Crutchlow: "I'm a lot more confident this year"

How are you feeling after the race in Qatar?
"Good! It was nice to finish really and get the first one out of the way. I don’t want to think that just because I finished fourth it means suddenly we're near the front. There's a long way to go and you never know, the next race you could finish tenth. I'm not saying it's close, because obviously there's a big gap from me and Dovi (Andrea Dovizioso) to the guys behind but things can change so quickly. We could easily be back in that battle or we could easily be a bit nearer to the front battle, so you don’t know. I just think it's a nice way to start the year, that's the way I look at it."

What was the reaction like back at home?
"It was good. I had some good press and people were happy to see it. You always have people who are not very happy to see it obviously, like fans of other riders, which I fully appreciate because it's like you supporting Liverpool, which is rubbish, and me supporting someone else, like Blackburn! Some people like to see me at the front which is nice. I had something like 2,500 messages on my Twitter. I couldn’t scan them all but most of them said well done, which is nice. Better than them saying it's rubbish."

Even though winter testing went so well for you, a lot of people were still surprised by your performance in Qatar. Were you?
"After the testing I think I expected to be in the top six but I didn’t expect that Dovi and I would be so far ahead of that group behind but I also never expected that we'd be so far behind the front three. But it's a good way to start the year. We're not on factory equipment and the only bikes that beat me in the race were factory equipment. But even if I was on factory equipment would I beat the guys in front? No, probably not. Not at the first race of the year, so I'll just chip away. I think we expected to be stronger than what we were last year but to finish fourth in a solid ride at the first round was good, but I don’t know if it was to be expected. I expected to do better than what I did last year but that's it."

Looking at your lap times it seems you could have been fighting up there if you'd have gone past Dovi earlier.
"I made a mistake in the race no doubt. I got a bad start and then I should have passed Dovi earlier. If I had passed him on lap three when I caught him I probably could have got across to the other guys. But with the new Bridgestone tyres if you really hammer them for a lap you won't last the race and I was panicking more that if I hammered the tyres for a lap and didn’t finish the race or got caught at the end, I'd be in a worse situation than I would have been if I could still go fast at the end of the race. We had the third fastest lap on the last couple of laps and the guys that were leading the race weren’t going that much faster than I was at the end of the race. So, I should have just gone earlier and got across with them, but I think if I had a decent start and went with them three I would have been a lot closer to them at the front. I still don’t think I would have been on the podium so it doesn’t matter if I finish fourth and really close to them, or fourth far behind them, I was happy enough anyway."

Do you think the M1 package has stepped up for the 1000s?
"What you have to consider for Dovi and I is that we're not on the same bike as Jorge and Ben. I really hope it doesn’t happen – it happened last year and normally happens every year to be honest – that Qatar and the tests are the closest we ever are to the factory team, with machinery. Because they have an endless budget and can keep developing. We all seem to start the year with very similar stuff. They're already a little bit ahead of us, which is fair enough as they are the factory team but I hope that they don’t keep developing and we don’t get it, because then the gap just gets bigger and bigger and we have to ride harder and harder."

Do you think then that's its important for you to get results in the first few races while the machinery is more equal?
"I think so but not many people understand that that's what sometimes happens – that the gap gets a little bit bigger because of that. But the people in the know, know it. There's nothing really you can do about it."

What do you think has contributed to your great start this year?
"I think that coming into this year I was more confident. I had a good race at the last race last year and the 1000cc suits me a little bit better, and I have a little bit more experience with the tyres sliding around than maybe the other guys do. I also think it's my second year, I want to be in MotoGP next year and my contract is up at the end of this year. I feel that I'm riding better because of that as well. I'd like to not necessarily prove people wrong, but I'd like to show what I can do if I really need to as well. There's a lot at stake for this year so I think all in all with everything put together – I had a good off-season – that's why we're going a little bit quicker this year. But if we were on 800s I still think I'd be nearer the front than what I was last year. Anyway, yes, 1000s seem to be a little bit better."

