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Formula 1 Thread

Kimi has fucked off to Rally, confirmed.
Brawn will sign Heidfeld for sure, not sure on Rosberg just yet.
Kubica was been looked at by Renault as Alonso's replacement. Now they are not sure if they are going to stay in F1. They probably will though.
 
Looks a possibilty that Michael Schumacer could be going to Brawn Mercedes. He's going to be a stop gap till Vettel is avaliable.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/motorsport/formula_one/8368107.stm

Michael Schumacher is poised for a sensational return to Formula 1 with the new Mercedes team, according to BBC Sport pundit Eddie Jordan.

Mercedes want the seven-time champion as their lead driver after taking over title-winning Brawn, Jordan says.

"The possibility is being actively pursued and I believe it is going to happen," said Jordan.

Schumacher's spokeswoman Sabine Kehm told BBC Sport a return was "highly unlikely - but never say never".

The plan is for Schumacher to be a stop-gap before Mercedes can prise German rising star Sebastian Vettel out of Red Bull, Jordan said.

The German, who will be 41 in January, had to pull out of a temporary comeback to F1 last year as a replacement for the injured Ferrari driver Felipe Massa because of a neck injury.

But Kehm said that while Schumacher had not had any new tests on his neck, it was expected to be healed by the end of the year.

Jordan said: "It started with a meeting between Michael, Ross Brawn and Daimler chief executive officer Dieter Zetsche at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

"At the moment, it is not possible for Michael to drive for Mercedes because he has a consultancy contract with Ferrari.

But I understand he was due to meet Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo with a view to him being released - and that it will be approved because it is in the interests of F1.

"I believe that is being planned at the moment.

"I also believe Ross and Michael have spoken in recent times and that Michael likes the idea of driving a Mercedes run by Ross. It's a mouth-watering idea.

"Schumacher was bitterly disappointed he didn't get to come back to replace Massa - he's keen to race again. And this is a dream for both parties.

"Michael and Mercedes go way back - he drove for their sportscar team before he raced in F1, and they were responsible for getting him in to F1. They paid the then Jordan team to give him his debut in 1991.

"He has won all these titles but never driven in F1 for Mercedes."

The Brawn team rose out of the ashes of Honda, which quit F1 in December 2008, and won the drivers' world championship with Jenson Button in 2009, as well as the constructors' title.

Mercedes's takeover was announced on Monday, but the team are looking for a lead driver following Button's decision to move to McLaren for 2010.

Signing Schumacher would be an ideal way for Mercedes to head off the negative publicity that has arisen from letting the world champion slip through their fingers.

A source close to Ferrari says the Italian team have yet to be asked to release Schumacher.

Schumacher's contract with the company was changed recently to remove him from any links with the F1 team, for which he was a consultant.

He is now an ambassador, consultant and test driver for the company's road car arm.

It is understood that during the summer Schumacher explored the idea of driving a third car for Ferrari on an occasional basis, but this is forbidden by F1's rules.

Kehm said Schumacher had given her no indication that he wanted to make a full-time return.

Vettel, 22, is contracted to drive for Red Bull until the end of 2011 and, while contracts are often broken in F1, Mercedes may not find it easy to buy him out.

Red Bull is owned by the soft drinks company's founder Dietrich Mateschitz who, as a billionaire, does not exactly need the money.

If the Schumacher deal does not come off, fellow German Nick Heidfeld is considered most likely to get the second Mercedes seat alongside Nico Rosberg, another German, whose contract has been signed but not officially announced.

But another possibility for Mercedes might be the highly rated Polish driver Robert Kubica.

He has signed for Renault, but the French company is deciding whether to continue in F1, with a decision due before the end of the year.

If Renault pulled out, Kubica would be on the market, and he might be an attractive option for Mercedes, who have moved to dismiss widespread claims that they are determined to sign two German drivers by describing their new F1 team as "global".
 
[quote author=Brendan link=topic=36232.msg993752#msg993752 date=1258751274]
Wowsers!
[/quote]

I know will be intresting to see Lewis racing against Schumacher. I reckon he could squeeze one more championship especially being reunited with Ross Brawn.
 
