Vettel takes historic victory at Monza

Vettel Monza 2008 winner

Toro Rosso’s superstar Sebastian Vettel takes his maiden victory with a commanding drive in the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.

At 21 years and 74 days he beats the previous record holder of 22 years and 26 days set by double world champion Fernando Alonso in the 2003 Hungarian Grand Prix.

Vettel also scored the first victory for Scuderia Toro Rosso, the team formed by Red Bull back in 2006. The Red Bull Racing squad have yet to win a race but for the Toro Rosso former team as Minardi, this was the best result for the Italian-based organisation after two decades in the sport.

Vettel is also the first German driver to win a Grand Prix since the seven times world champion Michael Schumacher retired. And afterwards Vettel said: “This is the best day of my life.”

The 21-year-old German is now the 101st driver to win a Grand Prix, and joins Robert Kubica (99) and Heikki Kovalainen (100) as this season’s maiden winners. Appropriately, Kovalainen finished second and Kubica was third, so the newest winners filled the podium.

Vettel led from the rolling start to the chequered flag with ease making no mistakes in the wet conditions. He was comfortably the fastest thanks to his dry weather set-up with low downforce, making his Toro Rosso car the quickest down the famous Monza straights. He finished 12 seconds clear of the McLaren of Kovalainen – who was struggling with his brakes due to the low temperatures – and 20 seconds in front of Kubica in the BMW Sauber.

Renault’s Fernando Alonso benefited from the switch to the intermediates in the semi-wet conditions during his final pit stop to take fourth ahead of Nick Heidfeld. The German couldn’t match his BMW Sauber’s team-mate pace but did well to hold off Felipe Massa in the closing stages of the Grand Prix.

Massa was unable to gain an advantage on his title rival Lewis Hamilton despite starting several positions in front. A sixth place finish was the best the Brazilian could achieve in a difficult race for Ferrari. It also didn’t help that Massa spent much of the first stint trapped behind Nico Rosberg’s Williams and then stuck behind yet more traffic after making his first pit stop.

At least Massa reduced Hamilton’s world championship lead to a single point, as Formula One heads off to the Far East for the Singapore Grand Prix in two weeks time. Lewis Hamilton did his best to recover from his low grid position (P15, by far the worst in his Formula One career) but seventh was the end result. Despite this, Lewis put on a show with some spectacular overtaking moves on the likes of Giancarlo Fisischella, Kimi Raikkonen, Fernando Alonso and Mark Webber as he charge through the field hoping to score some much needed world championship points.

Mark Webber claimed the final point finish for Red Bull Racing with eighth, while Kimi Raikkonen – who was barely featured in the race – finished in a disappointing ninth. The only consolidation for the Finn was setting the fastest laps as the track dried out but it was too little too late for the former world champion.

Nelson Piquet in the Renault rounded out the top ten finishes at Monza. Remarkably, there was only one retirement from the Italian Grand Prix. Giancarlo Fisichella (Force India) crashed at the Parabolica corner after damaging his front wing on the back of David Coulthard’s Red Bull. The broken wing then folded under his car and the Italian was sent off the road and into the tyre barriers. Fisichella was unharmed in the incident.

So a fantastic drive from Sebastian Vettel, though you must feel sorry for Sebastien Bourdais in the sister car. The Frenchman qualified in his best ever grid slot with fourth but as the Safety Car led the pack into the first corner, Bourdais was left behind after stalling his Toro Rosso… He got going again once the mechanics fixed the problem but by then he was a lap down. Bourdais finished the race in a frustrating eighteenth.

The Singapore Grand Prix is the next round of this year’s dramatic Formula One World Championship and the event will become extra special, as it will be the first in the history of the sport to be staged at night. Like Valencia, the teams and drivers have no knowledge on the new street circuit so expect something exciting come late September when Formula One arrives on scene.