Did you step up your training over winter for the 1000s?
"I've always trained hard. I like cycling, that's a big passion of mine but it's just in everything, I think that I've not got rid of stuff in my life, but concentrated more on racing the bike and not complaining about it. I've got what I've got and that's it and I will ride what I've got as hard as I can ride it. There's no point saying 'I want this, I need that', you've just got to do the best job you can on what you've got and I took that attitude in my life as well, not just for racing a motorcycle. I'm a lot more calm this year. I think last year was a tough year because I started the year so well, especially the second and third races. And then obviously I crashed and had a few bad races, and then in the middle of the year it was just a disaster. So I think I needed to regroup myself and get my confidence back as well because I know that when I'm at the top of my game, when I won World SuperSport, was winning World Superbike races and was the fastest guy out there, I felt it was all about confidence and I never had it at the end of last year and I've never had that so it was a big wake up call for me. Not confidence in a cocky or arrogant way, just confidence as in knowing that I can do it and I feel that I've got that back again now. Not to say it went away, I just think I needed a little bit of time. And maybe I needed that result at Valencia to know that it's still there, I'm not far away. Then obviously we tested the 1000cc after and I tested well on the 1000 as well. I think we just need to keep building on what we've started this year. I think this year with a little bit of a different attitude there's no reason why we can't be challenging up near the front for a lot of the year."

Do you think podiums are possible this year?
"Yes, I'd like to think so. Where and when I don’t know but I've always said that my aim or goal is to be at the front of the guys on privateer bikes and if I can beat some factory guys now and again I'll be very happy. You cant do much more than that. Is it possible to beat some of the factory guys now and again? Yes I think it is but you have to just do the best on what you've got and that's what I'm looking at doing. Andrea finished third overall last year and there were only two guys that beat him, which are the two best guys in the world who have won the title last year and the year before, so being anywhere near Andrea is… I'm not saying I'm happy with that, obviously if Andrea's tenth I don’t want to be ninth or eleventh, but I think with his calibre of how good he is, I'm happy to be around near that sort of area."

Do you see Dovi, as your team-mate and potential rival for a 2013 seat with Tech 3, as the first guy to beat?
"No, not at all. People will obviously think that way but if I'm there or there about I'm not expecting to beat Andrea, that's the thing for me. As I said he finished third last year in the world title, I finished a lot further down. He's won a MotoGP race and had many podiums but at the end of the day, it's not just me out of contract this year, there's a lot of riders out of contract, nearly every single one of them. So I've just got to do the best job I can and hopefully something will come. It's a long way off yet and I'm just concentrating on doing my job which is to finish as high as I can finish."

Maybe there's even a possibility for you to go into the factory team?
"Well Yamaha have got two fantastic riders there and in all honesty, if you ask me now, I can't see them changing. So I'm not necessarily just looking at that, I'm just looking at doing what I can do now and proving to people that I'm fast enough and that this year I'll be consistent and try my best. At the minute I think I've done that because last year at this point in the season I'd crashed about seven times with testing and stuff, but this year I've crashed once so far since Valencia. So I obviously feel more comfortable and more confident. I'm happy with the team, the team have done a great job over the winter and it's good that I've got the second year with them. This is the first team that I've been with for six years where I've stayed with the same team twice. So it's a little bit of continuity and the same bike essentially, a Yamaha MotoGP bike."

It must be good to be going back to Jerez where you tested so well while you have the momentum from Qatar?
"Jerez is a hard track, it's a very difficult track for me because I've only been there twice, I raced there last year and I tested there earlier on in the year. Testing obviously went okay but it's a little different, I think the race will be tougher than the test was. It's about knowing the tracks well and when those boys have been there for 10 years it's difficult. I think Estoril will be a good one for me, I liked that circuit when I was there last year. Not to say I didn’t like Jerez particularly but it wasn’t my best track. I felt Estoril was good and I think we'll be a little bit closer at Estoril than we will in Jerez, but you never know what's going to happen. People ask how do you plan the race but you can't plan anything in motorcycle racing because it never goes the way that you planned it. So I'll just do my best at both races and see how we go from there."

How are you dealing with the weight of British expectation?
"The British crowd are great, I've always said, when I won in World SuperSport and World Superbike in Britain, the crowd are phenomenal and they always back you but the problem is that sometimes they're the first ones to jump on you if you don’t do very well, which is difficult. But the thing is we don’t have the Spanish and Italian breed of winning, how much they're winning Grands Prix. But that's only because we're not brought up on Grand Prix bikes. But when it comes it will be good because it's been a long time waiting with Jeremy [McWilliams] being the last one and that was in 2000. I'm not saying that I'm gonna get on the podium but I hope so and I hope it for the British fans as much as myself as well."

