Category: Auto Sport

  • DS Penske’s emotional lift at Portland E-Prix

    DS Penske’s emotional lift at Portland E-Prix

    Formula E made a rare trip to a permanent circuit in Portland. Set up outside the city, the track is rural and the walls have disappeared in favour of patches of grass.

    The two long straights also made life complex on the battery side: “It’s the most complicated circuit we’ve come across from an energy point of view,” said DS Penske’s Vergne before the race. “In the simulator, we’d never worked on a track where you had to stay so far back in the pack to conserve energy. With the very high aerodynamic drag of these electric single-seaters, you can easily save 20% of energy per lap by staying behind the leader, and it’s clear that apart from pole position there’s no point in being the leader before the end.”

    The DS Penske driver’s assertions were proven correct the very next day. This is the first time that motorsport has come so close to cycling. The leading driver doesn’t want to expend too much energy and so huddles in the pack, also knowing they can’t attempt a breakaway because they would use up too much energy before the end of the race and would be reeled in by the pack.

    But DS Penske also had to come out fast to try and take as many points as possible. On this unfamiliar track, the Franco-American team’s DS E-TENSE FE23s generally do well. “I don’t know how the others work,” Vergne said. “But for our part, we analyse every corner in the simulator, we do a lot of work before coming to the circuits, and we arrive with a very meticulous preparation.”

    Jean-Eric Vergne, DS Penske, Stoffel Vandoorne, DS Penske

    Photo by: DPPI

    From pitlane to 4th position

    As the race took place on a permanent circuit, it was possible to run the first practice session on Friday afternoon, at the same time as the start of the race scheduled for the following day. The first few laps were cautious for all concerned, and resulted in a few swerves in the grass. At the end of this first session, led by McLaren’s Rene Rast, Vergne was less than two-tenths off the pace and his team-mate Vandoorne was half a second off the top of the timesheet. The gaps were close, with 17 drivers within a second of each other.

    The following day, the second practice session was fairly quiet, especially as it took place just over an hour before qualifying. The DS Penskes went about their business, alternating between economical and hard laps. The end of the session revealed a little more about everyone’s intentions. But by qualifying, things got serious. In Group A, Vergne qualified for the quarter-finals, along with Nissan pair Sacha Fenestraz and Norman Nato, plus Maserati’s Maximilian Guenther. Vandoorne missed out on a place in the next round by just five hundredths of a second. In any case, his efforts were in vain, as a few minutes later we learned that the two DS Penske drivers had been penalised and would start from the pitlane.

    But all hope was not lost, because in Monaco Vergne and Vandoorne had started from the back row and finished in the points. This was not to be the case in Portland, where the race was marred by two accidents which resulted in a safety car, bringing the proceedings to a standstill and four laps were to be added on.

    A shrewd strategist, Vergne momentarily climbed to fourth position, at one point posting the highest top speed in the race of 169.2mph. But the interplay of attack modes saw him drop back to 11th position at the chequered flag, just ahead of team-mate Vandoorne in 12th.

    The next round of the Formula E world championship will take place in three weeks’ time, on 15-16 July, on the hilly street circuit of Rome.

    Stoffel Vandoorne, DS Penske

    Stoffel Vandoorne, DS Penske

    Photo by: DPPI

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  • WRC Safari Rally: Ogier holds off Rovanpera to claim victory in tense finish

    WRC Safari Rally: Ogier holds off Rovanpera to claim victory in tense finish

    The eight-time world champion and co-driver Vincent Landais came under pressure from championship leader Rovanpera across Sunday’s final six stages to clinch his third win of a partial 2023 WRC campaign by 6.7s. The margin was the closest in the event’s 70-year history.

    Ogier produced a faultless drive on Kenya’s challenging, rough gravel stages, assuming the rally lead from M-Sport’s Ott Tanak on Friday’s morning first test, with road opener Rovanpera in second.

    The Frenchman enjoyed a near perfect Friday, winning four of the six stages, helped by an inspired call to take only one spare, instead of two, that lightened his GR Yaris. A lack of hybrid at the end of the morning loop was his only issue.

    Ogier then stamped his authority on the event, extending this lead over Rovanpera to 32.0s, despite suffering a puncture, before the much anticipated rain caused chaos during Saturday’s final stage.

    Rovanpera halved the deficit to 16.7s after a masterful display in extremely treacherous conditions as the Finn won the stage, while Ogier lost time to a double front puncture.

    Although happy to bag strong championship points by finishing second, Rovanpera continued to push on Sunday, reducing the gap to 8.1s, before Ogier responded by winning stage 15, despite losing his rear wing and tailgate after clipping a tree.

    The gap continued to fluctuate until 9.2s separated the pair ahead of the final stage, but Ogier clung on, despite a rock damaging his car, to seal victory. Rovanpera could only the muster the third fastest time on the powerstage due to a lack of power from his car, but extended his championship lead to 38 points.

