Categories
Formula 1 News

Professor Sid Watkins 1928–2012

Professor Sid Watkins

Professor Sid Watkins, the former long-serving FIA Fomula One Medical Delegate, has passed away in a London hospital. He was 84 years old.

Watkins is best known for his work in F1 and is credited for a general raising of safety standards in the sport, including the development of better techniques for removing drivers from cars and improved crash structures.

He started in F1 in 1978 shortly before the death of Ronnie Peterson and was one of the first one the scene after Ayrton Senna crashed at the San Marino Grand Prix in 1994. Senna was a close friend of Watkins and triple world champion often shared his deepest thoughts with Watkins.

When Watkins retired from F1 in 2005 Max Mosley, then FIA President, said: “Professor Watkins has made a unique contribution to improving the standards of safety and medical intervention in Formula One and indeed internationally throughout motor sport.”

James Allen shares a less familiar tale of Watkins assisting a passenger on a commercial flight: “In the early 1990s, I was on a long haul flight back from a Grand Prix when a man unconnected with racing collapsed in the downstairs deck of a BA 747. A group of us went in search of the Prof, finding him upstairs on the Business Class deck. Sid woke up immediately, came downstairs and performed a tracheotomy on the man, saving his life.”

On track, Watkins is acknowledged as saving the lives of several F1 drivers, including Rubens Barrichello (Imola 1994), Gerhard Berger (Imola 1989), Martin Donnelly (Jerez 1990) and Mika Hakkinen (Adelaide 1995).

Via his twitter account, Barrichello paid the following tribute: “It was Sid Watkins that saved my life in Imola 94.great guy to be with,always happy…tks for everything u have done for us drivers. RIP”

He will be greatly missed.

[Source: James Allen | Pic: F1 Journal]

UPDATE: A statement from the Watkins family has been added below.

Categories
Formula 1 Motorsports Subaru

Robert Kubica wins comeback rally in Italy

Robert Kubica

Former Lotus (nee Renault) F1 driver Robert Kubica returned to the winner’s circle in his competition comeback in Italy on the weekend. Competing in the in the Ronde Gomitolo di Lana rally, it was his first competitive event since he badly injured himself in the Ronde di Andora rally back in February last year.

At the wheel of a Subaru Impreza WRC Kubica and co-driver, Giuliano Manfredi, were first on all four stages to win the event by almost one minute. You can see some highlights via YouTube after the break.

The successful comeback run is a great boost to Kubica’s recovery and comes a little over a week since it was reported he tested a Ford Fiesta RS WRC.

[via Autosport]

Categories
Ferrari Formula 1 McLaren

2012 Italian GP: Post-race press conference

2012 Italian Grand Prix

Here we bring you the generally happy tale from the podium winners at the Italian Grand Prix. Lewis Hamilton was happy to notch McLaren’s third win in a row, of course. Likewise, Sergio Perez was over the moon to finish in second place. While Fernando Alonso could barely believe his luck, managing third, with three of his title rivals all failing to score any points.

Alas, there were no smiles in the Red Bull garage. Mark Webber explains his late race exit, “Towards the end of the race, I had no rear tyres left and I was pushing reasonably hard. Nico (Rosberg) was coming on his fresh two-stop tyres, so I had to keep pushing and staying on it—for the sake of getting a couple of points, maybe I shouldn’t have pushed as hard, but I was trying to stay on it.

“The rear tyres were completely finished, so I dropped it out of the Ascari chicane; I managed to keep it off the wall, but then the tyres were so heavily flat-spotted, I was worried about damaging the car. We do 330 km/h round here, I couldn’t see the track, so we decided to retire.”

And Christian Horner expressed his dissatisfaction with Vettel’s forced retirement, “A hugely disappointing race—our first non-points scoring race since Korea 2010. It was a repeat failure on Sebastian’s car with the alternator and we need to look into it and work with Renault to ensure it doesn’t happen again.

“It’s already cost us a victory in Valencia and now a points-finish again here in Monza. It’s important we address it for the remaining seven races.”

The full transcript from the first three can be read after the break, with thanks to the FIA.

[Pic: Ferrari]

Categories
Ferrari Formula 1 McLaren

Lewis Hamilton wins 2012 Italian GP

Lewis Hamilton wins 2012 Italian Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton has converted his pole position into a race win at the 2012 Italian Grand Prix. It’s his first win at Monza and McLaren’s 180th win in all. Hamilton was prominent all weekend and, despite a fast charging Felipe Massa (Ferrari) into the first corner, was never really troubled at the head of the field.

And yet it was Fernando Alonso who finished third and ended up being the real winner. It was as if the Ferrari ace was parting the red sea as he charged his way through the field from P10. He reached as high as P2 before a fast charging Sergio Perez (Sauber), himself starting from P12, overtook Alonso late in the race to equal his best finish in Formula 1.