Asus Transformer Pad Infinity 700 3G

Specifications
Asus Transformer Pad Infinity 700 3G
Network2G
3G
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900
HSDPA
SizeDimensions
Weight
Display
263 x 180.8 x 8.5 mm (10.35 x 7.12 x 0.33 in)
598 gram
Super IPS+ LCD, capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
1920 x 1200 pixels (~224 ppi pixel density)
MemoryPhonebook
Call records
Internal
Card slot


32/64 GB, 1 GB RAM
microSD, up to 32 GB
DataGPRS
EDGE
3G
WLAN
Bluetooth
Infrared port
USB
Yes
Yes
HSPA 21.1/5.76 Mbps
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, Wi-Fi Direct, hotspot
v3.0 with A2DP

v2.0
FeaturesOS
CPU
Messaging
Ringtones
Browser
Radio
GPS
Games
Camera
Video
Colors
Java
Android OS, v4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich)
Dual-core 1.5 GHz Krait; Qualcomm MSM8260A Snapdragon
SMS, MMS, Email, Push Mail, IM
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
HTML5, Adobe Flash

Yes
Yes
8 MP, 3264 x 2448 pixels, autofocus, LED flash
1080p@30fps
Amethyst gray, champagne gold

- Loudspeaker
- Mini-SIM
- 3.5mm jack
- Multitouch
- Optional mobile dock with QWERTY keyboard and trackpad
- Corning Gorilla Glass 2 (protection)
- ASUS Waveshare UI
- Accelerometer, gyro, compass (sensors)
- Active noise cancellation with dedicated mic
- HDMI port
- MP3/WAV/WMA/AAC player
- MP4/H.264 player
- Organizer
- Document editor
- Photo viewer/editor
- Voice memo/dial
- Predictive text input
- Calendar
- Alarm
Battery
Stand-by
Talk time
Non-removable Li-Po battery (25 Wh)
Up to
Up to 10 h

Image: http://www.gsmarena.com/asus_transformer_pad_infinity_700_3g-pictures-4604.php

Asus Transformer Pad TF300T

Specifications
Asus Transformer Pad TF300T
Network2G
3G

SizeDimensions
Weight
Display
263 x 180.8 x 9.9 mm (10.35 x 7.12 x 0.39 in)
635 gram
IPS LCD, capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
1280 x 800 pixels (~149 ppi pixel density)
MemoryPhonebook
Call records
Internal
Card slot


16/32 GB, 1 GB RAM
microSD, up to 32 GB
DataGPRS
EDGE
3G
WLAN
Bluetooth
Infrared port
USB



Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n
v3.0 with EDR

v2.0
FeaturesOS
CPU
Messaging
Ringtones
Browser
Radio
GPS
Games
Camera
Video
Colors
Java
Android OS, v4.0 (ICSandwich), upgradable to v4.2 (Jelly Bean)
Quad-core 1.2 GHz Cortex-A9; Nvidia Tegra 3 T30L
SMS, MMS, Email, IM
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
HTML, Adobe Flash

Yes
Yes
8 MP, 3264 x 2448 pixels, autofocus
1080p
Royal blue, Iceberg White, Torch Red

- Loudspeaker with stereo speakers
- Optional mobile dock with QWERTY keyboard and trackpad
- 3.5mm jack
- Multitouch up to 10 fingers
- ASUS Waveshare UI
- Geo-tagging
- Accelerometer, gyro, compass (sensors)
- HDMI port
- MP3/WAV/WMA/AAC player
- MP4/H.264 player
- Document editor
- Organizer
- Voice memo/dial
- Photo viewer/editor
- Predictive text input (Swype)
- Calendar
- Alarm
Battery
Stand-by
Talk time
Non-removable Li-Po battery (22 Wh)
Up to
Up to 10 h

Image: http://www.gsmarena.com/asus_transformer_pad_tf300t-pictures-4596.php

Raikkonen signs two year deal with Lotus Renault

The Lotus Renault GP F1 team announced earlier today that Kimi Raikkonen will race for them in the 2012 season. The 2007 World Champion, who left Formula 1 at the end of 2009 to pursue a career in rallying, has decided to make a comeback at the pinnacle of single-seater racing. He has now signed a two-year agreement with the Enstone based team.

Raikkonen’s F1 roll of honour includes 18 wins, 62 podiums and 16 pole positions. This experience and success is sure to help Lotus Renault make a step forward next year. The 32-year-old Finn’s commitment indeed makes for a vote of confidence in Lotus Renault GP, demonstrating the team’s determination and new philosophy for the seasons ahead.

“I’m delighted to be coming back to Formula 1 after a two-year break, and I’m grateful to Lotus Renault GP for offering me this opportunity,” said Raikkonen. “My time in the World Rally Championship has been a useful stage in my career as a driver, but I can’t deny the fact that my hunger for F1 has recently become overwhelming. It was an easy choice to return with Lotus Renault GP as I have been impressed by the scope of the team’s ambition. Now I’m looking forward to playing an important role in pushing the team to the very front of the grid.”

