Red Bull Racing Constructors Champion, 12 wins, 650
points
2011 was just about as perfect a year for any F1 team as one
could hope for when it comes to what appears for the time being to be the new
hegemonic force of the sport. With Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber standing
atop the rostrum a dozen times between them, Red Bull Racing acquired the most
wins in one season since 2004, when Ferrari swept all-comers with an
eye-watering fifteen of a possible eighteen wins. Numerous Adrian
Newey-inspired innovations contributed to this enormous success, such as the
exhaust-blown diffuser, the flexible front wing, and ‘wheel warmers’ which were
supposedly the main factor behind Vettel’s mystery tyre blowout at the very
start of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. The otherwise apparently unstoppable German
is contracted at Red Bull for a further three years, whilst Webber is confirmed
for next year only as the spectre of retirement begins to loom for the
35-year-old. Winning the title as early as the Japanese Grand Prix of course
has given Red Bull breathing space to focus on its car for the upcoming 2012
season, so their title chances next year will largely boil down to how well
their rivals from Woking and Maranello can respond to the gauntlet thrown down
by the boys from Milton Keynes.
Vodafone McLaren
Mercedes 2nd
Place, 6 wins, 497 points
For most teams, six wins would have constituted a fine
season, but such are McLaren’s exacting standards that 2011 can only be
labelled as a bitter disappointment. Although the silver-and-red machines were
never really expected to be in contention after the debacle that was their
‘octopus-style’ exhaust system used in pre-season testing, it became apparent
almost immediately that McLaren were to be the only team with any hope of
halting the Red Bull freight train. Lewis Hamilton’s win at China proved to be
a false dawn, whilst Jenson Button’s surge in form equally proved insufficient.
1998, the year when McLaren last won the constructors championship, must by now
seem a distant memory, and in spite of Hamilton’s litany of errors this season,
it’s not been the driving strength that has been wanting – Button’s signed up
for another three seasons, and Hamilton looks increasingly likely to extend his
McLaren contract when it expires at the end of next season. The vow of team
principal Martin Whitmarsh to go on the offensive from the very outset of 2012
seems to signify that the team have every confidence that it’s only a matter of
time before they return to the top of the pile. Only time will tell whether
this assertion will be proved right or wrong.
Scuderia Ferrari
Marlboro 3rd
Place, 1 win, 375 points
The oldest and most illustrious name in the sport endured a
difficult 2011 season, Red Bull’s utter domination of the field leaving just
room for one victory which, while undoubtedly deserved, came largely courtesy
of the temporary ban on exhaust-blown diffusers – a concept which Ferrari
appeared unable to master the way their opponents were able to. This was a
great shame for Fernando Alonso, who after 2010’s near miss was ruled out title
contention arguably after his heroic fourth-to-first start at the Spanish Grand
Prix somehow turned into finishing one lap down 65 laps down the line. As for
Felipe Massa at the wheel of the other car, the year could only be described as
a total flop as the Brazilian; with the possible exception of China, he was simply
unable to get even remotely on terms with his teammate’s blistering pace at any
stage during the season. Surprisingly, he’s been given one last chance to prove
his worth in 2012, but only a drastic improvement in his performances is going
to prevent a relegation to the midfield, with Robert Kubica being touted as a
likely replacement pending his full recovery. Alonso meanwhile finds himself
hamstrung until 2016, meaning it’s down to Ferrari to construct him a car
worthy of his talents.
Mercedes GP Petronas
F1 Team 4th
Place, 165 points
It’s easy to forget that, just two short years ago, this was
essentially the team that took Jenson Button to six of the first seven
victories and subsequently a shock title success. Back to the present day, and
whilst Mercedes may have consolidated their grip on the official ‘best of the
rest’ mantra, the reality is that they have been further off the front-running
pace than last year. Unlike last year, neither Nico Rosberg nor Michael
Schumacher made a single trip to the podium during 2011, even if it was close
but no cigar for the latter in the appalling conditions at Canada. For all
their travails this year however, the Brackley-based team seems to possess all
the necessary ingredients to take a step into the top flight with the
recruitment of ex-Ferrari technical director Aldo Costa as well as Geoff
Willis, who worked with the team in its BAR and Honda incarnations. Rosberg
will be hoping this gives him the equipment to finally take his first win
(having now racked up 108 starts without one), particularly since he’s
committed himself to the team for two more seasons. Schumacher will be equally
eager to take his first post-comeback victory, and there is now allegedly a
distinct possibility of the seven-time champion hanging around for 2013 if this
happens.