The current era of F1 generally sees reliability throughout the field, but it was not the case at Monza this weekend. First, Jenson Button (McLaren) retired with a fuel pickup issue, then Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull) was given a drive through penalty for forcing Alonso wide and off track. At least that’s what the stewards thought, the decision seemed a tad harsh from our lounge room. Worse was to come for Vettel with an alternator problem ending his race on lap 47. Red Bull’s day turned decidedly sour on lap 51 of 53 when Mark Webber kissed a bit too much kerb and sent himself into a spin. He managed to avoid the fences, but the resultant flat spots on his tyres sent him into pitlane for an early shower.

So, after all that, it was a double retirement for Red Bull—their first for 34 races— and Fernando Alonso managed to extend his championship lead by 13 points. A pretty handy result for the tifosi to cheer on after their hero started so far down the field.

For Australia’s other driver, Daniel Ricciardo (Toro Rosso), he lost his grip on the final championship point on the last lap of the race. So, not a great day for the Aussies. But at least Ricciardo had a better day than his teammate, Jean-Eric Vergne, who crashed out on lap 8 due to a problem with one of his rear wheels.

Making the smile on Hamilton’s face a little larger is the news he has moved from fifth to second in the drivers’ championship. He’s 35 points behind Alonso with eight races left in the season.

Categories
Ferrari Formula 1 McLaren

2012 Italian GP: Qualifying report

2012 Italian Grand Prix, qualifying

Lewis Hamilton has put his tweet rage and speculation he is in his final season with McLaren behind him to set the fastest time (1:24.010) in qualifying at the Italian Grand Prix. Alongside Hamilton is his teammate Jenson Button (1:24.133), with Felipe Massa (1:24.247)—remember him—to start from P3 for Ferrari.

Hamilton’s pole makes it three in a row for McLaren, adding to Belgium and Hungary. It’s also McLaren’s 61st front row lockout, which equals the all-time record with Williams.

Paul di Resta (Force India, 1:24.304) performed strongly to qualify fourth fastest, but will drop five places due to an unscheduled gearbox changed earlier this weekend.

Red Bull has struggled with high speed of Monza all weekend, managing to only better HRT in the speed trap. Mark Webber just missed the cut to make it into Q3 and will start the race from P11, while Vettel (1:24.802) is happy to be starting the race from P5 (after di Resta’s penalty).

Daniel Ricciardo (Toro Rosso) saved his best lap for the dying moments of Q2 and out-qualified teammate Jean-Eric Vergne, but it wasn’t enough to edge him into Q3. Daniel will start from P14, Jean-Eric from P16.

Championship leader Fernando Alonso (Ferrari, 1:25.678) was fastest in Q1 and Q2, but a rear anti-roll bar issue was claimed to be the reason he finds himself starting from P10. Alonso is quick off the line and with the long run into the first corner at Monza we’re expecting some fireworks.

Pastor Maldonado (Williams) was another driver to be docked a few grid positions after his efforts in Belgium and the finalised starting order can be seen HERE.

The transcript from the first three drivers is all yours after the break, with thanks to the FIA.

[Pics: Ferrari & Vodafone McLaren Mercedes]

Categories
Formula 1 News

Alex Zanardi wins Paralympic gold in London

Alex Zanardi wins gold at London 2012 Paralympics

The Paralympic Games are filled with countless stories of courage and inspiration. One journey having relevance to an automotive website is that of former F1 driver Alex Zanardi. A total of 11 years have passed since Zanardi lost both of his legs in an horrific accident during a CART race at Lausitz in Germany.

Zanardi is now 45 and he reached the pinnacle of another sport overnight by winning the gold medal in the men’s Individual H4 Time Trial hand-cycling event. Adding extra sweetness to Zanardi’s victory is the fact the event was held at the former F1 racetrack Brands Hatch.

“I only collected a second place, a third-placed finish (at Brands Hatch) and to win I had to come back with a hand-cycle. It’s an amazing feeling,” Zanardi said after collecting his gold medal.

“I’m really, really happy for the result and I knew that this moment was going to bring a little bit of sadness as well.

“This is almost the last day of a great adventure and from Monday I will have to find something different, otherwise life will become a little boring.

“It’s at the top of the scale with many other great moments I’ve been lucky enough to live.”

On behalf of AUSmotive we say well done Alex Zanardi, well done!

[Source: London2012 | Pic: Getty Images]

UPDATE 8 September: Alex is just showing off now, winning a second gold medal!

Categories
Formula 1

Weekend at Bernie’s

Sauber F1 Team time lapse video

This weekend’s Italian Grand Prix is the last European race before a block of seven fly away races to close out the 2012 F1 season. The Sauber F1 Team has given us a time lapse video showing their two main trucks being packed ready to hit the road. We reckon it’s worth sharing.

Categories
Formula 1 Safety Issues

Increased driver protection “inevitable” for F1

FIA Institute roll-hoop test

The fallout from the dramatic first corner crash at the 2012 Belgian Grand Prix continues calls for increased driver protection.

