so this year as Daniel Ricciardo makes his race debut for the team. We head there united and with strong determination.

    “We have a new car that has shown potential in Barcelona. The power unit has made progress and or driver line-up of Daniel and Nico is perhaps the strongest on the grid. We’re looking forward to seeing them showcasing their experience and talent on track. There is a lot of expectation for the first race, especially with Daniel’s debut for the team coming at his home Grand Prix.”

    Daniel Ricciardo (AUS) Renault Sport F1 Team RS19.
    Formula One Testing, Day 4, Friday 1st March 2019. Barcelona, Spain.

    Ricciardo announced his shock move from Red Bull – where he had been since 2014 and with whom he had won seven Grand Prix – at the Belgian Grand Prix of last year. The Australian, too, is positive about the prospect of racing for his new team, even if it is unlikely they will be at the same performance level as Red Bull immediately.

    “My first impressions, on a whole, have been positive,” Ricciardo said, “and we’ll continue to learn more throughout these early races. It’s going to take some time to get used to everything, but that’s not unexpected.

    “We’re realistic in our approach and we have work to do. We have a decent platform to build on now and we always strive for better. We’ve found some things during testing which we’ll dissect and see what we want to take forward, but our bigger steps will come during the next few months.”

     

    [Featured image – Renault Sport F1 Team]

  • IndyCar St Petersburg Report: Newgarden fends off Dixon to take first win at St Pete

    IndyCar St Petersburg Report: Newgarden fends off Dixon to take first win at St Pete

    Josef Newgarden took the first win of the 2019 season at St Petersburg, a win that marks his first around the demanding track and Penske’s first there since 2016. He held off a late challenge from defending champion Scott Dixon in what as an action-packed season opener.

    After being shuffled back at the start, Newgarden didn’t come to the lead until the second round of pit stops, but there he out-foxed the rest of the leading group and emerged from the pits with a near five-second lead over Marco Andretti, who was doing a good job of holding up the rest of the field. With the help of Andretti once more in the closing stages of the race, Newgarden came under threat from Dixon with the lead dropping to as low as 1.2 seconds but, once Andretti was out of the picture, Newgarden rebuilt his lead to take the win.

    Credit: Chris Owens/IndyCar

    Dixon was forced to settle for second-place having not led a single lap of the race. He managed to pass Will Power during the first Andretti hold up, taking second place and allowing him to have a chance at fighting Newgarden for the win. However, the lead Newgarden had built up was big enough to act as an effective buffer, even when Andretti came back into the mix. It wasn’t quite the perfect start to Dixon’s title defence, but it was good enough.

    For a while, it looked like the other Chip Ganassi of Felix Rosenqvist would be going for the win, but he got caught out and dropped back by the second round of stops. Rosenqvist passed Newgarden going into Turn 1 on the first lap, putting him in second and in a position to fight Power for the lead. The Swede took the lead after the first restart and went onto lead 31 laps in his debut race, the most bar race winner Newgarden. He came home in a respectable fourth place and showed that he’s ready to take it to teammate Dixon this season.

    After starting on pole, Power had to settle for a podium in third with his nemesis, like so many others, being the second stops and Andretti’s rather wide car. He couldn’t clear Andretti after the stops and was passed by Dixon who then disappeared up the road, meaning Power was unable to improve his position in the final stages of the race, but he was still happy with his result, given how badly St Pete has treated him over the past two years.

    Alexander Rossi was another driver who was forced to settle for a position probably lower than he was hoping for, especially after he came so close to the victory last year. Like last year, a rookie got the better of him, though this time it was Rosenqvist and not Robert Wickens, meaning Rossi couldn’t do much better than fifth having led two laps during the pit stop sequences.

    Wickens attended the race with his Schmidt Peterson Motorsports team to support their drivers and celebrate his thirtieth birthday with his fellow drivers. Attending St Pete was one of Wickens’ many goals on his road to recovery after his enormous crash at Pocono last season, with the Canadian a welcome figure in the paddock once more.

