2017 United States Grand Prix – Post Race

Lewis Hamilton has won the United States Grand Prix. Sebastian Vettel remains alive in the championship fight with his second place finish.

next race…. Mexico!

That is basically the end of the story for this posting on the Haas F1 Fan Journal.

Romain Grosjean qualified 12th and finished 14th. Kevin Magnussen qualified 14th and finished 16th. The poor result should not over shadow the basic fact tat the Haas F1 Team has again brought both cars home. The reliability in the car will pay off in the future. Haas will be more competitive on another day. And on that day the Haas car will be ready.

2017 Japanese Grand Prix – Post Race

The results for the Japanese Grand Prix are in, and for the second time this season both Haas F1 Team cars finished in point winning positions. Starting from the 16th position on the starting grid, Romain Grosjean Powered his Haas VF-17 to a P8 finish. Kevin Magnussen finished in P10 after starting ahead of Grosjean in P13.

Lewis Hamilton was the winner of the race. The drivers championship as nearly fallen to Hamilton after the Ferrari driven by Sebastian Vettel retired in lap 5. Mechanics changed a spark plug on the grid before the race, so that was our first clue to a problem with Vettel’s power plant. After what appeared to be a failed cylinder, Vettel made that hard right turn into the pit lane to retire the car, and his championship hopes were done. Lewis Hamilton could win at the Formula 1 drivers championship with a win at the US Grand Prix in Austin Texas and a P6 or worse finish for Vettel.

Upon returning to the garage, Vettel sat in his car for a an extended moment. perhaps he was holding onto the last moment of the seasons hope for a championship.  It was at that moment he had to accept the mathematical reality of the drivers championship standings.  Drivers are mandated by Formula 1 to provide access and interviews for the media after races. Vettel waved to the crowd, did not meet the press, and left the track. A bitter pill…

But as to the race, it was a good one. On lap 44 the two Haas cars executed a double passed on the Williams racer of Felipe Massa.

Haas F1 is currently in 7th place in the constructors championship. While still in only their second year, and with only fours races remain, the American startup is ahead of Renault and McLaren.

Next stop for the F1 circus, Austin Texas, and the United States Grand Prix. The home Grand Prix for the Haas F1 Team and it’s fans!!! It’s gona be a hoot! See you at Circuit Of The Americas!

2017 Malaysian Grand Prix – Post Race Review

The 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix was chock full of story lines. But there are no glamorous highlight for the Haas F1 Team.

The Haas cars of Roman Grosjean and Kevin Magnussen started the race 16th and 17th respectively. Grosjean finished 12th and Magnussen 13. Both Haas cars finished ahead of all Renault’s’, Saber’s and Toro Rosso’s. It proves that the Haas F1 Team is good, but they still didn’t get any points.

But the Haas F1 Team aside, it was a great race. There are many story lines worthy their own attention. Here is my list of Story lines from the 2017 Malaysian Grand Prix.

  1. Max Conquers – Max Verstappin passed Lewis Hamilton on lap 6 to not only take the lead of the race but the win.
  2. Vettels Climb – Scuderia Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel started the race from the back of the pack and ended up finishing the race 4th.
  3. Lewis’s Lead Lengthened – Lewis Hamilton extended his championship lead, but by not as big as he might think.
  4. Redbull Rebounds – “Alonso Smiles” – Redbull taking first and third tells Alonso that his 2018 car should be fast.
  5. Williams Wakes Up! – After a string of poor results Williams responds with both cars in the points.
  6. Alonso tells Magnussen to #SuckMyBallsHoney – after a lap 33 pass by Alonso on Magnussen.

Bring On Suzuka!

2017 Singapore Grand Prix – Post Race

The Formula 1 Grand Prix at Singapore is perhaps one of the most exotic races on the F1 calendar. It is a night race which takes place on a lighted street circuit on the streets of Singapore, and has a video game aspect to the broadcast. The political intrigue surrounding the country entices feelings of a still far off place with back alleys and lurking uncertainties. In this regard, the 2017 Singapore Grand Prix did not disappoint.