Lotus Renault GP 5th
Place, 73 points
Ten months ago, many were predicting (myself included) a
return to the big-time for one the sport’s biggest underperformers during the
last couple of years. Then came Robert Kubica’s devastating rally crash which
has meant that, contrary to estimates at the time, the Pole still hasn’t driven
an F1 car as of the time of writing. All seemed to be well again when Nick
Heidfeld was selected as a replacement, but his failure to live up to
expectations as well as Renault’s inability to develop its car as effectively
as its rivals has seen it finish a distant fifth in the constructors, just four
points ahead of Force India. Vitaly Petrov didn’t exactly set the world on fire
either, having scored two less points than Heidfeld prior to the German’s
dismissal, whilst Bruno Senna’s results in the latter third of the season also
left something to be desired. All that considered, it’s not hard to see why the
team is opting for a ‘clean sheet’ approach in 2012 with the signing of 2007
champion Kimi Raikkonen, who returns to the sport after a two-year absence, and
Romain Grosjean, who has spent this year carefully rebuilding his damaged
reputation by winning the GP2 series after his disappointing stint at the team
in 2009. Furthermore, the team will be officially rebranded ‘Lotus’ after a
resolution with Tony Fernandes’ team was reached earlier in the year.
AT&T Williams 9th
Place, 5 points
If you were new to the sport this year, you’d be forgiven
for having a hard time believing that Williams are in fact the third most
successful F1 team of all time. After all, the glories of the 80s and 90s are a
far cry from what has gone down in history as the team’s worst ever season
since it began constructing its own cars in 1978. Of the nine ‘established’
teams, they were more often than not the slowest, as evidenced by a feeble
points total of five. Four of these came courtesy of Rubens Barrichello, who
despite some mercurial performances looks set to be forced to call time on his long
and distinguished career in the sport. His likely replacement isn’t known at
the time of writing, but Adrian Sutil, Bruno Senna and Jules Bianchi are all
possibilities after Raikkonen’s surprise decision to sign for Lotus. Pastor
Maldonado meanwhile may have failed to shine as brightly as his fellow
first-year drivers Paul Di Resta and Sergio Perez, but has nonetheless done
enough to secure his place with the team next year after some improved
qualifying performances during the latter half of the year. Furthermore,
Renault will replace Cosworth as Williams’ engine suppliers next year,
something the team will be hoping improves their fortunes.
Force India F1 Team 6th
Place, 69 points
With each year that passes, Vijay Mallya’s pet project
continues to go from strength to strength, his Force India team having gone
from perennial tail-enders in 2008 to comfortably the fifth-fastest package on
the grid towards the end of the 2011 season. They may have just lost out to
Renault in the final reckoning, but sterling performances from both the
seasoned Adrian Sutil and the novice Paul Di Resta, who took to the demands of
F1 racing like a proverbial duck to water, brought them extremely close despite
a slow start prior to the introduction of the revised VJM-04. Thereon, the
points came in thick and fast, only the Japanese Grand Prix breaking a run of
points finishes from the German Grand Prix all the way to the end of the
season. The problem now for Force India is that they may have reached their
performance limit – they lack the financial clout that would allow them to
regularly fight the ‘big four’, so there must be doubts as to how much longer
their ascent up the constructors table will continue. Tasked with this
challenge are likely to be Di Resta and this year’s reserve driver Nico
Hulkenberg, leaving Sutil to make a probable move to Williams, though this is
yet to be confirmed.
