F1 racing returns to Austria

The Red Bull team doubts there will be a home advantage as Formula One returns to Austria this weekend for the first time in 11 years.

Drivers Daniel Ricciardo and Sebastian Vettel finally ended the six-race winning streak by Mercedes finishing 1-3 in the Canadian Grand Prix two weeks ago.

But just when their F1 fortunes have taken an upturn, they don’t believe their home track, the old A1 Ring redubbed the Red Bull Ring, will give them anything more than an emotional boost in the Austrian Grand Prix.

Even then, teams that have been eating Red Bull exhausts for the past four years are keen to pay them in kind on their home track.

“It adds a bit of extra motivation,” F1 leader Nico Rosberg of Mercedes admits. “It would be really special to win on the A1 Ring.”

Ricciardo and Vettel believe Mercedes will bounce back from their hiccup in Montreal.

“The gap is still big,” Ricciardo said on Thursday.

“We’ve got a bit of steam from the last race. We’re all really excited – the home one for Red Bull – but (closing the gap) is still going to take a bit of time, it’s not going to happen overnight.”

Vettel agrees but will be ready for any mistake from their rivals.

“If a chance comes up like in Canada, we want to be right there to take it,” the four-time world champion said.

Only engine troubles have stymied Mercedes this season. In Montreal, Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton had the same problem at about the same time, when their rear brakes overheated. While Hamilton went out, race leader Rosberg managed to limit the damage and lost just one place.

“It’s work in progress,” Rosberg said of their technicians trying to solve the problem.

“We are confident it’s not happening again. We don’t need to go extra conservative.”

Despite his second DNF of the season, Hamilton took positives out of the Canadian GP.

“We’ve only gained from that experience,” the 2008 world champion said. “The car’s been fixed so that won’t happen again. … We have a lot races ahead of us so a couple of DNFs are not concerning me too much now. I have done my optimum but there is still room for improvement.”

The Austrian GP was last held in 2003, when Michael Schumacher triumphed on his way to the sixth of his seven world titles.

Only four drivers have raced on this circuit – Jenson Button, Kimi Raikkonen, Fernando Alonso and Filipe Massa. It will be the first time for Ricciardo and Vettel.

Although the track has been modified only slightly, the 11-year-old race data won’t be much help as the series has drastically changed with the introduction of the hybrid cars.

“To be honest, I don’t remember anything … I have no memories,” Alonso said.

“(It) is a very short circuit, so there are only five or six corners around here where you can make the time, so I expect all the cars to be very close. One or two tenths (in time), you can make a lot of places, so you just need to make a perfect lap.”

Teams need to gather as much data as possible during practice on Friday and Saturday morning, especially on surface characteristics.

Those could change between the first and second practices as rain has been forecast for Friday afternoon.

Rosberg leads with 140 points, Hamilton has 118, and next-best is Ricciardo, on 79.

Vettel sits fifth with 60.

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