Alonso plays down title hopes

Formula One title favourite Fernando Alonso did his best overnight to play down his prospects of landing his third world championship.

The two-times champion Spaniard, making his first appearance as a Ferrari driver at a race meeting, was keen to keep expectations under control when he met the media ahead of this weekend’s season opening Bahrain Grand Prix.

The 28-year-old from Oviedo said he was not interested in making any predictions at all – and stressed that the season is not decided in March, but in November.

Accompanied by his Ferrari team-mate Brazilian Felipe Massa, the all-British McLaren duo of defending champion Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari’s former ‘red baron’ seven-times champion German Michael Schumacher, Alonso was in relaxed mood.

“It has been fantastic for me to join Ferrari and I feel very good in the team,” he said.

“We are very determined to do well, to do our best, and I think we are well prepared. But, you know, the championship is not going to be decided now.

“We want to be the world champions in November, not March. Our goal is to win the championship and we know that means a lot of hard work for the next 10 months. We are ready for that.

“A lot of people ask about the winter testing times and what it means and I just think we have to concentrate on our own performances, and try to be as good as we can, as fast as possible.

“I think there are four teams – Red Bull, Mercedes, McLaren and Ferrari, and any of these four can be a favourite for this race and in the first part of the championship.

“As well, I think there are other teams like Force India and Sauber who can have good races. We have to see.”

Alonso has described the new Ferrari F10 car as the best he has ever driven, but was reluctant to make any further comment on the advantage he may derive from that machine.

But he was happy to talk about the warm welcome he has received at Ferrari where he is very much at home.

“I think that when you change team you need to adapt yourself to new people and a new philosophy for working,” he said.

“So far, it has been great for me and I have felt very comfortable from my first day.

“I am at home and I feel as if I am ready to win again and to fight for successes.”

Ferrari are the fourth different F1 team of his career after racing previously for Minardi, Renault and McLaren, where he endured a torrid year of troubles in 2007.

“I have learned a lot in my career and now I am ready for this new challenge,” he said.

“But everyone can see this year is going to be very competitive.”

-AFP

F1 ace Massa not scared to race again after life threatening accident

London, Mar 8 (ANI): Formula One driver Felipe Massa, who was badly injured in a freak accident during qualifying for Hungarian Grand Prix in July 2009, will race for the first time this weekend since his horrifying head injury.

The Ferrari driver insisted that he is not scared.

Massa, 28, believes he survived his freak accident in Hungarian GP because God decided it was not his time to die.

Massa needed life-saving surgery on his fractured skull after a 2lb metal spring from Rubens Barrichello’s Brawn hit his helmet, The Sun reports.

The Brazilian was ruled out for the rest of the season but has no fears about driving in Sunday’s F1 curtain-raiser in Bahrain.

“In Hungary it was not my time. God was not planning to call me to him just yet,” Massa said.

“I was very lucky. If the spring had struck me half an inch on the right, I’d have been blinded – and half an inch more up and I would have been mentally retarded. But I’ll not think about the accident. I’m 100 per cent ready,” he added. (ANI)

All Formula One teams are cheats, claims Irvine

London, Sep 18 (ANI): Ex-Ferrari driver Eddie Irvine has claimed that all Formula One teams are cheats.

Irvine says there has been an overreaction to the race-fixing charges being levelled at the Renault team.

He admitted the Crashgate scandal that cost Renault team chief Flavio Briatore and technical boss Pat Symonds their jobs had gone too far.

“F1 is a war and all is fair in war. When I was in various teams you would do anything to win. You pushed people off, you did whatever you could do to win,” he said.

“This is probably slightly on the wrong side of the cheating thing, but in F1 – if you look back at days gone past – then every team has done it. They will cheat, bend the rules, do whatever they could, sabotage opponents.

“Nothing was beyond the realms of decency and that is what F1 always is. It is not a pure sport,’ The Sun quoted Irvine, as saying.

The Renault team still has to appear before the World Motor Sport Council in Paris on Monday where they face a massive fine, race suspension or even being kicked out of the sport.

But Irvine reckons they could escape with a more lenient penalty amid fears that another team is about to leave the sport.

Irvine, who also raced for Jordan and Jaguar, added: “If you think that McLaren got a 100 million dollars fine for having some papers of the Ferrari team, what punishment is relevant here? It is complete banning. But I don’t believe that is going to happen as F1 cannot afford to lose more teams.”

Briatore threatened to sue Piquet Snr after the three-time world champ made the revelations about his son. (ANI)

Massa to have titanium plate surgery on his skull

London, Sep.8 (ANI): Ferrari driver Felipe Massa will have a titanium plate surgically inserted in his head to ensure he is fit to return to Formula One next year.

Massa said the titanium-infused plate was necessary to protect a weak spot caused by the initial surgery so that next season he will be ready to race again for Ferrari.

“I need surgery to close a bone in my head that they had taken away because it was completely damaged. A normal guy can live like this without any problem. But for a driver, if you have an accident and you have this problem, the recovery is more difficult,” AAP quoted Massa, as saying.

“I’m going to Europe to use the simulator and drive some go-karts and then I will know very well if I’m 100 per cent,” he added.

Despite his steely determination to return to Formula One, Massa is acutely aware of how lucky he was to survive the July crash in Budapest while qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix. (ANI)