Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta McLaren. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta McLaren. Mostrar todas las entradas

martes, 11 de septiembre de 2012

Fórmula 1.- Hamilton sigue sin renovar su contrato con McLaren ... - ecodiario

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El piloto británico Lewis Hamilton sigue pensando si renovar su contrato con su actual equipo, McLaren, que expira a final de temporada, alegando principalmente estar centrado en la presente campaña, en la que está segundo clasificado, por detrás de Fernando Alonso, mientras que desde el propio equipo han reconocido que quieren seguir contando con el campeón del mundo de 2008.

MADRID, 10 (EUROPA PRESS)

Hamilton tiene sobre la mesa la oferta de renovación por parte de su escudería, sin embargo todavía no se ha decidido a prolongar su contrato con McLaren, que a día de hoy, concluye con el fin de la presente temporada.

"No estoy pensando en el próximo año, quiero centrarme en este. Estoy intentando llevar este equipo a lo más alto. Quiere ayudarles a condeuir el campeonato de Constructores y ellos a mí el de pilotos. Es un equipo increíble y tengo una gran relación con ellos por lo que estoy con buenas sensaciones de futuro", explicó el piloto.

Por su parte, el director del equipo, Martin Whitmarsh, reconoció que no se plantea la opción de un futuro sin Hamilton. "No he pensado en un 'plan B'. Queremos que se quede, pero solo si él quiere. Supongo que tendremos alguna conversación antes de Singapur. Predecir cuando los dos nos pondremos de acuerdo es difícil. Es un gran equipo para que Lewis se quede. Somos ganadores, como él, y trabajamos muy bien en conjunto", indicó.

Actualmente, el británico está en la segunda plaza del Mundial, solo por detrás de Fernando Alonso, que le aventaja en 37 puntos. La misma plaza ocupa la escudería inglesa, que está a 29 puntos del primer equipo, Red Bull, a falta de siete pruebas para que concluya la temporada.

Hamilton ha estado ligado al equipo de McLaren desde sus inicios al volante de un coche. Desde que empezó a destacar bajo los mando de un 'kart' cuando era solo un niño recibió el apoyo de la marca británica, por lo que sería difícil para ambos pensar en un futuro separados.

jueves, 23 de agosto de 2012

Hamilton 'wants McLaren contract'

McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh says Lewis Hamilton has told him he wants to sign a new contract with the team.

Hamilton, 27, has a deal that runs out at the end of this season and there has been speculation that he could seek a fresh challenge elsewhere.

But Whitmarsh, who has known Hamilton since the British driver was 11, insisted talks have progressed well.

"If Lewis wants to stay in the team, which he has told me he does, then he should do," he said.

A drive is expected to become available at Ferrari at the end of the season, with speculation also surrounding Michael Schumacher's future at Mercedes.

Made his Formula 1 debut for the team at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix Won his first F1 Grand Prix later that year in Canada Secured victory in his home Grand Prix at Silverstone on 6 July 2008. Became the youngest world champion in F1 history at the age of 23 in 2008, taking the title by a single point on the last lap of the last race in Brazil In total, Hamilton has 18 race wins and has been on the podium 46 times Hamilton, who claimed the driver's championship in 2008 and won the Hungarian Grand Prix last month, is fourth in the driver's standings and will be desperate to improve on last year's fifth place.

The 2011 campaign was doubly disappointing for Hamilton because, for the first time in his Formula 1 career, he was beaten by a team-mate. Jenson Button finished second in the championship behind Sebastian Vettel.

With nine races remaining this season, Hamilton is 47 points behind Fernando Alonso of Ferrari.

Hamilton met Red Bull's team boss Christian Horner at the Canadian Grand Prix in June, fuelling rumours that he was seeking a future away from McLaren.

But Whitmarsh, who has insisted for months that Hamilton should stay, reiterated his stance on Wednesday.

"Ultimately [the contract situation] is relatively straightforward," he said.

"Lewis and I have spoken two or three times at length. I think we are closer than we have ever been... our conversations have been about how we are going to beat the other teams, and how we are going to try and win races."


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viernes, 3 de agosto de 2012

Andrew Benson's blog: Just what McLaren needed

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer It was exactly the race Lewis Hamilton and McLaren needed heading into Formula 1's summer break - a controlled victory, impressively taken under intense pressure from the two Lotus cars, and a season back on track.

In the end, the Hungarian Grand Prix was much closer than even Hamilton's closest rivals expected it to be.

