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Stefano Domenicali is honest about the
Scuderia’s showing so far this year: “For
the first three months of the season I would
give a negative score to Ferrari for its
performance. But I would say the last part
of the first half of the year was better
because, although we only took one win, we
were competitive enough to have won more,
but for various circumstances. So I would
score it slightly higher, maybe a bit more
than the average, in the hope that the
second half of the season will be higher
still.” |
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After the British Grand
Prix at Silverstone, the Formula 1 circus pitches its
tents at the Nurburgring for another of what were known
as the Grandes Epreuves, the events that formed the
backbone of the calendar, the German Grand Prix. It is
two years since the race was last held in the Eifel
mountains as the German round now alternates between the
Nürburgring and Hockenheim.
This year marks the fifty eighth
running of the German GP and although that figures lags
behind England and Italy, this will actually be the
seventieth Formula 1 Grand Prix held on German soil,
which puts the country ahead of the rest, thanks to the
number of years it hosted not only its national race but
also the European and the Luxembourg GPs. Scuderia
Ferrari won this race 20 times, a record in its history,
for a total of 50 podium places (13 times 2nd, 17 times
3rd.)
Last year at Hockenheim, Fernando Alonso and Felipe
Massa delivered a one-two finish which signalled the
start of a championship fight back for the Prancing
Horse. A year later, the Scuderia arrives in Germany on
the back of its first win of the season. “That victory
in Silverstone was an important moment in this season,
made more so as it was also linked to our first victory
sixty years ago with Gonzalez on the same track,”
reckons Team Principal Stefano Domenicali. “We know that
Ferrari cannot be happy with winning just one race so
far this season, but it was important for the morale of
everyone in the company to make sure that everyone feels
the pleasant atmosphere that comes with being
successful. I never considered a season without a win.
Don’t forget that in the last eighteen years, Ferrari
has always won at least one grand prix per year.
Eighteen years is a lot and I don’t think that other
teams can claim this sort of result.”
For Pat Fry, the team’s Chassis Director, that win was
the first he has experienced since assuming his new role
within the team. However, it was not the fact that it
happened in his native England that made it important
for him. “The country did not matter, it was how
difficult the Silverstone track was for us,” he said.
“Having closed the performance gap through Canada and
Valencia, tracks that suited our car technically,
Silverstone was a lot more challenging. However, I have
to say I could sense a special feeling, a passion within
the team that I had not experienced before. The main
satisfaction was that it was great to get a victory in
Silverstone after all the hard work of the past four
months trying to close the gap and it was gratifying to
see that it had paid off. It does not change our
approach for the next few races. What that win does is
show that we have understood our problems and we are
working in the right direction. We will continue to
develop the car as quickly as we can and each step we
make improves our understanding, which is important as
it also impacts on work for next year’s car.”
On the Tuesday after Silverstone, work in Maranello
stopped briefly as President Montezemolo convened the
staff at the Fiorano track to congratulate everyone for
their efforts in delivering the first win of 2011, but
it was but a brief pause and since then, work has
continued at a frenetic pace to improve the performance
of the 150º Italia for the rest of the season. Germany
is the first of two races in the space of a week, with
the following Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix signalling
the start of the long summer holiday which includes a
period where F1 regulations dictate that all work
related to car development must stop. “We have a few
more updates coming for this weekend at the Nurburgring
and then one further update for Hungary the following
week,” revealed Fry. “We are keeping the pressure on to
develop as much as we can before the summer break.”
Analysing the challenges of the Nurburgring, the
Englishman sees some similarities with his home race.
“In a way it can be compared to Silverstone, in that it
has long duration corners, even if they are more medium
speed than high speed. Trying to find a balance through
those corners is a little bit more difficult as it suits
our car less than the brake-turn-accelerate type of
circuit like Canada and Valencia. In terms of tyres, we
will have the Medium and Soft again, a sensible choice
for this track and one which suits our car well.
However, the last race showed we are making progress in
adapting the car to all tyre types. Earlier in the year,
in Barcelona for example, we struggled on the Hard tyre,
but we have made improvements and our qualifying pace on
Hard tyres in Silverstone was a match for others.”
Silverstone did not produce the overtaking festival we
have seen at some of this season’s races thanks to the
arrival of DRS and this is another area where Fry thinks
Nurburgring could present a similar picture. “We cannot
be certain until we have run the cars on track, but at
the Nurburgring, the DRS zone involves following someone
closely through the high speed corner onto the back
straight which will be a little bit of a challenge for
drivers to get within the regulatory one second gap to
the car ahead before they are allowed to activate the
system. This means the degree of difficulty should be
similar to Silverstone rather than somewhere like Canada
or Valencia.”
With half the season gone, Stefano Domenicali is
characteristically honest about the Scuderia’s showing:
“For the first three months of the season I would give a
negative score to Ferrari for its performance. But I
would say the last part of the first half of the year
was better because, although we only took one win, we
were competitive enough to have won more, but for
various circumstances. So I would score it slightly
higher, maybe a bit more than the average, in the hope
that the second half of the season will be higher
still.” As for any championship aspirations, the Team
Principal prefers to focus on racing rather than
mathematics. “We don’t have to look at the
classification, but instead make sure that our
performance is always at the highest standard race by
race,” he affirms. “We know of course that this is
difficult because the competition is extremely strong.
Then, we will see later on what will be the outcome of
the championship. But at the moment we will just fight
race by race.”
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