Showing posts with label Adrian Sutil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adrian Sutil. Show all posts

Saturday, 12 October 2013

Aussie Grit Claims Pole

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Mark Webber claimed his first pole position of the season - and his first since Korea last year - with a superb performance in qualifying in Japan on Saturday afternoon. The Australian got the better of Red Bull team mate Sebastian Vettel, who suffered from intermittent KERS issues in Q3.

Webber had set the pace in Q1 at Suzuka with 1m 32.271s as he took the honours away from Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, who in turn had displaced Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso. But with only a few minutes remaining the session was temporarily red-flagged when Jean-Eric Vergne’s Toro Rosso rolled to a smoky halt at the Degner Curve with its rear brakes on fire. 

After the STR8 had been liberally doused in fire extinguishant the session resumed briefly, giving those who wanted another run just enough time to complete one more timed lap. There was another fire, this time when Esteban Gutierrez got back to his pit and the rear end of his Sauber was briefly set ablaze.

Several runners, notably Lotus’s Romain Grosjean and Ferrari’s Felipe Massa, opted for the medium compound Pirellis and as they jumped to the top of the times with 1m 31.824s and 1m 31.994s respectively, Adrian Sutil paid the price for his FP3 crash and was the first man who failed to get through, with 1m 32.890s. 

Vergne was a sitting duck and dropped to 18th, while Max Chilton did a great job to outqualify the Caterhams. The Englishman lapped his Marussia in 1m 34.320s to Charles Pic’s 1m 34.556s and Giedo van der Garde’s 1m 34.879s. Jules Bianchi did a great job to bang in a lap of 1m 34.958s in his rebuilt Marussia, making the fight between the rival teams closer than it’s been all season.

In Q2 Vettel shaded Webber as he topped the times with 1m 31.290s, while further back McLaren’s Sergio Perez was pipped to a Q3 place as Massa staged a late improvement to sixth place. That left the Mexican on 1m 31.989s just ahead of Paul di Resta on 1m 31.992s for Force India. Valtteri Bottas and Pastor Maldonado were 13th and 15th for Williams with 1m 32.013s and 1m 32.093s respectively, sandwiching Gutierrez on 1m 32.063s. Daniel Ricciardo was 16th on 1m 32.485s in the remaining Toro Rosso.

Webber actually set two times that were quick enough for pole position in Q3; his first lap of 1m 30.975s quicker than Vettel’s two efforts of 1m 31.312s and 1m 31.089s, and his second an improved 1m 30.915s. 

As the Red Bulls wrapped up the front row, Hamilton improved from 10th place to third with his last-gasp lap of 1m 31.253s, moving Grosjean across to the outside of the second row on 1m 31.365s.

Massa once again outgunned Ferrari team mate Alonso, as the Brazilian set the fifth-best time of 1m 31.378s and the Spaniard could only manage 1m 31.665s for eighth. In between them came Nico Rosberg in the other Mercedes on 1m 31.397s and Sauber’s impressive Nico Hulkenberg on 1m 31.644s.

On the fifth row, Kimi Raikkonen recorded 1m 31.684s in the second Lotus to edge ahead of Jenson Button’s 1m 31.827s in the lead McLaren.

Sutil, Pic and Bianchi all have grid penalties; Sutil five places for changing his gearbox after his FP3 crash, and the two Frenchman 10-place penalties apiece for picking up their third reprimands of the season in Korea. That means that the last six drivers on the grid will line up in this order: Vergne, Chilton, Van der Garde, Sutil, Pic and Bianchi.
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Saturday, 27 July 2013

Vettel Dominates Hungaroring

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Sebastian Vettel strengthened his hand before Sunday's Hungarian Grand Prix by posting the fastest time in both of Friday's practice sessions as Red Bull dominated.

On both occasions Vettel spearheaded a Red Bull one-two, finishing a quarter of a second faster than team-mate Mark Webber in the opening session at the Hungaroring.

Come the second session, and the switch to the soft Pirelli tyre – the quicker of the two compounds being used this weekend – Vettel improved his time by 1.5sec with a lap of one minute 21.264sec.

Webber at least managed to close the gap to just 0.044sec come the conclusion, but Vettel is so far looking on course to increase his current championship lead heading into Formula One's summer break.

As in FP1, a Lotus was third on the timesheet in FP2, but it was that of Romain Grosjean and not one of Vettel's two main title rivals in Kimi Raikkonen, who was down in eighth and 0.747sec off the pace.

Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, 34 points adrift of Vettel after nine of the 19 races, was again fourth fastest in his Ferrari, 0.162sec down, with team-mate Felipe Massa next up in fifth.

The Mercedes duo Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg improved to fifth and sixth, the former chalking up a day-high total – and a race distance – of 70 laps.

That was primarily due to Mercedes coming into this race on the back foot after being banned for last week's young driver test at Silverstone, where Pirelli's new range of tyres were initially tried.

Following a series of blowouts during the British Grand Prix last month, Pirelli were rapidly forced to revise their tyres, opting for a solution that comprises last year's structure with this year's compounds.

For Hamilton and Rosberg, the two sessions have been all about obtaining as much information as possible ahead of qualifying and the race.

At present, the team's run of six pole positions in the last seven races appears under threat from Red Bull and Vettel, who has won two of the previous three grands prix to open up his advantage over Alonso, with Raikkonen 41 points adrift.

Hamilton finished just over half a second down on Vettel, with Rosberg 0.727sec back, while McLaren's Jenson Button and Adrian Sutil in his Force India – on the occasion of his 100th grands prix – completed the top 10 behind Raikkonen.

Paul Di Resta, who struggled in session one with set up and found himself 1.5sec behind team-mate Sutil, at least improved in FP2, moving up to 11th on the timesheet and 0.222sec down on the German.

Marussia's Max Chilton, who sat out the morning run in favour of reserve Rodolfo González, was slowest of all, 5.383sec behind Vettel, and more importantly 1.5sec down on team-mate Jules Bianchi.


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Friday, 13 January 2012

Adrian Sutil Faces German Trial


Former Force India driver Adrian Sutil is to stand trial in Germany over an incident in China which left the owner of another Formula One team injured.

The German driver is charged with causing grievous bodily harm in the incident involving Renault F1 executive Eric Lux, who suffered cuts.

Mr Sutil has issued an apology over the incident, which happened in a Shanghai nighclub last April.

Prosecutors are requesting a year's suspended sentence for Mr Sutil.

Munich court spokeswoman Ingrid Kaps said two trial days had been set - 30 and 31 January.

Both Mr Lux and Mr Sutil were among guests at a party to celebrate Lewis Hamilton's victory at the China Grand Prix in Shanghai last April.

Mr Sutil's manager told reporters that the driver was looking forward to seeing the truth of the incident come out in court.

The Renault team has since been renamed Lotus. Force India have already announced Germany's Nico Hulkenberg as Mr Sutil's replacement.