Dovizioso pessimistic over Sepang prospects

Andrea Dovizioso is hoping for a big improvement at Sepang this weekend after the Ducati MotoGP rider struggled at the Malaysian circuit during the official pre-season tests.

Dovizioso rates Sepang as one of his favourite tracks but the Italian is far from convinced over his prospects on the back of two disappointing tests at the venue in February.

“Sepang is one of my favourite tracks, but the tests in February weren't so good. It looks like our bike didn't work very well on that track, especially because the grip is very low, but maybe the conditions now are different and we can show some improvement,” he said.

“Anyway we're going there always to push 100% and try to have fun with the bike.”

Dovizioso is eighth in the MotoGP World Championship, 13 points behind Alvaro Bautista and 10 ahead of team-mate Nicky Hayden after 14 rounds.

Ducati has tasted success at Sepang in the past, with Loris Capirossi and Casey Stoner both scaling the top step.

Marquez 'I knew the last lap would be the best'

Rookie MotoGP title leader Marc Marquez emerged with pole position after a 'who dares wins' qualifying session for the Malaysian MotoGP at Sepang.

A rain shower left the turn five, six and seven area slippery for the Q2 pole shootout - on an otherwise fully dry track.

Marquez was just eighth with a minute of the session remaining, but stuck to his plan and made his last lap count, knocking Valentino Rossi from pole by 0.325s with a new official lap record.

“At the start of qualifying there were two completely wet corners, which made it hard to put in a hot lap as we had to calculate the amount of risk - whilst still maintaining our speed,” said Repsol Honda rider Marquez.

“I knew straight away that the last lap would be the best because it was getting dryer all the time. So the key was to wait until the last laps and try to do the lap time, because in the beginning it was impossible to push.”

It was Marquez's eighth pole of the season and fourth in a row.

The 20-year-old Spaniard will be joined on the front row by Rossi and Cal Crutchlow. Nearest title rival Jorge Lorenzo heads row two, alongside Marquez's team-mate and practice pace setter Dani Pedrosa.

“I think Dani and Jorge have a very good pace, also Valentino and Cal, so it will be interesting,” said Marquez, before turning attention to the ever changing Sepang weather.

“Sure I would prefer a dry race, for me and for the show. But maybe it will be my first flag-to-flag [bike swap] race. If it's dry or wet we will do our best.

“If it's dry and I feel comfortable there is no reason to change the plan [just because of the points lead]. My mentality is the same. In practice I take the same risks.”

Marquez will start the race with a 39 point advantage over Lorenzo and 59 point advantage over Pedrosa.

'Special' Sepang victory for happy Pedrosa

Dani Pedrosa celebrated a 'special' victory at the Malaysian MotoGP at Sepang to secure his third victory of the campaign, closing the gap to Jorge Lorenzo in second place in the championship standings to 11 points.

It was Pedrosa's second successive victory at the Malaysian circuit after he also took the spoils in 2012.

The Spanish rider made amends after his championship hopes went up in smoke at Aragon in the previous round, where Pedrosa was fired off his Repsol Honda following contact with team-mate Marc Marquez, which disabled the traction control on his RC213V.

Pedrosa, though, has put the incident behind him and is now looking ahead to the final three races at Phillip Island, Motegi and Valencia.

“I am very happy with this win, as it is very special. My level of riding today was very good and the victory comes after a difficult week – in which I was laid up in bed and could hardly move,” he said.

“To come here and win is fantastic, so thanks to all my team.

“It hasn't been the best week but we can't look back any more. It's just a shame because we had a similar pace at the last race at Aragon so it could have been two in a row.”

Pedrosa took the lead from Jorge Lorenzo at the end of lap five and went on to win by 2.7 seconds from Marquez, who increased his lead at the top of the series table to 43 points over Lorenzo.

“Today was a good day. We had a good pace and I enjoyed a lot riding at the front. My bike was working well. Both tyres were slippery but I could ride well all weekend.

“The first laps are always key, but I wanted to check the track a little and see how it feels. After that Jorge was also going fast but I tried to go in front and make a gap. I felt confident and had a good lead by the end, so I could manage and control the pace.

“The tyres were sliding a lot. It was nice!”

Not so nice are Pedrosa's championship chances. Despite the win he is 54 points from Marquez with just 75 still available.

“With Marc finishing on the podium every time it is very hard to take back any points. Focusing on each race is what we have to do.”

