Ten things to look forward to in 2010

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How will Michael Schumacher fare on his F1 return?

Testing is over and we are less than two weeks away from the start of the hotly-anticipated 2010 season.

With exciting driver line-ups, more teams and a bigger calendar, there’s a lot to look forward to this year. Today we kick off the F1 Fanatic 2010 Season Preview by picking the ten most exciting storylines ahead of the new season.

New teams

Ferrari may not think much of the new crop of teams but for fans of the sport the expansion of the F1 grid is long overdue and entirely welcome.

Even if the new cars spend most of the year fighting at the back between themselves it adds a new storyline to the sport. Plus we’ll have more drivers to watch and that means more interesting racing.

Return to Montreal

It’s a warm welcome back for the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve with its fast straights, punishing braking zones and unforgiving walls. Montreal’s F1 circuit is no sanitised Tilkedrome – this a proper track for proper racing,

In the last two visits to this track we saw two first-time winners, Robert Kubica escaping the mother of all shunts and a pile-up in the pits.

As well as being one of the most reliably action-packed races, Canada’s passionate fans fill the stands and make a fitting atmosphere for a Grand Prix.

Refuelling ban

Good riddance to race-fuel qualifying, pit fires and all those tedious and impenetrable strategy and "fuel-adjusted lap time" calculations.

In its place we get a return to classic Grand Prix racing, where drivers have to cope with a car that will weigh around 160kg more at the start of a race than the end of it. It’s going to be fascinating to see which drivers cope best with the return to real racing.

Read more: 14 reasons to love the refuelling ban

The rookies

With so little change in the F1 field last year we saw just one new face at the start of the season – Sebastien Buemi.

This year we have a intriguing crop of rookie talent to compare from the get-go. Nico Hulkenberg dazzled with his GP2 form in 2009, Lucas di Grassi has looked like getting an F1 break for several years and Vitaly Petrov carries the hopes of a nation that has never had an F1 driver before.

Hopefully we might also see Bruno Senna finally bring F1’s most famous name back to the sport, and Jose Maria Lopez may yet get to join in the fun too.

More F1 on Twitter

Almost every week a new driver or team member appears on Twitter, giving us direct, first-hand insight into what’s going on in the sport.

Could we have every F1 driver on Twitter by the end of the year? We’ll add all the new official F1 Twitter accounts to the F1 Twitter Directory as they appear.

Read more: the 2010 F1 grid on Twitter

Inter-team rivalries

The F1 driver merry-go-round has thrown up some fascinating pairings this year.

Lewis Hamilton versus Jenson Button at McLaren not only pits Britain’s two top drivers against each other – but also the two most recent world champions.

At Ferrari, Fernando Alonso faces Felipe Massa, who will certainly be his most challenging team mate since his explosive encounter with Hamilton three years ago.

Nico Rosberg has discovered his graduation to a top team comes with a catch – he has to share it with the most successful driver the sport has ever seen: Michael Schumacher.

Red Bull have opted for stability in their line-up with Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber. With Webber only contracted until the end of the year he may need to raise his game to keep his place in the team for 2011.

Better yet, testing has given us the encouraging that these eight drivers should have fairly evenly-matched cars this year. To use that well-worn pre-season phrase, we could be in for a classic year’s racing.

Korea

Some will be eager to pass judgement on the Korean Grand Prix circuit before the F1 cars have even raced on it but we should resist the temptation.

But a new venue and a new audience for F1 to embrace is good news for the sport. I hope they get a fine Grand Prix for their inaugural event.

Read more: 2010 Korean Grand Prix

Proper qualifying

A positive by-product of the refuelling ban is we should get to see drivers setting their qualifying laps with little more than a whiff of petrol vapour in their tanks. Get ready for the return of exciting, hanging-it-all-out battles for pole position.

Yes, it would be more interesting without the rule forcing the top ten qualifiers to start the race on the tyres they set their best lap time with. But it will be a big improvement over the damp squib of ‘race fuel qualifying’.

Return of Schumacher

Love him or loathe him (and most people come down on one side or the other) there’s no doubt the return of Schumacher is big news for the sport and a fascinating story.

Will he pick up where he left off and immediately be fighting for race wins? Will he have to fight for points in the cut-and-thrust of the midfield? How will Nico Rosberg fare alongside him?

