2007 FORMULA ONE SEASON


Portal
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The '2007 Formula One season' is the 58th FIA Formula One World Championship season. It began on 18 March and is set to end on 21 October after seventeen Grands Prix.
The 2007 season is significant in that it will herald the end of the existing Concorde Agreement between the existing Formula One constructors and Bernie Ecclestone. In particular, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Honda (collectively the Grand Prix Manufacturers' Association) have a number of outstanding disagreements with the FIA and Ecclestone on financial and technical grounds. They had threatened to boycott Formula One from the 2008 season onwards and instead stage their own rival series, before signing a memorandum of understanding (MoU) at the 2006 Spanish Grand Prix.[1]
The 2007 Australian Grand Prix was the first time since the 1986 Spanish Grand Prix that there was a Formula One field without a Cosworth engine, as well as the first Grand Prix to have a driver of Afro-Caribbean ancestry in the field.
On 26 February Honda F1 announced that they would run with a new "Earth livery" on their RA107 car, the first time since 1968, when sponsorship in the sport became widespread,[2] that a team might run sponsor-free for an entire season.
A major talking point of the season has been an espionage controversy involving Ferrari and McLaren.
Fernando Alonso - Current defending Formula 1 champion

Lewis Hamilton achieved nine consecutive podium finishes at the start of his career, which started in this season, more than any other driver in the history of the sport. Lewis currently leads the Drivers' Championship.


Contents
Pre-season testing
Teams and drivers
New car launches
Formula One 2007 race schedule
Changes
Rule changes
Driver changes
Team changes
Television coverage
Circuits
Results and standings
Grands Prix
Drivers
Drivers statistics
Qualifying results
Constructors
Constructors statistics
Rumours and speculation
Driver rumours
Races
References
External links

Pre-season testing


Pre-season testing began in November 2006 at the Circuit de Catalunya, with ten of the eleven teams participating in the test sessions. The most notable absentees were Fernando Alonso and Kimi Räikkönen, who were still under contract at Renault and McLaren respectively. Jenson Button was also absent as he had suffered a hairline fracture on his ribs after a go-karting accident in preparations for the November tests. Lewis Hamilton made his first appearance in a McLaren since being confirmed as Alonso's team-mate for 2007.
Felipe Massa topped the times on the first two days of testing. Massa's testing partner, Luca Badoer, took the fastest time on the third day, although interest was on the fact that double World Champion Mika Häkkinen joined Hamilton and de la Rosa at McLaren for a one off test, although the Finnish driver was over three seconds slower then Badoer's time, completing 79 laps of the Spanish circuit. He hopes to be of continued benefit to McLaren over the coming winter.
The other big story of 2007 is the return to a single tyre formula (Bridgestone). It is possible that this accounts for some of the reason why Ferrari led the most recent test, although it has been claimed by Bridgestone that the 2007 tyre is of a completely new build, thus minimising any real benefit for the 2006 Bridgestone teams (Ferrari, Toyota, Williams, Midland/Spyker and Super Aguri).
Toyota was the only team out for the fourth day of testing at Barcelona, as the Japanese works team chose to miss the first day of testing. Both Ralf Schumacher and Jarno Trulli's fastest laps were quicker than Massa and Badoer's times during the previous three sessions. Testing resumed on December 6 at Jerez, with the majority of teams attending the session. Both Ferraris of Massa and Badoer were first and second fastest, with McLaren's Lewis Hamilton making up the top three in third. Hamilton improved on his position the following day by taking the fastest time, a second faster than Renault's Giancarlo Fisichella.
Japanese works teams Honda and Toyota topped the times for the next two days of testing: Honda's Rubens Barrichello and Toyota's Franck Montagny were fastest, although Toyota had the Jerez track to themselves when Montagny took the fastest time. Heikki Kovalainen and Pedro de la Rosa took the fastest times on the fourth and fifth day of testing at Jerez. Also of note, on the last day of testing Fernando Alonso made his Mclaren testing debut after an agreement with manager Flavio Briatore. This did not call for an end to his agreement (which ended on the 31st of December).

