Tag: Formula 1

  • Rosberg wins down under

    Rosberg wins down under

    Nico Rosberg picked up right where he left off at the end of 2015 to take the top step of the podium in Melbourne.

    Thanks to a red flag period just before halfway in the race, the driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car used tire strategy to beat out teammate Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel to score his 15th career victory in the FIA Formula 1 World Championship.

    “The strategy was crucial today,” said Rosberg. “So I’m really thankful. The team did a great job on that side as well. We are really strong in strategy amongst other things. I don’t want to single out one thing, we’re strong in nearly all areas, but that did it today.

    “It was the tire choice also on the red flag. I was glad to see that they were on the supersoft. I wasn’t sure that was going to be the case. I was happy that I was able to follow quite well with the medium. I was a bit concerned about the restart with the medium, that that tire would be too cold, but it worked out OK.”

    Despite winning the race, it wasn’t the typical Mercedes dominant clinics we’ve become accustomed to in the last two years. Despite winning his 50th career pole, the driver of the No. 44 Mercedes car stumbled on the start and failed to lead a single lap. It was the No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari of Vettel that dominated the race from the get-go.

    Fernando Alonso extracts himself from his destroyed McLaren Honda. Photo: Sutton-Images
    Fernando Alonso extracts himself from his destroyed McLaren Honda. Photo: Sutton-Images

    At first, it appeared the four-time world champion would put on a vintage clinic of his own. It all changed on the 19th lap of the race when Fernando Alonso, who was running ninth at the time, was making a pass on Esteban Gutiérrez. He mis-timed the move, clipped the left-rear tire of the No. 21 Haas F1 Team Ferrari and sent both of them crashing in turn 3. Gutiérrez’s car came to a halt in the sand trap, but Alonso’s No. 14 McLaren Honda turned sideways, dug into the sand and barrel-rolled into the tire barrier.

    Thankfully, despite the damage sustained to his car, the two-time world champion extracted himself from the cockpit and walked away uninjured. He said afterwards that he felt lucky to be alive.

    “It’s frustrating on one side because we lost an opportunity and probably we lost a power unit and the whole car because of the damage,” Alonso told NBC Sports. “The second point is that I’m super happy I’m alive. I’m talking to you and I’m so, so thankful to the FIA and the safety of the cars that we have right now. Try to learn from today and try not to repeat it.”

    The race was red-flagged to allow for extensive cleanup. During this time, most teams opted to change onto the medium tire compound. Vettel was the exception. He opted to change onto a new set of the super soft tires.

    When the race restarted, he was significantly faster than Rosberg, but taking the super softs also meant he would need to make one more stop to get fresher tires and to meet the race regulations. When he made his stop on lap 35, his team had a miscue that caused the stop to go longer. That ultimately cost Vettel the victory.

    With no real challenge, Rosberg drove on to win the race.

    Hamilton finished second. Vettel rounded out the podium in third. Australian native Daniel Ricciardo brought his No. 3 Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer car home fourth. Felipe Massa rounded out the top-five in his No. 19 Williams Mercedes.

    Despite a lousy qualifying run the day before, Romain Grosjean brought his No. 8 Haas F1 Ferrari home to a sixth-place finish. This was the best debut result by a startup team since Panasonic Toyota Racing in 2002.

    “We did it. A bit lucky in the race with the red flag but nonetheless we had a good car,” Grosjean told NBC Sports after the race. We threw it on track with no setup work, no chance to do anything during the weekend and here we are, P6 at the end. I told the guys that this is a win for you, this is a win for the whole team, for the work that has been done in the last few weeks, few months. They haven’t slept much. They made it possible and this is incredible.”

    Nico Hülkenberg finished seventh in his No. 27 Sahara Force India Mercedes. Valtteri Bottas finished eighth in his No. 77 Williams Mercedes. Carlos Sainz Jr. finished ninth in his No. 55 Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari. Max Verstappen rounded out the top-10 in his No. 33 Toro Rosso.

    The next race will be in two weeks in Bahrain.

  • New Tire Rules Coming to F1

    New Tire Rules Coming to F1

    Stop me if you’ve heard this before: New convoluted rules are coming to Formula 1.

