jueves, diciembre 20, 2007

Con la décima estrella de Nacional, Óscar Héctor Quintabani llegó a su tercer título como técnico

Diciembre 20 de 2007

Con la décima estrella de Nacional, Óscar Héctor Quintabani llegó a su tercer título como técnico

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Foto: Fernando Ariza / EL TIEMPO
Quintabani celebró junto a su familia un nuevo éxito en el fútbol colombiano.

Los números avalan exitosa la campaña de Nacional durante 2007, pero el equipo se enfrentó a algunos problemas en lo futbolístico y con el tema arbitral. Sobre esto habló el técnico campeón.

Óscar Héctor Quintabani tiene este diciembre una sonrisa diferente. Sin duda este ha sido su año más exitoso en el tema profesional, se consagró como bicampeón con Atlético Nacional e inscribió su nombre entre los técnicos más gloriosos de la rica y amplia historia del equipo antioqueño.

El miércoles, ante La Equidad, los verdes llegaron a su décimo título en el fútbol colombiano; en los dos últimos, Apertura y Finalización 2007, tuvieron al colombo-argentino Quintabani como técnico, el mismo que en el Apertura 2006 se había proclamado campeón con el Deportivo Pasto.

Después de celebrar en la noche de miércoles y madrugada de jueves, sin la euforia de la victoria reciente y próximo a reunirse con el Comité Técnico de Atlético Nacional, todo con el fin de analizar la exitosa campaña, calificar jugador por jugador y planear la campaña de 2008, el estratega respondió unos interrogantes de EL TIEMPO.

Profesor Quintabani, sumó tres títulos en menos de dos años, ¿se había imaginado unos momentos de tanta gloria deportiva?

Uno siempre sueña con esto, se proyecta positivamente en el tiempo para cumplir con lo que uno quiere, con los deseos propios. Siempre trato de tener equipos con metas y por ello, y gracias claro está a la labor de jugadores y directivos, conseguimos un año magnífico.

En el caso específico de Nacional, usted siempre ha alabado la labor de sus jugadores, ¿pero cuál fue la clave para los resultados obtenidos?

Empezamos por poder escoger las personas que necesitábamos y tener la idea clara de lo que se quería. Para uno como cabeza de grupo es muy importante y muy gratificante cuando los resultados se dan. Hay que saber escoger los jugadores, primero personas y después futbolistas, además hay que tener prudencia y capacidad, es ahí donde aflora la idea de no tener límites. Entre todos montamos un compromiso para no desfallecer nunca, para competir internamente. Todas esas son las posibilidades que engrandecen el grupo, que enseñan a resolver los momentos difíciles y saber enfrentar los nuevos objetivos.

'Un año magnífico'

Para este ex arquero del fútbol argentino y colombiano, que se radicó en Colombia y tiene ya varios descendientes nacidos en estas tierras, en el año entrante no pueden cambiar sus metas.

"Este fue un año magnífico, fuimos primeros en los torneos Mustang I y Mustang II, disputamos la Copa Sudamericana, hicimos 104 puntos en el año y alcanzamos una nueva consagración. Entre 18 equipos que se preparan para quedar campeones nosotros lo fuimos dos veces. Tuvimos la mejor defensa (42 goles en contra), la mejor delantera (86), los mejores números fueron nuestros, les cogimos más de 30 puntos a los otros equipos (24 a Cúcuta y 36 a Boyacá Chicó). Se igualó una marca en la que yo también estuve presente: la de 104 puntos del Deportivo Cali en 2002. Estoy muy contento por todo esto y se lo agradezco mucho a Dios", dijo Quintabani visiblemente satisfecho.

¿Cuál fue el momento más difícil en 2007 para el equipo?, ¿acaso la eliminación de la Copa Sudamericana?

Hubo momentos críticos, difíciles, pero lo más importante es tener siempre la objetividad para salir adelante. Hubo momentos críticos como la eliminación de la Copa Sudamericana pero el más difícil lo vivimos en el torneo Mustang I, cuando perdimos con Quindío, luego empatamos con el Pasto en Medellín y los resultados no se nos daban, la competencia nos apretaba pero el equipo resurgió ante Millonarios en Bogotá; Millonarios pasaba por un buen momento, le ganamos y a partir de ahí el equipo creció.

Y en el tema de los favores arbitrales, usted manifestó que 'nadie nos regaló nada', ¿cómo vivieron ese momento?, ¿afectó mucho al equipo?

Nos afectó pero no en el rendimiento sino en que nos sentimos ofendidos. Algunos salieron a ofender a una institución, a un cuerpo directivo, a los jugadores y al cuerpo técnico, a los que dirigimos. Algún o algunos idiotas útiles salieron a desestabilizar el grupo, no se midieron las consecuencias y querían con eso manchar el trabajo y lo que hace el equipo. Por suerte casi el ciento por ciento de los partidos de Nacional fueron televisados y la gente tiene la información para no creer en este tipo de comentarios de idiotas útiles que lo único que hicieron fue molestar.

Y ya pasado esto, lo bueno y lo malo, ¿qué planea para 2008?

Ya llegamos a un punto importante, hay que mirar qué sigue, otros objetivos, la Copa Libertadores y el torneo Mustang I. El equipo viene madurando y cuando uno es competitivo tiene que tener fe, confianza en el equipo y paciencia. Así los logros van a seguir llegando.

Felipe Sosa Vargas
Para EL TIEMPO
deportes@eltiempo.com.co



El mejor Nacional que yo vi (opinión)

El mejor Nacional que yo vi (opinión)

Gabriel Briceño

Fue el que ganó el torneo colombiano de 1991, cuando Hernán Darío 'Bolillo' Gómez se 'destetó' como técnico y tenía un ataque comandado por la mejor versión de Faustino Asprilla y Víctor Aristizábal.

Ese Nacional jamás se borrará de mi memoria. ¡Era una máquina! Y de ñapa, daba un gran espectáculo. Recordémoslo: Ómar Franco era el arquero: Luis Fernando 'Chonto' Herrera, Andrés Escobar, Giovannis Cassiani y Gildardo Gómez conformaban la defensa; Gabriel Jaime 'Barrabás' Gómez, Herman 'Carepa' Gaviria (q.e.p.d.), Mauricio Serna y Alexis García poblaban el medio campo; Faustino Asprilla y Víctor Aristizábal eran los delanteros INAMOVIBLES en la titular.

Eso sí, había grandes ausentes. René Higuita, el arquero símbolo de esa época, jugaba en el Real Valladolid de España con Carlos el 'Pibe' Valderrama y era dirigido por Francisco Maturana; León Villa había perdido el puesto con Gildardo Gómez; Leonel Álvarez había partido del Derby County inglés al Valladolid; John JairoTréllez estaba en el fútbol suizo (Zurich); y Albeiro el 'Palomo' Usuriaga había vuelto al América de Cali.

'Bolillo' tomó lo que quedó y armó un equipazo. Franco cumplió en reemplazo de Higuita, sin ser ni la mitad de lo espectacular de René. 'Chonto' y Gómez eran proyección, marca y espectáculo por las bandas; 'Carepa' y 'Barrabás' se hacían sentir en la mitad, quitaban balones como nadie y de ñapa metían goles de media distancia; 'Chicho' y Alexis eran fantasía, equilibrio, imaginación y también tenían gol. El 'Tino' y 'Aristi'... ¡genios! Entre los dos destruyeron todas las defensas rivales y marcaron los tantos decisivos para el título de ese año, el quinto de los verdolagas.

'Bolillo' era técnico 'en propiedad' por primera vez, después de haber estado a la sombra de Maturana desde 1987. Y 'la rompió'. En ese año demostró su viveza, rapidez para hacer los cambios, facilidad para 'leer' los partidos y manejo de grupo. Ahí demostró que tenía la capacidad para convertirse en uno de los mejores y más exitosos entrenadores colombianos de la historia.

Tuvo la ventaja de recibir un trabajo que venía desde 1987 y que en las divisiones menores era manejado con el mismo estilo por Juan José Peláez. Por eso fue una máquina que ganaba con suficiencia en Cali, Bogotá, Barranquilla y donde pudiera.

