Category: Featured Other Series

Featured Other Series

  • Rosberg flat out dominates in Azerbaijan

    Rosberg flat out dominates in Azerbaijan

    There was no stopping Nico Rosberg this weekend as he took the pole, led the most laps, posted the fastest single lap and took the victory in the first race in the Republic of Azerbaijan.

    This kind of performance has become almost second nature to the driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car as he took the top step of the podium for the 19th time in his career and fifth of the 2016 season. It’s only the second time this season that he achieved a “grand slam” of starting on the pole, leading the most laps, posting the fastest single lap and winning the race.

    Sebastian Vettel was outmatched by Rosberg and brought his car home to a runner-up finish in his No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari. Sergio Pérez, who was handed a five-place grid penalty following a gear change and went from second to seventh in the starting order, rounded out the podium in his No. 11 Sahara Force India-Mercedes.

    Kimi Räikkönen brought the other Ferrari home to a fourth-place finish. Lewis Hamilton was a non-factor for much of the race and brought his Mercedes home to round out the top-five.

    Valtteri Bottas finished sixth in his No. 77 Williams Martini Racing-Mercedes. Daniel Ricciardo finished seventh in his No. 3 Red Bull Racing-TAG Heuer. Teammate Max Verstappen came home eighth in his No. 33 car. Nico Hülkenberg finished ninth in his No. 27 Force India Mercedes. Felipe Massa rounded out the top-10 in his No. 19 Williams Mercedes.

    As for the Haas F1 Team, Romain Grosjean finished 13th and Esteban Gutiérrez.

    Rosberg leaves Baku with a 24-point lead over teammate Hamilton in the Drivers’ Championship. Mercedes leaves with an 81-point lead over Ferrari in the Constructors’ Championship.

    In two weeks, Formula 1 returns to the Austrian Alps to run the Austrian Grand Prix at the Red Bull Ring.

  • Firestone 600 Delayed, Rescheduled for August 27

    Firestone 600 Delayed, Rescheduled for August 27

    The Verizon IndyCar Series Firestone 600 at Texas Motor Speedway has been rescheduled for August 27 following a string of weather delays plus damage to the SAFER barrier following a hard crash involving Josef Newgarden and Conor Daly.

    The race was originally set for a Saturday evening green flag, but due to heavy afternoon rain, the start time was pushed back until the decision was made to wave the green flag Sunday afternoon at 2:15 p.m.

    On lap 42 of the 248-lap event, Daly and Newgarden got together exiting turn four, with Newgarden’s car impacting the wall hard and flipping onto its side. Newgarden then hit the frontstretch wall again, this time, helmet-first. While Daly emerged from his car unharmed, Newgarden collapsed upon exiting his vehicle before being airlifted to Parkland Memorial Hospital in Dallas, where he was diagnosed with a broken right shoulder and broken right hand.

    IndyCar later gave an update on Twitter:

    Also, Newgarden posted this on his Instagram feed:

    The roll hoop on Newgarden’s car dug a hole into the SAFER barrier, which had to be repaired. Meanwhile, more rain arrived, ultimately bringing a stoppage to the event after 71 laps. The decision was then made to move the event to August 27 as a night race.

    IndyCar President of Competition and Operations Jay Frye said of the delay, “We certainly want to come back and have a full race for the fans here in Texas. The people at TMS do a great job, so what we will do, per our rulebook, is start the race from where we stopped. So we will come back and start the race from that point. This is unique. It hasn’t happened for a little while, but there are a lot of unique things here and we’ll look forward to coming back Aug. 27.”

    James Hinchcliffe was leading the race when the rains came and will lead the field to the green flag when the series returns on August 27.

    Meanwhile, the series will make it’s next stop at Road America on June 26. It will be the first time since 2007 that the series stopped at the Wisconsin road course.

     

  • Beaubier Sweeps Superbike at Road America

    Beaubier Sweeps Superbike at Road America

    Monster Energy/Graves Yamaha rider Cameron Beaubier controlled the MotoAmerica Honda Superbike Showdown at Road America on Sunday, taking the win in both Superbike 1000 races.