“All year long, we kept saying that our team was at the start of a brand new cycle. Backstage we’ve been working hard to build the foundations of a successful structure and to ensure that we would soon be able to fight at the highest level”, added Genii Capital Chairman Gerard Lopez. “Kimi’s decision to come back to Formula 1 with us is the first step of several announcements which should turn us into an even more serious contender in the future. Of course, we are all looking forward to working with a world champion. On behalf of our staff, I’d like to welcome Kimi to Enstone, a setting that has always been known for its human approach to Formula 1.”

Lotus Renault

Lotus Renault GP and Heidfeld announce separation

The Lotus Renault GP team along with Nick Heidfeld have reached an amicable settlement today and have chosen to part company with immediate effect.

“Our disagreement with Nick has been the subject of much media coverage lately, and we are pleased to have reached a swift and reasonable solution,” said Lotus Renault GP Team Principal Eric Boullier.

“Our separation process was already a painful one, and neither of us wanted to go through another legal hearing. We’re very grateful to Nick for the highly valuable contribution he’s made to the team. We certainly had good times together, in particular remembering our podium finish in Malaysia,” he continued.

“He is a very strong and determined racer and we wish him every success in the future,” he added.

“Obviously I’m disappointed to be leaving Lotus Renault GP in the middle of the season,” said Heidfeld.

“I thought I could still make a big contribution to the team, but I have to see things as they are and I want to turn my attention to the future. We have taken the right decision by choosing to end our collaboration today.”

“I would like to wish all the friends I made at Enstone a successful end to the season. One thing is for sure – I’ll be back racing at the highest level soon,” added the German.

Lotus Renault GP

Teen Author Takes on High School Mean Girls

Remember the good old days, when teenagers were mainly concerned about how to get through the school year without spending too much time on exams and homework, while still getting acceptable grades or trying to figure out how to fix a broken heart?

These days, things have become much more complicated (and dramatic) as today’s youth feel peer pressure to keep up with the latest trends. For boys, this mainly means gadgets, but for girls, it is fashion. Not wearing the right pair of shoes for the first day of school, for example, can mean disaster.

That, at least, is the impression one gets when reading the novel “Brandsetters: An Inner Circle Novel,” written by 16-year-old Indonesian student Natasha Alessandra and published by Buah Hati. But even at her young age, this is not Natasha’s first foray into the world of literature. When she was only 8, she had her first book, “The Adventure of Molly,” published.

“Brandsetters” is set in New York City at West Pacific Preparatory School and follows the lives of the wealthy children of the city’s elite.

Sound familiar? Natasha’s novel is less-than-subtly inspired by “Gossip Girl,” both the books by Cecily von Ziegesar and the TV series that is now in its fifth season and has enjoyed tremendous success, especially among younger audiences.

One of the main characters in “Brandsetters,” Alexandria Blair Masen, or Lexi, has a striking resemblance to Blair Waldorf, the queen bee of “Gossip Girl,” and it is not only a name they share: just like “Gossip Girl’s” Blair, Lexi is described as the leader of her group of friends, and, from time to time, reveals a rather nasty side.

Natasha even lets Lexi wear headbands every day — anyone familiar with “Gossip Girl” knows that headbands are one of Blair’s trademarks.

The plot is simple. Lexi and her best friends Keira, Roxy and Meg are the most popular girls in school; rich, beautiful and fashionable. They call their clique “The Inner Circle,” and it is these four girls, led by Lexi, who decide which of the other students are cool, and which ones are losers and outcasts.

When Taryn, a new girl, comes into the picture, the status quo slowly falls apart. Things become even worse when an anonymous blog, “Gossipgurlxox729,” (go figure) spreads rumors about the four friends that turn them against one another.

The novel is a light and easy read, though predictable, and plays with the new technology that teenagers these days can’t seem to live without: some passages of the book consist entirely of BlackBerry conversations, blog entries and multiple person chats.

In that regard, “Brandsetters” paints a vivid and accurate picture of how the younger generation has embraced the digital and high-tech world, and more than that, how they manipulate it.

Natasha takes a lot of time describing the clothes that the girls — and boys — wear, from their Roberto Cavalli dresses and Alexander McQueen high heels to mounds of accessories and flashy jewelry.

Unfortunately, that is precisely the wrong kind of message to send to young readers, that what you wear determines your happiness in high school. Honesty, kindness or reliability are thrown out the window and even the story’s villain learns that revenge comes in the form of a publicly ruined dress.

