Showing posts with label Aussie Grit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aussie Grit. Show all posts

Monday, 16 September 2013

Webber Admits Lost F1 Grit

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Mark Webber says he had struggled with motivation in recent years before deciding to leave Formula 1.

The Red Bull driver, 37, is to lead Porsche's new assault on endurance racing after 12 years in F1.

"I've been on the edge with F1, motivation-wise, for the past couple of years," he told F1 Racing magazine. 

"You have to be driven. You turn yourself around each winter and the fire in the belly is not quite what it was when you were 24."

Webber, who has won nine grands prix and narrowly missed out on the championship in 2010, thinks he may be leaving F1 "a year too soon".

"I still enjoy being belted in the car and driving down the pit lane, which is a bit disappointing, but I've spoken to some really good sportsmen and women who have been at the crossroads where making the call was not easy and they messed it up," he said.

"I'm probably leaving F1 a year too soon but with the [regulation] changes next season [the introduction of turbo engines with a fuel limit] and the opportunity to join Porsche, it's the best move for me."

The Australian had got to the point where he was questioning whether he wanted to race in F1 any more and is sure he made the right decision for his future.

"I remember hearing something about sportsmen and women years ago," he told the latest issue of the magazine in an exclusive interview. "They were saying that as long as they could keep their motivation, they would keep going.

"I could never work out what that meant. How could you lose your motivation? But questions keep coming to me more and more often that were never there in the past.

"It's not about driving or racing, it's about keeping my own F1 programme going for 11 months of the year. And it's just got to the point where it's like, well, I've achieved a lot of things."

Webber admitted certain aspects of being an F1 driver had begun to pale.

"Travel and hotels," he said. "And probably the repetitive nature of the job. A bit of media. Lots and lots of small things that you're happy to deal with when you're bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.

"But it does, in the end, force you to ask yourself the question: 'Do I have to be here, doing this?' And when Porsche came along, I could look myself in the eye and say: 'Well, you know what, I probably don't have to do some of those things any more."

Red Bull have named fellow Australian Daniel Ricciardo, 24 as Webber's replacement.


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Monday, 2 September 2013

Red Bull Confirm New Aussie Grit

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Red Bull have confirmed Daniel Ricciardo will drive for the team from the start of next season, replacing his fellow Australia Mark Webber.
Ricciardo, who currently drives for Red Bull's junior team Toro Rosso, will link up with triple world champion Sebastian Vettel in the senior team in 2014.

"I feel very, very good at the moment and obviously there's a lot of excitement running through me," said Ricciardo.

"Since joining F1 in 2011 I hoped this would happen and, over time, the belief in me has grown. I had some good results and Red Bull has decided that this is it, so it's a good time.

"Next year I'll be with a Championship-winning team, arguably the best team, and will be expected to deliver. I'm ready for that.

"I'm not here to run around in tenth place, I want to get the best results for myself and the team. I would like to thank the team for giving me the opportunity to show what I can do.

"I know the team quite well already since being its reserve driver in 2010, which should make the transition easier. It will be a great challenge to be up against Sebastian Vettel, I'm looking forward to that."

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner added: "It's fantastic to confirm Daniel as the team's race driver for 2014, he's a very talented youngster.

"He's committed, he's got a great attitude and, in the end, it was a very logical choice for us.

"He's got all the attributes that are required to drive for our team: he's got a great natural ability and he's a good personality and a great guy to work with.

"Daniel knows what the team expects from him. He'll learn quickly and it's very much a medium to long term view that we're taking in developing him. The seat within the team is a wonderful opportunity and I think he's going to be a big star of the future."


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Saturday, 13 October 2012

Webber Shows Grit in Korea

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There's just no stopping Red Bull at present - but, confounding all the pre-qualifying expectation, it is Mark Webber and not Sebastian Vettel who will start the Korean GP from pole position after the Australian produced the lap of his year to defeat his Red Bull teammate in the final stages of Q3.

