November 12th, 2009
David
We have covered some rare and exotic racing cars for sale on f1buzz before but if you missed out on picking up Jenson Button’s old Honda here is another chance to buy some Formula One history.
Michael Schumacher’s old Benetton B194 that he drove to his first World Championship in 1994 is on eBay and the current bid is a bit over 2.5 million (+ 10,000 postage.)
The B194 was designed by Rory Byrne specifically to suit Michael Schumacher’s driving style although he would later comment that it was quite tricky to drive being prone to sudden unexpected oversteer.
1994 was one of the most controversial and tragic seasons in Formula One’s history. Like Jenson Button in 2009, Schumacher won six of the first seven races. The other teams were a bit suspicious of this and following an FIA investigation it was discovered that Benetton had illegal launch control software on the car but as it could not be proved it was ever used the team faced no punishment.
The eBay listing includes “a laptop with software for configuration of the race car” but it doesn’t mention anything about launch control…
Schumacher would later be disqualified from the British Grand Prix for ignoring a black flag and also stripped of his win in Belgium for excessive wear on the skid block but it is the final race of the season in Adelaide that this car is most remembered for. Schumacher’s infamous ramming of Damon Hill at the Flinders Street corner forced both drivers out of the race and sealed the Championship for Schumacher.
Image: Williams
It was always a bit worrying that Toyota wanted to wait until a November board meeting to confirm its Formula One involvement for 2010 but the team had recently been making noises about its possible driver lineup for next year so today’s announcement that Toyota are quitting the sport immediately comes as something of a surprise.
It comes a week after Bridgestone said it would be leaving the sport after 2010 and a few months after BMW’s exit announcement. At least BMW hadn’t signed the Concorde Agreement committing themselves to 2012. Toyota’s breach of that contract could leave them open to some kind of legal challenge from Bernie Ecclestone but, ironically, Toyota’s exit could smooth the way for the ex-BMW team to rejoin the grid next year.
The world’s largest car manufacturer revealed it had made its first ever loss of $4.74 billion last year and is predicting to lose almost double that amount this year. Ultimately this is the reason for Toyota’s announcement today.
In a statement, Toyota said that their time in F1 was an “irreplaceable experience that provided an opportunity to develop both human resources and its R&D operations,” but in a press conference Toyota President Akio Toyoda expressed his regret at not achieving the results they wanted:
Based on the current economic environment, we realise we have no choice but to withdraw. This has been a very painful decision. I offer my deepest apologies to Toyota’s many fans for not being able to achieve the results we had targeted.
Despite being one of the most well-funded teams in Formula One, Toyota never won a race and their best result was fourth in the 2005 Constructors’ Championship. This lack of success was surprising considering Toyota’s considerable achievements in Rallying, winning the World Rally Championship three times between 1993 and 1999.
So where does this leave the drivers? Both Jarno Trulli and Timo Glock were expected to move on anyway but team boss John Howett had hinted he might give Kamui Kobayashi a full-time seat next year.
Kobayashi will now be looking to one of the other teams for a job and I hope one of them picks him up. Based on his performance in the last two races I think he is the most exciting rookie of 2009.
Image: Toyota
With the final Grand Prix of 2009 the innaugural F1 Buzz Prediction Game also draws to a close.
The 2009 Championship was another very close season with six drivers from four teams winning races. Brawn dominated the opening Grands Prix but McLaren made one of the biggest comebacks ever in the second half of the season.
All through the year there was the constant presence of Red Bull and the occasional threat of a Ferrari and even Force India.
All this meant that predicting who would win or even who would stand on the podium was a dificult task. In the end, the prediction game was even closer than the Championship with a single point separating second and third places.
Thanks to a lucky couple of weeks in the Far East I actually ended up with the most points but as I was just playing for fun and not prizes my score doesn’t really count. 🙂
This means that the 2009 Champion is Andrew with a score of 173, closely followed by Sergio with 172. Despite apparently knowing nothing, Kathryn came in third with 133.
As announced, first prize is a 1:43 scale Minichamps replica of Jenson Button’s Brawn GP BGP001. Second and third will each receive a copy of the 2009 Formula One Season Review DVD.