Less politics

Jean Todt has got off to a quiet start as Max Mosley’s replacement and after the bitter acrimony of the past few years no-one would mind if it stayed that way.

We’ll continue to keep an eye on Todt’s presidency with out regular Approval Ratings – the third instalment of which will be on the site soon.

Over to you

What else are you looking forward to in F1 this year? Have your say in the comments.

2010 F1 season

Author information

Keith Collantine
Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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115 comments on “Ten things to look forward to in 2010”

  1. I’m dreaming and hoping of:
    – First career win from Kobayashi and Rosberg, last career win for Rubens.
    – Great internal struggle between Alonso and Massa, Button and Hamilton, Webber and Vettel.
    – Six different teams with a win at the end of the season (Ferrari, McLaren, Mercedes, RedBull, Sauber, Williams)…quite like in the early 80’s when my passion for F1 started.
    – Some podium place for Lotus and Virgin (really hard!).
    – Constructor championship for Ferrari.
    – Driver title for Schumacher.

    …and many overtakes!!!

    Montreal back, and new Korea also are interesting points. The Jeonnam track seems to me quite interesting.

    1. damonsmedley
      1st March 2010, 11:01

      I too would love to see Rubens get a victory in his final season, but I want him to race on in 2011! He is a great character and when he does eventually retire, I know I will miss his sense of humour and his ability to perform well and beat his much more youthful opponents.

      1. Agree with you. We will miss Rubens when he will retire.

        1. Remember him in Silverstone in the wet? I remember that press conference you could hear how much it meant to him. If he wins, It would be amazing…. hope he keeps going next year!

      2. Final season??? No no no. Rubens will race on. Dint Sir Frank give him a 3-yr contract? Rubens will crack 350 GP starts. No one will ever beat that record.

        Even still, I too rue the day Rubens retires. He has always been such a positive force in GP racing. He has a certain…character. I think he would have raced well with Nuvolari, Ascari and Fangio.

        1. I don’t mind at all that the new teams are a bit slow.

          In my eyes it’s just a fairytale story waiting to happen. Like Webber scoring points on debut for Minardi or Vettel winning in a Toro Rosso.

  2. I disagree that proper qualifying will return. It won’t, because the post-qualifying parc fermé will continue to exist.

    1. What does that have to do with qualifying? Unless you consider 80’s use of special ”3-lap rockets” engines as proper qualifying? I for one welcome the change to no race fuel onboard qualifications. Too bad they messed it up with the unnecessary tyre rule…

      1. I think it’s more to do with car setup. Things like the ride height and suspension will have to be a compromise because the cars will also have to race with full fuel with the same setup.

        Ideally the cars could be set up for qualification, set a fastest lap possible for the car, then be “re-setup” for the race.

      2. I think what Pingguest is saying is that ‘proper qualifying’ hasn’t actually returned because the top 10 (?) qualifiers will have to use the tires they qualified on (and then park in parc ferme) an thus, this is not the true return of ‘proper qualifying’.

        It would be true qualifying if they could change their tires for the start of the race instead of getting a ‘handicap’ for the race.

        1. Not just the tires. Like epi also says, they aren’t allowed to change the setup.

          So they have to start the race with the same setup as used in qualifying.

          Which means they have to qualify with a car that’s setup for some compromise between setting a first good stint and setting a fast qualifying lap.

          They are basically driving a car on fumes while it needs to be set up to be able to carry 170kg of fuel.

  3. It’s a shame that only 2 of the new teams actually have some semblance of being able to race, would have been interesting to have a 4 way Formula 1-B competition.

    I’m interested with how the midfield lines up this year…. Torro Rosso look like they might be able to put up respectable pace, and Sauber are looking interesting too. Might be another miserable year for Renault in my opinion.

    And Kobayashi is my pick for the “Rookie” championship.

  4. A few more

    1) Drivers getting confused and messing up with the new safety car rules – penalties as a result and possibly incidents between race cars and the safety car (as safety car can overtake race cars to find the leader)

    2)When a wet track is drying, cars going from intermediate to dry tyres too early and crashing as the new intermediates get trashed very quickly on a drying track.

