Although
this event will be the thirty second Formula 1 Grand
Prix held at Hockenheim, it is the fortieth anniversary
of the first ever world championship round staged here
in 1970, which produced a thrilling fight between Jacky
Ickx, who started from pole in a Ferrari and Jochen
Rindt in a Lotus, with victory after 50 laps going to
the Austrian by less than a second. In total, the
Scuderia has won the German GP nineteen times, which
makes it the race Ferrari has won more often than any
other event.The last victory came courtesy of Michael
Schumacher in 2006, when Felipe Massa made it a nice
one-two for the Prancing Horse. The Brazilian has
visited the podium on two other occasions, finishing
third in 2008 and again last year, when the race was
held at the Nürburgring, which now alternates the
hosting of the German GP with Hockenheim. As for
Fernando Alonso, he won here in 2005.
Five years
earlier, Rubens Barrichello, a Ferrari driver back then,
secured his maiden Formula 1 victory in rather unusual
circumstances. Having started from eighteenth on the
grid, the Brazilian began by staging a great climb
through the field, in a race that saw a madman stage a
one-man track invasion, which necessitated the
appearance of the Safety Car. Then in the final stages,
the rain arrived and while Rubens opted to stay on dry tyres, the McLaren duo of Hakkinen and Coulthard pitted
for wets: in the final laps, the Brazilian put on a
masterly performance in the slower section of the
circuit, stirring the enthusiasm of the large number of
Ferrari fans packing the Motodrom, who had been left
bereft of their idol Schumacher, out of the race after
an accident at the start.
Up until 2002, Hockenheim was something of a one-off
circuit on the calendar, or at least similar to Monza in
that it required a special very low downforce package
and set-up to deal with two very fast straights than ran
through the spectator-less forests, so that when the
drivers returned to the more normal part of the circuit,
their main priority was staying on the track with very
little wing, because priority was given to being quick
on the straights.
Since 2002, the circuit was modified,
which meant the straights disappeared, leaving a more
conventional circuit. Even without the straights, there
are still some genuine overtaking opportunities,
predominantly at the hairpin and the corner leading into
the stadium section. The circuit characteristics, on
paper at least, are more likely than recently visited
venues to play to the strengths of the Ferrari F10,
although it is fair to say that for a variety of
reasons, the fact that the car has improved dramatically
in recent races has been masked by a series of
unfortunate and unlucky incidents, that have kept it out
of the top places. Nevertheless, on the stop-start track
in Montreal and the higher speed street circuit in
Valencia, it proved competitive and even if it could not
match the Red Bull benchmark at Silverstone, here too at
the English circuit with its high downforce, fast corner
characteristics, the car was good enough for the second
row of the grid.
The engineering team at Maranello has
not eased up at all and there are further updates on the
car this weekend, with changes to the diffuser and
therefore everything points to another competitive
weekend for Ferrari. No matter how much progress has
been made in terms of car development, there are no
points awarded for technical excellence and it is clear
that, this weekend and at the race in Budapest just
seven days later, Scuderia Ferrari must bring home a big
points haul if it intends to be fully in the hunt for
the championship title.
For the first time this season, there is a rather
unusual tyre choice, in that Bridgestone is bringing the
two extremes from its range, the Supersoft and the Hard.
Whether or not this choice will produce an exciting race
on Sunday is hard to predict, but it will most likely
make the usual Friday free practice tyre comparison
particularly interesting. Adding to the workload on the
tyre front is the fact that, as always it is likely to
be extremely hot and humid over the weekend, not
forgetting that there is no recent data on running slick
tyres at this track, as last year, when slicks made
their come-back, the German GP was staged at the
Nürburgring. While the Hockenheim track has lost its
long straights, it still retains the famous Motodrom, a
stadium section which houses the paddock, pits and a
complex of corners, surrounded by giant grandstands. The
Hockenheim crowd has always been very enthusiastic and
in the past, red tended to be the dominant colour in the
stands, as they cheered on Michael Schumacher. This
year, they have no fewer than six “home” drivers to
choose from, showing their support with the deafening
sound of the famous air horns.