BMW sees championship challenge in 2009

With major rule changes due for the 2009 F1 season, and a competitive year for the BMW Sauber F1 team in which it won its first Grand Prix, team boss Mario Theissen says the goal is for his outfit to be fighting for the title next year.

"In consideration of this situation, a shift in the balance of power on the 2009 Formula One grid is entirely possible," Theissen said of the rule changes. "In both Munich and Hinwil, we have been working flat-out on the developments for the coming season and the work on the different projects is progressing as scheduled, so far."

"The roll-out of the BMW Sauber F1.09 has been scheduled for 20th January at Valencia," he added. "Afterwards, we will conduct three further tests before the 2009 season kicks off in Melbourne on 29th March - some weeks later than was the case in recent years. The challenges are big but we will stick to our ambitious goal: in 2009, we want to be one of the teams battling it out for the title."

Source:
http://f1.gpupdate.net

Michael Schumacher has congratulated Lewis Hamilton on becoming Formula One world champion

The seven-times former world champion admitted that he was "overwhelmed" by Sunday's title decider in Brazil, and has send his best wishes to Hamilton on his achievement.

"I congratulate Lewis Hamilton and I am sending very warm greetings to Felipe," he said.

An overtaking manoeuvre on Toyota's Timo Glock at the penultimate corner on the last lap of the final race of the season helped the 23-year-old capture the crown by a point from Ferrari's Felipe Massa.

"What a finale," Schumacher said, who currently works in an advisory role for Ferrari. "I am still overwhelmed from the race. I have never seen anything like this, not as a racer and not as a spectator - you can probably only say it was fate."

Schumacher also praised Felipe Massa, winner of the Brazilian Grand Prix, who lost out to Hamilton by just a point in the drivers' standings.

"He can leave that race with his head up as with this performance he surely has convinced all the people who still had doubts about his driving skills. He will for sure attack again next year."

Source:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk

Hamilton nears title with dominant win

Lewis Hamilton will take a seven-point lead into the final round of the world championship after dominating the Chinese Grand Prix.

McLaren driver Hamilton put his troubled Fuji race behind him by controlling the Shanghai event throughout, while his title rival Felipe Massa had to rely on Ferrari team orders to secure a distant second place ahead of his teammate Kimi Raikkonen.

Hamilton had little trouble holding the lead at the start, and then made an early break. Although Raikkonen was able to close slightly later in the first stint, by that time he was four seconds adrift - while Massa could not match either of the two leaders and was running eight seconds behind when he became the first of the front-runners to pit on lap 14.

Hamilton and Raikkonen stopped one lap later, with the Briton then extending his lead further in the middle stint.

By the time the final stops were due, Hamilton was nine seconds clear of Raikkonen and 14 seconds ahead of Massa, so with no hope of beating the McLaren on speed, Ferrari switched focus to getting their title challenger in front of their outgoing champion.

Raikkonen's pace gradually became more relaxed and with seven laps to go Massa slipped past into the hairpin. But by that time, Hamilton was 16 seconds ahead and on course for a dominant and hugely significant victory.

Fernando Alonso finished fourth for Renault, unable to match the top three this time but clear of the rest of the field. He briefly lost the place to McLaren's Heikki Kovalainen through the first corners, before repassing the Finn into the hairpin further around the opening lap.

Kovalainen then fell away from the Renault, although he might have had a chance to strike back by running longer at the final stops had he not picked up a right front puncture on lap 34. The slow lap back to the pits for new rubber dropped Kovalainen to 15th and he eventually retired with six laps to go.

The BMW Saubers completed the top six, with Robert Kubica using a long first stint to gain ground from 11th on the grid. The Pole finished close behind teammate Nick Heidfeld, but sixth was not sufficient to keep him in the title hunt, which is now a two-horse race.

Timo Glock used a one-stop strategy to take seventh for Toyota, ahead of Renault's Nelson Piquet, who also gained ground by running a very long first stint.

That meant Toro Rosso's points scoring run came to an end, with Sebastian Vettel finishing only ninth and Sebastien Bourdais down in 13th following a first corner tangle that took Jarno Trulli's Toyota out of the race.