Race results from Monza – 53 laps:

1. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1h26:47.000
2. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes +12.512
3. Kubica BMW Sauber +20.471
4. Alonso Renault +23.903
5. Heidfeld BMW Sauber +27.748
6. Massa Ferrari +28.816
7. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes +29.012
8. Webber Red Bull-Renault +32.048
9. Raikkonen Ferrari +39.468
10. Piquet Renault +54.445
11. Glock Toyota +58.888
12. Nakajima Williams-Toyota +1:02.015
13. Trulli Toyota +1:05.954
14. Rosberg Williams-Toyota +1:08.635
15. Button Honda +1:13.370
16. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault +1 lap
17. Barrichello Honda +1 lap
18. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari +1 lap
19. Sutil Force India-Ferrari +2 laps

Fastest lap: Raikkonen, 1:28.047

Not classified/retirements:
Fisichella Force India-Ferrari 12 laps

World Championship standings, round 14:

Drivers:

1. Hamilton 78
2. Massa 77
3. Kubica 64
4. Raikkonen 57
5. Heidfeld 53
6. Kovalainen 51
7. Alonso 28
8. Trulli 26
9. Vettel 23
10. Webber 20
11. Glock 15
12. Piquet 13
13. Barrichello 11
14. Rosberg 9
15. Nakajima 8
16. Coulthard 6
17. Bourdais 4
18. Button 3

Constructors:

1. Ferrari 134
2. McLaren-Mercedes 129
3. BMW Sauber 117
4. Renault 41
5. Toyota 41
6. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 27
7. Red Bull-Renault 26
8. Williams-Toyota 17
9. Honda 14

Next race: Singapore Grand Prix, Singapore, September 26-28

Vettel takes maiden pole for Toro Rosso at Monza

Vettel Monza 2008

Scuderia Toro Rosso driver Sebastian Vettel claimed his first pole position in only his 22nd start in Formula One racing with an impressive display at a soaking wet qualifying session at Monza.

The 21-year-old German set his time early in Q3 with one minute, 37. 555 seconds – which was good enough to take the top spot as the rain steadily became heavier, making it difficult for the other drivers to beat his time.

By claiming his maiden pole position, Vettel becomes the youngest Formula One driver to take the top spot. His performance over the last Grands Prix has been nothing short of remarkable and with this latest achievement, the German proves why he is a future star in Formula One motor racing.

As for the world championship leader, Lewis Hamilton had a difficult session in which a gamble on intermediates Bridgestone paid a heavy price on his bid for the title… Even though he switched back to the extreme wets, Lewis failed to recover from his mistake and he was left struggling for pace and grip. He ended up in a disappointing P15.

His McLaren team-mate fared better with a front row start for Heikki Kovalainen. The Finn may have missing out on grabbing pole by less than a tenth of a second from Vettel but he has a good opportunity in winning his second race with P2.

Red Bull Racing Mark Webber will start in an excellent third ahead of the sister car of Champ Car champion Sebastien Bourdais.

Williams will be celebrating their 500th Grand Prix this Sunday and by starting fifth on the grid, Nico Rosberg will have a great chance of scoring valuable points for the team in the constructors’ standings.

What about the tifosi’s favourite team Ferrari? This is their home race and the passionate Italian fans are expecting a result from the red cars. So where did Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen qualifying? Well, Massa will start the race down in sixth after just managed to scrape through into Q3 while his team-mate Raikkonen didn’t. The Brazilian is now only two points behind Hamilton in the drivers’ standings following the McLaren driver being penalised in cutting the chicane in last weekend’s dramatic Belgian Grand Prix and he has an opportunity to gain the championship lead thanks to his better grid position over his title rival. As for Kimi, P14 is not ideal for a driver who will stay at the Scuderia until 2010 but at least he is ahead of Hamilton!

The Toyotas of Jarno Trulli and Timo Glock sandwiched Fernando Alonso’s Renault, with seventh, eighth and ninth respectively. While Nick Heidfeld – who spun in Q1 – completes the top ten for BMW Sauber.

With more rain possible for Sunday, a fantastic race is in prospect as Vettel and the others seek to capitalise on their performances. Kubica, Raikkonen and Hamilton do everything they can to overcome their tribulations and it will be exciting to see the three championship contenders racing through the field. Hopefully Lewis won’t be cutting the chicanes as he races with Kimi during the 53-lap race at Monza!

Starting grid for the Italian Grand Prix:

1. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:37.555
2. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes 1:37.631
3. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:38.117
4. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:38.445
5. Rosberg Williams-Toyota 1:38.767
6. Massa Ferrari 1:38.894
7. Trulli Toyota 1:39.152
8. Alonso Renault 1:39.751
9. Glock Toyota 1:39.787
10. Heidfeld BMW Sauber 1:39.906
11. Kubica BMW Sauber 1:36.697
12. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari 1:36.698
13. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault 1:37.284
14. Raikkonen Ferrari 1:37.522
15. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:39.265
16. Barrichello Honda 1:36.510
17. Piquet Renault 1:36.630
18. Nakajima Williams-Toyota 1:36.653
19. Button Honda 1:37.006
20. Sutil Force India-Ferrari 1:37.417

Hamilton stripped of his Grand Prix win after harsh penalty

Kimi and Lewis Spa

This is the moment in which the most entertaining and dramatic Formula One race this season ended up the most controversial.