    Race One was the tamer of the two, with Beaubier establishing a comfortable lead over Yoshimura Suzuki’s Roger Hayden and keeping a few bike lengths between them until crossing the finish line.

    Race Two provided more drama, as Beaubier swapped the lead with teammate Josh Hayes several times before Yoshimura Suzuki’s Toni Elias joined the mix, managing to take the second spot from Hayes and build a gap between them. On the final lap Elias made a desperate lunge at Beaubier entering Turn 5, but the reigning champion executed an effective crossover and regained the inside position from the late-braking Spaniard.

    Beaubier’s perfect weekend (his fifth and sixth wins of the season) puts him in the championship points lead by seven points over teammate Hayes.

    Running on track at the same time as the Superbikes was the Superstock 1000 class. Former Superbike champion Josh Herrin piloted his Wheels in Motion/Meen Motorsports Yamaha to the win in both races, taking fifth overall and edging out Aprilia HSBK Racing’s Claudio Corti in both events.

    In the Supersport 600 class, Y.E.S./Graves Yamaha’s Garrett Gerloff won a wet Race One over his teammate and defending Supersport champion J.D. Beach. In Race Two, Frenchman Valentin Debise took his first Supersport victory in dramatic fashion, losing the lead and then retaking it at the end of the final lap.

  • Hamilton breaks the bank in Monte Carlo

    Hamilton breaks the bank in Monte Carlo

    In a season that started off slow with disappointment after disappointment, Lewis Hamilton capitalized on the pit road blunder of the pole sitter to score the victory in Monte Carlo.

    The driver of the No. 44 Mercedes AMG Petronas machine took advantage of Red Bull not having tires ready when Daniel Ricciardo pitted and held off Ricciardo to win the Monaco Grand Prix. It’s the 45th career victory for the reigning world champion and second at the track for the resident of the principality.

    “Thank God that today went the way that I hoped,” Hamilton said after the race. “Big thank you to all the fans that came out today, really made the weekend, big thank you to my team for providing me with a great car to see it through to the end. Honestly, I’m lost for words really. I prayed for a day like this and it came true. I feel truly blessed.”

    Pole sitter Ricciardo had the race under his control from the start until a miscue on pit road by his team not having the tires ready cost him the lead and the win. Needless to say, he wasn’t happy after the race.

    “I don’t even want to comment on the race to be honest,” a dejected Ricciardo said. Thanks to the fans, thanks for sticking out in this weather. From the outside we put on a show. Shouldn’t have been as exciting as it was to be honest. Two weeks in a row now I’ve been screwed, so it sucks. It hurts.”

    Sergio Pérez earned his seventh podium finish of his career with a third-place finish at Monaco.

    “I’m extremely happy because my team has done a tremendous job with the strategy, with the calls, with the pit stops,” Perez said. “It’s been an amazing day for us, my their podium with the team, a special one to have in Monaco, especially in these race conditions. I want to dedicate this podium to our boss, Vijay Mallya. He has been very supportive during these times, and I really want to dedicate this one to him.”

    Sebastian Vettel brought his No. 5 Ferrari home fourth. Fernando Alonso rounded out the top-five in his No. 14 McLaren Honda.

    Nico Hülkenberg finished sixth in his No. 27 Sahara Force India Mercedes. Defending race winner Nico Rosberg finished a disappointing seventh in his No. 6 Mercedes. Carlos Sainz Jr. finished eighth in his No. 55 Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari. Jenson Button finished ninth in his No. 22 McLaren Honda. Felipe Massa rounded out the top-10 in his No. 19 Williams Mercedes.

    The two Haas drivers finished 12th and 13th.

    Rosberg leaves in the points lead with teammate Hamilton moving up to second just 22 points back. Mercedes continues to run away with the constructors fight as they lead Ferrari by 67 points.

  • Chance at ‘perfect season’ for Mercedes ruined on opening lap

    Chance at ‘perfect season’ for Mercedes ruined on opening lap

    What had been a “perfect season” for Mercedes turned into a disaster on the opening lap of today’s race in Spain.