    Kalle Rovanperä, Jonne Halttunen, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

    Photo by: Toyota Racing

    Elfyn Evans and Takamoto Katsuta finished third and fourth to mirror the 1-2-3-4 Toyota scored at the event last year.

    The journey for Evans and Katsuta was far from simple. Evans remained in touch with the lead two occupying third until Saturday morning when the Welshman dropped more than a minute on stage eight after his GR Yaris took on too much water in a water splash and stalled. After losing more time to a puncture, Evans also escaped a couple of scares that damaged his rear wing, before coming home in third, 2m58.5s, adrift.

    Katsuta also endured an eventful rally that began with the Japanese driver rolling his GR Yaris in Wednesday’s shakedown. A broken lower suspension arm, a run in with a zebra and a clash with a tree left his car significantly damaged on Friday. But two stages wins across a much smoother Saturday and Sunday, albeit hampered by a leaking radiator on the final stage, helped him to fourth, 3m23.8s behind.

    Toyota’s dominance was contrasted by reliability issues and misfortune for Hyundai and M-Sport Ford.

    Dani Sordo led Hyundai’s charge to finish fifth (+5m05.4s) although his rally wasn’t helped when he became lost in his own dust on Friday prior to a power steering issue that struck on Sunday.

    However, Sordo was the only i20 N to complete the 355.92 kilometres. Thierry Neuville’s championship charge was dealt a blow when he retired from fourth on Friday due to broken front-left suspension. The Belgian rejoined the rally and recovered to finish eighth and claim the five bonus points for winning the powerstage.

    Thierry Neuville, Martijn Wydaeghe, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

    Thierry Neuville, Martijn Wydaeghe, Hyundai World Rally Team Hyundai i20 N Rally1

    Photo by: Tomek Kaliński

    Team-mate Esapekka Lappi starred at times on his Kenya debut following a double prop shaft failure that prevented him from logging time in shakedown. Lappi, who also sustained a puncture, inherited third after Evans’ stall, but a third prop shaft failure forced him into retirement on Saturday. The Finn rejoined the event on Sunday but encountered another mechanical issue.

    M-Sport’s rally started brightly with Tanak winning Thursday’s Nairobi superspecial by 0.1s from Ogier. However, his rally unrivalled on Friday when he was delayed by a pig and a group of zebra, before a puncture cost the Estonian more than two minutes, having already been struggling with his Ford Puma’s handling.

    Unable to challenge the leading group Tanak recovered to sixth (+9m14.4s) ahead of team-mate Pierre-Louis Loubet, who lost time to a power problem, two punctures and handling issues.

    The top 10 was completed by leading WRC2 runners Kajetan Kajetanowicz and Oliver Solberg.

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  • WRC Safari Rally: Lappi retirement leaves Toyota in control

    WRC Safari Rally: Lappi retirement leaves Toyota in control

    The Finn inherited third on Saturday morning after making the most of a stall for Toyota’s Elfyn Evans on stage eight, but Lappi’s rally came to a premature end on stage 11.

    Lappi pulled off the road at the 22km mark of the 29.32km Soysambu test with what appeared to be a terminal technical issue.

    Hyundai is yet confirm the reason for the retirement, but the nature of his exit would appear that Lappi’s i20 N had sustained a suspected prop shaft/transmission issue.

    The one-time WRC rally winner suffered a prop shaft failure during Wednesday’s shakedown.

    Lappi had impressed on his event debut up until this point, winning Friday’s stage three and was firmly in the fight for a podium despite losing 30s to a delaminated right rear tyre on stage four.

    Lappi’s exit has handed Toyota a 1-2-3-4 with Evans now climbing to third, 2.8s ahead of the fourth GR Yaris driven by Takamoto Katsuta.

    Rally leader Sebastien Ogier won stage 11 by a margin of 6.4s over nearest rival Kalle Rovanpera to extend his overall lead out to 28.5s.

    Ogier did however reach the stage end with some foliage protruding from his car.

    “There is a lot of branches in there and this one got stuck in there, no big drama,” said Ogier.

    Sébastien Ogier, Vincent Landais, Toyota Gazoo Racing WRT Toyota GR Yaris Rally1

    Photo by: Tomek Kaliński

    Rovanpera admitted that he wasn’t pushing in the stage, with his main focus on bringing the car to the end of the day given his title rivals Ott Tanak and Thierry Neuville are sitting sixth and 14th respectively.

    “I am not really pushing too much,” said Rovanpera. “I am driving my own pace with quite a level speed in my opinion.

    “I am not pushing a lot, let’s see what happens. I am just doing my own thing and trying to bring the car to the end of the day.”

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  • Nurburgring 24 Hours 2024 postponed to avoid WEC, Formula E clashes

    Nurburgring 24 Hours 2024 postponed to avoid WEC, Formula E clashes

    The twice-around-the-clock enduro at the Nurburgring Nordschleife has been pushed back from 11-12 May to 1-2 June after the WEC and Formula E scheduled races at Spa-Francorchamps and Berlin for the same weekend.