Sauber F1 Team 7th
Place, 44 points
Entering the second year of the post-BMW era for Peter
Sauber’s long-surviving team, things couldn’t have got off to a much better
start – Sergio Perez finished a highly impressive seventh with a single-stop
strategy on his debut with teammate Kamui Kobayashi just one place behind.
Though they had this haul of ten points taken away from them on the grounds of
technical infringements, both Perez and Kobayashi continued to rake in the
points (with the sole exception of the European Grand Prix) right up until the
German Grand Prix. It was at the following round in Hungary when things began
to go awry – Force India’s new-found speed left the Swiss outfit powerless to
prevent them snatching sixth place in the standings, and after that they found
themselves having to defend seventh from Toro Rosso. As it happened, the team
scraped together just enough points to prevent another slip down the table, but
this state of affairs doesn’t exactly bode too well for Sauber. Just how
Kobayashi and Perez will fare with the team next year therefore remains a
mystery, but it’s apparent that there will have to be some fairly major changes
of some kind if the team is to be anything other than a mere shop window for
young talent.
Scuderia Toro Rosso 8th
Place, 41 points
Red Bull’s ‘B-team’ may be just that, but that isn’t to say
that the boys from Faenza are content to simply be lower-midfield cannon
fodder. The fact that Vettel took them to a race win (which subsequently led to
them out-scoring Red Bull that year) three years ago is a reminder of that team
is capable of greater things than they achieved in 2011. Unfortunately, on the
evidence of the last three seasons, neither Buemi nor Alguersauri looks set to
emulate Vettel, which makes it all the more baffling that both are allegedly set
to be retained next season. On balance, one would have to say that it was
Algersauri who has made the bigger impression of the pair this year,
particularly with his seventh places at Monza and Korea, but Buemi is also
supposedly valued by the team for his technical feedback. Still, I can’t help
but get the feeling that both Daniel Ricciardo and Jean-Eric Vergne, the next
drivers in line in the Red Bull young-driver scheme, would make better bets
than the current drivers, but it seems that both will have to wait longer for
their chances; though it could be that one of them gets a mid-season promotion
as many thought would be the case this year. Either way, there will immediately
be pressure on both Buemi and Alguersauri next year to perform.
Team Lotus Unclassified
The rebranded ‘Team Lotus’, in deference to Colin Chapman’s
ultra-successful team of yesteryear, set itself the goal of scoring its first
points in 2011. Whilst this goal may have quickly been proven to be rather
pie-in-the-sky, the team are now on the brink of latching on to the tail-end of
the midfield scrum. Heikki Kovalainen’s performances could barely be faulted
all season, even making the occasional appearance in Q2, whilst Jarno Trulli’s
two thirteenth-place finishes proved pivotal in the battle for the
countback-derived tenth position in the constructors standings and the
all-important prize money that goes with it. On the basis of their performance
this season, the newly renamed ‘Caterham’ team can realistically expect to
accrue their first points in 2012, though the exact shape of their driver
line-up is still to be fully decided – Kovalainen will in all likelihood stay,
even if he has seemingly caught the eye of a couple of the more competitive
teams, but Trulli’s seat on the other hand is said to be in doubt with Red Bull
looking to station their young protégé Ricciardo
with the team after his endeavours for HRT this year. Lotus have undoubtedly
been the best performing of the three new teams up to now, but it could well be
that we no longer consider them in the same category as HRT or Virgin next
season.
HRT Formula One Team Unclassified
After the crushing disappointment of failing to qualify
either car for the curtain-raising Australian Grand Prix, things didn’t turn
out too badly for HRT in 2011. Though they may have lost considerable ground to
Lotus since last year, they were not only frequently battling, but also beating
their rivals at Virgin, Vitantonio Liuzzi’s thirteenth place at Canada proving
sufficient for the Spanish team to avoid finishing at the very bottom of the
pile. Unsurprisingly, he was more than a match for returnee Narain Karthikeyan,
who landed the seat courtesy only of his connections with Indian car giant
Tata, but once Ricciardo took the reins of the second car, something was found decidedly
lacking with Liuzzi’s pace. Whether he keeps hold of his seat for 2012 is yet
to be decided, but if he does, he will be partnered with one of the sport’s
elder statesmen in Pedro De La Rosa. Ricciardo appears to be headed for
pastures anew in the form of either Toro Rosso or Caterham, and it remains to
be seen whether Red Bull extends their partnership with HRT by placing Vergne
there. However, rumours of an all-Spanish line-up are rife, which will come as
comforting news to GP2 driver Dani Clos, who has confessed his desire to step
up to the highest level with the team alongside his compatriot.