Entering the Bus Stop chicane on lap 42, championship leader Lewis Hamilton was alongside his race rival Kimi Raikkonen after getting a good slipstream from exiting Stavelot. The world champion in the leading Ferrari was struggling for grip in the treacherous conditions as rain fell on the Spa Francorchamps circuit and he was about to get overtaken.

Lewis was in a determined mood to retake the lead after losing it on the second lap at the La Source hairpin. The McLaren had a good run from Stavelot and through Blanchimont, and he was ready to make the manoeuvre. Kimi held his line and braked early for the chicane, forcing Lewis to take the outside line.

The Finn then edged his Ferrari out wide in a bid to stay in front… Pushing your rival wide was not very clever and it shows how much Kimi Raikkonen didn’t wanted to concede the race victory…

At this point, Lewis had to make a quick decision. Either crash into Kimi or take the escape route. The Briton took the latter and even though cutting the corner is against the strict Formula One rules, he had no choice but to avoid the collision with the red car.

Hamilton rejoined the circuit and he let through Raikkonen on the start/finish straight, in fear that he might get a penalty for missing out a corner. Immediately afterwards, he attacked the Ferrari into the hairpin with a bold pass down the inside on Kimi.

This series of events didn’t go down well with the race stewards, who decided that Lewis Hamilton ‘gained an unfair advantage’ by missing out the chicane. To throw out the winner of the race over this racing incident is simply ridiculous and it was no surprise to see the uproar of Formula One fans from around the world when the news broke out that the McLaren driver had been penalised and Felipe Massa (who finished second on the track) was awarded the race win.

Obviously McLaren are appealing over this decision as it won the race fair and square. It’s quite surprising that Ferrari didn’t lodge the complaint but it was the race stewards who did…

It shows the inconsistency of the FIA. Why is that Ferrari always seem to escape heavy punishment while the other teams get the full wrath of the sport’s governing body? Case in point, Malaysian Grand Prix 1999 (Ferrari ran illegal barge boards but allowed to keep the win), Felipe Massa running off the road in his duel with Robert Kubica in Fuji last year and more recently, Felipe’s near collision with Adrian Sutil in the pits at Valencia that resulted in just a small Euros fine…

It is completely ludicrous that during the same Grand Prix at Spa, Heikki Kovalainen received a drive-through penalty after his collision with Mark Webber, while Kimi Raikkonen, who forced Lewis wide at the same corner didn’t get any punishment whatsoever…

There is a running joke in Formula One, that the FIA stands for ‘Ferrari International Aid’ as the sport’s governing body is biased towards the Italian team. And if the sport is rigged, then what is the point of racing?

As a passionate fan of the sport (I’ve been following Formula One since the late 1980s), this decision is by far the most disgusting. I am deeply worried that the general image of Formula One has been corrupted by dirty politics and I wonder what the sport could do to get out of this messy situation in the long term…

Hamilton takes victory in thrilling finale at Spa

Lewis Hamilton winner Spa 2008

Lewis Hamilton edges closer to winning the drivers’ championship after snatching victory from Kimi Raikkonen in the dramatic closing moments at the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa Francorchamps.

Raikkonen was on course to take his long-awaited race victory at his favourite circuit after leading the race from lap two, benefitting from Hamilton’s spin at the La Source hairpin at the end of the opening lap. The Ferrari driver had been under pressure to perform after a series of poor results and race victory would have kick-started his title ambitions.

But during the final three laps, the Finn was uncomfortable in the wet conditions and lost the lead when Hamilton caught and passed him. In fact, the race stewards are investigating a situation at the Bus Stop chicane when the pair may have broken the strict FIA rules on cutting corners…

The incident happened on lap 42 with Hamilton drew alongside his rival on the approach to the chicane. Neither wanted to give way and Lewis was forced off the track by Kimi.

Hamilton arrived on the start/finish straight ahead of Raikkonen and having gained an unfair advantage by cutting the previous corner, the McLaren driver let his rival by. But then he re-passed the Ferrari at the following corner at the La Source hairpin.

