Seven different drivers won the first seven races of the championship. a record for the series. It was not until the European Grand Prix in June that a driver, Ferrari'sFernando Alonso, won his second race of the year.[5] Alonso was the championship leader for the next seven races, taking his third win in Germany[6] and finishing on the podium in the United Kingdom,[7]Italy[8] and Singapore.[9] However, first-lap retirements in Belgium[10] and Japan[11] allowed others to catch up, and defending World ChampionSebastian Vettel—like Alonso, a two-time winner—took the lead in the sixteenth race of the season. Vettel, too, had problems during the season; contact with a backmarker left him to finish outside the points in Malaysia,[12] while alternator failures at the European[5] and Italian Grands Prix[8] cost him valuable points and exclusion from qualifying in Abu Dhabi led him to start from the pit lane.[13] Vettel entered the final race of the season with a thirteen-point lead over Alonso. Alonso needed a podium finish to stand any chance of becoming World Drivers' Champion, but in a race that finished under the safety car, Vettel finished in sixth place, scoring enough points to win his third consecutive championship,[1] becoming the third driver to do so. In the World Constructors' Championship, Red Bull Racing secured their third consecutive title when Sebastian Vettel finished second at the United States Grand Prix.[14]
In addition to seeing seven different winners at the first seven races, the season also had the most races ever in a season with twenty, beating the last record of nineteen, which was first set in 2005. Six current or former World Drivers' Champions—Sebastian Vettel, Fernando Alonso, Jenson Button, Lewis Hamilton, Kimi Räikkönen, and Michael Schumacher—started the season, breaking the record of five established in 1970.[15]
Pre-season
The pre-season testing season began immediately after the 2011 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix with a three-day 'Young Driver Test' (for drivers with fewer than three Formula One race starts to their name) at the Yas Marina Circuit from 15–17 November 2011.[16]Toro Rosso test driver and Formula Renault 3.5 Series runner-up Jean-Éric Vergne was the fastest driver in every session over the three-day test, driving for Red Bull Racing.[17] The Young Driver Tests also saw the debut of Pirelli's 2012 tyre compounds, with all bar one of the tyre compounds used in 2011 having undergone significant revisions.[18] Several teams, including Williams[19] and Mercedes[20] used the event to test parts for the 2012 season in the face of a ban on exhaust-blown diffusers.
Signed teams and drivers
After a dispute between the Formula One Teams Association and the FIA in the first half of 2009, a new Concorde Agreement was signed on 1 August 2009 by the then FIA president Max Mosley and all of the existing teams. The new agreement provided for a continuation of the terms of the 1998 Concorde Agreement, and ran until 31 December 2012.[21]
The FIA published a provisional entry list on 30 November 2011.[22]
In June 2011, Williams announced that they would be using Renault engines for the 2012 and 2013 seasons, with an option to use Renault engines again in 2014 under the next generation of engine regulations.[51] Renault had previously supplied engines to Williams from 1989 to 1997, when the team won four World Drivers' Championships and five World Constructors' Championships.
In July 2011, Virgin Racing split with Wirth Research mid-season after a technical review by former Renault F1 Team engineering director Pat Symonds found that Virgin's CFD-only approach had failed.[67] The team formed a technical partnership with McLaren that granted them access to McLaren's testing facilities as well as the purchase of Wirth Research facilities.[68]
In the week before the 2011 Indian Grand Prix, Force India announced that the Sahara Group had purchased a 42.5% stake in the team, valued at US$100 million.[41] The investment gives the Sahara Group and team principal Vijay Mallya an equal stake in the team, with team director Michiel Mol controlling the remaining 15% of the team. Under the terms of the sale, the Sahara Group will become Force India's naming-rights sponsor.
At the November 2011 meeting of the Formula One Commission in Geneva, several teams were given permission to change their names, pending final approval from the World Motorsports Council in December of that year:[69][70]
Team Lotus will be known as Caterham F1 Team, reflecting team principal Tony Fernandes' purchase of Caterham Cars.
Virgin Racing will become Marussia F1 Team, following increased ownership of the team by Russian car manufacturer Marussia Motors.
As a result of the name changes, Team Lotus and Lotus Renault GP declared that their ongoing dispute over the use of the Lotus name was over after they had reached an "amicable conclusion".[71] Although the exact terms of the settlement were kept confidential, the joint statement detailed the transfer of the rights to the Lotus and Team Lotus names to Group Lotus' ownership.[72]
In December 2011, Mercedes GP announced that they will change their official team name to Mercedes AMG.[35] The new name originates from AMG, Mercedes-Benz's performance and luxury road car brand.