    Now I’m probably violating a cardinal journalism rule by saying this is convoluted, but there’s no way I could discuss this without it sounding overly complicated. Now, “this” in my pronoun game is Formula 1’s new tire rule. This comes about with the introduction of the new “ultrasoft” compound for the 2016 season and the desire to stop teams from spending more time in the garage than on the track during practice. Pay very close attention because this gets very, very complicated.

    Starting this season, Pirelli will bring three dry compound to the track instead of just two. These will consist of three combinations: orange-banded hard, white-banded medium and yellow-banded soft, medium, soft and red-banded supersoft and soft, supersoft and purple-banded ultrasoft.

    Next teams will have 13 sets of tires instead of eight. Teams will also get their choice of what number of a certain compound they’d like versus the other two. At a minimum, the tire set manifest must have at least one of each dry compound. However, you could do a manifest that has just one soft, one supersoft and one ultrasoft. In order to get a customized set, teams are required to send to Pirelli their tire set request eight weeks prior to the Grand Prix weekend for European races and 14 for all other race weekends. Teams aren’t required to send one if they don’t want a customized tire set. In that case, Pirelli will give them four of the prime compound, five of the option compound and four of whatever they’re calling the softest compound.

    It’s only going to get more convoluted from here.

    Pirelli then takes one set of each compound to be used for Q3 and race day. Don’t think too much on that, I’ll explain it in a few minutes. Just focus on the 10 sets for practice and qualifying. After 40 minutes in free practice 1, teams are required to give the tire set they used for it to Pirelli and that set cannot be used again. After another 40 minutes, teams give their second set to Pirelli and that can’t be used again. The process repeats itself each practice session.

    Now we get to qualifying. At this point, a team will be left with just two sets of tires. Remember those three tire sets taken away? One of them is given back to the team if that team makes it to Q3. If they don’t, it disappears like the plot to Sword Art Online. Also, that tire set will be a set of the softest tire compound.

    Here’s where we up the ante. If you make it to Q3, you have to start the race on the tire set you used to set your fastest lap in Q2. Previously, it was the fastest time set in Q3. Why they changed it is beyond me. It’s beyond my comprehension. As someone who’s followed Formula 1 for a number of years, I’ve long since accepted that there are some things about this sport I’ll never understand.

    Once we get to race day, it pretty much unfolds like it always does. You are required to use both dry compounds should rain not fall on the track. Also, you can use any of the tire sets not used during the rest of the weekend, although that’s not likely to have any left over.

    If you’re still confused, just watch this video.

    Thanks for reading and I hope I didn’t cause any of our readers a brain aneurysm.

  • Rosberg Closes Out Season on Top

    Rosberg Closes Out Season on Top

    Nico Rosberg ends the year on a high note with a hat trick over Lewis Hamilton.

    The driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car scored the victory in the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix at the Yas Marina Circuit. It was his sixth win of the season and 14th of his career. He led all but two of the 55 circuits. The reigning world champion, Lewis Hamilton, finished runner-up in his No. 44 Mercedes car. He finishes the season with 10 wins (one less than the year before) and 17 podium finishes (tying Sebastian Vettel’s Formula 1 record for most podium finishes in a season).

    Kimi Räikkönen rounded out the podium in his No. 7 Scuderia Ferrari. The 2007 world champion ends the season with just three podium finishes. Vettel came home fourth in his No. 5 Ferrari after a blunder in qualifying relegated him to a 15th-place starting position. The four-time world champion finishes his maiden season with the men of Maranello with three wins and 13 podium finishes. Sergio Pérez rounded out the top-five in his No. 11 Sahara Force India Mercedes. He finishes the season with one podium finish.

    Daniel Ricciardo finished in sixth in his No. 3 Infiniti Red Bull Renault. After winning three races in his maiden season with Red Bull in 2014, he finishes the season with a less than stellar two podium finishes. Nico Hülkenberg finished seventh in his No. 27 Force India Mercedes. While his F1 season was uninspired at best, his 2015 motorsports season included scoring the overall victory in the 2015 24 Hours of Le Mans. Felipe Massa finished eighth in his No. 19 Williams Martini Racing Mercedes. He ends the season with two podium finishes. Romain Grosjean finished ninth in his No. 8 Lotus F1 Team Mercedes. He finished on the podium once in his last season with the team. He moves over to the Haas-F1 Team based in Kannapolis, N.C. along with Esteban Gutiérrez. Daniil Kvyat rounded out the top-10 in his No. 26 Red Bull. He finishes the season with one podium finish.