Later on that dramatic lap, Raikkonen ran wide at Pouhon but managed to recover with more speed over Hamilton. Then Lewis came across a spinning Williams (Nico Rosberg) and took evasive action! Raikkonen also avoided the backmarker and in the process seemed to have hit his rival… But as soon as Kimi was back in the lead, he spun his Ferrari exiting the corner and Lewis was back in front!

The drama didn’t end there, as Raikkonen tried in vain to regain lost ground on Hamilton, he unfortunately lost control coming out of Blanchimont which resulting in his car and the world championship smashed to pieces against the barrier…

It was crude luck for the reigning world champion as Raikkonen was driving superbly in the leading Ferrari. After inheriting the lead from the spinning McLaren at the end of lap one, the Finn was on course in achieving his fourth successive victory at Spa Francorchamp but that late rain changed the fortune for the Finn.

With Kimi out, it was left for team-mate Felipe Massa to pick up the points and by finishing in second position, the Brazilian is still within touching distance of championship leader Lewis Hamilton in the remaining five races.

BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld gambled on a last-gasp change to intermediate tyres to grab third place on the last lap, ahead of Renault’s Fernando Alonso and Toro Rosso’s Sebastian Vettel.

Team-mate Robert Kubica completed the top six, ahead of the unfortunate Sebastien Bourdais – who stayed out on slicks and was briefly in third, only for a group of intermediate-shod cars to cruise past him on the final lap… Toyota’s Timo Glock completed the points scorer with eighth place.

As for Heikki Kovalainen, this was a race to forget. The Finn made a poor start from third on the grid and he was forced wide at the La Source mayhem caused by Jarno Trulli fast-starting Toyota hitting the back of Bourdais.

That left Kovalainen down ten places in the first corner chaos and in the following laps, the Finn slowly made his way back up the field only for a tangle with Mark Webber at the Bus Stop chicane meant he received a drive-through penalty for punting the Red Bull car into a spin.

That incident cost him track position and although he recovered, the Finn was forced to retire on the final lap.

As for the other McLaren, it was an incredible race from Lewis Hamilton. He recovered from his mistake on lap two when he lost control of his car under braking. Lewis chased after Raikkonen lap after lap and with help from the fickle Belgian weather, the Briton was able to snatch the lead and take his fifth Grand Prix victory this season. Hamilton extends his points lead to eight over title rival Felipe Massa, who finished second in the 44-lap race.

Poor Raikkonen. He had the race in his hands and yet the late rain disrupted his winning performance and ended with a smashed Ferrari on the exit of Blanchimont… This non-finish for Kimi means he is now a massive 23 points behind Lewis in the drivers’ standings and Ferrari may well request the Finn to play the supporting role to aid Felipe Massa in the remaining Grands Prix.

The next race will be the glorious Monza circuit next week. This is Ferrari’s home race and the Italian team will be determined to score a good result in its battle for the world championship against Lewis Hamilton and McLaren-Mercedes.

Race results from Spa Francorchamps – 44 laps:

1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1h22.44.933
2. Massa Ferrari +14.461
3. Heidfeld BMW Sauber +23.844
4. Alonso Renault +28.939
5. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari +29.037
6. Kubica BMW Sauber +29.498
7. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari +31.196
8. Glock Toyota +56.506
9. Webber Red Bull-Renault +57.237
10. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes +1 lap
11. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault +1 lap
12. Rosberg Williams-Toyota +1 lap
13. Sutil Force India-Ferrari +1 lap
14. Nakajima Williams-Toyota +1 lap
15. Button Honda +1 lap
16. Trulli Toyota +1 lap
17. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari +1 lap
18. Raikkonen Ferrari +2 laps

Fastest lap: Raikkonen, 1:47.930

Not classified/retirements:

Barrichello Honda 21 laps
Piquet Renault 14 laps

World Championship standings, round 13:

Drivers:

1. Hamilton 80
2. Massa 72
3. Kubica 58
4. Raikkonen 57
5. Heidfeld 47
6. Kovalainen 43
7. Trulli 26
8. Alonso 23
9. Webber 18
10. Glock 16
11. Vettel 13
12. Piquet 13
13. Barrichello 11
14. Rosberg 9
15. Nakajima 8
16. Coulthard 6
17. Bourdais 4
18. Button 3

Constructors:

1. Ferrari 129
2. McLaren-Mercedes 123
3. BMW Sauber 105
4. Toyota 42
5. Renault 36
6. Red Bull-Renault 24
7. Williams-Toyota 17
8. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 17
9. Honda 14

Next race: Italian Grand Prix, Monza, September 12-14

Hamilton beats Massa to Spa pole position

Lewis Hamilton Spa 2008

Championship leader Lewis Hamilton scored his eleventh career pole position at the majestic Spa-Francorchamps circuit edging out his main title rival Felipe Massa in qualifying.