When he qualified nearly half a second clear of the field on pole position, Lotus did not really expect to be able to beat him in the race. But they came oh so close.

It was Romain Grosjean, second on the grid, who applied the pressure for the first 40 laps of the race, but somehow one always suspected that his team-mate Kimi Raikkonen would come into the frame sooner or later.

The Finn - who, it has to be said, has had a few lacklustre races in his comeback season - has been back on form since the British Grand Prix three weeks ago, and in Hungary he was the faster Lotus driver throughout the weekend.

Raikkonen should have qualified on the front row, but he underachieved in final qualifying, admitting he simply did not get his final lap together. Not for the first time either.

That relatively poor lap in the top 10 shoot-out - slower than he had gone in second qualifying - might have been the difference been victory and second place.

A further hindrance came as a result of an under-charged Kers power-boost system at the start of the race.

That left Raikkonen with less Kers on the first lap, which was almost certainly why he lost a place to Fernando Alonso, behind whose uncompetitive Ferrari the Finn then had to spend the first 17 laps.

The delay behind Alonso meant Raikkonen was 15 seconds adrift of Hamilton at that stage, rather than the 12 he would have been had he stayed ahead of the Ferrari at the start. Which in turn would have meant he started the final stint on Hamilton's tail, rather than four seconds behind.

It was, nevertheless, an extremely impressive drive by Raikkonen, especially in his outstanding second stint.

After rejoining following his first pit stop, he initially looked after his tyres, knowing he would then be able to unleash some pace at the end of the stint to make up ground and secure the podium position his car deserved.

It was a superbly controlled series of laps, and his pace at the end of it leapfrogged him past the three cars he had started the stint behind - Grosjean, Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and McLaren's Jenson Button. Raikkonen consolidated second place with a robust but fair 'lean' on Grosjean at the exit of the first corner as he rejoined the race.

That long second stint also ensured Raikkonen had tyres that were five laps younger than Hamilton's for the final stint, and he quickly closed on the McLaren.

Hamilton, though, was not to be denied and he drove with a maturity that has been in evidence for the vast majority of this season to secure his second victory of 2012.

There should, though, have been more - as Hamilton himself knows only too well.

"We managed to do it," he said to his team over the radio at the end of the race. "I'm so grateful for all the effort you've put in. Let's try and keep this up, all right?"

Was that a statement of the obvious that they need to keep winning and developing the car to catch Alonso? Or a veiled reference to the various operational errors McLaren have made which have cost Hamilton in the region of 40 points this season?

A puncture in Germany last weekend lost him a few more, and Hamilton's collision with Williams's Pastor Maldonado in the closing laps of the European Grand Prix last month was also costly.

Track temperature: 45C Air temperature: 31C Ave wind speed: 2.3 metres per second Humidity: 39% Fastest lap: Sebastian Vettel (lap 68): 1 min 24.136 secs Fastest Speeds: Sector 1: Lewis Hamilton 278kph (172.74mph) Sector 2 : Fernando Alonso 235kph (146.02mph) Sector 3 : Bruno Senna 254kph (157.83mph) Speed Trap: N Hulkenberg 307kph (190.76mph) There are those in F1 - including former drivers - who believe Hamilton should have been a touch more circumspect against the notoriously erratic Maldonado in Valencia.

Be that as it may, it is the only mistake one can lay at Hamilton's door in a season in which he has been driving impeccably - of his rivals, only Alonso can claim to be performing at a consistently higher level.

Yet, largely through no fault of his own, Hamilton is 47 points behind Alonso. That is a margin that will not be easy to make up even with a faster car, with the Spaniard driving as well as he is.

For Alonso, Hungary was a race of damage limitation - and despite finishing only fifth he managed it to the extent that his lead over second-placed Mark Webber of Red Bull is now six points bigger than it was on Sunday morning.

Alonso did lose some ground to Hamilton, Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel, but he will with good reason leave Hungary and head in to F1's summer break well satisfied with what he has achieved so far in 2012.

Ahead of the Hungarian race, on the back of two wins and a second place for Alonso, rival teams have been growing a little tired of the constant insistence by Alonso and Ferrari that they did not have an especially fast car.

But Hungary proved Alonso's point - in a straightforward dry qualifying session and race, they are a long way from setting the pace. Ferrari are well aware that even Alonso driving this well needs more help if he is to hold on to his lead.

That slight impatience with Ferrari was one of the more minor examples of what was a tense weekend in Budapest.

Far more serious has been the growing impatience of the other top teams with Red Bull's constant run-ins with F1's legislators.

