Current Alfa Romeo Racing (formerly Sauber)

Sauber

FIA Entry: Sauber F1 Team
Car 16: Kamui Kobayashi
Car 17: Sergio Perez
Engine: Ferrari V8
Team Principal: Peter Sauber
Technical Director: James Key
Race Engineer Car 16: Francesco Nenci
Race Engineer Car 17:Marco Schupbach

Stats as of end 2010

First Entered 1993
Races Entered 296
Race Wins 1
Pole Positions 1
Fastest Laps 2
Driver World Championships 0
Constructor World Championships 0

The Beginning

Following success in sports car racing Peter Sauber, in collaboration with Mercedes Benz, moved into Formula 1 in 1993. With Ilmor engines Sauber entered the C12 car (the C prefix for Sauber cars coming from Peter Sauber’s wife Christine) driven by Mercedes sports car drivers JJ Lehto and Karl Wendlinger. Lehto finished a creditable 5th in their first race and the cars proved fast but unreliable. When the cars finished they often picked up points with Lehto managing 4th in San Marino and Wendlinger the same placing in Italy.

In 1994 the team became officially Sauber Mercedes as the Ilmor engines were rebadged as Mercedes units. Heinz Harald Frentzen replaced Lehto and the team showed similar pace to the previous season with a number of minor points placings. Wendlinger was replaced, following an accident at Monaco, firstly by Andrea de Cesaris and later in the season by Lehto. Wendlinger’s accident, following closely after the deaths of Senna and Ratzenberger at San Marino, resulted in changes to the design of the cockpit on F1 cars to provide greater head protection in the event of an accident.

Red Bull & Ford

1995 saw Mercedes leave Sauber to supply engines to McLaren. Now armed with Red Bull sponsorship, Red Bull owner Dietrich Mateschitz having bought a stake in the Sauber team, Sauber sourced Ford factory engines. Wendlinger hadn’t recovered well and was replaced early in the season by Jean Christophe Bouillon. Sauber amassed 18 points for the season with Frentzen taking a podium for 3rd in Belgium.

Jonny Herbert partnered Frentzen for 1996 and managed a highest of 3rd at Monaco, with Frentzen 4th, but the team ended the season on their lowest points tally since entering Formula 1 with 11 points

Ferrari Customer

From 1997 to 2005 Sauber used customer Ferrari engines and run under the name of title sponsor Petronas. The tie in with Ferrari extended beyond the supply of engines as Ferrari also provided the Swiss team with technical support.

Jonny Herbert continued with Sauber for 1997 and ’98 and was partnered in ’98 by veteran Jean Alesi. Herbert managed a podiums at Hungary in ’97 and Alesi in Belgium in ’98 but generally Sauber’s performance was fairly ordinary. In 2001 Sauber hired young Finnish driver Kimi Raikkonen amidst protest form other teams due to his lack of experience. Raikkonen scored a point on his debut with teammate Nick Heidfeld 4th in the same race. Raikkonen’s appointment also triggered the sale of Red Bull’s stake in Sauber to Credit Suisse as the Austrian drinks company wanted the seat given to Enrique Bernoldi.

Peter Sauber continued to give drives to promising youngsters with Felipe Massa racing for him in 2004 & 2005 and Robert Kubica replacing Jacques Villeneuve in 2006.

BMW Sauber

For 2006 BMW took a controlling interest in the Sauber team and BMW units replaced Ferrari engines. BMW “works” driver Nick Heidfeld returned to Sauber from Williams and the team finished 2nd in the Constructors Championship behind Ferrari (following the exclusion of the McLaren team). Heidfeld scored points in 14 of the 17 races that season. 2007 also saw the first F1 drive for Sebastien Vettel who substituted for Robert Kubica at the race in Indianapolis following the Pole’s crash in Canada.

2008 saw Sauber take their first Grand Prix win with Kubica victorious in Canada and Heidfeld coming home 2nd. The team scored numerous podiums and claimed 3rd spot in the Constructors Championship.

2009 was a disappointing season following the highs of 2008 as Sauber struggled with changes to design regulations. Heidfeld and Kubica both managed a 2nd place each but the team dropped to 6th in the Constructors Championship. By the end of the season BMW decided to pull out of the sport.