The McLaren driver set a lap time around the challenging 4.352-mile Belgian race circuit with one minute, 47.338 seconds. This was three tenths of a second quicker than Massa in the Ferrari. Their team-mates will line up directly behind with Heikki Kovalainen ahead of Kimi Raikkonen.

It was another disappointing performance from the reigning world champion. Kimi Raikkonen really needed a good result at Spa to kick-start his title campaign following a series of poor races. The Finn is a past winner of the Belgian Grand Prix – he won this event three times – but starting from fourth, Kimi will have a difficult task in achieving his fourth consecutive victory. He will need to display his race-winning pace on Sunday or else he will play the supporting role of Felipe Massa in the remaining Grands Prix.

BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld is another driver under pressure for results. The German had suffered the problem of not setting quick lap times compared to team-mate Robert Kubica in qualifying. Heidfeld seems to be having trouble in maintaining good tyre pressure during his timed runs. But he responded with a fine fifth position at Spa. Indeed his time of one minute, 48.315 seconds was better than Kubica, who could only manage eighth position with one minute, 48.763 seconds.

Double world champion Fernando Alonso will line up sixth for Renault. A great result for the Spaniard and he had a chance of a strong finish in Sunday’s Grand Prix. His ambition is to help the team finish fourth in the constructors’ standing by out-qualifying and out racing Toyota. With sixth position, Alonso has the opportunity to close the points gap.

Australian Mark Webber will start in seventh for Red Bull Racing, ahead of Kubica and the Toro Rossos of Sebastien Bourdais and Sebastian Vettel respectively. Bourdais even set the fastest time in Q1, which was a fantastic achievement for the Champ Car champion.

So yet again the two championship contenders are on the front row. Can Lewis Hamilton extend his lead in the drivers’ standings with race victory? Or will Felipe Massa score another decisive win for Ferrari? What about Raikkonen? This is Kimi’s final chance to win at his favourite circuit and he needs a good result if he wants to challenge for title honours this year.

In addition the weather on Sunday could prove tricky for the twenty Formula One drivers. Let’s hope the racing will be better than the previous Grand Prix at Valencia a fortnight ago.

Starting grid for the Belgian Grand Prix:

1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:47.338
2. Massa Ferrari 1:47.678
3. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes 1:47.815
4. Raikkonen Ferrari 1:47.992
5. Heidfeld BMW Sauber 1:48.315
6. Alonso Renault 1:48.504
7. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:48.736
8. Kubica BMW Sauber 1:48.763
9. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:48.951
10. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:50.319
11. Trulli Toyota 1:46.949
12. Piquet Renault 1:46.965
13. Glock Toyota 1:46.995
14. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault 1:47.018
15. Rosberg Williams-Toyota 1:47.429
16. Barrichello Honda 1:48.153
17. Button Honda 1:48.211
18. Sutil Force India-Ferrari 1:48.226
19. Nakajima Williams-Toyota 1:48.268
20. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari 1:48.447

Goldfrapp’s Lovely Head in Magnetosphere form

Goldfrapp abstract

This is simply beautiful. The song is taken from Goldfrapp’s first album ‘Felt Mountain’ featuring the lovely voice of Alison Goldfrapp. I love how a part of the lyric from ‘Lovely Head’ grows and expands during the three-minute or so track.

How was this created? Well, read Processing artist Robert Hodgin’s blog on his idea of Magnetosphere and how it might be implemented into the new visualizer for Apple’s iTunes music player.

This new Processing technique could be the next step in how with visualise music. Even the Barbarian Group website’s page for Magnetosphere says that “We’ve had a ton of interest in it, and we’ve got some exciting plans, but it’s gonna take us a couple months to make it all happen.”

If Apple does take this concept, it would look breathtaking on every computer’s screen. This is especially true on my gorgeous 24-inch iMac!


Solar, with lyrics. from flight404 on Vimeo.