    3)teammates lapping together, slipstreaming to save fuel mid race – real team tactics to allow cars to start with less fuel

    4) front jackman getting run over by over eager drivers trying a quick pitstop getaway – unless teams don’t have a front jackman by using built-in car jacks.

    1. damonsmedley
      1st March 2010, 11:04

      So you’d like to see some crashes and pit-lane injuries… You aren’t bloodthirsty at all.

      1. Sush Meerkat
        1st March 2010, 11:08

        a sport is only a sport if there is a chance of injury.

        I foresee alot of problems this year, with all the rookies and even the veterans getting confused with the new ways their cars handle.

        1. “a sport is only a sport if there is a chance of injury”

          I’m pretty sure that’s not everyone’s definition.

          1. Well, think about it, there’s potential for injury in most sports:

            Football – bone-crunching tackles
            Rugby – even more bone-crunching tackles
            Cricket – hit in the head by the occasional bouncer
            Horse racing – getting trampled
            Ice hockey – not convinced there’s any purpose to the game OTHER than causing injury
            Darts – getting poked in the eye

            Dangerous stuff.

          2. You forgot at least one:

            Golf – getting a sunburn

          3. Darts – getting poked in the eye

            That would be quite a throw. Has this ever happened?

          4. Curling – being swept and then run over very slowly by a heavy stone whilst freezing to death.

            Bowls – dying of old age.

          5. @K

            Made me me chuckle with the curling.

      2. No I don’t want it to happen – I think that some of the rule changes have not been thought through properly

        1. In particular
          1) the new safety car rules are a recipe for disaster – I do NOT approve of the safety car overtaking race cars to find the leader

          From AMG Mercedes Press release on new SLS safety car

          “The two centrally positioned green lights in the aerodynamically optimised light bar are illuminated when the Official F1™ Safety Car joins the field and first needs to overtake all the racing cars in front of it. Once the SLS AMG has assumed the leading position, the outer orange flashing lights are switched on to signal to the Formula-1 drivers that no overtaking whatsoever is allowed. ”

          2) With refueling last year, the front jackman had plenty of time to get out of the way while fuelling finished. Without refuelling, he is in in the firing line at every pitstop – another recipe for disaster which could have been easily avoided if built in car jacks (as used in Indycar) were made compulsory

          1. surely that’s a typo. how on earth does the safety car pass the racing ones? in australia the safety car slowed down to let all the cars through until jenson was behind it. surely that hasn’t changed??

          2. the safety car comes out regardless of where the leader is. the leader just has to catch up to it and any lapped cars can overtake the safety car a lap or so later. (to get onto the lead lap)

          3. To Tom & Sato (sorry there is no “reply” button next to your posts)

            The Safety Car rules have changed for 2010
            These are the Sporting Regs
            http://argent.fia.com/web/fia-public.nsf/65EE8F15945D0941C12576C7005308AE/$FILE/1-2010%20SPORTING%20REGULATIONS%2010-02-2010.pdf

            There are significant changes to Safety Car procedures for 2010, including the removal of “LAPPED CARS MAY NOW OVERTAKE” timing monitor message. However, the new Sporting Regs do not specifically confirm the Mercedes press release about the Safety Car overtaking race cars to find the leader. I will contact Mercedes to seek clarification.

    2. “teammates lapping together, slipstreaming to save fuel mid race – real team tactics to allow cars to start with less fuel”

      I’ve never thought about that before, and it probably is not too feasible, but it would be interesting to see an attempt.

      1. In some touring series teams slipstream in quali to get the best possible time

        1. Has happened in F1 before, too. When Gilles Villeneuve was driving his Ferrari in Canada one year, his brother Jacques had entered the race in a much slower car. Gilles tried to “tow” his brother to a better lap time in qualifying.

          It didn’t work. Jacques Sr. failed to qualify.

          1. Nice one – to my infinite personal shame (having lived as an F1 fan in Montreal for… gulp, 27 years) I’d never heard of that before.

          2. It’s in Gerald Donaldson’s biography of Gilles…an excellent read, by the way.

      2. It’s not feasible in F1, maybe on an oval. Michael gave Rubens a tow one year at Indianapolis on their last qualifying run if you remember.