    Scheduling the WEC’s Spa 6 Hours for the same weekend was a decisive factor for the Nurburgring 24’s change of date. With the GT3 cars that forms the top class at the Nurburgring eligible in WEC from 2024, many works drivers would likely have been ruled out of one or the other.

    “We didn’t want to impose that on our participants or the endurance fans,” said Nurbugring 24 Hours race director Walter Hornung.

    “Since the organisers of [the music festival] Rock am Ring and also the Nurburgring have been very flexible, we were able to make the postponement possible.”

    Hornung was critical of the FIA series for instigating the clash, stating that the date of the 24-hour race had been known for a long time.

    “Especially since we know how complex the coordination with other series and individual events in GT3 racing is, we have already announced dates up until 2028 inclusive for the 24-hour race at the Nurburgring back in 2021,” he said.

    “Of course, all the relevant players knew that, so that scheduling overlaps in the international calendar are avoided and collisions with other major events at the same venue are prevented.

    “We are all the more happy that Rock am Ring and the Nurburgring are joining us in taking on the short-term logistical and technical challenge of having two completely different events, each with tens of thousands of spectators, take place back-to-back.”

     

    There are still two weeks between the 24-hour race at the Nurburgring and next year’s edition of the Le Mans 24 Hours.

    The postponement means there should now be enough space in the calendar to accommodate three rounds of the Nurburgring Endurance Series (NLS) plus the qualifying race for the 24 Hours. The latter usually take place four weeks before the main race, but a new date for the qualifying race has not yet been communicated for 2024.

    The last time the Nurburgring 24 was postponed was in 2020 amid the COVID 19 pandemic, when it was staged in September.

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  • How a breakthrough Safari win established a future WRC champion

    How a breakthrough Safari win established a future WRC champion

    “Richard Burns crossed the final flying finish line, punched the air and shouted something so obscene that the BBC won’t be able to show the moment!” That was how Autosport’s rally reporter Keith Oswin described Burns’ first win of what would become a glittering but unfortunately short World Rally Championship career on the 1998 Safari Rally.

    In recent years, this clip of Burns and Robert Reid crossing the finish line has resurfaced, becoming a social media hit that perfectly conveys the overwhelming emotion of succeeding at the Safari Rally. It was pure euphoria emanating from Burns, who had not only conquered one of the most gruelling events in world motorsport, but it just so happened to be the first of 10 WRC wins.

    Twenty-five years on and sadly Burns, who succumbed to a brain tumour in 2005, is no longer able to tell the tale. But co-driver Reid sums up a significant moment of their careers succinctly when asked to recall what was also his first WRC win.

    PLUS: The internal focus that made Burns a legendary world rally champion

    “Your first win is very important and very memorable,” Reid tells Autosport. “If you were to pick an ideal place to get your first win it would be at your home rally or on an iconic event, and there is no more iconic event than Safari. It is one of the few trophies that I have on display, most of the others are in a container. A big bronze elephant was a very special trophy.”

    It’s a special trophy because, put simply, the Safari Rally is a one of a kind rally. To this day, it remains one of the toughest events in world motorsport. First held in 1953 to mark the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II, the rally was the epitome of driver and machine taking on the harshest of the elements. In its heyday it was a brutal endurance test exceeding 3000 kilometres that lasted an entire week as crews took on the roughest of terrain on open roads that sprawled through Kenya’s wildlife-filled savannah.

    Back in 1998, the rally was still a 1063-kilometre marathon held on open roads, meaning crews could face the quite incredible and dangerous prospect of oncoming traffic in addition to Kenya’s unpredictable wildlife. To limit the dangers, spotter helicopters were deployed to run with cars to warn of any upcoming dangers, but there were still plenty of risks.

    Reid recalls: “I remember once getting to the end of a section and saying to Richard, ‘We were lucky with that gatepost in the stage’. He said to me, ‘What gatepost? That was a giraffe’s leg!’

    “Obviously the helicopter helped a lot. The first couple of years we went, we didn’t have the benefit of that. But in 1998 we had a local guy called Glen Edmunds, who was a rally driver out there and he was our spotter in the helicopter. He was very good, he understood Kenya very well and was very helpful.

    “The helicopter would be looking for wildlife and often it would go ahead and you would wonder what it was doing, and the next thing you would see it sweeping animals off the road. The helicopter wasn’t just your eyes in the sky; they were actively helping and warning of hazards, because at that point it was open roads. Speaking to people in Kenya today, it would be very difficult to do that now, have an open road rally.”

    Heading into the 1998 Safari, Burns and Reid had been knocking on the door of a maiden WRC win. They had won an Asia Pacific round in New Zealand the previous year and also that season had finished second at the Safari Rally, driving a factory Mitsubishi Carisma GT Evo. This made them victory contenders in 1998, but the list of rivals they would come up against wasn’t exactly lacking in the talent department. Among them were his Mitsubishi team-mate and then two-time world champion Tommi Makinen, the Subarus of Colin McRae and Piero Liatti, Toyota drivers Carlos Sainz and Didier Auriol plus the Fords of four-time champion Juha Kankkunen and returning 1981 champion Ari Vatanen.