The victor of Suzuka and Singapore had appeared peerless all weekend prior to Webber's unforeseen late charge and faces the unexpected anxiety of starting on the dirty side of a grid. Let battle commence. With championship leader Fernando Alonso starting alongside Lewis Hamilton and directly behind Vettel, the stage is set for a start which promises to be worth getting out of bed for - and, in all likelihood, the best chance Alonso and Hamilton will have to stop a Red Bull team which has rediscovered its 2011 dominance.

The World Champions have entered the final stretch of the season with a fearsome sprint, claiming successive front-row lock-outs on successive weekends, with a car which has been seemingly been decisively upgraded into the fastest in the field following the introduction of a secret Double DRS device. Its usefulness will be less pronounced in race conditions, but Alonso will once again start Sunday's race faced with a steep challenge after losing a pair of places to Webber and the previously-peripheral Hamilton at the dramatic culmination of Q3.

Held up to fractional but critical effect on his final run by Felipe Massa, Vettel berated his race engineer for failing to alert him to the Ferrari's proximity, but once the dust has settled - something which doesn't happen very often at a circuit which is mothballed for 360 days of the year - then the reigning World Champion will surely find cause for considerable encouragement. Given the car advantage he now holds over Alonso, it would be a major surprise if he doesn't leave Korea on Sunday night without the lead of the championship.

The disappointment of the session was the luckless demise of Jenson Button at the messy close of Q2 with the McLaren driver undone by an engine failure for Daniel Ricciardo. Slowing down under yellow flags is a black art and the murky reality was that Button simply lifted off too much as he passed by the stricken Toro Rosso - or at least more than the two Lotus cars which proceeded to progress to the top-ten shoot-out at his expense.

Chain reactions are nothing new in F1, and Button's exit also seemed to have the effect reenergising Hamilton as he picked up the McLaren to make a dash forward at the end of Q3. Prior to that, the 2008 World Champion had struggled to the extent of being fortunate to avoid the humiliation of being denied entry to Q2.

While the under-pressure Charles Pic and Vitaly Petrov did their hopes of keeping a place on the grid for 2013 a power of good by out-pacing respective team-mates Timo Glock and Heikki Kovalainen, Bruno Senna proved the exception to the rule that nothing quickens a F1 driver like the threat of a job cut by aborting his final lap. Had the Williams driver managed to hook up his lap then the 16th-placed Hamilton, marooned in the pits upon instruction, would have suffered an ignominious early exit.

He didn't and so Hamilton's title fight lives on for at least another day, as does Alonso's. But it would be the shock of the season if Sunday doesn't belong to a Red Bull.


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Monday, 8 October 2012

Grosjean a Nutcase - Webber

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An angry Mark Webber has branded Romain Grosjean a "first-lap nutcase" and intimated that the Frenchman should receive another race ban after his Japanese GP was wrecked by the Lotus driver.

Just three races on from receiving the first race suspension in Formula 1 for 18 years for causing a start-line pile-up at Spa, Grosjean was involved in his seventh first-lap incident of the season at Suzuka on Sunday when he punted the back of Webber's front-row starting Red Bull as the field navigated the first two corners.

The contact spun Webber onto the grass, and prompted an unscheduled visit to the pits at the end of the lap for repairs. After battling back to finish ninth at the chequered flag Webber expressed his considerable ire with Grosjean to Sky Sports F1's Natalie Pinkham.

"I haven't seen what happened at the start but the guys confirmed it was the first-lap nutcase again Grosjean," Webber said.

"The rest of us are trying to fight for some decent results each weekend but he's trying to get to the third corner as fast as he can at every race.

"It makes it frustrating because a few big guys obviously suffered from that today. Maybe he needs another holiday."

Asked by Natalie if he thought the FIA needed to intervene again, the Australian continued: "He needs to have a look at himself obviously. It was completely his fault. How many mistakes can you make, how many times can you make the same error with first lap incidents?