    3. I think built-in jacks are prohibited.

  5. Any idea what’ll happen in Q1 if there’s only 11 teams on the grid? Last I remember, after Q1, 18 cars would go through to Q2 – with 22 cars currently set to start Q1, that means only 4 will be eliminated.

    I suspect they’ll have to tweak things…

    1. Andrew White
      1st March 2010, 11:22

      They always change it so that 10 are left in Q3, and the amount knocked out in Q1 and Q2 are equal.

  6. What the hell are you saying???
    Well, Keith, don’t want to waste your site with some arguing with other guests…but watching formula 1 hoping for crashes is definitely so stupid.
    These guys are so brave and courageous to drive so fast, for our passion and pleasure. To me they’re quite heroes, wouldn’t ever wish one of them to be hurt!

    1. hmmm, I didn’t read that as he was hoping to see more crashes (from drying tracks and the jackman). I read it as these will be serious issues for the teams/drivers and it will be interesting to watch who handles them best and possibly gains a huge advantage…..

  7. “Get ready for the return of exciting, hanging-it-all-out battles for pole position.”

    Unfortunately we won’t. Apart from having to qualify on the tyres that they will use to race, which you mentioned, they won’t be allowed to change their setup either.

    So bot the tyres and the setup will be a compromise where some drivers will choose to concentrate on their (early) race performence while other will go for qualifying position.

    So instead of adjusted fuel predictions we will see predictions of who went for a race setup and who went for a qualy setup.

    1. The parc ferme rules have been in place for quite a few seasons now.

      So nothing has changed in that respect.

      1. Yeah and?

        That doesn’t negate the fact that it’s there and that we still won’t get pure qualifiying as we had it before 1993.

        Bot the tyres AND the parc ferme work against that.

        The point is we will see cars with “compromised” (unequal) setups go into qualifying.

        1. As much as I agree, parc ferme is quite important,

          and if I were smarter I could come up with some really good reasons, but its 3:30 am and my brain doesn’t like me for that.
          so forgive me this time.

          1. Well it can be important and it can have it’s advantages for all I care. I’m only saying that (together with the tyres) it will create another random element in qualifying.

          2. Interesting. So would you like to see a return to qualifying engines and tyres?

          3. Me? No.

            I’m just pointing out that there are still two “random” elements still in qualifying which will have a significant impact on qualifying times.

          4. OK, was just wondering.

  8. Personally I am not bothered about F1 on Twitter as I don’t use it but I do recognise that F1 should use new media such as this.

    Also with the Korean GP, while I won’t slate the track before a race is run, a new GP in a country with no F1 history such as Korea just doesn’t excite me as much as if F1 went back to countries like the US, Argentina, Mexico or South Africa.

    1. Every country had a ‘first race’ once…

      1. Hopefully this Tilkedrome isn’t quite as sanitised.

        Btw Keith! the term Tilkedrome is, the most brilliant thing you’ve ever said! and I reckon your some pretty whiz bang things in the past! Genius! Brilliant! Smashing!

        Good work!

        1. Ah, I don’t think I can claim credit for ‘Tilkedrome’, I’ve seen it in many other places!

      2. Yes they did all once have a first race…..

        But the difference between the tracks that we all now revere as ‘classic’ historical, part-of-F1-heritage circuits like Spa, Monza, Silverstone, Montreal etcetera is…that they were never designed with driver/spectator safety as a first priority. In those days exciting racing was the only consideration.

        Whereas Tilke, and anybody else trying to design a new track today must adhere to a codified set of rules thicker than the all- London telephone directory.

        That’s why we can’t have a track like Laguna Seca any more. FIA doesn’t like the idea of an F1 car taking to the skies like an F16 on afterburners…some would say ‘more’s the pity’ !

  9. Aleksandar Serbia
    1st March 2010, 11:33

    I am looking forward seeing Stefan get the spot since USgp canceled 2010 challenge!

    1. Not. Going. To. Happen.

      Guaranteed.

      1. But by saying that you’ve jinxed, so now it definitely will happen! Unless this comment unjinxes your jinx.

        Ah, F1. Where the logical never happens, unless someone swears it won’t.

        1. i’ll unjinx your unjinx by saying- Stephan GP won’t make it. ha.

