European Grand Prix Preview

Sebastian Vettel stormed to his 33rd career pole position to equal the tally of the greats Alain Prost and Jim Clark. Vettel was simply too good for the rest of the field who were largely separated by less than a second. Lewis Hamilton and Pastor Maldonado will line up 2nd and 3rd but Fernando Alonso, Michael Schumacher and Mark Webber all failed to impress.

Qualifying 1

The news came through before qualifying that Timo Glock would take no part in the session because of illness. He will also take no part in this afternoon’s race. The other 23 cars took to the track and it immediately became clear that Mark Webber was off the pace. His running in FP3 had been curtailed by issues with the car and, while he may have been able to get away with that last season, he was punished by the tight nature of racing in the 2012 season. Webber switched to the soft tyres but to no avail and was marooned down in 19th place. Just in front of him will line up Jean-Eric Vergne who thought he’d done enough to make it into Q2 before Heikki Kovalainen delighted the Caterham team with a brilliant lap at the death of the session to take P17.

Eliminated:

  • 18th Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:40.203
  • 19th Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 1:40.395
  • 20th Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) 1:40.457
  • 21st Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) 1:42.171
  • 22nd Narain Karthiekeyan (HRT F1) 1:42.527

Qualifying 2

With the Force India’s looking quick all weekend it became apparent that one of the more established teams would be eliminated in Q2. Unfortunately for Ferrari, it was them who would be eliminated. The revised F2012 still wasn’t up to the pace around a stop-start circuit like the one in Valencia and Fernando Alonso will start 11th with Massa in 13th. Michael Schumacher couldn’t produce a lap like in Monaco and will start 12th. Sergio Perez will have to produce another stunningly controlled performance to replicate his podium finish in Canada as he will start 15th. Heikki Kovalainen impressed again as he outqualified the Toro Rosso of Daniel Ricciardo. The fastest time in Q2 down to 13th place was separated by just two tenths of a second.

Eliminated:

  • 11th Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:38.707
  • 12th Michael Schumacher (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:38.770
  • 13th Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:38.780
  • 14th Bruno Senna (Williams F1) 1:39.207
  • 15th Sergio Perez (Sauber F1) 1:39.358
  • 16th Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) 1:40.295
  • 17th Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:40.358

Qualifying 3

With the field packed so tightly, anyone of the top 10 could have taken pole. For a while it seemed as though the Force India’s might just do it with Paul di Resta absolutely flying before locking up into the final corner and ruining the lap. Hulkenberg then slotted himself into P1 before Pastor Maldonado came along and took the honours off him. It was Hamilton’s turn next to take over at the top with a great lap as Button again couldn’t get near his team-mate. Sebastian Vettel has looked mighty all weekend and was the favourite for pole. In his one run, he destroyed the competition; going some three tenths faster than anyone else when the rest of the top 10 were by just half a second themselves.

Top 10:

  1. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) 1:38.086
  2. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:38.410
  3. Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) 1:38.475
  4. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) 1:38.505
  5. Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) 1:38.513
  6. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:38.623
  7. Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) 1:38.741
  8. Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) 1:38.752
  9. Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:38.801
  10. Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) 1:38.992

With this track being perhaps the most boring of the season (although Korea might argue with that) overtaking will be at a premium this afternoon. Vettel seems to have the measure of the field and will be difficult to beat while Grosjean looks the most likely to be another different winner this season. Hopefully the Pirelli tyres will inject some excitement into an event which, in my opinion, shouldn’t be on the calendar. My prediction is thus:

  1. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing)
  2. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes)
  3. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1)

Seventh Heaven for Hamilton

Hamilton beams as he sprays his mechanics with champagne.

Lewis Hamilton became the seventh different winner of what is turning out to be a vintage Formula 1 World Championship after his victory in the Canadian Grand Prix. He overhauled the one-stoppers Alonso and Vettel in the closing laps as his McLaren team benefited from a perfectly judged two-stop strategy. Alonso and Vettel fell down the order as Sergio Perez and Romain Grosjean, both on two stops, grabbed the final podium places.

In contrast to last year’s washout, the race was played out in glorious Montreal sunshine and the warm weather meant that the chances of a one-stop strategy working were always slim. From the start, Vettel got away well and led out of turn one as the field meandered their way behind him. Felipe Massa was making good progress before a spin on lap 5 cost him a few places. Massa was also the first to stop on lap 13 with Schumacher and di Resta joining him on the softer tyres.

At the head of the field, Vettel and Hamilton were closely matched but Vettel was the first to blink. Hamilton stayed out longer and, even with a typical McLaren error during his pit-stop, was able to rejoin ahead of the reigning World Champion. Fernando Alonso stayed out longest as Ferrari seemed to combat their high tyre degradation and rejoined ahead of Hamilton after his stop. Hamilton though was a man on a mission and passed Alonso down the long Droit du Casino straight to take the lead of the Grand Prix. Hamilton led from Alonso and Vettel with the top three drivers in the world building up a substantial lead over the rest of the field.

Behind them, Raikkonen and Perez were clearly on a one-stop strategy but sitting comfortably in 4th and 5th. They eventually pitted on lap 41 and continued their battle in 8th and 9th place. Michael Schumacher continued to suffer horrendous bad luck this season (some sections of the F1 fanbase claim that is karma for earlier discrepancies) as his DRS was stuck open and despite the panicked actions of the Mercedes mechanics, the flap just simply would not close and so Schumacher was again forced into retirement. Another former World Champion suffering in Montreal was Jenson Button. Having won so brilliantly last season, Button was languishing down the field for most of the race, struggling with tyre wear even with his silky smooth driving style. He would finish a disappointing 16th having suffered the ignominy of being lapped by his team-mate and demanded answers as to why he was so off the pace.

The closing of stages of the Grand Prix saw the race come alive. Hamilton stopped again of lap 50 while Alonso and Vettel tried to see the race out on their worn rubber. Hamilton, with the advantage of fresh tyres under him, pumped in a series of blistering laps to cut the deficit to the top two and he muscled past Vettel on lap 62 before Vettel pitted two laps later. Hamilton closed on Alonso and passed the Spaniard for the second time as Alonso’s tyres fell of the proverbial cliff.

Romain Grosjean has impressed this season and took a deserved second place.

Romain Grosjean and Sergio Perez had benefited from the chaos ahead and passed Alonso before Vettel too overtook him on the last lap. Hamilton took the chequered flag while Grosjean and Perez couldn’t believe their luck.

