Sebastian VettelFormula One has mixed up the ingredients for  the 2011 season to create a new recipe for excitement with more World  champions, including the youngest yet in Sebastian Vettel, and an added  dash of Indian spice. 
The arrival of Italy's Pirelli as sole tyre  supplier in place of Japan's Bridgestone will have an immediate impact  when the racing starts in Australia next week, with many more pit stops  and changed strategies. 
The debut of four newcomers, including Mexico's  Sergio Perez at Sauber and Venezuelan Pastor Maldonado at Williams,  marks the return to the Grand Prix paddock of nations whose drivers have  been absent for decades. 
India will see first-hand what F1 is all about  when the country hosts its first Grand Prix near New Delhi in late  October, with home-grown racer Narain Karthikeyan looking forward to  being back on the grid for the first time since 2005. 
Add moveable rear wings, the controversial  return of previously-banned “team orders” and the revival of Kinetic  Energy Recovery Systems (KERS) to the menu, and there should be enough  to satisfy the appetite of any racing fan.
F1  great Stirling Moss, still an avid race watcher at 81, said: “I think  in the championship it is going to be far more exciting. There are so  many new things that have come in where the driver's input is going to  mean quite a lot more than it did last year. I am looking forward to the  best year for years.” 
Vettel, who will line up on the grid in  Australia on March 27 with a new contract and the champion's No.1 on his  Red Bull for the first time, is now the main man at the tender age of  23. 
Red Bull has been quick and reliable in testing  and, although Ferrari has at times been quicker and done more mileage,  some suspect the champion of keeping its powder dry. 
Red Bull team boss Christian Horner told  reporters this week: “I think Ferrari look very strong, I think people  are under-estimating where Ferrari are. We hope that we are somewhere  near competitive,” . 
“There's a few teams that have shown good form  in testing, Mercedes has recently taken a step. It's difficult to say  where McLaren is; one thing's for sure, it will at some point emerge  near the front of the field. 
“I think it's doubtful that you will see one team dominate and run away with the first five races for example.” 
All will be revealed in Melbourne, but Vettel is sure to be a leading contender. 
Horner said: “He will go into the next year  with his confidence certainly high and in many respects it's a degree of  expectation already dealt with. 
“If he hadn't have won there would be that 'Oh, Vettel's got to do it this year; now or never' kind of thing. 
“He's achieved the championship, he turns up in  Melbourne as the reigning World champion with the No.1 on his car and I  think that will give him an added confidence and desire with perhaps  not quite the pressure had he not have done it.” 
It is all too easy, given everything that the  23-year-old German wunderkind has achieved on his rapid ascent to the  pinnacle of world motorsport, to forget just how young the Red Bull  driver is. 
Yes, Vettel still looks and behaves at times  like a cheeky schoolboy but the sport's youngest points scorer, youngest  pole sitter, youngest race winner and youngest champion has also shown a  maturity way beyond his years. 
That much was evident this week when Red Bull  announced that Vettel had extended his contract to the end of 2014,  having conducted the negotiations himself without the help of a manager.  
Horner said: “For somebody so young to be in control of his own destiny in the manner that he has is very refreshing. 
“He doesn't have a big management group or  organisation telling him what to do or where to do it. He is very much  his own man and makes his own decisions.” 
Vettel made some big mistakes in 2010 and was  dubbed the “crash kid” by McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh after a  jarring collision with then-champion Jenson Button, but he also got more  right than wrong over the 19 races. 
On far more occasions, he was let down by his  car rather than his own errors. In fact, it was when the situation  looked truly bleak that the youngster really revealed his inner  strength. 
Horner pointed out: “If you look at the way he  delivered in those final five races, especially after Korea where we all  left the track absolutely on the floor having been convinced that  Ferrari's Fernando Alonso had just taken an unassailable lead in the  Drivers' World championship, the guy that was most upbeat on that long  flight home was Sebastian. 
“He didn't give up, he never stopped believing  that he could do it. In that last sector of the championship, he hit a  purple patch of form that was just phenomenal.” 
Red Bull won nine races in 2010, Vettel triumphant in five, and started 15 from pole position with four one-two finishes. 
Its success in taking both championships, its  first titles, can be attributed to strong teamwork, considerable  resources, a great car designed by Adrian Newey and two highly  competitive drivers. 
Those who thought Red Bull were simply a  marketing concern intent on selling cans of energy drink and having a  good time had better think twice. 
Vettel's contract extension, along with other  key players such as Newey also being locked in, sent a clear signal to  rivals that Red Bull are in for the long haul as serious contenders. 
Horner, who has also pledged his future to the  team, said bluntly: “Red Bull has now demonstrated that it's not a flash  in the pan, we've come a long way in a short time. 
My target and focus is, having achieved what many people believed was insurmountable, to go on and repeat that. 
“Half the challenge is getting there. The  bigger challenge is staying there and that is very much our challenge  this year,” he added. 
“You have to pinch yourself at times that Red  Bull have, in an industrial unit in Milton Keynes, beaten Ferrari and  they've beaten McLaren. It's a hell of an achievement that we are keen  to demonstrate wasn't a lucky punch.” 
The new car has looked quick and reliable in  testing, with rivals already worried that the champion has been keeping  something in reserve so as not to appear too dominant. 
Vettel is battle-hardened and exudes the confidence that comes with having the No.1 on his car. 
Mark Webber, with his contract up for renewal  at the end of the season, has more of a mountain to climb after missing  out on the title in 2010 just when he seemed best placed to take it but  is still hungry to win - and particularly in Melbourne. 
Horner said: “Mark's had a good winter, he's  come back fully focused, he's brushed himself down after the  disappointment of last year and I think goes into 2011 with his  motivation higher than ever. 