Teams and drivers


The following teams and drivers have been confirmed for the 2007 Formula One season. Drivers are numbered as per the official FIA 2007 entry list.[3] All team details are as per the Formula 1 Official Website, except where noted. Note that there is no driver number 13.
EntrantConstructorChassisEngine1TyreNoDriverNoTest driver(s)2
Vodafone McLaren Mercedes McLaren MP4-22 Mercedes FO 108T 1 Fernando Alonso 31 Pedro de la Rosa
Gary Paffett
2 Lewis Hamilton
ING Renault F1 Team Renault R27 Renault RS27 3 Giancarlo Fisichella 32 Ricardo Zonta
Nelson Piquet Jr.
4 Heikki Kovalainen
Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro Ferrari F2007 Ferrari 056 5 Felipe Massa 33 Luca Badoer
Marc Gené[4]
6 Kimi Räikkönen
Honda Racing F1 Team Honda RA107 Honda RA807E 7 Jenson Button 34 'Christian Klien'
James Rossiter
Mike Conway[5]
8 Rubens Barrichello
BMW Sauber F1 Team BMW Sauber F1.07 BMW P86/7 9 Nick Heidfeld 35 'Sebastian Vettel'
Timo Glock
10 Robert Kubica
Sebastian Vettel[6]
Panasonic Toyota Racing Toyota TF107 Toyota RVX-07 11 Ralf Schumacher 36 Franck Montagny
Kohei Hirate[7]
Kamui Kobayashi7
12 Jarno Trulli
Red Bull Racing Red Bull RB3 Renault RS27 14 David Coulthard 37 Robert Doornbos
Michael Ammermüller
15 Mark Webber
AT&T Williams Williams FW29 Toyota RVX-07 16 Nico Rosberg 38 Narain Karthikeyan
'Kazuki Nakajima'
17 Alexander Wurz
Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR2 Ferrari 056 18 Vitantonio Liuzzi 39 ''None''
19 Scott Speed
Sebastian Vettel
Etihad Aldar Spyker F1 Team Spyker F8-VII Ferrari 056 20 Adrian Sutil 40 Mohamed Fairuz Fauzy
Adrián Vallés
Markus Winkelhock
Giedo van der Garde
21 Christijan Albers
Markus Winkelhock
Sakon Yamamoto[8]
Super Aguri F1 Super Aguri SA07 Honda RA807E 22 Takuma Sato 41 Sakon Yamamoto
James Rossiter[9]
23 Anthony Davidson

1 All engines conform to the Formula 1 2.4L V8 specifications introduced in 2006.


2 Test drivers in bold have taken part in Friday practices during Grand Prix weekends
New car launches

The following teams launched their 2007 entries as below.
ConstructorChassisLaunch DateLaunch Location
Toyota TF107 January 12 Cologne, Germany
Ferrari F2007 January 14 Fiorano Circuit, Maranello, Italy
McLaren-Mercedes MP4-22 January 15 Circuit de Valencia, Spain
BMW Sauber F1.07 January 16 Circuit de Valencia, Spain
Renault R27 January 24 Amsterdam, Netherlands
RBR-Renault RB3 January 26 Circuit de Catalunya, Spain
Williams-Toyota FW29 February 2 Grove, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom
Spyker-Ferrari F8-VII February 5 Silverstone Circuit, United Kingdom
STR-Ferrari STR2 February 13 Circuit de Catalunya, Spain
Honda RA107 February 26 London, United Kingdom
Aguri-Honda SA07 March 14 Melbourne, Australia

Formula One 2007 race schedule


Rd. Official Race Title Grand Prix Circuit City / Location Date Time
Local GMT
1 ING Australian Grand Prix Australian GP Albert Park Grand Prix Circuit Melbourne 18 March 14:00 03:00
2 Petronas Malaysian Grand Prix Malaysian GP Sepang International Circuit Kuala Lumpur 08 April 15:00 07:00
3 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix Bahrain GP Bahrain International Circuit Sakhir 15 April 14:30 11:30
4 Gran Premio de España Telefónica Spanish GP Circuit de Catalunya Barcelona 13 May 14:00 12:00
5 Grand Prix de Monaco Monaco GP Circuit de Monaco Monte-Carlo 27 May 14:00 12:00
6 Grand Prix du Canada Canadian GP Circuit Gilles Villeneuve Montreal 10 June 13:00 17:00
7 United States Grand Prix United States GP Indianapolis Motor Speedway Indianapolis 17 June 13:00 17:00
8 Grand Prix de France French GP Circuit de Nevers Magny-Cours 01 July 14:00 12:00
9 Santander British Grand Prix British GP Silverstone Circuit Silverstone 08 July 13:00 12:00
10 Grand Prix of Europe European GP Nürburgring Nürburg 22 July 14:00 12:00
11 Magyar Nagydíj Hungarian GP Hungaroring Budapest 05 August 14:00 12:00
12 Petrol Ofisi Turkish Grand Prix Turkish GP Istanbul Park Istanbul 26 August 15:00 12:00
13 Gran Premio d'Italia Italian GP Autodromo Nazionale Monza Monza 09 September 14:00 12:00
14 ING Belgian Grand Prix Belgian GP Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps Spa 16 September 14:00 12:00
15 Fuji Television Japanese Grand Prix Japanese GP Fuji Speedway Oyama 30 September 13:30 04:30
16 Sinopec Chinese Grand Prix Chinese GP Shanghai International Circuit Shanghai 07 October 14:00 06:00
17 Grande Prêmio do Brasil Brazilian GP Autódromo José Carlos Pace São Paulo 21 October 14:00 16:00


