Friday 14 March 2014

F1 2014: Ripe for renewal


LEWIS HAMILTON is being hotly tipped to win a second world title as Formula One receives a much-needed shot in the arm from a whole raft of technological changes.

Hamilton's team Mercedes has appeared to adapt better than its rivals to the new regulations - and the Briton thus has high hopes that the German outfit can supply him with a car good enough to land a second Championship, six years after his first.

Of course, much of the intervening period has seen Sebastian Vettel and his Red Bull team utterly dominate the sport.

The German won a fourth successive Drivers' Championship - and it was ultimately his most clear-cut success yet as he racked up nine consecutive race wins, a record for a single season.

But, sadly for F1 in 2013 - which had actually begun brightly with several different winners - the repetitive Vettel victories in the second half of the season eventually became an exercise in tedium.

The streak could even be said to have been aided and abetted by rival teams, some of whom openly admitted they had already shifted their focus to 2014.

At least Vettel will find it more difficult this year - indeed, it could be a real struggle if Red Bull's form in winter testing is anything to go by.

The champions hit a new low in the second spell of Bahrain testing where Vettel failed even to complete a single lap.

But the irony of the situation is that, if the German can still get some big results in a bang average car, he may actually enhance his overall reputation.

One driver who knows plenty about that sort of thing is Fernando Alonso.

For some years now, the Spaniard has outperformed a Ferrari team which has finished third in the Constructors' Championship for three of the last four years.

With so many changes going into 2014, the Italians simply must see this as a chance to win back that title for the first time since 2008 - and the Drivers' Championship for the first time since 2007.

That title, seven years ago, was won by the 'Ice Man' Kimi Räikkönen and, following a couple of years rallying and a couple more at Lotus, the Finn is back at Ferrari.

His arrival provides us with a fascinating in-house rivalry but it could, of course, work against both drivers.

After all, sooner rather than later, one of the two drivers will need to be favoured, although it is not just at Ferrari where this is an issue.

At Mercedes too, Hamilton will receive plenty of competition from his German team-mate Nico Rosberg, and the team may have also dropped a clanger in bizarrely parting ways with phenomenal technician Ross Brawn.

The situation at McLaren is rather clearer. Ron Dennis is firmly back in charge and Jenson Button is the Woking-based team's obvious number one, lining up alongside Danish rookie Kevin Magnussen.

The Frome Flyer really must use his position to is advantage - although he can only hope McLaren provides a better car than last season's unprecedented disaster.

Williams also struggled last year, as it has for some years now. However, with a Mercedes engine and the best livery (pictured) on the grid thanks to sponsorship from Martini, the Oxfordshire team wants to show it will not just be a pretty face.

Felipe Massa arrives from Ferrari, a good match with both team and driver seemingly in need of a pick up.

How apt it would be if the Brazilian Massa could deliver it with a race win, 20 years on from the ill-timed loss of his compatriot Ayrton Senna - who met his tragic end in a Williams, of course.

Certainly, Williams can look forward to this season with great optimism and an expectation that it can leapfrog the trio of respectable mid-table bunch - Force India, Sauber and Toro Rosso.

Even the Lotus, fourth in the Constructors' race last year, is eminently catchable after a truly dire winter in which the E22 somehow completed fewer laps than the new Red Bull.

Added to that, Lotus has opted for the curious strategy of retaining Romain Grosjean (though he  improved last year) and pairing him with another crash-happy driver, Pastor Maldonado.

Yes, Lotus could be the team to watch in 2014 - but only for all of the wrong reasons.

Finally, there come the stragglers. For, although the sport this year is expected to bring a whirlwind of change, the backmarkers will feature familiar names and faces.

Caterham, who finished bottom last year, fields Kamui Kobayashi and Swedish debutant Marcus Ericsson, both of whom have owner Tony Fernandes' threat to quit F1 ringing in their ears.

But, at least, there is more hope at Marussia, which - with Ferrari engines - may raise a challenge to Toro Rosso.

