Re: Latest F1 news from Grand Prix 247
From: Erik Nielsen (judge4regmail.com)
Date: Sun, 12 Jan 2020 05:04:44 -0800 (PST)
This reads like copy intended for WWE.  Maybe they are going after the same market/demographic.

I also saw that Geely (owners of Volvo) are looking at taking a piece of Aston Martin with Stroll rumored to be looking at 19.9%.  Interesting times.

On Jan 12, 2020, at 6:58 AM, Clarence Romero Jr. <clyderomerof4 [at] gmail.com> wrote:

Ah Sh*t 

 GRAND PRIX 247

Latest F1 news from Grand Prix 247

Link to GRAND PRIX 247

Red Mist: Who will replace Seb when he leaves Ferrari?

Posted: 11 Jan 2020 09:08 AM PST

One of the biggest Formula 1 talking points, until the subject will be resolved later this year, will be the feud for the Ferrari number one seat, or in other words who Sebastian Vettel’s place at the Scuderia.

The quadruple F1 World Champion’s contract with Maranello expires at the end of the year following what has been a pretty barren Prancing Horse stint so far — there’s still a season of that to run, remember…

Anyway, there’s been more than enough flatulence about Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari future — Italian motorsport bible Autosprint, after all, ran a doctored image of Lewis in a red Ferrari suit to taunt the Tifosi its cover in September 2018 already and there was a literal shitstorm on the subject a few weeks ago, once Hamilton had taken his latest title and surprisingly shortly after we regurgitated the matter again some months ago.

The facts are simple — both Seb and Lewis are out of contract as this current F1 era lapses after this season.

Speculation becomes complicated; Vettel is clearly not the happiest chappie following young Carlito Leclerc’s arrival at Maranello. Unlike with the previous German maestro at Maranello, the Monegasque lad is allowed to beat Vettel, as he can, has and will again, rather than Ferrari having a gorilla in its second car contracted not to beat the number one in Schumi’s superteam years.

So, should he not stop? Is Vettel likely to sail into the twilight of his career having to deal mano-a-mano with superbly talented young upstart? Would you…?

Then the story of Mercedes — the one about the racing team being sold — plausibly as the next acquisition to satisfy Roger Penske’s voracious recent racing appetite — with Merc stepping back to be just an engine supplier – will allegedly see Lewis free to go and allegedly let Toto Wolff follow him to #4 Via Abetone Inferiore.

Both of which juggernauts would suit Maranello just fine — but can Lewis and Toto ever be able to pull off a “Jean Todt” at polemic-infused Ferrari, that is. But evidence suggests that ‘casino’ was a negotiating ploy of sorts and a highly unlikely scenario.

However, I will argue — there’s a dark horse — ready to repeat history.

According to recent speculation in the German press, the honeymoon may be over at Renault. Asked about Daniel Ricciardo’s commitment to the Regie, team boss Cyril Abiteboul said cryptically, “I think my answer would be different today than it was a few weeks or months ago…”

Is that smoke we see there?

Danny’s (Italian roots etc) has also long been tipped to dress in Red sooner or later and should this latest speculation prove to have legs, we would see Dan oust former Red Bull teammate Vettel, this time, from Ferrari.

Thus the possible answers to the question posed in the title are twofold:

  1. Seb stays and things between the drivers remain as they are or get worse because it is doubtful they will improve unless he unconditionally he may have to play the number two role if Carlito keeps betaing him;
  2. Dan arrives with his big smile, chills things up at Maranello and pushes Carlito harder than he has been pushed before without the aggro they are going through now with their current explosive pairing.

No, it is not a given that Seb will leave Ferrari at the end of this season, but the above also applies for when he does leave which should be well before his 22-year-old teammate’s deal ends in 2024.

Step up the Honey Badger!

So over to you: Who will race in Red alongside Leclerc next year?

Alonso: Good pace, confident and improving

Posted: 11 Jan 2020 05:39 AM PST

Fernando Alonso looks back on his first six days tackling the Dakar Rally – the world’s toughest motorsport event – confident that he is improving with every outing while he recovers admirably from a day two setback that cost him nearly three hours in the Saudi Arabian desert.

Nevertheless, the Dakar rookie, who is sharing a Gazoo Racing Toyota with off-road legend Marc Coma in the co-drivers seat, has since the incident been on a charge from 63rd climbing up to 16th at the halfway mark, albeit 3.08 hours behind the leader Carlos Sainz senior.

On Friday, ahead of the rest day, he finished sixth, 7.56 minutes behind stage winner Stephane Peterhansel – notably only four minutes adrift of the best placed Toyota Gazoo Racing Entry of defending champion Nasser Al Attiyah at the end of the gruelling 830km stage.

Ahead of the rest day, Alonso told reporters, “Today has gone well again, with good feelings and good rhythm. We were fast again and in the top six.

“Removing the three cars in front [trio of Minis] which are in another league, being the third-best of the Toyotas has been a nice surprise. We had no problems, no punctures or anything. This rest stage comes at a good time.

“As I said in the first few days, visibility is essential. If it’s good, you are always constant and in rhythm with the leaders, but if you fall too far behind and there is dust there are some ‘waypoints’ in which you have to lift a lot

“It’s all new to me, at this level you have different challenges, such as the behaviour of the car at the beginning and then at the end, you go out with more than 400 litres of gasoline and you end up with 30 or 40, so there is a huge difference.

“You drive on sandy terrain, on gravel, on stones, on asphalt … so the level of grip is very unstable and you have to adapt to every kilometre. Visibility… There have been six stages in which we have passed a bit of everything and each of these challenges is new to me, but I try to learn as quickly as possible.

“In 500 km there are many things that happen and not always obvious. I am glad to have had four good days after the problem we had. In general, good pace, confident and gradually improving.

After the second day’s broken wheel mishap, which cost Alonso nearly three hours, it has been all upwardly mobile for the #310 Toyota as they bounced back impressively, “I don’t know why but I gound a better rhythm in the dunes.

“Marc, with his experience in the dunes, is always advising me, he also understands how the race is evolving, which are the dunes in which you have to slow down or where you have to climb a little more.

“And on the stones, the Toyotas have had many problems this first week, we have punctured two or three wheels each day, and that has been a very big penalty especially if you drop down the order.”

Meanwhile, at the sharp end, his good friend and fellow Spaniard Carlos Sainz leads in a Mini at the halfway mark, seven minutes ahead of Alonso’s Gazoo Racing teammate Nasser Al Attiyah in a Toyota.

“Spectacular, but there is no surprise in that regard,” remarked Alonso of Sainz’s run. “We know that Carlos is one of the best and I am very happy that he is leading. Half the race remains but he seems to have everything in hand.”

As for the remainder of the rally and his own chances, he said, “We will see how hard the second week will be. The Dakar is normally unpredictable but at the moment, in this one, nothing is really happening among the top six.

“If things start to happen during the second week and we continue at this rate, we could quickly recover two or three positions in one stage and get into the top three, but if nothing happens at the front it is difficult,” Alonso added.


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