One-stopping David Coulthard (Red Bull) beat Rubens Barrichello's Honda to 10th, while Mark Webber charged up the order initially following his engine change penalty but fell back into heavier traffic after his early first stop and had to settle for 14th behind Kazuki Nakajima (Williams) and Bourdais.

PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTS

The Chinese Grand Prix
Shanghai International Circuit, China;
56 laps; 305.066km;
Weather: Cloudy.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time

1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes (B) 1h31.57.403
2. Massa Ferrari (B) + 14.925
3. Raikkonen Ferrari (B) + 16.445
4. Alonso Renault (B) + 18.370
5. Heidfeld BMW Sauber (B) + 28.923
6. Kubica BMW Sauber (B) + 33.219
7. Glock Toyota (B) + 41.722
8. Piquet Renault (B) + 56.645
9. Vettel Toro Rosso-Ferrari (B) + 1:04.339
10. Coulthard Red Bull-Renault (B) + 1:14.842
11. Barrichello Honda (B) + 1:25.061
12. Nakajima Williams-Toyota (B) + 1:30.847
13. Bourdais Toro Rosso-Ferrari (B) + 1:31.457
14. Webber Red Bull-Renault (B) + 1:32.422
15. Rosberg Williams-Toyota (B) + 1 lap
16. Button Honda (B) + 1 lap
17. Fisichella Force India-Ferrari (B) + 1 lap

Fastest lap: Hamilton, 1:36.325

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap

Kovalainen McLaren-Mercedes (B) 50
Sutil Force India-Ferrari (B) 14
Trulli Toyota (B) 3


World Championship standings, round 17:

Drivers: Constructors:

1. Hamilton 94 1. Ferrari 156
2. Massa 87 2. McLaren-Mercedes 145
3. Kubica 75 3. BMW Sauber 135
4. Raikkonen 69 4. Renault 72
5. Heidfeld 60 5. Toyota 52
6. Alonso 53 6. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 34
7. Kovalainen 51 7. Red Bull-Renault 29
8. Vettel 30 8. Williams-Toyota 26
9. Trulli 30 9. Honda 14
10. Glock 22
11. Webber 21
12. Piquet 19
13. Rosberg 17
14. Barrichello 11
15. Nakajima 9
16. Coulthard 8
17. Bourdais 4
18. Button 3

Source:
http://www.autosport.com

Osaka crush Adelaide's hopes in AFC final 1st leg

Gamba Osaka have one hand on the AFC Champions League trophy after trampling Adelaide United 3-0 in the first leg of the final Wednesday to leave the Australians with a daunting task.

The Japanese outfit dominated their opponents with ace Brazilian striker Lucas opening the scoring in the 37th minute before setting up the second for midfielder Yasuhito Endo six minutes later.

Michihiro Yasuda added a third for the home team in the 68th minute, leaving Adelaide with plenty to do in the second leg at Hindmarsh Stadium on November 12.

It could have been worse for Aurelio Vidmar's men, with Endo having a goal disallowed from his curling freekick in the dying minutes with striker Roni adjudged offside.

Gamba coach Akira Nishino was more-than satisfied with the night's work.

"I reckon the second match will be quite tough. But we got a good advantage and want to make good use of it," he said.

"Adelaide's defence was not as tight as we had expected. I knew it would be a battle on the ground but we passed the ball well. We played a fine game of football.

"We have cleared half of our goal to become the champions by playing our brand of attacking football and we will play still better with a comfortable lead."

Vidmar admitted his side had a mountain to climb after what he called a "truly disappointing" defeat.

The deficit was "now very big ... Mount Fuji, probably," quipped Vidmar.

"They were an extremely good side."

About the return leg at home, he added: "We will go there and give everything we can.

"That's all I can ask for. I'm really happy with the way we played in the second half and put more pressure on them."

Vidmar vowed before the match that his team would rise to the occasion but their tactical discipline failed them with nerves evident in the biggest game in the club's history.

Given their home advantage, Gamba was always going to be favourites and they started the better side, encamped in the Australian field for most of the first half with Tomokazu Myojin, Hideo Hashimoto, and Hayato Sasaki going close.

Adelaide's best chance came after 26 minutes when Robert Cornthwaite let rip from 25 yards only to see his effort go wide.

