2005/2006 F1 News and Testing.

Penske to return?

Roger Penske is considering returning to F1, should it become economically viable.

The news comes on the back of the FIA's planned regulations for 2008, which see Max Mosley persist with his dream of reducing costs, which will hopefully encourage new teams into the sport.

Talking to L'Equipe, the Englishman said: "If we manage to reduce the costs to 100-120 million dollars, for a reasonable budget, they will come.

Currently, there are large manufacturers, who already spend 300 - 400 million euros, and are prepared to spend even more in their pursuit of the World Championship.

Referring to the threat of a breakaway series, he warned the manufacturers: "If you want to continue to play with us, it is with our rules, because the Formula One World Championship is the one that is trusted.

If you want to remain, you are welcome. If not, you have the right to create your own series.

Penske, one of several potential entrants that Mosley has referred to in recent times, should the cost of competing in F1 fall, ran in F1 in the mid-70s, before returning to the US racing scene, where his team has enjoyed success in CART and then IRL.
 
I especially like how they are banning stuff after a year or so if it is good... :rolleyes:
I hate the way they are going, it's the wrong response to what we voted for in the FIA survey! Sure they are trying to achieve the same results but not in the right way!
 
di Montezemolo talks

Talking to a select group of journalists at an end-of-season dinner, Ferrari President, Luca di Montezemolo has spoken on a number of issues including the future of Michael Schumacher with the Maranello outfit, Kimi Raikkonen and Valentino Rossi.

Fernando Alonso's shock announcement that he is to move to McLaren in 2007, has once again prompted speculation over Michael Schumacher's future. 2005 was his fourteenth full season F1, and his tenth with Ferrari.

"It is the pilot that decides," says di Montezemolo. "However, I not only consider the driver for 2006 but for the future.

"I am convinced that Michael has another 2-3 seasons where he can perform at maximum level, therefore I hope he continues.

"However, any decision is up to him, and we will respect it when the time comes. At that time, and only at that time, we will consider other possibilities.

"We are watching a number of drivers," he admitted, "however, at this time we must concentrate on producing a competitive car.

"I repeat, it will be Michael who decides his future, and for as long as his F1 career continues, it will be with Ferrari."

The Italian played down the loss of Vodafone to McLaren: "We could not assure Vodafone the sort of (sponsorship) prominence that it wanted, because we are continuing with Marlboro. We have a long list of potential sponsors, there is an abundance of choice."

One driver who has been linked with Ferrari for some time, even more so since the Alonso announcement, is Kimi Raikkonen. However, there are fears, mainly within the Italian media, that the Finn's off-track lifestyle could prove detrimental.

"I have heard this," says di Montezemolo. "Journalists have asked whether Ferrari would accept a driver, admittedly a very fast one, who enjoys the 'highlife'.

"The truth is, the Finn is the man of the future. Even here, in Maranello, there are nightclubs, but Todt would control it. There would be no problems.

"That said, to announce today who will drive for us in 2007 would be against our nature."

"Looking back on 2005, he said: "In any sport you cannot always continue winning. This year's champions deserve their titles fair and square.

"In 2005 we carried out endless test in order to develop the tyres, but we didn't work sufficiently on the car," he admitted. "Whatever others may say, 2005 was not simply about tyres.

"However, Ferrari is about concentration and determination, we will be competitive again, and will win again."

Finally, another subject of (almost) constant speculation is Valentino Rossi, who is scheduled to test for the team (again) next year.

"If he wants to carry out further tests, we will be happy to provide the car," says the Italian. "However, is not part of our budget, for Valentino to test simply when he wishes.

The situation is open," he adds, there is no timetable. If he decides to switch to F1 it will be because he feels confident of winning.
 
Q&A with Max Mosley

In an exclusive interview with L'Equipe, Max Mosley, the president of the FIA, speaks of the future of F1 as he is preparing it.