Provisional Classification:

  1. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1hr32:29.586
  2. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) + 2.513
  3. Sergio Perez (Sauber F1) + 5.260
  4. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) + 7.295
  5. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) + 13.411
  6. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) + 13.842
  7. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing)  + 15.085
  8. Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) + 15.567
  9. Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) + 24.432
  10. Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) + 25.272
  11. Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) + 37.693
  12. Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) + 46.236
  13. Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) + 47.052
  14. Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) + 1:04.475
  15. Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) + 1 Lap
  16. Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) + 1 Lap
  17. Bruno Senna (Williams F1) + 1 Lap
  18. Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) + 1 Lap
  19. Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) + 1 Lap
  20. Charles Pic (Marussia F1) + 3 Laps

Not Classified:

  • Timo Glock (Marussia F1) – Brakes, Lap 57
  • Michael Schumacher (Mercedes AMG Petronas) – DRS, Lap 44
  • Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) – Brakes, Lap 25
  • Narain Karthikeyan (HRT F1) – Brakes, Lap 23

Drivers’ Championship Standings:

  1. Lewis Hamilton – 88 Points
  2. Fernando Alonso – 86 Points
  3. Sebastian Vettel – 85 Points
  4. Mark Webber – 79 Points
  5. Nico Rosberg – 67 Points
  6. Kimi Raikkonen – 55 Points
  7. Romain Grosjean – 53 Points
  8. Jenson Button – 45 Points
  9. Sergio Perez – 37 Points
  10. Pastor Maldonado – 29 Points
  11. Kamui Kobayashi – 21 Points
  12. Paul di Resta – 21 Points
  13. Bruno Senna – 15 Points
  14. Felipe Massa – 11 Points
  15. Nico Hulkenberg – 7 Points
  16. Jean-Eric Vergne – 4 Points
  17. Daniel Ricciardo – 2 Points
  18. Michael Schumacher – 2 Points

Constructors’ Championship Standings:

  1. Red Bull Racing – 164 Points
  2. Vodafone McLaren Mercedes – 133 Points
  3. Lotus F1 – 108 Points
  4. Scuderia Ferrari – 97 Points
  5. Mercedes AMG Petronas – 69 Points
  6. Sauber F1 – 58 Points
  7. Williams F1 – 44 Points
  8. Sahara Force India – 28 Points
  9. Scuderia Toro Rosso – 6 Points

 

Euro 2012: The Knockout Stages

Well what an intriguing tournament it’s been so far. The football has been, on the most part, excellent and we’ve seen a number of shocks which have really spiced up the quarter final stage.

Karagounis has been instrumental for the Greeks during these championships.

Group A was always going to be the most open of the groups but few would have been brave enough to predict that Greece and the Czechs would make it through. It seemed that Russia and Poland were destined for the knockout stages but the Czechs somehow managed to recover from their 4-1 drubbing at the hands of the Russians and record two straight wins. The Greeks (and as anyone who read my group stage preview will know, I landed the Greeks in the sweepstake) scraped through by the skin of their teeth, recording just one win from their three group games.

Germany are favourites to win the tournament after impressing in the group stage

The reward for the Czechs is a tricky tie against Portugal tonight. Portugal were the dark horse in Group B and overcame Denmark after a thriller and beat the Netherlands fairly comfortably before pushing the otherwise dominant Germans all the way. Germany will face Greece in their quarter final and the game will have political connotations after the relationship between Greece and Germany has soured during the Eurozone crisis. Germany will be heavy favourites since they are the only team in the competition with a 100% record. I predicted that they’d be ruthlessly efficient and that’s what they were, winning every game by one goal to serenly progress from the ‘Group of Death’. As for the Dutch, they will go home and analyse just why they failed to fulfill their massive potential again.

Torres will have to propel this Spain side forward

Spain came to Poland and Ukraine looking to dazzle Europe with tiki-taka before claiming a hat-trick of major international competitions. Sadly, like France in 2002, they’ve disappointed so far. Yes, they’ve played well and gave the Irish a lesson but when the pressure was on against Italy they seemed to suffer from nerves. The re-emergence of Fernando Torres has given the Spanish a focal point but I’m still not confident that they’ll come away with the trophy. Italy just about made it through to the quarter finals after Prandelli’s tactical gambles started to pay off. Much of their success is based on keeping a clean sheet and striking on the counter but against sides such as Germany, that tactic will be hard to carry out. Croatia actually impressed the most in Group C. They looked comfortable going forward and pushed Spain and Italy very close. They’re just short of one or two good players in defence otherwise they’d have all the makings of a top-notch side.

Rooney’s served his ban and will be looking to terrorise the defences of Europe

Spain vs France is perhaps the stand-out tie of the quarter finals. Both sides have a lot to prove after disappointing efforts in the group stage. I think Spain have enough about them to quell the French goal threat and should progress but they can’t be as complacent as they’ve been up until now. On their day (well, against Ukraine) the French looked very good indeed and I think they’ll prefer being the underdogs for that one. England vs Italy looks like another mouth-watering morsel. Both sides are evenly matched, both are looking to confound pre-tournament expectations and both will look to play a direct, counter-attacking style. England have the benefit of Wayne Rooney returning from suspension and immediately getting in amongst the goals while Italy will focus on Di Natale and Balotelli with an onus on De Rossi and Pirlo in midfield stopping any potential England attack. It’ll be one for that tacticians but whoever wins has to have a lot of belief going into the semis…

So, after my predictions so far have been, in typical style, miles wide of the mark I’m going to do the only logical thing and give some more:

Quarter Final 1

Czech Republic vs Portugal

Winner: Portugal

Quarter Final 2

Germany vs Greece

Winner: Germany

Quarter Final 3

Spain vs France

Winner: Spain

Quarter Final 4

England vs Italy

Winner: England

Semi Final 1

Portugal vs Spain

Winner: Spain

Semi Final 2

Germany vs England

Winner: Germany (on penalties, naturally)

Final

Spain vs Germany

Winner: Germany

If that happens it’ll be a miracle judging from how far out I was in my group stage predictions but it’s probably the most logical outcome. Football tends to disobey logic at every convenience so here’s toasting a Greece vs Italy final!

Redknapp Sacked by Spurs

I didn’t expect to be having to write this blog today. The news is filtering through that Harry Redknapp has been sacked by Spurs after failing to guide the side to Champions League football last season. There have been rumours of trouble for a couple of weeks now after Tottenham suffered a horrendous slump in form towards the end of the season, going from a clear third place to finishing a close fourth in the space of three months.

Harry Redknapp is left to ponder his next career move after being shown the exit at Spurs.

Of course much of that lack of form was brought about because of off-the-field issues. Firstly, ‘Arry had his day in court fighting charges of tax evasion before his well publicised courtship of the England manager’s post. He gambled his entire career on getting that job but sadly the gamble appears to have backfired. His behaviour over the past couple of months has been getting stranger and stranger as he veered from denying and then confirming his interest in the England job, stating that he would most likely sell most of Tottenham’s best players and then just this week saying that he wasn’t going to resign his post at White Hart Lane, basically offering Spurs the chance to sack him.

