2006 Spanish Grand Prix - Race 6/18

rpstewart said:
Flibster, do you have a bio for Mark Preston?

Reason I ask is I went to uni with a guy by the name of Mark Preston, real smart cookie type and the only photo I've ever seen of the Super Aguri Mark Preston is similar to the point that I can't say for sure or not if they're the same guy....

It's been bugging me for a few weeks now and I can't come up with anything on the guy's background.

http://www.presspley.com/personnel/markpreston.htm

http://my.soflow.com/Mark-Preston

Thats about all I can find...
 
GPMA issues statement

In the wake of this morning's news from Barcelona, the Grand Prix Manufacturers Association has issued the following statement:

"Following a meeting in Barcelona between representatives from the Grand Prix Manufacturers Association (GPMA), a Memorandum of Understanding on the commercial structure of Formula One, as developed between CVC, FOA and the GPMA, was unanimously agreed and signed by representatives from the five GPMA teams BMW Sauber, Honda GP, McLaren Mercedes, Renault F1 and Toyota Racing.

The GPMA teams are committed to Formula One until 2012, and look forward to the commercial rights holder accepting the terms agreed today.

The Memorandum of Understanding provides the basis for a new Concorde Agreement between FOA, the FIA and the teams, and should help progress the sporting, technical and governance discussions with the FIA.

Prof. Burkhard Göschel, Chairman of the Grand Prix Manufacturers Association, said: "Today's MoU constitutes a comprehensive solution for the future of the sport. We can build on this result and look forward to jointly grow Formula One and make it an even bigger sporting spectacle than ever before."

Wonder if this is also related to all the 2008 regs getting thrown out as well. ;)
 
Renault commit to F1 until 2012

Renault has become the first member of the Grand Prix Manufacturers' Association to commit itself to Formula One beyond 2008.

Following McLaren's Ron Dennis revelation this morning that the GPMA members have agreed to sign a new commercial agreement, Renault issued an announcement saying the team will now stay in Formula One until at least 2012.

They join Ferrari, Red Bull, Williams, Midland, Super Aguri and Scuderia Toro Rosso, who have all committed already to extending their commercial agreement with the sport.

Renault F1 president Alain Dassas said in a statement: "The agreement the team have reached today with Formula One Administration expresses our commitment to Formula One.

"Having entered the 2008 championship last month, this is the next logical step to guarantee the commercial stability and competitiveness of our team.

"We have worked hard jointly with our fellow manufacturers in the GPMA to reach an agreement that satisfies our desire to see a balanced distribution of the income generated by our sport.

"We will now pursue our constructive dialogue with the FIA and the other teams to achieve our shared objectives of an improved sporting show and reduced costs.

"These factors will form the basis for Renault's long-term investment in Formula One."

The announcement quells persistent speculations that Renault could withdraw from the sport as early as next year.

Furthermore, with McLaren-Mercedes, BMW, Honda and Toyota also expected to sign on a memorandum of understanding for a new commercial agreement later today, it appears the Spanish Grand Prix will mark the end of a multi-year battle between the manufacturers and the sport's organisers.
 
Q & A with Ron Dennis on the new deal

McLaren chief Ron Dennis provides insight into the new deal agreed between the Grand Prix Manufacturers' Association and Formula One's commercial rights holder - what it all means and how it came about.

Ron Dennis: "The five members of the GPMA now have a complete agreement. Throughout the last 48 hours, the lawyers representing the GPMA and FOA have been continuously meeting, and from the GPMA's point of view, we are now at the point where we are prepared to sign the document.

"We are just awaiting the final confirmation from Donald McKenzie of CVC - he is either on his way here, or if he is not, then we will be speaking to him in the next hour.

"What is very pleasing is that the GPMA have stayed together and acted in unity on a difficult and challenging Memorandum of Understanding. It is quite a complex document, and obviously once you start to focus on the small print, it becomes quite a laborious process.

"It was quite a productive two days, and hopefully it will be executed today and some press announcement will follow. All the GPMA members are now prepared to sign.

"This will constitute now the biggest single commercial resolution and will allow us to move forward and focus on the future of F1.

"It is a document everyone is happy with. Inevitably, in the final throes of the negotiation there have been compromises reached, and I think everybody, especially in the last two years, entered this period with a strong desire to get resolution."

Q: Is the deal a five-year deal or a 10-year deal?