    “We only won three stages interestingly and that was very Richard-esque” Robert Reid

    Burns and Reid were somewhat fortunate to finish the recce before the rally had even started.

    “At the Safari, the recce tends to be full of stories, more than the rally at times,” says Reid. “I remember the recce being quite adventurous. I think we blew an engine and we borrowed Tommi’s recce car and we had an accident with it. It was almost a trial getting to the end of the recce, never mind the end of the rally!”

    They fared somewhat better than Ford’s Bruno Thiry, as a bizarre accident rendered the Belgian unfit to compete. This forced the Blue Oval to hastily recall Vatanen. The rally did, however, start in the best possible fashion for Burns, as the Englishman won the opening super special to emerge with an early lead. Brake issues halted Burns’ charge, but he still ended the opening day’s 343.85km of stages only 36 seconds behind leader Makinen, while McRae fought back from tyre delaminations to sit 1m48s behind in third.

    Heading north of host city Nairobi into Kenya’s famous Great Rift Valley for day two provided more trouble for Burns in the form of a slipping clutch. It ultimately dropped the Mitsubishi behind McRae into third, while Ford’s Vatanen began to close in. At the front, there was no stopping Makinen, who breezed into a six-minute lead.

    Clutch problems held Burns back, but engine woes would sideline his main rivals as Burns kept going

    Clutch problems held Burns back, but engine woes would sideline his main rivals as Burns kept going

    Photo by: Steven Tee / Motorsport Images

    Mitsubishi was able to rectify the clutch issue for Burns in service, but the Safari Rally was about to live up to its attritional reputation for his rivals. Sainz rolled his Toyota Corolla out of fourth early in the morning, but somehow his mechanics were able to keep the Spaniard going, although 10 minutes were lost in a repair job that required the crumpled roof to be jacked up.

    Subaru was the next to hit trouble. First Liatti suffered an engine failure before the same issue struck McRae’s Impreza, leaving the Scot fuming after a second retirement from the first three events. Engine problems also hit leader Makinen, as a broken cam belt put the Finn out of the rally. It handed Burns, still suffering his slipping clutch, a 6m01s rally lead from Vatanen heading into the final day.

    A breakthrough victory was far from safe, however, as crews faced 341km of stages on the Sunday. That equates to a whole WRC rally distance by today’s standards. The perils of the Safari were all too visible for Burns and Reid after hitting a rock, which damaged the Mitsubishi’s sump guard. They also picked up further damage to the front of the car after a run-in with the local wildlife.

    “We won the first stage, the super special stage, which I remember being incredibly dusty,” says Reid. “We only won three stages interestingly and that was very Richard-esque. From memory, it was bedrock [we hit on the final day]. And because the ruts had formed a bit, there was less ground clearance, so again the car was not as fresh as it was the first time round.

    “You just carry on [when something like that happens]. You have to do the best you can on each stage. We had a six-minute lead over Ari on the first stage and by the end it was nine minutes and then he started to take some time from us. It looked as though we were judging it a bit.

    “I don’t remember being concerned about the car, but I remember being relatively calm, in as much as the Safari Rally can be relatively calm. We were going through sections that we had already done, so there were some ruts appearing and you would crash through them, so there were a couple of scares. We took 99.9% out of the car.

    “But getting to the end of the rally, I remember – the last long stage, which was only 48km, a small one by Safari terms, we hit some Guineafowl and damaged the front and the radiator a bit. That was a bit of a scare. You would use everything from the car, and it certainly felt a lot like that.”

    The first WRC win for Burns and Reid gave them belief they could take the fight to the world's best

    The first WRC win for Burns and Reid gave them belief they could take the fight to the world’s best

    Photo by: Sutton Images

    It was indeed a scare, but it didn’t derail the victory bid. In the end, some of the pressure was taken away as Ford deployed team orders, meaning Vatanen cooled his charge to drop behind full-timer Kankkunen. But Burns and Reid still had to navigate a wounded car through the final stages to clinch the win by 9 minutes and 27s.

    Cue that expletive moment of joy as they crossed the finish line followed by some wild celebrations afterwards. The victory meant Burns joined McRae and Roger Clark (RAC, 1976) as British WRC winners and he became the first Englishman to win an overseas WRC round.

     

    “I’m sure it was all the emotion coming out of Richard, he was quite an expert at that,” adds Reid, when reflecting on Burns’ exuberant celebration. “It was incredible. I didn’t realise what history we had made at the time. You would laugh at this now, but I almost had 20 faxes at the hotel from friends saying well done.

    “In those days in Kenya, if you wanted to make an international call you had to book one and speak to the operator and say you want to call this number and then they would then call you back. In terms of being able to communicate with friends and family, it was certainly not as easy as it is today.