I'd love to see Schumacher back in F1, but in a competitive car.
It would be shit to see him drive around in midfield or worse.

Also, Brendan, I seem to remember you giving out about F1 as a sport.
Have you taken a recent interest?
 
So next season we might have:

Alonso+Massa in Ferrari
Hamilton+Button in McLaren
Possibly Schumacer and Rosber in Mercedes Brawn with Ross Brawn
Vettel + Weber in Red Bull.

Aces!

*starts saving up for Singapore GP*
 
Mercedes happy to sustain Schumacher speculation

Norbert Haug, a German former motorsports journalist, is an old-timer in the Formula One paddock and knows the rules when it comes to hot stories: if you do not deny claims, you are as good as admitting them to be true.

During a conference call from Germany yesterday to announce Nico Rosberg as a new driver for the Mercedes Grand Prix team — formerly Brawn GP — the vice-president for motorsport at Mercedes-Benz was asked if he was ready to end speculation about Michael Schumacher making a sensational comeback with the team by categorically ruling him out.

Haug, who was once described in this newspaper as Formula One’s answer to Henry Kissinger, a slightly tongue-in-cheek reference to his behind-the-scenes role in trying to solve last summer’s budget-capping crisis, avoided doing exactly that.

“When [can] you ever say anything categorically in Formula One,†he replied from his office in Stuttgart. Later he added: “We have to live with these speculations . . . I fully understand that these speculations are ongoing so long as we don’t announce who is driving in the other car, but that’s what we have to live with.â€

Even Kissinger would have understood that the uncertainty in this case could be removed by denying that Schumacher remains a target for the team. Thus, not surprisingly, the consensus among those who heard Haug yesterday was that Schumacher is still a possibility and contacts with him are likely to continue.

Whether the 40-year-old German legend goes for it is another matter and it may take several weeks for a decision. In the meantime this hare is running, which is no bad thing for a team who are still smarting from losing Jenson Button to McLaren.

In the same conference call Nick Fry, the Mercedes chief executive, was also coy on the Schumacher front, but he said that he wanted to sort out the second driver before Christmas. He added: “It may not be possible, but from an operational point of view, it would be better and we’ll try for that.â€

The reference to it being “possible or not†could be a reflection of the likely time Schumacher may take to decide and sort out his contractual issues with Ferrari, but it could be a reference to Renault and the uncertainty over its future in Formula One. The French carmaker has still to announce whether it is continuing in the sport and has said that a decision will be made before the new year. If it pulls out, Robert Kubica, freshly signed to Renault from BMW Sauber, would be attractive to Mercedes.

Rosberg refused to discuss Schumacher but said he was a “little surprised†by Button’s move. He hoped to win races with Mercedes in 2010, when he becomes the first German driver at the wheel of a “silver arrow†since 1955. “The aim is going to be very high for me,†he said. “I want to win races and then we’ll see. We need to wait a few months to see how the car turns up but I’m very confident that we are going to have an extremely strong package.â€

It is debatable whether Rosberg, who has not won a grand prix, has the personality and ability to lead the Mercedes team or whether his new managers feel a need for more firepower on the track, fire power that they would get from Schumacher, from Kimi Raikkonen, with whom they are also in contact, and from Kubica.
 
New Points System For Formula 1

Formula 1’s scoring system is set to be overhauled to award points to the top 10 finishers in each grand prix from next season.

The change ? prompted by the expanded grid of 13 teams that will participate in the 2010 world championship ? was agreed at Thursday’s meeting of the Formula 1 Commission, a body which comprises key stakeholders from F1 teams, promoters, suppliers and sponsors and is expected to play an increased role in the sport’s governance.

The new scoring system will award 25 points to the winner of a GP, 20 points to the second place finisher, 15 for third, 10 for fourth, 8 for fifth, 6 for sixth, 5 for seventh, 3 for eighth, 2 for ninth and a single point for 10th place.