Those who know me will know that I’m not Redknapp’s biggest fan. I think that he’s over-rated having spent vast amounts of money for a moderate amount of success. That being said, I will defend his record at Spurs vehemently. He has galvanised a team that a few seasons ago looked like they were going to languish in mid-table and has turned them into genuine top four contenders. I think Spurs will find it difficult to replace him and tonight’s events could end up being a disaster for both parties. I can’t wait to hear what he’s got to say on the matter and where his next move lays – maybe a spell abroad?

David Moyes could be Redknapp’s replacement.

So where do Tottenham turn now? Well the early runaway favourite is Everton’s David Moyes. Moyes is one of my favourite managers in the Premier League and the complete opposite to Redknapp. He’s shy, thinks before he speaks and has achieved minor miracles at Everton on a shoestring budget. He guided them to their staple 7th place in the league (above arch-rivals Liverpool) and has got them playing some lovely stuff. I just think that Spurs will be simply too different to Everton. Moyes is in a good place at Goodison Park and we’ve seen how managers who are nicely bedded at their club leave and end up being failures at their new club (Hodgson at Liverpool, Hughes at City etc…) I can see Moyes ruining his chances of the Man United job (the one he really wants) with a terrible spell at Spurs but on the other hand it could be the thrust into the big time that he deserves.

I think he’d relish the chance to work with the young, talented team that Tottenham have and he might even be able to persuade a few of his Everton boys to follow him down to London. I’m just not convinced that Moyes would want to leave Everton yet. I’m sure he sees them as deserving of a place in the top four and won’t leave until they get there. Whatever happens, this story has massive implications for the start of the season and Spurs fans will be hoping an appointment is made swiftly.

Canadian Grand Prix Preview

Sebastian Vettel produced an ominously clinical qualifying performance to take pole position for today’s Canadian Grand Prix. He edged out Lewis Hamilton by three tenths of a second with Fernando Alonso continuing Ferrari’s improvement this season by taking third on the grid. Kimi Raikkonen missed out on the Q3 shootout, lining up 12th this afternoon while Jenson Button scraped through to the final session but failed to impress down in 10th.

Qualifying 1

Jean-Eric Vergne crashed out of FP3 earlier on Saturday afternoon and it proved to be costly as he again failed to make it out of Q1 this season. He will line up behind the Caterhams after they showed some improvements this weekend. HRT’s Pedro de la Rosa put in a superb lap to place him ahead of the Marussia’s, much to the delight of the Spanish team. At the front of the field, Sebastian Vettel topped the timesheets to show that the RB8 wasn’t fazed by the modifications that the FIA forced Red Bull to make to it.

Eliminated:

  • 18th Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) 1:16.263
  • 19th Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) 1:16.482
  • 20th Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:16.602
  • 21st Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) 1:17.492
  • 22nd Timo Glock (Marussia F1) 1:17.901
  • 23rd Charles Pic (Marussia F1) 1:18.255
  • 24th Narain Karthikeyan (HRT F1) 1:18.330
Qualifying 2

Another weekend, another frantic Q2 session. The field is so tightly bunched this year that just the slightest mistake in this session can ruin your weekend. The Lotus’ are not suited to this track and Raikkonen struggled all session to get close to the top 10. The Saubers were also off the pace with Kobayashi ending up 11th ahead of Perez in 15th. Jenson Button was on the bubble and facing elimination in the dying stages of the session with Pastor Maldonado on a flying lap but fortunately for Button, Maldonado got out of shape coming out of the final corner and spun allowing the McLaren to scrape into the final shootout.

Eliminated:

  • 11th Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) 1:14.688
  • 12th Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) 1:14.734
  • 13th Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) 1:14.748
  • 14th Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:15.078
  • 15th Sergio Perez (Sauber F1) 1:15.156
  • 16th Bruno Senna (Williams F1) 1:15.170
  • 17th Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) 1:15.231

Qualifying 3

Vettel always looked in control of this session and he produced a brilliant lap to be the only driver to duck under the 1:14 mark. Hamilton always goes well at Montreal, the site of his first win in F1, and he will fancy his chances from second on the grid. Button couldn’t find any pace and will line up 10th with Paul di Resta  impressing on his way to 8th on the grid.

Top 10:

  1. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) 1:13.784
  2. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:14.087
  3. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:14.151
  4. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 1:14.346
  5. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:14.411
  6. Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:14.465
  7. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) 1:14.645
  8. Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) 1:14.705
  9. Michael Schumacher (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:14.812
  10. Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:15.182

Vettel secures his second pole of the season and I get the feeling that he will ‘do a Bahrain’ and just pull away and control the race. The battle behind could be fascinating though with some really tight racing in prospect. Here’s my prediction:

  1. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing)
  2. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari)
  3. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing)

Have a good one folks!

Webber Makes It Six Different Winners From Six Races In 2012

Mark Webber won an extraordinary Monaco Grand Prix to create a little bit of F1 history. Never before has there been six different winners in the first six races of a season and Webber followed Jenson Button, Fernando Alonso, Nico Rosberg, Sebastian Vettel and Pastor Maldonado in seeing the chequered flag in 2012. The streets of Monte Carlo were host to a grandstand finish where the top six were separated by just six seconds.

Webber held off Rosberg’s challenge down into turn 1 as the lights went out but there was drama behind as Grosjean tangled with Michael Schumacher leaving him with a damaged rear suspension and he became the first retirement of the race. Grosjean clipped the Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi forcing the Japanese driver into retirement five laps later due to damage from the collision. The first lap claimed two more casualties as Pastor Maldonado ran into the back of Pedro de la Rosa leaving them both with irreparable wing damage. The Safety Car was deployed following Maldonado stacking his car into the barriers on his way back to the pits.

Monaco is renowned as a circuit that is near impossible to overtake on and so it proved after the restart; the drivers were frustratingly close to each other but none could get past. Sergio Perez was the only driver making progress as he muscled his way past the slower teams after starting from the back of the grid. The Pirelli tyres were holding up well around Monaco and it was not until lap 27 that the leaders pitted for fresh rubber. One notable exception was Sebastian Vettel who stayed out and began pumping in a string of fastest laps in a bid to gain places on his rivals once the pitstop window had ended.

He increased his lead over team-mate Webber to nearly twenty seconds before finally pitting on lap 45, rejoining just ahead of Lewis Hamilton. Further back, Sergio Perez was handed a drive-through penalty for impeding Raikkonen on his way into the pits. Michael Schumacher’s run of bad luck in 2012 continued as he experienced a lack of fuel pressure before Pic and Ricciardo joined him on the sidelines a few laps later.