Massa keeps wins after pit lane controversy in Valencia

Felipe Massa winner Valencia

Ferrari’s Felipe Massa celebrated his 100th Grand Prix with victory after a commanding performance on the streets of Valencia. The Brazilian made up for his late-race disappointment in Hungary by taking Sunday’s European Grand Prix in style – leading from start to finish.

However, his victory was only confirmed once race stewards had investigated his second pit stop on lap 37. Massa nearly crashed with Force India’s Adrian Sutil in the pit lane following his stop and the stewards deemed his release had been unsafe.

As a result of the incident the Brazilian has been reprimanded and Ferrari fined 10,000 Euro for the “unsafe release from pitstop, although no sporting advantage was obtained.”

That was one of many incidents for Ferrari at Valencia. Team-mate Kimi Raikkonen had a messy situation in the pits on lap 43, when he was pulled away prematurely while the refuelling hose was still attached to his F2008… In the melee, a race mechanic was struck by the red car’s rear wheel. He was stretchered to the medical centre for further checks.

To compound the Finn’s misery, his engine blew shortly afterwards, ensuring he left Valencia empty-handed. The world champion is now 13 points off the championship pace.

BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica continues to impress with another strong podium finish with third. The Pole is still within 15 points off Hamilton in the title race. As for Heikki Kovalainen – who finished in fourth – McLaren may focus its resources by asking Kovalainen to support his team-mate in the remaining races of the season. Heikki has fallen 27 points behind in the drivers’ standings after this event.

Toyota’s Jarno Trulli finished in a solid fifth with team-mate Timo Glock again scoring some championship points with seventh. This was an impressive result by the German after running a one-stop strategy to haul himself up from P13 on the grid.

In between the pair was Toro Rosso’s Sebastian Vettel. The youngest was the star of the weekend and to finish in sixth is a great achievement.

The final championship point went to Williams’ Nico Rosberg, who led home BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld, Toro Rosso’s Sebastien Bourdais and Renault’s Nelson Piquet.

Red Bull’s Mark Webber, Honda’s Jenson Button, Renault’s Giancarlo Fisichella, Williams’ Kazuki Nakajima, Honda’s Rubens Barrichello and Red Bull’s David Coulthard all finished the European Grand Prix a lap down.

As for the double world champion and home crowd favourite Fernando Alonso, the Spaniard was unlucky to get involved in the opening lap shunt with Nakajima. He had to retire when the Japanese hit the back of his R28, ripping off the rear wing and damaging the suspension.

It was a disappointing result for Alonso as the massive ranks of Spanish fans alongside the harbour-side grandstands were left with no hero to cheer on.

But it was a good day for race winner Felipe Massa. Despite that pit lane controversy, the Brazilian drove a superb and commanding race from the front. Massa now has the momentum to lead Ferrari to championship success. Can Lewis Hamilton keep hold of his points lead as Formula One travels to the majesty Spa-Francorchamps? We will find out in two weeks’ time.

Race results from Valencia – 57 laps:

1. Massa Ferrari 1h35:32.339
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes +5.611
3. Kubica BMW Sauber +37.353
4. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes +39.703
5. Trulli Toyota +50.684
6. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari +52.625
7. Glock Toyota +1:07.990
8. Rosberg Williams-Toyota +1:11.457
9. Heidfeld BMW Sauber +1:22.177
10. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari +1:29.794
11. Piquet Renault +1:32.717
12. Webber Red Bull-Renault +1 lap
13. Button Honda +1 lap
14. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari +1 lap
15. Nakajima Williams-Toyota +1 lap
16. Barrichello Honda +1 lap
17. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault +1 lap

Fastest lap: Massa, 1:38.708

Not classified/retirements:

Raikkonen Ferrari 46 laps
Sutil Force India-Ferrari 42 laps
Alonso Renault 1 lap

World Championship standings, round 12:

Drivers:

1. Hamilton 70
2. Massa 64
3. Raikkonen 57
4. Kubica 55
5. Kovalainen 43
6. Heidfeld 41
7. Trulli 26
8. Alonso 18
9. Webber 18
10. Glock 15
11. Piquet 13
12. Barrichello 11
13. Vettel 9
14. Rosberg 9
15. Nakajima 8
16. Coulthard 6
17. Button 3
18. Bourdais 2

Constructors:

1. Ferrari 121
2. McLaren-Mercedes 113
3. BMW Sauber 96
4. Toyota 41
5. Renault 31
6. Red Bull-Renault 24
7. Williams-Toyota 17
8. Honda 14
9. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 11

Next race: Belgian Grand Prix, Spa-Francorchamps, September 5-7.