Although Bernie Ecclestone and others have argued that there needs to be a greater reward for winning in F1, the revised points system maintains the existing relative differential between the top three finishers (25-20-15 being equivalent to 10-8-6), while increasing the gap between third and the non-podium places.

The proposed change will be submitted to the FIA’s World Motor Sport Council for final approval on Friday and is almost certain to be ratified given that the F1 Commission meeting was chaired by Ecclestone and attended by FIA president Jean Todt.

The Commission also gave a “strong mandate†to the Sporting Working Group to develop detailed proposals to improve the F1 show, to take effect from next season.

It also proposed a number of other amendments to the sporting and technical regulations, as yet unspecified, which will be put to the WMSC on Friday.
 
Michael Schumacher close to agreement to return as Mercedes driver next season

Michael Schumacher could be revealed as the lead driver for the new German super-team within days as Formula One gets to grip with some of the biggest changes on the grand prix grid in the sport’s history.

Renault will also outline details of their future today, which could mean 75 per cent of the team is sold. David Richards, the founder of Prodrive, and Gérard Lopez, a Luxembourg-based entrepreneur, are favourites to take over and move into the team headquarters in Enstone, Oxfordshire.

But it is Schumacher’s comeback at 40 to join the new Mercedes team that will dominate the new season. Mercedes have had numerous chances to flatten speculation but their denials have been no more than tepid and Nick Fry, their chief executive, failed to dampen expectations again yesterday, saying that Schumacher’s return would be “very good for our teamâ€.

“A number of drivers are still available if Michael were to decide not to drive,†he said. “Then there are alternatives that we would be happy to go with.â€

But with Schumacher said to have recovered from a neck injury and apparently raring to return, there seems little to stop a comeback for the seven-times world champion.

He will join a grid that has changed radically since his retirement three years ago, with Toyota and Honda gone and Mercedes out of its partnership with McLaren to take over the championship-winning Brawn GP team. There will also be four new teams on the grid for the first race in March.

Among them will be Virgin Racing, the gas-guzzling advertising vehicle of Sir Richard Branson, the entrepreneur and climate change campaigner, who lived up to half his reputation at least yesterday. He took the wraps off his new Formula One racing team — that will run two cars that do four miles to the gallon of petrol — and promptly jumped on board a jet to take part in the climate change summit in Copenhagen today.

Branson knows a good investment when he sees one and all the signs are that Virgin Racing will spew cash as well as exhaust fumes. Unlike the teams and sponsors who have poured billions into probably the most environmentally unfriendly sport on Earth, Branson intends to make money out of Formula One.

“We haven’t put a lot of money in, we’ve put our brand in,†the Branson said. “On the back of the brand, the team are managing to get a lot of sponsors.â€

In other words, Branson provides his name and other sponsors — about ten are to be signed up — provide the cash for a budget estimated to be about £40 million for next season.

Virgin Racing represent a typically opportunistic move by one of business’s great showmen. He had declared that he loved grands prix but the costs of Formula One were too high and the cars needed to run on “clean fuelsâ€, but he was still quick to jump on the fledgeling Brawn GP team at the start of last year, cashing in as the team became the sensation of the season, with Jenson Button winning the World Championship.

As Brawn homed in on their twin titles, the sponsorship price went up and Branson moved out to tie up a partnership with Manor Motorsport, rebranding them under his Virgin banner.

“For us to be involved in Formula One is good for the brand,†he said. “Formula One is a sexy beast and we are going to try and make it a little bit sexier.â€

Timo Glock, the German driver who was at Toyota last season, and Lucas Di Grassi, the Brazilian former GP2 and Renault F1 test driver, will be in the cockpits, while Etienne de Villiers, the former president of the ATP Tour in tennis, will be non- executive chairman.
 
I can't think of anything better to stymie F1's progress than the return of the grinning automaton.

Next we'll have George Foreman coming out of retirement for the 12th time to contest the Heavyweight division.
 