"It's quite embarrassing at this level for him."

Webber's team boss Christian Horner also delivered an immediate rebuke of Grosjean's driving, describing the Frenchman's actions as "crazy".

"We feel that we really missed out with Mark," Horner told Sky Sports F1. "A crazy move at turn two by Grosjean and that effectively ended Mark's race.

"I think the most concerning thing is when it is repeat incidents. If you make mistakes that's fine but the most important thing is to learn from them."

Horner also suggested that Grosjean's Lotus bosses would be far from impressed with his lack of care given it continues to cost the team crucial points.

"He's hosing away points for his team. They're fighting in the Constructors' Championship. I would be surprised if they were impressed by that," he said.

"Seven incidents this year is more than enough and Mark was the victim of the action today and it cost him for sure at least a podium."


Tuesday, 10 July 2012

Webber Signs New Red Bull Deal


Mark Webber has signed a new deal with Red Bull for the 2013 season.

The Australian held talks about a move to Ferrari but has decided to stay with the team he joined in 2007.

"It's great to be able to make this announcement off the back of the win in Silverstone," said 35-year-old Webber, who narrowly beat Fernando Alonso in Sunday's British Grand Prix.

"I'm looking forward to competing on the edge and pushing myself in every race again next season."

Webber is second in this year's drivers' championship, 13 points behind leader Fernando Alonso of Ferrari and 16 points ahead of team-mate and reigning champion Sebastian Vettel.

"I'm high on confidence at the moment and firing on all cylinders," said Webber, who lives in England.

"I know the team well and I'm very comfortable here. We have grown together over the years and it feels like absolutely the right thing to stay with Red Bull for another season.

"The team is constantly working hard to improve in all areas and we've shown that together we can win races."

Webber has finished third in the drivers' championship in the last two seasons but there has been an underlying concern from him that the team favour Vettel.

The German has won the drivers' title for the past two seasons and in 2010 Webber, who was a title contender, was ordered by team principal Christian Horner not to challenge Vettel for second place during the closing laps of the British Grand Prix.

Webber, though, has remained with Red Bull and, after two wins from nine races so far this season, has decided to continue with the team.

"Mark has driven very well in the first nine races of this season and his performance has been impressive," said Horner.

"Much of his Formula 1 success has been during his time with Red Bull Racing and together we have achieved 10 poles, nine wins and 31 podiums.

"As there was a strong desire from both sides to continue the partnership, it was a logical decision to extend our relationship and it is with great pleasure that we confirm Mark will drive for us in 2013."


Sunday, 8 July 2012

Webber Wins British Grand Prix

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Mark Webber claimed the ninth win of his career on Sunday when he swept to a dramatic and perfectly-judged victory in an incident-filled British Grand Prix.

In a race run in welcome, if rare, dry conditions, the 35-year-old Australian steered his Red Bull through 52 laps of complex tactical and strategic racing to finish three seconds ahead of Fernando Alonso of Ferrari.

It was Webber's second win this year, after triumphing at Monaco, and his second at Silverstone in three years.

Webber's Red Bull teammate and defending double world champion Sebastian Vettel came home third to ensure the champions had two men on the podium.

Webber's winning time was one hour, 25 minutes and 11.288 seconds in front of a capacity Silverstone crowd of 120,000 spectators who had braved torrential rain for most of the weekend.

Pole sitter Alonso's second place, having led until the closing stages, enabled him to stay on top of the drivers' title race with 129 points ahead of Webber on 116.

Felipe Massa finished fourth in the second Ferrari ahead of his former Ferrari team-mate Kimi Raikkonen and his Lotus team-mate Romain Grosjean.

Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher of Mercedes finished seventh ahead of home favourite Lewis Hamilton who produced some spectacular racing on his way to eighth for McLaren.

Bruno Senna finished ninth for Williams and Jenson Button was 10th in the second McLaren.