    “Richard was very good at going as quick as he needed to go. I think some people misinterpret that as not being necessarily the fastest” Robert Reid

    “We had a big pool party in the hotel and Richard very famously shaved off Phil Short’s [Mitsubishi team principal] moustache and Andrew Cowan [Mitsubishi boss] ended up in the pool. It was good fun! You get to the end of any event and it is a relief, but with the Safari it is even more of a relief as you have been there testing, you’ve had the recce and then the rally. To get to the finish is a huge achievement.”

    Conquering the Safari wasn’t just a breakthrough victory but one that made Burns and Reid believe they could compete with the world’s best. The pair went on to repeat the Safari triumph in 2000 driving for Subaru, and lifted the coveted world title in 2001.

    Archive: How Richard Burns scaled the WRC mountain

    “Yeah definitely [it made us believe],” Reid says. “That was the first year that we had actually done the full championship. We had done bits and pieces before, but never a full championship. Safari was always a rally that suited Richard and I, and 1998 was only the fourth time we had done it.

    Short's moustache was a casualty of the victory celebrations, Reid recalls

    Short’s moustache was a casualty of the victory celebrations, Reid recalls

    Photo by: Sutton Images

    “Richard was very good at going as quick as he needed to go. I think some people misinterpret that as not being necessarily the fastest. If you look at 1999, 2000 and 2001, we had the most number of fastest times than anybody in the championship. He could certainly go quick when he needed to.”

    PLUS: Ranking lost WRC legend Richard Burns’ 10 best rallies

    As the WRC prepares to tackle the 70th anniversary Safari Rally this weekend – 25 years on from Burns’ maiden triumph – Reid believes that, while the rally is more sanitised at 355km, its challenge hasn’t diminished.

    “It is still a huge challenge and an adventure and it is important we still have that aspect in the championship,” he says. “It is a world championship, so we need to go to all the continents and it is incredibly important that we have an event in Africa.”

    Reid reckons Burns' first victory was an example of only driving as fast as he needed to

    Reid reckons Burns’ first victory was an example of only driving as fast as he needed to

    Photo by: Sutton Images

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  • F1 teams set to reject blanket-free slick tyres for 2024

    F1 teams set to reject blanket-free slick tyres for 2024

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    Team bosses have been cautious about coming out against the new tyres in public, but equally they have shown little enthusiasm for the change, and it’s believed that most do not want it to happen.

    Drivers are not keen on the new tyres, with the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association director George Russell – who tested the most recent iteration – making it clear that he believes they will be “dangerous”.

    Blankets were originally supposed to be gone in 2024, but the rules were changed to keep them with the option to change back if Pirelli could demonstrate by the end of the July that it had developed a tyre that could get the job done.

    The company has already introduced blanket-free wets, which were used for the first time in Monaco, but its attempt to bring its new inters for Singapore was rebuffed by the teams.

    Meanwhile, slick tyre development has been ongoing, with the most recent test conducted by Mercedes and Ferrari at Barcelona earlier this month.

    The last test before the decision is made will be at Silverstone after the British GP, and will involve Red Bull, Williams and Haas.

    If the FIA believes that Pirelli has made a strong case the decision will then go to a vote of the teams.

    “I think we’ll reserve judgment until we’ve done a test,” said Red Bull’s Christian Horner when asked by Autosport about the tyre decision.

    “Daniel [Ricciardo] is going to drive the car at the test, and we will get the feedback from that running and then I’m sure Pirelli will make the right decision.

    “I don’t think it’s what the drivers want. But my fear with these things is that when you think you’re going to achieve something simplistically that would create better racing, that there will then be a whole lot of effort go into trying to heat tyres very quickly, on out-laps and so on, that could drive a lot more cost in.

    Carlos Sainz, Ferrari SF-23

    Photo by: Pirelli

    “Everybody has tyre blankets, they do the job. I think what we should be looking at is sustainable ways of powering those tyre blankets as opposed to removing them.2

    Mercedes technical director James Allison, whose team conducted the most recent 2024 tyre test, suggested that the tyres are not yet ready.

    “I’d say that the early look at running without blankets, it’s not exactly a done deal to think that that’s going to be a good thing next year,” he said. “I’d say there’s plenty of challenge to make that work.”

    Williams team principal James Vowles also indicated that the new tyres have yet to be fully proven, while conceding that the Silverstone test would give his team more data.

    “My view is a very pragmatic one,” he told Autosport. “Show us a tyre where you take the blankets off and it performs. And it performs whether it’s Spa and five degrees or whether we’re in Bahrain and 40 degrees, and happily I’ll sign up to it because I think it’s a good step.

    “At the moment we haven’t fully seen a tyre that’s capable of doing it. The test will help and give us another bullet point to it. Reading between the lines, I don’t think we’re quite there yet. But the direction of travel is good.”

    Alpine’s Otmar Szafnauer suggested that blankets are part of the “essence” of F1.

    “We had a plan, run the tyres understand them and how good they are,” said the American. “Once that happens, I’m confident we’ll make a good decision.

