* Second consecutive podium for Infiniti Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo
* Ricciardo finishes third, under half a second from
second-placed Lewis Hamilton – the
closest finish so far this year * Romain
Grosjean claims eighth for Lotus F1 Team after a hard-fought race from 19th
on first lap * Caterham F1 Team
scores best result of season so far, with Marcus Ericsson 11th * Race of
attrition round the Principality, with one third of the 22 cars retiring with
mechanical problems or accident damage. Multiple safety cars deployed as a
result
Team-by-team
Infiniti Red Bull
Racing
Daniel Ricciardo
scored his second consecutive podium with third position in today’s Monaco GP.
The Australian dropped two places at the start to his team-mate and Ferrari’s
Kimi Raikkonen, but regained the positions when Vettel retired on lap 5 and
Raikkonen made a second stop under the second safety car. The gap to Hamilton
in front stabilized but over the final ten laps a big push from Ricciardo
closed the gap to under a second. At the chequered flag Ricciardo was just a
car length away from Hamilton in the closest finish so far this season.
Sebastian Vettel retired when power unit related problems caused a lack of
power.
Scuderia Toro Rosso
A very tough day in the office for the Italian team with
both cars retiring with exhaust failure. Daniil Kvyat retired on lap 10, while
Jean-Eric Vergne pulled into the pits on lap 50. Vergne had been running in the
top ten until serving a drivethrough penalty for an unsafe release on lap 34
dropped him out of the top ten.
Lotus F1 Team
Romain Grosjean had a fantastic Monaco Grand Prix. The
Frenchman started 14th but pitted on the first lap after picking up a puncture.
The unscheduled stop dropped him to 19th overall but he kept his focus in the
mêlée of accidents and safety cars, forcing a way past the Caterhams and Marussias
and ultimately taking advantage of the chaos in front. He moved into the top
ten after Raikkonen and Magnussen hit the barriers at the Hairpin just laps
from the end and claimed eighth at the flag fall, his second points-scoring
finish of the season. Pastor Maldonado did not start the race after a fuel
system-related issue caused him to stall on the grid. On further investigation
the team discovered a problem with the fuel pump that will be studied and
solved for the coming races.
Caterham F1 Team
The Anglo-Malaysian team had its most competitive outing of
the year so far. Starting from the rear of the field, Marcus Ericsson and Kamui
Kobayashi kept clear of the accidents ahead and fought for track position with
Kimi Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean, who had both dropped down the order due to
unscheduled pit stops. Both Caterham drivers kept focused and passed the flag
in 11th and 13th, the best finish of the season.
Rémi Taffin, Head of
Track Operations:
Today is pretty bittersweet. Ricciardo’s pace was very quick
and he managed his tyres well through the race. It was our most competitive
race of the year so far. In the end, unfortunately we could not pass Hamilton
due to the nature of the track. Finishing third is a good achievement but we
should not make this as standard: we have to try harder and succeed. Likewise,
Romain’s eighth position and Caterham finishing within touching distance of the
points represents a strong end to the Grand Prix.
However we’ve not been without problems. Vettel had a Power
Unit problem from the start and lost power, ultimately forcing a retirement. We
believe the issue is related to the turbo and MGU-H but will make full
investigations when we return the engine to base for a full diagnosis. We also
had issues with Maldonado’s car at the start. This initially looks to be a fuel
pump failure that caused a loss of fuel pressure.
This weekend we’ve made progress in some areas but we’ve
seen some reliability problems come back so it will be a long week at Viry –
but one we will use productively to come back stronger in Canada where we have
further upgrades scheduled.
Nessun commento:
Posta un commento