The A-League side would have dearly loved to take an away goal into the second leg, but it was Gamba who opened the scoring in front of a paacked stadium.

Lucas fired a shot after latching onto a pass from Takahiro Futagawa from near the centre line and goalkeeper Angelo Costanzo could only watch it flash past him in the 37th minute.

The partisan crowd was ecstatic six minutes later when Diego won the ball and set free Lucas who then released Endo down the left with acres of space.

Defenders flocked to the Osaka star, but Endo fired in a lethal left-foot strike which hit the mark.

The second half saw Gamba continue their domination and they struck the killer blow in the 68th minute with Endo floating in a corner to Yasuda who unleashed a withering strike from 25 yards which pierced the Reds defence.

"We could have scored more if we were better skilled in finishing," said Endo.

"We want to keep up our motivation and play the same kind of football. I know the pressure will be more fierce away but we will try not to be outdone mentally."

Despite their loss, Adelaide are already guaranteed a place in the lucrative FIFA Club World Cup next month against continental champions including Manchester United.

Source:
http://sport.id.msn.com

Adebayor out for three weeks as Pulis defends Stoke

Arsenal striker Emmanuel Adebayor will be out for three weeks after injuring his ankle in the weekend loss at Stoke, coach Arsene Wenger confirmed on Wednesday.

Wenger, who had Tuesday strongly criticised Stoke's physical approach to the encounter at the Britannia Stadium, confirmed that "Adebayor will be (out) three weeks," while winger Theo Walcott will also face several days on the sidelines.

Adebayor picked up his injury in a heavy tackle by Stoke defender Ryan Shawcross, while Walcott picked up a shoulder injury and right back Bacary Sagna damaged an ankle.

On the plus side, skipper William Gallas was set to return for Wednesday's Champions League match against Turkey's Fenerbahce having not played since the 4-4 draw with Tottenham owing to a hamstring problem.

"Walcott could be days or weeks. It is the shoulder he had the surgery on. We don't know about Gallas yet but Sagna will be back in the squad," Wenger said.

Wenger accused Stoke's long throw-in menace Rory Delap of causing Walcott's shoulder injury, which also makes the young England star a doubt for Saturday's home league game with Manchester United.

And he accused Stoke's Ryan Shawcross as going in too hard on Adebayor.

But Stoke manager Tony Pulis hit back Wednesday, noting that Gunners striker Robin van Persie was the only player sent off.

"In Stoke-on-Trent on Saturday evening, Mr Wenger talked openly about Arsenal's encounter with Stoke as being a `typical English encounter'," Pulis told www.stokecityfc.co.uk.

"He commended my team's organisation, my team's commitment and confessed that on the day Stoke City thoroughly deserved to win the game. Very open and very honest.

"In London 48 hours later and 150 miles away from Stoke-on-Trent, Mr Wenger changed tack and has tried to rewrite history.

"Remember there was only one red card on Saturday and the last time I watched the game it certainly was not a Stoke City player who received it," said Pulis, who insisted his players would never deliberately injure opponents.

Following Tuesday's training session Wenger had lauded the bravery of his team.

"The one who is tackling is not the brave one. For me the brave one is the player who is trying to play football," said Wenger, charging that his players "have been injured deliberately."

The Stoke loss has seen Arsenal drop to fourth in the English Premiership, six points behind leaders Chelsea.

Hamilton emotional, thankful after drama and glory

Lewis Hamilton did not know if he should laugh or cry after his dramatic world championship-clinching fifth place finish in Sunday's tense, dramatic and nerve jangling Brazilian Grand Prix.
The 23-year-old Englishman became the youngest drivers champion in Formula One history and the sport's first black champion, beating local hero Felipe Massa of Ferrari by one point over the season.

But he did it only after a nail-biting rain-hit finish in which, after appearing to be in control of his destiny in fourth place, he slipped back to sixth and had to recover at least one place to be sure of the title.

That recovery was completed at the final corner of the 71st and last lap of the race when he pulled clear of German Timo Glock's Toyota to cross the line in fifth, not knowing immediately if it was good enough for him to take the title.

In scenes of near-pandemonium in a crowded pit lane, and in front of a partisan crowd of 100,000 fans, mostly rooting for Massa, Hamilton had to choke back tears of emotion as he embraced his father and manager Anthony.

