AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.
Create a link to this page
Copy and paste this link tag into your Web page or blog:
Byline: ADAM COOPER
The way most saw it, Felipe Massa came to Bahrain looking like a deer caught in the headlights. On top of disappointing outings in Australia and Malaysia, if he were to experience a third disaster, his hopes of a world championship-and of challenging teammate Kimi Raikkonen as Ferrari's dominant force-would have evaporated.
Still, Massa insisted that all was well, that he'd just been the victim of bad luck. When the weekend was over, that confidence proved justified, as the Brazilian repeated his 2007 win at the same venue. That faultless performance left Raikkonen trailing in his wake.
It was by no means a classic encounter, which was a great shame, as the sport needed some class. The weekend was dominated by talk of FIA president Max Mosley's much-publicized bedroom antics with prostitutes dressed in Nazi garb and the fallout that has resulted; the subject dominated every conversation, to the extent that the race almost seemed like a sideshow.
Ferrari was strong in Bahrain last year, and only the Italian team and Toyota took up the option to test at Sakhir in early February, while their rivals stayed in Spain. That extra local knowledge gave Ferrari a further edge, and Massa was the pacesetter all weekend.
From the BMW-Sauber camp, it emerged that the team was also confident in its practice pace; it chose to opt for a race-load of fuel onboard as used in final qualifying. That was backed up on Saturday afternoon, when Robert Kubica put in a storming lap, generating the inevitable cliches about being the first Pole on pole. It was also a first pole for the team since its inception, as a privateer operation, back in 1993.
Second spot was not in the game plan for Massa, and he looked worried as his thought was that he'd rush off into the distance. Right behind Massa were McLaren's Lewis Hamilton and Raikkonen.
Source: HighBeam Research, A FINE MASSA; As F1 roils over a sex scandal, Felipe Massa wins in...