Formula One season review

Eurosport - Sat, 27 Dec 12:50:00 2008

Formula One should be looking forward eagerly to the year ahead after a thrilling 2008 season with new winners and 23-year-old Lewis Hamilton becoming the youngest world champion on the last lap of the last race.

2008 Lewis Hamilton - 0

Instead, with the global economic crisis squeezing sponsors and manufacturers alike, the playground of billionaires and big business has had to tighten its belt and prepare for a more frugal future.

Big-spending Honda and tiny Super Aguri will not be at the starting line in Australia in March, with the championship set to shrink to 18 cars if no buyer for Honda emerges in the next few weeks.

The next year will be far from easy but the cost-cutting measures, including cheaper engines and a ban on testing, should bring the sport back from the brink of disaster.

"I think this is probably the first step towards Formula One saving itself," said International Automobile Federation president Max Mosley after the wide-ranging package was rolled out last week.

That it should be Mosley leading the push illustrates how much the climate has changed in Formula One over the course of the year.

In March, the Briton's own future at the helm of the governing body was at stake after a British Sunday newspaper splashed details of his involvement in a sado-masochistic sex session with prostitutes.

Mosley fiercely resisted calls for his resignation in a saga that hung over the championship until the credit crunch started to bite and the realisation dawned that Formula One's free-spending, Champagne days were over.

The 2008 championship marked a series of firsts and lasts, with fresh faces entering the winners' circle and, in Hamilton, the first black champion and a role model to a whole new constituency.

Singapore, now established as the sport's jewel in the East, hosted the first night race to huge acclaim after fans had stifled a yawn at Valencia's less stellar debut in the European summer.

Next year will be Abu Dhabi's turn to impress with the season-ending race on a new harbourside circuit.

The coming season will see slick tyres replace the grooved rubber, very different aerodynamics and the advent of KERS energy recovery systems to transform heat from the brakes into additional power.

All the teams are starting with a fresh slate, something that Honda team boss Ross Brawn had been looking forward to after a dismal season, and even Hamilton cannot take anything for granted.

The Briton, his country's first champion since 1996, promises to be hungrier than ever after securing a championship that could easily have slipped through his fingers for the second year in a row.

Hamilton won fewer races than his main Ferrari rival Felipe Massa, the Brazilian who had one hand on the crown until the final seconds at Interlagos.

Formula One measures success and failure in milli-seconds and Hamilton rammed home that point by keeping everyone on tenterhooks almost to the end before sweeping past Timo Glock's struggling Toyota for the fifth place he needed.

After 18 grands prix and more than a thousand laps on five continents, the McLaren driver won by a single point.

Massa, noble in defeat, grew in stature and will be a real contender again next year. So too, Ferrari hope, will 2007 champion Kimi Raikkonen.

While the Finn had a disappointing year, despite Ferrari retaining their constructors' title, a younger generation came to the fore.

The most surprising member was Germany's Sebastian Vettel, triumphant in Toro Rosso's home Italian Grand Prix to become Formula One's youngest race winner at the age of 21 before leaving for Red Bull.

Poland's Robert Kubica laid down a marker for next year, seizing his and the BMW-Sauber team's first victory in Canada. A model of consistency after his big smash in Montreal in 2007, the Pole turned what could have been a two-horse race into a three-way battle for far longer than anyone could have expected.

Finland's Heikki Kovalainen crashed heavily in Spain but added his name to the list of winners in Hungary by emerging from Hamilton's shadow to take a lucky victory for McLaren after Massa was robbed by a blown engine in the closing laps.

Double world champion Fernando Alonso pulled off the comeback of the year with two wins in a row for resurgent Renault, a team most had counted out at the start of the season.

While the Mosley sex scandal took over from 2007's spy saga as the main talking point in the paddock, there was also the usual supply of controversy on the track along with some unforgettable action.

Hamilton found himself on the losing side in an appeal court hearing in September after being demoted from first to third in a Belgian Grand Prix thriller.

The Briton, who suffered racial abuse in Spain before the season started, was derided as a 'crash dummy' for accelerating straight into the back of Raikkonen's stationary Ferrari at a red light in the Montreal pit lane in June.

Massa also made hard work of his campaign, spinning repeatedly in the rain at Silverstone and suffering a botched Singapore stop in which his Ferrari trailed a fuel hose down the pitlane.

Canada and France, both axed for next year, followed Indianapolis off the grand prix calendar while Britain's David Coulthard, winner of 13 races for McLaren and Williams, called it a day at 37.

Brazilian Rubens Barrichello, who ended the season with a record 270 race starts, is likely to follow him out after Honda's demise.

Reuters

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  1. BILL MAC. just for you mate.McLaren-Mercedes is­ currently enjoying an advantage of some 25bhp over any­ of its Formula 1 rivals, it has been claimed –­ equivalent to four tenths of a second per lap.­

    Reports have suggested that behind such superiority­ are design improvements – including the Honda and­ BMW-esque nose wings that made their maiden appearance­ in Hungary three weeks ago – mated to the unmatched­ power of Mercedes-Benz's 2.4-litre, V8­ powerplant.Norbett Haug was not available for­ questioning on this unfair advantage.If those numbers­ are right, then an advantage of 25 horsepower with the­ same air resistance brings a benefit of four tenths­ [per lap],” BMW-Sauber technical director Willy Rampf­ told German magazine Auto Motor und Sport.