    Credit: Chris Owens/IndyCar

    On track, SPM didn’t have such a good weekend with James Hinchcliffe finishing in sixth after getting the better of Penske’s Simon Pagenaud in what was a race-long battle. On the other side of the garage, Marcus Ericsson didn’t even see the chequered flag with a water pressure issue cutting his IndyCar debut short. Their sort-of-teammate Jack Harvey finished tenth in the #60 Meyer Shank supported SPM entry, in his first of ten races this season.

    Rosenqvist may have taken the title of top rookie but fellow rookies Colton Herta and Santino Ferrucci were not to be forgotten in the first race of the season, finishing eighth and ninth respectively. Herta’s the only Harding driver after they failed to get an engine lease for their second car and Ferrucci lost teammate Bourdais 11 laps into the race, meaning the two rookies had to go it solo, but still delivered more than respectable performances.

    One recurring feature of the race was Honda engine failures, of which there were four with Ryan Hunter-Reay, Takuma Sato, Ericsson and Bourdais all suffering issues that led to their retirements. While Honda had four failures, their rival Chevrolet had none, meaning the former really needs to step up on the reliability side of things, otherwise the Chevy teams could be leaving them well behind.

    That concludes the season opener at St Petersburg with IndyCar back in action on March 24 at the Circuit of the Americas.

    Full Race Results:

    1. Josef Newgarden
    2. Scott Dixon
    3. Will Power
    4. Felix Rosenqvist (R)
    5. Alexander Rossi
    6. James Hinchcliffe
    7. Simon Pagenaud
    8. Colton Herta (R)
    9. Santino Ferrucci (R)
    10. Jack Harvey
    11. Spencer Pigot
    12. Graham Rahal
    13. Marco Andretti
    14. Zach Veach
    15. Tony Kanaan
    16. Max Chilton
    17. Charlie Kimball
    18. Ben Hanley (R)

    DNF – Takuma Sato (gearbox), Marcus Ericsson (R) (water pressure), Ed Jones (collision), Matheus Leist (collision), Ryan Hunter-Reay (engine), Sebastien Bourdais (engine)

    (Featured Image Credit: Karl Zemlin/IndyCar)

  • Silverstone Circuit to be resurfaced ahead of 2019 British Grand Prix

    Silverstone Circuit to be resurfaced ahead of 2019 British Grand Prix

    The Silverstone race track is to be resurfaced in June ahead of both the F1 and MotoGP races.

    The news comes as bosses of both Silverstone and F1 desperately scrap to come to an agreement to keep the F1 race alive at Silverstone, and try to avoid the British GP moving to a different and perhaps less favourable home.

    Situated on the site of what used to be a military airbase converted into a race track in the 1940s, Silverstone has been the sole home of the British Grand Prix since 1987, having alternated with Brands Hatch and Aintree prior to that.

    Last year saw a resurfacing job completed on the track ahead of the start of the F1 season. Now, another resurfacing will be completed just a month before the Formula One race towards the end of June, and two months before the MotoGP race in August.

    2018 British Grand Prix, Sunday – Wolfgang Wilhelm

    So, why the same job twice in as many years? You may remember the MotoGP race that was supposed to take place in August last year, but never did. Race day brought with it typically British weather, and alleged drainage problems meant the rainwater could not be cleared. As such, the race could not be contested or even rescheduled, and travelling fans had to be reimbursed after what turned out to be a disaster of a weekend for them. The track is thus being resurfaced again to avoid the same problems from occurring this year.

    The source of the funding for this year’s job is as yet, according to Silverstone managing director Stuart Pringle, uncertain. There is still an ongoing investigation as to whether Aggregate Industries – the company who surfaced the track last year – were at fault for the cancellation of the 2018 MotoGP race, and therefore should have to compensate for this year’s job, or whether the Silverstone circuit will have to fund it themselves.

    If Silverstone has to pay for the job itself, it will be a huge dent in its plans to host the race beyond its current deal which expires this year. Last year’s MotoGP cancellation cost Silverstone a huge amount of money, and having to pay for a job they feel should be paid for by the company whose alleged poor drainage cost them will result in struggles to pay the F1 race hosting fees beyond this year.