For the first time in twenty-five years, the FIA is free to define the future framework of Formula One, for 2008, on the expiry of the Concorde agreement. In the interests of ensuring the continuity of the discipline, Max Mosley has made it a priority to impose cost-saving measures, whether that pleases certain major manufacturers or not.

Evidently, the direction you have defined for the future of F1 has been clear and constant for some years, but the road to achieving your goal appears frightfully tortuous. How did such complexity in the management of Formula One come about?


Max Mosley: I agree: in theory, one should be able to take decisions in one week. F1, in fact, consists of very few people, it's not like a great national democracy, and there should be greater flexibility. It's only a few people, but even so it's many more than when we defined the Concorde agreement twenty-five years ago. At the time, the discipline was limited to a small group of people who had much less money, and far fewer lawyers, than nowadays. When I began in 1970 (with March), we had a hundred times less money: our budget amounted to £113,000 including the drivers' pay, which must correspond today, taking inflation into account, to £1,500,000. We finished third in the World Championship, and even won a race. In 2005, a decent budget is £150,000,000. I know teams who spend far more and who have finished this year in worse than third place…

Of course, but the complexity of the system isn't just down to money…
MM: I was getting there. The other difficulty is the Concorde agreement, which imposes several levels of discussion and decision. It was simple when there were only a few of us; it has now become extremely complex. For example, a change to the technical regulations requires the agreement of eight teams out of ten, via their technical managers. Then it needs the agreement of the Formula One Commission, i.e. at least 18 votes out of 26, and again after that the agreement of the FIA World Council. That involves interminable discussions, and as many inevitable compromises. I understand that the public ends up confused, and it's very regrettable for F1. I will admit that the meetings with the team bosses are far less efficient than those that Charlie Whiting (FIA technical delegate) may have with the technical managers! When we have to discuss the sporting regulations with the bosses, it's a little surreal sometimes… Because they now have teams of 800, or even 1000 people, to manage, many problems everywhere, and no time to go into the details of a set of sporting regulations. Therefore, they often suggest an idea without having analysed all the consequences in depth!

And that's how we end up with the aberration of the qualifying system for 2006…
MM: For example! (Smiles) In my opinion, it is absolutely vital that we don't change that sort of thing all the time. Or else we do change it, but we first ask the experts to examine all the consequences of the envisaged change.

The 2006 qualifying system is going to be complicated…
MM: Very complicated. But the times will be displayed and the people will at least know who is the fastest driver. Also, there will probably be a pit stop with a tyre change, and the spectators love that. But I sincerely believe that the public will be like me faced with an American football game: I can watch, it's a show, but I have no idea what's going on!

Isn't it tiresome, all the same?
MM: It's very worrying. Single-lap qualifying, it's true, was not exciting for the fans in the grandstands, and the organisers lost sales… But on television (enthusiastically), it was really good! You knew exactly what was happening, even with the worst TV director in the world!

How, as president of the FIA and a racing man, can you not impose, amongst other things, a qualifying method which seems to you to be better than another?
MM: All that is really a problem for me. The ideal system would be for the Federation to consult everyone and then take a decision, for which it would be entirely responsible. Unfortunately, that is not the system that we have now, and in my opinion that harms F1. The truth is that we are paralysed by the kind of decision making we have in F1.

In that case, why are you talking of extending the Concorde agreement beyond 2007, with five teams having already signed up (Ferrari, Williams, Red Bull, Toro Rosso and Midland)?
MM: There is a will to reform, I am sure of it. At the moment, we are having discussions with the teams, in particular on how to simplify the decision-making process in the future. They recommend a majority of 70%. As for me, I would be in favour of a simple majority: 51% is enough! In fact, what these five teams have signed is an agreement in principle, an undertaking to take part in our World Championship in 2008. But all of them agree that at a certain point it will be necessary to define a new Concorde agreement. And it is for that that I want us to change all these procedures that have become too burdensome. Simply put, we first had to stabilise the 2008 Championship.

