Ferrari detail. Ferrari Owners' Club
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Ferrari Happenings

GRAND PRIX: Italy: Joy and Sadness
by Winston D'Arcy

18.9.06

Normally for us tifosi there's only one thing better than a Ferrari win at Monza (followed by a pasta blow-out and a few bottles of Barolo) and that's a Ferrari one-two at Monza, followed by etc. but the fact that Schuey won this race was almost an anti-climax in the face of all the off-track action.

The biggest news of the weekend was actually the biggest news in motor racing for the last 11 years - Michael announcing his retirement from F1 at the end of the season. The Editor has already paid tribute to the great man and there's nothing I can really add except my own thanks and best wishes for a long and happy retirement.

The good news is that Ferrari have secured the services of Kimi Raikkonen for the next three years and we offer our support and encouragement to him, Felipe Massa and the rest of the Scuderia. Yet even this news was almost lost in the controversy and recriminations which surrounded it.

It all started when the teams turned up at Monza to find that part of the track had been resurfaced without anyone being informed and that the new tarmac was said to favour the Bridgestone tyres. The conspiracy theorists suggested that this was a ploy by the Italian organisers to favour Ferrari at this vital stage of the championships. Conspiracy theory regarding Ferrari at Monza is long established, because time was that in less rigorously policed eras there were suggestions of "special" qualifying engines - perish the thought! It is certainly through superior engineering that Ferrari have captured pole 18 times in the 57 runnings of the GP, ten ahead of their nearest rival McLaren.

If that wasn't enough, things went ballistic when Alonso was penalised by the Stewards after Ferrari complained that he had impeded Massa's hot lap in qualifying. He did pull out of the pits as the Brazilian was behind, but he looked well clear. Max Mosely said that Ferrari data showed that Massa's car had lost downforce and Alonso was relegated five spots on the grid, meaning that he would start from tenth place.

Fred said that F1 was no longer a sport, Flav said that the championship had been fixed though he later back-pedaled like crazy, saying he was only joking - wonder if it was Bernie or Regie Renault who had A Quiet Word? Fred hasn't calmed down at all and has since said that Michael is not a sportsman.

Kimi put his McLaren on pole by just two thousandths of a second in a virtuoso effort, despite being on Michelin tyres supposedly disadvantaged by the new track surface and with a sideways moment that must have cost him a couple of tenths. At the time, not a cause for us to celebrate, but with the benefit of hindsight it is now!

In the race Raikkonen pitted just one lap ahead of Schuey but that was enough for Michael to take a lead he never lost - one of the many times in his career he has done this. Alonso was cut some slack by those in front of him on the grid (the whole F1 world apart from Max Moseley, the Stewards and Ferrari were universal in their condemnation of Alonso's penalty) and got up to seventh at the end of the first lap. He passed Heidfeld for sixth on lap two, jumping a chicane, a move for which he surely should have been penalised.

You can just imagine the consternation in the Stewards' office with having to face that situation with the controversy over Alonso's qualifying penalty raging.... the computer screens stayed blank as they resolutely chose to do nothing. He carved his way through the field and was in third place until lap 43 when his over-worked engine blew up. The thing that then struck me above all else was the huge cheer that erupted from the Monza Tifosi! The blow-up helped Schuey but scuppered Massa, he locked-up on the oil, flat-spotted a tyre and finished ninth after looking set to come home fourth.

Talk of Heidfeld forces me to face the BMW issue. It sticks in my craw to say so, but they seem to be doing a great job. Heidfeld qualified third and finished eighth, but young gun Robert Kubica raced well and finished a fantastic third in only his third GP, actually leading the race when the first two pitted - clear vindication for their having forced grumpy Jacques into a long-overdue retirement. Ally this to Wunderkind Vettel being fastest again on Friday and BMW are clearly on the verge of becoming a top team.

Contrast BMW-Sauber's position with that of Williams. The old romantic in me hoped that the plucky little Brit racers would kick the ass of the mighty Teutonic corporate machine, but no chance. Williams's performance this year has been dismal - a fact acknowledged by Sir Frank himself, he called their performance 'achingly shocking'. He says they need to produce a faster car and that some of the reasons why they have failed in races is "lack of adherence to correct internal processes" . Tony Cotton e-mailed me to say he wondered whether they've lost the knack of correctly installing an engine as those problems bedeviled them in the BMW years and seem to have been carried over to the Cossies. Strangely enough, the fledgling Williams team suffered the same problems in the early '70s until Uncle Ken Tyrrell took pity on them and showed them how to install a DFV properly.

Michael won but did not look very happy thereafter, especially when trying to avoid a post-race embrace with Luca nor in the following Media conference. There have been suggestions that Michael was pushed, or that he didn't want to go head-to-head in the same team as Raikkonen, or even that the tight Todt - Massa business relationship may have caused some back-stabbing, but I'll let others venture into those territories.....

