Chargement ...

Massa on top, Red Bull struggles

End of Day 3

Chargement ...

The penultimate day of winter testing saw teams arriving at the Bahrain International Circuit with a wildly divergent set of objectives. For some today was about long-run pace, others were concentrating on pure performance, yet more were still chasing reliability. Williams’ Felipe Massa recorded the fastest lap of the day and of the seven days completed in Bahrain so far – but there were many other stories.

Only Massa, Caterham’s Marcus Ericsson and Marussia’s Jules Bianchi were continuing from day two, the other eight teams elected to swap their race drivers. Nico Rosberg returned for Mercedes, Kimi Räikkönen for Ferrari and Kevin Magnussen for McLaren. Sebastian Vettel was back for Red Bull Racing, Romain Grosjean returned for Lotus and Nico Hülkenberg for Force India. Daniil Kvyat had the seat at Toro Rosso and Adrian Sutil at Sauber.

For Mercedes the day got off to a bad start before it begun. The team announced its overnight crew had diagnosed an engine problem and at 0400 decided to make a precautionary change. The W05 was in pieces at the scheduled start time of 0900. Rosberg eventually appeared on track at noon.

Caterham also had a heavy overnight schedule. A fire late on day two caused significant damage and the repair work was still ongoing as the start of day three approached. Ericsson’s delay, however, was less severe and he was out on track 40 minutes into the session.

By the time the CT05 appeared the session was already over for Sutil. On his installation lap the German driver coasted into the pitlane with a smoking Sauber and did not reappear. After that drama the first time of the day was set by Hülkenberg with a time of 1:38.845.

Massa took the top spot an hour into running with a lap of 1:38.603. Williams had announced they would be concentrating on performance so the presence of the Brazilian at the top of the order was no surprise. He improved on that time with a lap of 1:37.224 which led the way two hours into the session.

At that point neither Red Bull nor Lotus had put in an appearance. Vettel emerged from the garage half an hour before noon but his run lasted only half a lap before the RB10 ground to a halt. He tried again an hour later but this time the car failed before exiting the pitlane. It was pushed back to the garage not to emerge again.

“Given how well the car behaved yesterday we were anticipating a solid run for Seb today,” explained Red Bull race engineering co-ordinator Andy Damerum. “But almost as soon as he went out there was an electrical problem, which stopped him on track. We brought the car back, identified the issue – which is one other teams have had but which hadn’t affected us so far – and set about fixing it. We got ready for another run but this time the car stopped in pit lane. We brought it back again and discovered a leak, which we thought we could fix but it turned out it had caused enough damage that we weren’t able to go out again.”

Lotus faired somewhat better. Their morning delay was attributed to a wiring issue. It was rectified shortly before noon and Grosjean was able to begin his day’s work complete 33 laps before an MGU-K problem ended his session early.

“It wasn’t a perfect day!” said Grosjean. “It is true to say that we haven’t been as successful as we wished in our preparations so far. This doesn’t mean everything is lost or that it will be impossible for us to win races, but certainly we are behind schedule.”


The lunch break began a little earlier than planned as Bianchi caused a red flag, rolling to a stop at 1250. After lunch the session ran smoothly until Grosjean’s KERS issue caused the third and final red flag of the day with two hours remaining. After the restart, and on a warm afternoon in Bahrain, the pace picked up. Kvyat recorded Toro Rosso’s best lap of testing so far and went fastest with a lap of 1:36.113, though he only stayed at the top of the timesheet for ten minutes before Massa took a second and a half out of it with a lap of 1:34.450. Rosberg was making up for lost running and passed the 100-lap mark while setting 1:33.484 and with 15 minutes remaining looked like finishing top of the timesheet but Massa had time to respond and reclaimed the honour with a lap of 1:33.258 a few minutes before the close.

“We did a lot more performance work in the car which is something that we haven’t done so much of so far,” said Williams’ new recruit. “I’m really happy with the car and feel we found a good balance. We did so much work on the set-up but it is very important that we go to Australia prepared. Of course you are always happy when you see your name at the top in first place, but as well as performance, today was good for the mileage and reliability of the car which we know is needed for Australia. You can never be sure that you are 100% ready for the first race, but I feel that what we have done in these days testing has been important for making sure that we have a car that can not only get to the end of the race, but that will have good performance as well.”

Pre-season testing concludes tomorrow.

Pos.DriverTeamTimeGapLaps
01 F. Massa Williams FW36 1:33.258 99
02 N. Rosberg Mercedes F1 W05 1:33.484 +0.226 103
03 K. Raikkonen Ferrari F14 T 1:35.426 +2.168 87
04 K. Magnussen McLaren MP4-29 1:35.894 +2.636 88
05 D. Kvyat Toro Rosso STR9 1:36.113 +2.855 81
06 N. Hulkenberg Force India VJM07 1:36.205 +2.947 115
07 J. Bianchi Marussia MR03 1:37.087 +3.829 78
08 M. Ericsson Caterham CT05 1:38.083 +4.825 117
09 R. Grosjean Lotus E22 1:42.166 +8.908 33
10 A. Sutil Sauber C33 -:—.--- +-.--- 1
11 S. Vettel Red Bull RB10 -:—.--- +-.--- 1

Chargement ...

«Red Bull crisis returns with force in Bahrain

Bahrain II, Day 3: Sauber test report»

Formula 1 news


>F1 is regulating ’emotion’ out of the sport - Montezemolo

>Kerpen’s Michael Schumacher snub enrages brother

>F1 owner Liberty investigated over MotoGP deal

>Signing Hamilton ’a risk’ for Ferrari - Montezemolo

>Bottas already eyeing Cadillac seat for ’26

More Formula 1news