On 15 December 2011, HRT team principal Colin Kolles formally left his position, with the team citing the relocation of their headquarters to Spain as the reason for the separation.[73] Former Minardi driver Luis Pérez-Sala took Kolles' place as team principal.[74] In January 2012, the team relocated to a new facility in Valencia.[75]
Driver changes
Jaime Alguersuari did not have his contract with Scuderia Toro Rosso renewed.[47] He was later offered a seat at HRT, but turned it down and was instead reported to be seeking a third driver role with a larger team.[76]
After two seasons with Williams, Rubens Barrichello left the team.[53] With HRT stating they want a young driver for their second seat,[77] Barrichello was without a drive for 2012.
Reigning GP2 Series champion Romain Grosjean will return to Formula One with Lotus F1, having previously competed for the team (when it was known as Renault F1) in 2009.[40]
Nico Hülkenberg will return to Formula One with Force India, having spent the 2011 season as their testing and reserve driver.[43]
After being injured in a rally accident shortly before the 2011 season,[79]Robert Kubica spent the 2011 season recovering from his injuries. In November 2011, Kubica informed his team that he would not be ready to start the 2012 season.[80] Lotus team principal Éric Boullier has indicated that he would be prepared to make a seat available for Kubica mid-season if and when Kubica is prepared to return.[81]
In December 2011, HRT driver Vitantonio Liuzzi joined the Indian i1 Super Series.[82]
Russian driver Vitaly Petrov was under contract to race for Lotus F1 in 2012;[83] however, the team terminated his contract one year in advance.[40]
2007World Drivers' ChampionKimi Räikkönen will return to the sport with the Lotus F1 Team after a two-year hiatus competing in the World Rally Championship.[39] Räikkönen had previously been in negotiations with Williams before joining Lotus.[84][85]
After competing for Lotus (under the Renault name) in the second half of 2011, Bruno Senna left the team.[40] He later joined Williams, the team his uncle was racing for at the time of his death,[53] though he did not sign a contract without his family's blessing.[86] Senna was reported to bring fourteen million Euros in sponsorship to the team.[87]
Adrian Sutil left Force India, having spent six years with both the team and its previous incarnations, Spyker and Midland.[43] He wanted to drive with Williams, before negotiations collapsed in December 2011.[88] Sutil was later charged with grievous bodily harm after allegedly assaulting a senior Renault team member with a glass in a Shanghai nightclub following the 2011 Chinese Grand Prix.[89] If convicted, Sutil could face up to one year in prison and be banned from entering China.[90]
2011 Formula Renault 3.5 Series runner-up Jean-Éric Vergne filled Toro Rosso's second racing seat, becoming the third French driver to join the grid.[47] Like Ricciardo, Vergne had completed a limited testing schedule for the team in 2011.
2012 calendar
Bernie Ecclestone wanted to see the calendar increase to a record 20 rounds, the maximum he feels is viable. A provisional calendar was announced in June 2011, with a record 21 races.[91]FIA President Jean Todt later said that the 2012 calendar would have no more than 20,[92] but did not say which race would be removed. On 29 July 2011, a second provisional calendar was released, confirming that the Turkish Grand Prix would be discontinued.[93] The final calendar was released on 7 December 2011.[4]
In May 2010, it was announced that Austin, Texas would host the return of the United States Grand Prix, the first since Indianapolis in 2007. Known as the Circuit of the Americas, the venue will be a brand-new and purpose-built permanent circuit designed by Hermann Tilke.[111] In November 2011, Bernie Ecclestone expressed "minor" doubt over the race going ahead after what he described as "disagreements inside the [management] company"[112] and gave the circuit owners and race organisers a deadline of 7 December[113]—coinciding with the meeting of the FIA World Motorsports Council and the release of the final 2012 calendar—to sort out their differences or else risk losing the event entirely.[114] The final calendar included the race,[4] with Ecclestone confirming that a new arrangement had been made, and that the event organisers had paid their circuit sanctioning fees for 2012.[115]
The calendar released in July 2011 showed several events being moved around the calendar:
The Bahrain Grand Prix was moved to the end of the season after the 2011 race was postponed, and later cancelled.[116] The race was scheduled for a November date to give the government more time to ensure civil order was restored, but was later brought forward to April. At the 2011 Japanese Grand Prix, several teams expressed concern over the state of the race in the face of renewed violence in the country.[117] These concerns were taken to the November meeting of the Formula One Commission.[112] In January 2012, human rights groups in the country urged teams to boycott the 2012 race amid renewed political disturbances in the country.[118]
The German Grand Prix will return to Hockenheim after the 2011 German Grand Prix was held at the Nürburgring, in line with the event's policy of alternating between venues.