Marussia Virgin
Racing Unclassified
Where Lotus and HRT took a step forward in 2011, it has to
be said that Virgin in contrast remained stagnant. After giving up hope on the
MVR-02 relatively early on, the car was scarcely developed at all, leaving the
team in the unenviable position of having to battle HRT in an effort to avoid
finishing twelfth and last among the constructors. The best efforts of Timo
Glock and Jerome D’Ambrosio just weren’t enough when push came to shove, and
the team is sadly stuck with numbers 24 and 25 once again in 2012. Whilst Glock
has already committed his short-term future to the team, D’Ambrosio follows in
the footsteps of Lucas Di Grassi in being replaced after just one underwhelming
season with the Yorkshire-based team. Arriving in place of the ousted Belgian
is the highly-rated French GP2 driver Charles Pic, who along with Grosjean will
give France their first representation on the grid since 2009. His record in
the junior formulae is substantially stronger than that of D’Ambrosio, so Pic
has a good chance of breaking the trend that has befallen the pilots of the
second Virgin thus far in the team’s short history. The team have also
abandoned their budget-conscious CFD-only approach, which should give Marussia (as
the team will be rechristened next season) a timely boost in their efforts to
gain respectability in the F1 paddock.
And so brings to an end another year of posting on my site. Whilst Melbourne, the first round of next season may seem some way off, don't forget that it's only a matter of weeks before the teams will begin to launch their new machines, with testing commencing in early February. 2012 promises to be an incredible season for the sport, and I'll of course be back to provide previews, reviews, features, fascinating insight and sometimes controversial opinions about everything that goes on. Thanks very much to everybody who has read this blog this year - hope you'll be back next year.
And so brings to an end another year of posting on my site. Whilst Melbourne, the first round of next season may seem some way off, don't forget that it's only a matter of weeks before the teams will begin to launch their new machines, with testing commencing in early February. 2012 promises to be an incredible season for the sport, and I'll of course be back to provide previews, reviews, features, fascinating insight and sometimes controversial opinions about everything that goes on. Thanks very much to everybody who has read this blog this year - hope you'll be back next year.
Sorry Mr. Klein, but I cannot agree about the last comments on Virgin and d'Ambrosio. If Mr. d'Ambrosio's season was underwhelming, and I don't think so by any means, then why are the famously chauvinistic British press are rating him favourably ? Race balance 10 / 9 so he has proven he is a racer... and under immense and unfair pressure of being told just arriving in Brazil his seat was his no longer he outperformed his so-called experienced and highly rated team mate fair and square... moreover any (be it minor) development was only on Glock's car... so to call his season underwhelming I have to say this is harsh... agree that it is not always the most exciting car in the field but do not think both drivers were to blaim for that.
ReplyDeleteI'm not trying to make out that D'Ambrosio is a bad driver or that he doesn't merit his seat in F1, but the harsh reality of driving for a team firmly mired at the very rear of the field means that you need to perform spectacularly in order to be noticed. I concede that it would have been unfair to expect him to outperform the more experienced Glock (after all, none of the other rookies this season outscored their teammates either), but on the same token we didn't see any real glimpses of promise that would indicate that he would make anything more than a competent mid-field driver in years to come. You might argue that getting yourself noticed in a Virgin is virtually impossible, but such is the ruthless, unforgiving nature of F1.
ReplyDeleteLet's see in the near future - in general true - but to be really honest I did not see particular sparks from Ricciardo nor Di Resta - sure solid jobs - but better than J D'A ? - Ruthless though it is !
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