Jarno Trulli and Heikki Kovalainen form Lotus team

2vi5kpz.jpg


Jarno Trulli and Heikki Kovalainen have been unveiled as the driving team for Lotus F1's maiden season on the Formula One grid.

The Malaysian team are one of four new entrants for the 2010 season and have agreed an experienced pairing in former Toyota driver Trulli and Finland's Kovalainen, who represented McLaren last season.

The pair each have one grand prix win, with Italy's Trulli taking first place in the 2004 Monaco Grand Prix and Kovalainen triumphing in the 2008 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Kovalainen stressed that the presence of Mike Gascoyne as chief technical officer and Tony Fernandes as team principal was key to his decision to sign.

"For me there were a couple of major factors - Tony and Mike being the two leading figures in the project, and the backing behind the team were both very important," he said.

"Having spoken to both of them I became aware that the whole operation has a lot of potential, and a very good chance of being a successful team in the future.

"I saw Lotus F1 Racing as the best choice for me to progress my career, after considering several other options that were available to me.

"I have visited the base of the team, as well as meeting Tony and Mike, and I can see that everyone involved is very motivated, excited and happy to be pushing this programme forwards.

"The team has ambitious plans for the future and everyone will see Lotus F1 Racing in Bahrain GP as a professional, competitive yet very humble group of intelligent individuals."

Fernandes hailed the double capture as the ideal partnership following lengthy negotiations over the make-up of the driving team.

"It was not a straight-forward decision because we spoke with other drivers who I rate very highly, but ultimately we have opted for a careful mix of experience, youth and ambition," he said.

"We have not even finished our first race car, so to attract two race winning drivers to the team is a huge achievement and honour. I think it is a testament to our ambition and our long-term vision that we have such talent on our books in year one.

"It is further proof that we are serious about what we do and I am sure the other new teams are looking at us with some envy right now."
 
Alonso told he must be team player at Ferrari

Fernando Alonso has been issued with a blunt warning by Luca Di Montezemolo, the president of Ferrari, that next season he will be racing for a team and not just himself.

Alonso is regarded as among the best Formula One drivers, but he has a chequered career behind him in more than one sense. At Renault the Spanish double world champion required the team to work almost exclusively for his benefit at the expense of team-mates and, during an explosive season in 2007 at McLaren, he tried to force the team to make him their leading driver and slow down Lewis Hamilton.

Di Montezemolo revealed that he and Stefano Domenicali, the Ferrari team principal, spent hours discussing the potential problems caused by bringing Alonso into the team to take the place of Kimi Raikkonen and drive alongside Felipe Massa. “I spoke about these elements with Domenicali maybe 1,000 times, not 100 times, 1,000 times,†he said.

In the end Di Montezemolo sat down with Alonso and spelt out the situation. “I spoke with him and I told him that if you come to drive for us, it’s because we want you, you drive for a team, you drive for a group, you don’t drive for yourself,†he said. “In Ferrari we want to put you in the best condition to win. If not, we will never hire you. We know that you can win the championship — we will do our best — but you are part of it.â€

The Ferrari president also passed judgment on Jenson Button’s move from Mercedes Grand Prix, formerly Brawn GP, to McLaren to drive alongside Hamilton. He wondered whether Button was aware when he made his decision if Mercedes had already bought Brawn, implying that Button may have been caught in the crossfire of that deal.

He said: “First of all, he [Button] is English. Maybe the challenge with Hamilton is the motivation. To be honest, Hamilton in McLaren has been something new for Formula One and is a good motivation for him. Button at Brawn was normal, so, from the outside, I don’t like tojudge.â€
 
Michael Schumacher is no traitor, say Ferrari (but he is going to race for Mercedes)

Anyone who doubted that Michael Schumacher is about to make one of the most extraordinary comebacks in international sport will have to think again after the Ferrari president confirmed the German’s intentions.

In an interview at Ferrari’s Maranello headquarters near Modena in northern Italy, Luca Di Montezemolo spoke not only of his sorrow at letting Schumacher go to a rival team, Mercedes Grand Prix, next season, but also about how he will have to convince the Scuderia’s fans that the legendary Formula One driver should not be seen as a traitor to a company that made him world champion five times.