    The Silverstone management is not the only disgruntled party. Lewis Hamilton described the 2018 resurfacing as ‘the worst job ever,’ so all was not well even before the MotoGP disaster of August.

    Ferrari Media

    In terms of the racing, the change in surface will mean that the track will not be rubbered in and there will be no racing line, resulting in less grip. Therefore, the lap times over the course of the weekend will take longer to fall as the drivers try to find traction.

    There is, however, another potential plot twist. Stuart Pringle was quoted as saying that he ‘hopes’ the job will be complete ahead of the F1 Grand Prix. Missing the race would be another big hit in terms of revenue, and it would mean that F1 would have to search for a new home for the race. British GT will be the last event run before the F1  race, and several club meetings have already been cancelled to accommodate the job. They will be hoping and praying the track will be ready for F1’s British Grand Prix weekend between the 12-14 July.

    The race is an extremely popular one for the fans, drivers, and teams alike. The campsites along with by the ample grassland allow for fans to enjoy barbecues over the course of the weekend. The track is vastly expansive and the Maggotts, Becketts and Chapel complex is truly a sight to behold.

    Because of the popularity of the track, it would be nice for F1’s British Grand Prix to stick around in Northamptonshire for a few years yet, but the resurfacing job really is just the surface of the many issues the Silverstone track faces in 2019.

     

    [Featured image – Andrew Hone]

  • MotoGP: Vinales Storms to Qatar Pole Position

    MotoGP: Vinales Storms to Qatar Pole Position

    The 2019 MotoGP World Championship enjoyed its first qualifying session of the new season in Qatar, with impressive-looking rookies and a tight field meaning it was to be a fantastic session.

    Maverick Vinales (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) took his second pole in successive grands prix after his wet weather pole in Valencia last November. Vinales reeked of confidence, lapping on his own in what were treacherous conditions – and his aggression on the brakes into the final corner was spectacular, the weight catapulting onto the front tyre. Despite being just under two tenths shy of Marc Marquez’ (Repsol Honda Team) outright lap record from Friday night, Vinales took pole by nearly two tenths, and consistently fast times posted in FP4 suggest he could be in the frame for the victory tomorrow.

    Maverick Viñales grabs the first 2019 MotoGP pole At Qatar. Image courtesy of Yamaha Corporation

    But it will a difficult race for Vinales. Despite having a pace as strong as anybody, he will have to fight against bikes which are between 15kph and 20kph faster than him in the front straight.

    One of those bikes is the Ducati Desmosedici GP19, and in particular the one ridden by Andrea Dovizioso (Mission Winnow Ducati). The Italian has been almost invisible throughout the weekend, but in the long runs he has perhaps the best pace, and when it mattered, he showed he had the one-lap speed to give him a good grid position, finally taking second place.

    In the past, the equal pace with his rivals would have been enough for Dovi, thanks to the straight-line speed of the Ducati. However, in Q2 Marc Marquez displayed the new engine in the Honda in its full potential, drafting past Danilo Petrucci (Mission Winnow Ducati) on his way to the back of the front row.

    Marquez had looked uncomfortable throughout the session, and in the end it was the tow provided by Petrucci that fired him onto the front row. Marquez also suffered two crashes on Saturday, in FP3 and FP4. The suggestion of a slightly weaker front end on the 2019 Honda compared to its predecessor means that its pilots could be some of those most at risk if the temperature is low tomorrow, and that seems to be what caught both Marquez and his Repsol Honda teammate Jorge Lorenzo out in Saturday night’s sessions.

    Jack Miller (Alma Pramac Racing) took the fourth fastest time despite a crash late on in Q2. In this, Miller scored the first point in the sub-championship going on this season with himself, Danilo Petrucci and Miller’s Alma Pramac teammate Pecco Bagnaia, who are all fighting for the second spot in the factory Ducati team for 2020 alongside Dovizioso.

