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Vettel gets a reprimand after celebratory donuts

Sebastian Vettel has been given a reprimand by the FIA after his tyre smoking donut display after the Indian GP.

Officially it was for failing to proceed straight to parc ferme after the chequered flag ‘without unnecessary delay.’ In addition Red Bull Racing was fined €25,000 for failing to sufficiently ensure by radio that he went to parc ferme.

The punishment might have been worse but the stewards accepted that there were ‘special circumstances.’ Meanwhile Vettel told the FIA that he knew exactly what he was doing and thus it was no surprise when he was called up.

“I didn’t think about the donuts before the race today – it just happened,” said Seb. “My engineer directed for the usual procedure, but I said ‘not this time!’”

While fans may not welcome the decision the bottom line is that the FIA had to set a precedent by giving some sort of punishment, as the rules are clear to all drivers.

Given the coverage that his display will receive the 25K is probably a small price to pay…

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Christian Horner: “It doesn’t get any better than that…”

Christian Horner has made it clear what a fourth set of double World Championships means to Sebastian Vettel and the Red Bull team – and admits that he thought the achievement would be out of reach.

“Sebastian is very emotional and I’m sure every member of the team is emotional,” said Horner. “The effort that’s gone into this campaign has been huge, because not only is it this year, we’ve also got to develop and build a car for next year as well.

“You win a championship the first time the pressure is there to defend it. We defended it, and then we retained it, and having achieved a triple you think, OK, it doesn’t get better than that, and the likelihood of doing a quadruple double just seemed hugely statistically unlikely, if nothing else. But the passion, the determination, the dedication within the whole team, and of course the way that Sebastian has delivered this year, has been absolutely phenomenal.”

Horner confirmed that today there were concerns over the alternator in Vettel’s car following the earlier failure on Mark Webber’s.

“After the failure on Mark’s car, which was just sudden, there’s no reason to expect that it can’t happen on the other car. Immediately we tried to reduce the amount of draw on the alternator as much as possible, which included even turning off the KERS system in the end. There was then a problem with the sensor on the alternator, which gave us even more heart in mouth moments. And in the mean time Sebastian’s lighting up the timing screen with purple sectors!

“There were some heart stopping moments in there, but thankfully the car got to the end, and Sebastian did what he needed to. It was just tremendously cruel luck not to have Mark up there as well.”

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Sebastian Vettel: “The soft tyre isn’t lasting very long…”

Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber finished Friday in India on top of the times, but like everyone else the Red Bull drivers struggled to keep the soft option tyre alive for more than a few laps in FP2.

Drivers suffered blistering on a track that inevitably was very green at the start of the day, and Vettel says that things might be better on Saturday.

“Obviously the soft tyre isn’t lasting very long,” said Vettel. “It’s Friday, the track is rubbering in, and it’s improving usually for Saturday. Plus we didn’t use this compound for a long time.

“On Sunday it could be a short stint on the option tyres, but as I said usually things improve and you learn to deal with the tyre and fine tune the set-up. Nevertheless I don’t think you will do a lot of laps on Sunday.”

Asked about the prospects for a one-stop race Webber said: “Obviously FP2 is generally different to the race. It can then open a window on the other compound in terms of going pretty long, so the one-stop can come into play. Who knows until the race day, really. We have to go with the pack, the pace, which hopefully is us, and then we can control the race from there.”

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Christian Horner: “The way he’s driving at the moment is quite supreme…”

Christian Horner hopes that Red Bull can continue its winning momentum to the end of the season – and he would like to see Mark Webber win a race before he walks away from F1.

Sebastian Vettel has built-up a remarkable streak of five consecutive wins since Spa.

“Sebastian’s won every race since the summer break, which is an incredible achievement,” said Horner. “There are still four races to go, our target is to try and carry this momentum into these last four races. I don’t think any of us would have imagined that he would have had the run of success that he’s had. The way he’s driving at the moment is quite supreme. We’ll see. India’s a different challenge, as is Abu Dhabi. Mark got pretty close today, so it will be great to see Mark win a race before the end of the year as well.”

Meanwhile Horner said that the Suzuka victory showed just how good Vettel is.

“He picked up a bit of damage from the incident with Hamilton that took about 20 points of downforce off the car. So he had a damaged car, and he just managed to adapt. He played the thinking game today, he watched, he waited, in that first stint, he preserved the tyres. He knew he wasn’t going to get priority at that first stop, and we discussed it before the race, that the lead car would get priority.