    Hamilton locked up the world championship at Circuit of the Americas back on Oct. 25. His final total for the season is 381 points (three points short of his 2014 total). Rosberg locked up second in the points with his win at Brazil two weeks ago. His final points total is 322 (besting his 2014 total by five points). Vettel ends up third in the points with 266 (besting his 2014 total). Räikkönen finishes in fourth with 150. Bottas finishes in fifth with 136.

    Massa, Kvyat, Ricciardo Peréz and Hülkenberg round out the top-10 in points.

    Mercedes locked up the constructors’ title in Sochi. They finish with a grand total of 703 points. According to NBC, they set a new record for the largest percentage of total points possible to accumulate at 86.47 percent. The most points a constructor can amass in a single race is 43. Multiply that by 19 and the most points a team can amass in a season is 813. Take 703, divide it by 813 and you get your result.

    That’s all for 2015, but preparations for 2016 begin tomorrow. Some teams will stay at the track to test Pirelli’s new ultrasoft tires. During the winter, late January and early February, the teams will begin preseason testing at the Circuito de Jerez and the Circuit de Barcelona-Catalunya. Formula 1 starts up its 67th season at Albert Park Lake in Melbourne on March 20 for the Australian Grand Prix. As of the publishing of this piece, the 2016 season will include 21 races, including the return of the European Grand Prix at the new Baku City Circuit in the capital city of Azerbaijan on June 19 and the return of the German Grand Prix at the Hockenheimring on July 31. The United States Grand Prix remains in its position on the calendar on Oct. 23 at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas.

  • Rosberg Reigns Supreme in Interlagos

    Rosberg Reigns Supreme in Interlagos

    Nico Rosberg took the victory in a dominant performance at Interlagos.

    The driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car started from the pole and led all but four laps en route to scoring his 13th career win in Formula 1, fifth of the season and second at the Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo. “It was a great weekend for me. Of course everything is relative with what happened back in Paris, but it went perfectly. Lewis put on a great challenge but I was able to control it and I was really happy with that,” he said.

    Teammate and reigning world champion Lewis Hamilton led four laps and finished runner-up. He said that he had good pace, but noted that it’s hard to make passes at this particular circuit. “I was behind Nico and in traffic for some time and I just killed my tires,” he added. “I don’t know if there was anyone else overtaking, unless you have a huge advantage you can’t get close.”

    Sebastian Vettel rounded out the podium for the 79th time in his career in his No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari.

    Kimi Räikkönen put the other Ferrari in fourth. Valtteri Bottas’s Williams Martini Racing Mercedes rounded out the top-five.

    Nico Hülkenberg finished sixth in his No. 27 Sahara Force India Mercedes, followed by Daniil Kvyat finished seventh in his No. 26 Infiniti Red Bull Renault. Felipe Massa finished his home race in eighth. That however could change as he’s under investigation for his right-rear tire being 27 C – 80.6 F – over the maximum pre-race temperature limit.

    Romain Grosjean finished ninth in his No. 8 Lotus-Mercedes while Max Verstappen rounded out the points in 10th in his No. 33 Scuderia Toro Rosso Renault.

    American Alexander Rossi finished 19th in his last race of 2015. He’ll return to his GP2 Series ride with Racing Engineering for the next two weeks.

    The only car to not finish the race was the other Toro Rosso driver Carlos Sainz Jr.

    Formula 1 closes out the 2015 season in two weeks at the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi.

  • Rosberg on the pole in Brazil

    Rosberg on the pole in Brazil

    Nico Rosberg will start the field tomorrow in São Paulo.

    The driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas car won his fifth straight pole with a time of 71.282 and a speed of 135.198 mph. He said afterwards that qualifying was “an area that I had to work on, so I have been working on it through the season. But I don’t have a direct explanation, a precise thing I’ve done different.”

    Teammate Lewis Hamilton will start second with a time of 71.360 and a speed of 135.051 mph. Asked if not being on pole since Monza concerned the 2015 champion, he simply said “no” and that his “main job is done this year. I have the most poles of the year and I won the world championship, so there’s nothing really to read into this. You don’t always get it right. You can’t get it perfect every single time.”

    It shouldn’t shock anyone that it was a Mercedes on pole. They’ve taken the top spot in qualifying in all but one race this season. Sebastian Vettel was the only other driver to be on pole this season when he took it in Singapore.

