Anticipation high at Jerez as curtain rises on the start of 2014 F1 season

Media hordes have descended on Jerez
Media hordes have descended on Jerez

The level of interest in the activities of the protagonists of the groundbreaking 2014 season is unprecedented for the start of a Formula 1 season.

The new rules, as evinced by the new V6 hybrid turbo ‘Power Units’, have attracted 25 television networks and 160 accredited journalists to Jerez, where the ‘odd-nosed’ grid for the new year is taking shape.

Unfortunately for some, the weather might not play along, as dark clouds were gathering above southern Spain late on Monday, ahead of the first of four days of testing.

Formula 1’s tyre supplier Pirelli is well prepared, and may not have to water the circuit as planned on Friday in order to test its wet-weather range.

McLaren mechanics with Pirelli tyres
McLaren mechanics with Pirelli tyres

The Italian marque has also developed a special ‘winter’ tyre for the crucial 2014 pre-season, having learned the lessons of 2013, when Paul Hembery recalls that “We even saw some ice on the track at one point”.

For once, however, tyres are not expected to be the talking point over the coming weeks.

The keyword will instead be reliability, or failures, as the teams attempt to get thousands upon thousands of all-new components all working harmoniously following perhaps the biggest year-on-year regulations change in memory.

“I think it will be a very turbulent time for everybody, especially at the beginning,” World Champion Sebastian Vettel, at Jerez to drive the so-far unseen RB10, is quoted in the German media.

Sauber were first to launch at Jerez on Monday
Sauber was first to launch at Jerez on Monday

“Of course we had a very sound basis in terms of our car after the past four years, but now everything is new,” he added.

Vettel is quoted by Sport Bild as worrying that the restrictions on fuel usage in 2014 could make the on-track action “somewhat limited”.

It will be after a particularly arduous off-season for the sport’s taller drivers, such as Toro Rosso’s Jean-Eric Vergne, who although standing at less than 180cm, looked visibly slimmer at Jerez on Monday.

The heavier 2014 regulations have pushed the teams to the limit in trying to get their new cars under the mandatory minimum weight, affecting drivers like Adrian Sutil, who is six feet tall.

“I didn’t eat too much over Christmas and New Year,” admitted Sauber’s German driver.

Daniil Kyvat walks the track with his Toro Rosso crew
Daniil Kyvat walks the track with his Toro Rosso crew

Also well-built is Red Bull’s new recruit Daniel Ricciardo, who desipte his Australian nationality admitted to having played “many winter sports” since the last race of 2013.

“This year, every gram counts,” he said at Jerez, where he will drive the RB10 on Thursday and Friday.

More immediately crucial, however, will be clocking up laps, after Jenson Button predicted that Jerez could be a “hilarious” test characterised by technical failures left, right and centre.

“Whoever has [the least] failures this year will be World Champion,” former triple World Champion Niki Lauda agrees.

Some believe that, unlike in the past when cars would amass 100 testing laps a day and more, a haul of 40 laps will be considered a success in the 2014 pre-season.

F1 team trucks in the paddock at Jerez
F1 team trucks in the paddock at Jerez

“If someone was to get 100 laps he will not have won the World Championship,” Ferrari technical director James Allison is quoted by Italy’s La Gazzetta dello Sport, “but he will be on the right [course].”

Backmarker Marussia, for instance, is already behind schedule, announcing that it will miss at least the opening day at Jerez due to a “small but frustrating technical issue”.

“The aim is to solve the issue as quickly as possible and send the car on its way,” said the team. “We’re all set up here in Jerez ready and waiting for it.”

The mood at Jerez, while full of anticipation, is also sombre, with Michael Schumacher’s ongoing coma not far from minds.

His last two teams in Formula 1 are paying tribute to the great German; Ferrari with a pitboard on Monday that read ‘Forza Michael’, and Mercedes with the Twitter hashtag #KeepFightingMichael included in the livery of its as yet unrevealed W05 car. (GMM)

Subbed by AJN.