The 2010
Formula 1 World Championship reaches its halfway point
this weekend, with the sixty first running of the
British Grand Prix and, after a bid to move this year’s
event to Donington Park collapsed, Silverstone circuit
plays host to the race for the forty fourth time. The
race in England has great significance in the Scuderia’s
history as it was here in 1951, that the Prancing Horse
took its first ever World Championship victory, when
Froilan Gonzalez beat Juan Manuel Fangio’s Alfa Romeo by
51 seconds after completing 90 laps of the 4.7 kilometre
track. The Scuderia has gone on to win this event a
further fourteen times, with the last victory dating
back to 2007, when Kimi Raikkonen was first past the
flag. Of the current line-up, Fernando Alonso won at
Silverstone in 2006, with two second places to his name
in 2005 and 2007, while Felipe Massa’s best result was a
fourth place last year. Ferrari's Brazilian driver is
particularly keen to improve on that, a sentiment he
shares with his race engineer, Rob Smedley, for whom
this is the home race.
With the majority of Formula 1 teams based in the UK,
the British Grand Prix used to add some spice to the
battle, as Ferrari and other “foreign” teams would
delight in scoring an “away” win. In the past, when
testing was an almost weekly occurrence, the “home”
teams also benefited from familiarity with the track,
but today this argument no longer holds true. In fact,
this year, the track will be new to everyone, as the
layout has been extensively modified, although it
retains its fast and flowing nature, which has always
made it so popular with drivers.
With that in mind, Fernando Alonso recently spent time
in Maranello to work with his engineers, analysing
available data from the circuit, even watching the
MotoGP event held at Silverstone a few weeks back.
Initial signs are that the new layout might provide a
few more overtaking opportunities, although as ever at
this track, the weather can add some uncertainty to
proceedings. Currently the forecast is for a dry and
warm weekend, but even in these conditions, winds
blowing across what was after all a flat airfield in a
previous life can upset the aerodynamics of the car and
even affect the choice of gearing. Walking the track is
a regular feature of every Thursday on the F1 calendar,
but this weekend, for the two drivers and their
engineers, it will be more important than ever, as even
though they have studied data from the revised circuit,
only a first hand inspection can throw up useful
information about bumps in the track surface, the type
of kerbs in place and other details.
The current phase of the development programme on the
F10, which began in Valencia, continues here in England,
with a new front wing, as well as an update on the rear
wing, while further modifications will be seen in
Hockenheim and Budapest. This is a crucial part of the
season: as the tenth round, it marks the mid-point of
the championship, but on top of that, the F1 circus will
now tackle three races in four weeks. Therefore, it is
not only because we often see some of the highest
temperatures of the year in Germany and Hungary that the
series can be said to be hotting up! The two previous
rounds in Montreal and Valencia were tinged with
disappointment that the potential of the Ferrari package
did not deliver the double podium finish that was within
its grasp, for various well documented reasons and on
past form, the configuration of the Silverstone track is
not the most favourable to Scuderia Ferrari, however a
combination of the updates launched at the European
Grand Prix and those introduced this weekend, should
give Fernando and Felipe a more competitive car than
they had in Istanbul, the track that most closely
matches this weekend’s track characteristics.
Despite the preponderance of English teams in this
sport, there are usually many Prancing Horse flags in
evidence at Silverstone and plenty of support for the
team: not surprising given that the UK Ferrari Owners
Club is one of the oldest, originally established in
1967 and boasting almost three thousand members. Indeed,
2010 marks the fiftieth anniversary of Ferrari cars
being officially present here, originally through
Maranello Concessionaires, until October 2004, when
Ferrari took over importation, trading under the Ferrari
North Europe Ltd. banner. The UK is one of the company’s
top five markets, with a thirteen strong dealer network
and last year, England’s first Ferrari Store was opened
in Regent Street, London, in the heart of one of the
most important commercial areas in the world.
ItaliaspeedTV:
Scuderia Ferrari British Grand Prix preview - interviews
with Stefano Domenicali, Felipe Massa and Fernando
Alonso
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