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Source: http://www.autocarblog.co.uk/148-gran-coupe-bmw-6-series.html
Valentino Rossi underwent surgery today to remove the pin in his right tibia, the final memento of his monster crash at Mugello in June 2010. The surgery, carried out at the Cervesi hospital in Cattolica, not far from Rossi's home in Tavullia, was performed by Dr Giannicola Lucidi and Dr Marco Trono, while Professor Giuseppe Porcellini, the surgeon who fixed the shoulder Rossi injured earlier that year in a motocross crash. The surgery was a success, and after a period of 5 days rest and recovery, the Italian should be able to get back to training ready for the 2012 MotoGP season. In a press release issued this evening, Ducati announced they expected Rossi to be fit enough to take part in the second Sepang test due to take place at the end of February.
Source: http://www.f1fanatic.co.uk/2012/02/10/jerez-test-day-pictures-3/
Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/02/07/adrian-newey-rues-loss-of-diffuser-blowing/
Gerhard Berger Eric Bernard Enrique Bernoldi Enrico Bertaggia
Source: http://anotherindycarblog.wordpress.com/2011/12/04/the-off-season-as-it-stands-today/
Eugene Chaboud Jay Chamberlain Karun Chandhok Alain de Changy
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Luki Botha JeanChristophe Boullion Sebastien Bourdais Thierry Boutsen
All right, here's the deal: Fantasy NASCAR is coming up soon, and we at Yahoo! Sports want to fantasize with you. (Wait, that sounded really wrong.) Anyway, you need to get in on this action. Go to the Fantasy NASCAR homepage and sign up for a team. Then make sure you jump in on our special private league:
Fans of From The Marbles
Group ID: 31
Password: marbles
(sneaky password, yes?)
Anyway, the whole deal begins in a month or so with the Daytona 500. There'll be acclaim and love for the weekly winners, and you'll get the satisfaction of knowing that you're a better race analyst than [insert announcer name here]. Win-win all the way around. Get on it!
Valentino Rossi underwent surgery today to remove the pin in his right tibia, the final memento of his monster crash at Mugello in June 2010. The surgery, carried out at the Cervesi hospital in Cattolica, not far from Rossi's home in Tavullia, was performed by Dr Giannicola Lucidi and Dr Marco Trono, while Professor Giuseppe Porcellini, the surgeon who fixed the shoulder Rossi injured earlier that year in a motocross crash. The surgery was a success, and after a period of 5 days rest and recovery, the Italian should be able to get back to training ready for the 2012 MotoGP season. In a press release issued this evening, Ducati announced they expected Rossi to be fit enough to take part in the second Sepang test due to take place at the end of February.

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. -- I swiped my credit card at a McDonald's one and a half miles from the turn one tunnel sometime after 12:30 Sunday morning for an order that I hardly wanted to eat ? a number one with extra pickles, an extra cheeseburger and a Dr. Pepper.
It was too much food ? about 1,220 calories of gluttony plus ketchup ? and inane for that time of the morning. But this trip to the Golden Arches wasn't a lesson in false pretenses. Rather, it was a simple case of supply and demand: most of the concession stands in the Daytona infield had closed while race cars continued to drone on. And those race cars had no immediate plans to stop their attack either, driving on and on twice around the clock and apparently straight through our heads.
So Chris (a longtime high school buddy) and I headed out, venturing in to the Daytona darkness in search of food and some sort of relief from the audial onslaught of Mazdas, Porsches, BMWs, Audis and more. The non-stop noise of the cars along the straightaways combined with the high pitches associated with downshifting and upshifting in and out corners had finally taken its unexpected toll. My head ached. Bad.
The Rolex 24 Hours of Daytona, in its venerable 50th edition, had taken us bright-eyed rookies by surprise.
After all, Chris and I had never tried endurance racing before. Both of us are longtime veterans of 16th and Georgetown in Indianapolis, having sat through our share of shivery-cold Pole Days and scorching practice ones. We aren't racing newbies. But the 24 Hours is a different beast, and 6 p.m. was merely a point in this year's race when everyone could look at a dark green Rolex clock in the middle of pit road and know that a mere 21 and a half hours remained.
And thus, Chris and I were fading fast. We sat in the McDonald's in the early Sunday morning hours, hardly tasting the food as the line grew longer nearby. I gazed at local high school kids skirting curfew, fans like us staring distantly in another booth and even track safety workers still in their yellow firesuits who stood in line as two hapless workers rummaged behind the counter in the unexpectedly-busy overnight shift. And still, the noise.
Even inside the restaurant, you could hear the damned cars. It was a dull hum, but it was always there ? almost like a hive of bees waiting to attack outside your front door. The McDonald's parking lot could have been the Daytona garage area.