Lo más agradable era ver a ese Nacional que tocaba la pelota con 'caché', desde 'Chonto' en la defensa, con la elegancia de Andrés en la zaga, el pincel de Alexis en la mitad, la inteligencia de 'Chicho' para marcar y entregar la pelota. Una cosa seria era ver la sociedad 'Tino'-'Aristi': gol, toque, gambeta, velocidad y 'diabluras'.

Esa pareja histórica, la más mentada de Nacional en todos los tiempos, forjó ese año su destino: Asprilla, el colombiano más exitoso en el fútbol internacional y Aristizábal, el mayor goleador colombiano de la historia. ¡Inolvidable!

GABRIEL BRICEÑO FERNÁNDEZ
Subeditor de Deportes
gabbri@eltiempo.com.co

Gabriel Briceño



jueves, octubre 25, 2007

Raikkonen: "A birthday present from heaven"

24/10/2007

Kimi Raikkonen landed at Zurich airport on Tuesday afternoon. These are his first words as world champion back in Europe: "I am so happy it almost hurts!" he admitted. "This is like a dream come true. This is something I wanted to reach since I've been a child. I was seven years old when I first saw a race-track: it was an old, small kart circuit called Bembole; just five kilometres from where I lived. It was like a second home for me. Now, 22 years later, I have many favourite race tracks, but the most important one is Interlagos, more than 5,000 kilometres away from home!

"I've always said that the aim of my career is to become World Champion. I came very close a couple of times and in the end everything turned out fine. We have always given our best to try to win. Doing that in sport you have to always push to the max until the end. You never know what may happen in a race; you only have to look at the last three races and you know what I'm talking about. Fuji was really terrible for us: we were at the back of the pack and our race was over almost immediately.

"We left Japan and were 17 points behind, without the possibility to fight back. I think I can say that not more than ten people outside of the team would have bet on us. But we didn't give up. In a certain sense we believe in miracles. China was our joker: we won and the driver on the top of the standings didn't make any points. That gave us some hope, but there weren't many chances for us left. The last race was really emotional. The first four drivers in the field didn't retire, but there was a tough fight for positions between us and our competitors. Maybe I had the best start of the season and maybe I could have passed Felipe at the first corner, but I had a plan and it didn't involve a fight with my teammate. I could see in my mirrors that Hamilton was next to Alonso in turn 3 and that he had a problem. I realized that we had the chance we had hoped for: this first lap seemed to be decisive for the whole championship."

"It was a great race and I think that I've never experienced such emotions in the cockpit. Everything worked perfectly fine. It was like a birthday present from heaven! We could have had more pace and I want to thank Felipe again for his support: he did what he could do, just like a perfect teammate. As a team we couldn't do more than a double-win, but when I had crossed the line the most important thing to know was what Hamilton had done. I asked for information over the radio but there was just silence for a couple of seconds: finally Chris told me that he came in seventh and my heart nearly went into flames due to happiness! This is it: now we're world champions!"

"I want to thank all those who have been close to me over all these years, all my fans. Thanks to the team: it is fantastic being a part of the greatest team of all times. This year I really enjoyed Formula One more than ever before. I dreamt about winning the title with Ferrari and I bet that this is every driver's dream. This team never stops: they work at the max and never give up. We had some difficult moments, but we always managed to come back. And this shows the quality of the people working there. Thanks again! But I also want to thank the sponsors and partners: together with them we really have the package of a world champion!"

"Now I go to the Finali Mondiali at Mugello, to celebrate with all of Ferrari: it's my first time there and it's the perfect moment to get there. And then it's time for a holiday, the first as world champion."



martes, octubre 23, 2007

Alonso a 'class act' says Montezemolo

Hamilton's achievements are 'extraordinary'
23/10/07 12:08



Photo F1-Live.com

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"I very much appreciate his sportsmanship"
In the days after the 2007 championship climax, Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo has reserved some high praise for Fernando Alonso.

Kimi Raikkonen stole the crown from McLaren's championship leader Lewis Hamilton and reigning title winner Alonso in Brazil on Sunday.

And while Montezemolo had little admiration for Alonso's McLaren stable-mates, he heralded the 26-year-old as an "extraordinary driver."

"Alonso is a class act in every respect. I very much appreciate his sportsmanship," Montezemolo is quoted by the news agency EFE as saying on Tuesday.

He added: "Despite losing the title by a single point and perhaps only due to the mismanagement of his team, he arrived at the press conference and immediately congratulated Raikkonen. He showed that is he also a champion off the track," Montezemolo said.

Alonso has been speculatively linked with a switch from McLaren, where he is openly uncomfortable, to other teams including Ferrari.

By contrast, Montezemolo characterised Hamilton's driving errors at Interlagos as borne out of "youth and nerves."

"Had he stayed behind the Spanish driver, he was champion," the Ferrari president said, referring to Hamilton's slide off the road whilst attacking Alonso on the first lap.

"It was recklessness, perhaps because of nerves.In any case his achievements must be recognised as extraordinary, because of his youth and his inexperience. So he deserves respect and congratulations. But it is true that he has not yet faced any setbacks."

Montezemolo also said he was not overly anxious about McLaren's 'cool fuel' protest, which could potentially see the title handed back to Hamilton.

"In Formula One, anything can happen, but as we have seen in the past in these circumstances, you remove the points of the team, not the drivers," the Italian remarked.

It must be noted however that if the FIA's Court of Appeal decides to expel the BMW Sauber and Williams cars from the Brazilian GP race results, no points would be allocated to either the team nor the drivers.

Lewis Hamilton would therefore move from seventh to fourth position in the final standings and gain enough points to clinch the Championship.

D.B. © CAPSIS International
Source GMM

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Alonso slams McLaren title appeal


McLaren driver makes clear his view on an appeal
22/10/07 15:46



Photo F1-Live.com

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Any appeal makes no difference to Alonso's
championship position
Fernando Alonso on Monday refused to back his team's decision to appeal the outcome of the Brazilian Grand Prix.

McLaren wants the Court of Appeal to find three rival cars guilty of using illegally cold fuel at Interlagos; a decision that would hand the drivers' championship from Kimi Raikkonen to Lewis Hamilton.

But Spaniard Alonso, demonstrating the depth of his rift with McLaren chiefs, said he would be 'embarrassed' if Ferrari's Raikkonen is stripped of the title.

"It wouldn't be fair," he told Spanish radio Cadena SER. "I will hide my head in shame, it would be a lack of respect.

"It would sink the sport if they won the title this way."


Alonso says McLaren lost the drivers' title not because of rivals' illegal fuel, but because of their own errors and bad management.

"They made a sequence of mistaken decisions in the second part of the season," he charged.

"It is difficult to hide that they haven't helped me much. It wasn't a very well organised season from the point of view of the management.

"There was no sensation of being a team and the result speaks for itself. If we had taken a different approach we would have obtained different results.

"In the last few races my hands and feet were tied. I had no power to make decisions. I had to race as they told me,"
Alonso added.

Source GMM
© CAPSIS International

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Hamilton admits human error cost him title

''My finger slipped on the steering wheel''
22/10/07 22:04



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One touch of a button and all went downhill for Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton has admitted that his bid for this year's Formula One Championship seemingly came to an end during the last race of the season following a moment of human error.

"My finger slipped on the steering wheel and I accidentally pressed the button used for the starting sequence," Hamilton confided several hours after the event, according to Montreal's French-language daily newspaper La Presse.

That error cut power to his McLaren for an interminable minute, dropping him down to 18th place as the Brazilian Grand Prix entered its eighth lap on the Interlagos circuit.

"The car went into neutral and I had to reinitialize the system, that is, reload the gearbox management program," he explained. The onboard camera recorded images of Hamilton pressing several buttons on his steering wheel while other drivers sped by.

Once his McLaren car was back up to speed, Hamilton would afterwards work his way back up to seventh place, two positions away from the necessary number of points that would have allowed him to be the first rookie World Champion.

However, his title chances might not yet be over: the McLaren team has announced it will appeal the stewards' decision not to sanction the BMW Sauber and Williams teams for possibly using 'cool fuel' during the Brazilian GP, claiming that precise information was not available.

