Ferrari’s latest blog post attacks the FIA and the new teams
Ferrari has unleashed a relentless and scathing rage against the changing landscape of Formula One, on the team’s official website. It was so impassioned and contained a plethora of hyperbole that at times it was comical:
“The thirteenth team, USF1, appears to have gone into hiding in Charlotte, North Carolina, to the dismay of those like the Argentinian, Lopez, who thought he had found his way into the Formula 1 paddock, (albeit with help from chairwoman Kirchner, according to the rumours) and now has to start all over again. Amazingly, they still have the impudence to claim that everything is hunky-dory under the starry stripy sky.
Next, we have the Serbian vultures. Firstly, they launched themselves into a quixotic legal battle with the FIA, then they picked the bones of Toyota on its death bed”
This inevitably has led to the complaints –which seem to follow the Maranello squad everywhere- that they are simply being arrogant and upset that the order is being threatened. Well yes and no…
There’s a reason Ferrari is saying this; they aren’t just going to come out and damage a relationship with new FOTA colleagues for nothing. If the new teams can’t take the pressure then they will crumble. There’s no point getting into bed with a new team that’s going to hop right out again. There’s little point in being all sweetness and light to new teams who could potentially go running off to the FIA or Bernie for help and risk the strength and credibility of FOTA especially when there are big names on their side such as Mclaren and Mercedes. Bernie has also been fairly critical of the new entrants recently.
There’s a changing landscape which ultimately means a threat to the established order. There’s more competition at the front which will be tougher for Ferrari but there are also bigger names and therefore in theory, more weight behind FOTA. Additionally, there is still the possibility for FIA vs FOTA rows in the future so FOTA needs to stay together and stand firm. However, there could be internal struggles within FOTA anyway due to Ferrari has the prestige, Mercedes supply the most teams and two of which are the biggest names in the sport while Mclaren works out its own plans in the future.
Ferrari aren’t in an ideal situation at the moment; Brawn has gone, Schumacher too (he may be old but there was fifteen years spent building up a relationship and almost a brand to be sold), they no longer have the genius of Rory Byrne, Todt’s cunning is now at the top of the FIA, Stefano Domenicali has had a few tough moments already, they endured a terrible season last year and have high expectations for a driver who is returning after a pretty big injury. To top that all off, the Italian outfit is going through a transitional phase with Alonso while facing possibly their biggest championship fight yet.
This is just my speculation but privately perhaps Mclaren are thinking along the same lines as they are have a new driver too, Whitmarsh is relatively new in charge and has faced criticism in the previous season and they have the Mercedes engine situation in the future. Mclaren at least showed they could return to form last year unlike Ferrari who has had constant doubts because news on the F10 was silent for a lot of the time which adds to the sense that this is a vulnerable squad who are just lashing out.
That would be a touch naive to say it is the sole purpose for this tirade. Ferrari has the experience to deal with a changing situation but they are under pressure. We’ve still yet to see how much of a threat Mercedes and Red Bull Racing really will be but there is the anticipation of a close battle ahead. I doubt this season and the coming ones will turn out to be a disaster for Ferrari; in fact this could well be a new but very different golden period for them but there is still the uncomfortable experience of change at hand.
F1 can live without Ferrari but Ferrari can’t without F1. They may not like what is afoot but they’re stuck with it and trying to swing as much clout and momentum for their ideas as they can. They have achieved one major thing and that is that the three car idea isn’t going away. It doesn’t have a lot of support but with these blog posts and statements it is still in the public eye and so still on the table but it does seem highly unlikely it will ever come to fruition.
Ferrari are trying to get what they want but behind closed doors every team will be plotting and planning their future, this is just a different style. If you thought 2009 was dominated by politics then the theme doesn’t seem to be going away for this season.
A look back: Rene Arnoux
In the depths of winter, when there are no races to get excited about, discussion among F1 fans turns to a variety of widely-discussed topics. One of the more common off-season conversations concerns that age-old question: “Who was the greatest driver never to win the world championship?”
Several names always come up. Stirling Moss, who was runner-up several times in the 1950s, is an obvious candidate. So too is Gilles Villeneuve, the flamboyant Canadian who was tragically killed near the start of the 1982 season. Jack has nominated Ronnie Peterson, another promising talent who died too soon. But one name that rarely seems to be mentioned is that of Rene Arnoux.
Born in eastern France in 1948, Arnoux had a successful motor racing career in the junior formulae, culminating in victory in the European Formula Two championship in 1977. On the back of this success, he was able to graduate to Formula One the following season, though he was only able to secure a part-season drive with the underfunded Martini team. Martini folded before the end of the year, and Arnoux switched to racing for Surtees in the final two races of the season – however, he scored no points all year, his best results being a pair of ninth places.