Webber had accused the team of favouring Vettel  in 2010, describing himself as a No.2 - ironic now that he actually has  the number two on his car - and Horner said both sides had learned from  that. 
The Australian expects to be competing against the German on level terms. 
Horner added: “Mark knows that this year is a big year for him, he will get full support. 
“I think he’s got what it takes to be champion.  He came close last year. Going into that final race, he was the one  that was the more likely of the two to win it. It didn't pan out for him  but he's continued to evolve and grow stronger. 
“I'm sure that those lessons that he's learned last year will stand him in good stead for the challenges of this year. 
“Obviously things bubbled over a little bit in  2010 on a couple of occasions. It was fairly unique for within a team to  have both guys going for the World championship. And with that comes  added pressures. 
“Both drivers have learned from that, I think  the team has learned from that and I think as a group we are better  equipped to deal with it,” he added. 
Vettel will be one of five world champions -  the most since 1970 - in a season that will criss-cross the globe with a  record-equalling 19 races. 
There could even be 20 rounds, although that  looks highly unlikely now, were Bahrain to be reinstated after having to  scrap its season-opening March 13 slot due to anti-government unrest in  the Gulf kingdom. 
Seven-times champion Michael Schumacher,  continuing his comeback with Mercedes, will be seeking to return to the  podium for the first time since 2006 while Ferrari's Fernando Alonso  looks sure to be challenging for his third crown after being let down by  the Italian team's strategy at the end of 2010. 
McLaren's 2008 champion Lewis Hamilton and 2009  title-holder Jenson Button may have more of a struggle with their car  alarmingly off the pace in pre-season testing. 
Germany's Nico Rosberg is gunning for the first  win of his Formula One career, having comfortably beaten team mate  Schumacher last year, while Felipe Massa needs to counter any impression  that he is Alonso's No.2 at Ferrari. 
With “team orders” now legal in Formula One, Massa will have to raise his game right from the start of the season. 
Otherwise, the Brazilian risks again playing a  supporting role to “Team Alonso”, just as his compatriot Rubens  Barrichello rode shotgun for “Team Schumi” in the days when Michael  Schumacher ruled Maranello. 
It may be too late already for a driver who has started 81 races for Ferrari, ranking him fourth in the team's all-time list. 
Alonso could have been lining up in Melbourne  with a third title to his name had Ferrari not bungled their strategy  and wrecked his chances in 2010's final race in Abu Dhabi. 
The team know that they owe him one and Alonso will be on their case more than ever. 
Massa, the only driver at the three top teams  who did not win a race in 2010, was told crushingly at the German Grand  Prix in July that Alonso was faster and effectively ordered to move  aside and let him win. 
Team orders, banned after an even louder howl  of outrage over Ferrari's manipulation of the 2002 Austrian Grand Prix  in Schumacher's favour, have now been made legal although teams can  still be punished heavily if deemed to have brought the sport into  disrepute. 
Any recurrence of the “Felipe, Fernando is  faster than you” instruction will come as a body blow for a man who was  seconds away from winning the title himself in 2008 before a serious  head injury in Hungary ruled him out of the reckoning in 2009. 
Ferrari president Luca di Montezemolo at the  end of 2010 judged Massa's 2010 performance as a seven, compared to  Alonso's 9.5, and suggested jokingly that the Brazilian had been  substituted by a lookalike. 
He has already made clear that he expects his team to be fighting for both titles this term. 
Montezemolo said in January: “Believe me, I  often still wake up at night thinking of the race in Abu Dhabi, so it  goes without saying that we must absolutely look to the future. 
“We must make a good start, both in terms of  reliability and, above all, on the performance front. Last year, we lost  the championship in a first half that found us failing to live up to  our expectations.” 
The 150 Italia, now on its third name after the  threat of legal action from Ford, which was seemingly concerned that  somebody might mistake the 300km/h machine for its best-selling F-150  pickup truck, should do what is required. 
Ferrari has done more kilometres than any other  team in pre-season testing while its pace has appeared to be on a par  with champion Red Bull. 
On the long runs, rather than single laps, the  sport's most glamorous and successful team with 16 Constructors' titles  and 15 Drivers' crowns, may even have the edge. 
Red Bull's Mark Webber told reporters in Barcelona last week: “Hopefully we are not too far away from Ferrari to start with.” 
Red Bull team boss Christian Horner added: “I  think they look very strong, I think people are under-estimating where  Ferrari are. We hope that we are somewhere near competitive.” 
Ferrari has been boosted by the arrival in 2010 of former McLaren chief engineer Pat Fry and Red Bull strategist Neil Martin. 
Chris Dyer, the former head of race track  engineering who was blamed in the Italian media for the Abu Dhabi  debacle, has been effectively demoted. 
Alonso and Massa have both been pounding around  the Spanish test tracks like irredeemable workaholics, with the  Spaniard putting in 141 laps - a double race distance - on one day in  Barcelona last week. 
“I am pleased with how the winter testing has  gone,” said Alonso, who won on his Ferrari debut in Bahrain in 2010 and  also triumphed controversially in Germany before further victories in  Italy, Singapore and South Korea. 
“On average, we have done around 100 laps each  day, which demonstrates we have the reliability which is a priority when  you are dealing with a new car,” he said. 
“Overall, I think we will arrive in Melbourne  in a 100 percent state of readiness, but whether or not that will be  enough to win, we will not know until we are there in Australia. 
“I feel confident, just as I did last year going into the start of the season. We are in good shape.” 
The big absentee will be Poland's Robert  Kubica, second in 2010 for Renault in Melbourne, after his  career-threatening and near-fatal crash while competing for fun in a  minor rally in Italy in February. - Renault 
                                                           


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