★ On 29 August 2006, The FIA published a provisional calendar for the 2007 Formula One season. The San Marino and European Grands Prix were excluded, although the European round would later make a comeback (see below).[10] The final calendar (above), which confirmed that the San Marino Grand Prix would not return, was released on October 18, 2006.[11]

★ For the first time in nearly half a century, there will not be a German Grand Prix in 2007 after the 2 Grands Prix previously held in Germany begin to alternate between Hockenheim and Nürburgring. Hockenheim controls the descriptor "German Grand Prix" and an agreement could not be reached between the two circuits for the naming rights. The Nürburgring event will therefore retain its usual Grand Prix of Europe title.[12]

★ It had been suggested that the Italian Grand Prix might do the same, swapping between Monza and Imola, but this now appears to have been rejected with the possibility that Imola could again host the San Marino Grand Prix in 2008.

★ After twenty years, the Japanese Grand Prix will move from the Honda-owned Suzuka Circuit to Toyota's rebuilt Fuji Speedway, a circuit that F1 has not raced at since 1977.

★ For the first time since 1975, all races are held in different countries (only one race for any one nation).

Changes


Rule changes


★ Although the FIA had planned to introduce a regulation single tyre manufacturer from 2008, there will be a sole supplier (Bridgestone) from 2007 to 2010, since Bridgestone's only rival, Michelin, ended their participation in Formula 1 after the 2006 season.

★ Tyres are supplied in accordance with the revised Sporting Regulations, which provide for a total of 14 sets of dry weather tyres per driver over the race weekend: four sets for Friday only, and 10 for the rest of the weekend.
top: harder tyre (officially named the 'prime' tyre), bottom: softer tyre (the 'option' tyre), at the Malaysian Grand Prix.


★ Also, during the race, both compounds of tyre (hard and soft) have to be used at least once during the race. Initially, in the Australian Grand Prix, soft tyres were marked with a white spot. However, this was difficult to see when the car was in motion and, as of the Malaysian Grand Prix, one of the four grooves in the soft compound tyre is painted white.[13]

★ The teams finishing 5th–11th in the previous seasons' Constructors' Championship are no longer be allowed to run a third car on Friday following a rule change.[14] The teams that finish 1st–4th are already banned from doing so.

★ Engine development is frozen from the 2006 Japanese Grand Prix, with these engines being used for the whole of 2007 and 2008. This is described as engine "homologation" by the FIA. It was previously set to be introduced in 2008.[15]

★ All cars are fitted with red, blue and yellow cockpit lights. The purpose is to give drivers information concerning track signals or conditions. The lights must be LEDs each with a minimum diameter of 5mm and which are fitted in order that they are directly in the driver’s normal line of sight.[16]

★ In order to give rescue crews an immediate indication of accident severity each car must be fitted with a warning light which is connected to the FIA data logger. The light must face upwards and be recessed into the top of the survival cell no more than 150mm from the car centre line and the front of the cockpit opening and as near to the marshal neutral switch as is practical.16

★ The two Friday practice sessions expand from 60 minutes to 90 minutes. Any team is allowed to use two cars, which may be driven by either the two race drivers or a nominated third driver.Longer Friday practice among 2007 changes. Retrieved October 19, 2006.

★ The engine penalty is now only apply in the second day of the grand prix weekends. Any engine change in the first day is not penalised.Longer Friday practice among 2007 changes. Retrieved October 19, 2006.