The threat of rain had lingered over the hills of Monte Carlo for the majority of the race and the decisions over tyre choice had been difficult to make. Toro Rosso called in Jean-Eric Vergne from a secure points scoring position to switch to the intermediate tyres. The gamble would have paid off handsomely if the rain had fallen but unfortunately for the Frenchman it didn’t and he quickly fell down the order.

At the front, Webber began to slow as the light faded. Rosberg, Alonso, Vettel, Hamilton and Massa all closed onto the back of the Red Bull and the cars were separated by little over five seconds for the remainder of the race. Webber was able to keep his cool and become the only Australian to win the Monaco Grand Prix twice.

Provisional Classification:

  1. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 1hr46:06.557
  2. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) + 0.643
  3. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) + 0.947
  4. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) + 1.343
  5. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) + 4.101
  6. Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) + 6.195
  7. Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) +41.537
  8. Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) + 42.562
  9. Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) + 44.036
  10. Bruno Senna (Williams F1) + 44.516
  11. Sergio Perez (Sauber F1) + 1 Lap
  12. Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) + 1 Lap
  13. Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) + 1 Lap
  14. Timo Glock (Marussia F1) + 1 Lap
  15. Narain Karthikeyan (HRT F1) + 2 Laps

Not Classified:

  • Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) – Collision, Lap 71
  • Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) – Steering, Lap 66
  • Charles Pic (Marussia F1) – Electrical, Lap 65
  • Michael Schumacher (Mercedes AMG Petronas) – Fuel pressure, Lap  64
  • Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) – Electrical, Lap 16
  • Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) – Damage, Lap 5
  • Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) – Damage, Lap 1
  • Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) – Collision, Lap 1
  • Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) – Collision, Lap 1

Drivers’ Championship Standings:

  1. Fernando Alonso – 76 Points
  2. Sebastian Vettel – 73 Points
  3. Mark Webber – 73 Points
  4. Lewis Hamilton – 63 Points
  5. Nico Rosberg – 59 Points
  6. Kimi Raikkonen – 51 Points
  7. Jenson Button – 45 Points
  8. Romain Grosjean – 35 Points
  9. Pastor Maldonado – 29 Points
  10. Sergio Perez – 22 Points
  11. Paul di Resta – 21 Points
  12. Kamui Kobayashi – 19 Points
  13. Bruno Senna – 15 Points
  14. Felipe Massa – 10 Points
  15. Nico Hulkenberg – 7 Points
  16. Jean-Eric Vergne – 4 Points
  17. Daniel Ricciardo – 2 Points
  18. Michael Schumacher – 2 Points

Constructors’ Championship Standings:

  1. Red Bull Racing – 146 Points
  2. Vodafone McLaren Mercedes – 108 Points
  3. Scuderia Ferrari – 86 Points
  4. Lotus F1 – 86 Points
  5. Mercedes AMG Petronas – 61 Points
  6. Williams F1 – 44 Points
  7. Sauber F1 – 41 Points
  8. Sahara Force India – 28 Points
  9. Scuderia Toro Rosso – 6 Points

 

Euro 2012 Preview

The European Championships are almost upon us with the game between Poland and Greece this afternoon in Warsaw acting as the official curtain-raiser to a tournament that threatens to be overshadowed by off-field issues. With English expectations displaying a distinct air of pessimism, attention in the British media has turned to the potential threat of violent and racist abuse during the Championships. We’ll go onto that later but for now lets focus on footballing matters with a preview of the groups and players to watch.

Expect a few Premier League scouts to be keeping a keen eye on Alan Dzagoev.

Group A

Poland

Greece

Russia

Czech Republic

The clear favourites to win the group are Russia and with good reason. In a fairly  weak group they have the most organised side with a manager with proven success in Dick Advocaat. They should just have the cutting edge over the other teams who will rely on their rock solid defences to get them through.

Poland will be hoping that home advantage (for at least half the tournament) can inspire their players to exceed expectations. Expect Dortmund players Lewandowski, Blaszczykowski and Pisczceck to be integral to the Poles’ chance of success.

The Czechs usually perform well at the Euros (remember Euro 96?) and they could well be the dark horses of the group this time round. In Petr Cech, they have a world class ‘keeper on a high from his recent Champions League success who will be hard to beat. Tomas Necid will be their main hope for goals alongside Milan Baros but these have been hard to come by recently for the Czechs. It should be between the Poles and the Czechs for second place.

Finally, we come to Greece. Unfortunately for the troubled Greek public (and me seeing as I got them in the sweepstake) Euro 2012 doesn’t promise to be the antidote for economic depression that they want it to be. The Greeks might have won in 2004 using a brand of defensive football that was so backwards the rest of Europe didn’t quite know how to play against it. Admittedly I thought at times they were fantastic in 2004 particularly against France at the quarter-final stage. Sadly though, the Greeks haven’t evolved their style of football since their unexpected triumph and have been left behind by tiki-taka and the like. I fully expect Greece to be the whipping boys of Group A but for my sake and that of the Greek people, I’ll be clinging to the cliché that anything can happen in football.

One to Watch

It’s between Necid and Russia’s Alan Dzagoev. Dzagoev promises to be the more explosive and with decent service he could make the difference in a group that is so focused on keeping a clean sheet. If he does that, CSKA Moscow can expect a stiff battle to hold onto his services.

Can Cristiano Ronaldo win his first major international tournament?

Group B

Netherlands

Denmark

Germany

Portugal

This is the definition of “Group of Death”. It’s a bit of a travesty that Group A is so weak and this group is terrifyingly good. To think that the competition is going to lose big name from Sneijder,  Eriksen, Ozil and Ronaldo after just three games is a sobering prospect. The Netherlands and Germany are my top two but it would be no surprise to see the other two sides pushing them all the way.

The Netherlands were very impressive at the 2010 World Cup… until they threw all their hard work away by auditioning for a kung-fu movie during the final. You look at their squad and see talent in every department. In goal they have an enviable choice between Maarten Stekelenburg, Tim Krul and Michel Vorm and while their defence is the weak link in the side there’s still the talent of Van der Wiel, Heitinga and Bouma. Where the Dutch really come alive is in the midfield with a ridiculously strong showing in the centre of the park; Van der Vaart, Sneijder, Robben, Van Bommel and de Jong are all present behind Robin Van Persie who has been in scintillating form this season. This could just be the Netherlands’ tournament.