What guarantees does this agreement in principle give to the signatory teams?
MM: The teams who have given their agreement to race in 2008 are assured of having the same rights as today until 2012.

What rights are those?
MM: The right to take part in making decisions, for example.

And when you want to simplify the new Concorde agreement, will you have to have everybody's approval?
MM: Yes, but I think that at certain moments, the stars are in our favour. We have with us Ferrari, Williams, Midland and the two Red Bull teams. And there is a common will to solve the problems. The young team manager at Red Bull (Christian Horner) is very good. Jean Todt is completely rational: among the bosses, he is the only one to accept reforms in the interest of F1, even when they are not necessarily in the interest of his team. And then we have Frank Williams: since he no longer has to answer to "uncle" BMW, we can once again discuss things in a very rational manner with him. So we have those people, plus three or four whom we know very well and who are interested in F1. We are therefore in a position to say to the others (meaning the five constructors in the GPMA: Mercedes, BMW, Renault, Honda and Toyota – see related article): "Look, this is how our championship is run; if you want to be part of it, you are welcome. If not, you have the right to create your own series." No problem. For us, it is an opportunity. For the first time since 1980, we have total freedom, along with the teams who are with us of course, to define the regulations that we want.

When you say "three or four who are interested in F1", do you mean people who would be prepared to enter a team in the Grands Prix?
MM: Absolutely. There are three, perhaps even four people who are very well known – I'll leave it to you to guess their names (the names David Richards or Roger Penske, in particular, are heard regularly), who want to join F1, but who are currently unable to because of the costs involved. And if we manage to reduce the costs, to 100 to 120 million dollars (100 million euros), for a reasonable budget, they will come. They are independent teams, who therefore have to earn their living from sponsorship. They do not want to lose money in F1.

Are these racing people, or outside investors?
MM: They are racing people. They are from the milieu; they have money or access to money. If I count them all, in fact, there are at least six who have this project in mind, including three, as I see it, or even four, who are serious. They have two years ahead of them in which to prepare. But they must make a decision at the beginning of 2006 if they want to compete in 2008.

Your main criticism of the major constructors is the escalation of costs…
MM: Yes, I am very sorry to keep going on about this, but it is the basic point. There are major constructors who are already spending 300 to 400 million euros and who are prepared to spend still more in order to win the World Championship, because it's very, very important for their image. I want to say to them: "If you want to carry on playing with us, you'll have to play by our rules, because the World Championship belongs to the FIA." History has shown that constructors come and go as they wish. They have a perfect right to do so, but our task is to see to it that the Championship goes on, with or without them.

Can Mr Mateschitz, the owner of the Red Bull trademark and of two teams (Red Bull and Toro Rosso), also leave when he wants, the day when, for marketing reasons, F1 is no longer of interest to him?
MM: Absolutely. But that does not pose a problem. We don't need a Mr Mateschitz with enormous sums of money, as on a "normal" market, with all the major worldwide companies, we shall always find someone to replace him… provided that the costs are not prohibitive. At the moment, F1 is too expensive. A big private team, very well known in America, recently told Bernie (Ecclestone): "We want to join F1, but only if we can do it with a budget of 80 million dollars." Because that is the level at which that team can make a profit. Frank (Williams) is now thinking along the same lines, Ferrari too…

But Ferrari are one of those teams that are reputed to spend the most money…
MM: In my opinion, that has changed fundamentally since Jean Todt has been running the whole of the Ferrari company, and not just the Scuderia. He is now responsible for the finances of the entire make, and he knows that he cannot count on much support from Fiat. He simply did the maths: 100 million euros, that's 25,000 euros on each road Ferrari sold. It is in the company's interest that its Formula One team works on the same basis as the independent teams, i.e. on the basis of profit… or at least of not making a loss. The interests of Jean Todt and Frank Williams are now the same. As for Red Bull, I have talked with Mr Mateschitz, and I told him: "I am well aware that you can spend as much money as you want." He replied: "Yes, but even so I want to keep it reasonable." Mr Mateschitz is in the position of a normal sponsor, and he wants his money's worth. For him, a reasonable budget is around 100 to 120 million.