Rain was falling before the race as teams prepared their cars on the starting grid. The rain stopped by the start of the race, but it was wet. With Vettel on pole and Verstappen lined up to his left on the front row, the race start was a sprint to turn one. As Vettel launched for his start he started to fade sharply to the left in an attempt to block the Redbull of Max Verstappen. What Vettel did not realize was that the Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen was closing to the inside, and the gap between the three cars did close rather quickly. By the time they reached turn 1 the three cars smashed and were out of the race. I must say that I did predict that Vettel nor Verstappen would make it past turn 1. Max and Seb have similar approaches to dealing with aggression; their fists are already clinched and ready to throw. Clearly it was Vettels fault. But I digress…

As to the race… Romain Grosjean get the Haas F1 Fans Mail Man Award f.or delivering points to Gene Haas. In a very ho hum fashion Romain Grosjean qualified 15th. He just squeaked into the second qualifying round as his teammate Kevin Magnussen did not and started 16th. But in the end Grosjean finished in 9th place and earned 2 points for both himself and the Haas F1 Team.

Kevin Magnussen did not have such a ho hum race but did not finish. On the 26th lap of the race the Haas Team decided to be the first team to try full dry tires. Kevin Magnussen pitted for a set of Ultrasoft Pirelli’s and his lap times began to drop significantly. But despite his jump in speed he never really capitalized on the improvement. The rest of the field jumped to dry tires and Magnussen remained in the P13 position. On the 51st lap of the race KMags lost the hybrid drive in his Haas VF-17, and his day was done.

So Haas gets 2 points… in 8th place for the constructors championship with 37 points.  In two weeks, Malaysia!

2017 CONSTRUCTOR STANDINGS

 

2017 Hungarian Grand Prix – Race Review

The 2017 Hungarian Grand Prix is in the books for the Haas F1 Team…. and that is a good place for it. After a few days of scheduled testing this week the team will all go home and take their FIA mandated vacations.

Performance for all three practice sessions for the Grand Prix weekend were uninspiring. Romain Grosjean achieved the best practice result and placed 15th in the third practice. Grosjean also qualified 15th for the race while Kevin Magnussen qualified 16th.

It was a good race. Daniel Riccardo was side swiped buy his team mate Max Verstappen on the very first lap. A radiator on Riccardo’s car was damaged and coolant was expressed on the car and track; his Redbull was broken, by another Redbull. Riccardo was pissed and beside himself to find restraint in the interview which followed immediately after returning to the paddock. It was the first “first lap” retirement of his career according to the NBC broadcast.

On lap 21 Magnussen was running 13th and Grosjean 16th when Haas race control informed Grosjean that he had “low tire pressure on the left front”.. his response… “wonderful”. Grosjean pits and all seems right with the broadcast. Just as Leigh Diffy mentions that it “has not been a good weekend for Haas”, Roman Grosjean was instructed to “stop the car”…

…and the Haas VR17 drops a big turd on the track. It really stunk up the place…

It was not a pretty sight. They crossed a wheel nut on one of the new wheels, and released the car…. The crew member on the right rear of the car has his arms crosses in the universal marshaling language of STOP, as the car drove away! Hindsight being what it is, and as fans, we’re better off not getting into the shoulda, coulda, woulda’s of what happened…. Shit happens! Lap 21 and the number 8 car of Grosjean is out while the number 20 car of Kevin Magnussen was running in 13th .

While the Haas team held a debrief of the debacle, the Ferrari’s of Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen lead the race 1 -2 respectively. They finish the race in the same order. And with that win Vettel (202 points) established a 24 point gap between himself and Lewis Hamilton (188 points) of Mercedes, for the drivers construction.

Lewis Hamilton finished 4th. On lap 47 The Mercedes Team issued orders for Valtteri Bottas to relinquish his position. Hamilton was running strong and the team he was running fast enough to fight ahead with the Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen.  I’ll spare the details, but Lewis could not catch Kimi… Lewis Hamilton relinquished 3 championship points when he filed in behind Bottas on the last turn of the last lap and handed the third podium position back to Valtteri Bottas. It happened at the very last moment before crossing the finish line.

