Bahrain Grand Prix Tickets
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Bahrain Grand Prix Tickets
22 April 2012 at 15:00 Local Time | Bahrain International Circuit
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Latest Information on Bahrain Grand Prix Tickets
For the 2011 F1 season, Bahrain was schedule to host round 1 on March 13th. Due to the well documented civil unrest in the country, the decision was taken to postpone the race. The race organisers were quick to assure fans than Bahrain Grand Prix tickets would be refunded in full.
There is talk that the Bahrain GP could be rescheduled for the latter stages of the 2011 World Championship, possibly running on back to back weekends with the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix in November. This has been met with some criticism from some people within the sport, citing the schedule is crammed enough. If the race does in fact find a new place on the 2011 F1 calendar, Bahrain Grand Prix tickets sales will start from here once again.
The Bahrain Grand Prix - Bahrain International Circuit
Location
The International Grand Prix circuit is located just a stones throw away from the west coast of Bahrain, a tiny island in the Persian Gulf. The country is so small that the international airport in nearby Saudi Arabia actually covers more land. Bahrain is joined to Saudi Arabia by a bridge that stretches 25 kilometres over the water, and new bridge is currently under construction that will double the length and will link Bahrain to Qatar. For almost 200 years Bahrain was a protectorate of the UK but gained full independence in 1971, and officially became a 'Kingdom' in 2002. It was the first country in the whole region to discover oil, and the country did very well during a resources boom in the late eighties. To this day it has the fastest growing economy in the Arab world.
Circuit Origins
The Government of Bahrain is aware the fortune it has amassed through oil is not going to last forever and has started attracting tourism and technological investment to strengthen the economy. A Grand Prix offered them the chance to do exactly that, and the country defeated a number of others to host the first F1 race in the Middle East. They handed over a massive amount of money to Formula One Management and spent 150 million dollars on the track designed by Herman Tilke. The results were very impressive and the circuit is one of two locations known as an 'FIA Centre of Excellence', the other being Paul Ricard. Although construction started in 2002 the facility was not fully ready when the circus arrived in 2004. The race still ploughed ahead although paint was still wet on some of the buildings. A spray-on adhesive was pioneered for the surroundings that prevented sand from getting onto the circuit.
Description
The circuit is fairly fast and is incredibly hard on brakes as there are many tight corners that follow high speed sections. This makes overtaking very possible, especially into turn one which is one the tightest first corners of them all from the highest speed. The track has a few quick bends but is generally stop-start. The run off areas at Sakhir are very wide meaning driving mistakes are not punished by contact with the barriers. However, this often allows from some fierce racing as the drivers know they can run wide if they need to. Although concerns about sand have never materialised the track is always dusty, especially off line. Fans can view much of the circuit from the main grandstands.
Racing History
Of the five races held in Bahrain, Ferrari and Renault have won them all. However, cars that are quick at Sakhir are not necessarily quick elsewhere which adds a little intrigue to the Grand Prix. For example, Ferrari was very fast in 2005 and 2006 but struggled poorly in the races that followed. Toyota locked out the front row in 2009 but quailed last and second last at the very next race. The pitlane in Bahrain is very long which makes the time spent in the pits quite high. As a result of this a one-stop strategy is possible and Raikkonen did exactly that in 2006 to move from last third. Drivers and machinery are often not settled in Bahrain as it is part of the flyway start to the season, and the racing is always quite good. This is helped because some of the corners allow the drivers to be a little more adventurous than usual.
Driving Challenges
The circuit is very dusty offline which makes it very easy to lose time from a tiny mistake. Brakes also take a massive punishment meaning the driver who can look after his pads best will have a significant advantage at the end of the race. Few of the corners are challenging but turn 10, which leads onto the back straight, has a kink right before where driver can adopt several different lines. Some of them, such as Jarno Trulli, are able to use this to their advantage and make it an overtaking opportunity.
What happened in 2009?
Toyota qualified first and second, and set the fastest lap of the race, but threw away likely victory by using the wrong tyres partway through the race. Their tactical error gifted the win to Jenson Button, who brilliantly fought past Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton at the start.
Why Watch?
The racing in Bahrain is always exciting and the order is often mixed up a little. The Grand Prix can also come alive at the end if it is a close race due to excessive brake wear. The first corner is possibly the most exciting in F1 because it is a tight hairpin where the cars arrive at almost top speed. Like the sound of this race? Check out our range of Bahrain Grand Prix tickets right here.
Memorable Moments
2004 : Kimi Raikkonen was frustrated with his unreliable McLaren so planted his foot to the floor when the engine went bang. The result was more fuel in the cylinders and a huge trail of flames out the back of his car, embarrassing Mercedes greatly.
2005 : This was one of three races in 2005 where Ferrari were competitive, but it was to no avail because Schumacher registered his first mechanical retirement in over four years.
2006 : Kimi Raikkonen moved up nineteen places in the race making it the best result from the worst starting position since 1993.
2008 : Lewis Hamilton resumed hostilities with Fernando Alonso by crashing to the back of the Renault driver on lap two. McLaren mechanics initially suggested that Alonso may have brake tested his fiercest rival, but it later turned out that Lewis had simply misjudged the distance between the two cars.
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