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Webber Wins Wire to Wire


finely-judged drive from Mark Webber has seen the Australian become the sixth different driver to win one of the opening six races of the current campaign with victory at the Monaco GP.

The Red Bull driver led from start to finish in a grand prix dominated by tyre management and Monaco's ultra-restrictive nature. Not even a late sprinkling of rain could spice up a race that, for vast soporific swathes, felt more a procession than flat-out charge. Even the fast-degrading Pirellis failed to enliven the drama, with each of the leading drivers adopting a policy of conservation that resulted in not a single overtaking move attempted, let alone completed, for a points-paying position once the first corner mayhem had been tidied up.

In was, in short, the sort of race that Monaco almost invariably produces: tightly-run but processed on a track too tight to permit any changes of position outside of the pit-stops. Six seconds covered the first six at the chequered flag, but they may as well have been separated by six minutes.

Not that any of those traditional quibbles should detract from Webber's performance, however. Around the ultimate driver's circuit, the 35-year-old was faultless, controlling the race from the front and thoroughly deserving the eighth F1 victory of his career.

Having held off Nico Rosberg with an atypically quick start off the line, Red Bull's calm reaction to Mercedes' attempt to undercut Webber by pitting Nico Rosberg ahead of predicted schedule proved decisive with the German failing to launch a convincing attempt for the lead of the race thereafter.

It might have been different had Sunday night's heavy rain shower arrived during the actual race, and it might be different still yet with a protest against the legality of the RB8 expected to be launched before the F1 circus makes its departure from the Principality, but the Red Bull team had double reason to celebrate with Vettel rescuing fourth place to finish behind new Championship leader Fernando Alonso.

Yet while both Ferrari and Red Bull could congratulate themselves on a job well done, McLaren suffered the ugly repeat of an all-too familiar story. Though Lewis Hamilton's pace looked insufficient to challenge either Webber or Rosberg, third place was his for the taking but for yet another slack pit-stop change costing him position to both Vettel and Alonso. Hamilton's disgruntlement stretched to a slow start and the absence of any warning that he was in a race for position against Vettel, while the frustration of Jenson Button, after an afternoon stuck behind Heikki Kovalainen, boiled over into an ill-judged move on the Caterham that predictably only resulted in the end of his race.

Hamilton later added debris falling from the pitwall to his list of complaints but, as one wag later put it, McLaren certainly could do with some heads being banged together.

There was little cheer either at Lotus, another team not short of pace but conspicuously short of points at the end of a weekend they had threatened to dominate at its start. Kimi Raikkonen, on the back foot after missing Practice One, wound up a lacklustre ninth, while Romain Grosjean failed to make it through the first corner after being propelled into Michael Schumacher's Mercedes. Kamui Kobayashi and Pastor Maldonado were the collateral as the field tried to find a way around the stranded Lotus and, once the debris was cleared away, that was it for on-track drama.


Wednesday, 2 May 2012

Webber Denies Ferrari Signing


Mark Webber has denied signing a pre-contract agreement with Ferrari - but, perhaps tellingly, refused to rule out joining the Italian outfit for next season.

Reports in Spain this week suggested that Webber - out of contract with Red Bull at the end of the season - had agreed to move to Ferrari on a short-term deal before making way for Sergio Perez in 2014. However, speaking to reporters in Mugello, Webber denied that was the case.

"There's a whole season ahead of us before we need to think about the future. One day the talk is about Jenson [Button joining Ferrari], then it's Sergio, now it's me. I haven't signed anything," the Australian told ESPNF1.

"My focus is on this team. We have had a good start to the season, we're only four races down and the road is very, very long before we start talking about the future."

Speculation linking Webber with Ferrari is neither new nor likely to disappear in the months to come. Felipe Massa is under huge pressure to retain his seat alongside Fernando Alonso and Webber would provide an experienced and steady hand at the tiler were he to replace the Brazilian. According to El Confidencial, Webber's 'great relationship' with Alonso has also prompted Ferrari to consider the 35-year-old as a potential replacement for Massa.