If the FIA's Court of Appeal were to overturn the decision and sanction both teams with exclusion, that would remove drivers Nico Rosberg, Robert Kubica and Nick Heidfeld from the rankings and allow Lewis Hamilton to jump from seventh to fourth position in the race's final standings - thereby giving him enough points to become the 2007 World Champion.

While McLaren have declared their motive is to support their drivers' best interests, Hamilton himself does not at all feel comfortable with the procedure.

"Being promoted after some people have been thrown out is not the way I want to do it," he told Reuters.

His thoughts also went to Ferrari driver and provisional title holder Kimi Raikkonen: "To have it taken away is a bit cruel and probably not good for the sport."

Daniel BASTIEN
© CAPSIS International

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Against all odds King Kimi!




21/10/2007

OK, we'll leave the World Championship title battle aside for the time being and look at what else is at stake today.

Fist off, several drivers, most notably Ralf Schumacher and Giancarlo Fisichella have yet to find berths for 2008, while a number of other drivers' futures are 'on hold' as we await news of Fernando Alonso's plans.

Although BMW has secured runner-up spot in the Constructors' Championship, ahead of Renault, Williams only enjoys a four point lead over Red Bull, which has scored eight points in the last three races, as opposed to the Grove outfit's one. Another strong result from Toro Rosso could see the Italian team leapfrog Toyota, while Super Aguri will be keen to move back ahead of 'sister outfit' Honda. So today's race could see some significant changes to the Constructors' Championship, where points make prizes.

In the Drivers' Championship - no not the title battle - Heikki Kovalainen is five points behind Robert Kubica, while Scottish veteran David Coulthard is just one point behind Nico Rosberg.

A good finish could see Mark Webber move ahead of Alex Wurz, while Jenson Button will be hoping to fend off Vettel, Schumacher, Sato and Liuzzi, and thereby avoid repeating his worst championship finish ever (seventeenth in 2001).

Naturally, Felipe Massa will want to win his home race, his second successive victory here, however, greater forces are at work, for there is the little matter of that title fight.

We all know the permutations, and are therefore well aware that the man who has the most work to do today is Kimi Raikkonen, while Lewis Hamilton, in many respects, can only lose the title.

The sky is blue with barely a cloud so it is highly unlikely that the weather is going to play a part in the championship outcome. Instead, it will be down to strategy, courage, common sense, determination and maybe a little bit of luck.

After a season dominated by events off track, we are all hoping that the championship fight will end on a high today, with no silliness, by which we mean we hope that nobody will attempt to win the fight by resorting to 'dodgem car' tactics. That said, the first corner here at Interlagos is notorious, and it is usually the drivers in the midfield that cause the problems. Therefore, all eyes will be on the pack as it races away from the grid, for the title could be decided before the field reaches Curva do Sol. It's not what we want but these things happen.

Overtaking is possible here, and the fact that Felipe Massa is on pole may help Raikkonen, for a good start would allow the Brazilian to control the race. However, alongside the 2006 race winner is Hamilton, who is aware of every possible permutation.

In a season in which Ferrari has clearly missed Ross Brawn - if not Michael Schumacher - tyre strategy has sometimes paid off, and this is one race where it could be an advantage. Seemingly, the supersofts are degrading far earlier than expected, a situation brought about by the intense heat and the new tarmac surface. That said, all drivers face the same problem, it will come down to how they deal with it.

The eyes of the world are on Interlagos today, where Lewis Hamilton could make history not only by becoming the first rookie to win the title but also by becoming the youngest driver to win the title. Then there is the obvious fact that Hamilton would also be the first black driver to win the title. So not a lot of pressure on the Stevenage Rocket then.

It promises to be an entertaining, hopefully thrilling, afternoon. Let us hope that we have a fair fight and that the best man wins - whoever he might be, for each has thrilled us in his own way this season.

Let's also hope that the championship is decided once and for all today, and that we don't face months of legal challenges and WMSC appeals. Let us further hope that in 2008 we can put such nonsense behind us.

As the field prepares to head off on the warm up lap, the air temperature is 36 degrees C, while the track temperature is 63 degrees. As we aid earlier, the sky is blue with barely a cloud in the sky. However, that track temperature is sure to cause problems with the supersoft (soft) tyres.

Adrian Sutil, who suffered a fuel pressure in qualifying, is starting from the pitlane.

Most drivers appear to be starting on the harder compound as the grid takes shape.

They're away, Massa holds Hamilton but Raikkonen is unable to take advantage. However, the Englishman has other problems for Alonso is al over him. They appear to touch very lightly at Turn 4 and Hamilton goes wide losing a number of places.

However, on lap 2 there is an incident elsewhere, with Fisichella being hit from behind by Yamamoto. While Kovalainen goes off following a nudge from Schumacher. All three head for the pits, as does Liuzzi.

No safety car, merely waved yellow flags. Massa heads Raikkonen, as Hamilton is chasing sixth placed Heidfeld.

As Hamilton pursues Heidfeld, Raikkonen is just 1.1s behind his Ferrari teammate. In his eagerness to get by, the Englishman goes wide once again. However, at the start of lap seven in the Curva do sol Lewis makes his move and the German is unable to hold him.

As Raikkonen closes to 0.6s of Massa, with Alonso a further 4.2s behind, Hamilton is chasing Kubica, who is involved in his own battle with Webber. At the start of lap 8, the Pole passes the Australian but all eyes are on Hamilton who slows to a crawl. It sounds like an engine problem, and though he gets up to speed again he has dropped to eighteenth.

The English rookie doesn't pit, instead he stays out, at this point it clearly isn't a terminal problem.

After 9 laps, Massa leads Raikkonen, Alonso, Kubica, Webber, Heidfeld, Trulli, Rosberg, Coulthard and Vettel. However, Hamilton sets his own personal best lap as he pursues Barrichello, who has just served a drive-through for a jump start.

The stewards announce that Fisichella and Yamamoto are under investigation even though both drivers are out of the race.

After 12 laps, with a 7.7s comfort zone over Alonso, Raikkonen trails race leader Massa by 1.6s. Hamilton is up to sixteenth, 3.9s behind Schumacher. However, there is a whole gaggle of cars ahead of the German, which Hamilton will have to deal with.

As Hamilton makes short work of Schumacher and then Davidson, Webber is out, further reliability misery for the Australian.

The Ferraris are in a class of their own, Massa now 11.5s clear of Alonso, who is in turn 4.5s ahead of Kubica. Elsewhere, Hamilton passes Nakajima at the end of the pit straight to take eleventh. The McLaren driver's next target is Button, Britain's former 'golden boy'.

The Ferraris drivers are the first to dip into the 1:12s, almost 0.6s a lap quicker than Alonso.

At the end of lap 19, Kubica is the first driver to make a regular stop. A lap later it is Massa who pits, thereby handing the lead, and possibly the World Championship to Raikkonen, who responds with a new fastest lap (12.665).

Next time around it is Raikkonen who pits, rejoining in third behind his teammate. Alonso leads.

At the end of lap 21 Alonso pits, as Button retires, thereby leaving Hamilton to chase Vettel, who promptly pits. Next time around Hamilton pits, and surprisingly has the softs fitted.

Rosberg and Coulthard pit at the end of lap 23, which leaves Heidfeld as the last of the front-runners who has yet to stop.

After 24 laps, it's Mass, Raikkonen, Heidfeld, Alonso, Kubica, Rosberg, Coulthard, Nakajima and Sato. Hamilton is down in fourteenth following his pit stop. Elsewhere Sutil and Davidson collide, however the Englishman looks able to continue as he heads back to the pits with a damaged tyre.

At the end of lap 25, Heidfeld finally pits.

Raikkonen appears to be losing ground to Massa, a heavy fuel load, or some sort of problem? Elsewhere, Davidson has made it back to the pits, as has Sutil, though both are now under investigation.

As Hamilton, clearly struggling on the supersofts, moves up to thirteenth, courtesy of Sato's pit stop, Raikkonen is back on the pace, though he is now 3.7s down on Massa.

At the start of lap 30 Hamilton makes a brave move on Barrichello coming from (seemingly) miles back to take the Brazilian at the first corner.