Back to Ferrari

Following BMW’s withdrawal Peter Sauber took back control of his team. Re-equipped with Ferrari engines Sauber signed promising young Japanese driver Kamui Kobayshi alongside returning veteran Pedro de la Rosa. Early season reliability problems blighted the team but by the end of the season, and the replacement of de la Rosa with Nick Heidfeld, Sauber began to score points on a regular basis. Kobayshi managed a highest finish of 6th in Britain and the team ended 8th in the Constructors Championship.

2011

Kobayashi stays with Sauber for 2011 alongside Sergio Perez who brings with him some much-needed sponsorship from Mexican Telecoms company Telmex. The C30 chassis continues with a Ferrari engine.
 
A driver has to take part in at least one practice session. Qualifying is considered to be a practice session. Saturday morning will most likely be decision time.
 
A driver has to take part in at least one practice session. Qualifying is considered to be a practice session. Saturday morning will most likely be decision time.

I might be wrong but I thought the rule had changed to say your race drivers had to be declared by p2 hence why all reserve drivers only run in p1 and why Sauber were frantic to find a driver after P1 in Canada ladt year.
 
Guttierez stood in for Perez in P1. Kobi's time was 1.29.802 and Guttierez was 20th with 1.31.212

I thought that was an interesting little snippet.
 
RasputinLives

If that is the case, then it would be a new amendment for this season and one which I am not aware of. I wouldn't know where to look and so on this matter I guess I'm no wiser or less wiser than you.
 
From the 2012 Sporting Regulations - http://argent.fia.com/web/fia-public.nsf/FE4C9612DB18AD8BC125797B00344B65/$FILE/1-2012 SPORTING REGULATIONS 07-12-2011.pdf

Section 19, page 8 details driver changes:
During a season each team will be permitted to use four drivers. Changes may be made
at any time before the start of the qualifying practice session provided any change
proposed after 16.00 on the day of scrutineering receives the consent of the stewards.


Section 31, last sentence on page 20 states:
No driver may start in the race without taking part in at least one practice session.
 
Ok guys so Sauber say they'll announce their second driver this weekend at Brazil. Seems to be between Kobi and Gutteriez.

Who's your money on?

I'd love it to be Kobi but have a feeling they'll give the young Mexican a go.
 
They have Telmex money and will want to hang on to it. If they don't sign Gutteriez I suspect that money will end up at Mclaren. So sadly I think finances may say the young Mexican. I'd love it to be Kobi though, I enjoy watching him race and would be sad to see him out of F1.
 
RasputinLives. I wanted to like your post but I feel too sad for Kobayashi to have done so. :(

Will still be nice to see a new face on the grid and see how another GP2 star fares with a step up to the top-flight.
 
Judging by Guitterez' performances this year in GP2, I'm not sure he deserves it.

James Calado pretty much matched him throughout the season despite being a rookie. On top of that, there are a string of GPs where he goes missing.

I would give him another year in GP2, but if Sauber have looked at his results in an F1 car an they are good, then fair enough.
 
I'm still saying Alguersuari. With Telmex and Chelsea backing staying they already have decent money and signing Hulkenberg suggests to me that like Force India they want the most competitive driver pairing they can get plus if that driver can bring cash the better chance he'll have. They didn't say to Kobayashi, "you're out", they told him to find some money (I doubt he'll find enough), but Alguersuari does have money.

Kaltenborn and Sauber don't strike me as likely to be pushed around by their sponsors and if Gutierrez was getting the 2013 seat, Sauber would have put him in the car this season slightly more than the 1 Practice session he drove when Perez was ill.

Frijns is probably an outside candidate.
 
racecub all those Alguersauri sources are actually him on Twitter lol.

It was Autosport thst said it was between Kobi and Guti(can I call him that?) so maybe they know something we don't. I'm surprised Guti(guess I can) hasn't been in more sessions if they were going to put him in.
 
I know he twitters, but this came from a guy in Spain, he told me this some months ago. Said he absolutely knew. I have no idea how he absolutely knew. Have to wait and see if he was right I guess.
 
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