          1. You are playing with powers you cannot possibly comprehend :D

    2. Well, don’t hold your breath.

      StefanGP withdrew their application last year before the FiA process was complete. StefanGP has no entry to the 2010 season.

      There is absolutely nothing in the FiA regulations that would allow StefanGP to be awarded a grid slot.

      The only way Zoran could get a team on the grid would be to buy out another team…and the entry would be the other team’s name, not stefanGP…unless all the other teams and FiA agreed to it being changed.

      and the chances of Zoran buying out another team are now slim to none. Make that none.

      Sorry to burst your bubble, but that’s the reality .

      1. Joe Saward had an interview with Jean Todt and he wouldn’t rule out that Stefan GP would get a license.

        1. If Stefan GP get a slot I would be amazed…it probably will happen as it’s F1 but logically there are obstacles in the way.
          All of Dsob’s reasons and the rest of the teams would have to agree which doesn’t look like it is going to happen.
          I’d be surprised if Todt seemed to approve of Stefan GP and perhaps it would be indicative of how he wants to govern. I say this because Mike Coughlan -as far as I know- is still with the Serbian squad and he was implicated in the spy scandal so Ferrari and Todt would be expected to hold a grudge.

      2. That’s not the reality actually. Apart from buying another team, which is perfectly permissible under FIA regulations, the FIA can also rescind the entries of others (such as USF1) and with the unanimous consent of the other teams they can be awarded to others. Both of these seem unlikely but that doesn’t mean that either of them won’t happen. It definitely helps when Bernie Ecclestone is on your side also.

  10. red bull tastes like crap
    1st March 2010, 11:48

    young drivers, but first of all, the fight between alonso and hamilton. I hope they have evenly matched cars.

  11. I hope to see Karun Chandhok in Campos

    1. Aleksandar Serbia
      1st March 2010, 11:59

      I think they have a unibrow policy there if u have one cannot compete!

      1. What, they’re going to sign Alonso?

  12. I’m looking forward to some Hamilton vs Schumacher battles :)

    1. No unfortunately the media accreditation area wasn’t open early enough on Saturday for me to get in in time for the Virgin media briefing. You can imagine how happy I was about that.

      1. Keith, you are now a full-time journalist. can you not get a full-time press pass? Most sports have those for recognized journalists. Or is F1 still in the 19th century on that front, as on so many other fronts ?

        1. I think Keith talked about this in his last “Behind the Scenes” article if I remember rightly. You need media accreditation from both the FIA and the circuit. Presumably the FIA accreditation remains in place (being renewed every so often, I suppose), but every time you go to a new circuit you have to be re-appraised (and pick up a new pass!) That’s how I imagine it works anyway.

  13. I hope this new brewing “diffuser row” doesn’t ruin things again and give Mercedes a ridiculous advantage like Brawn had last year. It just defeats the object of fairness and excitement in F1. http://www.planet-f1.com/story/0,18954,3213_5996955,00.html

    1. I wouldn’t worry; it’s only PlanetF1 and there’s no point speculating yet until we actually see what Merc bring.
      Brawn only had the advantage anyway as most other teams didn’t use the loophole and make diffusers so had to play catch up. That situation won’t happen again so even if Merc somehow design some wonder diffuser it probably won’t be as half as significant advantage as last year.

    2. I second the “it’s only Planet F1” sentiment.

      1. not familiar with Planet F1 are they the News of the World when it comes to F1?

        1. I would say so Rampante. It isn’t a site I trust much

        2. Put it this way, off the top of my head I can think of at least one site that is More Accurate Than Planet-F1. :D

        3. Guys at Planet F1 report everything they can get their hands on… There is a lot of information there, but big chunk of that is pure speculation.

    3. okay, you guys missed the fun part….Fernando Alonso had this to say…

      “I do not know what Brawn (Mercedes GP) will have in Bahrain, but we’ll see if it really is something new,” Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso told El Pais newspaper.

      “For me, it is just a rumour, like many others. Like for the past year it has been said that Renault is going to leave Formula One.”

      Well, DOH ! Which rock have you had your head under Fernando ? Renault is still there in name and engine only. What a hoser!

