The
2003 season is drawing to a close but there is still a lot to be decided before
the garage doors shut on another sucessful season of the LG Super Racing Weekend
series. For the last action-packed weekend of racing of the year, the teams and
drivers will be meeting up at the Italian circuit of Monza, located near Milan,
in Italy.
The circuit has a special significance for the
multi-series platform, as it hosted the first-ever event in this format, in
2001. Since then, however, the circuit has undergone renovations, both to the
infrastructure, and to the track itself, which is now 5.77 km long, and which
remains one of the fastest circuits in Europe.
With a bumper pack of 24 cars, including two guest
superstars, Giancarlo Fisichella and Alessandro Zanardi, the FIA European
Touring Car Championship will contest the nineteenth and twentieth rounds of
2003. The series was revived in Monza back in 2001, and now, three years down
the line, it is thriving. Everything remains to play for, and although BMW only
needs two points to take the Manufacturers' title, the Drivers' Championship is
closer than ever. BMW Team Deutschland's Jörg Müller and Autodelta's Gabriele
Tarquini are tied on 96 points, with Britain's Andy Priaulx and second Autodelta
driver Nicola Larini trailing by seven and nine points respectively. Any of the
four could take the title, and all the Manufacturers have been drafting in help
to strengthen their sides. As well as BTCC runner-up James Thompson, Formula One
star Giancarlo Fisichella will be joining Autodelta in Monza, marking his return
to touring car racing after seven years. Also making a return - to racing - will
be double CART Champion Alessandro Zanardi, who will join BMW Team Italy-Spain
in a specially adapted car.
MONZA - ACCORDING TO GABRIELE TARQUINI
Joint leader of the FIA European Touring Car
Championship, Gabriele Tarquini has had a long career in both Formual One and
Touring cars. In 1994, he won the British Touring Car Championship for Alfa
Romeo; in 2001, he came close to winning the FIA European Super Touring
Championship, losing out to Fabrizio Giovanardi at the final round.
"This is definitely the fastest circuit we have in the
Championship. It is not fun to drive, because you spend most of the lap time
giving full throttle on the straight, rather than negotiating corners. However,
it is very difficult, because the smallest hesitation can cost you a lot. A
slight mistake at the exit of a chicane or the Parabolica, would result in a
significant loss of speed on the straight. You need to maintain maximum
concentration for the whole race, particularly at the braking points.
"FIA ETCC cars have small brake discs, however we can
brake at the 130-metre mark before the first chicane; during the races we have
to manage the brakes in order to save them, but in the final laps our braking
points will be up to twenty or thirty metres earlier. Set-up is another
challenge. You should have a very stiff car here, because of the high speed, but
it is better to find a compromise, in order to have a more efficient car that
can jump over the kerbs. In this respect, touring cars are better than
singleseaters. As for overtaking, you choose a place and dive inside. The only
place where it is impossible to pass is between the two Lesmos."
Monza
Giancarlo Fisichella and Alessandro Zanardi will burst
into the FIA European Touring Car Championship as the title fight comes down to
the final shoot-out in Monza. On the superfast Italian racetrack, where average
lap speed of the 2-litre ETCC cars will exceed 170 kph, Alfa Romeo and BMW will
face each other, both eager to win.
In the Drivers' Championship, both Manufacturers still
have two men in contention, as the first four are within just nine points of
each other. Gabriele Tarquini and Jörg Müller are both on 96 points each;
however, Tarquini is the leader, having won six rounds so far, compared to
Müller's four. The two other contenders are Andy Priaulx, who is seven points
behind, and Nicola Larini, a further two points adrift. Despite the fact that
twenty points are still at stake, their chances are hanging by a thread. On the
contrary, BMW is only two points from claiming its 12th Manufacturers' title in
the European Touring Car Championship; the last won by the Bavarian make dates
back to 1979.
All the title contenders will be carrying ballast for
Monza: Taquini has the maximum 40 kg, Jörg Müller and Larini have 20, Priaulx
has 10, as does Roberto Colciago.
GABRIELE ABOUT JÖRG AND THE CHAMPIONSHIP
Jörg's strong point: he's fast, and has the experience
to control the final part of the races; he's fully backed by BMW.
Jörg's weak point: sometimes he makes mistakes, but I
do too.
The Championship: we will be fighting on equal terms;
our chances are fifty percent each.
