News
04.02: Seb's penalty to be reavaliated
Lewis was disqualified and jarno is back at 3rd...
Sebastian Vettel has been asked by the FIA to go and discuss the 10-place grid penalty he was handed for his involvement in a crash with Robert Kubica at the Australian Grand Prix. The German's Red Bull Racing team has confirmed that Vettel has been asked by FIA race stewards' advisor Alan Donnelly to go through the rationale for being hit with a penalty for the clash that came as he fought for second place with Kubica in Melbourne. It is not clear whether the FIA is considering revising the penalty off its own back, but Red Bull Racing team principal Christian Horner made it clear his outfit was not involved in any formal bid to reduce the punishment. "Alan Donnelly has asked to have a chat with Sebastian to go through the rationale behind their penalty," said Horner, when asked by AUTOSPORT to clarify the situation. "To me I thought the penalty was harsh. We thought it was very much a racing incident. Sebastian was defending his line and it [the penalty] depended on what was discussed during the stewards' hearing. So I think Alan wanted to speak to Sebastian about that. I think that is the long and short of it." Horner said that after RBR chose not to appeal the decision in Australia, then there was no possibility for it to protest the matter in Malaysia. "There is no mechanism," he explained. "We had the right to appeal but the stewards' minds were resolute in Australia. I think it was an extremely harsh decision but we chose to accept that decision." With the race stewards in Malaysia currently deliberating the Lewis Hamilton/Jarno Trulli safety car incident from Australia, Horner admitted that he was unsure about the possibility of the stewards overturning the Vettel penalty. "Let's follow the Toyota one and see what happens there," he said. "The stewards were pretty busy all weekend in Oz, hopefully they will have a quieter time this weekend." Source: Autosport
Posted on 02 Apr 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
04.01: "You can't pile the blame on one person"
says seb about unfair penalty...
Sebastian Vettel feels the penalty he received for colliding with Robert Kubica during the Australian Grand Prix is unfair. The Red Bull driver will drop 10 places on the Malaysian Grand Prix starting grid after stewards deemed him responsible for the accident with the BMW driver during the closing stages of the season-opening race. Kubica admitted that it was "difficult to say who is at fault" and Vettel believes his punishment is harsh. "I don't think being put back 10 places on the starting grid in Malaysia is justified," Vettel said in an interview with German press agency DPA. "Neither Robert nor myself wanted to end the race that way, you can't pile the blame on one person." Vettel, though, says he has put the incident behind him and is confident Red Bull can improve on their performance in Australia. "The accident was certainly a disappointment but there is not point in crying too long over spilt milk," he said. "We showed that the Red Bull performance is up there, not only my performance but that of the entire team. We can build on this." Source: Planet F1
Posted on 02 Apr 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
04.01: Seb to attend another press conference
for the malaysian grand prix...
Thursday, April 2, 15.00Sébastien Bourdais (Toro Rosso-Ferrari), Jenson Button (Brawn-Mercedes), Lewis Hamilton (McLaren-Mercedes), Kimi Räikkönen (Ferrari), Nico Rosberg (Williams-Toyota), Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull-Renault). Friday, April 3, 16.00Ross Brawn (Brawn-Mercedes), John Howett (Toyota), Adam Parr (Williams-Toyota), Martin Whitmarsh (McLaren-Mercedes).
Posted on 01 Apr 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
03.30: "He couldn't make his car dissolve"
said Schumi bout unfair penalty...
Michael Schumacher in Australia questioned the stewards' decision to penalise his countryman Sebastian Vettel. Vettel, driving for Red Bull, apologised to his team and BMW's Robert Kubica for the crash near the end of the 2009 season opener. The 21-year-old was also quoted by media as calling himself "an idiot", and it is believed he was equally as frank during the stewards' inquiry. However, not everyone agreed that Vettel was entirely to blame, as he tried to defend his second place to the charging Kubica. "He (Vettel) was on the inside - he couldn't make his car dissolve into thin air," Ferrari advisor and seven time world champion Schumacher said at Albert Park, according to Germany's Bild newspaper. 1982 world champion Keke Rosberg remarked that Vettel may have been penalised because he is an overly "honest chap". Stewards ruled that he caused the crash and ordered Vettel to start ten places lower than his qualifying position in Malaysia this weekend. "I think it's hard but we just have to accept it," Sebastian said. Source: F1Live
Posted on 30 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
[O/T] Join our first Facebook group!
let's relax a bit...
To quit the bad mood, we want to invite you all that have Facebook, to join our first (of many to come) official group. Click the link to check it: Only Sebastian Vettel can drive with three wheels++ More pictures added to our gallery! ++ Updates in all relevant sections, Championship Table, Race Archives, Quick Info...
Posted on 29 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
[RACE] Ten positions punishment for Malaysia
Contrary to earlier news, it has emerged that Sebastian Vettel was indeed penalised for his Australian Grand Prix crash with Robert Kubica. We reported that the German was actually handed his ten-grid penalty for the forthcoming Malaysian round, and a $50,000 fine, for failing to promptly pull his heavily damaged Red Bull to the side of the track. In fact, the Sepang grid penalty was for his crash with BMW's Kubica with three laps to go, when stewards ruled that Vettel caused the incident, a somewhat harsh decision. "Should I have let him go? You always want to fight. Maybe I should have said let him go and bring third back home, but that's life," said Vettel, who had been fighting with Pole Kubica for second place. The $50,000 fine, meanwhile, was levied because Red Bull officials instructed the 21-year-old by radio to continue to race his three-wheeled car rather than pull it to the side of the Melbourne layout. Source: F1Live
++ They should punish Seb also for exisiting, because it's as fair as punishing him for that. Even my mother knows this.
We'll keep our heads up, cus this feels exactly like Japan 2007 and we know what comes next...
Posted on 29 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
[UPDATES] Race result + Just to let you know
Sebastian unfortunately didn't finish the race yesterday after a brilliant driving that put him in second, because a stupid driver can't make a proper overtake without putting both out of race. We feel so sorry for Seb and also for the type of fan that commented news under. Next attempts will get an ip ban ;) Updating: Ok, three ip bans. Anyone else? ;)
Posted on 29 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
[GALLERY] More images from Australia
added to our pictures gallery...
 Click here to check the images
Posted on 28 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
[RACE] Check official weights for tomorrow's race
published by FIA...
Post-qualifying car weights:
1 - Jenson Button / Brawn = 664.5kg 2 - Rubens Barrichello / Brawn = 666.5kg 3 - Sebastian Vettel / Red Bull = 657kg4 - Robert Kubica / BMW = 650kg 5 - Nico Rosberg / Williams = 657kg 6 - Felipe Massa / Ferrari = 654kg 7 - Kimi Räikkönen / Ferrari = 655.5kg 8 - Mark Webber / Red Bull = 662kg 9 - Nick Heidfeld / BMW = 691.5kg 10 - Fernando Alonso / Renault = 680.7kg
Posted on 28 Mar 2009 by Kati | 0 Comments
News
03.28: Williams give up protesting
against red bull cars...
It has emerged that Williams have withdrawn their protest of the Ferrari and Red Bull cars, having gone to the race stewards at Albert Park after qualifying to question the legality of the cars. In spite of hours of discussions between the teams involved and the stewards, Williams decided just before midnight to call an end to the protest, making this evening's qualifying result official. The protest comes following a protest of the diffuser on the Williams, Toyota and Brawn cars on Thursday, a protest which was initiated by Ferrari and Red Bull, among others. The exact details of today's protest have not yet been released, and Williams didn't comment following the decision to withdraw. Source: ManipeF1
|