Official: Raikkonen to stay at Ferrari for 2016

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Kimi Raikkonen will stay on at the Ferrari Formula 1 team for the 2016 season, the Italian squad announced on Wednesday.

The Finn, who won the drivers’ title with the Maranello team in 2007, will partner four-time world champion Sebastian Vettel for the second year in succession.

Raikkonen rejoined Ferrari at the start of last year, but was overshadowed by teammate Fernando Alonso.

Although several drivers were linked to the second Ferrari seat, most prominently Williams’s Valtteri Bottas, Raikkonen will retain his drive.

“What can I say… For me, to be able to stay another year at Ferrari means that the dream goes on,” said Raikkonen. “The Scuderia is my family, as I always said, it’s here I want to end my career.

“I am more committed than ever and I want to say thank you to the people who gave me this chance. Also, a big thank you goes to all my Ferrari fans, for their continuous support.”

Ferrari boss Maurizio Arrivabene added: “We believe that extending Kimi’s contract into the next season will provide further stability to the team.

“This has been our guideline, also considering the very good relationship between Kimi and Seb. On our side, this shows our great confidence in him, and I expect this confidence to be well rewarded.”

Raikkonen, 35, is currently fifth in the standings, 84 points behind Vettel, after having secured a sole podium finish this year.

Vettel, in contrast, has finished on the rostrum seven times, including two victories.

The last of Raikkonen’s 20 grand prix wins came in the 2013 season opener for Lotus.

Raikkonen is yet to score a victory in his second stint with Ferrari, meaning that all his victories have come in the pre-hybrid turbo eras of 3-litre V10s and 2.4-litre V8s.

| Source: ferrarif1.commotorsport.com | espn.co.ukautosport.com | f1fanatic.co.uk | pitpass.com | crash.net | bbc.co.uk |



Was Ferrari right to keep Raikkonen?

Raikkonen may be 36 in October, out-qualified by his Ferrari team-mates 24-5 since his return at the start of last year and out-raced 20-3, but you can understand Maurizio Arrivabene’s decision to retain the Finn for 2016.

There were specific reasons as to why Raikkonen languished behind Fernando Alonso so often last year as the F14 T struggled in many areas and was almost the complete opposite in the way he likes a car to handle.

With those faults addressed over the winter, and with the hiring of a team-mate in Sebastian Vettel he is close to and has considerable respect for, Raikkonen has been a far happier man this year.

The results, however, have betrayed him as Vettel has enjoyed seven trips to the podium, including two wins, compared to Raikkonen’s one second place.

There have been mistakes in qualifying, highlighted by the team, that have undermined Raikkonen’s grid position, and ultimately his finishing spot.

Arrivabene has long made clear, though, the key to Raikkonen’s future was in his own hands, and as long as he showed sufficient appetite and desire, a new deal was his for the taking.

Now in the Indian summer of his career, by his own admission Raikkonen is more content than he has ever been, the initial key ingredient to extracting the best from him.

Technical director James Allison has also stated in terms of speed there is nothing to separate Vettel and Raikkonen, with only those little errors letting him down.

So you have a fast, happy, and a clearly still hungry Raikkonen, and in terms of box office, he continues to remain one of the top attractions in the business.

One can only assume in assessing the competition for the seat – Valtteri Bottas, Nico Hulkenberg and Daniel Ricciardo – there was no-one to compare to Raikkonen at present when you take the aforementioned characteristics into consideration.

In that respect, Ferrari has done exactly the right thing in holding on to him for one more season.


Five reasons why Ferrari are keeping Raikkonen

Ferrari want stability

Italy might have a reputation for holding elections like they’re going out of style, but while the political machinations at Maranello can also seem fraught at times – last year being a case in point – their driver line-ups have tended to stand in marked contrast.

Just six drivers – Michael Schumacher, Rubens Barrichello, Felipe Massa, Kimi Raikkonen, Fernando Alonso and Sebastian Vettel – have been employed over the last 15 years, ample proof that the Scuderia like to run a steady ship in that regard. One suspects they see such stability as a hallmark of a successful operation: contrast the dominance of the Schumacher-Barrichello years with the revolving door of the early 1990s, for example, when they were in the doldrums, Alain Prost was sacked in-season and the likes of Ivan Capelli and Nicola Larini were flitting in and out.

Raikkonen is on a different level altogether and has a wealth of experience, including five seasons with his current team. And…

The Vettel-Raikkonen relationship works well

Honestly, when was the last time you looked at a Ferrari line-up and thought, ‘I just don’t know who has the upper hand here’? Most of us would point to the 2008 season, when Raikkonen was the defending champion but Massa challenged for the title. Pure talent tends to ensure a de-facto No 1 driver in a team but the process of natural selection goes a step further at Ferrari, thanks to the awesome commitment and political skills their superstars also tend to possess.

In that respect, Vettel is like Schumacher and Alonso, with their team-mates invariably playing second fiddle. Raikkonen isn’t by any means a No 2 driver, which helps explain why that sort of situation has developed again this season to the benefit of (just about) everyone. The pair get along well and, coming towards the end of his career, the Finn seems more willing to accept the status quo. He also seems to be driving Vettel back towards his best form. Moreover, technical director James Allison also likes Kimi, having worked with him at Lotus.

