Daniel Ricciardo, Red Bull, Shanghai International Circuit, 2018

Paddock Diary: Chinese Grand Prix day four

Paddock Diary

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Daniel Ricciardo and Brendon Hartley shared a joke about the coming-together between the Toro Rosso drivers which helped Ricciardo to victory in Shanghai. Read the last of @DieterRencken’s China Paddock Diaries below.

9am

Wake up after continuing my habit of getting to sleep as late as possible to stay as close to European time zones as possible, yet still pack in six hours’ sleep. The late start makes ablutions, breakfast and check-out a rush, particularly as I need to drag my suitcase to the media centre in order to depart for the airport from the circuit, but I manage to catch the 10am shuttle.

On arrival I head for Force India and a casual catch-up chat with deputy team principal Bob Fernley and head of media Will Hings. We discuss Checo Perez, perhaps F1’s most underrated current driver, one who consistently out-performs his car. Despite placing seventh in the championship for the past two years and scoring seven podiums he has failed to catch the eye of top three team bosses. Bob suggests I return for lunch later…

11:30am

Time to follow up on interview material at Williams in preparation for a feature on Claire Williams. It pains me to walk in knowing the mood is depressed, particularly as the team was so upbeat ahead of the season. That’s the reality of F1 – it can be a cruel sport. Still, as always, the team handles its predicament with dignity. Although Sir Frank is now past long-haul travel, he can be proud of the team’s resilience.

12:30pm

Return to Force India for lunch beside the maze of water walkways that give Shanghai International Circuit its unique atmosphere. Built in 2003 in the shape of the Chinese character “Shang” (it means “above”) at a cost of (then) over £350m, SIC sits on reclaimed swampland, and hence the water.

SIC was constructed using ground-breaking techniques: the track is perched upon 40,000-plus concrete piles varying in height from 50 to 120 feet, in turn covered with polystyrene matting upon which asphalt was laid. The main grandstands resemble giant F1 rear wings, and accommodate 50,000 spectators. The circuit’s total capacity is four times that.

Ah, lunch: I choose the Asian platter – prawns, chicken skewer and squid served in spicy sauces – followed by teriyaki beef with spicy french fries. The dishes taste even better than they sound. Thanks Bob!

5pm

After the race it’s a rush to get through all interviews and get them to editor Keith before catching the 7:45pm airport shuttle. Charlie Whiting’s media briefings are always illuminating, and today was no exception: he countered all comments made by drivers in a calm and logical manner. One can’t help wondering how the FIA will replace him – particularly given he is now heading for 65.

9pm

Sit in the Emirates lounge; in strolls Brendon Hartley. “Hi Brendon,” I say, “how you doing?” As expected the Kiwi says “I’ve had better days,” before grabbing a bite. In comes Daniel Ricciardo, sees Brendon, and says with his customary broad grin, “I owe you a beer, mate…”

It was, of course, the Toro Rosso driver’s accident with team-mate Pierre Gasly that set in motion the circumstances that led to Dan’s sixth career victory. Bet it was an icy cold one. Hope it wasn’t served in footwear.

A reader had wondered what the issue was with Dan’s lower lip, and I use the opportunity to find out. Seems he inadvertently bit it in Bahrain, and swelling set in. “Nothing to worry about, though,” he says,” it’s getting better.”

With that its time to email the final Paddock Diary from China, then board the Airbus 380 to Brussels via Dubai. It’s a nine-hour flight, so some shut-eye is on the schedule. Next stop: Baku in a fortnight.

2018 Chinese Grand Prix

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10 comments on “Paddock Diary: Chinese Grand Prix day four”

  1. I really enjoyed reading your diary. Keep up the great work!

  2. Force India … deputy team principal Bob Fernley

    This is the thing that has annoyed me slightly about Force India for some years. Setting aside his legal issues, I don’t see Mallya as a TP, he’s more of a figurehead, but one who hogs the title of TP. And I do see Bob Fernley playing the TP role, both the visible side (media interviews, etc.) as well as the boring and nitty-gritty details (representation in FIA discussions, etc.). Mallya should just give Bob the title he deserves.

    Sir Frank is now past long-haul travel

    I do miss seeing him on TV during races. One can always count on him having a big grin upon seeing a good racing move, irrespective of whether it’s a Williams driver making the move or being on the receiving end.

    Ah, lunch: I choose the Asian platter

    Thank you for the pictures!

    1. @phylyp Glad you suggested those photos.
      @dieterrencken Are we allowed to take pictures at the plane?
      Maybe RaceFans need an Instagram account of these rare F1 food & travel…

  3. Looks like you enjoyed the lunch and dinner in one sitting. That makes a chef proud

  4. Is it possible for an article/series to cover the logistics of a race weekend, from the perspective of a team. I have a vague indication of how it works (rather, the two types of race weekends – the European ones where there are hundreds of trucks moving freight around, and the flyaway races that heavily leverage DHL type of partners), but would be interesting to hear of the build up to a race weekend, and the subsequent teardown.

    1. @phylyp have you seen the – I think – DHL/Red Bull mini doc on YouTube? Very interesting. Can’t look up for it now but I’m sure you’ll find it (it was from official RB channel as far as I can remember)

      1. Thank you @m-bagattini I’ll check those out.

  5. Awesome notes about the DR and BH :)

  6. That Aussie will suffer shoe stench shock syndrome if he keeps on winning.

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