Dennis: "It is inappropriate for me to pre-empt any of the content of the press release. I feel comfortable with what I said to you, but most of the other questions that you will want answered will probably be contained in the press release, if it is finally executed and if the release is issued.

"The important thing is that the five GPMA members have completely agreed, the document has now been executed, with our colleagues at CVC left to put their own signature to the paper."

Q: How did the deal get done over a Grand Prix weekend, when you are under so much pressure to deliver, rather than on a Wednesday in London?

Dennis: "This is a process that has been running for years, it has been running a long, long time. This meeting was preceded by myself and Professor [Burkhard] Goeschel (BMW executive board member) and CVC Representatives.

"We met in Jersey earlier this week, and at that meeting we were addressing 15 points that were outstanding on the MOU. We found resolution on most of them, and the document was going backwards and forwards for detailed drafting.

"Ultimately, because there are teams who desperately want stability in order to plan, there was a heightened desire to arrive at a point where we could all simultaneously sign a document in order to show to each other that we were together and focused.

"This document is only the first step to a [new] Concorde Agreement and Sporting and Technical Regulations, and there is a long, long way to go.

"It is important to remember that primarily, this is a document about 2008, it is the absolute cornerstone of the future Concorde Agreement, and therefore an extremely detailed document - but a long way from the extensive document that will be the Concorde Agreement.

"It just so happens that every time we meet away from the circuit, everyone has to travel significant distances to arrive at one point, and we are all spread around Europe, so at a Grand Prix we are all here, and at the stage we got here, we were not that far away.

"So it is easy to sign a document simultaneously, because we are all here. The core objective was a unified agreement with simultaneously signing.

"It has not been signed by CVC yet, but their lawyers have been basically interfacing with our lawyers, so the document has been agreed. There is one small commercial point that we will need Donald to resolve as and when he arrives, but nothing of real significance."

Q: Is the commercial deal done?

Dennis: "This is a document that embraces the principles that relate to all issues, so it is an MOU that embraces the whole of the situation. But of course the FIA is extremely important into the formation of the Technical and Sporting Regulations, and at the end it is the starting point.

"Now, I would assume - and it is my assumption - that there will be parallel processes that will ultimately lead to a consolidated Concorde Agreement that will have as an integral part the Sporting and Commercial agreement. This is an open issue. They may stand separate, but they may be part of a unified document."

Q: Is this the deal you were always hoping for?

Dennis: "In anything there is always give-and-take, and you always look back on something and say, well... The process of not moving forward was starting to hurt our entire business.

"Sponsors want to feel confident, we need to develop F1, we need to stabilise a whole range of issues that have moved out of the spotlight and moved out from under the microscope. We have been focusing on the bigger picture issues and now we have got to start and go back and systematically address all the issues that need to be address for 2008.

"From a timing perspective it is 2008, a lot of the decisions that need to be taken sooner than that, but there is no decision that needs to be taken before February next year. Even if you had to make new engines - I am not suggesting for one minute we do - you could still accommodate it.

"In order to get to where we want to get to, now is the time the detailed work starts and hopefully everyone will realise it is a spirit of compromise and more importantly an environment where the democratic process is important. That is what we need.

"Once you have got the rigid framework that the Concorde Agreement can give you, which means stability, then I think everybody starts to spend a lot of money focusing on that stable situation, and that is when change really starts to cost money.

"So my own opinion is that we should be democratic to the point of stability, and then locked down where individual teams cannot be penalised for innovation and things like that. There is a lot of water to go under the bridge before we get to that point."

Q: Is this different to the the Williams deal (of agreeing to extend the Concorde Agreement)?

Dennis: "Honestly, inevitably all the teams are taken into consideration. There is no question, and it is great for them, that the situation we have arrived at is executed by CVC and is significantly different and more clearly defined in the breadth of the document, and what it addresses is far more broader than any of the existing documents. That is no more than anyone wanted.

"Clarity gives you the fundamental tools to move forward. Ambiguity is difficult to reflect in clear documents, there is a degree you can go from half a dozen heads and have a simple heads of agreement but it doesn't allow you to flesh out and guide and govern this complex sport."

Q: Were Renault urging you to move on?

Dennis: "Not really. Everyone has different agendas, and they clearly needed and wanted to understand the stability of F1, and that was taken into consideration. But we are all on parallel paths with a common desire to achieve a common objective, and that is what we did."
 