Natasha said during the March 30 release of the book at the Times bookstore in Pacific Place mall in Jakarta that she prefers to write in English. She has certainly accomplished a lot for someone her age, and “Brandsetters” shows her potential as an author. Publishing such an accomplished novel at such a young age should serve as an inspiration to other young Indonesians to follow their dreams, regardless of their age.

The story, however, lacks the same inspiration. Natasha has explained that many of the occurrences and characters in her book are based on real-life people and her own experiences. And that, to be frank, is quite a scary thought.

Of course there is no harm in teenagers developing an interest in fashion. But to have their entire lives revolve around it, and to judge others based only on that, is definitely not a character trait that we would like to see young Indonesians grow up with.

First Arab Sumo Wrestler Chases Glory in Japan

Tokyo. With legs resembling tree trunks and packing the body weight of two average-sized men, sumo wrestling’s “Great Sandstorm” would seem a good fit for the wildly popular Japanese sport.

But Egypt’s Abdelrahman Ahmed Shaalan, the first professional sumo wrestler from both the African continent and Arab world, faces some mighty challenges as he embarks on a quest to become a yokozuna, or grand champion.

The man known by the ring name Osunaarashi, which translates as Great Sandstorm, prays five times a day as a devout Muslim, a tough routine given the intense daily training schedule required for sumo’s highly ritualized contests.

Small in number, foreigners are vital members of tradition-bound sumo as more Japanese youngsters with high athletic abilities tend to choose baseball, football and other lucrative or more high-profile sports with less rigid conventions.

Mongolians have been a dominant force in the top ranks for years, although Shaalan is among the sport’s first Muslim competitors.

As such, the 20-year-old does not touch the deep-fried pork cutlets loved by millions of Japanese or drink vast quantities of beer and rice wine sake, staples of a diet that sumo wrestlers rely on to bulk up.

Muslims avoid pork and alcohol.

But Shaalan, who quit his university accounting degree to enter sumo’s professional ranks, is undeterred, even brushing aside the challenges presented by the holy month of Ramadan when he cannot eat or drink during daylight hours.

Regular sumo tournaments are held in the afternoon.

“I am confident that I can overcome my challenges,” the burly wrestler told Japanese media last month after winning his first two professional-level matches at a tournament in the western city of Osaka.

Shaalan, a native of Giza, which is home to Egypt’s pyramids, insisted he was able to train for at least four hours in the daytime during the Islamic celebration.

“I want to become a wrestler who represents Arab and African nations.... My dream is to become a yokozuna,” said the Egyptian, who stands at 189 centimeters (6 ft 2 ins) and weighs 145 kilograms (320 pounds).

He did, however, concede: “I am a little bit worried. But no problem.”

Japan’s sumo association could not say whether the Great Sandstorm is the sport’s first Muslim competitor. There have been unconfirmed reports of Muslim sumo wrestlers in the past.

His coach, a former wrestler known as Otake, has promised he’ll keep his new recruit in top shape, even changing the recipe for a meat, vegetable and fish stew known as Chankonabe which wrestlers devour on a daily basis.

“When we serve pork cutlet, we prepare chicken cutlet for him. When we use pork for Chankonabe, we let him eat something else,” the coach said.

“But I want him to get used to the customs and traditions of the sumo world otherwise.”

Shaalan’s coach is most concerned about keeping his young apprentice focused amid the media storm sparked by the newcomer’s spectacular debut, which included dumping his Japanese opponent with a powerful arm throw.

“It was very exciting,” declared the novice, who was not allowed to do a one-on-one interview under sumo association guidelines for new recruits.

Otake was less enthusiastic about the victories that earned Shaalan a coveted spot in the sport’s bi-monthly tournaments, although he will start at the bottom of the rankings at the next meeting in May.

“He needed to crouch lower in exchanging thrusts,” the sumo master said, adding that his apprentice was not flexible enough to do the splits.

“I will teach him to become more humble as his ranking rises.”

Shaalan’s arrival in the pro ranks came after he won an open-class bronze medal at the 2008 world junior sumo championships and an over-100 kilogram bronze at the 2010 edition.

Despite its popularity, the sport has suffered in recent years with a hugely damaging bout-fixing scandal that infuriated the public and forced the resignations of about two dozen wrestlers and a stablemaster.

Sometimes brutal training methods and allegations of illegal drug use have also come under the microscope.

None of that is likely to turn off the determined Shaalan, whose love affair with sumo began at the age of 15 when he was invited by a friend to a practice session.

“I was impressed by the strength of sumo wrestlers who behaved as if nothing had happened even after they lost or got tired,” he said.

“I want the world to understand sumo.”

Agence France-Presse

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