Luci
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« on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 13:04:24 » |
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Obviously just practising as its Friday however Massa seems to have gone off the boil recently what with technical difficulties last weekend on home soil and spinning off today. I was thinking its about time for a Ferrari 1-2 however looks as though MacLaren will be up there again with BMW not too far behind! Raikkonen sets early pace at Spa Raikkonen is 18 points behind championship leader Hamilton Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen was fastest in the first free practice session ahead of this weekend's Belgian Grand Prix. McLaren's Lewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso, free to race after avoiding punishment by the FIA in the 'spygate' case, were second and third fastest.
Raikkonen's team-mate Felipe Massa had an early set back when he went off on his first warm-up lap at Spa.
The Brazilian approached the Rivage hairpin too fast and slid off, through the gravel trap and into the barrier.
It means Massa will be behind his rivals in terms of the time he has preparing his car, which could harm his chances of setting it up to behave to his liking.
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pumbaa
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« Reply #1 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 13:12:06 » |
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Toyota seem to be up there too this weekend, Trulli and Schumacher(R) currently 4th and 5th in 2nd free practice, ahead of Hamilton and the Beemers.
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« Reply #2 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 13:12:47 » |
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Alonso from Massa in second quali so far. 0.8 secs gap. 20 mins to go.
yes, yes, not indicative of how the race will go, but Massa seems OK
edit: Finished Alonso from Hamilton....
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pumbaa
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« Reply #3 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 14:02:41 » |
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2nd practice times
1 1 Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes 1:46.654 2 2 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:46.765 3 5 Felipe Massa Ferrari 1:46.953 4 6 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 1:47.166 5 12 Jarno Trulli Toyota 1:47.491 6 11 Ralf Schumacher Toyota 1:47.946 7 3 Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 1:48.086 8 15 Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:48.271 9 10 Robert Kubica BMW 1:48.279 10 4 Heikki Kovalainen Renault 1:48.567 11 9 Nick Heidfeld BMW 1:48.606 12 16 Nico Rosberg Williams-Toyota 1:48.840 13 14 David Coulthard Red Bull-Renault 1:48.883 14 7 Jenson Button Honda 1:48.919 15 8 Rubens Barrichello Honda 1:49.364 16 17 Alexander Wurz Williams-Toyota 1:49.393 17 21 Sakon Yamamoto Spyker-Ferrari 1:49.697 18 19 Sebastian Vettel STR-Ferrari 1:49.720 19 22 Takuma Sato Super Aguri-Honda 1:50.168 20 20 Adrian Sutil Spyker-Ferrari 1:50.399 21 23 Anthony Davidson Super Aguri-Honda 1:50.542 22 18 Vitantonio Liuzzi STR-Ferrari 1:50.865
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Luci
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« Reply #4 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 14:11:51 » |
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This overshadows this weekend a bit: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/6995240.stm"All the information from Ferrari is very reliable," De la Rosa wrote to Alonso on 25 March in an exchange about the Ferrari's weight distribution.
"It comes from Nigel Stepney, their former chief mechanic - I don't know what post he holds now.
"He's the same person who told us in Australia that Kimi (Raikkonen) was stopping in lap 18. He's very friendly with Mike Coughlan, our chief designer and he told him that."
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« Reply #5 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 14:51:18 » |
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If they were both aware of the information they should both be punished as well
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pumbaa
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« Reply #6 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 14:53:51 » |
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This overshadows this weekend a bit: http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/6995240.stm"All the information from Ferrari is very reliable," De la Rosa wrote to Alonso on 25 March in an exchange about the Ferrari's weight distribution.
"It comes from Nigel Stepney, their former chief mechanic - I don't know what post he holds now.
"He's the same person who told us in Australia that Kimi (Raikkonen) was stopping in lap 18. He's very friendly with Mike Coughlan, our chief designer and he told him that."