After checking with his translator for the English equivalent of traditore, Di Montezemolo said: “Of course, I will have a lot of fans on our website who will be very, very upset. They think Michael is a traitor. But I will explain to them this is not the real Michael, it is another one.

“As a friend [of his], it is difficult. I am happy to see somebody who is so fit and with such a big determination. But, as president of Ferrari, I’m sad because he received a lot from Ferrari and he has given a lot to Ferrari. I think the combination in the good and bad moments was very, very good.â€

Di Montezemolo believes that Schumacher will drive next season under the guidance of Ross Brawn, his former technical director at Ferrari and now team principal of Mercedes.

The team, based in Brackley, Northamptonshire, have not confirmed Schumacher’s arrival and, despite a blizzard of speculation that the German is to take the seat vacated by Jenson Button, they insist that a decision will not be made until after Christmas.

However, the Ferrari president revealed that Schumacher phoned him on Wednesday and told him what he wanted to do.

In the course of that conversation, Di Montezemolo said he agreed to free Schumacher from his contractual obligations to Ferrari, with whom he has had a consultancy role in the company’s road-car division.

“I spoke to him on Wednesday — he phoned me — and he told me that there is a very, very, very strong possibility [that he will drive for Mercedes],†Di Montezemolo said. “Having said that, it is not 100 per cent decided, this is what he said to me.â€

And what did he say in reply? Di Montezemolo — who loves Schumacher like a son and hoped, at one stage, to see him drive for Ferrari again next season — would not be drawn on how the conversation developed.

Had he tried to dissuade him from a course of action that many in the sport believe is heavy with the wrong sort of risk? “You must not forget that when you start a collaboration that goes back to August 1995, you are also a friend, so you can agree and you can disagree,†Di Montezemolo said.

“But you remain friends because I will never forget what he did for Ferrari and he will never forget what Ferrari did for him, and this is life.â€

So, after three difficult years on the sidelines, it looks probable that Formula One’s most successful driver has given in to the pressure — from within him and from outside — to return to the cockpit. He will be 41 when the Bahrain Grand Prix gets next season under way on March 14.

Schumacher will drive for a team he has never raced with and against competitors who are young enough to be his sons.

With seven World Championships to his name and 91 grand-prix wins, some wonder what Schumacher has left to achieve and whether this could mark the beginning of a sad end to a great career. Others, among them Damon Hill, Britain’s former world champion, see no reason why he cannot continue where he left off.

Either way, his return to face drivers such as Fernando Alonso, Schumacher’s former championship rival who drives for Ferrari next season, Lewis Hamilton and Button, the world champion, is big box office and Bernie Ecclestone, the sport’s commercial rights-holder, will be loving every minute of it.

Di Montezemolo has an eccentric streak and throughout his remarks on Schumacher he employed the artifice that “the real Michaelâ€, as he called him, will stay at Ferrari and finish his career with the team, while a “twinâ€, or impostor, will compete for Mercedes.

The device underlined how difficult Di Montezemolo is finding the prospect of seeing Schumacher in rival colours. More than just an exceptional racer, Schumacher became the embodiment of Ferrari and pushed the team to hitherto unconquered peaks.

It was a remarkable sporting journey and the emotional bonds formed are painfully being broken.
 
Michael Schumacher begins tests for Formula One comeback

Michael Schumacher has begun preparations for the new Formula One season by getting behind the wheel of a GP2 car.

The 41-year-old German legend has come out of retirement to drive for Mercedes GP this season, having not driven a Formula One racing car for more than three years.

While Schumacher awaits the first of four official pre-season tests next month, he has taken the opportunity to practice in a GP2 car to help to get his eye in.

The private test session, which started today and continues until Thursday, has been approved by the FIA, the sport’s governing body, who are not allowing drivers to try their new Formula One cars until the first official test early next month in Valencia as part of its mission to cut costs.

