Monday 23 September 2013

After Race 13: Singapore

You know how this works by now, let's get cracking...

1. Sebastian Vettel (last week: 1st, no change) (Season high: 1st, low: 4th)
Sebastian Vettel clinched his third career Grand Chelem (pole, win, FL, led every lap) – becoming only the second driver in F1 history (after Jim Clark) to complete one in three consecutive seasons. His 33rd career win moves him ahead of Fernando Alonso into sole possession of 4th-all-time. More booing again on the podium and credit Martin Brundle for discouraging it – it is the responsibility of the rival big teams to stop the domination, namely Ferrari, Mercedes and McLaren.


2. Fernando Alonso (last week: 2nd, no change) (Season high: 1st, low: 13th)
Another super Sunday drive from the double world champion; a ridiculous start saw him gain four spots by turn two and he then mastered his tyres to finish second, as Ferrari’s safety car gamble paid off.
Alonso gave his good friend a lift home - they were both reprimanded
Source: FOM TV images
 3. Kimi Räikkönen (last week: 4th, up one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 12th)
In his first race since the Ferrari announcement – and also the revelation that he has not been paid all season – it looked as if Kimi Räikkönen would be on course for a low-key weekend with back pain limiting his potential, something reflected by his Q2 exit while Romain Grosjean netted third. However, like Alonso, he used the SC to help him eek out his tyre life and netted a superb podium on the bumpy street track.

4. Lewis Hamilton (last week: 3rd, down one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 9th)
Strange weekend for Lewis Hamilton. We’ve become used to seeing him really come alive on the street circuits but, just like in Monaco, it was Nico Rosberg who was the lead Mercedes through quali and the race.

=5. Mark Webber (last week: 5th, no change) (Season high: 1st, low: 15th) & Nico Rosberg (last week: 6th, up one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 12th)
In the end, Mark Webber’s final Singapore Sling turned out to be a rather miserable affair. He’ll be disappointed at how big the gap to Vettel was through quali and the race but he was on course for a solid P4 until his late mechanical failure. To rub salt in the wounds, the wonderful post-race scenes of the Aussie hitchin’ a ride home with Alonso resulted in Webber picking up a ten-place grid penalty for Korea as it was his third reprimand. Rosberg, as mentioned earlier, had a strong weekend and was unlucky not to finish on the podium after the safety car jumbled up the strategies – but such things happen on street circuits.

7. Nico Hülkenberg (last week: 7th, no change) (Season high: 7th, low: 19th)
Having been stunned by Esteban Gutierrez in quali, The Hulk bounced back in the race and enjoyed battling for points once again. He was rightly fuming at having to let Sergio Pérez past him by the stewards – and rightly so, replays showed that Checo clearly tapped Nico Hülkenberg, forcing him to cross the white line off the track. He is peaking at the right time as he aims for a 2014 Lotus seat.

8. Felipe Massa (last week: 8th, no change) (Season high: 3rd, low: 15th)
Given the recent news, it was rather amusing to see Felipe Massa outqualify his team-mate but that was corrected within metres off the start line. Massa had a solid race to finish where he started but it was strange Ferrari opted to pit him in the final stint rather than gamble on a double podium.

9. Romain Grosjean (last week: 10th, up one spot) (Season high: 6th, low: 22nd)
Another case of “what might have been” for Romain Grosjean. An excellent third on the grid saw him spend the whole race in podium contention until a problem with the air consumption ended his race – much to Grosjean’s expected dismay.

10. Jenson Button (last week: 11th, up one spot) (Season high: 5th, low: 16th)
A decent race for JB and all credit to McLaren for gambling on a podium in their final stint. He was a staggering nine seconds a lap off the pace in the closing stages as his tyres fell away and an eventual seventh place finish is probably a fair result.

11. Sergio Pérez (last week: 11th, no change) (Season high: 8th, low: 17th)
No change for Checo: he was shaded by Jenson Button through the latter half of the weekend and was rather lucky to finish above Hülkenberg for the reasons mentioned above. The comments from Martin Whitmarsh are strange and extremely harsh – Checo has had a decent season, all things considered.

12. Esteban Gutiérrez (last week: 17th, up five spots) (Season high: 12th, low: 22nd)
Easily Guti’s best display in F1; the young Mexican made Q3 for the first time this season and had a strong race. His inexperience showed in the closing stages as he struggled to maintain a top-ten position on worn tyres but it was an encouraging weekend, nonetheless.

13. Daniel Ricciardo (last week: 9th, down four spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 18th)
Another excellent qualifying performance from Daniel Ricciardo but it evaporated as the lights went out with a dreadful start. A poor rookie mistake saw him crash upon entry to the grandstand tunnel.

14. Giedo van der Garde (last week: 15th, up one spot) (Season high: 12th, low: 22nd)
Another strong race for VDG moves him to the top of the Caterham/Marussia battle for the first time in the F1 Power Rankings. He once again mixed it with the Williams in the early stages and wound up finishing top of the class after the gruelling two hour race.