Ferrari are waiting for 2017’s market to open up

Note that Ferrari have only extended Raikkonen’s stay for a further season by exercising the option they already held on the Finn’s services for 2017. For while the merits of their decision to retain Raikkonen might be questionable, the strategy of playing a waiting game is not. Why? Because unlike this year, when the majority of drivers remain under contract, next year will be a buyer’s market. Not only will Bottas be a free agent but so might Ricciardo (depending on the details of the small print in his Red Bull deal). And perhaps most pertinently of all, Max Verstappen may be available for hire after another season in which the Toro Rosso starlet could assuage any lingering doubts Ferrari, no fans of youth as a rule, may have about his calibre or state of readiness.

Red Bull, under whose umbrella Toro Rosso operate, will undoubtedly soon declare that Verstappen is tied to a long-term deal with the group. He probably is. But contracts in F1 are just pieces of paper whose principal use is a bargaining chip. What price Verstappen if and when Red Bull enquire about a supply of engines from Ferrari, for instance? That’s a scenario for another day. In the meantime, Ferrari have played a sensible hand, retaining Raikkonen on a one-year deal which Bottas would almost certainly have rejected. When the time comes in 12 or so months’ time for F1’s next major merry-go-round in the driver market, Ferrari will be calling the tune.

Bottas looked too expensive for 2016

With both of Raikkonen’s likeliest potential replacements under contract for next year, Ferrari’s 2015 options never boiled down to a simple ‘him or him’ choice. Instead, once Red Bull flatly refused to countenance letting Daniel Ricciardo depart, their decision effectively amounted to ‘Kimi or Bottas plus £10m’ – the amount of money Williams were reputedly demanding in exchange for releasing the Finn a year early from his current deal.

Even when Bottas excelling at the start of the year – finishing fifth at Malaysia after missing Australia through a troublesome back injury, fourth in Spain and Bahrain, and then reaching the podium in Canada – it was tough to argue that his potential upgrade in performance was commensurate with such a sum. He’s good, no question. And he very probably would deliver better results than Raikkonen has produced this year. But £10m-worth better? Not according to his recent form and, more importantly, not judging by a comparison of his results with those of Felipe Massa, a known quantity as far as Ferrari are concerned. Ultimately, paying £10m for Bottas over Raikkonen was an expensive gamble that not even Ferrari, the richest team in F1, were willing to take.

Kimi hasn’t actually been that bad

Yes, Raikkonen’s contract extension – and particularly the timing of it – has been greeted with a fair deal of surprise among the media, but has Kimi’s form really been all that wretched? We know about the Iceman’s struggles to string a single qualifying lap together ever since his return to Maranello last year, but as he himself has pointed out several times already, 2015 has hardly been the “disaster” of 2014. Much of that, undoubtedly, is down to the big step forward Ferrari have made with their car and engine, but Raikkonen has already scored 21 points more than he managed in the whole of last season – despite three retirements in 10 races.

While his bizarre lap-one crash in Austria, when he collected Fernando Alonso, hardly pointed to a driver on top of his game, his other DNFs in Australia and Hungary were car related – retirements which probably cost him in the region of 28 points all told. Had he enjoyed the 100% reliability from the SF15-T of his team-mate, those extra points would have put him comfortably ahead of Williams’ Valtteri Bottas in fourth in the drivers’ standings, rather than just behind, and a whole lot closer to Vettel. There have been flashes of the ‘old Kimi’ too, particularly on race-day in Bahrain when he would probably have won had the race been a few laps longer.

Flashes of podium-finishing form are currently not enough to consistently trouble a revitalised Vettel – who let’s not forget, is a good way away yet from the veteran stage of his career – but do Ferrari, still a little way adrift of being a title-winning force again, actually really need Raikkonen to be quite on his team-mate’s level every week?

12 thoughts on “Official: Raikkonen to stay at Ferrari for 2016

  1. Yaaay super happy! 😍

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Finally— 😀 – Kimi can drive at the weekend quietly and be triumphant again… Long live the King of Spa!

    Like

  3. Woohoo! The best news in a long time. Now for some more good news over the weekend!

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  4. FANTASTIC!!! So glad to hear. My parrot KIMI & I will be yelling GO KIMI GOOO this weekend and hoping that Kim has a similar great start to Hungary, followed by a spectacular finish on the podium at Spa!! Holding toes Kimster! Best wishes Ettala Afrika Jo

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  5. Fantastic news !!! (And hopefully it will stop all the negative comments, constant rumours, gossip and speculation from those wretched Sky TV presenters)

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  6. Fantastic, and he deserves it no doubt! Just hope for better luck and that he can better make the tyres work over one lap from now on. When he’s in front, he’ll be on podium all the time.

    As for comments going on, I’m afraid there will still be continuous talk about whether Ferrari made the correct choice and whatnot..

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  7. Great News!! This actually made me set new password for my account and comment here after ages..Saima its all because of your and all us fan’s faith and support that we finally got some good news to hear in 2015..hoping for a better 2nd half..i have a feeling..Iceman would be amazingly happy this weekend..Contract extension, Driving at spa, driving a competitive Ferrari, what more does he want now..and some ice cream:p C’mon Kimi!!! Baby Robin Power this weekend!!! 🙂 I’m so glad i’m going to get to see Kimi race for 1 more year..feeling so content now:)

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  8. Better times to come hopefully guys! Kimi is so determined. I’m sure he will work hard and try fix his qualy issues, but even if he can’t, his race performances are still top-notch, he just needs a little bit of luck.

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  9. Really fabulous news! The sheer force of his personality no doubt led to this decision. And he is a damn good driver. Just had some bad luck of late.

    WIthout Kimi, F1 would not be the same.

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  10. Hallelujah! Something wise & reasonable from Ferrari! Go, Kimi………..

    Like

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