JÖRG ABOUT GABRIELE AND THE CHAMPIONSHIP
Gabriele's strong point: he's a fair driver, but he can
be very tough during the race; he's the only Alfa driver able to finish the
races without any significant drop off
Gabriele's weak points: I haven't seen any yet
The Championship: after Estoril it's going to be tough
for me, but it's not over yet
FISICHELLA TO DRIVE FOR ALFA ROMEO
Formula One star Giancarlo Fisichella will drive for
the Alfa Romeo Autodelta team in the final meeting of the 2003 FIA ETCC. In the
attempt to claim another European Touring Car Drivers' title, the Italian team
will run a five-car formation, with Fisichella joining the regular trio Tarquini,
Larini, Colciago and newcomer Thompson. This is not the Touring Car debut for
the F1 driver from Rome, as at the age of 22 he was part of the Alfa Corse 2
team in the 1995 International Touring Car Championship.
"It will be like coming back to his roots," said
Autodelta team manager Monica Sipsz, "Because I was his team manager then. And
our technical director Marco Calovolo was his race engineer." Fisichella's best
result was a second position in Mugello with the powerful Alfa 155 V6; he
remained at Alfa Corse and in the ITC for the following season, in which he was
classified sixth, with six podium results. That same year, his Formula One
career took off. Since then Fisichella has driven for Minardi, Jordan and
Benetton, before returning to Jordan again.
He has competed in 124 Grands Prix, becoming one of the
most popular and fastest drivers in the World Championship. He was classified
sixth in the 2000 season and after nine podium finishes, he finally managed to
win his first GP this year in Brazil.
PRIAULX AND LARINI: WE DON'T HAVE MUCH HOPE
Andy Priaulx and Nicola Larini are currently placed
third and fourth in the Drivers' Championship, seven and nine points behind the
leading duo respectively. However, the fact that they are both chasing a driver
racing for the same Manufacturer - Jörg Müller in a BMW for Priaulx, Tarquini in
an Alfa for Larini - does not give them much confidence concerning their hopes
of becoming champions.
"I will be more than happy to stay within the top-three
classified at the end," said Priaulx, who has already claimed three race wins on
his first FIA ETCC season at the wheel of the BMW Team Great Britain's car. "I
think I still have a chance to be the best-placed BMW driver."
As for Larini, who has scored only one win in
Anderstorp so far, he declared: "My title hopes were over after Gabriele won
both races in Estoril. Now, I think that Alfa Romeo has the Championship under
its belt. If Gabriele secures the title after the first race, in the second the
team could work to help me finish as runner-up." Larini was already classified
second in the 2001 FIA ETCC and third in 2002.
SEAT AND ALFA CONFIRM YVAN MULLER AND THOMPSON
After their joint debut in the previous FIA ETCC
meeting in Estoril, the 2003 British Touring Car champion Yvan Muller and
runner-up James Thompson will face each other again in Monza. Muller, who
claimed his first BTCC title three weeks ago, will drive the third works SEAT
Toledo Cupra, alongside regular drivers Jordi Gené and Frank Diefenbacher.
The Portuguese meeting was not a lucky one for Muller,
whose car suffered from electrical problems in Race 1 and did not start in Race
2; in Monza he will continue his job of assisting SEAT Sport to develop the car.
This weekend, his team-mate Diefenbacher is already racing in Monza, taking part
in an Touring Car endurance race, sharing a SEAT Toledo Tdi with Gianni
Morbidelli.
On the Alfa side, Thompson will drive again Autodelta's
fourth 156GTA in order to help the team to win the Championship. In Estoril,
Thompson was classified eighth in both races, after two red-hot and much debated
fights with Jörg Müller.
DE MICHELI JOINS SCUDERIA BIGAZZI
Adriano De Micheli is the latest addition to the FIA
ETCC Independents Trophy, for the final rounds in Monza. De Micheli, 28 years
old from Genoa, has been a regular competitor in the Italian Super Production
Championship over the last four years. In 2000 he scored two wins and finished
as runner-up at the wheel of a Peugeot 306; this year he has joined the Clever
Cat's Team in an Alfa Romeo 147, helping his team-mate Salvatore Tavano to
clinch the Italian title. He is currently third in the championship
classification, with two race wins and one round to go. For his debut in the FIA
ETCC, De Micheli will join Alessandro Balzan at Scuderia Bigazzi, driving the
team's second Alfa Romeo 156GTA.
With the Independents Trophy already claimed by Carly
Motors' Duncan Huisman in Estoril, Monza will see a great fight for the second
position, between Huisman's team-mate Tom Coronel (93 points), Clever Cats'
Paolo Ruberti (89), his team-mate Fabio Francia (85) and Balzan (85). The two
drivers of the PRO Motorsport Honda Civic Type-R cars, André Couto and Tomas
Engström (the latter despite only taking part in the final four meetings of the
season) will battle for the sixth position in the trophy. Because speed is the
Japanese car's strong point, Couto and Engström should be in a position to claim
the Civic's first success in the trophy in Monza.