    “It’s really hard to know, really hard to be able to answer. I think we have a pretty decent show now. And, yeah, there’s all sorts of considerations with the tyres.

    George Russell, Mercedes

    George Russell, Mercedes

    Photo by: Pirelli

    “There’s other series that don’t have tyre blankets, but there does come a time where that essence of F1, whatever that is, where maybe tyre blankets is part of it that we should keep.”

    Aston Martin boss Mike Krack said he trusted the FIA to make the right call on whether or not it even goes to a team vote.

    “To be honest, I cannot comment because we have only tested them in Jerez but that was an earlier generation,” he said.

    “We follow on only as a passenger basically what is happening now. I think the FIA will take the right decision honestly.

    “We have a wet that is without blankets. I think we have an intermediate that is almost ready to run without. And then we see what happens to the slicks.

    “But I think we need to trust the FIA that they take the right decision for next year. It’s up to FIA proposing a vote or not. So the FIA takes the first step.

    Read Also:

    “What we need to we need to do is try to have as much info as we can have for the moment that there is voting, and then take a decision.”

    One intriguing aspect of the July decision is that should the blanket-free tyres be rejected for 2024 Pirelli is likely put development on hold in the coming months until it knows the result of the tyre tender, and whether or not it will still be in F1, for a second attempt to introduce them in 2025.

    If it loses the deal to a rival then clearly the programme will be abandoned completely.

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  • DTM adjusts pitstop rule that cost Porsche victory at Oschersleben

    DTM adjusts pitstop rule that cost Porsche victory at Oschersleben

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    Manthey EMA driver Preining was on course to win the second race at Oschersleben from pole position until he was handed a long-lap penalty for a pitstop infringement, dropping him to third at the finish.

    A Manthey EMA mechanic was found to have briefly left the rear tyre on the ground in the pitlane while he closed his fireproof suit, contravening a rule which states that the tyre must be held in the air at all times using muscle power after entering the pitlane.

    Preining wasn’t the only one to fall prey to this rule at Oschersleben, with three other drivers penalised for the same offence over the weekend.

    The rule was introduced to prevent tyres from being placed on the ground and being collected by other cars. But the DTM has now been compelled to make a change following the events of the opening two races of the season.

    In a clarification issued by race director Sven Stoppe ahead of the second round on Monday, the DTM said that the mechanics are still required to secure the rear wheel after crossing the line into the working lane. However, the requirement for the wheel to be held in air (and hence not touching the ground) has been dropped.

    Instead, the mechanics are now allowed “to place the rear wheel in question on its tread or part of its tread on the surface of the working lane.” In addition, both hands do not have to touch the rear wheel at all times and mechanics can now simply “stabilise it in its position with at least one hand using its own muscle power.”

    As long as the wheel remains stable using one hand, the DTM feels that it doesn’t compromise the safety of anyone present in the pitlane. Moreover, the series doesn’t want the mechanics to hold heavy tyres for up to half a minute until the car stops in the pitlane and then lose their strength when actually performing the pitstop.

    Maro Engel, Mercedes-AMG Team Landgraf Motorsport Mercedes-AMG GT3

    Photo by: Alexander Trienitz

    Long-lap penalty

    The DTM introduced a MotoGP-style long-lap penalty system this year following its takeover by the ADAC, but its application is slightly different. As per the rulebook, once a penalty has been announced, the driver ‘may not cross the finish line more than once’ before taking the wider loop at 50km/h. 

    At Oschersleben, Preining completed a second lap before finally serving his penalty – but no action was taken in this regard. It is understood that race director Stoppe wanted to be lenient as it was the first time the rule was put into force, with the procedure being completely new to teams who do not have experience of racing in GT Masters.

    It remains unclear how strict the series will be in the timely application of the long-lap penalty at Zandvoort this weekend.

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  • Nakagami was “scared” by Marquez’s Germany MotoGP warm-up crash

    Nakagami was “scared” by Marquez’s Germany MotoGP warm-up crash

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    Marquez endured a miserable weekend at the Sachsenring in which he crashed five times, the last one leaving him with a small fracture on his thumb.

    The eight-time world champion ultimately withdrew from Sunday’s race, leaving Nakagami as the only Honda rider on the grid.

    Following Marquez at the time he crashed in Sunday’s warm-up session, Nakagami says the Spaniard “wasn’t overriding” and he was left spooked by the incident.

    “Very tough weekend,” Nakagami began.

    “Unfortunately, after the warm-up, only one rider at Honda. I was behind Marc and I saw that nasty crash.

    “I was behind him. From behind, looks… I mean, he wasn’t overriding. He didn’t miss the apex, looked nice.

    “Just he lost the rear somehow. He had a massive highside. When I saw this, honestly I was scared because it’s the same bike and a couple of times I had the same feeling.

    “Fortunately, I didn’t have a highside, but a couple of times it was close.”

    Marc Marquez, Repsol Honda Team crash

    Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

    Nakagami took the chequered flag in Sunday’s race in 14th having ended the sprint in 17th.