Massa pips Hamilton to pole in Valencia

Felipe Massa Valencia

Ferrari’s Felipe Massa produced a perfect lap around the challenging new street track in Valencia, edging out championship leader Lewis Hamilton for pole position.

The duo battled fiercely in Q3, with the Brazilian initially taking the top spot by half a second after the McLaren driver made a mistake in the final sector of his lap.

Undaunted, Hamilton responded with a second attempt that was error-free and went quicker than Massa (by a small margin of two tenths of a second). But Felipe was able to resist and recorded his fourth pole position of the season with a time of one minute, 13.989 seconds.

BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica will start the race in third with the current world champion Kimi Raikkonen alongside for Ferrari. Hungarian Grand Prix winner Heikki Kovalainen could only manage fifth for McLaren.

But the real star of qualifying was Sebastian Vettel, who was fastest of all in Q2. The German was driving superbly in the Toro Rosso and to be rewarded with sixth position on the grid is a fantastic achievement for the talented driver. Team-mate Sebastien Bourdais also produce a good result for the team, with his best grid slot in Formula One with tenth.

After setting the fastest time in Q1, Toyota’s Jarno Trulli will start the European Grand Prix in seventh, ahead of BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld and Williams’ Nico Rosberg. The former was fortunate to reach Q3 after having to take to the asphalt run-off in the first qualifying session due to a misunderstanding with Timo Glock’s Toyota in traffic.

As for home crowd favourite Fernando Alonso, the double world champion was unable to produce a result for Renault after making a mistake at turn 14. Alonso comprised his final Q2 lap when he ran wide over a kerb and thus had to settle with P12. Nelson Piquet, in the sister R28 also had a bad qualifying session and will start the Valencia race down in P15.

But the most disappointing driver of all was Jenson Button. The Honda star was showing strong pace during the run-up to the all-important qualifying session but was shocked to be knocked out as early as Q1. Jenson will start the race down in P16 with team-mate Rubens Barrichello even further behind.

Even though the drivers have no prior knowledge around this new street circuit, it’s incredible that nobody had any significant incidents during the past two days at Valencia. This might change on Sunday with the possibility of rain and safety car periods.

Starting grid for the European Grand Prix:

1. Massa Ferrari 1:38.989
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:39.199
3. Kubica BMW Sauber 1:39.392
4. Raikkonen Ferrari 1:39.488
5. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes 1:39.937
6. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:40.142
7. Trulli Toyota 1:40.309
8. Heidfeld BMW Sauber 1:40.631
9. Rosberg Williams-Toyota 1:40.721
10. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:40.750
11. Nakajima Williams-Toyota 1:38.428
12. Alonso Renault 1:38.435
13. Glock Toyota 1:38.499
14. Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:38.515
15. Piquet Renault 1:38.744
16. Button Honda 1:38.880
17. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault 1:39.235
18. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari 1:39.268
19. Barrichello Honda 1:39.811
20. Sutil Force India-Ferrari 1:39.943

A day out at the V Festival

Muse - Matt Bellamy
Picture: Andy Willsher

Last weekend, I went to Chelmsford (Essex) to attend the V Festival. I was feeling quite nervous that the wet British weather might spoil the event but in the end, it stayed dry with the sun just breaking out from the clouds.

The highlight of course was Muse. I still remember fondly the sell-out gig at Wembley last year and I was feeling pretty devastated when I missed out on the opportunity to see this fantastic band performing live at the Royal Albert Hall in London recently. (All the tickets were sold out within minutes!)

So I made amends by grabbing hold of those elusive V Festival tickets post-haste. I went for the Saturday only ticket but in hindsight, I should’ve gone for the weekend. That way, I get to see Muse performing twice!

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Kovalainen takes maiden victory after Massa’s late retirement

Heikki winner

Heikki Kovalainen claimed a surprising victory for McLaren after the dominant Felipe Massa suffered a late engine failure and Lewis Hamilton’s hopes were dashed by a puncture.

It was a lucky win for the Finn, as Massa was poised to take the chequered flag after making an excellent start off the grid. The Brazilian jumped both McLarens into the first corner and maintained a small gap over Lewis Hamilton in the first part of the race.