I can't access the link, so I take it that's an extract from e-mail correspondence between Alonso and de la Rosa that McLaren used as evidence. All very interesting... What I don't get about this whole affair is whether there is any objective evidence that quite clearly demonstrates without doubt that McLaren gained an advantage through use of Ferrari's Intellectual Property. To date, I've not seen or heard about anything that proves this beyond doubt, and hence why the saga remains very mysterious to me. I can't believe anybody knows the real truth, except for maybe Nigel Stepney and Mike Coughlan, and until such time as they are called to give evidence in their defence, nor will we. Hence why the majority believe the penalties imposed on McLaren are unjust and another example of the FIA seemingly favouring Ferrari.
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Luci
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« Reply #7 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 14:56:01 » |
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There you go Pumbaa McLaren exposed by spy evidence Alonso (left) and Pedro de la Rosa are implicated in the FIA report McLaren received a systematic flow of information from a spy within rivals Ferrari for nearly three months this year, the FIA has revealed. Drivers Fernando Alonso and Pedro de la Rosa were aware of the information.
It was the possession of this "highly sensitive" data that led the FIA to fine McLaren £49.2m and deduct their constructors' championship points.
The information came to McLaren chief designer Mike Coughlan from Ferrari chief mechanic Nigel Stepney.
The data McLaren received over the three-month period concerned the Ferrari car's brakes, weight distribution and aerodynamic balance tyre inflation.
In a 16-page document, the FIA said emails showed that test driver De la Rosa and reigning world champion Alonso had been aware of the Ferrari data.
All the information from Ferrari is very reliable
Pedro de la Rosa in an email to Fernando Alonso on 25 March
"The emails show unequivocally that both Mr Alonso and Mr de la Rosa received confidential Ferrari information via Mike Coughlan.
"Both drivers knew that this information was confidential Ferrari information and that both knew that the information was being received by Coughlan from Nigel Stepney," the report states.
In what is being viewed as the most damning section of the report, the FIA has published an email exchange between De la Rosa and Alonso.
"All the information from Ferrari is very reliable," De la Rosa wrote to Alonso on 25 March in an exchange about the Ferrari's weight distribution.
"It comes from Nigel Stepney, their former chief mechanic - I don't know what post he holds now.
"He's the same person who told us in Australia that Kimi (Raikkonen) was stopping in lap 18. He's very friendly with Mike Coughlan, our chief designer and he told him that."
McLaren has refused to comment on the FIA's revelations, published on the eve of the Belgian Grand Prix in Spa.
The extent of the information Coughlan received about the Ferrari goes far beyond what was revealed at a first meeting of the FIA's world motorsport council in July.
At that time, the FIA decided not to punish McLaren because there was no proof the information had been used "in such a way as to interfere with the running of the FIA F1 world championship".
But the new evidence persuaded the world council to change its verdict at Thursday's meeting.
De la Rosa revealed plans to test Ferrari's weight distribution in McLaren's simulator, plans that were later abandoned.
It was revealed that Alonso agreed it was "very important" that McLaren tried out the gas Ferrari were using to inflate their car's tyres.
It also emerged that De la Rosa had asked Coughlan for specific details of Ferrari's braking system, and that the designer revealed to the test driver "we are looking at something similar".
The document appears to explode the view that this was only a case of two rogue employees using the information to find better jobs at other teams, and that the confidential information had not been circulated within McLaren, as the team contended at the first world council meeting.
The world council said it had decided to inflict such a heavy punishment on McLaren because "there was an intention on the part of a number of McLaren personnel to use some of the Ferrari confidential information in its own testing".
It added: "The evidence leads the WMSC to conclude that some degree of sporting advantage was obtained, though it may forever be impossible to quantify that advantage in concrete terms."
Alonso and team-mate Lewis Hamilton were not punished in the drivers' championship because "primary responsibility lies with McLaren, and also because McLaren's drivers were offered individual sanction".
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pumbaa
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« Reply #8 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 15:02:22 » |
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Thanks Lady, I'd not seen that before. VERY interesting...