Friday, 2 March 2012

Red Bull Fly New Chassis


Red Bull are flying out a new chassis for the final two days in Barcelona armed with a series of high-profile and critical upgrades as the testing season goes into dramatic overdrive.

Sky Sports F1 understands that the World Champion's aggressive new package will include a new rear wing, a new front wing and a heavily-revised exhaust.

The revisions are so extensive that the team have had to bolt them onto a new chassis after round-the-clock work at their Milton Keynes HQ.

Ted Kravitz told Sky Sports News: "It's not only parts, it's a whole new car that's being flown out from the Red Bull factory in Milton Keynes.

"So for all these mechanics in this [Red Bull] garage that's the end of work with this particular chassis. This will be chassis number one and rather than fit all the new parts to chassis number two tonight, which would involve a lot more work for these guys, they've decided to fly out the new car.

"Now that's needed agreement from some of the other teams, but what it's going to mean is we're expecting to see a significantly different car when it rolls out at 9 o'clock. So this test is about to to get much more interesting."

Along with the arrival of a new chassis for Saturday morning, Team Principal Christian Horner and Chief Designer Adrian Newey, conspicuous by their absence at the Circuit de Catalunya on the opening two days of the third-and-final winter, are also flying out from England.

"It seems like they've pressed the button after Jerez," Ted added after learning of Red Bull's plans.

With McLaren also planning to bolt on their Melbourne specifications onto the MP4-27 on Saturday, it means that testing for the start of the new season has effectively been condensed down to just two days for both Red Bull and McLaren and explains why both teams have put their drivers - Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton for the latter, Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber for the former - on rotation over the weekend.

Ted added: "Ominously for everybody else, Red Bull are bringing more performance to this car which is already, we think over the long runs, the fastest here in testing here in Barcelona...

"It's an ominous sign for McLaren who are just adding piece by piece to their car here at Barcelona.

"I think what we can expect to see is maybe some of these improvements that come to the Red Bull, they'll start bringing much better lap times and that will be a shame as far as McLaren are concerned because they've been working very slowly on these upgrades that they've got for Barcelona.

"They'll bring a new front wing, a new rear wing and we'll really see then where everybody stands. Ferrari as well have been bringing more performance to their car - they tested a new front wing on their last run this afternoon. But they've already brought new exhausts.

"So for Ferrari to be bringing a new exhaust layout at this point with only two testing days to go, is a little bit late in the game. So I think when we get to Australia, we will see Red Bull possibly first and McLaren probably second.

"I think Lotus are looking like they're the third-fastest team at the moment, then Mercedes, and then potentially Ferrari only the fifth fastest as we go into Melbourne."


Friday, 24 February 2012

Aussie Grit Suffers Gear Trouble


Australian Mark Webber has finished sixth fastest after suffering gearbox problems early in his first day of the official F1 test session at Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona, Spain.

The Red Bull racer completed 97 laps after his world champion teammate Sebastian Vettel completed the previous two days.

Webber’s time was 2.2 seconds behind the fastest of the day set by Williams pilot Pastor Maldonado and was close to two seconds slower than Vettel’s time from the previous day.

The Aussie remained positive however, saying he would've liked a few more laps after completing less miles because of the transmission failure.

"We could have done a bit more, but everybody is in the same boat," he explained. "You always want to do 20 or 30 laps more each day but, in the end, the guys have worked incredibly hard and done a good job. We need to focus on tomorrow now.

"In Jerez I felt comfortable in the car. Today, we didn't have the smoothest of days but there are still loads of positives to look at. Obviously we are a very ambitious team, and we want to keep improving."

Seven-time world champ Michael Schumacher was second fastest on the day with Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi and McLaren’s Jenson Button completing the top four.

Jean-Eric Vergne was around eight-tenths short of Aussie teammate Daniel Ricciardo's time from the previous day, but the Toro Rosso driver was one place higher than Webber and his best was around three-tenths quicker than the Red Bull.