★ No car is allowed to enter the pits to refuel during a safety car period until all cars are in the group following the safety car and they have been advised that the pit lane is now open. This prevents drivers from racing to the pits immediately after a safety car is deployed. In addition, any lapped cars in front of a car on the lead lap are required to pass the safety car and restart at the end of the line-up instead of maintaining their physical position.[17]

★ The Formula 1 teams have unanimously agreed to the voluntary early introduction of the testing agreement scheduled for 2008. This limits each team to an annual limit of 30,000 km.

★ The team's second car now has to run with a yellow coloured roll bar instead of a black one. The first cars will still run with a red/orange roll bar. This is intended to help spectators distinguish between first and second cars at further distances.
Driver changes


★ 2005 and 2006 World Champion Fernando Alonso will drive for McLaren starting in 2007 after 5 years at Renault.

Juan Pablo Montoya, who was a McLaren driver until aftermath of the 2006 United States Grand Prix will be driving in the NASCAR Nextel Cup series for 2007, effectively ending his Formula 1 career, as announced on July 9, 2006.

★ On August 2, 2006 Williams announced that test and reserve driver Alexander Wurz would step up to a race seat for 2007, replacing Australian Mark Webber.

★ On August 7, 2006, Red Bull Racing announced their 2007 driver line-up of David Coulthard and Mark Webber, displacing Christian Klien.

★ On August 7, 2006, BMW Sauber announced that Jacques Villeneuve's contract has been terminated immediately and for the rest of the season would be replaced by test driver Robert Kubica. Kubica was later announced on October 19, 2006 to retain the race seat for the 2007 season, with Sebastian Vettel remaining as the team's test driver. On December 21, 2006 BMW announced GP2 driver Timo Glock as their second test driver.

★ On September 6, 2006, Renault confirmed Heikki Kovalainen as the team's replacement for Fernando Alonso.

★ On September 10, 2006, Scuderia Ferrari confirmed Kimi Räikkönen as a replacement for the retiring Michael Schumacher.

★ On November 15, 2006, Super Aguri confirmed Anthony Davidson as Sakon Yamamoto's replacement.

★ On November 24, 2006, McLaren confirmed Lewis Hamilton as their second driver.

★ On December 21, 2006, Spyker confirmed Adrian Sutil as their first driver.

★ On July 10, 2007, Spyker announced that Christijan Albers would no longer be driving for the team. The given reason was a failure to pay sponsorship monies due. Markus Winkelhock will race Spyker's second car at the European Grand Prix.

★ On July 25, 2007 Spyker confirmed Japanese driver Sakon Yamamoto would compete in the remaining seven Grand Prix for them.8

★ On July 31, 2007 Scuderia Toro Rosso replaced Scott Speed with BMW test driver Sebastien Vettel following an alleged physical altercation between Speed and STR Team Principal Franz Tost.[18]
Team changes


Ferrari technical director, Ross Brawn, was to take a sabbatical year for 2007, after 10 seasons at the Italian team. However, it was later announced that he is to leave the team,[19] although he has stated he wishes to work with the team in future.

McLaren will change their name to Vodafone McLaren Mercedes after signing a primary sponsorship deal with the telecommunications company late in 2005.

★ With the loss of Vodafone, Scuderia Ferrari will begin work with Alice, a brand of Telecom Italia who will join the team next year.

Mild Seven confirmed that they would not renew their contract with Renault following its conclusion at the end of 2006 and current European tobacco laws.[20]

British American Tobacco's Lucky Strike and 555 brands ceased to sponsor the Honda F1 team, leaving them to seek another primary sponsor.

Williams changed their engines from Cosworth to Toyota in a three-year deal.[21] Contrary to recent speculation, the engines will not be rebadged as Lexus.[22]

★ On September 9, MF1 Racing was officially sold to a Dutch-Arab consortium owned by Michiel Mol, along with the aid of Spyker Cars. The team has officially been renamed Spyker MF1 Team, keeping the ''MF1'' for the rest of the season due to Concorde Agreement rules.[23]

★ On September 30, Spyker announced that their engines supplier would be Ferrari.[24]

★ On October 16, Renault confirmed that the Dutch banking company, ING, would become their main sponsor to replace Mild Seven.[25]

★ On October 20, Williams announced AT&T as their new main sponsor.[26]

★ On October 24, Spyker announced they would change their name from ''Spyker MF1 Team'' to ''Spyker F1'' from 2007 onwards, subject to all other teams giving their agreement.[27][28]