15. Jules Bianchi (last week: 13th, down two spots) (Season high: 6th, low: 15th)
It’s a season low for Jules Bianchi although that’s more due to the recent rise of Giedo van der Garde that deserves credit. A tough race for Bianchi saw him need a new steering wheel in the early stages after a gearbox problem but he was once again comfortably quicker than Max Chilton – even if the latter decided to disobey team orders and hold him up.

16. Paul di Resta (last week: 14th, down two spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 17th)
The desperate times continue for PDR. Eliminated in Q1 once again, he put in a strong early performance to get some crucial TV coverage as he ran third during the first round of pit-stops. He was on course for solid points until a poor mistake saw him end his night in the barriers.

17. Adrian Sutil (last week: 19th, up two spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 20th)
A rather anonymous race from Adrian Sutil although he did manage to score a point thanks to the late demise of both his team-mate and Webber.

18. Jean-Eric Vergne (last week: 15th, down three spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 20th) 
Another man with a rather non-descript weekend. Outqualified by Ricciardo, the two STRs ran together in the early stages but neither looked likely to score points despite showing decent pace in practice.

19. Charles Pic (last week: 18th, down one spot) (Season high: 7th, low: 19th)
I’m not going to lie, this is a straight copy’n’paste from last week: “The battle at Caterham has evened up recently, which does not reflect well on the team’s ‘veteran’.

=20. Max Chilton (last week: 20th, no change) (Season high: 17th, low: 22nd), Pastor Maldonado (Season high: 12th, low: 22nd) & Valtteri Bottas (Season high: 10th, low: 21st) (both were =21st last week, up one spot) 
Little to separate this trio. Williams were disappointing once again – finishes of 11th and 13th were flattered by the retirements while Chilton was again outperformed by Bianchi.


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Friday 13 September 2013

After Race 12: Italy

Formula 1 bid farewell to Europe for another season with the off-track action more intriguing that the on-track action. Such has been F1’s globalization over the past decade, there are still a whopping seven races to go – there were only two races after the 2003 Italian GP! This week’s F1 Power Rankings were delayed in order to include the Ferrari 2014 driver announcement.

The Magic of Monza: the Tifosi pose for Alonso
Source: Fernando Alonso, Twitter
1. Sebastian Vettel (last week: 1st, no change) (Season high: 1st, low: 4th)
The triple world champion extended his title lead to over two race victories and tied Fernando Alonso for 4th-all-time with 32 wins (only Schumi 91, Prost 51, Senna 41 are ahead). The Tifosi booed him but that was to be expected, and Sebastian Vettel won’t care one bit as long as he’s racking up the big trophies.

Flashback 2008: Vettel takes his maiden win for Toro Rosso at Monza
Source: F1 Fanatic
2. Fernando Alonso (last week: 3rd, up one spot) (Season high: 1st, low: 13th)
Ferrari’s qualifying drafting failed once again but Alonso took an easy second place on Sunday. He was nowhere near Vettel, however, and best of the rest is all he can hope for this season. The signing of Kimi Räikkönen will shake things up at the Scuderia (ironic, given The Iceman’s laid-back nature) and it will be an unwelcome wake-up call to Alonso.

3. Lewis Hamilton (last week: 3rd, down one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 9th)
Having been hugely self-critical of his qualifying performance – branding himself an idiot – Lewis Hamilton then found himself on the back foot early in the race with a slow puncture. He rebounded magnificently with an excellent drive to pick up a couple of points but, with Vettel winning again, it was scant consolation.

 4. Kimi Räikkönen (last week: 3rd, down one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 12th)
Rather like the clichéd London buses, Räikkönen failed to score points for the second race running having scored in the previous twenty-seven. He misjudged his braking into the tricky first corner which necessitated a new front wing and he spent the race in catch-up mode but, unlike Hamilton, he was unable to crack the top ten. Ferrari 2014 can’t come soon enough as far as he is concerned.

Räikkönen celebrates winning the 2007 title for Ferrari
Source: BBC Sport
5. Mark Webber (last week: 5th, no change) (Season high: 1st, low: 15th)
Five weeks at #5 for Mark Webber; his last F1 race in Europe ended on a high as he finally cracked the spectacular Monza podium after over a decade of trying.

6. Nico Rosberg (last week: 7th, up one spot) (Season high: 2nd, low: 12th)
Nico Rosberg moves up one spot in the rankings although that is more by default than anything else. A solid, but distinctly mediocre, weekend saw him both qualify and finish sixth as he spent virtually the entire race behind Nico Hülkenberg.