Alonso is under serious pressure from Kubica, the Spaniard not really appearing to be on his best form today. Elsewhere, Barrichello pits, as does Sutil (again).

Hamilton is now on the tail of Vettel, who is all over Schumacher. The Toro Rosso driver will not be as easy as Barrichello. Meanwhile, makes a balls up of his first ever F1 pit stop, knocking over a couple of his mechanics like skittles.

As Hamilton lines up Vettel, the TV director cuts to Kubica who passes Alonso with apparent ease on the pit straight.

Hamilton finally passes Vettel and now sets off after Coulthard who is 10.1s up the road. Meanwhile, Sutil, has made three pit stops this afternoon, is given a drive-through for "causing a collision".

At the end of lap 36 Hamilton makes his second stop, rejoining behind the Ferraris, which are a lap ahead. However, Kovalainen crashes out after what appears to be a suspension failure. The yellow flags are waved as the Finn climbs (unhurt) from his car.

Third-placed Kubica pits at the end of lap 38, as Raikkonen closes to within 2.2s of the race leader. Vettel has joined the growing list of retirements, which already includes Fisichella, Yamamoto, Webber, Button and Kovalainen.

It's all over for Rubens Barrichello who has smoke and flames pouring from his car in the pits. His season is over, and the first time since he entered F1 in 1993 he has failed to score a single point.

When Coulthard pits on lap 43, it promotes Hamilton to eighth, though it is thought the Englishman will have to make another stop. Elsewhere, possibly falling asleep in the cockpit, Massa gives the Tifosi a heart stopping moment as he locks up and appears to drift off track. Phew!

After 45 laps, Raikkonen is now 0.8s behind Massa, with Alonso a further 33.4s down the road. The Spaniard has a 15.2s advantage over Heidfeld, who has Rosberg all over his tail.

After 49 laps, it's Massa, Raikkonen, Alonso, Heidfeld, Rosberg, Kubica, Trulli, Hamilton, Coulthard, Nakajima, Schumacher, Sato, Liuzzi and Davidson.

At the end of lap 50, Massa pits, and the softs are fitted. He rejoins in second. Hamilton has had his sting with the white-banded tyres, now his rivals will have their turn. Meanwhile, Raikkonen goes quickest in the middle sector as be begins his final assault on the race win, ands possibly the title.

At the end of lap 52 Alonso pits, as does Raikkonen. The Finn rejoins the race ahead of his teammate, the Finn has the race lead, and - at this stage - the 2007 title.

Rosberg pits at the end of lap 55, which promotes Alonso back to fourth, the Spaniard having slipped to fifth. Kubica is running third behind Raikkonen and Massa.

At the end of lap 56, Hamilton makes his third stop of the afternoon, and as the fuel pours in the title slips through his fingers. Other than that off and the engine glitch, McLaren's strategy hasn't helped the youngster.

Kubica pits at the end of lap 58, which promotes Alonso back to third place. Meanwhile, 'never-say-die' Hamilton posts the fastest lap of the race, thus far (12.506). The Englishman is running in eighth, 21.8s behind Trulli, who is having a great race.

Talking of great races. Rosberg and Kubica are having a great scrap for fifth, the Pole making a superb move on the German at Curva do Sol. Elsewhere, Coulthard spins after touching Nakajima. The Japanese driver promptly pits, as does Schumacher.

At the end of lap 64, Trulli pits, which moves Hamilton up to seventh. The Englishman's next target is Heidfeld who is 16s ahead.

With 6 laps remaining, it's Raikkonen, Massa, Alonso, Kubica, Rosberg, Heidfeld, Hamilton and Trulli. Raikkonen posts a new fastest lap (12.445).

Rosberg and Kubica are still enjoying a terrific fight, with the German now having the upper hand. Fantastic stuff from these two youngsters.

As Raikkonen begins his final lap, Massa goes quickest in the first sector, small comfort for the Brazilian if he takes the fastest lap.

The deed is done, Raikkonen takes the chequered flag, and with it the 2007 crown. Chris Dyer comes on the radio, "you've done it mate, Lewis finished seventh, by my calculations you've done it". And indeed he has.

Who would have believed it, only ninety minutes Hamilton had the title to lose, while who would have thought that McLaren would end the season with nothing.

The talk will continue throughout the off-season and probably for many years to come, however, let's not forget that this is Kimi's sixth win of the season. Had the Finn and his teammate enjoyed the sort of bullet-proof equipment available to Michael Schumacher, perhaps it would never have gone down to the wire in the first place.

Lewis will be gutted, but he has many, many years ahead of him. Yes he made a silly mistake at the start, but the race was lost when he suffered the engine glitch on lap 7, not to mention McLaren's extraordinary strategy.

As for Alonso, he wasn't in it, we barely saw him all afternoon, maybe he was concentrating on his job prospects for next season.

Nico Rosberg takes a fine fourth place having finally got the upper hand over Robert Kubica. Nick Heidfeld takes sixth, while Hamilton finishes seventh ahead of Trulli.

An amazing day of Turk Thrust proportions, as, against all odds, the outsider came through.

The good news is that there was no silliness, and hopefully the title is decided once and for all.

Now, as we look ahead to 2008, let's savour the fact that F1 has survived with out Michael Schumacher, and that we can already start to salivate over the prospects in store for us next season, no matter where Fernando Alonso ends up.

To check out our Brazil GP gallery, click here


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lunes, septiembre 17, 2007

Cápsulas de fútbol » DE LOS MEDIOS: Sobre Nacional y Cápsulas del impreso

SOBRE NACIONAL

Por Carlos Augusto Gracia Buitrago [mailto:cargracia@gmail.com]

*Alfredo, cordial saludo. Quise escribirte para manifestarte mi punto de vista sobre Atlético Nacional y su eliminación de la Copa Nisan Sudamericana y el bajón que viene sufriendo el equipo en su rendimiento.

*El único culpable de la eliminación es el propio equipo, nadie más. Soy admirador del buen fútbol y por ello admiro a Nacional, pero sólo cuando se dedica a jugar, a la pelota, a brindar espectáculo, porque es sin duda el mejor equipo del fútbol colombiano. Infortunadamente, sus jugadores -con el apoyo incondicional de buena parte de la prensa deportiva que les ha hecho creer eso- son agrandados, prepotentes y arrogantes, se creen vacas sagradas, intocables y son excesivamente cansones con el árbitro y con el rival, menosprecian a su oponente y quieren ganar de camiseta.

*Aunque ya lo venían exhibiendo y nadie dijo nada -porque infortunadamente por conseguir la nota y quedar como “parceros” de los jugadores, algunos colegas periodistas exceden los límites de esta noble profesión y se convierten en sobachaquetas, aclarando que cada uno es libre de ejercer como quiera-, contra Millonarios quedó más que demostrado lo que estoy diciendo.

*Si Nacional se hubiera dedicado a jugar fútbol, a hacer lo que sabe, no me cabe duda que hubiera clasificado tranquilo, porque es mucho más que Millonarios en fútbol y en nómina. Ese era el Nacional que yo esperaba. Pero tristemente me encontré con un equipo de jugadores engreídos, peleadores e instigadores, sobradores, que perdió en Medellín por eso, y que en Bogotá, con todo a su favor para darle vuelta al marcador, se quedó por fuera por dedicarse a algo que no le queda bien al campeón del fútbol colombiano.

*Critico a Humberto Mendoza -quien quiso meter miedo por su estatura y no por fútbol-, a Camilo Zúñiga -quien tenía los ojos desorbitados del desespero e impotencia y bronca contra sus rivales, y por querer a los trancazos desequilibrar el marcador- porque ataca y ataca y no marca nada, a José Amaya -quien siempre termina con amarilla o roja como sucedió esta vez aunque estuvo mal echado, y quien además fue irresponsable por jugar sabiendo que había tenido tremendo desgaste la noche anterior con Colombia y no iba a rendir en pleno-, y a los otros que se les unieron en esa faen de golpes y patadas.