Whilst I can fully understand the role of Coughlan in this whole affair, I just don't see the motivator behind Stepney, who lets face it had been Ferrari's Chief Mechanic for several years and very senior in their organisational structure, leaking this data to their chief rival. Just bizarre.
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« Reply #9 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 15:17:59 » |
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Silly season F1 story: http://www.grandprix.com/ns/ns19649.html Our spies in the FIA World Council meeting have revealed that there are going to be some surprises when the details come to light next week. We understand that the most extraordinary revelation will be in relation to the identity of the man who tipped off the FIA that there was additional evidence against McLaren: it was none other than Ron Dennis.
It appears that this strange turn of affairs came about because Dennis and Fernando Alonso argued about the details of the Spaniard's contract. Alonso seems to have mentioned that he was in possession of information that might be of interest to the FIA. In order to deprive Alonso of this rather unsavoury negotiating tool and negate the possibility of anyone else using it against McLaren and because it was the right thing to do Dennis reported the information to the FIA in the hope that his display of good faith would underline the fact that the team has been honest throughout the investigation.
It is anticipated that this will be confirmed when the transcripts of the case come to light next week.
If this is indeed the case, Fernando Alonso's image as a simple, nice fellow is going to take quite a hit.
 I'll beleive when I see it (the report!)
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Luci
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« Reply #10 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 15:22:56 » |
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If this is indeed the case, Fernando Alonso's image as a simple, nice fellow is going to take quite a hit  what reputation would that be. I really don't know what to make of that as it had to come from somewhere there was more evidence. But Ron Dennis?! :shock: Knowing it would have a detrimental effect on McLaren as a Constructor I find hard to believe he'd do that If however, it is down to honesty then I commend him for that, however surely Alonso would be santioned separately within McLaren for his behaviour as it contributes significantly to the case ?
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« Reply #11 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 15:26:49 » |
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I can't work out whether it is a piss take story or a serious one?!
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pumbaa
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« Reply #12 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 16:18:46 » |
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I've attached the link (via the ITV F1 website) to the full FIA transcript, all 16 pages of it! http://www.itv-f1.com/News_Article.aspx?PO_ID=40662Its pretty well summarised in the main post, but delve deeper and the plot thickens even more. Its like an episode of Law and Order...
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pumbaa
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« Reply #13 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 16:24:57 » |
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And other snippet of rumour, conjecture and conspiracy theory to add into the mixer... One of the key submissions to the World Motor Sport Council on Thursday came from Ferrari driver Kimi Raikkonen, we can reveal.
The Ferrari driver stated in writing that while he was at McLaren from 2002 until 2006 the team systematically listened to Ferrari’s radio transmissions, which are supposed to be scrambled.
This was put to Ron Dennis in Paris on Thursday, and reportedly a long silence followed before he came up with a reply.
Intriguingly, the Kimi evidence was not part of the report released by the FIA today, and thus has not reached the public domain until now.
Ironically in July Mika Salo revealed to a Finnish newspaper that when at Ferrari in 1999 he regularly received transcripts of Mika Hakkinen’s radio conversations.
Unfortunately for Salo he was driving a Ferrari at the Spa 24 Hours the week that story emerged. A “correction” was soon sent from Maranello explaining what the Finn had meant to say was that in those primitive days sometimes teams accidentally overheard the conversations of rivals…
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« Reply #14 on: Friday, September 14, 2007, 16:54:30 » |
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As recently as the season before last only 2 teams scrambled their transmissions, Ferrari and MacLaren, who both went for digital encryption. (Oh and 'Jordan' used a primitive analogue inversion which was a waste of time).
I don't know if this has changed this season. We used to listen to them at the race using relatively cheap scanners (£70 or so). In fact Nick Fry (formerly BAR/Honda) said that they would continue to broadcast in the clear because there was little to be gained from listening to other teams ("set mix 2" WTF).
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