      Boy! Is he gonna be surprised by Ross’s new diffuser, LOL

      1. Let´s hope so! That´ll be so much fun.

  14. I am particularly interested in how the two old fellas are going to teach their young promising Nicos. You have Barrichello (and Frank Williams) setting up the car and giving wise words and starting their Nico in F1 and you have Schumacher (and Ross Brawn) teaching their Nico how to win championships. Let’s see who will learn more!

  15. Rivalries between teammates would be inTRA-team rivalries.

  16. I’m also looking forward to a less controversial race stewards decision

    None politicizing of penalties.

    And Todt walking on stilts to tower above everyone else that an FIA president has towered over in past so many years.

  17. The things I’m looking forward to are (in no particular order):
    Ferrari and Mclaren hopefully back at the front
    The very fact we will see racing again
    Massa finally returning to action which means I now have a driver to really cheer for (obviously I supported Fisi, Kimi and Badoer completely for Ferrari last year but it’s nice to support a driver in their own right)
    The potential for an astonishingly close year which really makes up for last year
    Todt in power…I do like the politics side. There may be less controversy with him than Max possibly but I bet the teams are still at loggerheads at times :P
    Another year on slicks is another good year
    More rain please! Last year the weather was pathetically dry. We’ve all ready had more rain during testing than we saw in the whole of last season.
    Seeing what happens with Bridgestone and if Michelin do return.
    Personally I think the calendar is very good – Australia very fun, Malaysia maybe we may get another rain storm but it is an ok track for a Tilke, Bahrain not a classic but usually provides good racing, Catalunya is boring on the TV but it’s a good track, Monaco, Montreal, Spa, Monza, Abu Dhabi is alright, Interlagos always stupendous, Hungary again boring on TV but a nice track, Germany is alright I suppose, Turkey esp turn 8 is a masterpiece. Maybe Korea will be ok too. Silverstone thank God is being changed. I hated it before as the only good bits we Copse, Maggotts/Beckketts and the rest was just dire. It can only get better in my opinion.
    Team mate rivalries.
    Usual F1 madness which means we’ll get more than a few surprises.
    I loved Kimi and thought he was a great driver but if there is one plus to him being gone it means we don’t have to listen to the mumble.
    Silly season will start probably as soon as Bahrain comes.
    Schumi return.
    Finally all the really marvelous drivers seem to be in top cars. It’s great for the sport than Alonso is out of that Renault.
    Hopefully seeing Senna in F1…and he has a really nice helmet!
    BBC coverage for the second year it has returned. Some people complain that they have no ads so no loo break but honestly how hard is it to sit still for 2 hours? There was no point in ITV having an ad , coming back showing replays of anything good we missed just for the ads to come on again.
    Brundle’s grid walk.
    EJ’s shirts.
    Bernie …he’ll probably be up to something this year to make everyone speak of him ni the same way as they do about Darth Vader :P
    The cars and watching how they are devloping
    That I won’t have to see the autosport countdown being at over 100 days again for a long while.
    And of course F1fanatic and the live blogs!

    1. Not too much to look forward to then Steph!!

      Pretty much agree with everything you say, except for the fact that hopefully it will be Mclaren on top rather than Ferrari!!

      only 2 weeks to go…………………

    2. >Bernie …he’ll probably be up to something this year to make everyone speak of him ni the same way as they do about Darth Vader<

      If I was casting the next trilogy, Bernie would definitely make a better Emperor. Max could be a decent Vader, Todt would not be a bad Yoda, Flavio…. Jabba the Hut? Actually, Schumacher as Vader and Vettel as Luke – "Join me and together we shall rule the paddock…."

      Sorry there, momentary regression.

      1. maciek, I feel dirty for saying this but…. your a bloody genius ^^

        I suppose Kimi were he still here could pass for R2D2, he doesn’t say much does he?

        Who could pass for an Ewok? … I have my thoughts.

        1. I’m glad someone thought it was funny. How about Martin Whitmarsh as C3P0?

          1. lol “Join me and together we shall rule the paddock….”

            “Use the KERS luke!” (well if it was based on last year)

            Whitmarsh as C3PO classic.

            Frank Williams as Yoda.

            ..and thefore Patrick Head as Obi Wan?

            Charlie Whiting as Grand Moff Tarkin.

            Mark Webber as Han Solo?

            Barichello has to be an Ewok.