LG Optimus L4 II Tri E470

Specifications
LG Optimus L4 II Tri E470
Network2G
3G
GSM 850 / 900 / 1800 / 1900 - SIM 1 & SIM 2 & SIM 3
HSDPA 850 / 2100
SizeDimensions
Weight
Display
112.8 x 64.7 x 12.7 mm (4.44 x 2.55 x 0.5 in)
140 gram
IPS LCD capacitive touchscreen, 16M colors
320 x 480 pixels (~152 ppi pixel density)
MemoryPhonebook
Call records
Internal
Card slot
Yes
Yes
4 GB, 512 MB RAM
microSD, up to 32 GB
DataGPRS
EDGE
3G
WLAN
Bluetooth
Infrared port
USB
Yes
Yes
HSPA 7.2/5.76 Mbps
Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g/n, hotspot
v3.0 with A2DP

microUSB v2.0
FeaturesOS
CPU
Messaging
Ringtones
Browser
Radio
GPS
Games
Camera
Video
Colors
Java
Android OS, v4.1.2 (Jelly Bean)
1.0 GHz Cotex-A9; Mediatek MT6575
SMS, MMS, Email, Push Email, IM
Vibration; MP3, WAV ringtones
HTML
FM radio/recorder
Yes
Yes
3.15 MP, LED flash
Yes
White, black

- Loudspeaker
- Triple SIM
- 3.5mm jack
- Multitouch
- Accelerometer, proximity (sensors)
- Digital TV
- MP4/H.263 player
- MP3/WAV/AAC player
- Photo viewer
- Voice memo/dial
- Clock
- Calendar
- Alarm
Battery
Stand-by
Talk time
Li-Ion 2150 mAh
Up to
Up to

Image: http://www.gsmarena.com/lg_optimus_l4_ii_tri_e470-pictures-6385.php

Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari return gives F1 a lift

Rome: Kimi Raikkonen’s return to Ferrari, which was confirmed on Wednesday, may not be exactly what Fernando Alonso wanted, and it was certainly not on Felipe Massa’s wish list, but it will give Formula One a lift in 2014, when conversation elsewhere is likely to be dominated by talk of motor generator units and ERS (forget DRS) as teams downsize to new 1.6-litre V6s.

In a flawed sport constantly wringing its hands about whether to be pure and boring or contrived and exciting (cue Pirelli), and always fussing over team orders, Raikkonen represents F1 One at its very best.

The Finn is skilful and fast and if he is at his best during his two-year contract with Ferrari he will give Alonso a headache and the rest of us a rare treat. The disappointment among the leading teams is that Sebastian Vettel has been much too good for Mark Webber at Red Bull, Alonso has been a class ahead of Massa at Ferrari and Raikkonen has been too experienced and knowing for Romain Grosjean at Lotus. Raikkonen has the experience and speed to keep Alonso honest and may force the Spaniard to up his game in qualifying.

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg have looked the strongest pairing on the grid, but now that all changes. Raikkonen might give Ferrari indeed all of Italy a headache. The truth is that the prancing horse does not know exactly what it is getting, even though they employed the Ice Man from 2007-2009. He was paid off in 2009 because he was being outdriven by Massa, whom he replaces at Maranello.

Rome: Kimi Raikkonen’s return to Ferrari, which was confirmed on Wednesday, may not be exactly what Fernando Alonso wanted, and it was certainly not on Felipe Massa’s wish list, but it will give Formula One a lift in 2014, when conversation elsewhere is likely to be dominated by talk of motor generator units and ERS (forget DRS) as teams downsize to new 1.6-litre V6s.

In a flawed sport constantly wringing its hands about whether to be pure and boring or contrived and exciting (cue Pirelli), and always fussing over team orders, Raikkonen represents F1 One at its very best.

The Finn is skilful and fast and if he is at his best during his two-year contract with Ferrari he will give Alonso a headache and the rest of us a rare treat. The disappointment among the leading teams is that Sebastian Vettel has been much too good for Mark Webber at Red Bull, Alonso has been a class ahead of Massa at Ferrari and Raikkonen has been too experienced and knowing for Romain Grosjean at Lotus. Raikkonen has the experience and speed to keep Alonso honest and may force the Spaniard to up his game in qualifying.

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg have looked the strongest pairing on the grid, but now that all changes. Raikkonen might give Ferrari indeed all of Italy a headache. The truth is that the prancing horse does not know exactly what it is getting, even though they employed the Ice Man from 2007-2009. He was paid off in 2009 because he was being outdriven by Massa, whom he replaces at Maranello.

Rising costs hurt smaller F1 teams

Singapore: Formula One team bosses say the rapidly escalating costs of the sport — set to climb even higher next season — mean there is something “fundamentally wrong” with the sport which must be corrected.

The switch to V6 turbo engines next season, along with the re-introduction of in-season testing, means already financially-stretched teams will face a significant increase in costs.

Talks between teams to agree on cost-reduction methods have collapsed without any agreement, failing to bridge the gap between the smaller teams and the big four of Red Bull, Ferrari, McLaren and Mercedes, who were resistant to any restrictions.

“When I came into Formula One, people talked to me about cost coming down, but I don’t think there’s been a single year it’s come down,” Caterham team founder and Air Asia chief Tony Fernandes said. “Next year will be the highest year, so there’s something fundamentally wrong.