He was under unbelievable pressure at Monza yet he still delivered. He has closed to two points of Alonso, so I call on all fellow tifosi to watch the last three Grand Prix, think positive thoughts and will our great champion to his eighth and final title. This would give him the exit he so richly deserves. If there is such a thing as the power of the Forza, then surely we should be able to invoke it!

Forza Schumacher, Forza Ferrari!

BTW I still enjoyed my post-race pasta blow-out and couple of bottles of Barolo...

Footnote:
Lost in all the excitement - Ferrari have taken over the lead in the Constructors' Championship!

Jean Todt:
" Of course, I had known for a while that this was his decision, but the news breaking alongside this great win makes today special. It is very gratifying to win here, in front of our Ferrari colleagues who packed out the grandstand at the Parabolica and in front of all our fans. This result sees us move into the lead in the Constructors' classification and it also considerably reduces the gap between Michael and the leader of the Drivers.' I am sorry for Felipe: an unplanned stop prevented him from bringing home a good result in a race where he never really managed to get the most out of the car because of traffic. We must remain concentrated and united to make Ferrari even better and to bring to a close in the best possible way this magnificent chapter in our history, which began eleven years ago when Michael arrived."

Michael Schumacher :
"A marvellous win in front of our fans. Being on the podium alongside Jean was an indescribable feeling. From up there, we could see a sea of fans and you could feel the love they have for Ferrari. Super! The race was relatively straightforward. We were hoping that Kimi would pit before us and he did. Everything went according to plan with no particular worries. The most emotional moment was the final lap. After the chequered flag I came on the radio and told all my friends in the team what I was about to announce and it was really difficult to keep my emotions under control. This win is very important in terms of both titles. We have taken the lead in the Constructors' and as for the Drivers,' we are no longer dependent on our rivals' performance."

Felipe Massa:
" I am very happy for the whole team and also for Michael, who deserved this win and it's great that he took this victory on a day that is so special for him. Michael is an amazing guy and I am honoured to have had the opportunity to race alongside him. He is an example to us all. Now we must try and reach the targets that we want so much. Right from yesterday's qualifying it was clear this was not going to be my weekend. Today, I was always in traffic, never able to use all the car's potential on a track which, while very quick is definitely not easy to overtake on. Then, when it seemed like I could bring home a good fourth place, I flat-spotted my right front tyre when I had to brake on the oil from Alonso's Renault."

THE ITALIAN GRAND PRIX: AUTODROMO DI MONZA, ITALY.
53 LAPS: 306.720km: WEATHER: SUNNY.


Classified:
Pos Driver Team  
Time
1.
M. Schumacher Ferrari (B)
1:14:51.975
2.
Raikkonen McLaren (M)
+ 8.046
3.
Kubica BMW - Sauber (M)
+ 26.414
4.
Fisichella Renault (M)
+ 32.045
5.
Button Honda (M)
+ 32.685
6.
Barrichello Honda (M)
+ 42.409
7. Trulli Toyota (B)
+ 45.955
8. Heidfeld BMW-Sauber

(M)

+ 45.309
9. Massa Ferrari (B)
+ 45.955
10. Webber Williams (B)
+ 1:12.602
11. Klien Red Bull (M)
+ 1 lap
12. Coulthard Red Bull (M)
+ 1 lap
13. Speed Toro Rosso (M)
+ 1 lap
14. Liuzzi Toro Rosso (M)
+ 1 lap
15. R.Schumacher Toyota (B)
+ 1 lap
16. Sato Super Aguri (B)
+ 2 laps
17.
Albers MF1 (B)
+ 2 laps
Monteiro MF1 (B)
NC
Alonso Renault (M)
NC
  de la Rosa McLaren (M)
NC
  Yamamoto Super Aguri (B)
NC
  Rosberg Williams (B)
NC
         

Fastest lap: Raikkonen, 1:22.559


World Championship Standing, Round 15
Drivers:   Constructors:
1.
Alonso
108
 
1.
Ferrari
168
2.
M. Schumacher
106
 
2.
Renault
165
3.
Massa
62
 
3.
McLaren
97
4=.
Fisichella
57
 
4.
Honda
65
4=.
Raikkonen
57
 
5.
BMW-Sauber
33
6.
Button
40
  6. Toyota
30
7. Montoya
26
 
7.
Red Bull
16
8.
Barrichello
25
  8. Williams
10
9. Heidfeld
20
  9 Toro Rosso
1
10. R Schumacher
18
       
11.= Coulthard
14
       
11.= de la Rosa
14
       

13.

Trulli
12
       
14. Villeneuve
7
       
15. Webber
6
       
16. Rosberg
4
       
17. Klien
2
       
18. Liuzzi
1
       
             
             
             
             
             




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