            Who would be Lando Carlrission?

          2. Maciek…start writing the script NOW….bloody fantastic !

            Auntie Beeb could do a special with Brundle doing the …’once upon a time in a far distant galaxy’…..

          3. When we get the forum back we should definitely revive this as a thread – good laugh potential. Sorry for hijacking, Steph.

          4. Didn’t Lando Calroussian end up being a traitor? Would have to be Piquet Jnr, then.

          5. OK, ok one more: Branson for Chewbacca!

    3. And of course F1fanatic and the live blogs!

      And don’t forget the Predictions Championship!

      1. Sorry! Knew I would forget something. Though that championship is mine :p

  18. Ned Flanders
    1st March 2010, 13:52

    I know there are way too many GP’s in Asia and the Middle East these days, but I think the South Korean GP could become one of the few new races which are actually popular. It’s a country with a large population and with so many major companies there is money there too- and that’s exactly what most teams need right now.

    Hopefully the Korean fans will ‘get’ F1 more than the people of Malaysia, Bahrain, Abu Dhabi etc. I’m no expert on the area but I assume Koreans are perhaps similar to the Japanese. If F1 catches on even half as much as it has in Japan then it should be a great event.

  19. I think your article Keith sums it all up.
    Shame on me that I didn’t know there would be a new venue this year, being it Korea. I think it will be good, because Korea is like a Japan Version 2, with good fans so for sure it’s one of the highlights of the season (prior to it happening).

    I’m particular interested in the fight (I would call it a war) between Schumi and Rosberg. I don’t even car if MErcedes will be challenging for race wins or not, I just want to see how they challenge one another. I think Rosberg has the proper qualities to be the most challenging team-mate Michael has faced his entire career.

    Just 2 more things I personally add to your list:

    – Lotus VS Virgin – There should be a bet between Tony Fernandez and Sir Richard Branson, and I’m dying to see whether Branson will use the female flight attendant costume in one of his flights (yes I think Lotus will fare better);
    – Will Renault make a successful comeback – Still not sure if they are into something good, their car is intriguing and as a fan I’m hoping they have some sort of an edge, although never like Brawn last year, because Brawn proved during the testing phase, whilst Renault seems to have a better pace this year but are not topping the timesheets, although I’m betting their true race pace is good enough for challenging for the top spots.

    I remember another point of interest: McLaren introduced last week an air intake right in front of the cockpit (like a snorkel), seemingly to allow extra air to go to the shark-fin reducing drag for the straights, if this is true and since they would make it dynamic in order to open for the straights and close it for the turn, when will the other teams protest about it (I think that the only aero-parts the driver can change dynamically are some “flaps” in the front wing)?

  20. Since I got completely wrong in predictions after last year testings, I’m looking forward trying again.

  21. Kinda comes under ‘refuelling ban’, but the races should be much easier to follow. Instead of guessing at fuel loads (which are now equal, more or less) the main factor in car performance is tyre wear, which is there for all to see. The soft tyres are clearly marked, and tyre wear shows up much better on slick tyres than the old grooved ones.

    Looking forward to the new Silverstone layout, still wondering why Bahrain have lengthened theirs. Hopefully Singapore and Abu Dhabi will jump on the bandwagon and improve their tracks too.

    1. I agree about the new Silverstone layout, am intrigued by the new Bahrain layout but not convinced it’s really necessary.

      1. I find the new Bahrain layout about as intriguing as a half eaten packet of ready salted crisps.

        And it is completely unnecessary.

    2. Very eager to see the new Silverstone as well. Although will miss Bridge visually, it was flat if dry, so not really the greatest of challenges.

      Rather unfashionably, I always liked Bahrain as a track, but the track changes, on paper at least, look like amounting to sticking a cart track on an F1 circuit – DOH!

      Of course the return of the evil genius that is Michael Schumacher, is going to pander to the febrile imaginings of journos and fans alike. But suspect the real story will be Alonso getting a great drive and Hamilton going head to head with him once more for the WDC. But hells, it could still be between Vettel and Massa…?

      One last reason to have mostly moist palms in 2010. A new toy at the end of the season. Hoping Codemasters manage to improve on recent titles. More TOCA, less GRID. More Crammond, less Super Monaco Grand Prix. And they better get the new Silverstone layout in there too, or I will sulk all next winter! RIP Studio Liverpool.