With five teams on your side, plus three or four serious candidates for F1, you are in a position of strength vis-à-vis the constructors' GPMA…
MM: The constructors are always talking about Bernie's money. they want a better distribution of the F1 earnings. I can understand that it is annoying for them to see Bernie as a multi-billionaire, but after all wasn't he the one who built all that, and didn't they come into it fully aware of the system? But in fact, this story of getting a fairer share is a false problem. Imagine that in the end, each of the constructors manages to get 5 million dollars more from Bernie; that's already a great deal, but it is nothing compared with what they spend in F1 and what I call wasted money. Because those who now spend 300 to 400 million dollars or maybe more, if they were to accept the conditions that we propose, namely reducing the budgets to 100 million, they would be saving 200 to 300 million! I can tell you of one constructor, naming no names, who distributes around 400 million euros in dividends to his shareholders… and who spends far more than 200 million euros in F1. And the 200 million is just for the engine!

But how can you prevent a constructor from spending money on technological research?
MM: It's difficult. The only way is to reduce the ratio between improved performance and financial investment beyond a certain level. To reduce the costs of an engine, the aerodynamics, the tyres, etc. via the technical and sporting regulations. If a constructor's wind tunnel is running 24 hours a day, it is necessary for another competitor, with a wind tunnel that is used at 70% but with a better driver, to be able to win despite that. At a certain moment, the constructors will thus admit that money spent that way is wasted.

Not all of them are so extravagant?
MM: Among the five that have entered so far, two are prepared to spend anything to win the World Championship. There are two others whose bosses say: "If it's reasonable from a financial point of view, we do it; if not, we stop." The big boss of one of those two even told me: "If it's really profitable, why not have two teams, running under two different makes?" And then the fifth one is hesitating between enormous spending and the path of reason.

You don't want F1 to become a pleasure reserved exclusively for the drivers and engineers?
MM: At the moment, it's an engineers' game. Inside certain gearboxes you have technologies that are absolutely fascinating – when you know about them. Only about a dozen people are interested in them, and not the millions of people who follow F1. However, directly or indirectly, it is the public that pays for F1. Another little example of waste, from something that I have been able to observe in England: for the aerospace industry, which also supplies parts to the teams, Formula One represents a tiny little percentage of their turnover, but a very major share of their profits – because numerous teams pay without question, as long as the quality is there. Similarly, I learned that in 2003 a major constructor changed engine blocks three times in the course of the season! In these conditions, you have to understand that, for 2006, we have restricted the engineers' field of investigation… Honda and BMW were not happy. They wanted more freedom. But more freedom is above all the freedom to spend a lot of money…

F1 must nevertheless remain a shop window for very high technology…
MM: It will, but we want to orient the technology in a useful direction. Today, you know, F1 fans tell us: "Personally, what I like about this sport is the technology." Let's not forget that in Formula One, 99% of the technology is unknown to the public."
 
BMW Recruiting Hard for F1 Team

New owner BMW is working hard to make Sauber a big grand prix team.

Motor sport director, and likely 2006 team principal, Mario Theissen, reports that six months after the purchase from Peter Sauber, fifty new employees are soon to start work at 'BMW Sauber'.

The ultimate target is for the recruitment of 50 more.

''On January third we will see as many as 20 people turning up for their first day's work,'' the German said.

The Munich based carmaker is also about to lodge a planning application for an addition to the main building at Hinwil (Switzerland), with construction scheduled to start in June next year.

In addition, BMW Sauber has now sold most of the sponsorship space on the 2006 car, which will be rolled out at Valencia (Spain) on 17 January.