Germany have been a bit off colour in their warm up matches, losing 5-3 to Switzerland before lumbering to a 2-0 win over Israel. That being said, Germany always have a knack of performing at major tournaments no matter what form they’ve been in previously. Like the Netherlands, they have a brilliant squad that is capable of beating anyone but their focus is likely to be on the forward threats. Mesut Ozil has proved himself to be one of the best playmakers in the world and he’ll play alongside Thomas Müller, Toni Kroos, Bastian Schweinsteiger, Lukas Podolski and the exceptional wonderkid Mario Götze. In addition to that fearsome group you can add Mario Gomez, Phillip Lahm and Manuel Neuer to create a well-rounded team. If Germany find their form early on then it’ll be difficult to stop them reaching the latter stages.

Portugal are perhaps the most likely to disrupt the Germany/Netherlands stronghold. Of course they’ll need to rely on Cristiano Ronaldo and his impressive record of 60 goals this season in all competitions for Real Madrid. Unfortunately for Portugal and Ronaldo, the squad looks likely to have to rely solely on him for success as per usual due to a lack of depth and key players suffering from a lack of form. Nani in particular is one who hasn’t performed this season and will be under intense pressure to compliment Ronaldo’s creativity. One saving grace for the Portuguese is the presence of Pepe who has been in good form all season and can organise the defence against the threats from Netherlands and Germany. In Ronaldo they have the best player in the tournament but he’ll need to be in his very best form in order for Portugal to trouble the knockout stages.

Lastly we have Denmark and they could be a bit of a dark horse. Christian Eriksen will be key to any success that Denmark is to have in Poland and Ukraine and Danish fans will be hoping that he puts in a performance that matches his potential. Denmark can also rely on Christian Poulsen and Thomas Kahlenberg in midfield while the talented Simon Kjaer can provide some solidarity at the back. Up front, Nicklas Bendtner will have to start finishing his chances if Denmark are going to get anywhere in this competition. Fortunately for the Danes, they play some nice football which should at least keep them in the hunt for victories.

One to Watch

Take your pick from Robben, Sneijder, Van Persie, Gomez, Müller, Götze and Ronaldo. It’s probably the latter who will stand out individually seeing as he is Portugal’s main force of attack in addition to being the best player in the tournament. I think he’ll relish the challenge of leading his team into battle against the likes of the Netherlands and Germany and will back himself to win having almost single handedly guided Real Madrid to La Liga success.

Xavi and Iniesta’s beautiful passing football will be integral to Spain’s success


Group C

Spain

Italy

Republic of Ireland

Croatia

Spain have the chance to win their second consecutive European Championship in addition to their 2010 World Cup success. If they do win this tournament then it is safe to say that this Spain squad can be regarded as one of the greatest to ever play on the international stage. However, their path to victory may not be as simple as it was in 2008 or in 2010. The squad is older now and they’re missing key players in David Villa and Carles Puyol; lets not forget that David Villa almost single-handedly took Spain to the World Cup final with his goalscoring ability and it will be up to misfiring striker Fernando Torres to step into the breach. That being said, the squad seems to blend together with ease. Both Real Madrid and Barcelona players embrace the tiki-taka style of play which leads to some scintillating stuff being produced. The midfield is the heartbeat of the Spanish side and during this tournament they can call upon: David Silva, Xabi Alonso, Cesc Fabregas, Xavi, Iniesta, Sergio Busquets and Jesus Navas. On paper they’re the best side here but a gruelling domestic season and complacency could scupper their chances, remember what happened to France after their back-to-back victories?

Italy are the other side fancied to progress from this group. Unlike Spain, they had a disastrous World Cup and will look to improve on that poor showing. Italy has a good squad to call upon with players such as Buffon, Pirlo, De Rossi and Chiellini all returning from an impressive domestic campaign. Much rests on the shoulders of that lovable rogue, Mario Balotelli, who will be tasked with combining his considerable talent with some aptitude. If he turns up with the right attitude then Italy could do well and he could be one of the stars of the tournament but if he lets the threat of racist abuse get to him (more on that later) Italy’s gameplan could become undone. There’s also been a lot of off-field dramas which could derail their bid for victory; recent earthquakes and the infamous match-fixing scandal have caused Italians to re-examine their relationship with the national game. Domenico Criscito is a notable absence from the final squad as he seeks to clear his name from the scandal. If they can work to triumph in the face of adversity then they could be quite a formidable side. Much will depend on their first two games against Spain and Croatia but I’ll stick my neck out and say they’ll make it through the group.

Croatia could pose a threat to Spain and Italy if they get their attack working nicely. Luka Modric has always been earmarked as one of the world’s top players but I never felt that he’s had the impact of others around him. He usually performs well for Croatia though so I can see him being the key player for Slaven Bilic’s side. His role will be to get the ball to Croatia’s potentially potent front-line which includes Everton’s Nikica Jelavic. If Croatia has a weakness then it is their weak defence which Spain will relish picking holes in. It’s an experienced back-line but will still fall apart against slick passing play. The rest of the side looks a match for Italy and that game on the 14th June could be crucial in this group.

The underdogs in this group are the Republic of Ireland. They will see this tournament as vindication for failing to make the last World Cup because of THAT handball but sadly they’ve been dealt a rough hand with this draw. They’ve found goals hard to come by and Robbie Keane is their biggest threat in front of goal. One factor that counts in their favour is the squad’s experience – players like Shay Given, Damien Duff, Robbie Keane, John O’Shea and Richard Dunne have all played on the biggest stages in football and will be undaunted by the prospect of these championships. I think the Republic of Ireland will enjoy the experience of competing in Poland and Ukraine but I don’t think we can hold our breath for an Irish presence in the knockout stages.

One to Watch

Balotelli could be the most explosive player in the group but I think one of the Spanish players will stand out. Torres has the chance to prove he’s still the player he once was and Xavi and Iniesta always catch the eye but I think that David Silva will be the star performer. He’s been in great form all season for Man City and will be a menace for the defence’s in this group.

Can Karim Benzema lead the French to glory?


Group D

Ukraine

England

France

Sweden

England fans, look away now. I think we’ll get mercilessly slaughtered at these Championships. People point to Euro 96 as being similar to this – low expectations, injuries to key players and an ‘atmosphere’ within the team – but Euro 96 was held on our home turf, not hundreds of miles away on the continent. To be fair we’ve been dealt a rough hand with this group. It was just about as bad as it could be. Our perennial group stage opponents Sweden will pose a challenge and France will obliterate us. The absence of Rooney is big but he wouldn’t be able to make up for the shortfall in talent that we have elsewhere. We might have beaten Norway and Belgium in our warm-up games but they didn’t have the quality to make it to this tournament and they outplayed us for large periods of the game. In Roy Hodgson we have a manager who is tactically astute and internationally experienced and he has done the right thing by bringing in youth to this tournament, giving them the chance to gain valuable experience ahead of the 2014 World Cup. I’m predicting a loss and two draws on the way to a disappointing exit in the group stages.