    Given the limitations of the 2023 Honda, Nakagami said he “couldn’t ride better” and is now relying on HRC bringing updates after the summer break to try and improve the situation.

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    “It’s difficult to say, but the weekend, we couldn’t find any solutions,” he added.

    “We are quite far from where we want to be and the gap is massive. But I couldn’t ride better, because the problem is I was slow, but the limit is there.

    “I felt the front was always closing, the rear is really unstable, and the bike is always moving, shaking, and it’s difficult to keep pushing.

    “I have to take a step back and at least see the chequered flag, because I know this is important for myself and Honda because if I get injured there’s no one on the grid for Honda!

    “So, at least I got to give some data to them to help them developing. They understand what the problem is, where they need to improve.

    “We don’t have time for Assen, but after the summer break we believe they will bring something to help.”

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  • Piastri knew first F1 crash would come at some point

    Piastri knew first F1 crash would come at some point

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    The Australian had enjoyed an encouraging weekend in Montreal up until his accident, as he made it through to the final qualifying segment.

    However, he ended up against the barriers early on in Q3 as he spun on the exit of Turn 8.

    The incident briefly stopped the session and meant Piastri ended up ninth fastest overall, before moving up a place after Carlos Sainz’s grid drop.

    Asked by Autosport for a summary on what happened, Piastri said the incident was a simple throttle error – which did not take too much of a shine off what has been a fairly uplifting event.

    “I think it’s been a reasonably encouraging weekend,” he said. “I think most of qualifying was good, apart from Q3.

    “But even in saying that, I’m not sure what the potential in Q3 would have been myself.

    “It’s my first sort of major mistake and I had to get the first crash out of the way at some point. Just too aggressive on the throttle and that was all.

    “It is easy to do, and obviously a shame. I’m sorry to the mechanics who now have more work than they need. But yeah, all in all, I’m still reasonably happy with how the weekend has gone.”

    Oscar Piastri, McLaren

    Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images

    Speaking ahead of the Montreal event, Piastri had talked about needing to find the limit quicker on race weekends after admitting that he had perhaps been too cautious at times.

    “I think in general, especially at circuits we’ve been to like Saudi Arabia, Baku and Monaco, building through the weekend is useful because you find the limit at the right time and you don’t go over it,” he said.

    “I think that’s been something I’ve tried to do through my whole career as well. I just think in the races themselves, I try to be quite sensible in some places, maybe even a bit too cautious at times.

    “In some ways I can be a bit more aggressive. But obviously I’m new to F1 and trying to build up as much as I can.

    “There’s been some close calls definitely and some big moments, but there’s not been any crashes yet. It will happen one day, but for now I’m just trying to get there slowly and maximise my track time as well.”

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    Asked if he could remember the previous time he properly crashed, Piastri said: “I’ve had a couple of spins in an F1 car, but the last time I hit a wall or got stuck…. yeah, that was probably Formula Renault in 2019 when I got stuck in the gravel. So it’s been a while.”

    Additional reporting by Adam Cooper and Ronald Vording

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  • Why the Marquez/Zarco MotoGP spat shows Honda’s situation has become untenable

    Why the Marquez/Zarco MotoGP spat shows Honda’s situation has become untenable

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    Everyone has their breaking point. And everyone reacts in a different way when frustrations boil over, generally doing so in a way that is out of character. This is very much what we are seeing unfold in front of us with Marc Marquez.

    It’s no secret he is losing patience with Honda. Having gone through the injury hell of his badly broken right arm in 2020 and put himself through more misery with four operations to try and get back to a competitive level, Honda hasn’t been delivering him the tools he needs.

    FEATURE: The crisis point Honda has reached in MotoGP after its Mugello hell

    Honda has built some bad bikes in recent years, but the current one and last year’s model are perhaps the worst of the bunch. Even through 2019 and with the 2020/2021 bike, Marquez was still competitive on them. He dominated the 2019 campaign with top two finishes in all but one of the 19 grands prix, and eased to a sixth premier class crown by 151 points, as no other HRC rider got near a podium.

    Prior to his season-ending crash at Jerez, Marquez was on course to win that Spanish Grand Prix in 2020, having been left fighting from the back by an early off. And he admitted in the winter of 2022 that, had he been fit, he would have probably won the 2021 title: after all, he still scored three victories with essentially only one functioning arm.

    Honda’s radical concept change for 2022 is where the problems it faces now can be traced to. With Marquez out of action for several months at the end of 2021 due to a vision problem after a training crash, development of the 2022 bike was done without his input. When he returned in pre-season testing of that year, the bike started to bite him as the shift in balance to try and find more rear grip meant he couldn’t utilise his key strength of corner-entry.

    His first proper taste of the 2023 bike in Valencia (he tried a prototype at Misano in September, but had just come back from three months on the sidelines after his fourth operation) wasn’t met positively, as he said it already wasn’t good enough to fight for the title. It never really improved from there.

