Blog

  • Vettel leads Red Bull one-two in Turkey to stretch title lead

    Vettel leads Red Bull one-two in Turkey to stretch title lead

    (CNN) — Sebastian Vettel led Red Bull to a one-two in the Turkish Grand Prix Sunday to increase his lead in this year’s Formula One title race.

    The defending world champion drove a flawless race from pole position to claim victory from teammate Mark Webber, with two-time world champion Fernando Alonso in third place.

    Webber completed a superb overtaking maneuver on Ferrari’s Alonso in the closing stages in Istanbul to complete a superb day for the English-based team.

    Lewis Hamilton, the 2008 world champion, came home fourth, with Germany’s Nico Rosberg in the Mercedes, separating the two McLaren drivers as Hamilton’s fellow Briton Jenson Button took sixth.

    Button paid the price for a three-stop strategy, while the other leading contenders opted for four.

    Germany’s Nick Heidfeld finished seventh for Renault ahead of his Russian teammate Vitaly Petrov.

    Swiss Sebastien Buemi for Toro Rosso and promising young Japanese driver Kamui Kobayashi of Sauber completed the points scoring down to 10th.

    But there was more disappointment Germany’s seven-time champion Michael Schumacher, who finished adrift of teammate Rosberg in 12th, just behind former teammate Felipe Massa in the second Ferrari.

    Schumacher was involved in a tangle with Petrov which resulted in him having a new rear wing fitted.

    But it was Vettel, who dominated from start to finish, only led when he went in for pit stops.

    “What a race. We controlled it from the beginning to the end. Thank-you,” he said on his team radio.

    It was his third win in four races this season and he leads Hamilton by 34 in the drivers’ championship, with Webber four points further adrift.

    Red Bull have a big lead in the constructors’ championship with 148 to McLaren’s 105.

    via Vettel leads Red Bull one-two in Turkey to stretch title lead – CNN.com.

  • Turkey’s prime minister rethinks country’s role in Middle East

    Turkey’s prime minister rethinks country’s role in Middle East

    Erdogan takes tougher stance against authoritarian regimes

    Posted May 8, 2011, 12:05 pm

    Nichole Sobecki GlobalPost

    ISTANBUL – Turkey has emerged as a regional heavyweight, expanding its web of influence across the Arab world.

    But as the old regional order crumbles beneath the tide of revolution, the government of Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan is beginning to rethink its foreign policy – which in recent years has largely been to play nice with everyone – and take a bolder stance against authoritarian regimes.

    “They’ve been trying to steer a realistic path through this maze,” said Hugh Pope, director of the Turkey-Cyprus project at the Brussels-based International Crisis Group. “But this is a real wake-up call for Turkey.”

    Turkey has longstanding ties to governments now beset by unrest, ties that have been meticulously cultivated through its much-heralded “zero problems with neighbors” policy. Under that policy, it has pushed for greater economic and diplomatic integration with countries across the Middle East.

    Before the uprising in Libya took hold, for instance, Turkey had sought stronger relations with its leader, Muammar Gaddafi. Turkish exports to Libya had reached $2 billion a year and 25,000 Turkish citizens were engaged in major construction projects there, mainly in cooperation with the Libyan government.

    But after two months of violent clashes between Libyan rebels and forces loyal to Gaddafi, in which as many as 30,000 people are thought to have been killed, Erdogan finally decided to pack it up. He closed the Turkish embassy in Tripoli – one of the last still open there – and called on Gaddafi to step down immediately.

    “Muammar Gaddafi, instead of taking our suggestions into account, refraining from shedding blood or seeking for ways to maintain the territorial unity of Libya, chose blood, tears, oppression and attacks on his own people,” Erdogan said during a televised news conference last week.

    Message to Syria

    It was Turkey’s first move against a former partner, but probably not its last, analysts said. Wrapped in Erdogan’s call for Gaddafi to step down appeared to be a message to Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, as well.

    “I find it necessary to repeat my warning to countries in the region,” he said. “Equality, justice and democracy are not the right of some countries but of every nation.”

    Syria, a country with which Turkey had recently abolished visa requirements and held small-scale military exercises, has responded with brutal violence to an ever-growing protest movement, killing – by most estimates – hundreds of people.

    “While he wasn’t speaking directly to Syria, he made it clear that Turkey’s support for al-Assad is not unconditional,” said Joshua Walker, a professor at the University of Richmond and expert on Turkey.