    After locking up the front row in qualifying, the Spanish Grand Prix had the makings of another runaway race dominated either by Lewis Hamilton or Nico Rosberg. On the initial start, Rosberg got off the line better and drove by Hamilton on the outside to take the lead in turn 1. Hamilton pulled back up to his teammate exiting turn 3 and dove to the bottom to make the pass going into turn 4.

    Rosberg moved down to block his advance and he ran onto the grass. Hamilton lost control of his car, spun out, crashed into the back of Rosberg and sent both of them into the sand trap.

    Toto Wolff, executive director of Mercedes AMG Petronas, said that Hamilton and Rosberg were “both upset for themselves and the team. They were both apologetic to the team. We lost a potential one-two, lost 43 points. It was just thrown away.”

    In response to whether Hamilton or Rosberg were fully to blame for the incident, Wolff said “No. It was a very difficult situation and difficult to analyze. There was not a clear cut thing. Coming out of the corner, Nico closed up the door, and then Lewis went on the grass. Definitely not 100% for one and zero for the other.”

    Niki Lauda, three-time world champion and non-executive chairman of Mercedes, laid the blame largely on Hamilton.

    “Lewis was too aggressive,” Lauda said after the crash. For both to be out after two corners is completely unacceptable.”

    Despite the wreck, Rosberg leaves Barcelona as the championship leader. Reigning world champion Hamilton fell to third with a 43-point deficit on his teammate.

    Neither driver has to leave his current residence for the next race, as Formula 1 heads to the streets of Monte Carlo. Rosberg goes into Monaco having won the last three races in one of the crown jewel races of the sport and not having finished worse than second in the last four.

  • Max Verstappen makes history in Spain

    Max Verstappen makes history in Spain

    Max Verstappen, in only his second year of competition, made history in his maiden ride with Red Bull and  took to the top step of the podium in Barcelona.

    Working on a two-stop strategy, the driver of the No. 33 Red Bull Racing car held off a hard charging Kimi Räikkönen for over 20 laps to score the victory in the Spanish Grand Prix at the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. At 18 years, seven months and 16 days old, Verstappen displaced Sebastian Vettel as the youngest winner in Formula 1 history.

    “It feels amazing,” Verstappen said. “I can’t believe it. It was a great race. I have to say thank you to the team for giving me such a great car. To win straight away in the first race, it’s an amazing feeling.”

    Verstappen, who had never turned a lap in a car for RBR, took over the ride formerly occupied by Daniil Kvyat after the Russian Grand Prix.

    Räikkönen brought his No. 7 Scuderia Ferrari home to a runner-up finish. Vettel rounded out the podium in his No. 5 Ferrari. Daniel Ricciardo, who led most of the race, brought his No. 3 RBR car home fourth in spite of a tire puncture with two laps remaining. Valtteri Bottas rounded out the top-five in his No. 77 Williams-Martini Mercedes.

    Carlos Sainz Jr. finished sixth in his No. 55 Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari. Sergio Pérez finished seventh in his No. 11 Sahara Force India Mercedes. Felipe Massa, after failing to advance out of Q1 the day before, finished eighth in his No. 19 Williams Mercedes. Jenson Button finished ninth in his No. 22 McLaren-Honda. After being relegated to the sister Toro Rosso team, Kvyat brought his No. 26 car home to a 10th-place finish.

    As for the Haas F1 Team, Esteban Gutiérrez finished 11th in his No. 21 car and Romain Grosjean exited the race with less than 16 laps remaining and finished unclassified. As of the publishing of this piece, no reason was given for Grosjean’s retirement.

    Championship leaders Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton were involved in a lap 1 wreck that took both of them out going into turn 4. As of the publishing of this piece, no actions have been taken by the stewards.

    Rosberg leaves Barcelona with the championship lead. Räikkönen leap-frogged Hamilton for second and tails Rosberg by 39 points. Hamilton trails by 43. Vettel and Ricciardo leave tied for fourth trailing by 52. Race winner Verstappen leaves sixth trailing by 62.