    Speaking of Vettel, the four time world champion placed his No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari in third with a time of 71.804 and a speed of 134.215 mph. Valtteri Bottas finished his No. 77 Williams Martini Racing Mercedes in fourth with a time of 72.085 and a speed of 133.692 mph. He was handed a three-place grid penalty for overtaking Felipe Nasr under red-flag conditions in free practice 2. Kimi Räikönen rounded out the top-five in his No. 7 Scuderia Ferrari with a time of 72.144 and a speed of 133.583 mph.

    Nico Hülkenberg qualified sixth. Daniil Kvyat qualified seventh. Felipe Massa qualified eighth. Daniel Ricciardo qualified ninth. He was handed a 10-place grid penalty for his team going over the five engine change limit for the season. Max Verstappen rounded out the top-10.

  • Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas Preview

    Formula 1 United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas Preview

    A champion could be crowned this week in America.

    This week, Formula 1 returns to Circuit of the Americas in Elroy, Texas – on the outskirts of Austin – for the United States Grand Prix. This’ll be the 45th edition of the race, 38th as a round of the FIA Formula 1 World Championship and fourth at COTA.


    About COTA

    Let’s talk about Circuit of the Americas. The track is roughly three and a half miles (3.427 to be exact) and is modeled after several famous tracks. Turns three through six modeled after Maggots, Becketts and Chapel at Silverstone, while turn seven is loosely based on the Senna S curve at Interlagos. Not sure if the long backstretch at COTA was modeled after Istanbul Park, but both are roughly similar. Turns 13 through 15 are modeled after the Arena Bends at the Hockenheimring, while turns 17 and 18 are modeled after the high speed turn eight at Istanbul Park.

    But don’t take my word for it, let Sky Sports’s Martin Brundle take you for a lap around COTA.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u-Jee_AuH_Y

    The track will have two DRS zones. The first will be on the pit straight from the exit of turn 20 to the entrance of turn one while the second will be on the backstretch between turns 11 and 12. Pirelli will bring the yellow banded soft tires as the option compound and the white banded medium tires as the primary compound. Unless the race is affected by weather, teams will be required to use both dry compounds at least once in the race. The forecast this weekend is wet with a chance of more wet. So expect large usage of the intermediate and full wet tires.


    History of the United States Grand Prix

    Indianapolis 500

    F1 has raced in the United States since 1950 when the Indianapolis 500 was a round of the world championship from 1950 to 1960. However, the cars in the 500 ran different rules than were used by the FIA. As a result, only one regular F1 driver, Alberto Ascari, entered the race during that time.

    Sebring

    So while the Indy 500 was part of the world championship, the first real F1 race on American soil took place on Dec. 12, 1959 at Sebring International Raceway. It was the ninth and final round of the 1959 season and was won by Bruce McLaren. At 22 years, three months and 12 days old, McLaren was the second youngest winner in the history of F1. It was widely misreported that he was the youngest when that distinction belongs to Tony Ruttman – Joe Ruttman’s older brother – who was 22 years and 80 days old when he won the 1952 Indianapolis 500. Either way, both records stood for 44 years until it was broken by Fernando Alonso in 2003.

    Riverside

    In 1960, F1 returned to the U.S. to race at Riverside International Raceway. The race was won by Sir Stirling Moss.

    Watkins Glen

    Despite being in the worlds largest consumer market, race promoter Alec Ullman was unable to drum up the crowds and support needed to secure a place at Sebring or Riverside. He attempted to work out a deal with Bill France to run the race at Daytona International Speedway (which I admit would be cool if that had actually happened), but was unable to reach an agreement. Finally, he reached an agreement with race promoter Cameron Argetsinger and the United States Grand Prix found a new home in the Finger Lakes region of New York at Watkins Glen International.

    When I say a new home, I really mean a new home. For the next 20 years, fans gathered every Autumn to watch Formula 1. It’s isolated, peaceful and quiet location gave the track a “vacation atmosphere.” With The Glen either bookending or towards the end of the F1 calendar, the festivities with fans and teams some years celebrating winning the title in America. All this lended to The Glen becoming the “Mecca” of American road racing and one of the greatest race tracks in the world.