    If Libya was a problem for Turkey’s foreign policy, Syria is a much bigger one. In many ways, Syria is Turkey’s gateway to the Arab world, and it’s a place they have invested heavily in for years.

    Images from Syria published in Turkish newspapers paint a brutal image of security forces shooting unarmed demonstrators. About 200 members of Assad’s Baath Party have resigned in protest and the violence looks unlikely to end anytime soon.

    Unwilling to set themselves directly against Assad, the Turks have so far used the same strategy as they had with Gaddafi – a mix of private pressure and veiled public criticism. Last month the Turkish foreign minister visited Assad and the Turkish intelligence chief was dispatched to Damascus.

    But with Syria so close to home – they share a border – Turkey has more to lose if things spiral out of control as they have in Libya.

    Credibility at risk

    A deeply sectarian country in which the Alawite minority controls all the levers of power in a Sunni majority country, things there could quickly turn much more dangerous than they already are. Trade between the two countries would all but end and tens of thousands of refugees could end up at Ankara’s doorstep.

    Turkey has for the most part continued to hedge its bets, keeping a pulse to the sea changes going on around them and cautiously, some say too cautiously, measuring their response.

    “They’ve put a lot of emphasis on the zero-problem policy, at the expense of its relationship with the West,” Pope said. “But, for some time, the Middle East is going to be less stable, less wealthy and less appealing.”

    For years Erdogan championed Palestinians, confronting Israel and winning himself popularity on the Arab streets. But by ignoring the violence against civilians in cities across Libya for so long, and now in Syria as well, experts say the prime minister is at risk of losing the credibility he has so carefully crafted.

    Until Erdogan’s decision last week to break diplomatically with Libya, Turkish flags were being burned on the streets of Benghazi, the center of the rebellion, and the country’s consulate was almost overrun.

    “Turkey’s vision for the Middle East was predicated on cooperation with the status quo there,” wrote Semih Idiz, a columnist for the Turkish Daily Hurriyet, adding that “Ankara will have to establish new bridges now.”

  • Michael Schumacher admits he is not enjoying racing

    Michael Schumacher admits he is not enjoying racing

    Michael Schumacher has admitted for the first time that he is not enjoying racing following a disappointing start to the second season of his comeback.

    The 42-year-old Mercedes driver finished 12th in the Turkish Grand Prix after another poor weekend.

    Schumacher told BBC Sport: “The big joy is not there right now.”

    He won a record seven titles and 91 grands prix before retiring in 2006, but has been bettered by Nico Rosberg in 15 of their 23 races as team-mates.

    Rosberg, 25, has also out-qualified his fellow German on 19 occasions.

    Michael Schumacher

    Schumacher admits to joyless F1 experience

    Rosberg qualified third in Turkey, more than a second faster than Schumacher, who was eighth on the grid.

    Schumacher was not helped by an opening-lap collision with Renault’s Vitaly Petrov, for which he admitted he was at fault. The incident forced him into the pits for a new front wing.

    Schumacher made three further stops for fresh tyres but never looked capable of getting close to the front runners.

    The result – allied to a retirement in Australia, a ninth-place finish in Malaysia and eighth in China – means he sits 11th in the drivers’ championship with just six points.

    Rosberg finds himself 10th on 20 points, while Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel lead the way on 93 points following his victory in Turkey.

    “I told you before the race there was going to be some action and indeed I had lots of action,” said Schumacher.

    “I guess I was responsible myself to have the result that I had. With Petrov I guess it was mostly my mistake what happened there.

    “I need to analyse it. It was a bit strange that suddenly we got together and I lost my front wing. The race was a given from there – lots of fighting, lots of action, but for nothing.

    “From where we came [on the grid], going forward is better than still having to defend backwards, and mostly I was able to go forward.”

    ANDREW BENSON’S BLOG

    Continue reading the main story

    I’ve known Schumacher for a long time, and he looked and sounded like a man beginning, as Coulthard said, ‘to ask himself some questions’

    Read more here

    Schumacher signed a three-year contract with Mercedes when he returned to F1 last year, but BBC F1 chief analyst Eddie Jordan said it might be time for him to consider his future.

    “I felt just a glimmer of sadness that here’s a legendary person who has been magnificent in all the years that he’s raced, winning seven world championships,” Jordan said.

    “He’s very human, he’s very, very honest – he’s clearly not enjoying it and the results are showing why he’s not enjoying it. He has a couple of big decisions to make in the next couple of months.”