Commenting on the incident, in which Fernando Alonso’s head was missed by inches, McLaren’s technical director, Paddy Lowe, said, “You see it time and time again and think ‘that was lucky’. One day it won’t be lucky. At the same time it is an open cockpit formula so we have to protect that, but it should be technically possible one way or another.”

According to Lowe such measures could be in place within 18 months. “I think 2014 is intended, as we started the project a year ago,” he added. “Personally I think something is inevitable because it is the one big [safety] exposure that we have got.”

Back in May we showed you an amateur rendering of what a closed-cockpit F1 car could look like. It didn’t look too bad, but Lowe seems to think a completely covered cockpit won’t be the direction taken.

Categories
Formula 1 Lotus

Grosjean given one-race ban, will miss Monza

Romain Grosjean tries F1 hurdling

The blame for the spectacular crash at the start of the 2012 Belgian Grand Prix has been laid squarely at the feet of Lotus driver Romain Grosjean. Following a stewards’ inquiry Grosjean has been handed a one-race ban and a €50,000 fine.

Television replays showed the accident was set-off after Grosjean moved across on Lewis Hamilton, forcing the McLaren driver onto the grass where he lost control. Hamilton then crashed into the back of Grosjean’s car, sending the Lotus flying through the air across the nose of Fernando Alonso’s Ferrari.

A statement issued by the FIA reads in part: “The stewards regard this incident as an extremely serious breach of the regulations which had the potential to cause injury to others.

“It eliminated leading championship contenders from the race.

“The stewards regard this incident as an extremely serious breach of the regulations which had the potential to cause injury to others,” said a statement released by the FIA. “It eliminated leading championship contenders from the race.”

That means we’re likely to see Lotus reserve driver Jerome D’Ambrosio at the wheel of Grosjean’s car for the Italian Grand Prix this weekend.

Ferrari team principal, Stefano Domenicali, has issued a forthright statement on the team’s website saying: “It would be better if, starting with the junior formulae, rules relating to on-track behaviour were enforced in an inflexible manner, so as to have drivers as well prepared as possible when they reach this, the highest level of motor sport.”

[Source: Formula1.com & Autosport | Pic: Ferrari]

Categories
Formula 1

Kamui’s amazing Belgian shuffle

Kamui Kobayashi, 2012 Belgian Grand Prix

When looking at the first corner mayhem from the Belgian Grand Prix on the weekend it was quite astounding to see that Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi was able to escape this contact relatively unharmed. Sure, he finished in P13, well below the potential offered by his front row start, but as the series of images after break show, it could have been much worse!

[Source: imgur via motorcentral]

Categories
Formula 1 Mercedes-Benz

Has Bernie revealed Michael’s retirement plans?

2012 Belgian Grand Prix

Speaking on the BBC TV’s Belgian Grand Prix pre-race show Bernie Ecclestone may have given away Michael Schumacher’s end of season retirement plans.

Last weekend’s race was Schumacher’s 300th Grand Prix start, a mighty fine performance in its own right, and when the topic was broached on during Bernie’s interview with the BBC the F1 supremo said, “I’m sorry that he’s leaving us not being a winner, because he is a winner.”

Eddie Jordan, part of the BBC’s on-air team, sensed the big news and quickly asked,”Is he going to announce his retirement?”

Sensing he may have just let the cat out of the bag, Bernie replied, “I don’t know, I don’t know.”

It’s no secret that Schumacher has struggled at times since his return to F1 with Mercedes in 2010. He signed a three-year contract back then and you’d have to think the chances of an extension are unlikely.

[Source: Planet F1 | Pic: Mercedes AMG]

Categories
Formula 1 Lotus McLaren Red Bull Racing

2012 Belgian GP: Post-race press conference

2012 Belgian Grand Prix

So the FIA persists with the post-race interviews on the podium. We’re not fans. To be fair Jacky Ickx did a reasonable job last night at the Belgian Grand Prix, but, please, stop this nonsense. Do you agree?

Anyway, on to Jenson Button’s apparently easy victory. The Brit hasn’t always done too well at Spa and he was happy to win on the famous circuit. I just love Spa, I think we all do. Through Eau Rouge, I know it’s easy flat, but it’s still an experience, the g that we pull through there,” he said. “But it’s really nice to win on a circuit like this. I remember watching Formula One back in the day here—it was a little bit different then—and there’s so much history. It’s really good to be a part of that.”

Further explaining his great result at Spa, Button revealed an omen for the other teams heading in to the super fast Italian Grand Prix at Monza next weekend. “All weekend, to be fair, the car has felt reasonably good. And this is the first circuit we come to that is lower downforce, we pretty much run full downforce everywhere else we go, so it’s a nice change to try something different.”

You can read more from the first three drivers after the break with thanks to the FIA. There’s even a surprise f-bomb thrown by Sebastian Vettel!

[Pics: Red Bull/Getty Images]