*Pero en especial, aclarando que lo admiro como jugador por su gesta, reprocho la actitud pendenciera, insoportable e irresponsable de Víctor Aristizábal. ¡Qué jugador tan cansón!. Si lo miran prende bronca y si no también, pega y se ríe -actitud desafiante- pero si le pegan arma el tierrero e insta a sus compañeros a que le sigan su maravilloso “ejemplo”. Molesta y molesta al rival y al árbitro tratando de amedrentarlos de boca los 90 minutos. De ahí su bajón, por ponerse de “mamón” se le olvida el equipo, el fútbol y lo que mejor sabe hacer, el gol. Además, con esa actitud tan agresiva corrobora su irresponsabilidad. Es un líder, pero negativo, porque insta a su equipo a hacer lo mismo que él y de paso, sin querer queriendo, incita a la afición verde -bastante belicosa por demás- a insultar y a actuar como él en contra de su rival. Y eso es incitar a

la violencia. Lástima que un jugador insignia, que ha logrado tanto, actúe de esa forma. Y encontró a su ‘partner’, Gerardo Bedoya, otro irresponsable igual a él, para hacer el coro. Y “Aristi” no tiene las agallas de aceptar sus errores y los de su equipo y se escuda en las falencias arbitrales para ocultar la incapacidad futbolística de Nacional.

*De los mencionados anteriormente -excepto “Aristi” en clubes, porque con la selección hizo poco, Galván y Hurtado-, no nos digamos mentiras que ninguno ha ganado nada. Sólo el título del torneo colombiano, cuya calidad, como nuestro fútbol, es mediocre, regular. Y pregunto Alfredo: ¿qué han ganado o a quién le han ganado los endiosados Mendoza, Amaya, Zúñiga y demás?. Nada. El día en que logren superar o al menos igualar las gestas de otros “bravucones” como Leonel, Chicho, Rincón, “El Pibe”, Higuita, etc., sólo ese día, podrán creerse algo. De resto, son buenos jugadores, de equipo, y nada más.

*Sé que me van a decir muchas cosas, hasta de qué me voy a morir, pero simplemente expreso mi manera de mirar cómo a un club que juega bien al fútbol, bonito y efectivo y brinda espectáculo, se le olvida jugar y se dedica a tirarse el “show” y a jugar como equipo pendenciero de barrio.

*Por eso fracasó Nacional, fracasó Quintabani y fracasaron sus jugadores, pues la eliminación de la Copa Nissan Sudamericana es un gran fracaso, se había armado para ella y era su objetivo del segundo semestre. Espero que Nacional recapacite, que el técnico Quintabani tenga la personalidad de apretarse el cinturón y poner en cintura a todos sus jugadores, así sea al emblemático “Aristi” -con el que ya se dobló- y que el “veeerrrdeeee” vuelva a ser el de antes, el mejor. Un abrazo..

Carlos Gracia, Editor Deportes El Periódico (cargracia@gmail.com)

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Burying the ghost of Henry

Burying the ghost of Henry


Tottenham Hotspur 1 - 3 Arsenal

There were those who believed the departure of Thierry Henry would signal the beginning of the end of Arsene Wenger's Arsenal's dynasty, yet the truth seems to be far more encouraging than the theory.

GettyImages
Arsene Wenger's fresh crop flourish in a scintillating win at The Lane.

As Arsenal swept to a hugely impressive victory at the home of their nearest rivals, Wenger had every right to feel a glow of satisfaction as the master plan he has been working on for the last three seasons seems to be coming together in glorious fashion.

Oozing with class and threatening to show the cutting edge they so often lacked when they were dependent on Henry, Arsenal are the emerging as the title contenders no-one picked and Wenger can take most of the credit for their evolution. The Frenchman has long been eulogising about the potential of the young players he has put his faith in this season, but it now seems as if he, and not the doubters who wrote him off not so long ago, will be proved right. Whisper it quietly, but Arsenal without Henry may even be a little better than the Gunners side that went so close to Champions League glory with their legendary talisman leading the line. Led by the mercurial Cesc Fabregas, Arsenal's youngsters are now coming into their own in all areas and their refusal to shy away from a silky passing style that has long been viewed as both their greatest asset and primary problem, is charming and refreshing in equal measure. Manchester United may have come close to matching Arsenal for entertainment value last season, but there can be little doubt that Wenger's team boast a style that leaves many neutrals hoping they succeed. All too often, brawn has beaten their brains when it has mattered most in the last couple of years, but Wenger has always stayed loyal in his conviction of how his side will play. So even after Gareth Bale fired Tottenham into a 14th minute lead with a well placed free-kick on a beautiful autumn day in North London, Arsenal refused to panic and they should have been on level terms long before the break if they had taken the chances the created by carving their opponents open time and again. Abou Diaby and Emmanuel Adebayor wasted clear-cut chances either side of half-time and had Dimitar Berbatov and Tom Huddlestone not spurned glorious chances to double that lead in what developed into a thrilling derby battle, Arsenal may have been making the short journey home nursing some wounds. Instead, they proved themselves to be up to the challenge of bouncing back and as Emmanuel Adebayor rose highest in the box to head Arsenal level after 65 minutes, this game seemed to swing in the direction of the resident North London superpowers. Even though Robbie Keane wasted a clear chance to restore Tottenham's lead, the pressure Arsenal put on defences with their quick and incisive play was beginning to tell and after Robin van Persie and Cesc Fabregas went close to firing the Gunners ahead, a fearful hush descended on White Hart Lane. The game so nearly took an unexpected twist as Berbatov saw his header scrambled off the line 12 minutes from time, but then Fabregas struck his power-packed goal and with that, Tottenham boss Martin Jol knew he was in for more intense speculation about his future. England keeper Paul Robinson would have been disappointed as he was beaten with a long range shot once again. Such issues are of little concern to Wenger, who will believes his side are proving them have discovered the way to add a winning touch to their creative brilliance. 'We scored the difficult chances and missed the easy ones in this game, but the result shows that the side is growing and maturing as I had hoped,' said a jubilant Wenger. 'It was important that we started the season well after losing Thierry Henry in the summer and while a player like that will never be forgotten, we are moving on now. 'We are playing in a very pleasing way. That is always going to be the case so long as I am the manger here, but the goals we scored in this game were very special and I have a great faith in these players to produce such moments. Even when we went in a half-time a goal behind, I just told the players to keep passing the ball and doing what they are good at. I knew it would turn in our favour and even though there were a few scares along the way, we got there in the end. This was probably our best performance of the season. 'It is nice to look at a league table and see Arsenal right at the top again and I couldn't fault the consistency of the team in this game. Even when we went behind, we showed the spirit you need to come back.' It was easy to have some sympathy with Tottenham boss Martin Jol as the press room was quickly filled with rumours that his tenure as Tottenham boss would soon come to an end, but he remained defiant as he faced the media. 'The chairman says he is behind me, but this situation is not just about me as I have a great life whatever happens,' said a resigned Jol. 'I cannot fault my players for the commitment they showed in this game, but Arsenal were just a bit luckier than us and took more of their chances. 'I've been under press from day one, so I'm not worried because the press tell me I'm in trouble now. I will keep fighting and I'm sure this team will start winning soon.' How Jol must wish he had the scouting network Wenger has been working with for the last ten years as the kids he has at his disposal have the potential to follow in the footsteps of Sir Alex Ferguson's crop of the mid-1990s that went on to achieve so much. In Fabregas, he has a true master of the modern game, while the likes of Gael Clichy, Abou Diaby and Denilson play with the sort of style and grace that only great players possess. In Kolo Toure, he has an unsung hero of real quality and while they have yet to square off against a top four rival this season, they have every right to feel optimistic. 'Maybe we are already back at the top of this league and I don't just mean for a few days in September,' added Wenger. 'I have total faith in these players and I think the performances are backing up what I felt was possible for us this season. We have a great start and I'm convinced we can carry it on.' The contrast of emotions could not have been bigger between the Tottenham and Arsenal camps after this latest instalment of North London's oldest rivalry. While you wonder whether Martin Jol will get another chance to manage in this famous old fixture, Arsene Wenger must have been tempted to mutter 'I told you so' to his detractors. MAN OF THE MATCH: Cesc Fabregas The little Spanish magician took time to find his feet in a crowded midfield, but he began to assert his influence after the break and scored a brilliant winner. FACE IN THE CROWD: Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles may not be one of Europe's sexiest men, but he was attending this game with a girl whose good looks would be welcomed on a catwalk. Clearly she sees the inner spirit in a man. FOOD WATCH: A beef and ale pie made this a traditional North London pre-match lunch on offer in the Spurs press room and the half-time meat pie also went down well. INSIDER QUESTION: Do any players opt for the traditional black boots in the Premier League? Pascal Chimbonda's glaring yellow footwear was a sight to behold, while Emmanuel Adebayor's shocking red matched his Arsenal kit. ARSENAL VERDICT: Wenger's kids may well have been overawed by the presence of Thierry Henry in his final two years at the club as they are now playing with a freedom that was absent when all the focus was on the legendary No.14. This team are title contenders who will get better as the season moves on.