“He was very, very smart in the way he handled the race. He created the options for him by having that range in the first stint, and then by doing the same in the second stint, by making those tyres go longer and further than any of the other drivers. And of course when he had the one opportunity that he needed to nail Grosjean, he did it immediately.”

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Christian Horner: “It never gets boring, winning…”

Christian Horner says a fourth pair of titles for Sebastian Vettel and Red Bull would be a major achievement – and adds that winning doesn’t get boring.

Horner insists that the 2013 title battle isn’t over yet, but has pondered what a fourth success would represent.

“We haven’t allowed our thoughts to drift like that to be honest with you, we’ve just stayed in the moment, stayed focussed,” said Horner. “If we were to achieve it, of course it would be massive. To win the first one was special, to defend it was remarkable, to do a triple, we didn’t think we could surpass that. So if we do manage to defend both titles it’s something that the whole team will be absolutely blown away by.

“It never gets boring, winning. To win races takes so much effort from all the departments behind the scenes, all the guys and girls back in Milton Keynes are working flat out at the moment. We had Adrian [Newey] in the operations room supporting the team through all of the sessions this weekend, so he was a virtual attendance at the Grand Prix, as if he was on the pit wall, but he wasn’t sitting there. So it’s down to that kind of team work and the effort that goes in behind the scenes that we’re able to achieve the kind of results that we’ve managed to achieve over the last 4-5 years.”

Meanwhile Horner says that Vettel could have done a two-stop in Korea even without the safety car making things easier.

“Yes ultimately, but it would have been right on the edge. The tyres that came off Sebastian’s car and had done very long stints in the first and second stints compared to other cars were pretty much through their wear life. He should have just been OK to get to the end of the race. It was certainly marginal.”

Regarding criticism of Pirelli he said: “I think that at the end of the day we’ve been driving around with the same issues that we had 12 months ago. Here the tyres were too marginal, last week they were fine. For sure it’s a challenge meeting the different criteria of the different tracks that we go to. I think this weekend arguably while having produced a great race they were a bit too much on the limit.”

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Christian Horner: “If he had any fillings he won’t have any more…”

Christian Horner says that his Red Bull team did an “incredible job” to deal with tyre and gearbox issues during what looked from the outside like a straightforward win for Sebastian Vettel in Monza.

Vettel made his life harder in the first stint by flat spotting a front tyre at Turn One, and later there were concerns about the gearbox. It says a lot that the German only set the 12th fastest lap as he nursed the car home – and for once he didn’t try to add to his tally in the record books.

“It was a fantastic weekend for us really,” said Horner. “We had a few issues to manage during the race, but an incredible team performance. We’ve been strong all weekend, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. We had a few issues that did need managing during the race – Sebastian locking up into the first turn created a big flat spot, which put a massive vibration into the car that he was certainly concerned about, and we were monitoring quite closely. If he had any fillings he won’t have any more!

“Then we managed to get into the one-stop window. A fantastic double stop by the guys, 2.6s and 2.7s. It was enough to get Mark ahead of Massa, get Sebastian back out into the lead on a round set of tyres, and control the race thereafter.”

Both Red Bull had their fifth, sixth and seventh gear ratios changed before the race – for identical replacements – and the team became further concerned when Webber had another issue in the race, which led to both drivers being asked to short shift to protect their equipment.

“The only issue we had after that was loss of gearbox pressure in Mark’s car in the closing laps, which we just needed to take some precautions with to get to the finish.

“We had a bit of damage to a couple of dog rings on both cars. Under parc ferme after applying to the FIA due to it being damaged they were allowed to be replaced. Of course when that’s hanging over you, and we weren’t sure why that happened, we’ve not seen that before, and it’s not something that happened on the Caterham gearbox, which is obviously something that we supply. We were concerned as to why that was there.

“When you’re sitting there in the race not quite knowing what’s caused that issue and then you start to lose gearbox pressure, obviously it was a bit of a concern.

“If it was happening to one, the chances were [it would again]– because yesterday it happened to both. So as a precaution we asked Sebastian to do the same thing.”

Meanwhile Horner was unconcerned about the booing of Vettel on the podium.

“I think anybody racing a Ferrari, and beating a Ferrari, at Monza, in Italy, is never going to be cheered! It was inevitable that there wasn’t going to be a big reaction for Sebastian beating Fernando Alonso in front of the tifosi who have come to cheer their car and team around. I don’t think it surprised any of us the reaction that there was. If anything it fuels the motivation of Sebastian just to go out there and continue to improve.”

