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Hungarian Grand Prix

July 29, 2009 By vack

Hot Flash: Schumacher to Replace Massa

Michael Schumacher will be replacing the injured Felipe Massa at the European Grand Prix in Valencia. Ferrari confirmed the decision on Wednesday evening.

retro
Kimi Raikkonen, Lewis Hamilton, and Mark Webber

by Erik C. Nielsen
Photos courtesy and copyright Ferrari Media

The Formula One season so far seemed to be a shuffle of the teams at the top of the leader board. Brawn GP came out of the ashes of the old Honda effort to mop up the competition. Red Bull Racing played a strong second fiddle; German fans felt they had their next-generation boy wonder in Sebastian Vettel; and, the legions of tifosi were scared that Ferrari had decided on benchmarking their performance to the efforts of the Scuderia in the late 80s and early 90s. This weekend’s results showed more consistency with the pecking order being restored to last year’s table.

The major incident of the weekend was Filipe Massa’s incident when he was hit in the head by an errant spring from Rubens Barichello’s Brawn GP in qualifying. As of 12:17 GMT today, according to a report on Autosport.com, Massa’s doctor, Dino Altmann, said that Massa will be able to race again.
“I have no doubt Felipe will race again,” he told Gazzetta dello Sport.


“I’m sure of that. The situation is still delicate, but I believe his life is not in danger anymore. From the beginning I felt that the trauma wasn’t as extended as it was believed, but the improvements of the last hours have gone beyond our wildest expectations.”

retro
Kimi Raikkonen

Motor racing is still a dangerous sport.  Within the last week, John Surtees’s son was killed in an open wheel race when a wheel came off a competitor’s car, also hitting him in the head.  F1 hasn’t seen a competitor killed since Senna in 1994.  Most of the improvements have come from better regulations, but these incidents are still proof that the sport has not been completely sanitized.

Lewis Hamilton won his and his team’s first race of the season,
showing that the tide is turning from the young upstarts to the old guard.  Hamilton’s performance was back to what Ron Dennis would expect from his prodigy.

Kimi Raikkonen put forth the most effort that has been seen this season to finish in second place, giving the entire team a bit of an up moment. But everyone on the Scuderia had their thoughts with their stricken pilota.  It will be a couple of days before the Italian press starts wondering if the Finn was capable of better performance earlier in the season.

retro
Felipe Massa

Alonso wasn’t able to capitalize on his pole result.  After his first pit stop, the team did not properly secure the front right wheel which let go on his out lap.  The former champion was able to bring the car around and have a new wheel fitted, but the damage to the car was done and he retired the following lap.  The rumor mill has gone into high gear about the Spaniard making the move to Ferrari. The Massa incident through gasoline on that fire, but there seems to be plenty of politics behind that one, and the fat lady hasn’t even entered the building, let alone warmed up.

Webber was not able to make the most of Brawn’s troubles this weekend and finished in third place.  It was still a good finish for the team, but not the maximum points that they needed to close the battle with the Brawns.  The other Finn was happy with a fifth place, giving the Woking based team a huge mid season motivational boost.

Toyota could do no better than sixth with Timo Glock, but the team smiled when they realized that they did better than the legacy Honda team.  His team mate Trulli captured the last point which should help them out in the final standings.

Jenson Button finished in seventh place.  The two points he received were definitely more in line with what the team was capable of under the Honda banner.  The spring issue has raised questions on how much development is left in the chassis without sacrificing reliability. It is still early to say that the team is done, but this weekend’s result points in that direction.

An informative video of the Massa crash can be seen on YouTube.

Race Results

1 HAMILTON McLaren-Mercedes 1h38m23.876s
2 RÄIKKÖNEN Ferrari + 11.5s
3 WEBBER RBR-Renault + 16.8s
4 ROSBERG
Williams-Toyota + 26.9s
5 KOVALAINEN McLaren-Mercedes + 34.3s
6 GLOCK Toyota + 35.2s
7 BUTTON Brawn-Mercedes + 55.0s
8 TRULLI Toyota + 68.1s
9 NAKAJIMA Williams-Toyota + 68.7s
10 BARRICHELLO Brawn-Mercedes + 69.2s
11 HEIDFELD BMW Sauber + 70.6s
12 PIQUET Renault + 71.5s
13 KUBICA BMW Sauber + 74.0s
14 FISICHELLA Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
15 ALGUERSUARI STR-ferrari + 1 lap
16 BUEMI STR-Ferrari + 1 lap
17 VETTEL RBR-Renault + 41 laps, suspension
18 ALONSO Renault + 55 laps, fuel pump
19 SUTIL Force India-Mercedes + 69 laps, engine
Fastest Lap WEBBER RBR -Renault 1m21.931s

Driver’s Championship Standings

1 BUTTON Brawn-Mercedes 70 Points
2 WEBBER RBR-Renault 51.5 Points
3 VETTEL RBR-Renault 47 Points
4 BARRICHELLO Brawn-Mercedes 44 Points
5 ROSBERG Williams-Toyota 25.5 Points
6 TRULLI Toyota 22.5 Points
7 MASSA Ferrari 22 Points
8 HAMILTON McLaren-Mercedes 19 Points
9 RÄIKKÖNEN Ferrari 18 Points
10 GLOCK Toyota 16 Points
11 ALONSO Renault 13 Points
12 KOVALAINEN McLaren-Mercedes 9 Points
13 HEIDFELD BMW Sauber 6 Points
14 BUEMI STR-Ferrari 3 Points
15 KUBICA BMW Sauber 2 Points
16 BOURDAIS STR-Ferrari 2 Points

Constructor’s Championship Standings

1 BRAWN-MERCEDES 114 Points
2 RBR-RENAULT 98.5 Points
3 FERRARI 40 Points
4 TOYOTA 38.5 Points
5 McLAREN-MERCEDES 28 Points
6 WILLIAMS-TOYOTA 25.5 Points
7 RENAULT 13 Points
8 BMW SAUBER 8 Points
9 STR-FERRARI 5 Points

Tagged With: F1 2008, ferrari massa, hamilton, Hungarian GP, massa, massa accident

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