    Unfortunately, Watkins Glen was not keeping up with the times. By the time 1980 came around, the track had lost a lot of its early splendor as the track surface was getting more bumpy, the facilities were growing cramped and the crowds went from civilized party goers to rowdy drunks. These drunks gained an infamous reputation for going to the “Bog” inside the Boot section to set cars, trees and even a Greyhound Bus on fire. Eventually, the crowds and lack of significant improvements led to the demise of the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen.

    Various locations

    During the period between 1981 and 1989, Formula 1 ran at different locations in the U.S. such as on the streets of Long Beach, Calif. (this race still runs as the Toyota Grand Prix of Long Beach on the IndyCar schedule), in the parking lot of Caesars Palace in Las Vegas – I’m not making that up as that actually happened (it actually worked surprisingly well for a parking lot race) -, and the streets of Detroit (the rate of attrition in these races made Martinsville look like nothing) and even at Fair Park in Dallas.

    Phoenix and demise of Formula 1 in America

    The plan for 1989 was for Formula 1 to continue in Detroit at Belle Isle Park, but that didn’t materialize. Laguna Seca was seriously considered, but was passed up due to it’s isolated location and local noise ordinances. Finally, they came to the streets of Phoenix, Ariz. and it just never clicked. The street circuit never offered any challenge to the drivers, the local population largely ignored the race and the temperatures could reach up to 100 degrees Fahrenheit (38 degrees Celsius). After the 1991 race, the race was cancelled and the United States was left without an F1 race for the first time ever. Over a period of 11 years and four failed American Grand Prix’s, Formula 1 tarnished its image in the U.S.

    Indianapolis

    On Sept. 24, 2000, in front of a crowd of over 225,000 at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Formula 1 made its triumphant return to the United States. Michael Schumacher scored the victory and retook the points lead from Mika Häkkinen and went on to win his third career title.

    The 2001 race on Sept. 30 was the first international sporting event to be held in the U.S. following the events of September 11th. Almost every team ran decals showing their support for the nation still reeling from the attacks. Schumacher once again finished ahead of everyone else, except for the guy who finished ahead of him, Häkkinen, who scored his 20th and final Formula 1 win. That’s a play-on of a famous phrase referring to the legend himself Murray Walker who announced his final race that day.

    What seemed like a perfect marriage of a famous track and Formula 1 went downhill from there. In 2002, Schumacher, who had dominated the race, gifted the race win to Rubens Barrichello on the final lap. It was most likely the former returning the favor after the latter did the same a few races earlier in Austria (although Austria was ordered by Ferrari). Needless to say, a lot of the fans weren’t thrilled with the contrived finish. However, that was nothing compared to 2005.

    I once asked longtime motorsports commentator Bob Varsha why the 2005 United States Grand Prix was so badly botched and he said plainly that “it was an ensemble effort.” So many pieces came together to make one giant fustercluck. Two in particular were the resurfacing of The Brickyard and changes to the sporting regulations that required tires to last an entire race.

    Prior to the race, the oval surface at Indianapolis underwent a diamond grinding to smooth out the surface. As we saw with the 2005 Coca-Cola 600, this can lead to a high rate of tire failures. With subsidiary Firestone being the sole tire supplier to the Verizon IndyCar Series since 1999, Bridgestone was able to bring a tire that could last an entire race and not wear out on the turn 13 of the track (a.k.a. turn 1 on the oval). Michelin, who ironically had been superior all season with tire durability and the vast number of top teams running with their tires vs. Bridgestone’s, did not have a proper tire for the final turn. Ralf Schumacher suffered a left-rear tire blowout and slammed the wall in turn 13. He was unable to continue racing.

    This led Michelin to meet with Track President Tony George, Formula One Administration and Formula One Management CEO Bernie Ecclestone, and all the team principal’s sans Jean Todt of Scuderia Ferrari to discuss the installation of a chicane that would bypass the banked turn 13. FIA President Max Mosley rejected the proposal saying it was “out of the question” and that any modification to the circuit would force the FIA to strip the race of its sanction.

    Michelin was left with no choice but to request that the 14 cars using Michelin tires not take part in the race because the durability of the tires couldn’t be guaranteed beyond 10 laps. Michael Schumacher, who qualified fifth for the race, took the lead with ease and won the race. He would go on to win the race the next season and became the all-time winningest driver in the history of The Brickyard.

    Lewis Hamilton won the eighth and final USGP at Indy. Sebastian Vettel, who made his first start in this race, became the youngest driver to ever score points in an F1 race. A record that stood for eight years before being broken this season by Max Verstappen.