★ On October 31, Red Bull confirmed their engine situation for 2007. Renault engines will be used for Red Bull Racing, while Scuderia Toro Rosso will use Ferrari engines.[29]

★ On March 15, 2007, Spyker announced their new title sponsor for the 2007 season: United Arab Emirates airline company Etihad Airways.[30]
Television coverage


Formula One Management will become the sole host broadcaster for all 17 Grands Prix for the first time in 2007. Coverage will be produced in anamorphic 16:9 widescreen and a High Definition feed will also be made available to broadcasters, although it's unclear as yet which countries, if any in 2007, this will be broadcast to.[31][32][33]

ITV Sport, RTL Television, Premiere, TF1 and TV3[34] were among the first broadcasters to provide a standard 16:9 widescreen programme at the opening race in Australia.

★ For the United States TV coverage, except Speed Channel, FOX also broadcast 4 Formula One races. Those were the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix, 2007 United States Grand Prix, 2007 French Grand Prix and 2007 British Grand Prix. The 2007 Canadian Grand Prix and 2007 United States Grand Prix were televised live.
Circuits


★ A new chicane has been inserted into the straight between Europcar and New Holland (final corner) at the Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona. This was installed in order to slow the cars down before the long main straight, and provide more overtaking opportunities into turn 1.[35]

★ Spa has also undergone track changes, with a new paddock area, a reprofiled Bus Stop Chicane, an extension of the start-finish straight and a change to La Source hairpin.[36]

★ The largest-scale repair in last 35 years will be done to Autódromo José Carlos Pace in São Paulo, Brazil, to fundamentally solve problem of the asphalt.[37][38] All present asphalt will be removed and replaced with new asphalt.[39] At the same time, the pit lane entrance will be enhanced to improve safety.[40] The circuit is closed and no event held for five months to work, from June to October, until immediately before the event.[41]

Results and standings


Grands Prix

Rd. Grand Prix Pole Position Fastest Lap Winning Driver Constructor Report
1 Australian Grand Prix Kimi Räikkönen Kimi Räikkönen Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari Report
2 Malaysian Grand Prix Felipe Massa Lewis Hamilton Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes Report
3 Bahrain Grand Prix Felipe Massa Felipe Massa Felipe Massa Ferrari Report
4 Spanish Grand Prix Felipe Massa Felipe Massa Felipe Massa Ferrari Report
5 Monaco Grand Prix Fernando Alonso Fernando Alonso Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes Report
6 Canadian Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton Fernando Alonso Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes Report
7 United States Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton Kimi Räikkönen Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes Report
8 French Grand Prix Felipe Massa Felipe Massa Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari Report
9 British Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton Kimi Räikkönen Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari Report
10 European Grand Prix Kimi Räikkönen Felipe Massa Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes Report
11 Hungarian Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton
Kimi Räikkönen Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes

Report
12 Turkish Grand Prix Felipe Massa Kimi Räikkönen Felipe Massa Ferrari Report
13 Italian Grand Prix Fernando Alonso Fernando Alonso Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes Report
14 Belgian Grand Prix Report
15 Japanese Grand Prix Report
16 Chinese Grand Prix Report
17 Brazilian Grand Prix Report



Fernando Alonso qualified as pole position but was demoted 5 places due to blocking Lewis Hamilton in the pit lane.[42]