The leadup for Chris and I to our Daytona foray was akin to 10-year-old boys heading to our first sleepover. We were going to have our cake, our ice cream, our video games and stay up all freaking night in the basement, man. And just as 10-year-olds would, we did about everything you can do at Daytona within our first 12 hours on the premises.
We drank beer. We threw a football. We drank more beer. We wandered the garage area. We snapped photos that sexy new Daytona Prototype Corvette. We got in the way of cars being push out of the stalls. We stood atop the garage area, me pointing out trivial knowledge and Chris nodding. We walked along Daytona's scenic Lake Lloyd, and questioned the structural integrity of the infield midway rides. We drank more beer. We ate $7.50 Philly Cheesesteaks. We marveled at the new Nissans along vendor row. And then at Porsches. And then at BMWs. And, yep, we then found some more beer.
By then, the race was still two hours away. We couldn't decide if this was good or bad news.

So we drank some more beer, walked to pit road and bumped in to the Ganassi guys. Chris shook Scott Dixon's hand and said "good luck!" ? as if Dixon was needing a pep talk. We ran into an incognito Brian France. We got sunburned. We gazed too long at the NOS Energy Drink girls.
And finally, standing outside the chainlink fence near the east horseshoe, the 24 Hours of Daytona started. The Daytona Prototypes strutted by first, booming their low, rumbling engines. Then the Grand Touring class charged the corner, the whining engines of the Mazdas and Porsches drowning out the nearly-silent Ferraris and the Chevrolet Camaro that sounded more like a buzzing fire alarm. And nothing crazy happened. No one hit each other. No one spun. Hell, hardly a driver made a daunting move in our little corner. So we moved on.
23 hours, 30 minutes left. Time appeared to be standing still.
Of course, we had planned our trip like complete rookies. We wouldn't need a hotel reservation because, duh, we'd just watch racing all night and sleep in the grandstands if need be. We just needed our Chrevrolet Malibu rental car ? full-size, mind you ? and ill-advised confidence. The confidence bubbled for those early hours, like the foam that sprung up each time we popped open a can of Yuengling Light. But soon, it was flat.
We had made it to the grandstands on the frontstretch and sat high enough to see the beach resorts along the Atlantic while the sun dipped and forced a shivery-cold retreat back to the Malibu for more layers. By then, the noise had rendered our ear plugs virtually useless and our ability to follow the race even worse. Renting a pair of radio scanners with full, over-ear headphones proved to the best $20 investment of the weekend.
But still, the noise.

You could probably blame many things for how lethargic we had become while guys like Franchitti, Lally, McNish and more continued to perform at their best all around us. The list in our minds, however, didn't matter. We were tired, and the two Red Bulls in the trunk weren't going to fix that.
Somehow, though, we had caught a break after we met up to Chris' uncle for the second time in the day around 10 p.m. His uncle was tied to a sponsorship of the No. 67 GT team, and had planned to entertain clients in an infield motorhome. Those plans fell through, leaving an empty motorhome with heat and a pair of beds to crash on. And they were ours.
Talk about a pick-me-up.
The good news carried us for all of 15 minutes, but managed to be enough to push us through a first exciting and then excruiating trip to a soon-closing backstretch viewing area that featured a tram system obviously assembled by someone who bemoans efficiency.
Finished now at McDonald's, we headed back toward the glow in the sky along the wide-open streets built to accomodate a much larger race's exit and I, as driver, somewhat fretted the left-turn off Williamson back on the Daytona property. There was no hiding from those cars and that noise now.

But that turn ?�back into the noise, back into the haze of racing exhaust and thick campfire smoke ? proved to be worth it the next afternoon. Chris and I, perched once again in the grandstands, watched as the hours ticked by the intensity grew deeper. We saw the Ganassi cars struggle with their transmission on pit road, countless GT cars overshoot turn one and eventual winner A.J. Allmendinger bounce off of Allan McNish exiting turn two. It was thrilling. It was grinding.
Most importantly, the 24 Hours of Daytona was fun again. The sun beamed warmth, the competition was ragged. Who could hang on? Who would drop out? We had felt the intensity of going twice around the clock, even without a cockpit. And when the checkered flag flew and it all stopped ? the noise, the action, everything ? the contrast was more than strange.
For 24 hours, drivers, teams, fans, workers and more had battled to keep this race going, battled to get to the end. We weren't ready for it to actually end, rather just for it to keep going.
That's the grip of the 24 Hours, and that's a grip that draws drivers and fans alike back to this arduous journey of a racing event. It's not for the faint of heart, and those who finish it ? no matter the trip getting there ? feel an innate sense of accomplishment. That's what brings them back. That's what will bring me back.