7. Nico Hülkenberg (last week: 13th, up six spots) (Season high: 7th, low: 19th)
Monza saw the return of The Incredible Hulk: a stunning qualifying lap saw him take third and, unlike Valtteri Bottas in Canada, he managed to hold his own in the race and finish a superb fifth – enough for him to score his highest F1 Power Rankings position to date – just ten seconds behind Vettel. Even if the Sauber seemed suited to the low downforce circuit, The Hulk still had to finish the job off in one of this season’s stand-out performances. His main concern will be where he’ll end up next season. Monisha Kalternborn told Sky Sports that 18-year-old Sergey Sirotkin will almost certainly be in one Sauber – and you’d have to think that Esteban Gutierrez will retain the other. With his outside shot at a Ferrari having evaporated, the options are thinning out, with Lotus the best available option. Otherwise, he faces losing a richly-deserved place in F1 due to (lack of) money for the second time, after Williams in 2010.
 
The Hulk put in the performance of the weekend
Source: F1 Fanatic
8. Felipe Massa (last week: 13th, up five spots) (Season high: 3rd, low: 15th)
With his Ferrari days now officially coming to an end, Felipe Massa scored his best finish in seven races with after a fine weekend and he would have also gained a good deal of personal satisfaction from having outqualified Alonso. In a similar way Hülkenberg, you’d imagine it was Lotus-or-nowhere for the Brazilian in 2014.

You somehow can't see Fernando & Kimi like this...
Source: Fernando Alonso, Twitter
9. Daniel Ricciardo (last week: 16th last week, no change) (Season high: 5th, low: 18th)
Finally confirmed as an RBR driver for 2014, Daniel Ricciardo put in an important performance to silence any lingering doubters that he was the wrong choice as he qualified and finished an excellent seventh.

10. Romain Grosjean (last week: 8th, down two spots) (Season high: 6th, low: 22nd)
Disappointing weekend for Lotus – especially in qualifying as both cars dropped out in Q2. Grosjean kept his nose clean and brought the car home a solid eighth in a solid, if unspectacular, performance.

=11. Jenson Button (last week: 6th, down five spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 16th) & Sergio Pérez (last week: 10th, down one spot) (Season high: 8th, low: 17th)
The McLaren duo are both fallers in this week’s F1 Power Rankings and they are level with each other for the third time in four weeks. Checo outqualified JB and was running ahead of him until a slow pit-stop elevated the Englishman. Thereafter, it appeared that Sergio Pérez was quicker than his team-mate but just could not find a way past him as both McLarens lacked straight line speed.

13. Jules Bianchi (last week: 11th, down two spots) (Season high: 6th, low: 13th)
There were no repeated heroics by the backmarkers this weekend after they excelled in the inclement Spa qualifying but Jules Bianchi, once again, did his usual solid job for Marussia.

14. Paul di Resta (last week: 9th, down five spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 17th)
Force India’s mid-season slump continues as PDR failed to score for the fourth consecutive race, having finished in the top ten in seven of the first eight races; the change in Pirelli tyres has hurt them more than anyone else. Like Räikkönen, he misjudged his braking on the opening lap but, unlike the Finn, saw his suspension disintegrate. Another man in contention for a Lotus 2014 seat, this loss of form will not help him.
 
di Resta was reprimanded for his first lap collision, captured here by FOM's new on-board thermal imaging camera
Source: FOM TV images
=15. Jean-Eric Vergne (last week: 16th, up one spot) (Season high: 5th, low: 20th) & Giedo van der Garde (last week: 12st, down three spots) (Season high: 12th, low: 22nd)
A weekend of missed opportunities for JEV. STR had a good car and Jean-Eric Vergne had the opportunity to show the senior team picked the wrong driver but he committed a costly error exiting Parabolica in Q3, similar to his Silverstone mistake, before his early engine failure on Sunday. Next season will be critical for him – he will need to beat his team-mate, whether it be António Félix da Costa, Carlos Sainz, Jr. or Daniil Kvyat. Meanwhile, Giedo van der Garde’s good form continued as he outqualified Charles Pic, but a miscommunication over his second pit-stop saw him surprise his mechanics.

17. Esteban Gutiérrez (last week: 19th, up two spots) (Season high: 15th, low: 22nd)
Slowly but surely, Guti is finding his feet in F1. Sure, he was knocked out in Q1 for the umpteenth time this season and he finished half a minute behind Hülkenberg but his racecraft has improved significantly over the last two races – he even managed to finish on the tail end of the mammoth midfield battle, just behind the McLarens, rather than his usual anonymous performances.

18. Charles Pic (last week: 18th, no change) (Season high: 7th, low: 19th)
No change for Pic this week. The battle at Caterham has evened up recently, which does not reflect well on the team’s ‘veteran’.

19. Adrian Sutil (last week: 15th, down four spots) (Season high: 5th, low: 20th)
Poor weekend for Adrian Sutil. Savagely blocked Hamilton in qualifying, for which he picked up a deserved penalty, before a hugely underwhelming Sunday afternoon drive.

20. Max Chilton (last week: 20th, no change) (Season high: 17th, low: 22nd)
No change this week for Max Chilton but it was a solid weekend from the young Brit and probably the closest he’s been to Bianchi all season.

=21. Pastor Maldonado (Season high: 12th, low: 22nd) & Valtteri Bottas (Season high: 10th, low: 21st) (both were =21st last week, no change)
Not much to say about Williams as their dreadful season continues.