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Going to be an interesting grid

 

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The full extent of Lewis Hamilton's problems with his McLaren became apparent during today's opening practice sessions for Sunday's Australian grand prix. Apart from recording a disappointing 18th fastest time, the Englishman was overheard discussing the car's handling difficulties with his engineers when the radio conversation was broadcast on television.

 

Hamilton admitted that the McLaren was bottoming so badly on the bumps on the Albert Park circuit that he had difficulty seeing his braking points. "The car's bottoming out, I can barely see the marker boards," he said. An engineer replied: "Understood."

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All fun and drama already. B & B on the front row. Who would have thought.

 

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And in one of the most remarkable turnarounds in sporting history, the Brawn GP duo of Button and Barrichello will start from the front row for tomorrow's Australian Grand Prix.

 

As for Hamilton, after just scraping out of the opening 20-minute run by a mere 0.049 seconds, a drivetrain failure prevented him from taking to Melbourne's Albert Park track, on which he won last year, for Q2.

 

The 24-year-old will start from 15th, equalling his worst display in qualifying in last year's Italian Grand Prix when he misjudged the weather and the state of the Monza circuit.

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And he wins

 

 

 

Jenson Button secured a dream debut victory for the Brawn GP team after dominating the Australian Grand Prix.

 

The Englishman led throughout the race for his second Formula 1 win and team-mate Rubens Barrichello completed a Brawn one-two after a dramatic finish.

 

The Brazilian was promoted after Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and BMW's Robert Kubica collided while disputing second place with three laps to go.

 

Lewis Hamilton was an unexpected fourth behind Toyota's Jarno Trulli.

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I enjoyed the fact that beforehand, it wasnt clear who was going to do well.

 

It also demonstrated that Barrachello was competing in a demolision derby rather than F1, and still managed to finish second - a trbute to the strenght of the Brawn cars I think.

 

the use of the supersoft tyres by different teams at different times also made the last few laps unclear

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The most important thing of course must be that the BBC now they have it back are using the PROPER F1 theme (The Mac's song). And of course there's no ads. Now if only the racing would be good each time.... wink

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Lewis Hamilton and McLaren have been disqualified from the Australian grand prix after "misleading" stewards at the inquiry into the latter stages of the opening race of the season.

 

 

Hamilton finished fourth at Melbourne on Sunday before being upgraded to third after Jarno Trulli, of Toyota, was adjudged to have illegally overtaken the world champion under the yellow flag on the 57th lap of the race and handed a 25-second penalty, which relegated the Italian driver from third to 12th place.

 

 

However, Trulli's podium finish has now been reinstated on appeal and Hamilton and McLaren's classification annulled after the 23-year-old provided "evidence deliberately misleading to the stewards at the hearing on 29 March".

 

 

The decision was explained in a statement which read: "The stewards having considered the new elements presented to them from the 2009 Australian formula one grand prix, consider that driver No 1 Lewis Hamilton and the competitor Vodafone McLaren Mercedes acted in a manner prejudicial to the conduct of the event by providing evidence deliberately misleading to the stewards at the hearing on Sunday 29 March 2009, a breach of Article 151c of the International Sporting Code.

 

 

"Under Article 158 of the International Sporting Code the driver No 1 Lewis Hamilton and the competitor Vodafone McLaren Mercedes are excluded from the race classification for the 2009 Australian grand prix and the classification is amended accordingly."

 

doh

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Lewis Hamilton's reputation for sporting fairness is in tatters after he was found guilty of lying and cheating his way to third place in last Sunday's Australian Grand Prix. And now the world champion has been fined for speeding in the pits.

 

lol

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Not since about 1970!! Team orders and radio telemetry mean that the team in the pits has much more say in what happens. I wish they'd just give the money they spend developing and transporting these "fighter jets without wings" to someone whose major concern is the provenance of the next meal.

 

In total, the amount spent by F1 (in R & D, transport, accommodation, fuel and associated costs) would be the equivalent of the GNP of a small country!

 

I'll get the figures later.

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