Once you might see as an accident, twice perhaps unfortunate, but the latest row to brew up over the weekend was the fourth example of Red Bull pushing the technical rules to the limit this year.

Rivals are unhappy with both Red Bull's behaviour and the way in which the FIA are policing the rules.

The revelation in Hungary that Red Bull were asked last month to remove a device that theoretically allowed them to illegally adjust their front suspension by hand - which the team insist they never did - follows hot on the heels of the row over engine mapping in Germany a week ago.

That prompted a rule change ahead of the Hungarian race. Red Bull insisted it would have no significant effect on them, but their pace was always going to be watched closely.

They were slower in qualifying than they might have been expected to be at a track which should suit their car, but the way the race panned out it was hard to make a definitive judgement on their pace. However, their best laps and sector times suggested the Red Bull was indeed the fastest car on the track in the race. 

To prove it definitively, they will have to wait, for F1 now embarks on its mid-season break, when all teams have to down tools for two weeks, before getting back hard on it for the remainder of the month-long gap before the next race.

It is a break that many in F1 feel they need after a demanding first 11 races, and the remaining nine promise to be even more intense.

When F1 reconvenes at Spa in Belgium at the very end of August, almost everyone involved has a point to prove.

Despite Alonso's handsome lead, this championship remains very much alive.


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viernes, 27 de julio de 2012

McLaren expect long Hamilton deal

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren are confident they can secure a long-term deal with Lewis Hamilton when they come to negotiate a new contract this summer.

Hamilton, whose contract runs out this year, has had a frustrating season and has indicated his loyalty to a team who brought him into F1 only goes so far.

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“ There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind”

Martin Whitmarsh McLaren boss The contractual situation of other top drivers means he might push for a one-year deal to keep his options open.

But team boss Martin Whitmarsh is "expecting" to seal a longer contract.

McLaren typically prefer driver contracts that last for three years, with the first two years fixed and the third under option - as is the case with the contract Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button signed in 2011. Hamilton's current contract was for five years.

McLaren started this year with the fastest car but a series of operational problems have blunted Hamilton's championship challenge, and the team have struggled for pace in the last two races.

The 2008 world champion heads into this weekend's German Grand Prix - with the Hungarian race following a week later - in fourth place in the championship, 37 points off the leader, Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.

His options for the future reduced dramatically last week when Mark Webber signed a new deal with Red Bull for 2013. That leaves only Mercedes, the least competitive of the top teams, as a viable alternative to McLaren for Hamilton.

For 2014, however, at least one seat at world champions Red Bull might be available.

Webber is only on a one-year deal, however, while there is also the possibility that his team-mate Sebastian Vettel might go to Ferrari for 2014.

Alonso is believed to have vetoed having Hamilton as his team-mate at Ferrari.

Whitmarsh said: "We're going to the next two races trying to win, as we go to every race.

Made his Formula 1 debut for the team at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix Won his first F1 Grand Prix later that year in Canada Secured victory in his home Grand Prix at Silverstone on 6 July 2008. Became the youngest world champion in F1 history at the age of 23 in 2008, taking the title by a single point on the last lap of the last race in Brazil In total, Hamilton has 18 race wins and 46 podiums "We've known Lewis for a long time. We have been concentrating on a season. There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind.

"We appear nowadays to be often asked questions about it, but I don't think it occupies as much time in our mind as it does in column inches."

McLaren are introducing some aerodynamic upgrades to the car for the German race in the hope of battling for victory against Red Bull and Ferrari.

Whitmarsh said: "The sidepods from the front to the rear are quite different, so you'll notice those and [there are] other bits and pieces that the sharper eye will see."

He blamed the team's unexpectedly poor performance at the British Grand Prix two weeks ago on the team failing to get their tyres into the right operating window. Hamilton and Button finished eighth and 10th at Silverstone.

"For everyone, not just McLaren, trying to understand and exploit the tyres correctly is proving quite a substantial challenge," Whitmarsh said.

He said the team's race was "quite difficult" after a poor qualifying session in the wet, which he blamed on not having enough temperature in the 'intermediate' tyres they were using.

And in the race he said two sets of the same 'hard' tyre that had been prepared in the same way behaved differently on Hamilton's car.


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VIDEO: McLaren pleased with practice pace

27 July 2012 Last updated at 16:55 GMT

Lewis Hamilton

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VIDEO: McLaren duo eye Hungary challenge

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McLaren concerned about wet pace

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer at Hockenheim McLaren's Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton have admitted they are struggling to be competitive in wet conditions at the German Grand Prix.