But Theissen warned: ''We don't harbour any illusions. There's a long road ahead and we will negotiate it with perseverance and circumspection.''
 
ON-LINE MEMORIAL FOR DUCKWORTH

A website has been set-up to commemorate the life of Cosworth co-founder Keith Duckworth, who died last weekend.

Duckworth, along with Mike Costin, created a company that changed the face of motorsport engineering around the world and still has a massive impact on the sport today.

Keith's son Roger has set-up the site, www.keithduckworth.co.uk, so that friends, fans and acquaintances can leave their messages and memories of one of Formula 1's greatest engineers.

www.keithduckworth.co.uk
for those who didn't spot it
 
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Tribute to a Fallen Ferrari Hero

Today, former Ferrari F1 driver Michele Alboreto, of Italy, should have marked his forty ninth birthday.

The veteran of 194 grands prix, winner of five, died whilst testing a Le Mans sportscar in April 2001.

Alboreto also drove for teams including Tyrrell, Arrows, and Minardi in a F1 career from 1981 to 1994. Intriguingly, he started racing in 1976, in the Italian 'Formula Monza' category -- with a car he designed himself.

In a Tyrrell, he gave the famous 'DFV' its last of 155 grand prix wins.

Alboreto also won the 1997 Le Mans endurance race, but died at the wheel of an Audi R8, after a tyre failure in Germany.

"His death hit me very hard," said Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo. "Michele was still competing, moved by a great passion."

Quadruple champion Alain Prost added: "I knew maybe three, maybe four true gentlemen in my career.

"Michele was one of them."

Also celebrating a birthday on 23 December is Bertrand Gachot, 43, the former Belgian grand prix driver who raced 47 times in F1 and won Le Mans in 1991.
 
F1 powered by Cows?
F1 fuel must contain nearly 6 per cent 'biological' material, according to a rule hidden away in the new 2008 technical regulations.

So-called 'biofuel' is made up of things like agricultural waste, fish and plant oils, alcohol -- even cow manure.

In the '08 regulations, the Max Mosley-led governing body explained that the rule would make the sport 'keep ahead of developments in fuel for road cars.'

"I think it's long overdue," said former German formula one driver Hans-Joachim Stuck in the 'Bild' 'paper.

The regulation should be ratified by the FIA's 'world motor sport council' on March 22.

So...

Permission to make the "F1 has always been powered by bull****" joke! :D
 
Villeneuve not the 'favoured' driver

On the eve of Christmas, BMW Sauber has given Jacques Villeneuve a dubious vote of confidence by revealing that he is not the team's 'favoured driver' for 2006.

After looking in to scrapping the French Canadian's 2006 contract, and negotiating with potential replacements including Alex Wurz and Heikki Kovalainen, team boss Mario Theissen has said that Villeneuve's teammate Nick Heidfeld 'was our favoured driver.'

"When it came to Jacques," the German BMW motor sport director explained, "we took our time in making a careful assessment of his performance."

34-year-old JV, despite being a former world champion, endured a trying full-time return to F1 with Sauber in 2005.

Theissen insisted: "The start of this year was difficult for him for a number of reasons, but then as the year went on he made significant progress.

"We believe he's going to improve further."
 
F1 2006 Silly Season to be Extremely Silly

The debate about Fernando Alonso's bombshell switch from Renault to McLaren goes on.

High profile paddock players have been divided over the wisdom, and even the morality, of the Spaniard's surprise split from a title winning team to Ron Dennis' arguably quicker camp.

Red Bull principal Christian Horner thinks the move has set in motion a 'fascinating' silly season next season.

He told England's The Guardian newspaper: "I think the driver market in 12 months' time will be more fluid than at any time over recent years."

One guy not blown off his chair by the McLaren press release, however, was Dennis' 1996-2004 driver, F1 veteran David Coulthard.

"This business is all about long-term planning and investment well down the line," said the Scot. "So, no, I'm not surprised."