    From touronroute, on Tue 30 Dec 4:37PM
  2. Mouron read the posts. JD was alluding to Renault I­ think.
    Can you please publish any evidence you have­ about McLaren cheating with their engine design. Or is­ this your normal output of conspiracy theory nonsense.

    From BigBill, on Tue 30 Dec 3:11PM
  3. SLIM J, j.d patel is quite correct.Mclaren were on­ 25bhp increase to the other cars, and it was a­ significant advantage over their rivals. However it­ would not necessarily show up in the form of higher top­ speeds for the McLaren cars - it is often more useful­ for teams with a horsepower advantage to use it to run­ more wing on their cars for better speed through the­ corners, without having to worry as much about the­ penalty of increased drag, as you know mccheats have to­ go that little bit extra to the other guys, but it has­ been stopped this year, so they will have to be the­ same as the other guys,

    From touronroute, on Tue 30 Dec 1:46PM
  4. marnio from peru stop acting like a child and grow up­ LM won it end of news

    From alan, on Tue 30 Dec 1:51AM
  5. jd.patel : could you be a little more specific with­ the allegations of increased horsepower . This is the­ first i have heard of such .

    From slimj, on Mon 29 Dec 10:11PM
  6. I TYSON u talk some @#$% !!

    From giovannit1980, on Mon 29 Dec 6:51PM
  7. Has everyone forgotten Fernando had been with Renault a­ full year and most of the year he looked dull only­ really getting the results at the closing end of the­ year. How come? Could max be right when he said some­ teams illegally increased the engine horse power at the­ end of the year at the expense of those that did not.­ Or words to that effect. Credit were credit is due he­ has still got to be one of the top four drivers in F1­ this year.

    From JAYANTILAL, on Mon 29 Dec 12:51AM
  8. because fia allways help hamilton and macladron.

    From Count Louis Zborowski, on Sun 28 Dec 11:19PM
  9. How short all of our memories are. Massa did not win­ more races than Hamilton, he was given a win,­ rightfully Hamilton's. In any sensible fans book­ Hamilton won two more
    GP's than Massa.

    From Reg, on Sun 28 Dec 10:48PM
  10. johnnywns,
    You are golf in the kingdon!
    I know. You­ carnt fool me!

    From Count Louis Zborowski, on Sun 28 Dec 10:37PM
  11. At Christmas time, goodwill is spread amongst the­ world. Except for the idiots who continually post their­ rantings on this forum. Verily, the lunatics have taken­ over the asylum.
    Let's hope that those of us that­ enjoy motorsport and even F1 will be able to follow the­ 2009 season without the blatherings of these fools.

    From JOLYON, on Sun 28 Dec 8:48PM
  12. Marion, Marnio, Bernard (and whatever else he calls­ himself in here) are the SAME guy. A sad, tiny d1cked­ little runt of a man with no life. Boring cut and paste­ of the same useless @#$% EVERY day on EVERY article.­ What a complete waste of a life the little @#$% is.

    From crispyduck, on Sun 28 Dec 6:40PM
  13. Glock ran wide in the last corner because he was­ pushing too @#$% his slick tyres on a wet track, which­ happens all the time in racing. Do you people actaully­ watch F1, or just make stupid comments about it?? Just­ to clarify further that Glock did nothing wrong, his­ last lap was faster than Trulli his team mate who was­ on the same dry tyres. Before you start spouting off­ about me being a Hamlton fan I cant stand the guy, im a­ Kimi fan and wanted massa to win.

    From craig_beviss, on Sun 28 Dec 4:40PM
  14. BERNAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAARD

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 12:01PM
  15. MARNIO AND BERNARD ARE LIVING TOGETHER BOTH GAY AS F-CK

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 12:01PM
  16. BERNARD WHAT IS LIKE IN A SKIRT ­ LOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOSER

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 12:00PM
  17. HELLO BENARD YOU DUMB TW-T, YOU BITE AT EVERY POST, YOU­ ARE ONE BIG GIRL

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 11:59AM
  18. Formula One measures success and failure in­ milli-seconds and Hamilton rammed home that point by­ keeping everyone on tenterhooks almost to the end­ before sweeping past Timo Glock's STRUGGLING Toyota­ for the fifth place he needed.

    BERNARD MARNIO THIS IS­ FOR YOU, IF YOU CAN'T UNDERSTAND IT! HAVE MUMMY TO­ EXPLAIN IT TO YOU. TW-T

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 9:43AM
  19. LEWIS WORLD CHAMPION, EVEN WITH ALL THE POINTS TAKEN­ OFF HIM ! HE IS MAGIC, NO DRIVER PAST OR PRESENT COULD­ LIVE WITH THIS MAN, LET THE SEASON BEGIN

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 9:42AM
  20. MARNIO GET A LIFE, GET OVER IT, YOU SAD TW-T OF A­ LOOOOOOOSER

    From I TYSON, on Sun 28 Dec 9:39AM
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