But from every race, we look for a take away. And for the 2017 Hungarian Grand Prix we found one, and we have Kevin Magnussen to thank for it. KMags delivered an 11th place finish., though the official race results placed Magnussen at 13th place. Magnussen received 2 points against his F1 Superlicense and a 5 second penalty for a race incident involving German driver Nico Hulkenberg.  Those 5 seconds cost him two positions on the result from 11th to 13th.

On lap 61 Magnussen forced Hulkenberg wide as the German tried to execute a pass on the outside. Magnussen defended and faded to the right as the Renault of Hulkenberg tried to pass Magnussen on a bending left sweeping turn.  Magnussen made what can be classified as a blocking move, and the yellow Renault was eating dust… I digress…

The 5 second penalty cost the team 2 meaningless positions on the final result. Magnussen received a 2 point penalty on his license. But Nico Hulkenberg was not happy.  Nico Hulkenberg called Magnussen “the most unsporting driver”… Haas F1 Team boss Gunther Steiner came to his drivers defense calling Hulkenberg “a bully”.  But Magnussen’s response to Hulkenberg was cataclysmic in its impact… and an all timer!

Kevin Magnussen told Nico Hulkenberg to “suck my balls honey”…

Aside from delivering social media gold to the F1 world… KMags set a no prisoners mentality.  Nothing brings a team together better than a common enemy… a chip they can carry around over their vacation break.

From a racing perspective, the race was meaningless. The Haas Team is in 7th place for the constructors championship with 29 points. Renault is behind them in 8th with 26 points. Last year the team finished the season with 29 points, so They’ve scored level with last years totals, and we still have the entire second half of the season ahead of us.

But here we are in the second year for the American team. They are leading Renault. Renault built it’s first purpose built race car in 1907, The Racing Roadster. That car went on to win the first ever race called a “Grand Prix”.

So the Haas F1 Team will enter their sophomore summer break amidst a bit of controversy.  Kevin Magnussen is telling the competition to “suckmyballshoney” and the Haas fans love it. The @HaasF1Fans twitter feed was alive with some “Vikings” ready to jump in on the fight. That is a clan I will not mess with, and that is the message that The Haas F1 Team is sending…

So enjoy your break from F1 everyone. Look for HaasF1Fans on Facebook and twitter.

2017 Austrian Grand Prix – Race Review

With a waft of summer edelweiss in the air, Romain Grosjean finished 6th place in the Austrian Grand Prix with his Haas F1 Team car. With the finish Grosjean claims 8 more points and stands with a total of 18 points for the year in the 2017 F1 Drivers championship. He’s tied with the Williams of Lance Stroll and the Renault of Nico Hulkenberg  who also have 18 points for positions 11 thru 13. The other Haas car of Kevin Magnussen sits in that 14th spot with 11 points.

The Haas F1 Team has solidified their hold on the 7th spot in the constructors championship. Renault entered this race with 18 points to the 21 of Haas. Those yellow Renault cars could not keep up and finished out of the top 10 and therefore score no points. The deficit of  by the French team will allow the Americans to make a leap in pursuit of the next constructor in the standings, Toro Rosso. With 33 points, the Toro Roso’s of Carlos Sainz and Daniil Kvyat are loosing ground to the Haas Team… the game is afoot.

As for the race… Romain Grosjean was fast all week. Both of the Haas Cars were in the top 10 for all three practice sessions leading up to qualifying. Grosjean Qualified 7th, and started 6th, when Lewis Hamilton was bumped back 5 grid spots for a transmission swap penalty. Kevin Magnussen experienced a rear suspension failure during the first session of qualifying.  Despite not completing the the first qualifying session he still completed a lap fast enough to place him 15th on the grid…

In the world of woulda, coulda, shoulda.  KMags shoulda  scored points. His pre-race bout with the gremlin stick continued into the race as smoke began to pour from the rear of the Dane’s Ferrari in the 29th lap.  With a race distance of 71 laps, Magnesium woulda had plenty of time to advance one more position into the top 10 and the points. With both Toro Rosso’s and Renault’s finishing way back, this mechanical failure can directly attribute to the loss of at least one point. Despite the lack of points, both the driver and car demonstrated that they have the pace to lead the mid pack.