    Circuit of the Americas

    In 2012, Formula 1 came back to the United States to race at the newly built Circuit of the Americas. Hamilton battled with Vettel to score the victory. The next season, Vettel won his eighth consecutive race at COTA. Despite starting on the pole, Nico Rosberg finished a distant second to Hamilton.


    Points situation

    Lewis Hamilton enters the race with a 66-point lead over Sebastian Vettel. If Hamilton leaves with a point lead greater than 75-points, he will clinch the championship. In other words, Vettel has to win or finish second to keep his title hopes alive. His chances have already been hit after he was hit with a 10-place grid penalty for Ferrari exceeding the five engine change limit.

    You can catch the race this Sunday at 2:00 on NBC.

  • Lewis Hamilton Takes the Gold in Sochi

    Lewis Hamilton Takes the Gold in Sochi

    The world championship all but belongs to Lewis Hamilton after scoring the victory in Russia.

    The driver of the No. 44 Mercedes AMG Petronas car capitalized on the mechanical failure of teammate and pole sitter Nico Rosberg to score his 42nd career win in Formula 1. It moves him past his hero Ayrton Senna and ties him for third on the all-time wins list with Sebastian Vettel. Speaking of which, the driver of the No. 5 Scuderia Ferrari car finished runner-up. Last-lap mayhem allowed Sergio Pérez to take his Sahara Force India-Mercedes to his fifth career podium finish.

    Williams-Mercedes Felipe Massa and Red Bull-Renault’s Daniil Kvyat rounded out the top-five.

    Felipe Nasr, Pastor Maldonado, Kimi Räikkönen, Jenson Button and Max Verstappen rounded out the top-10. Fernando Alonso, who originally finished 10th, was handed a five-second time penalty for exceeding track limits and was demoted to 11th. It cost McLaren-Honda their second double points finish of the season.

    This was one of the more bizarre races I’ve seen this season. It started on the first lap with a collision in Turn 2 involving the other Sahara Force India of Nico Hülkenburg and Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson. It forced the deployment of the safety car.

    On lap six, Rosberg retired from the race with a broken throttle. With Hamilton winning the race, it all but ends the title hopes for the German driver.

    A few laps later, Romain Grosjean got loose in Turn 3, overcorrected and slammed the wall. It forced the safety car to come out a second time.

    Another unusual note is that the super-soft Pirelli tires, which are supposed to wear out at a significant rate, lasted more than half the race for some of the lead cars. To put it another way, as NBC’s Will Buxton did, “this’ll send the OCD fans into a tizzy.”

    In the closing laps of the race, Martinsville broke loose. Carlos Sainz Jr., who was running in the top-10, had a brake failure and spun out in the same part of the track where he had a heavy wreck the day before. A piece of his wing fell on the track and required a marshall to retrieve it. Someone wasn’t paying attention to the location of oncoming cars because he about got hit by Sebastian Vettel. Daniel Ricciardo was running fifth when he had engine issues in the closing laps and retired from the race.

    It was the battle for the final podium step on the final lap that will stand out the most. Rounding turn 4, Kimi Räikkönen made contact with Valtteri Bottas and sent him into the wall. This allowed Sergio Pérez to take the final podium step. After the race, Räikkönen was handed a 30 second time penalty, moving him down to eighth. This gave Mercedes the Constructors’ Championship.

    After all was said and done. Lewis Hamilton left as the points leader. Sebastian Vettel moved past Nico Rosberg for second in the points.

    There is a chance Hamilton can clinch the drivers championship in two weeks at Circuit of the Americas in Austin, Texas. That race will be Sunday, Oct. 25 at 2:30 p.m. on NBC.

  • Rosberg takes the pole in Russia

    Rosberg takes the pole in Russia

    Nico Rosberg scored the pole for tomorrow’s race in Russia.

    This is the 18th career pole for the driver of the No. 6 Mercedes AMG Petronas Formula One Team and third of the 2015 season. He’ll be joined on the front row by teammate, points leader and defending race winner Lewis Hamilton.

    This pole is critical for Rosberg to get back into title contention as he trails Hamilton by 48-points. What was a 28-point gap heading into Monza ballooned into a 53-point canyon after Nico’s retirement from the race due to engine gremlins. He was given a golden opportunity to significantly shrink that gap under the lights of Singapore after Lewis retired from the race with engine issues, but could only muster a fourth-place finish – only the second non-podium finish for the Mercedes organization this season. While he won the pole two weeks ago in the land of the rising sun, it was Hamilton who got the advantage on the initial start and won the Japanese Grand Prix.