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Fernando Alonso: “We don’t have enough races…”

Fernando Alonso kept himself in the frame for the World Championship by finishing second in Monza, and while he lost another seven points to race winner Sebastian Vettel, he has at least now pulled clear of Lewis Hamilton and Kimi Raikkonen.

“I think the weekend we took the maximum from the car,” said Alonso. “Practice was OK, and we learnt some good information Friday. Saturday it was very good, both cars in the top five. I think the last time was Malaysia this year, so a very, very long time, so we were very, very happy.

“Today, being in the podium again, it’s a fantastic feeling here in Monza. The fourth year that I drove for Ferrari, four times that I was in the podium, and every year is something amazing, something unique again, to be there in that moment.

“And we did the maximum and nearly a perfect weekend. We didn’t close the gap in the championship, which is obviously the goal every weekend but when Sebastian and Red Bull dominate Friday, Saturday and Sunday and they win the race we have to congratulate them. They were the best all through the weekend, and we need to do hopefully a better job next time, but from what we had this weekend I think we did the maximum. So we are extremely happy.”

Nevertheless, Alonso accepts that his title hopes are getting slimmer.

“Well, I think we need to be realistic about the championship now there’s a very big gap. We don’t have enough races and probably we don’t have the speed right now to win some consecutive races and hope to reduce the gap just by pace. We need to be lucky and we need to have some DNFs from Sebastian or something to win the championship. With the races left and the points disadvantage, it’s hard, but in a way, it was exactly the same last year.

“We could only lose the championship, with 41 points advantage in front of Sebastian after the Monza race. It was difficult for him to catch up and so it was maybe up to us. We didn’t complete the job and we had a DNF in Suzuka, and some other problems. There’s still a long way to go; we will try until the last race to be as good as we can and score as many points as possible, and then in Brazil we will see how many points we have compared to him.”

Alonso says he’s open-minded about the car’s potential form in the next race in Singapore.

“Obviously we were expecting a lot from Monza, and it was a very good Monza. It’s true that we didn’t win the race, because Red Bull and Sebastian did an even better job and they were very, very good but in our level of competitiveness that we had this year, Monza is one of the best weekends, as we expected before.

“We came from Silverstone, from Nurburgring, from Hungary where we had Red Bull in front of us, Lotus in front of us, Mercedes in front of us and some other cars sometimes, so here in Monza we were able to beat all those cars and fight for the wins, so if we can repeat this good performance in Singapore, we hope so but this will be the real test for us. We made some changes in the car, they seemed to be positive in Spa, seem to be good and positive in Monza, but when we reach the maximum level of downforce in Singapore, like we had in Hungary, we need to check.

“If we still have Mercedes in front, Lotus in front and some other teams, we will be more or less the same as in Hungary and we don’t want to be. I think we prepare the car and we prepare everything to make a step forward and in Singapore hopefully we can see it.”

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Analysis: Is Alonso still in the frame at RBR?

The consensus in the paddock at Spa was that Daniel Ricciardo had already got the nod for the second Red Bull seat, and Mark Webber added fuel to the fire by telling Australian TV that it was a done deal.

However Christian Horner continues to insist that the team has yet to decide who will get the drive.

Ricciardo is signed to Red Bull Racing anyway, and in effect the team could call on his services at any time up to the start of next season. Even if the Aussie doesn’t get the RBR job he will be in a Toro Rosso with an identical powertrain/gearbox package to the RB10, and thus potentially in a competitive seat.

There appears to be no logical reason why Red Bull would not have announced Ricciardo if he had already been guaranteed the drive. Indeed from a PR standpoint an early announcement would be a show of faith in the junior programme at a time when other options were available.

The bottom line is that Horner wouldn’t be doing his job if he didn’t continue to explore other interesting options, given that Ricciardo isn’t going anywhere. Two World Champions are currently without a 2014 contract – Kimi Raikkonen and Jenson Button – while sources continue to suggest that Fernando Alonso is still not 100% committed to Ferrari.

When this writer asked Bernie Ecclestone if he thought that Felipe Massa would be staying at Maranello, he replied: “They should be more worried about hanging on to Alonso…”

The value of having two experienced, proven winners on board for what will be a complicated season for all the teams is obvious, and at the same time if RBR takes a second top driver it will in turn damage a rival.

“There’s plenty of speculation about, but nothing has been signed yet,” said Horner at Spa. “So the situation is still as I said before the race, we’ve got time to contemplate who we’re going to put in the other seat, and there will be no announcement certainly before Monza.