This is good news, of course, for the third Briton on the grid, Max Chilton, who became the only driver to finish every race of his rookie season last year

However, the 22-year-old from Reigate will need to get much closer to his French team-mate Jules Bianchi for 2014 to be considered a success.

Frankly though, at this stage, who knows what is going to happen between now and the final race in Abu Dhabi where the horribly-gimmicky double points will be awarded.

At least that will probably mean the title goes to the wire - but only after the best season in years for thrills and spills anyway.

The campaign begins in Melbourne with the Australian Grand Prix this weekend. Qualifying will be held at 6am GMT on Saturday with the race starting 24 hours later.


ON THE GRID
RED BULL-RENAULT
1Sebastian Vettel (GER)GPs 120Pole 45Wins 39
3Daniel Ricciardo (AUS)GPs 50Pole 0Wins 0

MERCEDES
6Nico Rosberg (GER)GPs 147Pole 4Wins 3
44Lewis Hamilton (GBR)GPs 129Pole 31Wins 22

FERRARI
7Kimi Räikkönen (FIN)GPs 194Pole 16Wins 20
14Fernando Alonso (ESP)GPs 217Pole 22Wins 32

LOTUS-RENAULT
8Romain Grosjean (FRA)GPs 45Pole 0Wins 0
13Pastor Maldonado (VEN)GPs 58Pole 1Wins 1

MCLAREN-MERCEDES
20Kevin Magnussen (DEN)GPs 0Pole 0Wins 0
22Jenson Button (GBR)GPs 249Pole 8Wins 15

FORCE INDIA-MERCEDES
11Sergio Pérez (MEX)GPs 58Pole 0Wins 0
27Nico Hülkenberg (GER) GPs 58Pole 1Wins 0

SAUBER-FERRARI
21Esteban Gutiérrez (MEX)GPs 19Pole 0Wins 0
99Adrian Sutil (GER)GPs109Pole 0Wins 0

TORO ROSSO-RENAULT
25Jean-Éric Vergne (FRA)GPs 39Pole 0Wins 0
26Daniil Kvyat (RUS)GPs 0Pole 0Wins 0

WILLIAMS-MERCEDES
19Felipe Massa (BRZ)GPs 193Pole 15Wins 11
77Valtteri Bottas (FIN)GPs 19Pole 0Wins 0

MARUSSIA-FERRARI
4Max Chilton (GBR)GPs 19Pole 0Wins 0
17Jules Bianchi (FRA)GPs 19Pole 0Wins 0

CATERHAM-RENAULT
9Marcus Ericsson (SWE)GPs 0Pole 0Wins 0
10Kamui Kobayashi (JPN)
GPs 60Pole 0Wins 0

2014 RACE CALENDAR
As with the last two seasons, Sky will broadcast every race on their dedicated channel (Sky 408). Where Sky is listed in the column below, the satellite channel will have exclusively live coverage and the BBC will only show extended (delayed) highlights. The BBC has live coverage of nine races where its name is listed below, notably omitting Monaco in May.

DateTV
Pole positionFastest lapWinner
16 MarchSkyAustralian Grand PrixHamiltonRosbergRosberg
30 MarchBBCMalaysian Grand PrixHamiltonHamiltonHamilton
6 AprilSkyBahrain Grand PrixRosbergRosbergHamilton
20 AprilSkyChinese Grand Prix


11 MayBBCSpanish Grand Prix


25 MaySkyMonaco Grand Prix


8 JuneBBCCanadian Grand Prix


22 JuneSkyAustrian Grand Prix


6 JulyBBCBritish Grand Prix


20 JulySkyGerman Grand Prix


27 JulySkyHungarian Grand Prix


24 AugustBBCBelgian Grand Prix


7 SeptemberBBCItalian Grand Prix


21 SeptemberSkySingapore Grand Prix


5 OctoberBBCJapanese Grand Prix


12 OctoberBBCRussian Grand Prix


2 NovemberSkyUnited States Grand Prix


9 NovemberSkyBrazilian Grand Prix


23 NovemberBBCAbu Dhabi Grand Prix


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