Grand Prix 2014 Australian Grand Prix Practice, Qualifying & Race Discussion

24 years old. Apprenticeship fully served, and finally arrived in one of the two seats that you've been working towards sitting in for years; that of the quadruple reigning champions. And to start with, your home Grand Prix. All you need is for the car and engine combination to maintain its previous stratospheric standards...

At time of going to press, testing has shown little sign that Daniel Ricciardo's dream will be realised. Although, it has to be said, at time of going to press, testing has not been quite as indicative as it could have been. We don't know who is going to be fast and we won't know until the lights go out in Melbourne.

Ricciardo's team-mate, paradoxical pantomime villain and quadrakaiser Sebastian Vettel is going for his tenth race win in a row, although early suggestions are that his assault on double figures might not be as straightforward as some of the previous nine. At Jerez, getting to double figures in terms of laps was a struggle..

Ricciardo will have to make sure he performs well this season to make sure he keeps the dream seat ahead of Daniil Kvyat, presuming the young Russian puts Jean-Eric Vergne's F1 career to sleep in a dignified and respectful ceremony.

Lotus, meanwhile, have very little money, necessitating the parachuting in of Scrooge El Duck as their driver to back up 2012's other panel-beater Romain Grosjean. Their nose looks rather different to anything else out there, and is closest in design to Williams' 2004 walrus nose. Which doesn't save the fears.

McLaren and Mercedes will back up their silver cars with a British World Champion, a Mercedes engine and a plethora of team principals. Button is, of course, the Melbourne specialist. They've got some running in at Jerez; it is unknown whether either are quick, but neither are stationary.

Fernando Alonso's Ferrari hegemony is about to be challenged by Kimi Raikkonen's arrival. Raikkonen won in Australia last year, so he's got form, and this race will be the first to tell us if Ferrari team radio this year will be a story of two passionate racers abusing their engineers, or two old men moaning about their backs.

Sauber's driver line-up is the most boring thing in Formula One since the US Grand Prix of 2005.

Nico Hulkenburg gets ready for his third consecutive last year before he is signed by a big team. A poor Force India will lead to the Hulk crying himself to sleep, while team-mate Sergio Perez comforts him with stories about how McLaren isn't all it's cracked up to be.

Williams have an interesting partnership; Felipe Massa released from the suffocating stranglehold of the Alonso anaconda and partnered with an almost-ripe pretender in Valteri Bottas. They have a new old livery, a new sponsor and new hope. Williams-Mercedes still doesn't sound right.

And, hey, the 2014 Australian Grand Prix has to be the best chance for Marussia and Caterham to actually score a point; only 9 of the other teams' engines need fall apart and 6 of them are made by Renault! Race finishing expert Max Chilton could be the beneficiary. Although he could actually finish 11th if there are only 10 finishers.

So, all that's left to talk about is Melbourne itself. Despite the rugby and cricket last year, the Grand Prix itself has been quite Pommie friendly in the last several years! The yellow lines at the edge of the track bordered by green walls have been a sign of F1 starting for a number of years, and there has been good racing backed up by poor reliability. And, boy, do we expect poor reliability...
 
Wombcat are you seriously saying in this day of drivers safety that the stewards are going to allow drivers to crash into each other willy nilly without penalty and anyway that sort of behavior does not impress me one bit and so in answer to your question no I do not think those years were great for F1..
 
Last edited:
Let me rephrase the question. In 1988 and 1989 the car to have to win races was a Mclaren. In 1988 even more so than in 1989, in another car you had virtually no chance. Was it bad for the sport? Are those years looked back to as boring seasons, just for htat reason?
Or 1987: you had to have a Williams to win the championship. Senna and Prost could each keep up for half a season, but not the whole.

My bet is that more people wil think 2002 and 2011 were boring than 1987-1989.
It's not so much depending if a car is dominant, but if there's a battle for the title going on.
 
How many people on this forum are equal supporters of two drivers in the same team? If there are more than me I'd be shocked. I've been Hamberg longer than the modern Mercedes team has been around.

Re FBs comments, do the poll, I think you'll be surprised and hopefully most of these comments can be transferred.

I quite frankly want to see a great battle regardless of who is driving and for what teams. I'm an F1 fan before I'm a fan of any driver. I loved the podium, I loved watching Bottas and Kvyat, I loved Hulkenberg keeping Alonso at bay all those laps and I loved Ricciardo's smile on the podium before twatface ruined it all.

I just don't want to see another 2013 and to an extent 2009 and the entire Schumacher/Ferrari era.

I do agree with you about a team manipulating the result but I can't see past Ferrari for that and even then Kimi wouldn't listen.
 
Last edited:
I'd put money on anyone being Hulked if he were their team mate!

Very true but Sergio could have at least kept pace with those Torro Rosso's. As we saw Hulk dicing with Alonso and waltzing away from Kimi thats the least we could expect.

(And lets remember he got a very lucky point)
 
Now that I wasn't aware of. However the safety car should have put him back in the game.

I maintain that he was further off Hulks pace than he should have been.
 
I wonder if any members of the FIA would be willing to fly in an aircraft with airspeed indicators no more accurate than the fuel flow sensor given to RBR?
 
Hmmm Sergio was only 35 seconds back from Hulk with an extra stop. Not sure how much time he would have lost limping back to the pits as well so this could have netted out Hulks apparent advantage.
 
Back
Top Bottom