“Mark obviously isn’t privy to all of the discussions with drivers. When there’s something to announce, we’ll certainly announce it. It will probably go on beyond Monza.”

Elaborating on Ricciardo’s situation, he said: “Both Toro Rosso drivers are on Red Bull Racing contracts. They’re on loan to Toro Rosso, so at any point they are available for us to call upon. So we don’t have to worry about those two, because they’re products of the Red Bull junior team, and the reason we’re taking the time is to look at what other options are about.

“Obviously they are very big shoes to fill next year. We want to field the strongest possible team that we can, so therefore it’s absolutely prudent to look at all the options that are available. It’s actually surprised us the options that are available that perhaps we didn’t think were.”

It’s widely assumed that it would be impossible for Sebastian Vettel to operate alongside a proven superstar, but Horner says that’s not an issue.

“To be honest with you Sebastian has no input or veto or requirement for any blessing over that second seat. He wants obviously to have a competitive team mate, because he wants to be pushed, as Mark has pushed him. He hasn’t voiced any opinions, strongly or otherwise, in any way. He sees it very much as a team position, and that’s very much the way it is.”

While many observers struggle to understand why Alonso might want to leave Ferrari, it may well be that he simply has fears about the competitiveness of the 2014 powertrain package.

It remains unclear in what circumstances Alonso might be able to walk away from what appears to be a solid Ferrari contract, unless it contains a generous performance clause that works in his favour – for example something that relates to driver and team having failed to win a World Championship over their four years together.

Of course as ever there are some potentially some games in the background, and it’s easy to suggest that Alonso is simply finding ways to motivate his current team, while Horner is destabilising the likes of Ferrari and Lotus by keeping the driver debate open.

However, it’s worth remembering that it’s dangerous to second guess what Alonso might do. Not many people expected him to leave his home at Renault for McLaren, or indeed walk away from an ultra competitive McLaren at the end of 2007 – even allowing for the rather awkward way that season unfolded, and the breakdown of his relationship with the team management.

As someone close to Fernando said at Spa, “At McLaren he finished a point behind the champion, and he still quit…”

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Ricciardo gets his chance with Red Bull test

Not surprisingly Red Bull has changed its plans for the Silverstone Young Driver test, and the team will now be giving both race drivers and Daniel Ricciardo some miles in the RB9.

Ricciardo’s inclusion is clear evidence that the Aussie is on the cusp of landing a 2014 race seat, with Kimi Raikkonen as his obvious rival for the job.

Red Bull’s ambitious run plan sees it split each day in half as it tries to squeeze in mileage for five different drivers. The schedule is as follows:

Day 1: António Félix da Costa/Daniel Ricciardo

Day 2: António Félix da Costa/Mark Webber

Day 3: Carlos Sainz Jr/Sebastian Vettel

The team points out that “Antonio’s test with Infiniti Red Bull Racing fulfils the team’s commitment to grant the mid-season leader of the World Series by Renault a full day’s test in the RB9.”

Meanwhile Toro Rosso will be equally busy at it too runs five different drivers over the three days:

Day 1: Johnny Cecotto Jr/Johnny Cecotto Jr

Day 2: Carlos Sainz Jr/Daniel Ricciardo

Day 3: Jean-Eric Vergne/Daniil Kvyat

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Christian Horner: “We were certainly in the right window here”

Christian Horner stressed after the Canadian GP that the tyres had allowed drivers to go flat out – and made it clear that in such circumstances Red Bull is hard to beat.

Sebastian Vettel dominated the race, although he had a couple of mishaps along the way.

“It was a really strong race for us today,” said Horner. “And what was good about the race as well was that everybody seemed to be pushing flat out from start to finish, unlike in Monaco a couple of weeks ago. Sebastian was mighty today. He got his head down and built up a comfortable lead.

“Going into the race we thought it might be a one-stop, but then fairly evidently because of the temperature rise it became more obvious that it was going to be a two-stop, and really he never looked threatened. He managed to build up a 15s margin by pretty much half way through the race, which is the time it takes to do a pit stop and drive through the pitlane, and from that point onwards it was about managing the gap and getting on with it.

“He had a couple of wake-up calls, one where he touched the barrier in the middle sector, and then a little off at Turn One, but I think we’ll forgive him those today.”

Regarding how the ability to use the full performance of the car helped Red Bull he said: “I think it’s been a strong performance here like it was in Bahrain, like it was in Malaysia. We see with these tyres that once you’re in the window with them, you can extract a lot of lap time. We were certainly in the right window here.”

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