France on the other hand look sublime. Laurent Blanc has galvanised a side that has promised much in recent years but delivered little. The squad has excellent depth and combines promising youngsters with seasoned veterans. The French now appreciate possession and have invented a brand of football not too dissimilar to Spain’s but with a certain Gallic flair. They’re unbeaten in 18 matches and have recorded wins over Brazil and Germany in that time. Players such as Yann M’Vila, Blaise Matuidi and Marvin Martin will step up to the mark during this tournament and will provide the creativity that the French were so lacking at the last World Cup. Their weakness is in their attacking strength, having picked only two recognised strikers. It’s not a bad partnership – Olivier Giroud and Karim Benzema – who have spearheaded Montpelier and Real Madrid to domestic glory respectively but if one of them gets injured then it’s curtains for the French campaign. If they keep them fit and get them lots of service then France are destined to finish in the top four.

Sweden are a bit like a weed when it comes to international competitions – they’re always present but they just sort of sit there. Apart from the days of Brolin and Dahlin, the Swedes haven’t set the world alight but I fancy them to pounce on a weak English side and qualify for the latter stages. Sebastian Larsson and the always entertaining Zlatan Ibrahimovic will be vital for the Swedes with the latter being the main focus of attack. If Ibrahimovic forgets his scoring boots then the Swedes will be packing their bags. Another key player will be Martin Olsson who will be tasked with organising a pretty shaky defence. If they can keep firm at the back then that might just be enough to see them through the group.

Co-hosts Ukraine must be feeling the pressure. While Poland have a fighting chance of making it out of their group, the Zbirna need a minor miracle. Attention will turn to Andriy Shevchenko (now aged a sprightly 35), Andriy Voronin and Artem Milevskiy. Andriy Yarmolenko could also be a handy player but sadly I think they’ll come up short in a group that looks set to be dominated by the French. Hopefully the Ukrainian fans will realise just what a tall order it is to qualify from this group and won’t be too hard on the players when the inevitable happens.

One to Watch

Baring Danny Welbeck, Jordan Henderson or Oxlade-Chamberlain setting the world alight, I think we have to look at a Frenchman to be the star of Group D. Take your pick from staple players like Ribery, Lloris and Mexes or from the array of impressive youngsters such as Adil Ramil, Yann M’Vila and Marvin Martin. I think either Yohan Cabaye or Samir Nasri will impress the most. Both have been excellent for their sides in the Premier League and should make the step onto the international stage with ease.

UEFA will hope that images like these aren’t what the world takes away from Euro 2012

Sadly, as I mentioned earlier, external issues threaten to overshadow the prospect of a classic tournament. The most prevalent of these concerns is a far-right presence in Poland and Ukraine. A vast number of reports have provided evidence of planned abuse of black players and pro-Nazi chanting. Mario Balotelli has threatened retribution if he is racially abused and several black players’ relatives have decided against travelling. UEFA has tried to downplay the far-right activity but has ended up ‘doing a bit of a FIFA’ in PR terms. Michel Platini said that any player walking off the field of play due to racist abuse would be given a yellow card, completely contrasting the view of the majority of the developed Western world. When the inevitable racism occurs UEFA will have to walk a very delicate line with their response. In fact, it has emerged that black Dutch players were targeted in an open training session in Krakow with UEFA claiming that locals were just angry about the city not hosting a game at the Championships. That’s fine for now but what about when the racism occurs at a stadium that is hosting a game?

Another issue has been the boycott of UK ministers (and the proposed boycott of other EU ministers) of the Championships due to the alleged human rights abuse in Ukraine. Opposition leader Yulia Tymoschenko has been imprisoned for corruption but many believe that the current government took a dim view of her part in the Orange Revolution of 2004. She has since gone on hunger strike during her time in prison and the Ukrainian authorities have tried to brush the story under the carpet. If the EU ministers do boycott then it could be a major embarrassment for the organisers and sponsors.

Predictions

I truly believe that this tournament has the potential to be an absolute classic. You’ve got four or five teams of utmost quality – namely France, Spain, Germany and the Netherlands – who can all produce the highest standard of football on their day. Behind them there’s Italy, Portugal, Russia and England who will be hoping to defy the odds with a little bit of luck. It all makes for a fascinating prospect (aside from the external issues of course.)

Here’s my prediction for the top 4:

Winner: Germany

Runner-up: Spain

3rd Place: France

4th Place: Netherlands

Germany have the efficiency required to counter Spain’s possession football and I make them favourites for the tournament. They’re well-organised, talented, young and have a good amount of depth. France should look forward to a strong showing but they’ll come to regret not picking more than 2 strikers while I think the Netherlands will continue to underachieve at elite competition level.

16 teams will dream of lifting this in a few weeks time.

We’ll do another preview at the knockout stage but until then come on the Greeks!

Monaco Grand Prix Preview

Michael Schumacher can’t hide his delight at being the fastest man in qualifying despite lining up 6th due to a penalty.

Michael Schumacher rolled back the years in Monaco as he recorded the fastest time in Saturday’s qualifying session. Unfortunately for the seven time World Champion, he will only line up sixth on the grid after the five place penalty he received for his collision with Bruno Senna in Spain. Mark Webber was second fastest and will line up on pole for today’s race. Schumacher was delighted to have shown he’s still got the pace at a time when he was under pressure from Mercedes and will be quietly confident about his chances in today’s race.

Qualifying 1

Before qualifying began, Pastor Maldonado received a ten place grid penalty for clashing with Sergio Perez in FP3 in addition to a five place penalty for a gearbox change. For Perez, the drama did not stop there as he suffered a power steering failure in his first run in Q1 which sent him crashing into the Swimming Pool chicane and ending his session before it begun. As the session wore on, several big names had to change to the supersoft tyres in order to avoid elimination. Sebastian Vettel lay in 16th position before he was forced into using a set of the supersofts along with Kimi Raikkonen. Nico Hulkenberg set the fastest time of the session on the supersoft tyres while Heikki Kovalainen comfortably outqualified team-mate Vitaly Petrov. Sergio Perez will be left trying to make the best of a bad situation in today’s race.