  22. So excited about the season to come! Can’t wait until it get started. What an amazing line up and so many potential winners.
    It’s a pitty Kubica not having a proper seat though, perhaps the only remarkable driver not having a competitive car.

    1. Cole, I think we should wait and see. I might get some surprises when it comes to racing, at least I sure hope so. It would be great to have Ferrari, McLaren, Red-Bull, Mercedes, Renault, Williams and Force-India (they seem to have a good pace this year) batling hard with each other, some of them with an advantage in some circuits, then the situation reversing in other type of circuits.

      Yes I may be dreaming, but who knows! It might happen eventually…

      1. Hope that’s true, because it would be good for everyone, and he deserves to have a competitive car.

  23. Schumacher have no chances in 2010! Go Rosberg!!!

  24. Oh what desire to see f1 again! We are almost to the time!

  25. I am more excited for the Bahrain GP than I was for Christmas. I didn’t watch F1 before the refueling ban, but I am wetting myself with glee at the thought of a simple first-dude-to-the-finish-wins (change-tyres-if-you-want-to) race.

  26. waiting just gets worse and worse every year I think. The more I get involved with it the harder it gets to not explode when the first race starts, engine’s reving and hear GOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

    Also it just came to mind, are they still going to wheel spin their tyres before the race starts?, because I would of thought the answer would be no period.

  27. I’m very curious! The testing didn’t give us too much information other than the big 4 teams seem to be fast. Judging by Schumacher’s remarks they will be midflied in the first few races but I’m sure he’ll get the pace up. I wonder if Rosberg indeed does get treated equally to der Michael. McClaren showed some good progress. I think Hamilton will drive circles around Button but we’ll see. Alonso finally has a competative car under him, he’s the favourite to win the title now that the politics are left behind. Vettel and Webber showed that the’re pretty quick, wonder how reliable that renault engine will be. My pick for the rooky championship is Nico Hülkenberg. Williams did a lot of long runs and when they finally did a run with low fuel they were the quickest. I don’t view them as favourites though. Sauber started promising but I feel they got a little bit behind. It’s going to be an interesting season!!

  28. Anyone has a comment on the exhaust positioning on the floor of the RB6?
    Maybe they’re trying to generate a low pressure zone there to attacht the flow into the rear wing and diffuser, or maybe just to make it hard for the trailing car to follow as their front wing will be in less dense air?
    Anyhow the stickers trick was a good one!

  29. 1 Thing to look forward to in 2010…

    F1 – It’s going to be amazing!

  30. The most important thing is that we didn’t had in the court room.Schumi returning is great & also I hope will boost tickets sales.
    New teams & two more races will be exciting.
    You missed the battle between Virgin & Lotus (team bosses fight).

    HOpe we have a cracking year in F1.
    CHEERS EVERYBODY.

  31. Massa’s comeback from his terrible injury is also a great story to follow… the way he got on the pace in pre-season testing is encouraging… Since his crash, I was hoping he could “do a Hakkinen” and return from the coma better than he was…

  32. Schumi becomes champion of 2000 after the accident in 1999.
    And so does Massa, after freaking accident in 2009, 2010 will be his year. Hopefully.

  33. I’m hoping that the top four will be really close for most of the way through the season. How cool it is that we have the drivers we have, in the cars they are in?

    It’ll be really interesting to see who of the mid-field can be closest to the big boys. Still waiting for Williams to regain a touch of former glory, but anyone among Force India, Sauber, and Renault giving the top guys a tough time once in a while will be a welcome sight.

    Will remain hopeful that Virgin, Lotus, and whoever else manages to make it can at least come close to respectability on the track by the end of the season.

    Looking forward to how the new cars look in race mode.

    I am soooooooo happy that fast qualifying and no-refueling are back, and slimmer front tires are welcome, too.

    And last, but not least looking forward to many more hours of procrastination from work on this site.

  34. McLaren_Monkey
    2nd March 2010, 16:59

    Im looking forward to Hamilton picking up his 2nd drivers crown and McLaren winning the constructors title :-)

  35. I’m looking forward to Korea but I hope it will not be a damp squibb like Abu Dhabi…

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