Congratulations to the winners (email me at david@f1buzz.net to let me know where to send your prize) and thanks to everyone for taking part. I hope you enjoyed it. A special thanks also goes out to Miguel for suggesting the idea!
Only four months until next time!
Image: Brawn GP
Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber secured Red Bull’s fourth 1-2 finish of the season in Abu Dhabi on Sunday.
After qualifying it looked like Lewis Hamilton would easily drive away from the two Red Bulls in the race but despite setting six consecutive fastest laps and opening a gap of two seconds on Vettel, a brake problem forced Hamilton to retire after 20 laps.
The billion dollar Yas Marina circuit looked spectacular as twilight faded into night and while there are some interesting sections to the track, including a pit exit tunnel, for the most part the race was pretty uneventful.
The most excitment came in the closing laps as Mark Webber came under attack from Jenson Button and only just managed to hold him off with some great defensive driving.
It’s hard to see how an old airfield in Northamptonshire can compete with a city that sits on one-tenth of the world’s oil reserves and whose citizens (not including foreign workers) are worth about $17 million each. But Sunday’s race showed that while money can buy spectacular, it can’t buy history and it can’t neccessarily buy good racing.
2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Race Results
Pos |
Driver |
Team |
Grid |
Time |
Points |
1 |
Sebastian Vettel |
Red Bull-Renault |
2 |
34:03.414 |
10 |
2 |
Mark Webber |
Red Bull-Renault |
3 |
34:21.271 |
8 |
3 |
Jenson Button |
Brawn-Mercedes |
5 |
34:21.881 |
6 |
4 |
Rubens Barrichello |
Brawn-Mercedes |
4 |
34:26.149 |
5 |
5 |
Nick Heidfeld |
BMW Sauber |
8 |
34:29.667 |
4 |
6 |
Kamui Kobayashi |
Toyota |
12 |
34:32.757 |
3 |
7 |
Jarno Trulli |
Toyota |
6 |
34:37.780 |
2 |
8 |
Sebastien Buemi |
Toro Rosso-Ferrari |
10 |
34:44.708 |
1 |
9 |
Nico Rosberg |
Williams-Toyota |
9 |
34:49.355 |
0 |
10 |
Robert Kubica |
BMW Sauber |
7 |
34:51.594 |
0 |
11 |
Heikki Kovalainen |
McLaren-Mercedes |
18 |
34:56.212 |
0 |
12 |
Kimi Raikkonen |
Ferrari |
11 |
34:57.731 |
0 |
13 |
Kazuki Nakajima |
Williams-Toyota |
13 |
35:03.253 |
0 |
14 |
Fernando Alonso |
Renault |
15 |
35:13.014 |
0 |
15 |
Vitantonio Liuzzi |
Force India-Mercedes |
16 |
35:37.814 |
0 |
16 |
Giancarlo Fisichella |
Ferrari |
20 |
lapped |
0 |
17 |
Adrian Sutil |
Force India-Mercedes |
17 |
lapped |
0 |
18 |
Romain Grosjean |
Renault |
19 |
lapped |
0 |
RET |
Lewis Hamilton |
McLaren-Mercedes |
1 |
retired, 20 laps |
0 |
RET |
Jaime Alguersuari |
Toro Rosso-Ferrari |
14 |
retired, 18 laps |
0 |
Image: Red Bull
The FIA now publishes the weights of each car after qualifying on Saturday. Those cars that make it through to the final qualifying session must use the fuel they qualified with while the rest of the field may refuel before the race.
Below is a graph showing the actual top ten qualifying times as well as those times adjusted for the weight of fuel each car is carrying. The graph assumes a standard lap time cost of 0.3 seconds per 10kg of fuel.
Looking at these weights we can see that while everyone is roughly in position, Lewis Hamilton really is a lot faster than anyone else. It’s hard not to imagine Hamilton driving off into the distance on Sunday leaving everyone else behind.
Trulli looks quite fast so a podium for him isn’t totally out of the question but it is more likely a McLaren and two Red Bulls will take the final podium positions of 2009.
2009 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Car Weights
Image: McLaren