Eliminated:

  • 18th Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) 1:16.538
  • 19th Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) 1:17.404
  • 20th Timo Glock (Marussia F1) 1:17.947
  • 21st Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) 1:18.096
  • 22nd Charles Pic (Marussia F1) 1:18.476
  • 23rd Narain Karthikeyan (HRT F1) 1:19.310
  • 24th Sergio Perez (Sauber F1) – No time, has a five place penalty for gearbox change

Qualifying 2

Jean-Eric Vergne got Q2 underway with a bang when he scraped the wall inside the tunnel, damaging his front wing and suspension and meaning that he would not take any further part in qualifying. He wasn’t the only one in trouble as Sebastian Vettel complained of a poorly handling car. Vettel was eventually able to claw his way into Q3 but at the expense of another set of tyres. Jenson Button and the Lotus’ were also in trouble but while Raikkonen and Grosjean improved, Button did not and was left down in 13th with di Resta, Senna and Kobayashi among the other drivers eliminated. Less than a second separated the top 16 drivers in Q2.

Eliminated:

  • 11th Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) 1:15.421
  • 12th Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) 1:15.508
  • 13th Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:15.536
  • 14th Bruno Senna (Williams F1) 1:15.709
  • 15th Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) 1:15.718
  • 16th Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:15.878
  • 17th Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) 1:16.885
Qualifying 3

After the end of the first runs in qualifying, Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg was on provisional pole ahead of Grosjean and Webber while the two Ferrari’s decided to only run once in Q3, at the end of the session. A flurry of lap times followed with Alonso going up to P5 before Webber overhauled Rosberg’s time. But few could have predicted what happened next as Schumacher went faster still to take P1 and despite his penalty he will be delighted with his performance. Vettel was the only driver not to take part in Q3 and will have a tough task to win from 10th. The race promises to be absolutley captivating.

Top 10:

  1. Michael Schumacher (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:14.301 – will start 6th after 5 place grid penalty
  2. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) 1:14.381
  3. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:14.448
  4. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) 1:14.583
  5. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) 1:14.639
  6. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:14.948
  7. Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) 1:15.049
  8. Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) 1:15.199
  9. Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) 1:15.245 – will start 23rd after 10 place grid penalty plus 5 place penalty for gearbox change
  10. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) – No time

Well, who would’ve thought Schumacher would’ve taken pole? Ironic given the fact he’s had 68 of them but he’s been under such pressure this week with Mercedes almost publicly declaring that they’d hire Paul di Resta if Schumacher didn’t raise his game. Raise his game he did and he must be feeling confident today and when he’s confident he usually pulls something special out the bag. Webber will be delighted to be starting on pole but Rosberg should pose a strong challenge to him. My prediction is thus:

  1. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas)
  2. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing)
  3. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1)

Enjoy the glitz and glamour (I hate how they’ve become what the Monaco Grand Prix is about rather than the racing) and I’ll see you on the other side!

Maldonado Defies the Odds to Win First Grand Prix

Pastor Maldonado cannot hide his joy at winning his first ever Grand Prix

Williams’ Pastor Maldonado converted pole position into a race win to record his first victory in the elite level of motorsport. Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso provided stiff competition for the majority of the race while Kimi Raikkonen scored another podium as he edges closer to a comeback win. A dramatic Spanish Grand Prix was capped with a fire in the Williams garage after the race which gutted a great deal of equipment and has left the team struggling to gather themselves at Monaco next weekend.

When the lights went out, Alonso delighted the home crowd by powering past Maldonado into turn one, in a repeat of his brilliant start 12 months ago. Behind him, Raikkonen gained a few places while Perez clashed with Grosjean, giving the Mexican a puncture while Mark Webber was left down the order after a bad getaway.

Perez pitted and switched to the hard compound tyres which would emerge as the faster tyre in the course of the race. Alonso and Maldonado led Raikkonen but the Ferrari driver couldn’t shake off the Venezuelan. Further back, Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa were making swift progress from their lowly grid positions with Hamilton running as high as fourth at one point. Lap 13 saw the first major talking point of the race as Michael Schumacher careered into the back of the Williams of Bruno Senna forcing both cars into retirement and earning Schumacher a 5 place grid penalty for Monaco.

Alonso was happier in a much-improved Ferrari but just couldn’t catch Maldonado.

McLaren’s pitstop woes continued as Hamilton’s first stop was marred by contact with a tyre as he exited his box. McLaren weren’t the only team with problems as Red Bull’s Mark Webber suffered from a loose nose which cost him several places. At the front, Alonso was still holding Maldonado at bay after the first round of stops but the Venezuelan looked to be the equal of Alonso. Maldonado had closed the gap down to 1.5 seconds by lap 21 and Williams brought him in to try and undercut the Spaniard. He set a blistering out lap and with Alonso held up in traffic was able to end up in the lead by lap 25.

Sebastian Vettel and Felipe Massa were handed drive-through penalties for ignoring yellow flags following the Schumacher/Senna accident which compromised their strategies. The Lotus drivers were back on the pace after switching to the hard tyres and it seemed as though Raikkonen might have had an outside chance of victory. Williams had a slight issue with a rear tyre during Maldonado’s final stop and Alonso was able to close the gap to three seconds. Raikkonen’s third stop saw him switch to a fresher set of tyres than Maldonado and Alonso and the Finn was closing in on them at a second a lap.

The tyre situation created a grandstand finish as Maldonado preserved his tyres and Alonso and Raikkonen went all out in the hope of overhauling him. Alonso closed onto the gearbox of Maldonado but couldn’t pass him and eventually had to concede defeat as his tyres hit the metaphorical performance ‘cliff’. Raikkonen was in hot pursuit but could only close to within three seconds as Maldonado opened the throttle and powered to his first career win and the first ever win for a Venezuelan in Formula 1 history.

An eventful weekend for the Williams team was capped in dramatic fashion with a fire in their garage. Investigations are still continuing as to the cause of the fire but it gutted a large section of the garage and a great deal of IT equipment and data. Fortunately the majority of personnel got to safety including Team Principal Sir Frank Williams and several of the other teams helped fight the fire. Sadly, at least nine mechanics were injured, one seriously and the Williams outfit face a battle to be ready in time for Monaco. One thing is certain, Williams will never forget this Grand Prix weekend.

