8 August 2010

The Silly Season


The 2009 silly season was one of the best in recent memory. We had Button making what many regarded as a foolhardy move to McLaren, Alonso making his long-awaited jump to Ferrari, and rumours swirling of a certain Michael Schumacher making a full-time comeback with Mercedes after being unable to replace the injured Felipe Massa at Ferrari. Added with the expected arrival of three new teams, and thus six fresh seats, the prospect of who was heading where was almost as exciting as the action on track itself.


This year's silly season however has turned out to be something of a letdown. Continuity seems the name of the game, with Ferrari extending Massa's contract to 2012, Webber being retained for another season by Red Bull, and Mercedes showing no signs of giving up hope on Schumacher. Of course McLaren already had Button and Hamilton on contract, and Alonso, Rosberg and Vettel seem to be going nowhere soon either. Looking further down the field, Williams seem set to retain both Barrichello and Hulkenberg, Renault has Kubica firmly in its clutches, Toro Rosso have confirmed both Buemi and Alguersauri, and the Force India line-up looks unlikely to change too, despite impressive practice showings from Paul Di Resta.


So, that means the best seat up for grabs seems to be the one at Renault currently being occupied by Russian novice Vitaly Petrov. Whilst he has been very inconsistent, he has shown flashes of promise at Turkey, Germany and more notably at Hungary. Whether those performances will be sufficient to merit his retention by the French manufacturer is yet to be seen though, particularly with fierce competition from many more experienced pilots.


2007 champion Kimi Raikkonen was mooted at one point, but since then he's committed himself to at least one more year's rallying with Citroen. The other contenders for the seat appear to be Heikki Kovalainen, Timo Glock, and the current Mercedes third driver Nick Heidfeld, who coincidentally used to partner Kubica at the BMW works squad. The sad fact for Petrov is that you just can't help feeling all the aforementioned would more than likely do a better job than he is now. The Russian's only saving grace is he's only going to get better, whilst arguably the others have already peaked.

I'd personally like to see Heidfeld snaffle the drive, but equally Petrov does deserve to stay in F1. If he was to be ousted from Renault, his next likely port of call would be Sauber. Whilst the Swiss team's current pairing of De La Rosa and Kobayashi are doing a solid enough job at the moment, a driver who brings funding to the team would be valuable, particularly for a team with no title sponsor. At age 39, it's likely De La Rosa would be the one given the boot, particularly since he's been outpaced by his young Japanese teammate more often than not.


Petrov is far from the only well-heeled candidate out there however, for there are a multitude of up-and-coming racers in GP2. Pastor Maldonado is currently stamping his authority on this year's championship, but then Sergio Perez and Jules Bianchi would also be good bets, the latter already having signed some kind of long-term deal with Sauber's engine supplier Ferrari. Looking a stage further down the ladder, Esteban Gutierrez is dominating the GP3 field this year, and already has a Sauber testing deal in his pocket.


As for the new teams, in theory Lotus have both of their drivers under contract (although that won't stop either leaving should a better offer arise), as does Virgin Timo Glock. Lucas Di Grassi may have to make way for one of their test drivers Jerome D'Ambrosio or Luis Razia, again depending on how hungry Branson is for cash. As for Hispania, it's probably going to be a case of who's the highest bidder. Both Senna and Chandhok have acquitted themselves well this year, but that means little in the face of the Sakon Yamamotos of this world who have impressive bank accounts.


Looking further into the future, Ferrari and Red Bull appear to be the most fluid. Massa is under contract until 2012, but you can bet your bottom dollar Ferrari would usher in Webber or possibly Kubica if they saw fit for 2012. Indeed if the Ferrari seat was to go the way of the Aussie, that would free a coveted space at Red Bull. Dr. Helmut Marko has made no secret of the fact he'd like to see Sebastien Buemi, who Red Bull have backed since his Formula BMW days, nab the drive. Alternatively, Raikkonen could yet be lured back from the rallying scene if Red Bull remains the finest package on the grid.


Finally, there's the trifling matter of who will get the 13th grid space after the shambolic attempt from USF1. Now hot favourites ART have pulled the plug the slot looks to go either to respected sportscar constructor Epsilon Euskadi, Stefan GP who unsuccessfully tried to claim the 13th slot this year, or erstwhile GP2 team Durango in conjunction with none other than 1997 champion Jacques Villeneuve. The Canadian has been looking for an F1 reprieve for a couple of years now, and Schumacher's dismal return doesn't seem to have put him off at all. But with rumoured involvement from the stars of Crashgate Flavio Briatore, Pat Symonds, Nelson Piquet Jr. along with the son of Colonel Gaddafi, it will be interesting to see if the FIA will even touch them with a bargepole.


Epsilon Euskadi, with their wind tunnel supposedly already up and running seem the likely victor. As for their drivers, planned USF1 driver Jose Maria Lopez is certainly in with a shout, but so are the likes of Kazuki Nakajima, Anthony Davidson and Christian Klien if the team feels the need for an experienced runner. With the right talent, there's no reason why the Spanish outfit shouldn't be able to mix it with the other new teams straight from the off.

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