    Danilo Petrucci and Marc Marquez at Qatar MotoGP Qualifying. Image courtesy of Ducati

    The middle of the second row sees the surprise of the weekend so far, with Fabio Quartararo (Petronas Yamaha SRT) qualifying fifth on his MotoGP debut. Quartararo has been fast all weekend, especially over one lap, and he put that into perfect practice in Q2. Like Vinales he will have his work cut out tomorrow against bikes which are so much faster than his, but already this weekend has been a big success for the Frenchman, beating both his teammate, Franco Morbidelli (Petronas Yamaha SRT) and Yamaha stablemate Valentino Rossi (Monster Energy Yamaha MotoGP) in in his first ever premier class qualifying, and supposedly all with five-hundred revs taken off the top of his M1’s motor.

    The second row for tomorrow’s MotoGP race will be rounded out by Cal Crutchlow (LCR Honda CASTROL), who made a stunning return after an injury from which he is still recovering to qualify sixth on a motorcycle with which he does not feel completely comfortable. Crutchlow is worried for the race, just to finish, if it starts at the planned 8pm, so it will be interesting to see what he can achieve tomorrow.

    Danilo Petrucci has some outstanding-looking race pace, but he will be hoping Ducati’s holeshot device will propel him past some of the riders in front of him tomorrow, so that he can use that pace, after qualifying only seventh, in front of Franco Morbidelli and Takaaki Nakagami (LCR Honda IDEMITSU on row three.

    As disappointed as Petrucci will be, the feeling will be similar for Alex Rins (Team SUZUKI ECSTAR) after the Spaniard only managed tenth place on the grid for the opening race after such an impressive preseason. Rins will be joined by his teammate, Joan Mir (Team SUZUKI ECSTAR) and Aleix Espargaro (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) on the fourth row tomorrow.

    Francesco Bagnaia was the fastest of those riders who did not make it through to Q2, and will start thirteenth tomorrow. On the face of it, especially with fellow rookies Quartararo and Mir in fifth and eleventh respectively, thirteenth doesn’t seem so fantastic for the reigning Moto2 World Champion, but the Italian will share the fifth row of his first GP with some hefty names: Valentino Rossi and Jorge Lorenzo.

    Valentino Rossi under the lights of Losail circuit. Image courtesy of Yamaha Corporation

    Rossi’s problems started on Friday evening, when an out-of-balance front tyre destroyed itself in five laps and left the Italian out of Q2 overnight. FP3 was too hot, too windy and too dusty for The Doctor to make an improvement and get into the top ten, and then a difficult Q1 saw him end his Saturday early, qualifying only fourteenth for the opening round of the championship. Unfortunately for Rossi, he has become only too accustomed to failing to make it out of Q1, and now tomorrow he faces another big fight back – one which, on paper, he seems entirely incapable of achieving. Rossi needs something big overnight if he is to make a good result tomorrow night.

    Lorenzo’s problems also started when he failed to make the top ten on Friday night. The Spaniard then suffered a nasty high side on the exit of turn six early on in FP3, meaning he had to miss the rest of the session. After starting Q1 quite strong, the Repsol Honda rider looked good to advance to Q2, but a crash at the start of his second run ended those hopes, and he will start fifteenth tomorrow.

    Jorge Lorezno at Qatar MotoGP qualification. Image courtesy of Yamaha Corporation

    Seventeenth on his debut MotoGP grid is what faces Red Bull KTM Tech 3’s Miguel Oliveira tomorrow, as the Portuguese starts between the Spanish duo of his KTM stablemate Pol Espargaro (Red Bull KTM Factory Racing) in sixteenth and 2014 Moto2 World Champion Tito Rabat (Reale Avintia Racing) in eighteenth.

    Andrea Iannone (Aprilia Racing Team Gresini) will head up row seven tomorrow for his debut on the RSGP. Iannone had a bike problem at the end of Q1, although it didn’t seem as though he had the speed to make it to Q2 regardless. The Italian will be joined on row seven by Karel Abraham (Reale Avintia Racing) and Johann Zarco who will make his Red Bull KTM Factory Racing debut from twenty-first.

    Hafizh Syahrin (Red Bull KTM Tech 3) still looks to be struggling to adapt to the RC16, and the Malaysian will start twenty-second tomorrow, in front only of Aprilia wildcard Bradley Smith (Aprilia Factory Racing).

    Featured Image courtesy of Yamaha corporation