Type_R said:
Very nice pics Joe T :)

Don't worry about bandwidth here - 20mbit downstream at home - got to love ADSL 2+ ;)

It's good - but VDSL is better - also a hell of a lot rarer

Still awaiting for the line to be repaired though. :( Had to go down to 8mb.. :eek:

Simon/~Flibster
 
Zip said:
Whats VDSL? :confused:

54mb download
27mb upload

It's on the quick side...will also be very expensive when officially available.

Stormrider said:
I'm guessing its what you get if you live next to, or in the exchange? :)

Had an official measurement done when they were installing it - cable length is a whopping 62 meters. :D
 
Dennis: McLaren driver decision in "weeks"

Speaking to reporters ahead of the Spanish Grand Prix, McLaren boss Ron Dennis said that he expected his team to make a decision on its 2007 driver line-up in the next few weeks.

"We have a very firm plan now, we know exactly what we are doing as a team, said the Englishman. "We will start to implement the plan, which provides for all contingencies.

"We think now we are in a phase as a team that we are going to start to take decisions and they will unfold over the next two to three weeks," he added.

Following the shock announcement in December 2005 that Fernando Alonso was to join the Woking outfit in 2007, there has been constant speculation as to who will partner the Spaniard.

Most F1 insiders feel that Kimi Raikkonen will remain with the team, though others claim that the Spaniard's imminent arrival, not to mention the way the deal was done, has put the Finn's nose out of joint. consequently, Raikkonen has been linked with both Ferrari and, more recently, Renault.

It is unlikely that Dennis will want to keep Juan Pablo Montoya, the Colombian having enjoyed a 'hit and miss' career with the Woking outfit.

To add to the speculation, Dennis launched into a typical bout of 'Ronspeak': "We are a Grand Prix team," he said. "Norbert and I are people who have to make recommendations to the people who support the programme.

"Sometimes you are following the necessity to be courteous to sponsors. However, there are other shareholders or board members and all of these have to be supportive of your intentions or plans and we've made a firm plan on how we will move forward."
 
//Mike said:
Afternoon everyone! Unfortunately I was unable to watch last weekends race as I had other commitments, however from the sounds of things I didn't miss much!!

Looks like it's shaping up to be another Alonso vs. Michael battle, perhaps we will see some proper on-track racing between these two this time around?


Someone has their priorities wrong... ;)

F1 first - everything else second...

Simon/~Flibster
 
//Mike said:
I was doing a sponsored walk with all the other members of my Sixth Form - not that I enjoyed it one bit...

There were many photos taken of me periodically checking my phone - F1 updates of course :D.

Get a running machine - stand it in front of your tv....sorted. :D

Or - one of those battery powered portable TV :D

Simon/~Flibster
 
6-12 helmets a season?

Went through 15 in 7 months myself...Although that was due to accidents. Oops...

Still got 5 in storage ready for the end of this year. ;)

Simon/~Flibster
 
Some Murray classics

"So Bernie [Ecclestone], in the seventeen years since you bought McLaren, which of your many achievements do you think was the most memorable ?"
Ecclestone responded "Well I don't remember buying McLaren."
Murray turns to the camera "I've done it again!"

"Do my eyes deceive me, or is Senna's Lotus sounding rough ?"

"He's obviously gone in for a wheel change. I say obviously because I can't see it"

"And the first five places are filled by five different cars."

"...and Blundell is doing very well in sixth position...in fact he's lapping 2.5 seconds faster than Blundell who is in fifth position"

Murray: "And there are flames coming from the back of Prost's car as he enters the swimming pool."
James: "Well, that should put them out then."

"The atmosphere is so tense you could cut it with a cricket stump"

"I don't make mistakes. I make prophecies which immediately turn out to be wrong"

"Mansell is slowing it down, taking it easy. Oh no he isn't! It's a lap record."

"Jean Alesi is 4th and 5th"

"I should imagine that the conditions in the cockpit are unimaginable!"

"Unless I'm very much mistaken... and YES I AM very much mistaken!"
 
fuz said:
Hope it's a good 'un

...And I wish James Hunt were still with us in the commentary box


Along with the classic...

"James has jast popped out to take a look at the other side of the circuit."

AKA - James has just popped out to smoke a joint...
 
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