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Alonso dio su versión sobre el caso de espionaje

Fernando Alonso no quiso contestar a las acusaciones de Ron Dennis sobre el espionaje y aseguró que seguirá dando todo por McLaren


SPA -- El español Fernando Alonso (McLaren Mercedes), dos veces campeón del mundo de Fórmula Uno, respondió a las declaraciones del jefe de su equipo, el británico Ron Dennis, en las que lo acusaba de haber amenazado con divulgar algunos correos electrónicos, y señaló que se ha mentido sobre él en los últimos años.

Dennis afirmó primero a la prensa de su país y luego confirmó al resto de medios presentes en el circuito belga de Spa-Francorchamps que durante el Gran Premio de Hungría "Fernando se presentó muy enfadado" por muchas cosas que no va a "explicar en detalle".

"Tuvimos una conversación y él me dijo: 'Tengo algo en mi correo electrónico que procede de uno de tus ingenieros'".

"Entonces nos miramos Martín (Whitmarsh, director ejecutivo del equipo) y yo, y Martin dijo: 'Fernando podría informar a la FIA'. Nada más marcharse Fernando, telefoneé a la FIA, les dije lo que pasaba y colgué", agregó Dennis.

El jefe de McLaren explicó luego que "media hora más tarde el representante de Alonso volvió" y le dijo: "'Mira, perdona, (Fernando Alonso) estaba enfadado, y bla, bla, bla, y se retractó de todo'".

Además, agregó que después de la visita de Luis García Abad volvió a llamar a la FIA para decir que Alonso se había retractado y que había que pasar página.

Sin embargo, Alonso afirmó a la prensa española presente en Spa a que su propia versión de los hechos es muy diferente.

- ¿Se parece esta versión a la tuya?
- "No (rotundo). Yo no suelo comentar nada de lo que pasa fuera de la pista y nada de lo que hago. Suelo mantenerme al margen de eso. A veces convendría que hubiera un poco más de silencio en el equipo porque así se acallarían muchos de los problemas que tienen. Estamos en una buena posición para ganar, pero siguen intentando lavar una imagen y no hace falta.

Tendríamos que concentrarnos más en otras cosas. El año pasado, en Renault, nos quitaron el 'mass damper' y se habló de ello en la carrera siguiente, pero a la dos siguientes ya se dejó de hablar del asunto. Aquí se intenta dar demasiadas vueltas y por eso este follón".

- ¿Qué te parece lo que ha dicho Dennis?:
- "Ya he dicho que no voy a comentar nada de este tema. Esa es la versión del equipo y lógicamente otros tienen otra, la FIA tiene otra, y cada uno tomará sus decisiones y sacará sus conclusiones.

Quien piense que por dos e-mails que se reciben de otro de los pilotos intentando colaborar e intentando ganar carreras van a poner esa sanción al equipo es porque las cosas no se están tomando en serio, ni con mucha inteligencia".

- ¿Te sientes traicionado por el equipo?
- "No, para nada. Cada uno tiene su versión. Si el equipo ofrece esta versión y alguno se la cree viendo lo que ha pasado toda esta semana... Cada uno tiene su opinión".

- Después de esto... ¿te replanteas tu futuro?
- "No. No cambia nada".

- Pero, te están acusando de chantajear...
- "Yo no voy a comentar nada. En donde tengo que hablar es en la pista. Tengo que hablar de neumáticos, de motores, de cambios... de todas estas cosas. De lo demás, no. No comparto esa versión y no tengo nada más que decir".

- ¿Puedes mantenerte frío con todo esto?
- "Sí porque yo veo esto como una gran bola que se ha creado en los dos últimos meses, desde que aparecieron las primeras investigaciones. Se ha ido aumentando la bola, la bola, la bola... sobre todo porque es muy apetitosa para la prensa.

Llevamos corriendo dos meses en esta situación y hemos obtenido buenos resultados, liderando los dos Mundiales. Al equipo técnico nunca le ha cambiado mucho la cosa".

- ¿Miente el equipo sobre ti?
- "Yo no digo nada".

- ¿Te ha garantizado la FIA protección? ¿Qué garantías te dan?
- Ninguna. No necesito ninguna protección porque no he hecho nada como para necesitar una protección.

Hoy me ha llamado (Max) Mosley (presidente de la FIA) para darme las gracias personalmente por la colaboración y nada más. No necesito que nadie me dé las gracias porque cada uno hace lo que sus principios le dicen que haga".

- ¿Te preocupa la imagen que esto pueda dejar de ti?
- "No. Nunca me ha preocupado. Siempre se ha mentido un poco sobre mí en los últimos años. Lo que me importa es que las cosas vayan bien en lo profesional y en la pista. Tras ganar dos mundiales no me importa si a alguien le caigo mal o bien. Si ahora la prensa inglesa quiere pensar o convencer a alguien de que dos e-mails que recibo de otro piloto pueden causar una sanción a un equipo entero de Fórmula Uno, allá quien quiera ser engañado".

- ¿Qué confianza te queda en el equipo?
- "La misma que tenía. Al final yo vengo aquí a darlo todo, a conducir al cien por cien e intentar ganar carreras. Y el equipo viene a ofrecerme el mejor coche posible, con todas las mejoras, con todo lo que se pueda, para intentar batir a nuestros rivales, como hoy hemos intentado, al acabar terceros y mañana saliendo a la carrera a por todas. Eso no va a cambiar nada, pero desgraciadamente parece que importa poco".

- ¿Apostarías por ti para ganar el Mundial en esta situación?
- "Al cien por cien. Según los comentarios ya iba a ser imposible hacerlo a mitad de año. Se ha dicho que me iba a ir del equipo, que no estaba cómodo, que si tenía problemas. En cualquier equipo y en cualquier trabajo hay altibajos. Unas veces estás mejor y otras peor, pero el objetivo sigue siendo el mismo: tratar de ganar y eso es lo que he tratado de demostrar en las últimas carreras. En este final del campeonato voy a ir a por todas. Cuando salga de mi boca que me voy a ir del equipo o algo así, será otra cosa, pero como no ha sido así es bastante más difícil".

- ¿Crees que alguien está interesado en dañar tu imagen?
- "No. Esto es una bola que se ha aumentando cada vez más desde que salió el caso de los espías. Ahora, al final, con la decisión (de la FIA), se trata de buscar por qué sí y por qué no, en vez de aceptarla y seguir corriendo. Es como cuando a un futbolista le sacan una tarjeta roja. Se habla de ello el lunes, pero después de tres o cuatro partidos ya nadie habla de ella".

- ¿Te ves capaz de ser feliz en McLaren en el futuro?
- "Siempre que gano soy feliz y siempre que no gano no soy muy feliz. Al final dependemos de una máquina, dependemos de un coche cuya velocidad determina que obtengas unos resultados u otros. Ahora mismo tengo un coche ganador y estoy luchando por mi tercer mundial consecutivo y por eso estoy contento".

- ¿Si no tuvieras un coche ganador tendrías alguna razón para seguir en McLaren?
- Eso lo pensaría en todos los equipos. Cuando estaba en Renault en 2003 y 2004, cuando sólo hacia un podio suelto por ahí pensaba en estar en uno de los equipos que ganaban. Pero luego el coche mejoró y conseguimos ganar. Ahora he tenido la suerte de venir a McLaren y que el coche vaya bien otra vez. Siempre es una lotería cuando cambias de equipo, pero he tenido suerte esta vez".