Romain Grosjean gets the Mailman award… he carried the mail and delivered 8 points for Gene Haas. Grosjean maintained his relative position the entire race.  He nor the team made any mistakes and the car was fast. The Ferrari powered Haas VF-17 is proving to be a fast car. And did anyone notice… no mention of brakes from Grosjean. Has Haas worked out the brake problems on the number 08 car? We shall see.

The next stop for the F1 circus is Silverstone and the British Grand Prix. Let’s see if the the Haas F1 Team can maintain the pace of fast, mistake free racing and race craft and conquer that 6th position ion the constructors championship from Toro Rosso…

Until then……. tally ho!

2017 Monaco Grand Prix qualifying – Romain Grosjean Shines!

Romain Grosjean qualified 8th for the Monaco Grand Prix. The Haas  car performed well despite a very near miss by Grosjean when he spun at Mirabeau during the second stage of qualifying.

Both Grosjean and the Haas car performed well. the car also performed well for Kevin Magnussen. KMags was on an absolute flier during Q2 when he was blocked on track by none other than the….. Languishing Lewis Hamilton. As a result, Magnussen will start the race in P13.

If ever there was an opportunity for the Haas F1 Team to campaign two cars in a third stage of qualifying, it was today.  The cars of  Force India driven by Sergio Perez and the Toro Roso car of Carlos Sainz both out paced the Haas machine of Grosjean. This keeps Haas third in that pecking order behind the leaders. But the car has out performed most fans expectations. Maybe I’ll read about brake problems, but I’ve not heard a peep of the “B” word…

Regarding Lewis……

I don’t think the problem was the car. He seemed to be over inputting everything. The oversteer had him sideways. And all of that vertical slip is time…. and if piled up in heaps. He knows this track as well as anyone. His teammate was first after the Ferrari’s. Lewis can tend to be a bit of emotional about things at times while in the cockpit. That emotion generally serves him well. We’ve seen Lewis tear up the field from the back of the grid. But no one does that at Monaco…

Regarding Pole…. Kimi Raikkonen was brilliant. 4/100’s of a second separate the first 3 cars of Raikkonen, Vettel, and Bottas. The Ferrari’s were delivering top performance for their drivers. Sebastian Vettel was grabbing all of the attention before qualifying. He, Like Hamilton, have a storied record at Monaco, but only has one win in 2011. Hamilton has won the Monaco Grand Prix twice, in 2008 and last years 2016 race.

As you may recall, Hamilton;s 2016 victory was tainted with the controversy of Justin Bieber.  Upon taking his magnum of victory Campaign, he gave the first sip to Bieber. The 2017 Monaco Grand Prix promises to be a Bieber Free Event… as Lewis has no shot at a victory. His best hope is for attrition at the front of the field.

But for the Haas F1 team? They are in a good position to score double points.There will be some failures in front of Magnussen.  He has had better than averages race starts and has been faster than his team mate at times. With some luck and effective strategy, the Haas team can see some success at the 2017 Monaco Grand Prix.

 

2017 SEASON 2

The 2017 Formula 1 racing season is upon us, and the second for the Haas F1 Team. Ten teams are gathered in Melbourne for the Australian Grand Prix.

Kevin Magnussen has joined Romain Grosjean as the second Haas F1 driver. I think KMags will be fantastic. He is equally if not more aggressive than his predecessor and has demonstrated better race day judgement.  There is not much we can talk about with the drivers. Their numbers and on track performance will say it all.

Roman Grosjean is easy to like and I believe still the best driver on the Haas F1 team. Esteban Gutierrez was a built choice that came along with the 2016 deal with Ferrari. Haas did not have much choice in that seat position. I believe Guiteeriez cost the team some points, but not any  positions in the teams 8th place in the 2016 Formula 1 Constructors Championship, with 29 points. The Toro Rosso F1 Team finished ahead of them in 7th place with 63 points.  No driver could have made a difference of 34 points.