For 1979 Arnoux was picked up by the Renault team, partnering compatriot Jean-Pierre Jabouille. The new turbocharged engines on the Renault machines were powerful but unreliable, and the chequered flag was a rare sight for Arnoux that year. This was a trend that would continue.
There was cause for hope, however – Jabouille took the team’s only victory of the year at the French Grand Prix at Dijon, with Arnoux third. This race provided perhaps the defining moment of Arnoux’s career, as he held his own in a frantic, wheel-banging battle with the Ferrari of Gilles Villeneuve in the closing laps. The two cars swapped positions over and over again as the race neared its conclusion, with Villeneuve eventually emerging – just – on top. Both drivers confessed to having enjoyed the battle immensely, and despite criticism from their peers on the grounds of safety, the spectacle became one of the best-loved incidents in Grand Prix history.
Arnoux stayed with Renault in 1980, and took the first win of his career second time out at Interlagos. The very next race, at Kyalami in South Africa, Arnoux won again, putting him in the lead of the world championship. Inconsistency and poor reliability scuppered his chances for the rest of the season, however, and he had to be happy with a hat-trick of pole positions later in the season, as well as a single additional visit to the podium.
1981 was another difficult year for Arnoux in more ways than one. For one thing, Renault seemed to have lost competitiveness in relation to its nearest rivals – he finished in the points only three times all year, finishing ninth in the championship – his worst result since arriving at Renault. For another, his new teammate was the popular and immensely quick Alain Prost, who quickly established himself as the top driver in the team. Prost managed to win three races, though the Renault’s characteristic unreliability left him well out of the world championship hunt.
The following year, 1982, was perhaps one of the most unpredictable in F1 history, both on and off the track. Eleven different drivers won races – more than in any other F1 season – and the tragic deaths of Villeneuve in Belgium and Riccardo Palletti in Canada, as well as a crippling accident for Didier Pironi in Germany, shook the F1 world. Also contributing to this surreal atmosphere was the politics – the ongoing “war” between the sport’s governing body, FISA, and the Formula One Constructors’ Association ultimately led to a FOCA boycott of the San Marino Grand Prix (Renault, well-placed to capitalise on this boycott as one of the only competitive teams racing, saw both drivers retire). Not only this, but Arnoux himself was instrumental in a drivers’ strike that threatened the season-opening South African Grand Prix, in a dispute between the drivers and FISA over the issue of driver licences.
1982 was also the year where Arnoux, in a slightly different set of circumstances, could have been champion. Renault had a very fast car – Arnoux and Prost managed 10 pole positions out of 16 – but reliability was again the Achilles’ heel. Of the five races he actually finished, Arnoux was on the podium four times – suggesting that had the car been more reliable, he would certainly have been in championship contention. As it happened, Arnoux managed to score two victories, including leading Prost home in a one-two result in France. Prost, for his part, was outraged at the result, believing that as the senior Renault driver, Arnoux should have yielded to him. Arnoux insisted that no such order had been given by the team, and as far as he was concerned, he was free to race.
The controversy surrounding Arnoux’s victory in France was the culmination of a series of disagreements between the teammates at Renault, and at the end of 1982 Arnoux left the French team. He found solace at Ferrari, however, joining fellow countryman Patrick Tambay, who had joined the team the previous season after Villeneuve’s death. Three victories followed that year, and Arnoux was still in contention for the championship at the final round in South Africa, along with Brabham’s Nelson Piquet and his old sparring partner Prost. Unfortunately the Frenchman retired with engine trouble, and Piquet picked up a podium to secure his second world title.
Had Ferrari’s reliability not let him down – as it had earlier in the season, when he had been forced to retire from the US Grand Prix at Detroit while leading – Rene Arnoux could have been France’s first world champion. Instead that honour fell to Prost, who would win the title for McLaren two years later. Meanwhile Arnoux faded into obscurity; a difficult year in 1984 led to him being suddenly sacked by Ferrari one race into the 1985 season. He returned with Ligier, but his – and Ligier’s – best years were behind him, and he managed only a handful of points in the following four seasons. Arnoux retired from Grand Prix racing at the end of 1989, having failed to qualify for seven races that year. His departure from the sport was met with some relief from front-runners, who had frequently accused the Frenchman in his later years of failing to move out of the way quickly enough when being lapped.
After F1 Arnoux moved into business, establishing a karting firm. In 2006 he participated in the largely unsuccessful Grand Prix Masters series, and went on to drive for Renault at demonstration events, lapping circuits in a 1983-spec Renault F1 car. Though the steady, at times undignified, decline of Arnoux’s career is far removed from the abrupt halt we saw with Villeneuve and Peterson, and his more methodical driving style lacked the romantic extravagance of those two, Arnoux was nonetheless a worthy competitor.
