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The Independent

Kobayashi to race again in Abu Dhabi

Kamui Kobayashi will again deputise for the injured Timo Glock in the final race of the Formula One season in Abu Dhabi on Sunday.
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The Independent

Jenson Button's Bugatti Veyron supercar up for sale - a snip at £899,995

A supercar owned by newly-crowned Formula One world champion Jenson Button has been put up for sale for almost £900,000.
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B.B.C. NEWS Button savours dream world title

Britain's Jenson Button celebrates fulfilling a boyhood dream after his bold drive in Brazil earns him a maiden world title.
10/19/09
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F1 Complete Crump thanks Mark Webber for injury help

Oct.19 (GMM) Speedway motorbike racer Jason Crump has thanked his Australian countryman Mark Webber upon winning his latest world title.
10/19/09
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B.B.C. NEWS F1's number one

Just how good is Jenson Button?
10/18/09
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The Sydney Morning Herald Fisichella gets green light for...

Giancarlo Fisichella has been given the green light by Force India to race for Ferrari for the remainder of the season, with immediate effect.
09/03/09
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Yahoo! Eurosport Di Resta named reserve driver by...

Dario Franchitti's 23-year-old cousin Paul di Resta will be Force India's test and reserve driver this season.
02/02/10
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The Independent Youngster Alguersuari stays in frame...

Jaime Alguersuari will race for Toro Rosso again this season, giving Spain three drivers on the Formula One starting grid for the first time when the season starts in Bahrain in...
01/23/10
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guardian.co.uk

Button takes the scenic route

Too often Jenson Button has lacked the instinct to pick the right team at the right time, but at last he's found his perfect matchSo there it is, the name of Jenson Button finally inscribed on the grand prix roll of honour at the end of a season in which a campaign that began with the rush of six wins in seven races appeared to have slowed to a crawl as it approached the chequered flag. There are many ways to win the world championship, and the 10th British driver to capture the title added to the suspense by taking the scenic route.Button may be still on the right side of 30, but he has had to wait longer to secure his title than all but one of his compatriots. The task that took Lewis Hamilton two seasons, Jim Clark and James Hunt four, Jackie Stewart, John Surtees and the two Hills, Graham and Damon, five and Mike Hawthorn seven to complete has occupied Button for an entire decade, longer than anyone except Nigel Mansell, the sweating, straining Sisyphus of formula one, who rolled his boulder up the hill for 13 fretful years before managing to get it to stay put on the summit.This coming January it will be 10 years since tears rolled down Button's boyish cheeks as he fell into the arms of his equally emotional father after being told by Sir Frank Williams that he was about to become Britain's youngest-ever grand prix driver. Less than a week earlier the lad from Frome had celebrated the end of his teenage years, and the future appeared to be one of unbroken promise.But it takes all sorts of experiences to make a world champion, and Button's path to the title has been strewn with obstacles. In retrospect his trials, although painful and sometimes humiliating, could be seen as a necessary counterbalance to the impression he can sometimes give of floating through life on a cloud of privilege and good fortune, with a yacht in the Monaco harbour, a yellow Ferrari and a string of girlfriends drawn from the ranks of pop singers, aristocrats and underwear models.But Button is not burdened with an overinflated ego, and a world championship is unlikely to change him now. According to his schoolteachers, he was careful to underplay his early success in karting -- "There was no boasting or bragging," one of them told me several years ago -- and he has remained an approachable and unpretentious figure, with much more to him (including a liking for competing in triathlons) than the celebrity nonsense."We always thought that Jenson was outstanding," Patrick Head, Sir Frank Williams' partner, said in Monaco this spring, when Button was in the middle of his early-season winning streak with the Brawn team. "He's always had great driving skill, and now he has experience, calmness, judgement and other things. He's also in the right place."Too often in the past he had found himself trapped in the wrong environment, creating a superficial and misleading impression that caused him to be written off by two of the sport's most powerful men. The now-disgraced Flavio Briatore sacked him from the Renault team in 2002 in order to promote his own protŽgŽ, Fernando Alonso, shortly before Bernie Ecclestone advised David Richards, the BAR-Honda boss, against reviving the Briton's career.Richards's decision to ignore Ecclestone's opinion set Button on the path that would lead, seven years later, to his coronation as the 31st world champion in formula one's 60-year history. Even then, however, it was hardly plain sailing as Button navigated his way unsteadily through a series of setbacks. A mini-scandal when his team was suspended for making illegal use of a hidden device in the car's petrol tank was followed by the messy aftermath of Richards's mysterious sacking by Honda, an expensively aborted attempt to return to the Williams fold and a succession of poor cars.Among the most valuable weapons in a world champion's armoury is the instinct for joining the right team at the right time, and until this year it seemed to be the attribute Button most crucially lacked. Williams let him go (in order to honour an pre-existing commitment to Juan Pablo Montoya) at the end of his first season, he was ejected from Renault just as the team was becoming competitive enough to win titles, and even when a period of improving fortunes with Honda climaxed in 2006 with his first grand prix victory, that success proved to be a mirage as the team went into a sudden and disastrous decline.His judgement was not always sound in his choice of personal managers and advisers, and it took him several years to settle on one he believed he could trust. Throughout it all, however, his resilience earned growing respect from the paddock cynics. He stayed on good terms with Williams and Head, he refused to trade insults with those who denigrated his ability, and he earned the loyalty of the Honda engineers and mechanics by never complaining or making excuses when, instead of the Stradivarius he needs, they kept giving him plastic ukeleles.Most of all, when Honda suddenly pulled the plug before the beginning of the present season, he refused to panic. Instead of fleeing into the arms of a rival team, he saw the sense in staying put, voluntarily cutting his £12m annual salary by about two-thirds and showing his confidence in Ross Brawn, his new team principal. That act of faith played a key part in restoring the morale of team personnel whose livelihoods had been threatened.On the track he has shown that while some champions are bullies and others are stylists, his smooth precision puts him firmly in the latter category. It is no accident that he grew up admiring the calmness and consistency of Alain Prost while the young Lewis Hamilton adored the panache and charisma of Ayrton Senna.And now he has proved himself beyond doubt, in and out of the car, to be anything but a flaky underperformer. In answer to those who claim that his run of six wins in this season's first seven races, which laid the firmest of foundations for his title challenge, was the achievement of the car rather than its driver, he can point to Mansell's eight of the first 10 with Williams in 1992 or Michael Schumacher's five of the first six with Ferrari in 2002. These things happen in formula one, and the champion is the one with the skill and intelligence to take advantage of his circumstances, as Jenson Button has done at last.Jenson ButtonFormula OneBrawnMotor sportRichard Williamsguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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The Independent