The team were uncompetitive in wet qualifying at Silverstone two weeks ago and the drivers said they were having problems in practice on Friday.

"Trying to get these wet tyres working is one of our big issues," said Button.

Hamilton added: "In the wet, we need to do a bit of an improvement on the wet tyres trying to get them switching on."

Pastor Maldonado German GP: Practice two highlights

Button and Hamilton were eighth and 19th fastest in the second, wetter of two practice sessions at Hockenheim on Friday.

Button led Hamilton to a one-two in the dried first session, both men setting their fastest laps at different parts of the session, but when the track was dry.

The McLaren drivers said they were struggling to get the required operating temperature into both the 'extreme' wet-weather tyres and the 'intermediates', which are used in drier conditions.

Button said: "There's a lot of work needed to prove we can be quick in the wet because I think it could be wet tomorrow."

Hamilton added: "It feels like you're on ice when you're out there. Maybe the Ferraris and Mercedes are seeming to switch their inters on a bit better, so we have a bit of work to do there."

McLaren have brought a major aerodynamic upgrade to this race - with new sidepods, brake ducts and diffuser.

Pole position in qualifying has been converted to a win in half of the German Grands Prix in the last decade

Button said the team were "happy that it's working" but Hamilton admitted they would not know how effective it had been until they got some extensive running in the dry.

"The car definitely should have made a slight step forward but we don't know how much - we might not know until tomorrow or the race if it's wet on Saturday," Hamilton said.

"I couldn't tell you how big a step it was but I'm quite confident it is a good step."

Sporting director Sam Michael said the team were confident of a strong weekend.

"We come here expecting to fight for pole position and win the grand prix," he said. "And I think we would have taken that approach even without these updates."

Saturday, 21 July: Third practice 09:55-11:05 BST; BBC Sport website and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra. Qualifying 13:00; BBC Sport website and BBC Radio 5 live. Highlights 17:00 BBC Two and BBC HDSunday, 22 July: Race 13:00 BST; BBC Sport website and BBC Radio 5 live. Race highlights 17:30 BBC Two and BBC HD. Race highlights repeat 23:40 BBC One and BBC HD

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McLaren target German GP victory

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer at Hockenheim McLaren believe they can win the German Grand Prix despite a disappointing qualifying performance.

Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton will start sixth and seventh but the race is predicted to be dry, in which they have been fast.

Asked if he could finish on the podium, Button said: "We should aim for that. I think we should aim even higher."

Hamilton said: "Fortunately, we have a big DRS [overtaking zone] so hopefully we'll be doing lots of overtaking."

Jenson Button German GP: McLaren strong if it is dry - Jenson Button

McLaren sporting director Sam Michael believes the team have "very competitive" pace in the dry. "All the data says we should have a very strong race car if it's dry," he said.

Asked if they could win, Michael said: "Yes, that's the aim."

McLaren's strong dry pace follows the introduction of a major upgrade package for this race, which includes new sidepods, brake ducts and diffuser.

Button said: "I think we should be happy with the progress we have made with the new package.

"For [tyre] degradation and outright pace we're strong but as soon as it started raining we knew we were going to struggle. I'm actually quite impressed we're this far up the grid.

"The car is quicker in the dry and the race is supposed to be dry. I think we're in for a very good race."

Both drivers struggled to get their tyres into the right operating temperature in the wet conditions - a problem that has afflicted them all season to a greater or lesser extent depending on the track and whether they are running 'extreme' wet or 'intermediate' tyres.

"We struggled with the wets here and been not bad on inters, and in Silverstone it was the other way around," Michael said.

0.44 - Lewis Hamilton has been almost half a second quicker (on average) than Jenson Button across the nine qualifying sessions so far

"There's clearly something we are not on top of when we get into the operating windows we see on wet tyres."

Button out-qualified Hamilton for the first time this season after coming into the pits for a fresh set of tyres for a final two fast laps in qualifying.

Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, who took pole position, did the same, but Michael said the decision not to do the same with Hamilton - who was fastest heading into the final three minutes of the session - was not decisive.

"The way the session was run, with Jenson stopping for another set and Lewis continuing, showed you could have done either [and it not made a huge difference for McLaren]," Michael said.

"Alonso and Kimi [Raikkonen] went four to five seconds quicker and Jenson went 1.4 seconds quicker, so he didn't get the same gain as other teams did."