Dennis' long time ally Sir Frank Williams, however, was just as surprised as the rest of the racing world. But the man who signed 20-year-old Nico Rosberg for 2006 did not seem disappointed that the new world champion is off the market.

Frank said: "Surprise won the day but there are plenty of new young drivers on the horizon."

:D

toosilly.jpg


[MontyPython]

Stop it! It's all got terribly silly!

[/MontyPython]
 
^ Wrong Chapman Flibster!

Anyhoo, back to reality, or at least as close to it as F1 gets...

Red Bull: We can beat Ferrari in 2006
Red Bull Racing have set their sights on beating in 2006 their engine providers, former World Champions Ferrari.

On the back of an encouraging first season under Red Bull's management, along with improvement to the team's technical staff, sporting director Christian Horner and technical director Mark Smith are both upbeat about their chances for 2006.

"Ferrari have to be our benchmark next year," Horner told this week's Autosport magazine. "If they are better than us then we are not doing a good enough job or Bridgestone are doing a better job than Michelin."

Smith, who was chief designer at Renault until the end of 2004, said: "We can beat Ferrari. The strength of the engineering group that we have at Red Bull is very high. It's the strongest group I've ever worked in."

Red Bull Racing finished in seventh place on the 2005 Constructors' Championship standings, with 34 points. Ferrari, on the other hand, finished third with 100 points.

However, Red Bull Racing believe their chances of beating Ferrari next season will be boosted by the arrival of former McLaren technical director Adrian Newey in February.

Although he will not be able to have much input into the RBR2 prior to the start of the season, it is hoped that he will play a major role in helping the outfit move towards the front of the grid over the course of the year.

Smith explained: "There will be very little that he can do in terms of the first race, but in terms of how we develop the car, he can have a considerable amount of input.

"He's aware of how we work. I really believe he will bring us things that we will benefit from and likewise I think he will be quite pleasantly surprised by the strength of our engineering group.

"In the first month or two we will find our feet, but I can only see positives from his arrival."
 
Now this one is a little scary, I knew the French took the tobacco ban seriously but when it interferes with the correct reporting of news you have to worry.

French newspapers fined under tobacco ban

Three French newspapers have been fined for publishing photographs of Formula One drivers whose overalls featured tobacco logos.

The newspapers - Le Point, Le Monde and Les Echos - were sued by the Rights of Non-Smokers action group, who were unhappy about the publications printing the logos of cigarette companies.

Tobacco advertising is illegal in France and a court of minor offences in Paris fined the papers between 800 and 1,000 EUR each for printing the pictures. The newpapers were also ordered to pay 2,750 EUR in damages to the Rights of Non-smokers.

The strictness of tobacco advertising legislation in France has resulted in many publications needing to ensure that all their coverage of F1 features only non-branded cars and driver photos.
 
Two tracks to share the German GP?

Germany's formula one race could alternate between financially-embattled Hockenheim and the Nurburgring, currently the scene of the European grand prix.
The idea is the brainchild of Nurburgring boss Dr. Walter Kafitz, whose own annual F1 event in Germany is also enduring a spectator lull.
The 'SID' agency reports that F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone has been receptive to the idea of limiting Germany's race count from two to one per year. As well as save money for the beleaguered German venues, it would free-up space on the crowded calendar for new destinations like Russia and Mexico.
''Ecclestone knows about it,'' Kafitz confirmed.
He added that many traditional F1 venues no longer make a lot of money from hosting a race.
Kafitz explained: ''In 2002 we had 350,000 people at the Nurburgring on the grand prix weekend. Those days are long gone.''
 
Max Mosley's father voted 'Worst Briton'

FIA president Max Mosley's notorious father has been named the worst British person of the 20th century.

Academics and historians put together a list of the 'worst of the worst' villains and evil-doers for the BBC History Magazine, according to the British 'Guardian' newspaper.