Ferrari’s Felipe Massa set an identical time to Webber, in 84 laps. But the Brazilian was predominantly on the hard Pirelli tyre.

Teams will one more test at Barcelona on Friday local time before another week of testing on March 1-4


Sunday, 12 February 2012

Webber Needs Aussie Grit in 2012


The season may not have started but already Mark Webber is already facing the same old questions over his future at Red Bull which increasingly dominated the second half of 2011.

Webber, who had consistently refused to commit to when he would retire, told the Sunday Age that he was not contemplating quitting at the end of the 2012 season and said he was refreshed and ready for the coming campaign.

"Not at all, you know, I've been through enough on and off the track to know that nothing is forever," he told the paper. "I was supposed to be replaced by Kimi [Raikkonen] four years ago."

He admitted that things had not gone according to plan last year. "Yeah it was a tough start to the year I think, that makes it difficult to roll out of that mid-season and come to [the end] ... but, again, it's those old lessons of operating at this level, you know you just have no choice, you've just got to get back on the horse, mate, and get on with it."

But he said he felt really refreshed after a winter break. "This was a real first nice winter, saying, like, let's pull it all together and come back refreshed. You just feel refreshed, that's the most important thing.

"Every sportsman or woman when you have a 10-, 12-year career there is absolute moments where you do the travel we do, this is an international sport, your energy levels get tested."

The emergence of Jean-Eric Vergne and Daniel Ricciardo - both tipped as possible replacements for him - has only served to fuel the reports that Red Bull may replace him

Asked whether Ricciardo driving for Toro Rosso signalled the start of more Australians coming into the sport, Webber said while it would generate more interest that did not necessarily mean more drivers.

"I think what could and will happen is that when you have Australians winning and if Daniel goes on to have a good career, which I have no doubt that he will, it stimulates more people to have a crack at it but it won't be made any easier in many ways. I still think you'll have to be trying very hard."




Monday, 6 February 2012

Redbull Racing RB8 2012



Red Bull have unveiled their new car with which Sebastian Vettel will bid to become just the third driver in history to win three consecutive Drivers' world titles in 2012 - the RB8.

In an online 'reveal' on the team's official website of the most eagerly anticipated new car of the winter, the latest creation from renowned designer Adrian Newey follows the 2012 trend of incorporating the already infamous 'boxer's nose' into the design to comply with the new lower nose-height regulations.

However, in characteristic Newey fashion, the slope on the RB8's nose appears on first inspection slightly different and more graceful to many of the other cars which have featured the same stepped look so far.

Intriguingly, it means that the one 'pretty car' unveiled so far, McLaren's MP4-27, is very much unique in not featuring the 'stepped' concept.

Given last year's RB7 won 12 races and claimed pole position at every grand prix bar one, and the team have been winning consistently since F1's regulations were overhauled in 2009, the new challenger unsurprisingly otherwise appears more familiar to its predecessor - although, as with any Newey creation, the devil is usually in the detail.

Newey himself says the car is evolutionary, although admits the effective ban on blown diffusers for 2012 has led to a "big re-think" at the car's rear given the RB7 was built around the concept of lowly-exiting exhausts. He concedes the change could hurt them more than most.

"It's the fourth evolution of the RB5 this year, so obviously the pressure is to try and stay there if we possibly can," he said.

"It's a difficult task, we have lost the exhaust technology with the restriction exhaust outlet position that we were able to develop and perhaps be ahead of the pack on in the last couple of years, that led to a big re think over the winter.

"Whether that will affect us more than other people is difficult to know of course. We designed the RB7, last year's car, around that exhaust position and were probably the only people to do so, so it may be that we've lost more than other people through that. Only time will tell, it will be good to get out to do some testing and to see where we get to."

RBR's chief technical officer conceded the drooping nose wasn't particularly aesthetically pleasing, but was a necessity given the regulation change in this area.