- ¿Tienes las certeza de que todo esto no va a influir en la pista?
- Creo que sí. El equipo siempre ha hablado por activa y por pasiva de la igualdad que hay entre los dos pilotos, de que tienen las mismas oportunidades y siempre lo han hecho. Quedan cuatro carreras y en esta carrera se ha visto otra vez. No creo que nada vaya a cambiar dentro del equipo".

- ¿Responderás algún día a la basura que hoy (sábado) Ron Dennis ha echado sobre ti?
- No creo. No suelo hablar de lo que otros comentan o dicen. Allá él con lo que diga. Si lo dice, tendrá sus razones".

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jueves, septiembre 13, 2007

Dennis

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For some reason there seems to be campaign against Ron Dennis. That is nothing new, there are journalists who have seemed to have resented the man's success. Some people have pointed out that that he began as 'only' a mechanic. He was the youngest mechanic on the Formula One pitlane and that was at a time when there were only two or three wrenches per team.

Ron was exceptional. He has always been exceptional. When Jack Brabham set up the Brabham Racing Organisation he could pick and choose and he chose Ron. I don't think there has been a smarter operator in Formula One than Sir Jack and he chose Ron Dennis. For me, that says a lot.

When Ron wanted to go his own way, and set up a team with Neil Trundel, Ron Tauranac did something against his nature, he allowed them credit. I know Ron Tauranac, I wrote his biography. When Tauranac allows you credit, you have to be on the far side of trustworthy.

When Ron Dennis got into Formula One we had 'Ronspeak' This was because Ron's speech was on the convoluted side. Some journalists got on to that. As soon as Ron Dennis opened his mouth they were set to mock him, they were on the blocks. Ron seemed to have swallowed every book on management jargon without digesting it and sometimes the result was amusing. There were people out there, and there still are, who thought that Ron Dennis was risible, that he had grown too big for his boots.

All I can say is that they were not at Goodwood tests in the Formula Three and Formula Two days. I saw Ron close at hand, frequently, but I never spoke to him because he was busy. I witnessed his approach and he impressed me.

Ian Bamsey edited a book called 'The 1000 BHP Grand Prix Cars' and I got McLaren, which was not a bad gig, I got to chat with both John Barnard and Ron Dennis. There had been a big falling out between the two and Ron wanted to put his side. He said, 'This is off the record', so I reached to turn off the tape recorder. He said it was not necessary.

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He knew that if he said something was off the record I would respect that. The tape kept rolling, however, so I have one hot cassette, but everything that Ron said to me is still off the record.

The thing about Ron Dennis is that sometimes the words get jumbled, but he looks you straight in the eye. I saw him close up when he was in Formula Three and I don't get why he appears to be targeted.

Ron Dennis has been targeted, make no mistake about that. There is a campaign against him and I do not know why. Sir Jackie Stewart has come out on Ron's behalf. He has expressed the opinion that senior people in the FIA are out to nail Ronzo and it could backfire on them. When Jackie Stewart speaks, I listen. He is a man who thinks before opening his mouth.

I do not suppose it has anything to do with Nigel Stepney saying he knows where all the bodies are buried. To me, in my simple way, that sounds that he knows about cheating at Ferrari.

Maybe he means something else apart from cheating, but to claim to know where the bodies are buried is a dramatic statement. I have never thought that Stepney was a Drama Queen so what did he mean?

Ferrari has been protested by McLaren on a regular basis and I do not think that McLaren cheats. It is not in the nature of Ron Dennis to cheat.

I once asked him what went into his back pocket when he ran Stefan Johansson in Formula Three in 1980. I asked him direct, he told me and I am not going to tell you because it was a private conversation. I know that he also told Marlboro, who was Stefan's sponsor.

Ron was straight with sponsors, there had been had been some dodgy deals in motor racing. When Ron presented his budget there would always be someone who would query one figure. Ron would say, "That is my profit. I am running a business, I expect to make a profit, as you do in your business. I am offering a business partnership."

The Philip Morris company believed in him and edged him to his place at McLaren. Daimler-Benz believes in him which is why they have so much money tied up in Woking and Brixworth. I do not think that the people at Daimler-Benz are daft, the one thing I do know about them is that they value integrity.

I believe that Ron Dennis is being set up, You cannot vouch for the integrity of each one of more than a thousand employees, you wish that you could, but the plain fact is that you cannot. Chief Designer, Mike Coughlan, appears to have been guilty of something, he has been suspended from his job. I would like to know of what he has been guilty.

He told his bosses that he had received Ferrari data and he got it from Nigel Stepney who seems to have gone mute. Were the documents stolen? The documents were in English and Ferrari paints its cars red. Is it possible to claim that the papers are the personal property of Nigel Stepney?

Does Stepney have any right to information he gained in the course of his employment? If he came up with new ideas, does he has a right to them? This question affects every industry and every employer.

The FIA (aka Ferrari's Internal Agency) seems set to nail McLaren over the action of an employee, but it was an employee of Ferrari who started it all. It was Nigel Stepney, allegedly, who handed over the documents.

Two former Ferrari employees have received (suspended) prison sentences for selling data to Toyota Motorsport. Three senior figures at Toyota have left the company having been charged with industrial espionage. Until proven guilty they are, of course, innocent.

I do not recall the FIA becoming agitated about the Toyota case, yet two people have been found guilty in a court of law. Nobody at McLaren has been charged with anything. The only person who has had criminal charges levelled against him in the current case is another former Ferrari employee.

I want to know why the FIA is so keen on slamming McLaren, which has no criminal charge against it, and has done nothing about Toyota Motorsport. I could not possibly imagine that someone at the FIA simply dislikes Ron Dennis and it is all personal.

Mike Lawrence
mike@pitpass.com



McLaren's Dennis caught on a dangerous rollercoaster ride

09/12/2007
Among many twists and turns, another vertiginous drop awaits at a hearing of Formula One's governing body in Paris on Thursday.

Ron Dennis likened his Italian Grand Prix weekend to a "difficult, emotional rollercoaster" and even as he said it, the McLaren boss knew that the stomach-churning ride was far from over.

Among many twists and turns, another vertiginous drop awaits at a hearing of Formula One's governing body in Paris on Thursday. The meeting of the International Automobile Federation World Motor Sport Council, the FIA's top sporting body, will consider new evidence against McLaren in a long-running spying controversy with Ferrari.

If found to have benefited from a dossier of Ferrari technical information seized from the home of their suspended chief designer Mike Coughlan, McLaren could be kicked out of this and next year's championship.

The elation of the Mercedes-powered team's historic one-two at Monza, their first in Ferrari's backyard, could turn to despair. Even if that worst case scenario does not happen, there are many who suspect that the championship leaders will be stripped of some or all of their constructors' points.

What happens to the drivers, with 22-year-old British rookie Lewis Hamilton leading Spanish double world champion team mate Fernando Alonso by just three points in the standings with four races to go, is another burning question.

The irony for Dennis, a self-made multi-millionaire who started out as a mechanic with Cooper-Maserati in 1966, is that all this is happening just when there should be so much to celebrate. After failing to win a race last year, McLaren have taken seven of the 13 grands prix to date and have two great drivers jousting in one of the most thrilling championships in years.

Integrity questioned

Dennis, caught wiping away tears as well as champagne in a rare show of emotion after Sunday's win, has seen the integrity of his team questioned as they spiral from crisis to crisis. His own future at the helm has been called into doubt.

First there was the deteriorating relationship between Hamilton and Alonso, who had hoped to be number one but instead found himself upstaged by the novice. Then there was the debacle of Hungary, with the team stripped of 15 constructors' points after Alonso impeded Hamilton in qualifying. Last weekend there was a $50,000 fine for the use in Hungary of a gearbox that had not passed a crash test and the appearance of Italian magistrates in the paddock to notify senior McLaren management that they were under investigation.

McLaren cannot claim they have not made mistakes. Even if Coughlan was acting as a rogue element for his own benefit, there is no denying that he had 780 pages of highly confidential Ferrari information. What is in question is how deep that went into the team, despite McLaren's assurances that none was incorporated into their cars.