    The next race on the Formula 1 calendar is the Grand Prix of Monaco on May 29.

  • Suzuki Podium Is Much-Needed Leverage in Factory Fight for Vinales

    Suzuki Podium Is Much-Needed Leverage in Factory Fight for Vinales

    Blue track suits dominated the podium at Le Mans on Sunday, but a lighter shade than usual was present in the form of Team Suzuki Ecstar’s Maverick Vinales. His first premier class podium, a possible instance of foreshadowing showed the 21-year-old next to the dark blue suits of the Movistar Yamaha team where he may end up next season.

    Suzuki’s first podium since 2008 and a career benchmark for the second year rider, he downplayed the implications of his high finish as it relates to his upcoming decision to remain at Suzuki or take an offer from Yamaha.

    “The decision is gonna be really difficult but every day is more clear and finally as soon as possible I will make it,” said Vinales. “For sure, I will make the decision soon. I don’t need to think [the decision] is whether I made a podium or not.”

    If Vinales has already settled on Yamaha and is just waiting to make it official, then the podium won’t have much effect, but if he is still considering Suzuki then it would be difficult to imagine the factory’s best finish in nearly a decade won’t provide some pull in attaining the Spaniard.

    Team Suzuki Ecstar knows this well, and in an interview with Motorsport.com, Suzuki boss Davide Brivio made it clear that improvements set for early in the season could help keep Vinales on board.

    “That task began last summer when we explained our development programme for the bike,” Brivio said. “We knew that in the first three or four races 2016, Maverick would decide his future, so we had to take a step forward, and we have done that.”

    Brivio said Vinales will choose teams sometime between Le Mans and Mugello because Yamaha does not want to wait too long.

    An Improving Team in 2016

    With just five races to make an impact this season, Suzuki has done just that.

    Vinales and teammate Aleix Espargaro have finished inside the top six the last three races in a row. Currently fifth in the World Standings, Vinales only finished worse than sixth place at Argentina, where he crashed. Espargaro’s worst finish this year is 11th, and he sits seventh in the standings.

    Vinales has already gathered over half of his total points from last year less than a third of the way through this season (49 points through five of 18 races), which is more a comment on this season’s huge success than any failure last season. In his 97-point rookie year in the premier class, he gathered points in every race except Brno and Motegi, both of which ended in crashes.

    Last year at Le Mans, Espargaro failed to finish and Vinales came in the ninth spot. Improvements this year are undoubtedly due in big part to rider performance, but it goes without saying that Suzuki is providing better bikes. Vinales and Espargaro combined have finished every race this year but one. Among those nine races completed, they average a finishing position of 6.2.

    Is It Enough To Keep Vinales Around?

    Vinales voiced concern over his inability to maintain pace with the leaders during qualifying at Le Mans, claiming that rear tire sliding caused him to fall nearly a second off Jorge Lorenzo’s pole time.

    “For me it’s always the same problem. I always say, also last year, that we need to improve the rear,” Vinales said. “The problem is, when I need to use the rear to turn, the bike doesn’t turn and it starts to slide. It’s one year that I say the same and I still have the same problem.”

    The Suzuki optimist could see Vinales’ concern as a sign that he is invested in the team and wants better performance going forward. More likely, his interest in Suzuki’s performance pertains to the remainder of the season ahead. With an offer from the top team in the world dangling in front of him and the bad taste of recent dissatisfaction with Suzuki performance in his mouth, several signs point to a move. It doesn’t help Suzuki’s chances that Vinales’ third spot on the podium was bested only by the two riders from the team that is trying to sign him.

    Brivio thinks an underdog Suzuki narrative could provide leverage against Yamaha in the fight for Vinales.

    “Maverick can become a legend if he wins with Suzuki, because at Yamaha everybody expects him to do it,” Brivio said. “In any case, that is up to him, and maybe he doesn’t care at all. Maybe he only wants to win and that’s it.”

    Vinales must decide which team offers the best residence to fulfill expectations regarding his being the next big thing. Yamaha has the track record. But Suzuki is making reasonable arguments, which is keeping things interesting.