McLaren were not awarded constructors points or a trophy on the podium.
Drivers

Pos Driver AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA Pts
1 Lewis Hamilton 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 3 3 9 1 5 2 '92'
2 Fernando Alonso 2 1 5 3 1 7 2 7 2 1 4 3 1 '89'
3 Kimi Räikkönen 1 3 3Ret 8 5 4 1 1Ret 2 2 3 '74'
4 Felipe Massa 6 5 1 1 3 DSQ 3 2 5 2 13 1Ret '69'
5 Nick Heidfeld 4 4 4Ret 6 2Ret 5 6 6 3 4 4 '52'
6 Robert KubicaRet 18 6 4 5RetINJ 4 4 7 5 8 5 '33'
7 Heikki Kovalainen 10 8 9 7 13
4 5 15 7 8 8 6 7 '21'
8 Giancarlo Fisichella 5 6 8 9 4 DSQ 9 6 8 10 12 9 12 '17'
9 Alexander WurzRet 9 11Ret 7 3 10 14 13 4 14 11 13 '13'
10 Nico Rosberg 7Ret 10 6 12 10 16
9 12Ret 7 7 6 '12'
11 Mark Webber 13 10RetRetRet 9 7 12Ret 3 9Ret 9 '8'
12 David CoulthardRetRetRet 5 14RetRet 13 11 5 11 10Ret '8'
13 Jarno Trulli 9 7 7Ret 15Ret 6RetRet 13 10 16 11 '7'
14 Ralf Schumacher 8 15 12Ret 16 8Ret 10RetRet 6 12 15 '5'
15 Takuma Sato 12 13Ret 8 17 6Ret 16 14Ret 15 18 16 '4'
16 Jenson Button 15 12Ret 12 11Ret 12 8 10RetRet 13 8 '2'
17 Sebastian Vettel 8 16 19 18 '1'
18 Rubens Barrichello 11 11 13 10 10 12Ret 11 9 11 18 17 10 '0'
19 Scott SpeedRet 14RetRet 9Ret 13RetRetRet '0'
20 Anthony Davidson 16 16 16
11 18 11 11RetRet 12Ret 14 14 '0'
21 Adrian Sutil 17Ret 15 13RetRet 14 17RetRet 17 21 19 '0'
22 Christijan AlbersRetRet 14 14 19
Ret 15Ret 15 '0'
23 Vitantonio Liuzzi 14 17RetRetRetRet 17
Ret 16
RetRet 15 17 '0'
24 Sakon YamamotoRet 20 20 '0'
Markus WinkelhockRet '0'
Pos Driver AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA Pts



Driver did not finish but was classified, having completed more than 90% of race distance.
Drivers statistics

Pos Driver Constructor(s) Starts Wins Podiums Poles F.Laps Points
1 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 13 3 11 4 1 '92'
2 Fernando Alonso McLaren-Mercedes 13 4 9 2 3 '89'
3 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 13 3 8 2 5 '74'
4 Felipe Massa Ferrari 13 3 7 5 4 '69'
5 Nick Heidfeld BMW Sauber 13 0 2 0 0 '52'
6 Robert Kubica BMW Sauber 12 0 0 0 0 '33'
7 Heikki Kovalainen Renault 13 0 0 0 0 '21'
8 Giancarlo Fisichella Renault 13 0 0 0 0 '17'
9 Alexander Wurz Williams-Toyota 13 0 1 0 0 '13'
10 Nico Rosberg Williams-Toyota 13 0 0 0 0 '12'
11 Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 13 0 1 0 0 '8'
12 David Coulthard Red Bull-Renault 13 0 0 0 0 '8'
13 Jarno Trulli Toyota 13 0 0 0 0 '7'
14 Ralf Schumacher Toyota 13 0 0 0 0 '5'
15 Takuma Sato Super Aguri-Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '4'
16 Jenson Button Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '2'
17 Sebastian Vettel BMW Sauber
Toro Rosso-Ferrari
4 0 0 0 0 '1'
18 Rubens Barrichello Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '0'
19 Scott Speed Toro Rosso-Ferrari 10 0 0 0 0 '0'
20 Anthony Davidson Super Aguri-Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '0'
21 Adrian Sutil Spyker-Ferrari 13 0 0 0 0 '0'
22 Christijan Albers Spyker-Ferrari 9 0 0 0 0 '0'
23 Vitantonio Liuzzi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 13 0 0 0 0 '0'
24 Sakon Yamamoto Spyker-Ferrari 3 0 0 0 0 '0'
Markus Winkelhock Spyker-Ferrari 1 0 0 0 0 '0'