    But BBC F1 co-commentator David Coulthard cautioned against jumping to conclusions.

    “He’s not performing at the same level of his team-mate, that’s a fact,” said the former Williams, McLaren and Red Bull driver, who raced against Schumacher for 12 years.

    “The statistics show Nico Rosberg is getting more out of that car than Michael Schumacher.

    “I don’t think we should write Michael off by any stretch of the imagination – there’s a lot of talent there – but he must be asking himself questions.

    “I think the key thing is he’s not enjoying it and to be perfectly open and honest with you there was an element of that for me at the beginning of 2008.

    “I wasn’t as competitive as I felt I should be, I wasn’t enjoying the races as much as I used to and then that’s the moment.

    “It slowly builds until you look in the mirror and realise that feeling you’ve been having for a few weeks or months is the internal message. You can’t hold back the clock.”

    via BBC Sport – Michael Schumacher admits he is not enjoying racing.

  • Drivers want Istanbul to remain

    Drivers want Istanbul to remain

    Formula One drivers hope they will not be competing at the Turkish Grand Prix for the last time this weekend.

    Doubts were raised that Turkey may not host a race next year, after the head of Istanbul’s Chamber of Commerce Murat Yalcintas – citing an increase in the fee to stage it – last month expressed reservations it could continue.

    Turkey joined the F1 calendar in 2005 but the race has attracted poor attendances due to high ticket prices and difficulty of access to the venue on Istanbul’s Asian side.

    Although Istanbul’s six-year contract to host the race is due to expire this year, drivers want to keep coming back.

    “I would miss it, definitely, as it is a place that you have some better results than you expected. It is a good place, but we will see how it is going to be,” Felipe Massa said.

    “It is a track you always like to come (to). You always have a good result, good feeling and we will miss it if we are not coming here next year.”

    Massa has a particular fondness for it, as he won three straight races at Istanbul Park from 2006-08, all from pole position.

    “It is a very special place for me. I won three times, especially the first time it was a big fight with Fernando (Alonso) and Michael (Schumacher),” Massa said. “In 2008 I had a big fight with Lewis (Hamilton).”

    Hamilton won at Istanbul last year and the Briton is hoping more success this Sunday can close the gap on Championship leader Sebastian Vettel. The German F1 Champion leads Hamilton by 21 points after three races.

    “It’s got some great high speed corners and quite a nice mixture of corners,” Hamilton said of Istanbul’s track. “Of course it would be a shame to not have the Grand Prix on the calendar.”

    Istanbul’s Turn Eight is the longest of the season at 640 meters and is particularly thrilling for drivers to test themselves against.

    “We love to race at circuits that are challenging and exciting for us, so fingers crossed it will be here (next year),” Hamilton said.

    Yalcintas, who represents the backers of the race, said on his Twitter account last month that Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone doubled the asking fee from $13 million to $26 million, and that Turkey’s Ministry of Finance considered the amount too high.

    via Drivers want Istanbul to remain | Planet F1 | Formula One News.

  • 2012 Turkish Airlines Euroleague Final Four to land in Istanbul

    2012 Turkish Airlines Euroleague Final Four to land in Istanbul

    Euroleague Basketball is pleased to announce the city of Istanbul as the home of the 2012 Turkish Airlines Euroleague Final Four. The state-of-the-art Sinan Erdem Arena, which opened in 2010 to host the FIBA World Championships final stages, will host European basketball’s premier event in early May 2012. Euroleague Basketball President and CEO was joined by representatives of two partners in the event, Turgay Demirel, the President of the Turkish Basketball Federation; and Firuz Baglikaya, the President of Detur Group; as well as Istanbul Mayor Kadir Topbas and Hamdi Topçu, Chairman of the Euroleague’s title sponsor, Turkish Airlines, to make the announcement on Sunday at a media conference hours before tip-off of the 2011 Turkish Airlines Euroleague title game at Palau Sant Jordi in Barcelona.

    The 2012 Final Four brings the event back to Istanbul for the first time in two decades. Partizan defeated Joventut Badalona in the 1992 Final Four at Abdi Ipekci Arena. Sinan Erdem Arena, which has a capacity of over 16,000 for basketball, has become a leader in hosting premium sporting events. In addition to being the home of Euroleague club Efes Pilsen, Sinan Erdem Arena is also scheduled to host the year-end WTA Championships in each of the next three years plus the world indoor track and field championships and the world swimming championships in 2012.