    “If he stays at Suzuki and we win, the story will be very inspiring because we started from scratch together,” Brivio said. “He arrived at Suzuki new to MotoGP, and we were also new as a team. From a sporting point of view it would be very inspiring.”

    Vinales has a lot to think about: The future of his career. The future of the sport. The potentially history making intersection of those separate-but-bound unwritten narratives.

    The French GP could only have made his decision more difficult. With a contract offer from the reigning champions, he just made recent history with an underdog team that is very much on the rise. Just how high that team can rise is the question he must answer.

  • Quinten Moore’s Inspirational Journey

    Quinten Moore’s Inspirational Journey

    He had one chance, one shot to win, in what was likely the only race he would probably be able to run. One opportunity to show everyone what he already knew inside, that he could win. At heart, he is a race car driver. He is Quinten Moore and this is his story.

    Moore grew up in a family of racers. His grandfather, father and even his sister have raced. Late NASCAR driver Bobby Hamilton helped Moore’s sister with her car, offering to help if needed. Moore and Hamilton became friends and Moore would visit his race shop which was located near his home.

    Moore became an avid NASCAR fan even entering a coloring contest where he placed third which allowed him to meet Jeff Gordon. Gordon was just one of the many drivers Moore had the pleasure to meet. Out of the drivers that Moore has met one driver would become a big inspiration. Many drivers may come to mind when you think of who inspires us, Dale Earnhardt Jr. or Tony Stewart are two which would probably come to mind. However, the driver that made the biggest impression on Moore is none other than veteran racer Morgan Shepherd.

    You see 20-year-old Moore has Spina Bifida and is in a wheelchair. Moore has had 33 surgeries and 51 kidney stones, earning the nickname “Stone Man” by the hospital staff. At one point they thought that Moore would lose his left kidney. He also had a shunt put in to drain spinal fluid but was able to have it disconnected in September 2012. Some of the other issues stemming from Spina Bifida are seizures and epilepsy. Some of the grand mal seizures may last up to a few seconds leaving Moore dizzy with blurred vision. It’s because of the seizures that he is unable to be cleared to race as it is too dangerous for Moore as well as the other competitors.

    It was during some of these hard times that Moore turned to his faith for guidance. As he was going through all of this that he believes God put Morgan Shepherd in his path. As he was recovering from back surgery in 2012 he received a surprise phone call from his idol. To his shock, Shepherd called to see how he was doing. From then on the two became friends, and they stay in contact still today keeping tabs on one another talking about faith and racing. Moore spent part of his graduation trip at Shepherds race shop, ending up spending the day chatting with him and watching him work.

    It was from Shepherd that Moore got the inspiration to see if he could find a way to race.

    “I looked at Morgan,” he said, “who hasn’t let anything or anyone stop him from racing, especially not his age. I thought to myself that if he could do it then so can I.”

    Moore knew it just wasn’t possible to race full-time with his disability. He thought if he could race just once he could show everyone that you can do anything if you put your mind to it. He wanted to show others that even if you’re disabled you should not give up on your dreams.

    He actually has a funny quote he likes to say for laughs, “I’m not disabled, I just really like wheelchairs.”

    Putting his ideas into action, he and his dad got the go-cart that his sister had used to race and tricked it out with hand controls so that Moore would be able to use it. Finally, In 2013 at the Wilson County Fair in Tennessee, Moore had his chance to race.

    It was everything coming together from his roots in racing to inspiration from Shepherd and learning from Hamilton. It was his chance to prove that even with Spina Bifida he could race. Not only could he race, but he could win… which he did!

    Some people may look at it as if it’s not much of a big deal, but to Moore it was huge. It was so much more than a race; it was something that he will carry with him in all that he will face now and in the future. It’s lifted him up in ways few will understand.

    He hopes that anyone facing struggles or who thinks that they can’t fulfill a dream will be inspired by his story, to at least try. On his journey, Moore has found a lifelong friend and he hopes to continue to help Shepherd on and off the track. Most important, he wanted to race and win so that he could inspire others.