Sir Oswald Mosley, who died in 1980, founded the 'British Union of Fascists'. Mosley's movement was linked with several violent conflicts, often directed at Jewish groups in London. In 1936 he was married -- in Nazi chief Joseph Goebbels' house, with Adolf Hitler as a guest.

During World War II, he was imprisoned.

Oswald Mosley's dubious honour on the list put him alongside Jack the Ripper, the worst figure of the 19th century.

Think they got the wrong Mosley....
 
Puma to sponsor a Red Bull?

According to a whisper on the formula one grapevine, energy drink Red Bull is on the verge of signing up a sponsor.

Although whether 'Puma' is bound for the senior team or Scuderia Toro Rosso is unknown, speculation indicates that the deal will include on-car branding, rather than the clothing agreements with many existing teams.

German-based Puma's logo features a leaping cat, similar to the Jaguar insignia that featured on the green cars between 2000 and 2004.
 
Alonso move annoys Ferrari

Luca di Montezemolo has added his criticism to Fernando Alonso's recently announced switch for 2007 to McLaren.
Like F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone, the Italian president of Ferrari does not agree with the tactic of announcing a deal to change teams more than a year before he'll even try the new cockpit.
Montezemolo might also be annoyed that the Alonso deal seems to indicate that Kimi Raikkonen is indeed bound for the red squad.
''It doesn't please me at all,'' Luca replied to a question about the move.
Perhaps referring specifically to Renault, he added: ''It can only harm the motivation and the work of the entire team. I think it is not morally right.
''Ferrari would never behave like that.''
 
Toyota wow Raikkonen with a $120 million offer.

According to media reports, Toyota is attempting to wow Kimi Raikkonen with an impressive (US)$24 million offer, to switch from McLaren in 2007.

The speculated five-year proposal - worth a total of $120m - is despite rumours that Kimi, the 26-year-old Finn, is definitely bound for Ferrari and may already have signed a preliminary agreement.

However, apparent offers from BMW and Renault are also on the sought after iceman's table.

The Toyota link was reported in Germany's Bild am Sonntag newspaper.
 
Kimi signs agreement with Ferrari?

While Kimi Raikkonen might have the offers of McLaren, Renault, BMW and now Toyota on his table, the signs are still pointing to a done Ferrari deal for 2007.

Significantly, the Maranello team's president did not deny that an agreement with the Finnish driver had been struck, when asked how Raikkonen's renowned off-track lifestyle would fit in Italy.

''There are no night clubs here in Maranello,'' Luca di Montezemolo said at the team Christmas Party, ''and (Jean) Todt would keep him in check about the drinking.
''There wouldn't be a problem.''

So why, if the Kimi-Ferrari deal is struck, hasn't the team - in Alonso-McLaren style - already let the world know?

Montezemolo insisted: ''Everything should come at the right time. To announce today he will race for us in 2007 would go against nature.''
 
Germany and Italy to lose a race each?

According to reports this week, F1 supremo Bernie Ecclestone keenly supports a novel idea to cut one of the two grands prix in Germany out of the calendar.

Nurburgring boss Dr. Walter Kafitz has floated the concept of annually switching between his track and financially embattled Hockenheim.
He told the German 'SID' sports news agency that the idea 'was welcomed' by the 75-year-old grand prix chief.
"It is well known that Bernie wants to organise new races in as many countries as possible," Kafitz explained.
Ecclestone, meanwhile, has told the 'Autocourse Annual' that he would indeed like to scrap a race in Germany and Italy -- both the scene of two grands prix every season.

"We ought to lose one Italian and one German," the Briton said, "but realistically that would be difficult at the moment and I don't have the balls to put any more (races) in there until that happens."

Bernie argues that despite Italy and Germany being two big markets for the sport, no-one really benefits from their double F1-dose.
He explained: "If I say to the teams, 'Would you get another sponsor because we have two races in Italy and Germany?', the answer is probably 'No, one's enough."
 
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