I think Kevin Magnussen will prove to be the difference in 2017. I’m expecting the fight for points to be difficult, and the margins between team totals to be closer. When the margins are tight you bring in a closer, and KMags will prove to be the difference on that side of the garage and I do expect at least one dual points race. KMags is the closer!

The 2017 version of the Haas F1 car carries the VF17 nomenclature. VF stands for Very first and was originally used on their very first car for the 2016 season, the VF16. I guess Gene liked the sound of the name or just didn’t care, so we got the VF17. Next year we’ll probably get the VF18…

The Haas VF17 is striking.

Silver gunmetal Metallic Grey is featured. they are drawing from the same color pallet as last year, which is also the same for their NASCAR team. I was not a huge fan of last
years livery, through it did grow on me.    By the end of the 2016 season we had all become accustomed to the car. If you’ll recall, white started out as the predominating color and somewhere along the line it went to silver. Now here we are at a darker gray, and I really like it. I don’t like the black along the bottom of any car. The details of the car become increasing more difficult to see on TV with dark cars. I was aghast with the all black McLaren car with the splash of a red, the Nike swoop.

So I like the 2017 Haas F1 livery, but I do not love it. The dark gray is very close to that of the 2014 Sauber. Hands raised, who else thought “Sauber” when they saw the 2017 Haas car?

Haas does not sell a full range of automobiles to this world wide market, like Mercedes,  they’re selling C-N-C Milling Machines. Haas Automation has very little room for change in their color scheme. Moving away from the traditional color pallet does not serve the marketing of Haas Automation in any way.

Our expectations for future cars should be soundly set regarding the the color of any additional Haas cars. It would take a complete re-branding of Haas Automation to deep metallic Shelby Blue to give me the car I want. So I’ll stick with Red, grey and black. As long as that goose keeps laying golden eggs, I’m happy with gray cars.  It also means we’re safe from pink ones too.

The performance of the 2017 car is… eh, we don’t know. No one knows. Testing helps us break the field down into class sizable chunks. But so much can change throughout the season, and it does. The Haas F1 Team has proven that they can match any other team on the grid when it comes to “race day management”. And it is that overall management aspect which Gene Haas deliverd from day one that allowed him to take advantage of opportunities when they appeared. I highly suspect that the Renault Team will be at the front of the pack within one year. So the way I see it, the beginning of the year is the best opportunity the Haas Team will have to steal some points early.

Even towards the end of the 2016 season, the Mclaren’s were responsible for some of those 10th place finishes, which kept the Haas team from the points. the Haas team finished in 11th place, EIGHT times in 2016. There were other teams with at least a couple of 10th place finishes; Williams, Force India. But no one had more 11th place finishes than Haas F1….. yea us

 

The Renault F1 Team will be a formidable threat to Haas. In many ways this is like the first car from the Renault Team. Last years car was an homogenization of a chassis designed for a Mercedes Engine matched with a Renault power unit. It all depends on that Renault engine. The 2016 Ferrari  engines in those Haas cars did prove reliable. I don’t have the numbers in front of me, but I believe brakes were a bigger cause of race retirements than anything else… Brakes are technical and we’ll discuss that at another time. But with the demise of the Manor F1 Team, Haas has no one that they can really “kick around”. Every other team on the grid has strong backing and can provide competitive performance on race day

This is how Gary Anderson from Autosport weights the performance for the teams after testing… (he used his method of adjusting for variables like fuel load, tire type etc…

ADJUSTED LAP TIMES
1 Ferrari 1m19.202s
2 Mercedes 1m19.555s
3 Renault 1m20.146s
4 Red Bull 1m20.353s
5 Williams 1m20.876s
6 Sauber 1m21.374s
7 Haas 1m21.818s
8 Force India 1m22.059s
9 Toro Rosso 1m22.156s
10 McLaren 1m22.448s

What this indicates is a performance boost for the Ferrari teams.  Toro Rosso has jumped to Renault power while Force India has remained with Mercedes power.

So, who knows….. My prediction, the team finishes 8th again. This is going to be a much harder fought 8th place for the American car.