Massa was steadily pulling away at the front and appeared to have the Hungarian Grand Prix in the bag following Hamilton’s front-left puncture. But as he powered down the main straight on lap 68, his Ferrari V8 let go spectacularly and Massa grounded to a halt in front of the pits… That late retirement was a cruel blow to the Brazilian as race victory would have placed him in the lead of the drivers’ championship.

Instead, it was Kovalainen who took the chequered flag and the Finn becomes the 100th driver to win a Formula One Grand Prix. In addition, he is the second driver to take his first win this year after Robert Kubica in the Canadian Grand Prix. Heikki’s maiden victory comes after Vodafone McLaren Mercedes extended his contract to the end of the 2009 season.

Finishing in second went to Timo Glock. This was a fantastic result for the Toyota driver as it was only two weeks ago that he was hospitalised following his enormous Hockenheim accident. To take second position was a great achievement, especially as he finished ahead of reigning world champion Kimi Raikkonen.

It was another lacklustre race for Raikkonen, as he struggled to find a right balance in the Ferrari. Third place was a good result for the Finn but questions will need to be answered as to why he lacked the speed in qualifying and the race compared to team-mate Felipe Massa.

Double world champion Fernando Alonso came home in a solid fourth for Renault, after spending most of the race battling with Raikkonen. His team-mate Nelson Piquet again finished in the points with a fine sixth place. These two points finishes means Renault move into fifth place in the constructors’ standings and are now four points behind Toyota.

Finishing in between the Renaults was Lewis Hamilton. The pre-race favourite was on course in achieving his hat trick of race victories with a front row start, but as the five red lights went out, he was out-accelerated by Massa into the first corner. The McLaren driver did his best to maintain within touching distance with the Ferrari during the first rounds of pit-stops but on lap 37, he suffered a front-left puncture.

Lewis was able to return back to the pits and he did well to recover from this incident. Finishing in fifth wasn’t so bad as those four points will be crucial in the remaining races in this year’s championship.

Toyota’s Jarno Trulli finished seventh with BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica claiming the final point with eighth.

The 2008 Hungarian Grand Prix was also notable for a number of minor fuel fires in the pits. Sebastien Bourdais (Toro Rosso), Kazuki Nakajima (Williams) and Rubens Barrichello (Honda) were all delayed in pit-stops after small amounts of fuel leaked onto their cars as the fuel nozzle was withdrawn. It caused a brief but ultimately harmless fires – for the case of Bourdais, it happened twice! All three were able to continue and finished the race.

Formula One now takes a three-week summer break where no testing will be allowed. It will be fascinating how the other teams can develop their cars in the search for performance and reliability without pounding around test tracks. The next Grand Prix will be Valencia, a new street circuit at the home of the America Cup yacht race.

Race results from Hungaroring – 70 laps:

1. Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes 1h37:27.067
2. Glock Toyota +11.061
3. Raikkonen Ferrari +16.856
4. Alonso Renault +21.614
5. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes +23.048
6. Piquet Renault +32.298
7. Trulli Toyota +36.449
8. Kubica BMW Sauber +48.321
9. Webber Red Bull-Renault +58.834
10. Heidfeld BMW Sauber +1:07.709
11. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault +1:10.407
12. Button Honda +1 lap
13. Nakajima Williams-Toyota +1 lap
14. Rosberg Williams-Toyota +1 lap
15. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari +1 lap
16. Barrichello Honda +2 laps
17. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari +3 laps
18. Massa Ferrari +3 laps

Fastest lap: Raikkonen, 1:21.195

Not classified/retirements:

Sutil Force India-Ferrari 63 laps
Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari 23 laps

World Championship standings, round 11:

Drivers’

1. Hamilton 62
2. Raikkonen 57
3. Massa 54
4. Kubica 49
5. Heidfeld 41
6. Kovalainen 38
7. Trulli 22
8. Alonso 18
9. Webber 18
10. Glock 13
11. Piquet 13
12. Barrichello 11
13. Rosberg 8
14. Nakajima 8
15. Vettel 6
16. Coulthard 6
17. Button 3
18. Bourdais 2

Constructors’

1. Ferrari 111
2. McLaren-Mercedes 100
3. BMW Sauber 90
4. Toyota 35
5. Renault 31
6. Red Bull-Renault 24
7. Williams-Toyota 16
8. Honda 14
9. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 8

Next race: European Grand Prix, Valencia, August 22-24