Seven victories, 18 poles, 181 points. Rene Arnoux is not a name that springs to mind most quickly when considering the great F1 drivers, but had he had the required breaks, his name could be well up that list. Hence, he is my candidate not only for one of the greatest drivers never to win the world championship, but also for one of the most under-appreciated drivers of all time.
Who will be the 2010 F1 world champion?
There is a lot of excitement from the fans and a buzz in the paddock now that F1 testing has started, and that it feels like F1 has really kicked off for 2010. However, who will be in contention for the championship this season?
It is nigh-on impossible to make a prediction. But I am stupid enough to try to make one, and in this post, I will be doing just that.
There is McLaren, Ferrari, Red Bull and Mercedes GP who could all be in the mix on paper. Sauber could join the teams on that list, based on their impressive testing times, although the skeptics would suggest that they are running low fuel loads to make them look quick, and therefore attract sponsors to slap their signage on a distinctly logo-free livery.
The McLaren MP4-25 is undoubtedly the most radical and aggressive car so far, with the shark-fin attached to the rear wing and the incredibly complicated diffuser. McLaren should undoubtedly be back up with the front-runners in 2010.
While McLaren new boy and reigning world champ Jenson Button is underrated by a lot of people, who believe that it was the car who won him the championship in 2009, but he has shown flashes of brilliance on occasions. The drive to his championship win at Interlagos was stunning, but the defining moment of Jenson’s 2009 was his incredible drive in Monaco, where he seemed to be inches from the barriers, and this precision driving won him the Grand Prix.
This is in stark contrast to Button’s 2010 teammate, Lewis Hamilton. Hamilton likes to throw the car around the track, sliding into corners. However don’t let this fool you, after a difficult 2009 he will be back hungrier than ever. His McLaren was very poor to begin last season, and it wasn’t much improved at the end of the year, yet he still managed to wrestle it to some incredible results, winning in Hungary and Singapore. Hamilton will be somewhere near the front if the MP4-25 is only an average car, but if it’s good, he could well dominate.
Like McLaren, Ferrari really ought not to make the same mistakes twice, and if the consistent testing times are anything to go by, 2010 will be a good year for the Scuderia.
Felipe Massa was 5th in the championship and going well during qualifying for the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix, before his horrific accident. He has proved he has the pace, coming within seconds of winning the world championship in 2008 but we will have to wait and see if he is back, as he claims he is, to the driver he was before the accident. After his short break from F1, and the birth of the real ‘Felipe baby‘ – his son Felipinho, it could be the season for the Brazilian to shine.
Fernando Alonso has had two awful seasons at Renault, with the Spaniard not being able to show his true speed. However Alonso has certainly got a good deal in moving to Ferrari, and the driver who many believe to be the out-and-out fastest in F1 seems to have the right tools after setting the fastest time overall at Valencia testing to win his third world championship.

It is a case of 'if' rather than 'when' for Seb Vettel, but has his time come this early in his career? (C) Red Bull/Getty Images
The Red Bull RB6 has not yet been launched – we will have to wait ’till Wednesday to see it, but given that it is a Newey creation, it should certainly be as radical and as impressive as the RB5.
Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel is undoubtedly a future world champion. Last season Vettel pushed Button right ’till the end, and I believe that had the RB5 had the double diffuser and the Mercedes engine, he would be our reigning world championship. It is a case of ‘if’ rather than ‘when’ for Baby Schumi and a good car (which it almost definitely will be) means that Vettel will be a strong candidate for the title once more.
Moving on from Baby Schumi to real Schumi, who is another driver in contention for 2010. He has proved in testing that he can go quickly, but the murmurs have already started about his neck not being able to withstand another season in F1. However if the health issues don’t materialize then the break from F1 could spark Schumi’s enthusiasm for racing in the top level of motorsport, and help him on the way to an eighth world title.
So, they are the drivers on my shortlist for title contenders, but now it is time to really stick my neck out on the line and predict my 2010 champ. It is such a hard thing to try and do, but my prediction is Felipe Massa. I think that the short break he has had, and the birth of his son will galvanise Massa, who is a driver who has shown many times he has the raw pace. Providing his eye causes him no trouble, I think that the 2010 season will be a good one for the Brazilian.















































Both McLaren and Ferrari will stream their 2010 car launches live on the internet.