Qualifying results

Car
No
Driver AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA
1 Fernando Alonso 2 2 4 2 1 2 2 10 3 2 6 4 1
2 Lewis Hamilton 4 4 2 4 2 1 1 2 1 10 1 2 2
3 Giancarlo Fisichella 6 12 7 10 4 9 10 5 8 13 13 10 15
4 Heikki Kovalainen 13 11 12 8 15 22 6 6 7 7 11 7 7
5 Felipe Massa 16 1 1 1 3 5 3 1 4 3 14 1 3
6 Kimi Räikkönen 1 3 3 3 16 4 4 3 2 1 3 3 5
7 Jenson Button 14 15 16 14 10 15 13 12 18 17 17 21 10
8 Rubens Barrichello 17 12 15 12 9 13 15 13 14 14 18 22 12
9 Nick Heidfeld 3 5 5 7 7 3 5 7 9 4 2 6 4
10 Robert Kubica 5 7 6 5 8 8INJ 4 5 5 7 5 6
10/19 Sebastian Vettel 7 20 18 16
11 Ralf Schumacher 9 9 14 17 20 18 12 11 6 9 5 16 18
12 Jarno Trulli 8 8 9 6 14 10 8 8 10 8 8 9 9
14 David Coulthard 19 13 21 9 13 14 11 16 12 20 10 13 20
15 Mark Webber 7 10 8 19 6 6 9 14 11 6 9 12 11
16 Nico Rosberg 12 6 10 11 5 7 14 9 17 11 4 8 8
17 Alexander Wurz 15 19 11 18 11 19 17 18 13 12 12 14 13
18 Vitantonio Liuzzi 20 18 16 12 12 19 19 17 16 19 16 15 19
19 Scott Speed 18 17 19 22 18 16 20 15 15 18
20 Adrian Sutil 21 21 20 20 19 20 21 21 20 21 21 19 21
21 Christijan Albers 22 22 22 22 22 22 22 20 22
21 Markus Winkelhock 22
21 Sakon Yamamoto 22 20 22
22 Takuma Sato 10 14 17 13 21 11 18 22 21 16 19 17 17
23 Anthony Davidson 11 18 13 15 17 17 16 19 19 15 15 11 14
Car
No
Driver AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA

Constructors

Pos Constructor Car
No.
AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA Pts
1 McLaren-Mercedes 1 2 1 5 3 1 7 2 7 2 1 4

3 1 '166'
2 3 2 2 2 2 1 1 3 3 9 1

5 2
2 Ferrari 5 6 5 1 1 3 DSQ 3 2 5 2 13 1Ret '143'
6 1 3 3Ret 8 5 4 1 1Ret 2 2 3
3 BMW Sauber 9 4 4 4Ret 6 2Ret 5 6 6 3 4 4 '86'
10Ret 18 6 4 5Ret 8 4 4 7 5 8 5
4 Renault 3 5 6 8 9 4 DSQ 9 6 8 10 12 9 12 '38'
4 10 8 9 7 13 4 5 15 7 8 8 6 7
5 Williams-Toyota 16 7Ret 10 6 12 10Ret 9 12Ret 7 7 6 '25'
17Ret 9 11Ret 7 3 10 14 13 4 14 11 13
6 Red Bull-Renault 14RetRetRet 5 14RetRet 13 11 5 11 10Ret '16'
15 13 10RetRetRet 9 7 12Ret 3 9Ret 9
7 Toyota 11 8 15 12Ret 16 8Ret 10RetRet 6 12 15 '12'
12 9 7 7Ret 15Ret 6RetRet 13 10 16 11
8 Super Aguri-Honda 22 12 13Ret 8 17 6Ret 16 14Ret 15 18 16 '4'
23 16 16 16 11 18 11 11RetRet 12Ret 14 14
9 Honda 7 15 12Ret 12 11Ret 12 8 10RetRet 13 8 '2'
8 11 11 13 10 10 12Ret 11 9 11 18 17 10
10 Toro Rosso-Ferrari 18 14 17RetRetRetRet 17Ret 16RetRet 15 17 '0'
19Ret 14RetRet 9Ret 13RetRetRet 16 19 18
11 Spyker-Ferrari 20 17Ret 15 13RetRet 15 17RetRet 17 21 19 '0'
21RetRet 14 14 19Ret 14Ret 15RetRet 20 20
Pos Constructor Car
No.
AUS MAL BHR ESP MON CAN USA FRA GBR EUR HUN TUR ITA BEL JPN CHN BRA Pts




After an incident at the end of Qualifying Session 3, and before the race in Hungary, an FIA decision was made that, due to team infringements during qualifying, McLaren would not be awarded any points. The drivers, however do retain the points won. (Alonso was demoted five places from pole on the start grid). On August 8, McLaren confirmed they have lodged a protest to the FIA via the Motor Sports Association, the UK's motorsport governing body, over the penalty against the team.[43]
Constructors statistics