    So far, Marquez has crashed out of all three grands prix he has started in 2023 – the first one leading to a three-round spell out with injury – and has scored just 15 points. All of those crashes have been on the front-end.

    Marquez has crashed 11 times already in 2023 as of qualifying in Germany, putting him seven away from his 2022 season tally

    Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

    The risks he is having to take to be vaguely competitive are taking a toll. While he may not publicly say anything, his inner circle is concerned about more injury problems. This weekend’s German GP does not feature Alex Rins – Honda’s only winner in 2023 – and Joan Mir, after both suffered injuries from crashes at Mugello.

    Looking at the crash statistics for the season so far, Honda riders have totalled 35. Marquez has 11 for the season already, having missed three rounds, and is only seven away from his 2022 total. In 2021, he suffered 22 falls, but this was largely down to him not having strength on his right arm and shoulder to save a number of front-end moments.

    Four of his 2023 spills have come in Germany – a track he has won at every year he has raced it in MotoGP – already, with three in qualifying and one on Friday. He very nearly ended up with two with a big moment going through Turn 11, his immediate reaction – giving his Honda the middle finger – telling of where his head is at now and a precursor to what happened later that day.

    So far, Marquez has crashed out of all three grands prix he has started in 2023 – the first one leading to a three-round spell out with injury – and has scored just 15 points

    Starting his final flying lap to try and bag a place in Q2 for qualifying, Marquez lost the front-end of his bike into Turn 1 while braking and it skittled into Johann Zarco’s Pramac Ducati. It was a sickening accident that both walked away from, but frustration clouded Marquez’s judgement.

    He ran back to pitlane without checking on Zarco, which the Frenchman was not pleased about, and then later apportioned all of the blame onto the Pramac rider. While there is an argument to be made that the rider exiting the Sachsenring’s awkward pit lane should be extra vigilant for oncoming traffic, it was a racing incident.

    Marquez’s crash was identical to those suffered by Fabio Quartararo, Aleix Espargaro and Maverick Vinales at Turn 1 on Friday. Vinales’ bike came close to hitting Alex Marquez as he exited pitlane, but just missed. The Marquez/Zarco tangle was just misfortune, identical to what happened in Aragon in 2016 when Pol Espargaro crashed at Turn 2 and his bike hit Danilo Petrucci as he left pitlane.

    Regardless, Marquez’s lack of empathy towards Zarco in the immediate aftermath of the crash was not befitting of an eight-time world champion and superstar athlete looked up to by millions. He did seek out Zarco in the paddock later to check on him. And, sitting from our armchairs, it’s hard to understand the adrenaline and pressure surging through a rider’s body in moments like this – not least under this new weekend format where so much emphasis is put on getting into the top 10 on Fridays. Marquez’s outburst to the media afterwards, however, was unnecessary.

    Johann Zarco was unhappy with Marquez pinning the blame on him for their collision

    Johann Zarco was unhappy with Marquez pinning the blame on him for their collision

    Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

    “I like the way Marc is riding and the way he is pushing,” Zarco noted on Friday. “He is a champion, but he is losing a bit of control when he speaks. He should think twice before speaking because just having the idea to say that it is my fault, this is not acceptable. I’m a nice guy and he can’t put the blame on me because I’m a nice guy.”

    Zarco’s comment is spot on, but he could also do well to remember he found himself publicly scalded by KTM for outbursts he made about the bike during his difficult 2019 season with the Austrian marque.

    The Marquez/Zarco incident led to a predictable pile-on by the masses on social media, from people claiming Marquez is always crashing, to some hilariously claiming he needs a race ban for something the absolute definition of a ‘racing incident’.

    During the Mugello round, Marquez held a meeting with senior Honda management about the current dire situation it is going through in MotoGP. Repeatedly since last year he has stated that Honda is his priority, but he will look elsewhere if it can’t give him a winning bike. Time is now running out.

    Marquez’s contract with Honda expires at the end of next season, and the rider market will move quickly for 2025 with all of the factory deals up for grabs. It’s unlikely he will ever find a contract as lucrative as the one he is on now, which is thought to be worth €100 million over four years.

    The fact he isn’t just wobbling about on the Honda and finishing wherever is safest says a lot about how important his paycheque is to him, given the risk of injury faces every time he goes on track now.

    Honda has tried to think outside of its box to get the RC213V to be more competitive, working with Kalex on chassis design. It was a small step forward when Marquez started racing it in France, but in Germany one of his bikes as the HRC-designed frame fitted. Tiny steps won’t fix a fundamentally broken bike.

    With another concept change clearly needed with its 2024 bike to stop its skid, Honda is running out of time to convince Marquez to stay beyond next season. As the weight of the situation continues to grind away a rider who, when the bike is simply just manageable, is still the best on the grid, how much longer before it breaks him?

    Honda needs a radical change to reverse its fortunes if it has any hope of convincing Marquez to stay beyond 2024

    Honda needs a radical change to reverse its fortunes if it has any hope of convincing Marquez to stay beyond 2024

    Photo by: Gold and Goose / Motorsport Images

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