    What Moore doesn’t realize is that he has been an inspiration long before he entered that race. He’s yet to see that he has been in a different race his entire life and true to form, he’s winning that race too.

  • Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Marquez Completes Perfect Weekend in Austin

    Repsol Honda’s Marc Marquez dominated Sunday’s Grand Prix of the Americas, building a big gap between himself and the field early and winning the race by six seconds.

    The 23-year-old Spaniard has won all four MotoGP races at Circuit of the Americas since it’s inaugural season (and his rookie season) in 2013.

    COTA is the only North American track on the schedule after Indianapolis Motor Speedway was removed following last season. At Indy, Marquez claimed wins in three of his four premier class visits.

    Leading up to Sunday’s race, Marquez topped the charts in all four free practice sessions and qualifying. All of his wins at COTA come from pole position starts.

    In the three races this season, Marquez has claimed victories in the last two and placed third in the season opener at Qatar, launching him to a 21 point lead in the championship over Movistar Yamaha’s Jorge Lorenzo. His comfortable lead is due in part to being the only factory Honda, Yamaha or Ducati rider not to have crashed out of any of the three races thus far this season.

    His easy win may have been partly influenced by an early Valentino Rossi low side, followed by a hard wreck between Repsol Honda teammate Dani Pedrosa and Ducati’s Andrea Dovizioso.

    Lorenzo appeared to be the only rider with anything for Marquez, but even his clean race couldn’t put him in contention for the win. The Movistar Yamaha rider may have elected to accept the second position and avoid pushing his bike too hard after crashing out of last weekend’s grand prix in Argentina.

    Ducati’s Andrea Iannone finished third, eleven seconds behind Marquez, with a comfortable seven-second gap to fourth place finisher Maverick Vinales. Iannone also improved heavily on crashes in the first two races, particularly last week’s final turn slide that took himself and Ducati teammate Dovizioso out of the race. Worth noting is that Dovizioso’s crash this week was due to competitor error as well.

    Fifth went to Suzuki Ecstar’s Aleix Espargaro, who engaged in close action with teammate Vinales from Lap 6 to the checkered flag.

    The series heads to Jerez, Spain in a few weeks, yet it goes without saying that Marquez would like an extended Western Hemisphere swing in the schedule.

  • Elias and Yoshimura Best the Americans at COTA

    Elias and Yoshimura Best the Americans at COTA

    Spaniard Toni Elias captured the win in Superbike Race One at Circuit of the Americas on Saturday. The former Moto2 World Champion and MotoGP race winner filled in for Yoshimura Suzuki’s injured rider Jake Lewis, and the win was in his first ever MotoAmerica race.

    Yoshimura teammate Roger Hayden dominated the early laps of Race One after grabbing the lead from the pole. Hayden only temporarily lost the lead to Monser Energy/Graves Yamaha’s Cameron Beaubier before the defending champion crashed out on the second lap.

    Hayden proceeded to take the lead and steadily increase it, building a gap of over two seconds to second place.

    Trouble struck for Hayden when Kyle Wyman blew his engine and spread oil across the track, bringing out the red flag as his bike erupted in flames. Oil cleanup caused a lengthy stoppage, and race officials decided to restart the race with five laps remaining.

    The second part of the race saw Hayden’s dominance put to the test, as his tire grip problems created a heated three-way battle for the lead with Elias and Monster Energy/Graves Yamaha’s Josh Hayes.

    Elias took the lead and Hayden pushed, but was faced with pressure from Hayes for second. Elias gained some breathing room and eased through the final portion of the last lap, while Hayden faced one final charge from Hayes in the last turn, but denied him the spot, completing a one-two sweep for Yoshimura Suzuki.

    Broaster Chicken/Roadrace Factory’s Jake Gagne took fourth, and Latus Motors Racing’s Bobby Fong finished fifth overall, winning the Superstock 1000 class on his Kawasaki ZX-10R.

    Texas native Garrett Gerloff won the Supersport race after he and Y.E.S./Graves Yamaha teammate J.D. Beach pulled away from the field early in the race.