GP2 Series cars are about six seconds a lap slower than Formula One cars in dry conditions. They are normally driven by Formula One hopefuls on the undercard at grand prix weekends and Schumacher is not thought to have driven one before.

"It is an honour and a privilege for us to have Michael Schumacher help us develop our car," GP2 organiser Bruno Michel, said. "This test will be prove to be very important for the future of our GP2 drivers and will be a confirmation of the high standards of our Series.

"Michael's input and advice will be invaluable. I am confident his knowledge and unparalleled driving skills will help us to develop a great car for next season."

Norbert Haug. Mercedes' competition boss, says that although the test is a "warm-up", it will not give Schumacher an unfair advantage over his team-mate Nico Rosberg. "I don't see it that way," he said. "And whoever does, can rent a GP2 car for themselves. The GP2 organisation was smart enough to use the situation in their favour."
 
Ferrari rekindle fire that made Fernando Alonso world champion

They come, they go; the best drivers in the world, moving between teams like the world’s best professional footballers. At Ferrari, the pre-season introduction of a new star performer in this elegant ski resort in the Dolomites has become a familiar rite of passage. It is the Scuderia’s equivalent of presenting a new striker, complete with his new team shirt.

The big signing this time is Fernando Alonso, who will be earning, at conservative estimates, about £15 million a year over the next three seasons in the red-and-white colours of Maranello.

And there is no doubt that the proud Italian team are hoping that the 28-year-old Asturian will be the driver to take them on to further glories, much in the way that a certain Michael Schumacher led the oldest team in Formula One history through their most successful era.

Felipe Massa, returned from injury and raring to go, is still a big presence in the team, but the Brazilian is going to have an uphill fight this year to oppose the onslaught from the Spanish side of the garage.

Alonso has come to Ferrari saying all the right things and the contrast with Kimi Raikkonen, his taciturn and ill-educated predecessor, could hardly be more stark. With a ready smile and an easy charm — as well as a willingness to ski in the day and be part of the traditional torchlight procession down the mountain at night — Alonso is pressing the right buttons.

At his formal introductory press conference yesterday, when drivers and hacks suspend activity on the slopes for a little light work, Alonso delighted the mass ranks of the Italian press corps by saying that he has no plans to drive for any other team. This is it for him. Ferrari is the peak, he said.

“All of you have dreamed of driving Ferrari street cars, I’m the same,†he said. “This will 100 per cent be my last team. I want to finish my career with a good taste in the mouth.â€

Raikkonen said three words in Italian when he arrived at Madonna in January 2007 — “Buon giorno tutti.â€

Alonso started with the same phrase but continued in fluent Italian, much to the delight of his audience. He showed that he knows the history of the team. He described the thrill of visiting the Ferrari factory, of chatting to all the engineers on the road-car production lines and realising, as he put it, that they are all race fans. “I’ve felt comfortable from my first day,†he said. “The team has welcomed me like a family.â€

As for the hopeful prediction delivered on Wednesday by Stefano Domenicali, the team principal, that Alonso can kick-start a new era of success at Ferrari, Alonso joked that he was in no position, as the new boy, to disagree with his new superior.

The Spaniard makes for a fascinating prospect in the red garage. Schumacher apart, there is no driver in Formula One at present whose career has swung from moments of sublime glory, in the form of two World Championships with Renault and some spectacular race performances, to dark days when his moral and sporting credentials have been exposed as seriously wanting.

During his traumatic year with McLaren in 2007 when he believed that they were favouring Lewis Hamilton, who was at the time a Formula One rookie, Alonso resorted to trying to force the team to slow down the Englishman. He also threatened to expose the secret links that he and others at McLaren had with counterparts at Ferrari, and he escaped censure for his role in what became known as “Spygate†only because he told the FIA everything he knew. By the end of the season, he had had enough and his three-year contract was torn up as he returned with his tail between his legs to Renault.