    Euroleague Basketball President and CEO Jordi Bertomeu:

    “The reason why we are here is obvious if you look at the people I have the honor to have with me at this table. I have to say that we are glad to announce that the 2012 Turkish Airlines Euroleague Final Four will take place in the beautiful, amazing city of Istanbul at Sinan Erdem Arena in early May, as always, according to the Final Four tradition. The exact dates will be decided when the calendar is approved by the Euroleague General Assembly. We have waited a bit to announce this decision, but we wanted to close all details before making an official announcement. We have been working closely with basketball authorities in Turkey, especially with the Turkish Basketball Federation. The Euroleague is going to Turkey for many reasons that helped us make this decision. First, Turkish basketball has dramatically improved in the last years. We are very happy about the way basketball has grown in Turkey, at both club and national team level. Turkey has proven to have a high-level organization in the latest World Championships in August and September last year. The experience of Turkish Basketball Federation is a guarantee for us to have an excellent Final Four in Istanbul next year. We have two Istanbul-based Euroleague teams with a long tradition in our competition, Efes Pilsen and Fenerbahce Ulker, as well as some Eurocup teams. I definitely cannot forget the fact that we have enjoyed an unbelievably good partnership with Turkish Airlines this season. I want to take advantage of this moment to thank them for their commitment to the Euroleague and their contribution to make this event possible in Istanbul next year. I am confident that, coordinating with the Turkish Basketball Federation, one of the most active in Europe, we will deliver our fans an excellent event this year. I hope I see you all there next year.”

    Turgay Demirel, the President of the Turkish Basketball Federation:

    “I am very proud to be able to finalize negotiations with the Euroleague to host the event in 2012 in Istanbul, the sport capital of Europe for the coming year. Istanbul has been a very good host for many sporting events and the arena is very good. We hosted the FIBA World Championships and next year top clubs will compete in our beautiful town. We look forward to hosting all of you. We also thank Turkish Airlines for promoting this brand all over the world. I look forward to hosting you all Istanbul next year.”

    Hamdi Topçu, Turkish Airlines Chairman:

    “I greet you all with respect. One year ago, I was speaking with Jordi about hosting the Final Four in Istanbul and he told me was almost impossible, but Jordi opened the press conference with today’s good news, so I am very happy. Please allow to thank the people who really worked hard to bring the Final Four to Istanbul: The President of the Turkish Basketball Federation Turgay Demirel and Mayor of Istanbul Kadir Topbas were involved and I spoke on the phone today with the Turkish Minister of Sports Faruk Ozak. The city of Istanbul has hosted big things lately, so it is now new. The Government, municipality and other state organizations, including us, will work together and we hope to deliver the best to everyone. Turkish Airlines in the last eight years has proved itself as a great international brand with all its activities and services. Turkish Airlines has done many sponsorships and partnerships and one of the majors ones is with Euroleague Basketball. Turkish Airlines is already contributing and will continue to contribute to this the best it can over the next five years. This partnership will help our brand and also contribute to Euroleague Basketball. I want to thank again very much Jordi, the Turkish Basketball Federation and all those that have contributed.”

    Istanbul joins a list of major European cities that have honored Euroleague Basketball by hosting the Final Four in recent years, including Barcelona this season, Berlin in 2009, Madrid 2008, Athens 2007, Prague 2006, Moscow 2005, Tel Aviv 2004, Barcelona 2003 and Bologna 2002. In addition to the games themselves, which bring the best four teams from the Turkish Airlines Euroleague season together to decide a champion, the Final Four also features the annual NIKE International Junior Tournament and other parallel events.

    Sunday, May 08, 2011

    via 2012 Turkish Airlines Euroleague Final Four to land in Istanbul – MAIN PAGE – Welcome to EUROLEAGUE BASKETBALL.

  • Vettel Takes Third Win Of Season in Istanbul

    Vettel Takes Third Win Of Season in Istanbul

    Vettel Takes Third Win of Season in Istanbul

    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    The Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel cruised to his third victory of the season, winning the Turkish Grand Prix in Istanbul ahead of his teammate Mark Webber. Vettel, the defending Formula One champion, was never in trouble after starting from the pole for the fourth consecutive race. He won by a comfortable 8.8 seconds.

    Vettel, who won the opening two races and was second to Lewis Hamilton of McLaren in China last month, leads Hamilton by 34 points and Webber by 38.

    via Vettel Takes Third Win Of Season in Istanbul – NYTimes.com.