The Korean Grand Prix was to be brought forward from October to April; however, the July calendar brought the Indian Grand Prix forward to April, leaving the Korean event in its October date. The Indian race was later moved back to 28 October, with the Korean race remaining in its 14 October date.
The Turkish Grand Prix was removed from the calendar after Formula One Management and the event organisers could not agree on a renewed contract. In August 2011, organisers of the race said that they were negotiating with Bernie Ecclestone to resume their place on the calendar.[119]
The United States Grand Prix was originally scheduled to be held in June, but was moved back to become the penultimate event of the season in response to concerns over the heat of the Texas summer and its effects on teams, drivers and spectators.[120]
Organisers of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix had originally planned to reconfigure the Yas Marina Circuit for the 2011 race following heavy criticism over a lack of overtaking in 2010.[121] They later postponed the circuit modifications until 2012 in the face of rule changes for the 2011 season that they felt directly addressed the criticisms levelled at the circuit,[122] promising the speedy introduction of changes if the 2011 race proved disappointing.
Organisers of the Korean Grand Prix said they were unhappy with the terms of their contract with Bernie Ecclestone and Formula One Management, particularly the cost of race-sanctioning fees, and asked to make a new contract, seeking more-favourable terms.[123][124] However, Ecclestone ruled out renegotiations, stating that the initial negotiation process had been difficult enough, and that the organisers were aware of the terms of the contract when they first signed it. Ecclestone stated that in the event that race organisers can not pay sanctioning fees, the Korean Grand Prix will be removed from the calendar.[125]
In January 2012, organisers of the European Grand Prix wrote to Bernie Ecclestone about the race in Valencia. They felt it would not make money, and wanted to change the contract with Formula One Management to include "a substantial cost reduction".[126][127] Organisers of the Spanish Grand Prix in Barcelona expressed similar misgivings over the state of their race.[128]
Changes
Rule changes
Technical regulations
The 2011 season saw teams running "off-throttle blown diffusers", which created downforce by forcing fuel through the engine to produce exhaust gasses and directing it over the diffuser when the driver was not applying the throttle. This was originally banned in incremental phases, with increasingly restrictive rules on what teams could and could not do, with a full ban to be applied from the 2011 British Grand Prix onwards. The incremental ban was controversial, with several teams applying for and receiving permission to avoid the total ban. After discussion between the FIA and engine manufacturers, the original regulations were restored, with the full ban delayed until 2012. The regulations in 2012 will govern the design of the exhaust with the teams agreeing to strict rules on the position of the exhaust tailpipe. This will result in the exhaust exiting the bodywork much higher up than in 2011, and no longer near the diffuser.[129] In October 2011, a clarification to the amended rules was issued, effectively banning "exotic" engine maps;[130] in November, further amendments were introduced, completely banning the practice of blowing exhaust gasses over parts of the car to improve downforce, following a bid by several teams to allow it under certain conditions.[131]
In January 2012, the FIA banned the use of "reactive ride-height".[132] The system, first proposed by Lotus in 2010 (but not applied until 2012), used hydraulic cylinders in the brake calipers and suspension push-rods to make minute adjustments to the ride height of the car, thereby keeping the ride height at an optimal level throughout the race and providing stability during braking.[133] The FIA initially approved the device as being legal,[134] and several teams, including Ferrari[135] and Williams,[136] gave plans to the FIA for their own versions of the device before it was banned one week later. No reason was given for the reversal of the decision, though it was reported that the reactive ride-height systems violated Article 3.15 of the technical regulations, which states that "any aerodynamic effect created by the suspension should be incidental to its primary function" and "any device that influences the car's aerodynamics must remain immobile in relation to the spring part of the car".[137]
Technical regulations for 2012 include the reprofiling of the car's nose. The pre-2012 regulations allow the nose to be as high as 62.5 centimetres (24.6 in) above ground, but the revisions to the sporting code lower the maximum allowable height to 55 centimetres (22 in).[138]
At the meeting for the Formula One Commission in Geneva in November 2011, the use of helium in air guns used to change tyres during pit stops was banned.[139] Despite increasing the rotation speed of the air guns by up to 30%, the use of helium was deemed to be too expensive with little competitive gain.
