Formula One Gearing up for Another Eventful Year of Rivalry
Pre-season testing has suggested that Mercedes have improved both chassis and engine and extended their advantage. 'Catch me if you can' is the most-used headline in the run-up to Sunday's race at Albert Park.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: March 09, 2015 09:35 am IST
Even before the first engine roars, Formula One can be heard drawing breath this week in readiness for another year of drama, intrigue and trepidation, starting with the final countdown to the season-opening Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne.
Fewer cars, teams and drivers will start this year's championship, one of the sport's stars is mysteriously missing amid a spiral of conspiracy theories, and, as financial constraints continue to eat into its balance sheets, the global juggernaut that mixes glamour, danger and speed faces an uncertain future. (Vettel tips Hamilton, Rosberg for 2015 World Title)
At 84, the sport's enduring commercial ringmaster Bernie Ecclestone is also under scrutiny.
After the tumultuous events in 2014 when Briton Lewis Hamilton seized his second drivers world championship from the clutches of Mercedes team-mate and season-long rival Nico Rosberg in a brutal finale in Abu Dhabi, a similar on-track sporting scenario is in prospect. (Williams' Susie Wolff to Compete in F1 Practice)
Pre-season testing has suggested that Mercedes have improved both chassis and engine and extended their advantage. 'Catch me if you can' is the most-used headline in the run-up to Sunday's race at Albert Park where Rosberg was flawless and triumphant a year ago, setting up a duel with Hamilton that shifted through the gears as the story unfolded.
Off-circuit, however, it is a different matter.
The grid has been reduced following the demise of the Caterham team and only 20 cars are expected to line up for the opening race, or 18 if the Manor-Marrusia outfit, a re-hashed team built from the remnants of last year's Marussia, fails to qualify.
Safety procedures have been revised and, hopefully, improved after the accident in Japan that left Frenchman Jules Bianchi fighting for his life after aquaplaning into a collision with a recovery vehicle in teeming rain.
- talent and race-craft -
His survival battle overshadowed the final races in which Hamilton stole away from Rosberg with a demonstration of talent and race-craft that has installed him as favourite to land a third title.
At 30, and single again if the latest reports of his on-off-on-off relationship with singer Nicole Scherzinger run true, he may have the maturity and motivation to dominate.
After their moves from Ferrari to McLaren and Red Bull to Ferrari respectively, Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel were expected to emerge as contenders with their new teams as each seeks more glory to revive a once spectacular career.
Spaniard Alonso won two titles with Renault before his unrewarded toil with the scarlet Scuderia while Vettel, four times a champion at Red Bull, was out-performed last year by Australian Daniel Ricciardo.
The evidence of pre-season testing in Spain suggested that Ferrari have a much-improved engine, but Alonso's accident at the Circuit de Catalunya in February - in which he suffered severe concussion - has cast a shadow over engine suppliers' Honda's return to McLaren 23 years after their golden run of successes in the late 1980's and early 1990's.
He is set to be replaced by reserve Kevin Magnussen alongside Briton Jenson Button for the opener.
It remains to be seen if Vettel can live up to the legacy of his hero and mentor, Ferrari's last German leader, Michael Schumacher, who won five of his seven titles with the Italians.
- youngest ever driver -
Schumacher, like Bianchi and Alonso, is another victim of head injuries.
His skiing accident in France in December, 2013, removed him from public view as an active sportsman and, after months in a coma, he has recovered, but remains in need of intense medical attention and support.
Images of Senna, as seen in many recent advertisements, memories of Schumacher and Bianchi, and the latest shock of seeing Alonso's debut with McLaren-Honda delayed, all remind of the dangers.
That, however, has not stemmed the flow of new drivers, younger than ever before.
At Toro Rosso, the team that launched Vettel and Ricciardo, a new pairing with a combined age of 37, races for the first time in Melbourne.
Spaniard Carlos Sainz junior, son of former world rally champion Carlos Sainz, is just 20 while his team-mate Dutchman Max Verstappen, son of former Benetton driver Jos Vestappen, is only 17 and will become the youngest starter in F1 history.
At Sauber, Brazilian Felipe Nasr debuts aged 22 alongside Swede Marcus Ericsson, a one-season veteran at 24.
Overall, only four of the 18 drivers sure to start on Sunday, were aged 31 or more when the entry lists were published, while two, including Hamilton, are 30.
If that is a sign of change, and the falling value of experience compared to youthful promise, attached to sponsorship, it is unlikely to affect the outcome.
Hamilton's main challenge, apart from Rosberg, is likely to come from Ricciardo's Red Bull, as the Australian builds on his breakthrough 2014 season with 20-year-old Russian Daniil Kvyat as his team-mate, and the settled Williams pairing of Felipe Massa and Valtteri Bottas.
Both teams did well enough in testing to endorse their potential as rivals to Mercedes with Ferrari in close pursuit and McLaren-Honda, despite the fanfares of expectation, struggling badly.
If one, or more, can take race wins away from Mercedes, it will enliven what threatens otherwise to be a Mercedes procession in another year of living dangerously on and off the circuit.