"We've kept more or less the same chassis shape, but had to drop the nose just in front of the front bulkhead, which, in common with many other teams, has led us to I think I'd probably say a slightly ugly looking nose," he said.

"We've tried to style it as best we can, but it's not a feature you would choose to put in were it not for the regulation."

Having won both world titles in each of the past two seasons, team principal Christian Horner says the objectives for 2012 are therefore obvious but feels there is still room for improvement - which he suspects they will need to deliver anyway in anticipation of renewed competition from their rivals.

"The team's goals are quite simple. It's to try and defend both titles in the manner (in which) we achieved them," he said.

"Of course, when you've achieved what we have, particularly in 2011, we've set a very high standard for ourselves. But, we're always looking to improve, we're always looking, in all areas, to try and do better. We can't control what our opponents do, we're up against some formidable opponents, but we can only really focus on ourselves and only when we get to Melbourne will we truly know where we sit against our rivals."

World champion Vettel, meanwhile, enters the new season looking to join Juan-Manuel Fangio and, his great friend and countryman, Michael Schumacher in winning three or more F1 championships on the spin.

But although he put together one of the most dominant seasons in history last year, Vettel is under no illusions about the likelihood of repeating the same level of supremacy again.

Asked for what his 2012 target is, he replied: "Well to do it again! Obviously we had a great year and I think we will always look back to 2011 and think how special it was.

"But to be honest you don't start a season having expectations to have the same or similar season again. We know how special it was and we really enjoyed that, but we know how hard it is to be that consistent, to be nearly every race on the podium.

"The target is obviously to try to do it again and try to get everything out of ourselves. So we will see how we get on with the new car, RB8."

Team-mate Mark Webber stays on at Red Bull for a sixth straight season bidding to recapture the form that took him so close to the 2010 championship after winning just one race last time round.

The 35-year-old Australian acknowledges the front of the grid is more competitive than ever at the moment, but feels motivated to hit the ground running from the off this time.

"I think off the back of last year many sportsmen or women when you don't get the most out of a situation you always want to come back and improve and do a better job," Webber said.

"The bar has been lifted very, very high in the last few seasons and it's the challenge I'm looking forward to. I've had a really good winter and prepared for the season as best I can so I'm looking forward to the new season, I just cannot wait to get racing. We can talk a lot about it but we need to get on the track."





Saturday, 27 August 2011

Webber Commits to Red Bull


Mark Webber has described it as a "no-brainer" in opting to commit his Formula One future to Red Bull Racing for the 2012 season.

After months of speculation the Australian, who today celebrates his 35th birthday, has agreed a one-year extension with the Milton Keynes-based team.

"I want to continue racing at the top in Formula One so it's a no-brainer to remain at Red Bull Racing for another year," said Webber.

Webber, who has been with Red Bull since 2007, added: "My motivation to achieve the best results possible for both myself and the team is still very high.

"Over the past five years we have worked hard and proved we can design and build a competitive and championship-winning car.

"I'm looking forward to putting the car and myself on the limit again each and every race weekend in 2012."

Team principal Christian Horner always said he would sit down and discuss a potential new deal with Webber at the end of the summer, and that has proven to be the case.

Last season proved to be a contentious one for Webber who endured fall-outs with team-mate Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull, believing himself to be a No 2 driver on occasion.

Webber ultimately lost out on the title to Vettel in the final race in Abu Dhabi, and this season has been completely overshadowed by the 24 year-old.

Ahead of Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix, Webber trails Vettel by 85 points and has yet to win a race compared to the German's six wins.

Despite that, Horner said: "When we sat down and started talking about 2012 it was immediately obvious that Mark and the team wanted to continue our successful relationship.

"This meant agreeing an extension for 2012 was very straightforward.

"Mark knows the team, having been with us since 2007, and his motivation, fitness and commitment is as high as it has ever been.

"The pairing of Mark and Sebastian is a very strong one, they push each other hard and we are extremely happy it will remain unchanged for a fourth season."