Sunday, 22 July: Race 13:00 BST; BBC Sport website and BBC Radio 5 live. Race highlights 17:30 BBC Two and BBC HD. Race highlights repeat 23:40 BBC One and BBC HD

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Button thrilled with McLaren pace

Jenson Button says he now has the car to challenge for victories after marking a return to the podium for only the third time this season at the German Grand Prix.

The Briton finished third but was promoted to second after Sebastian Vettel was penalised for an illegal overtake on the McLaren driver.

"We're right up there with Ferrari and Red Bull in terms of speed," he said.

Australia 1 Malaysia 14 China 2 Bahrain 18 Spain 9 Monaco 16 Canada 16 Europe 8 Britain 10 Germany 2 "If we can sort out qualifying we have a really good chance of winning races."

Since finishing second in China, Button's form dipped and the former world champion had only picked up seven points from six races before arriving at Hockenheim.

McLaren brought a number of upgrades to Germany and Button is feeling confident they will reap the benefits of those in the coming races.

"Our upgrade package is working well. In the last couple of races, as I've said, I've been very happy with the car - the balance of the car anyway - and my feeling with it," he added.

"The results haven't been there because the pace hasn't been there with the car.

"This race gives me a lot of confidence and I'm very happy with being up on the podium."

Next on the Formula 1 calendar is the Hungarian Grand Prix, a race that holds good memories for Button.

The 30-year-old claimed his first ever F1 victory at the Hungaroring and also won there last year.

Vettel passes Button Vettel controversially overtakes Button

"I'm already looking forward to Hungary," he said.

"It's a special place for me, and I feel really encouraged that we can have another great race next weekend."

McLaren team principal Martin Whitmarsh praised Button's performance, saying it proves that he still has the "hunger" shown in his 2009 championship-winning season.

"Look where Jenson was at the end of the first stint. Vettel and Alonso were some way down the road and we had to hunt them down," he said.

"Anyone who doubted Jenson's hunger can put that now to the back of their minds."

There was some disappointment for McLaren, however, as Lewis Hamilton retired on his 100th grand prix appearance with gearbox damage after running well down the field following an early puncture.

"Lewis will know he had a quick car," said Whitmarsh.

"He will be frustrated for the next 24 hours but he will recover knowing he has a good record in Hungary and he has a fast car."


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Hamilton predicts McLaren revival

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton believes he can bounce back from a disappointing race in Germany by challenging for victory in Hungary this weekend.

Hamilton retired at Hockenheim with a gearbox problem caused by an early puncture.

But he was was buoyed by McLaren's pace following the fitting of new parts.

"There's good reason to feel confident; our upgrade package seems to have delivered the pace we anticipated," Hamilton said.

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“Things haven't always gone our way in the first half, but I certainly feel like we're experiencing something of a turning point for the whole team”

Lewis Hamilton McLaren Driver Hamilton said McLaren would be stronger in the second half of the season.

He currently lies fifth in the championship - 62 points off the lead, held by Ferrari's Fernando Alonso - after a first 10 races marked by usually strong pace but also operational errors and occasional lack of competitiveness, especially in the wet.

Hamilton said: "Things haven't always gone our way in the first half, but I certainly feel like we're experiencing something of a turning point for the whole team.

"We've really stepped up and delivered the pace we needed, our strategy has been spot-on and our pit stops, despite a troubled start at the beginning of the year, are now consistently the fastest in the pit lane."

Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button was second at the German Grand Prix, which was won by Alonso, and the team say they can erode the Spaniard's advantage.

Team boss Martin Whitmarsh said: "I firmly believe we have the drivers, car and team to win both titles - and I think the difficulties we encountered during the first 10 races of 2012 have strengthened our resilience and hardened our resolve to fight back to the front.

"At Hockenheim last weekend, we had a car capable of taking on and beating our main rivals - the aim now is to ensure both Jenson and Lewis both score points in every race and to take as many points away from our rivals as possible.

"On paper, it may look a difficult task, but we are singularly determined to close down the gaps between ourselves and the championship leaders."

Alonso wins the German Grand Prix Alonso wins at Hockenheim

McLaren managing director Jonathan Neale said the team were "under no illusions about how hard we need to work".

And he said the title would be a three-way fight between Alonso, McLaren and the Red Bull drivers Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, who are second and third in the championship table.

"While it is undeniable Fernando has driven really well this season," Neale said, "if you look at the points conversion rate of Red Bull, they are very strong and we have to get in among that mix.

"I don't think Fernando has a clear advantage over Red Bull at this stage."

Neale admitted that the team's uncompetitiveness in the wet was "a source of concern for us" and said he would prefer a dry weekend in Hungary.


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