Then, in 2008, he inherited victory in the now-infamous Singapore Grand Prix when Nelson Piquet Jr, his new team-mate, crashed his car intentionally to help Alonso to win. Alonso has always maintained that he knew nothing of the plan.

The pre-season, and especially that at Ferrari, has been dominated by talk of Schumacher’s comeback with Mercedes GP — the prospect is causing a lot of misery with people in this part of northern Italy — but in many ways this is also the beginning of Alonso’s renaissance.

He has been in the Formula One wilderness since his abortive move to McLaren, scrapping around at the back of the field in uncompetitive Renault machinery. For two years he has been waiting for his chance to match his undoubted talents as a driver and a developer of a racing car with a team of similar stature and now he has got it. He has told us that he will never drive for anyone else in Formula One, so it is all or nothing for Alonso as his Ferrari career begins.

Will he cope with Massa, trying to prove that he can lead the team to his first title? How will he fare against Schumacher, his former rival, and Hamilton, his more recent and bitter opponent? And how will Ferrari cope with Alonso?

Domenicali claims that outsiders are attacking the team, by underlining Alonso’s need to be the focus of attention, at the expense of his team-mate. He says the Scuderia are approaching the management of Alonso “calmly and rationallyâ€. Easy to say in a ski resort in the Dolomites. Not quite so easy to stick to in the heat of battle in Melbourne, Monza or Interlagos.
 
Is anyone else really excited about seeing Alonso back in a competitve car?
I cannot wait to see him back where he belongs, at the front of the grid and winning races again.
Next season is shaping up to be a belter.
 
Round Race Title Grand Prix Circuit Date Time
Local UTC
1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix Bahrain GP Bahrain International Circuit, Sakhir, Manama 14 March 15:00 12:00
2 Australian Grand Prix[105] Australian GP Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit, Melbourne, Victoria 28 March 17:00 06:00
3 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix Malaysian GP Sepang International Circuit, Kuala Lumpur 4 April 16:00 08:00
4 Chinese Grand Prix Chinese GP Shanghai International Circuit 18 April 14:00 06:00
5 Gran Premio de España Telefónica Spanish GP Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona 9 May 14:00 12:00
6 Grand Prix de Monaco Monaco GP Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo 16 May 14:00 12:00
7 Turkish Grand Prix Turkish GP Istanbul Park 30 May 14:00 11:00
8 Grand Prix du Canada[106] Canadian GP Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montreal 13 June 12:00 16:00
9 Telefónica Grand Prix of Europe European GP Valencia Street Circuit 27 June 14:00 12:00
10 Santander British Grand Prix British GP[107] Silverstone Circuit 11 July 13:00 12:00
11 Großer Preis Santander von Deutschland German GP Hockenheimring 25 July 14:00 12:00
12 Magyar Nagydíj[105] Hungarian GP Hungaroring, Budapest 1 August 14:00 12:00
13 Belgian Grand Prix[105] Belgian GP Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Spa 29 August 14:00 12:00
14 Gran Premio Santander d'Italia Italian GP Autodromo Nazionale Monza 12 September 14:00 12:00
15 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix Singapore GP Marina Bay Street Circuit 26 September 20:00 12:00
16 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix Japanese GP Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka 10 October 15:00 06:00
17 Korean Grand Prix† Korean GP Korean International Circuit, Yeongam 24 October 14:00 05:00
18 Grande Prêmio Petrobras do Brasil Brazilian GP Autódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo 7 November 14:00 16:00
19 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Abu Dhabi GP Yas Marina Circuit 14 November 17:00 13:00
 
Anybody bother pointing to me where this 'dorsal fin', McLaren have supposedly invented is at which part of the car?
 
[quote author=reuque link=topic=36232.msg1047837#msg1047837 date=1265064367]
Anybody bother pointing to me where this 'dorsal fin', McLaren have supposedly invented is at which part of the car?
[/quote]

2010-McLaren-MP4-25-47-500x318.jpg


That bit that is connected to the rear wing.
 
Mclarens are looking quite slow in testing about 3 seconds off massas pace! Let's hope there runnin different fuel loads.
 
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