"I can't talk, I just can't speak," he said immediately. "It's pretty much impossible to put into words. I am still speechless.

"My whole family is here. And I am so proud for them. My dad's here and he is the man. For us all, it has been such a long journey and with a lot of support from people back home.

"My team did a fantastic job all year and all the sacrifices we made, I'm so thrilled to be able to do this for everyone."

Hamilton lost fifth place to young German Sebastien Vettel two laps from the end, but his McLaren team knew that Glock was running on heavily-worn dry-weather tyres in the rain.

They talked him through the final tense moments as he chased after Vettel, to try and regain the place he needed, and then realised that Glock was slowing and could not handle his car in the conditions.

In the end, Glock could not resist Hamilton who passed him so close to the finish that the celebrations had already started for Massa's family and team in the Ferrari garage.

It could not have been a more dramatic conclusion to a championship-deciding race.

"Before it started to rain I was quite comfortable," said Hamilton. "My tyres were a little bit shot, so I was struggling to keep the pace up, but I was able to stay ahead of them and that's all.

"Then it started to drizzle and I didn't want to take any risks. Then he (Vettel) got past me and I was told that I had to get in front of him.

"I couldn't believe it. Then, at the last corner I managed to get past Glock and, I'm telling you, it was just amazing. I can only thank God!

"Just before I got to him, they said you have to get past Glock! So I was trying my hardest to get to Vettel, but he was just as quick as me, if not a little bit quicker. It was one of the toughest races of my life, if not the toughest."

As he crossed the line, Hamilton, still did not know if his efforts were in vain.

"I was shouting 'do I have it? Do I have it?" and they came on when I was down at turn one and they told me and I just felt ecstatic. It's been a dream and now we've got it..."

Hamilton's father Anthony, also his manager, was also lost for words in the sea of emotion that overwhelmed them and the McLaren team at the finish.

He criticised the Brazilian fans for booing the result. "They should not do that, they should recognise a great sporting contest," he said, before adding his great feelings of respect for the Massa family.

"This is the culmination of 16 years of hard work and I hope it is an inspiration to other families and shows them that if we can do it, so can they."

Hamilton's girlfriend Nicole Scherzinger, lead singer with the Pussycat Dolls, said: "It is just amazing, so exciting and he did it - like I knew he would. I could just feel it was going to happen and it is fantastic."

His brother Nicolas said: "It was close and it was late, but he deserved it for all his work and all his sacrifices for so many years."

McLaren sporting director Dave Ryan reckoned this was only the tip of the iceberg for the boy from Stevenage.

"This is only the beginning. The kid is magic. He's going to go a long way," he suggested.

Source:
http://sport.id.msn.com

Ferrari boss pays tribute to Hamilton

Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo has paid tribute to Lewis Hamilton after the British star denied Brazilian Felipe Massa the Formula One world title.
McLaren's Hamilton claimed the title by a single point following a dramatic Brazilian Grand Prix at Interlagos on Sunday, where the 23-year-old overtook Timo Glock on the very last corner of the last lap to claim the fifth position he needed to become world champion.

Ferrari's Massa won the race in front of his home fans but was left heart-broken after initially believing he had won the world title - when he finished his race, Hamilton was still in sixth place.

"I want to congratulate Lewis Hamilton, the youngest world champion in the history of Formula One," said di Montezemolo.

"He was an incredibly tough competitor and he fully deserved his victory ... Next year he will have the number 1 on his car but there's one thing we can be certain about: we'll do everything we can to have this number back on a Ferrari."

Di Montezemolo also had a word of commiseration for Massa, who came so close and whose family and mechanics had actually started to celebrate the title victory before Hamilton's late drama.

"I can't imagine to what extent that moment must have been painful for him but I want to congratulate him nonetheless, not just for what he did on the track, dominating in front of his fans and showing that he's a driver who deserves the world title, but also for his maturity and his sportsmanship.

"He's a great champion and a great man."

There was a silver lining to Ferrari's cloud, though, as they won the constructors title once again.

"To have won this title for the eighth time in 10 years is a result that has no equal in collective sport on a world level and demonstrates what an extraordinary group we are," added the president.

Source:
http://sport.id.msn.com

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