All cars must now pass their mandatory FIA crash tests before they can take part in pre-season testing.[140] Previously, passing the crash tests was only a requirement prior to the first race of the season. Crash tests for the 2012 season will also be more rigorous than in previous years.[141]
Sporting regulations
After being banned in 2009, in-season testing will return in 2012, with plans for a test to be held at Mugello on 1 May ahead of the European leg of the 2012 championship.[142] As teams will only be permitted to do fifteen days of testing over the course of the season, the pre-season winter testing schedule has been cut back to accommodate the Mugello test.[143]
At the September 2011 meeting of the FIA World Motor Sport Council, representatives of the member organisations voted to amend the rules for double-waved yellow flags in all FIA-sanctioned championships. The amendment means that double-waved flags will be shown when a track marshall is working on or beside the circuit.[144]
Faced with several constructors applying for name changes,[145][146] teams have requested a clearer definition of what constitutes a "constructor".[147] Under the rules set out in the Sixth Concorde Agreement, several teams have been forced to compete under names that do not necessarily reflect their ownership – such as Sauber competing as "BMW Sauber" in 2010, despite BMW withdrawing from the sport at the end of the 2009 season – in order to preserve their status as a current constructor and their claim to a share of the television rights paid to teams that placed in the top ten in the final World Constructors' Championship standings.
At the final meeting of the World Motorsports Commission in December 2011, a series of changes to the rules were published. Chief among these is the re-introduction of a rule that will allow all lapped traffic under the safety car to be released from the queue before the car returns to pit lane, allowing the drivers to unlap themselves and to ensure a clean restart.[148]
Drivers will not be able to leave the confines of the circuit without good reason. In 2011 drivers were seen using access roads around the circuit to shorten their reconnaissance and in-laps in order to save their fuel and tyres.[140] Drivers will not be allowed to return to the normal racing line should they choose a defensive line going into a corner.[149]
Races will have a maximum four-hour time limit to prevent the indefinite suspension of a race. This will stop the theoretical possibility of a race lasting more than eight hours. This rule was introduced after the rain-interrupted 2011 Canadian Grand Prix, which set a record for the longest race in Formula One history, at four hours, four minutes and thirty-nine seconds.[149]
Any driver in the pit lane when a race is suspended will be permitted to return to the circuit and take up the position on the grid that they were running in at the time of the suspension.[140]
Other changes
In July 2011, a joint broadcasting deal for Formula One in the United Kingdom was announced between Sky Sports and the BBC. The new arrangement runs from 2012 until 2018 and will see all practice, qualifying sessions and races being broadcast by Sky, with the BBC televising qualifying and the race live from ten selected venues and extended highlights of the remaining ten on a delayed broadcast.[150][151] The announcement was controversial, with early promises that the races would not be interrupted by commercials[152] doing little to quell the highly negative reactions from fans and observers.[153][154] It had previously been believed that the terms of the Concorde Agreement prevented Formula One from being broadcast exclusively on pay-per-view, but the Agreement did not prevent a shared broadcast such as the proposal made by Sky Sports and the BBC.[155] The controversial nature of the broadcast deal led to the House of Commons' Culture, Media and Sport Committee calling Bernie Ecclestone and "senior BBC figures" including director-general Mark Thompson to answer questions over the details of the broadcasting arrangement.[156] In November 2011, Sky announced plans to launch an additional channel, Sky Sports F1, specifically for Formula One coverage.[157]
In December 2011, Red Bull Racing and Scuderia Ferrari left FOTA, the Formula One Teams Association, following prolonged debate over the implementation of the controversial Resource Restriction Agreement,[158][159] though Red Bull team principal Christian Horner reaffirmed his team's commitment to cost-cutting measures and highlighting the team's concerns over certain loopholes in the Resource Restriction Agreement that they felt teams and manufacturers would willingly exploit.[160] One week later, Sauber also left the organisation, though the Swiss team did not publicly give a reason for ending their membership.[161]
↑"Pit & Paddock: Third year for Trulli and Kovalainen". Autosport. 205 (11). Haymarket Publications: 12. 15 September 2011. Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli will continue to drive for Team Lotus next season. Trulli was, as expected, officially announced as a 2012 driver by the team last weekend, while team boss Tony Fernandes confirmed to Autosport that Kovalainen will also be staying on.
↑"d'Ambrosio, van der Garde working in stealth mode". Crash.net. 13 January 2012. Retrieved 20 January 2012. According to Belgium's La Libre newspaper, which quotes HRT technical director Jacky Eeckelaert, Liuzzi has not seized the chance to cement his place on the grid for 2012, despite occasionally helping HRT punch above its weight last season. "He hasn't really confirmed himself after several chances, [and] we are looking more for a young driver with a lot of potential," Eeckalaert explained, before going on to rule out the likes of Barrichello and a host of Spanish talent, including Jaime Alguersuari and Dani Clos, currently being linked to the soon-to-be Valencia-based squad. "I don't think it's in the interests of the team to have a second Spanish driver," he said, "and the same goes for the drivers approaching retirement."[permanent dead link]