The smoke from the fire covered the paddock and track

Provisional Classification:

  1. Pastor Maldonado (Williams F1) 1hr39:09.145
  2. Fernando Alonso (Scuderia Ferrari) + 3.195
  3. Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) + 3.884
  4. Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1) + 14.799
  5. Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber F1) + 1:04.641
  6. Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing) + 1:07.576
  7. Nico Rosberg (Mercedes AMG Petronas) 1:17.919
  8. Lewis Hamilton (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) + 1:18.140
  9. Jenson Button (Vodafone McLaren Mercedes) + 1:25.246
  10. Nico Hulkenberg (Sahara Force India) + 1 Lap
  11. Mark Webber (Red Bull Racing) + 1 Lap
  12. Jean-Eric Vergne (Scuderia Toro Rosso) + 1 Lap
  13. Daniel Ricciardo (Scuderia Toro Rosso) + 1 Lap
  14. Paul di Resta (Sahara Force India) + 1 Lap
  15. Felipe Massa (Scuderia Ferrari) + 1 Lap
  16. Heikki Kovalainen (Caterham F1) + 1 Lap
  17. Vitaly Petrov (Caterham F1) + 1 Lap
  18. Timo Glock (Marussia F1) + 2 Laps
  19. Pedro de la Rosa (HRT F1) + 3 Laps

Not Classified:

  • Sergio Perez, Transmission – Lap 37
  • Charles Pic, Driveshaft – Lap 35
  • Narain Karthikeyan, Loose Wheel – Lap 22
  • Bruno Senna, Collision – Lap 13
  • Michael Schumacher, Collision – Lap 13

Drivers’ Championship Standings:

  1. Sebastian Vettel – 61 Points
  2. Fernando Alonso – 61 Points
  3. Lewis Hamilton – 53 Points
  4. Kimi Raikkonen – 49 Points
  5. Mark Webber – 48 Points
  6. Jenson Button – 45 Points
  7. Nico Rosberg – 41 Points
  8. Romain Grosjean – 35 Points
  9. Pastor Maldonado – 29 Points
  10. Sergio Perez – 22 Points
  11. Kamui Kobayashi – 19 Points
  12. Paul di Resta – 15 Points
  13. Bruno Senna – 14 Points
  14. Jean-Eric Vergne – 4 Points
  15. Nico Hulkenberg – 3 Points
  16. Daniel Ricciardo – 2 Points
  17. Felipe Massa – 2 Points
  18. Michael Schumacher – 2 Points

Constructors’ Championship Standings:

  1. Red Bull Racing – 109 Points
  2. Vodafone McLaren Mercedes – 98 Points
  3. Lotus F1 – 84 Points
  4. Scuderia Ferrari – 63 Points
  5. Mercedes AMG Petronas – 43 Points
  6. Williams F1 – 43 Points
  7. Sauber F1 – 41 Points
  8. Sahara Force India – 18 Points
  9. Scuderia Toro Rosso – 6 Points

UEFA Champions League Final Preview

Tonight see’s the final of Europe’s premier football competition. Bayern Munich and Chelsea have seen off the likes of Barcelona and Real Madrid to make it this far and will now compete in front of a global audience of millions for the title of best team in Europe and for an estimated £48 million in prize money!

Chelsea

Can the Blues pull off another surprise tonight?

Few expected Chelsea to make it anywhere near this far after all they were 3-1 down on aggregate against Napoli in the first knockout round and had to face the might of Barcelona in the semis but they survived those tests and their reward is a chance to win their first Champions League and avenge the penalty defeat against Manchester United in 2008.

Their problem tonight will be coping against a potent Bayern attack without the likes of John Terry and Branislav Ivanovic who both miss out through suspension. They’re also missing Raul Meireles and Ramires who are two important creative forces in the middle of the park. As if that wasn’t bad enough, there are also major doubts over the fitness of David Luiz and Gary Cahill who would make up the centre-back partnership tonight. So Roberto di Matteo’s men are out of it before the game has even kicked off? Well, not exactly. They’ve been up against it pretty much all season and who would’ve bet on them reaching a Champions League final and winning the FA Cup? Tonight could see one final act of magic from the squad and they have the players and motivation to do it.

Firstly, Didier Drogba looks as potent as ever after inspiring Chelsea to FA Cup success. He relishes the big occasion and Bayern will find it difficult to control the big man. Torres has shown glimpses of a return to form by bagging a hat-trick against QPR and the winner against Barcelona before that although he will likely only feature as a substitute tonight. In addition to them, Chelsea can rely on Juan Mata who has been one of the signings of the season. He’ll be sure to supply some of the pace and creativity that the Blues are lacking in other areas of midfield tonight. Chelsea can certainly score tonight and if they score first then there’s no reason why they can’t employ the same tactics that they did against Barcelona and defend for 70-odd minutes.

Secondly a few of the players such as Drogba, Ashley Cole, Frank Lampard and Petr Cech know that tonight could be the last Champions League final that they play in. If that’s not motivation enough to go out and perform some heroics then I don’t know what is.

Bayern Munich

Bayern will be looking to win their fifth Champions League tonight.

On paper, this Bayern side has enough about them to beat Chelsea tonight but football matches aren’t played on paper. Ironically Bayern are playing tonight’s final at their home stadium – the Allianz Arena, and so will have a slight psychological advantage tonight. That being said, Bayern do have problems of their own. Like Chelsea they have players suspended in the shape of Holger Badstuber, Luiz Gustavo and David Alaba while Daniel Van Buyten will face a late fitness test. You’ve got to admire the strength of Bayern’s attack though. I said that Bayern were, in my view, the third best all-round team in Europe (behind Barcelona and Real Madrid) but I think they’re on a level footing with them when it comes to the midfield and frontline.

Can you imagine a better wing partnership than Franck Ribery and Arjen Robben? Then in front of them there’s Mario Gomez and that’s without even mentioning Schweinsteiger, Thomas Muller and Toni Kroos. In fact, I’d say that Bayern will be harder to shut out than Barcelona because they are not set in one way of playing football like Barca are. Bayern are brutally efficient and combine the best of the English game with the best of the German, Spanish and Italian games. Another key element in the team is Phillip Lahm who can provide an attacking impetus from the back – something that Chelsea will have to stop before it starts.

There are flaws in the Bayern team though and perhaps the most obvious is Manuel Neuer. He’s been inconsistent since joining from Schalke and has dropped a fair few clangers at important stages of the season. If the pressure gets to him tonight then I expect Chelsea to have a field day pelting shots at him. The centre-back area could be a bit makeshift too if Van Buyten doesn’t make the starting XI as his likely replacement would be Anatoly Tymoschuk – a natural defensive midfielder. He could be caught out of position and silly mistakes like that  simply can’t be allowed to happen in a Champions League final (remember last season’s final, United didn’t close down Messi and he made them pay.)

Prediction

I’m still leaning towards a Bayern victory but it won’t be as clear cut as most of the bookmakers think it will be. I fancy Gomez to score but don’t rule out Drogba at the other end. If Luiz and Cahill are on the same wavelength then they should be a stronger alternative to Tymoschuk and Contento. With both teams having suffered final heartache within the last five years, it promises to be a passionate affair. With an expectant German crowd watching Bayern will be under pressure to deliver and that could lead to an open game.

For that reason, I’m going for a 3-2 Bayern win. Ambitious I know but I’m feeling lucky.