“The teams lost out an opportunity to get costs under control. Self-interest overrode the sport and we are as much to blame for this problem as a [new] engine. We screwed it up. It’s as simple as that.”

Cost-saving measure
Toro Rosso team principal Franz Tost voted against the reintroduction of in-season testing, which was originally axed as a cost-saving measure but brought back in 2014 at the behest of the big teams.

“The teams are stupid enough to do tests during the season,” Tost said. “On the one had they’re complaining they don’t have money, on the other hand they throw it through the window.

“And who wants the tests? The rich teams. As usual.”

Lotus team principal Eric Boullier said costs had come down significantly since the manufacturer era of last decade when the likes of Renault, BMW, Toyota and Honda had their own teams. However he still urged more talks between teams, governing body FIA and the commercial rights holder headed by Bernie Ecclestone, to stabilise regulations to reduce compliance costs.

Bob Fearnley, deputy principal of Force India, agreed regulation needs to be imposed from the top as there is too much competition between the teams for them to ever reach an agreement.

“The teams have demonstrated that they are not capable of being able to agree a cost control, so the answer is to take it outside of the teams’ control. It’s up to the FIA to decide a formula, bring that in and implement it.”

Re-negotiate
Aside from cost reduction, another means of sustaining the teams is for more of the money earned by the commercial rights holder to be passed on to the teams.

“We may have missed an opportunity to just sit down with the commercial rights holder and re-negotiate something which could have been more in favour of the teams, but we failed,” Boullier said.

Tost said getting more money flowing from TV rights and sponsorships to funnel down to the teams was not the answer.

“It’s easy to say we should get more money, but give the engineers one million and they ask for two. Give them four million and they ask for eight.”

Boullier agreed, saying increased revenue must work in concert with tighter regulations to control spending.

“The more money you get, the more money we will spend if you don’t have any safeguards around you,” Boullier said. “The more open the regulations are, the more we will spend money and waste money.”


Race Direction explains Aragón decision

After Thursday’s hearing at the Sepang International Circuit, relating to the Aragón Grand Prix collision between Repsol Honda Team’s Marc Marquez and Dani Pedrosa, MotoGP™ Race Director Mike Webb explains the decisions taken by Race Direction as well as emphasising how all manufacturers are working together to avoid repeats of such happenings.

Following Thursday’s hearing at Sepang, please explain which decisions have been taken in relation to Marc Marquez and Repsol Honda Team following the touch between Marquez and Dani Pedrosa in the Aragón Grand Prix.

I have to stress that Dani was in the meeting just in case he wanted to offer any opinion - he was in no trouble at all. The hearing was on two subjects: one was the contact between Marc and Dani during the race and the second, related but separate, was the crash of Dani which Honda has explained to us was caused by a fault in the traction control system. So, two separate things. Our decisions on those two separate items: for Marc Marquez, we have added one penalty point to his total for the 2013 season due to irresponsible riding. On the second subject, which is the technical subject of the failure of the traction control on Dani’s bike, we have deducted 25 points from the manufacturers’ championship for Honda that they gained due to winning that race. In both cases, I want to stress that this is Race Direction sending out messages: one is about the standard of riding and the care our riders take when they are riding close to others, while the second was a message to the manufactures about the standard of safety and the inbuilt failsafes for the systems on the bikes, to try and increase the safety.

Regarding the contact between Marquez and Pedrosa, some riders have been quite vocal about Marc’s riding so far this year. After today’s decision, will he and other riders now be more careful when it comes to issues of contact with opponents?

Yes, that is our intention. We are sending a message to Marc, very clearly, that we understand that he is an extremely talented rider but he is also intelligent enough to understand that there has to be some margin for error – especially, as we have seen a number of times this year, under braking when the rider behind has the responsibility of not getting too close to the rider in front who is riding his own lines. Finally, we have had an incident in which Marc has been very close to another rider – close enough to make contact – when coming from behind under braking. For us, that is a signal (even though the contact itself was quite minor) to make a formal warning by way of a penalty point to Marc to say he has to take more care.

Looking at the Honda issue and the failure of the traction control system, could this lead to changes in the Technical Regulations in order to ensure that all manufacturers and CRT outfits can follow such solutions in order to avoid any scenarios in which damage to rear wheel sensors leads to traction control issues?

It is a subject we are discussing in the context of safety. Right now, I am not going to say that there are going to be rule changes or things like that. As a working group, we are investigating it to try and increase safety. The thing is that these are very complex systems and every manufacturer has their own way of doing it. It is difficult to write an overall regulation that would be effective and sensible in the light of ongoing developments. We are discussing the issue and trying to work together with the manufactures, with recommendations and basically trying to work together to raise the safety. I have to say that all of the manufacturers, and in this particular case HRC, are very aware of the issue and they are the first to say that they want to improve it. In fact, they have already improved their bike, so it is not so much a question of having to make regulations to force them to do something; it is more a cooperative effort to make sure that all of us can work together to make the bikes safer.

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