Pos Constructor Chassis Engine Tyre Starts Wins Podiums Poles F.Laps Points
1 McLaren MP4-22 Mercedes 13 7 20 6 4 '166'
2 Ferrari F2007 Ferrari 13 6 15 7 9 '143'
3 BMW Sauber F1.07 BMW 13 0 2 0 0 '86'
4 Renault R27 Renault 13 0 0 0 0 '38'
5 Williams FW29 Toyota 13 0 1 0 0 '25'
6 Red Bull RB3 Renault 13 0 1 0 0 '16'
7 Toyota TF107 Toyota 13 0 0 0 0 '12'
8 Super Aguri SA07 Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '4'
9 Honda RA107 Honda 13 0 0 0 0 '2'
10 Toro Rosso STR2 Ferrari 13 0 0 0 0 '0'
11 Spyker F8-VII Ferrari 13 0 0 0 0 '0'

Rumours and speculation


Driver rumours


★ With his contract at BMW Sauber expiring at the end of the 2007 season, there was some talk that the team's lead driver Nick Heidfeld would be leaving to replace Ralf Schumacher at Toyota.[44] As of August 21, 2007, it has been confirmed that Heidfeld will be staying at BMW for the 2008 season.

★ Three time Champ Car Series Champion Sébastien Bourdais was linked with a drive at the Toro Rosso team following confirmation that the Frenchman would be testing the STR2 for three sessions during the 2007 season. According to Bourdais' website, once his final test session at Spa-Francorchamps is complete, Toro Rosso "will have to make a decision" on their relationship with Bourdais.[45] He has been recently confirmed as joining Toro Rosso for the 2008 Formula One season.
Races


★ Having lost the Japanese GP to the Fuji circuit, Suzuka was in negotiations with Bernie Ecclestone on staging a race at the circuit again. It would likely have been a revived Pacific Grand Prix, or possibly named the Asian Grand Prix. This now appears to have been rejected but it remains a possibility for 2008.[46]

★ It has now been confirmed that Fuji Speedway and Suzuka Circuit will alternate hosting the Japanese Grand Prix from 2009.[47]

References


1. Ecclestone signature ends breakaway threat
2. History of Sponsorship in Formula 1
3. FIA unveils 2007 entry list.
4. Gene stays at Ferrari - but to do what?
5. Honda signs Conway
6. Vettel in for Kubica
7. Toyota push Japanese talent
8. Yamamoto to race for Spyker Biranit Goren
9. Rossiter joins Super Aguri as tester
10. ''San Marino, Europe dropped for '07'' Formula1.com. Retrieved 29 August 2006
11. 2007 FIA Formula One World Championship Calendar
12. No Germany Grand Prix in 2007
13. F1 introduces clearer tyre marks
14. Qualifying revised from this weekend
15. F1: Teams, FIA Agree on Races, Engine Freeze for '07
16. ''FIA 2006 Technical Regulations'' FIA.Com Article 22. Retrieved 26 September 2006
17. Longer Friday practice among 2007 changes. Retrieved October 19, 2006.
18. Vettel replaces Speed at Toro Rosso ''autosport.com'', retrieved on August 3, 2007.
19. Official: Brawn to leave Ferrari
20. Mild Seven to leave Renault after 12-year sponsorship
21. Toyota engines for Williams in 2007
22. Williams' engines not to be rebadged
23. Midland team bought by Spyker
24. Spyker get Ferrari power for 2007
25. Renault confirms ING
26. Williams sign AT&T as 2007 title sponsor
27. Spyker to drop MF1 for 2007
28. Spyker wants a name change
29. Renault engines for RBR - Ferrari engines for STR
30. Etihad Airways becomes Spyker F1 title sponsor
31. Exclusive: TV Coverage Revolution
32. F1 set for HD TV coverage
33. Investment in MK after F1 TV deal is secured
34. Telecinco and TV3 warm up motors for the return of “Formula 1”
35. Changes to Catalunya for 2007 revealed
36. Spa revamp work in progress
37. Interlagos será fechado para reforma
38. As obras em Interlagos
39. FIA tem uma justificada preocupação com o GP Brasil de Fórmula 1
40. Alargamento da entrada dos boxes, para maior segurança dos pilotos
41. Reforma deve acabar com problemas no asfalto de Interlagos
42. Hamilton inherits pole as Alonso and McLaren penalized
43. Planet-f1.com article (Retrieved 9 August 2007)
44. Heidfeld and Toyota?
45. Second Toro Rosso test for Bourdais
46. Suzuka keen to return to F1 in 2008
47. Japanese Grand Prix to alternate between Fuji and Suzuka

External links



FIA Formula One World Championship Season guide 2007

2007 season at Formula1.com

All formula one races as iCal-calendar

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