    Valtteri Bottas will start his Williams Mercedes in third. The Ferrari duo of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Räikkönen will start fourth and fifth.

    The rest of the top-10 consisted of the Sahara Force India duo of Nico Hülkenburg and Sergio Pérez, Romain Grosjean of Lotus-Mercedes, Max Verstappen of Scuderia Toro Rosso and Red Bull-Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo.

    The rest of the field consists of Daniil Kvyat, Felipe Nasr, Jenson Button, Pastor Maldonado, Felipe Massa, Fernando Alonso, Marcus Ericsson, Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi.

    Alonso will take a 35 grid penalty for his McLaren-Honda team going past the five-engine change maximum. The same goes for Merhi of Manor-Marussia.

    Carlos Sainz Jr. didn’t take part in qualifying after a heavy crash in FP3 which forced him to be airlifted to a nearby hospital. He expects to race tomorrow, but will remain in the hospital overnight. He’ll also need approval from the race stewards because he technically didn’t take part. Typically, teams that are unable to put the car on track in qualifying will go to the stewards and show that they ran more than one lap in practice within 107% of the fastest lap set in the first round of qualifying. The fastest lap Sainz ran in FP3 was 1:42.683 and the fastest lap in Q1 was 1:38.343 by Nico Rosberg.

    With practice and qualifying in the books, all that remains is to run the race.

    Coverage of the Russian Grand Prix begins tomorrow at 6:30 a.m. on NBCSN and NBC Sports Live Extra.

  • Why There is a 1% Chance of Seeing a NASCAR Driver in Haas F1

    Why There is a 1% Chance of Seeing a NASCAR Driver in Haas F1

    Since Haas F1 was given permission to join Formula 1 in April starting in 2015 (Later delayed to 2016), there has been constant speculation and rumor that Haas F1 is going to hire a current NASCAR driver, specifically one Danica Patrick, to drive one of their two cars in Formula 1.

    The problem with that is that it’s a lot like if Tony Romo were to jump ship from the Dallas Cowboys to Manchester United FC.

    It would be almost impossible for Danica to try and run F1. She has a sponsor, yes. But, even though some reporters would tell you otherwise, she has never driven anything quite like a Formula car. It is radically different from her former Andretti Green IndyCars under the surface. And even if this is ignored, remember that Formula 1 has all road courses- which Danica typically struggled at during her IndyCar career.

    And this isn’t just another “screw Danica” article. The reality is that there are problems with every driver in NASCAR looking to make the switch. Most drivers came up on dirt ovals, while all F1 drivers come up running pavement road courses. Most drivers are simply too old. Danica, at 32, would easily be the oldest rookie in the field, and one of the older drivers in the field, period. Most drivers also are simply too big. This doesn’t mean at all that most are fatties, but Formula 1 drivers need to be much thinner, to the point where some drivers are eating less than the stereotypical model. And why would Haas get a driver with all of these disadvantages when he could get an experienced foreign driver while attempting to develop an American driver?

    The reality is, in order to successfully make the switch to Formula 1 from NASCAR, something that has never been done, you’d need a once in a decade driver to agree to make the switch within about 5 years of being in NASCAR. After that, they aren’t making the switch. Over the past 25 years, only three drivers jump out to me as being that good: Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, and Kyle Busch (Although in his case it’s more in that his driving style would fit in perfectly in Formula 1).

    If it were to happen, I’d be shocked and excited. But the reality is that it just isn’t going to happen in spite of how the media attempts to spin the news. Somehow Haas saying, “I think she would. I think she would. She would bring an awful lot of viewership. I think it would be great for America. I think she would be a great candidate. Whether that’s going to happen or not that’s, that’s, that’s … you know I think that’s kind of a long shot there, too,” turned into “At the Canadian Grand Prix in Montreal last weekend, Haas said Patrick would be considered as a driver for the team.”

    The reality is that Haas F1, when it starts out in 2016, will probably have a rookie and veteran who are both not American. Essentially, their job will be to develop the car until the right American comes along. Until then, it’s a waste of time pulling names out of a hat.