Strained relations

The personalities of key players, and historic rivalries and animosity, add another twist to the drama. It is no secret that FIA President Max Mosley, whose easy aristocratic charm masks a steely determination, and fellow-Briton Dennis do not come high on each other's Christmas card lists.

"Many Formula One insiders believe that the issues surrounding the stolen Ferrari technical data are emblematic of the strained personal relationship between Dennis and Max Mosley," was how experienced commentator Alan Henry put it in the Guardian newspaper on Tuesday.

Dennis was asked at Monza whether he felt McLaren were being victimised. The 60-year-old avoided the question, careful not to lend credence to any suggestion of a vendetta. He made clear also that he would not be forced into retirement.

In the past, paddock wags have suggested that FIA stands for 'Ferrari International Assistance' and triple champion and former team owner Jackie Stewart alluded to that perceived influence. "The FIA have historically been very close to Ferrari and closer to them than anyone else," he told Reuters. "It seems that some of the most powerful people in this sport are more aligned to Ferrari than anybody else."

Rival team owner Frank Williams was more circumspect:"I won't use the word witch-hunt, but there is enormous tenacity to find out what happened," he said of the governing body's handling of the enquiry.

An FIA spokesman said such comments were to be expected but referred back to the evidence. "This enquiry was triggered by a letter of complaint from Ferrari which was, in turn, triggered by the extraordinary discovery of 780 pages of their most confidential technical information in the hands of McLaren's chief designer," he said. "Under the circumstances, the suggestion that the FIA's ongoing investigation is about anything other than the pursuit of sporting fairness demonstrates a blinding refusal to accept the basic facts."


lunes, septiembre 10, 2007

Franchitti proves prophetic on way to first title - Open-Wheel

Franchitti's prediction -- and title dream -- comes true at Chicagoland

Updated: September 9, 2007, 10:48 PM ET

Franchitti Wins Race and Points Title

JOLIET, Ill. -- Dario Franchitti's prediction months ago that the 2007 IndyCar Series championship would not be decided until the last corner of the last lap at Chicagoland Speedway turned out to be correct.

Franchitti, who watched Scott Dixon whittle his 65-point championship lead down to three points in the second half of the season, looked as though he was going to have to settle for second to Dixon on Sunday in both the Peak Antifreeze Indy 300 and the title sweepstakes.

But Dixon's Target/Ganassi Racing Dallara-Honda started to cough on the backstretch of the last lap, starved of fuel. A very surprised Scotsman darted past his stricken rival with less than a mile to go to claim the race win and the $1 million IndyCar Series championship for Andretti Green Racing.

"I was drafting him and going for the slingshot, and just as I pulled out, I saw him twitch and we shot up the track," Franchitti said. "It was all I could do to avoid hitting him, and I went a lot higher than I would have liked.

"Once I collected that, I knew the race and the championship was ours, and I went crazy from there to the finish. There was a lot of shouting on the radio and fist pumping."

It was a stunning reversal of fortune in a race in which Franchitti frequently looked like an also-ran while Dixon showed he had the pace to win. He simply needed to run one more lap under caution behind the pace car.

"I think Dario was in about the same position as we were, and he just worked the system a little better than we did today," remarked Target/Ganassi Racing managing director Mike Hull. "We did everything we needed to do to try to win a championship, and that's just the way life is.

"We just were a little short at the end, and we needed another lap of yellow."

Appropriately, Dixon and Franchitti ran 1-2 entering the final 50 laps of the race. Dario stretched his mileage longer than anyone else all day, and he had benefited from being able to pit under yellow on Lap 139 when Panther Racing's Vitor Meira crashed in Turn 4.

Sensing they could make the finish without stopping again, the Ganassi team brought Dixon in for a fuel top-off on Lap 148.

Franchitti also pitted, and the two resumed their private battle for the race and the championship when action resumed on Lap 152.

In quick succession, Sam Hornish Jr., Danica Patrick and Dan Wheldon streamed past a fuel-saving Franchitti and demoted him to fifth.

Dixon yielded the lead to Hornish and dropped into his draft to save fuel, but with Franchitti still fifth, the title would go to the New Zealander.

"Those Penske cars [Hornish and Helio Castroneves] were quick," Franchitti said. "I was trying to make a fuel number, but I couldn't do it unless I was stuck back in the pack. [Strategist] John Anderson was on the radio telling me fuel is critical and today was a high point for him. He did a tremendous job.

"Sometimes I kind of get a little bit hot under collar, but I was very calm in the car all day," he added. "As hard as I was trying, I couldn't make anything happen. The one thing I knew I could do was save fuel."

As the laps wound down, Hornish, Wheldon and Patrick all had to make splash-and-go stops, and Wheldon gave a precursor of things to come when his Ganassi car ran dry on Lap 194 and stopped on course.

Then Patrick spun in the pit entry on Lap 195, and the Dixon camp erupted in a wild cheer, believing that the ensuing full-course caution would allow its man to win under yellow or at least race to the finish without pitting.

On the Lap 198 restart, Franchitti briefly nosed ahead before Dixon retook the lead on the backstraight. Although a lap down, Hornish tried to follow Dixon on the inside, but it wasn't enough to push the Ganassi car ahead, and on the final lap, Franchitti pulled to the outside entering Turn 3.

The scene was set for a drag race to the finish, only for the No. 9 Target car to slow dramatically. With Hornish and company all a lap down, Dixon's second place wasn't in jeopardy.

But his hopes for a second IndyCar Series championship were toast.

"I just don't think Dario's car was as quick as the Penske cars and Dan and myself," said Dixon, who won the 2003 IndyCar Series championship. "Midway in the race, we knew we had a very good shot at the championship. But going into the last restart, I knew it was going to be close. Going into 3, it seemed to cut out of fuel, and that was it.

"I think Dario is a great competitor, and to be honest, if anyone out there could win the championship, I'm glad to see him win it as he has done," the New Zealander added. "He's done a superb job to win a championship, and he hasn't let things get to him."

Indeed, Franchitti endured a couple of tumultuous months after he built a 65-point championship lead with a victory in late June at Richmond International Raceway. That was his last win before Sunday's triumph at Chicago, and in between, he twice walked away from spectacular accidents in which his No. 27 Canadian Club car got airborne.

The wreck at Michigan International Speedway, caused when his car touched wheels with an overaggressive Wheldon while fighting for the lead, was particularly frightening.

"The biggest mental challenge this year was jumping in the car in Kentucky, five days after flipping the car in Michigan," Franchitti said. "To get over that barrier … I thought if I can do that, I can handle anything that's thrown at me."


Dario Franchitti


The biggest mental challenge this year was jumping in the car in Kentucky, five days after flipping the car in Michigan.

Dario Franchitti

With those chilling shunts as a backdrop, Franchitti could have been forgiven for cruising down the championship stretch. But he ran as hard as ever, notching up plenty of laps in the lead even if he wasn't winning races.

In all, Franchitti led 718 laps in 2007 compared with Dixon's 291. They each won four races, topped only by Tony Kanaan's tally of five.

Kanaan finished sixth in Sunday's race and third in the championship.

A miscommunication with teammate Marco Andretti cost Franchitti the race at Infineon Raceway and almost the championship. But under Anderson's leadership, AGR's No. 27 team was able to maintain its focus, even when the story broke on the championship-deciding weekend that Franchitti reportedly won't be defending his Indianapolis 500 and Indy Racing League championship titles.

He is expected to announce a multiyear contract with Ganassi Racing's stock car operation within the next two weeks.

"The most important thing for me today was drive a good race and give 100 percent," Franchitti said. "I did the job my guys wanted me to do, and that was more important to me than the result. I don't know if it's because I won the 500 and that took pressure off, but that was my thought going into the race.

"Winning the 500 was such a great feeling," he added. "This is different, and because it's the whole year rolled into one, it means a hell of a lot."

The phrase "gentleman racer" can be derogatory, but when applied to Franchitti, it's a true compliment. In victory or defeat, he's a class act, and he races and carries himself with style and panache.

It's too bad he apparently won't be sticking with the IndyCar Series for an encore, because American open-wheel racing is going to lose a hell of an ambassador.

John Oreovicz covers open-wheel racing for National Speed Sport News and ESPN.com.

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