Button could struggle warns Coulthard

David Coulthard believes Formula One world champion Jenson Button could struggle in the wake of McLaren team-mate Lewis Hamilton this season.
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Yahoo! Eurosport Alguersuari stays with Toro Rosso

Jaime Alguersuari will drive for Toro Rosso again in 2010, giving Spain three drivers on the starting grid when the season starts in March.
01/22/10
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The Independent Button ready to work with Hamilton

World champion Jenson Button insists he and Lewis Hamilton must work closely if either of them are to mount a serious challenge for this year's title as he prepares to meet...
01/20/10
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F1 Complete Alguersuari's grandfather dies aged 90

Oct.12 (GMM) Rookie Spanish formula one driver Jaime Alguersuari's grandfather has died at the age of 90.
10/12/09
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The Independent Massa aiming to banish demons

Ferrari's Felipe Massa has encountered more difficulty coming to terms with his agonising championship loss in 2008 than his recovery from a life-threatening accident that...
01/15/10
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The Independent Reshuffle at McLaren to ensure driver...

Jenson Button is to benefit from a behind-the-scenes reshuffle at McLaren as the team strive to guarantee equality between their two drivers.
01/11/10
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The Independent Button insists he can handle rivalry

Jenson Button was in cheerful mood yesterday, as befits a man starting a challenging new job. As he experienced his first proper day at work at McLaren, and took his first...
01/08/10
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guardian.co.uk

Massa sets pace for Ferrari on return

• Massa led seven-car field at Valencia's Cheste circuit• Brazilian completed 32 laps and will test again tomorrowFelipe Massa returned to a competitive Formula One car today and the Ferrari driver was fastest in a morning testing session, the first since a life-threatening crash last summer.Massa led the seven-car field at Valencia's Cheste circuit to start a three-day test session with a best lap time of 1min 13.088sec. Massa, who completed 32 laps, was nearly two-tenths of a second faster than Pedro de la Rosa of Sauber.Massa, 28, suffered a skull fracture during a crash at the Hungarian grand prix in July. The Brazilian underwent lifesaving surgery and missed the rest of the season. Massa has driven older model Ferraris since late last year, but today's outing was his first in the new F10 car.Ferrari set the pace as this year's Formula One campaign got under way, with Michael Schumacher expected to return to the track with Mercedes GP later today. The 41-year-old German is racing again for the first time since retiring in 2006. Team-mate Nico Rosberg was on the track in the morning and was third with a best lap of 1min 13.543sec in the former Brawn GP car, nearly half a second slower than Massa.The McLaren test driver Gary Paffett was fourth, Rubens Barrichello of Williams was fifth, while Renault driver Robert Kubica and Toro Rosso's Sébastien Buemi completed the standings. Massa will also drive tomorrow before giving way to new team-mate Fernando Alonso on Wednesday.Felipe MassaFerrariFormula OneMotor sportguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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The Independent

Schumacher may extend F1 comeback

Seven-time champion Michael Schumacher may extend his Formula One comeback beyond the current three-year contract he has signed with Mercedes.
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guardian.co.uk Interview: Jenson Button

McLaren driver on the forthcoming F1 season and the pressures of being world champion
03/05/10
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cbc.ca Massa says he's '100% ready' for F1...

Felipe Massa says he might not have survived the crash that nearly killed him if he'd been driving in Formula One 15 years ago.
03/10/10
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The Independent Stars of the arts honoured – but no...

Patrick Stewart, the actor who has played parts as varied as Macbeth, Star Trek's Captain Jean-Luc Picard and Professor Charles Xavier in the X-Men movies, is joined today by...
12/31/09
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The New York Times Roundup: Ferrari Drivers on Top in...

Fernando Alonso passed his teammate Felipe Massa at the second corner and overtook the pole-sitter Sebastian Vettel on the 34th of 49 laps to win the Bahrain Grand Prix.
03/15/10
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The Independent Schumacher to make F1 return with...

Retired seven-times Formula One champion Michael Schumacher has agreed a one-year deal to drive for Mercedes in 2010, according to reports in Germany. The German newspaper Bild...
12/23/09
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B.B.C. NEWS Button out to prove class - Brawn

Mercedes boss Ross Brawn says world champion Jenson Button joined McLaren to prove his driving ability.
12/23/09
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F1 Complete Alguersuari unhurt after 130R crash

Oct.4 (GMM) Jaime Alguersuari is unhurt following his big crash towards the end of Sunday's Japanese grand prix.
10/04/09
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Yahoo! Eurosport Sauber sign up Kobayashi

Sauber announce Kamui Kobayashi as one of their drivers for the 2010 Formula One World Championship.
12/17/09
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