  • The Big Disconnect: Why racing will never be a fully accepted mainstream “sport” in America

    The Big Disconnect: Why racing will never be a fully accepted mainstream “sport” in America

    As an American racing fan, be it NASCAR, IndyCar, F1, or just about anything else, you know racing really isn’t covered well at all by mainstream sports media.

    Here in Southern Maryland, I may see a mention or two during Speedweeks or Indy month, but outside of that no mention on local TV.  On ESPN I have to wade through NFL, MLB, NBA, and NCAA before maybe a mention of NASCAR or something with Danica Patrick. Fox Sports is basically the same. Now granted both sports groups have hour or half an hour long NASCAR shows (NASCAR Now and Race Hub) each day in season, but nobody watches them compared to SportsCenter or even Fox Sports Live (I think, but either way I doubt the FSL audience is 100% NASCAR fans).

    The problem with this being, of course, that both sport groups air every single NASCAR race from its three National series with the lone exception of TNT’s six race summer series. I know what you may be thinking right now: “Well, that’s pretty dumb. Why not really promote something you’re going to air?”

    Guess what? They aren’t being dumb, they’re being smart, because NASCAR simply isn’t accepted as a sport by the majority of the viewing public.

    Even if you hate football and have never played it, I’m pretty certain that you can at least accept that there is athleticism and that it is a sport. Same with basketball, hockey, and baseball. Unless you’re a Yankees fan, I’m pretty sure you see it as throwing big money at cheaters but I digress. People generally go to college and throw all of their hopes into making it into the NFL, MLB, NBA, NHL, or XFL (In Vince McMahon’s mind).

    Last time I checked, the NCAA doesn’t sanction a racing series. Sure, drivers have gone to college before but that’s primarily to have a back up plan if it doesn’t work out – only 43 drivers start in Cup races, so the chance to make it big is pretty darn low. Mechanics are a different story but they don’t receive a tenth of the credit the driver usually does.

    If I wanted to go throw a football, I have a buddy who lives down the road who has an old football we can play with. I don’t have a buddy with two Sprint Cup cars along with a quarter mile we can play with. Herein lies one of the big problem with mainstream opinion on motorsports – they do not understand that there is a core difference between driving and racing, they simply believe it is one and the same. I drive every day to work in my Toyota, this is the only connection many have with motorsports, even though the only similarity between the two is controlling an automobile down a road for a distance.

    Driving is to travel a distance to get to a location and something the general public does everyday. Racing is something most sane people will never get the opportunity to do outside of carney go kart tracks where half the karts don’t work and the green one is always the fastest (in my experience). Just because I drive everyday in a Toyota, which has AC in the summer, doesn’t mean I can hop into the #18 Camry, no AC in a fire suit in a 100 degree cockpit, and become the next Kyle Busch. It took Busch 20 years of racing to get where he is today. I haven’t had a minute of it.

    When I watch football, when Aaron Rodgers is on an absolute roll I can see the fire in his eyes, just how perfect he is at throwing the football. On the flipside, when Jay Cutler is having a bad day, I can see the anger, the heartbreak in his face and in his body language, every bad throw. This is why Tim Tebow was such a big deal to the mainstream – he has emotion, charisma, and fire most athletes could only dream to have, just no talent. You do not see this in motorsport, especially NASCAR.

    Unless you really watch at driver motions in the windshield, you can’t see through the car and watch Busch wheel a loose car from the back to the front. Thus, there I think might be the biggest disconnect of all, the perceived lack of emotion on display. Outside of the insane wreck or two, when do you hear about NASCAR in mainstream media? Post race, when the emotion and the fights, the heartbreak, and the joy are all on full display.

    Finally, the short attention span of Americans today make it hard to watch things for extended periods of time on TV if you don’t know about those involved. If I were to watch Landon Cassill swap the lead back and forth with Aric Almirola, I’d be pretty happy and would be interested. To the average channel surfer, they don’t know or care about that and would leave in a few minutes if it is the same old same old. Compare that to football, within a few minutes different players are guaranteed to be on the field doing different things.

    No matter how well the sport of racing is doing ratings or fan base wise compared to its contemporaries, there will always be a Donovan McNabb out there who obviously doesn’t understand it and demeans it. If baseball is relatively easy to follow and football hard to understand at first, racing might be the single most complicated of them all. And it might have the most raw emotion out of its fans- even during a bad race fans are never going to keep to themselves about it.