George Abecassis Kenny Acheson Andrea de Adamich Philippe Adams
Fox Sports has rolled out the details of its 15-event coverage this season, and there are a few surprises within. Fox will handle the first 13 Sprint Cup races plus the preseason Budweiser Shootout and Daytona qualifying.
There are some shifts in the announcing booth; Michael Waltrip will join his brother Darrell and Chris Myers for the prerace events. Once again, DW, Mike Joy and Larry McReynolds will handle in-race coverage. On pit road, you'll have Jeff Hammond, Dick Berggren, Steve Byrnes, Matt Yocum and Krista Voda.
Fox enjoyed a 9-percent bump in 2011 over its first 13 races. The average of 8.6 million viewers was the highest in three years. And last year's Daytona 500 had over 30 million viewers, making it the most-watched race since 2008. This year, with a new champion and new faces in the field (we don't need to draw you a neon-green picture, do we?), it's likely Fox will exceed that figure handily.
Here is the�coverage start times, followed by the actual race start times�(all times Eastern, all subject to change):
Sat. Feb. 18: Daytona Int'l Speedway (Budweiser Shootout), 8:00 PM; 8:29 PM
Sun. Feb. 19: Daytona Int'l Speedway (Daytona 500 Qualifying), 1:00 PM
Sun. Feb. 26: Daytona Int'l Speedway (Daytona 500), 12:00 PM; 1:30 PM
Sun. March 4: Phoenix Int'l Speedway, 2:30 PM; 3:14 PM
Sun. March 11: Las Vegas Motor Speedway, 2:30 PM; 3:16 PM
Sun. March 18: Bristol Motor Speedway, 12:30 PM; 1:13 PM
Sun. March 25: Auto Club Speedway, 2:30 PM; 3:16 PM
Sun. April 1: Martinsville Speedway, 12:30 PM; 1:13 PM
Sat. April 14: Texas Motor Speedway, 7:00 PM; 7:46 PM
Sun. April 22: Kansas Speedway, 12:30 PM; 1:16 PM
Sat. April 28: Richmond Int'l Raceway, 7:00 PM; 7:44 PM
Sun. May 6: Talladega Superspeedway, 12:00 PM; 1:19 PM
Sat. May 12: Darlington Raceway, 6:30 PM; 7:15 PM
Sun. May 27: Charlotte Motor Speedway, 5:30 PM; 6:16 PM
Sun. June 3: Dover Int'l Speedway, 12:30 PM; 1:15 PM
Jack Brabham† Bill Brack Ernesto Brambilla Vittorio Brambilla
Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/02/07/first-pic-as-red-bull-rb8-takes-to-track/
Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/02/07/something-for-f1-to-think-about/
Sure, it's the offseason, but that doesn't mean we can't throw out a few Power Rankings now and then. Today, we focus on the most important developments in one of the wildest offseasons in recent memory. And we start exactly where you'd expect we would ...
1. The saga of Kurt Busch. Has any former champion in NASCAR ever gone through such a dramatic decline in fortune while still in the prime of his career? Busch's separation from Penske, regardless of fault, and his new gig at Phoenix Racing made for one of the offseason's most fascinating soap operas, and one of the 2012 season's more interesting stories.
[Richard Petty: NASCAR sponsors leery of Kurt Busch]
2. The rise of AJ Allmendinger. You can name plenty of winners in the Kurt Busch saga, like Phoenix and Kurt's former crew, for two, but Allmendinger has to rank at the top of that list. Just starting to come into his own as a driver at Richard Petty Motorsports, Allmendinger found himself in a Chase-worthy ride just days after losing his sponsor.
3. The journey of Darian Grubb. The offseason began instants after the checkered flag dropped at Homestead, with Darian Grubb being shown the door after leading Tony Stewart to a championship. Grubb landed on his feet at Joe Gibbs Racing, and will try to work the same mojo on Denny Hamlin next year.
4. The reloading at Stewart-Haas. How do you make a championship team better? By bringing in top-flight talent across the board. Steve Addington and Greg Zipadelli joined SHR and ensured no dropoff in talent from the departure of Grubb.
5. The drivers who've taken a step downward. Brian Vickers still doesn't have a ride for the 2012 season. David Ragan has dropped from Roush Fenway to Front Row (sorry, Front Row, but you know it's true) and David Reutimann's future is also cloudy because of sponsorship concerns at Baldwin.
6. The battle to kill tandem drafting dead. NASCAR hates the tandem drafting at Talladega and Daytona, and is doing everything possible to change it, right up to and including banning radio talk between cars. But it persists, and as last week's testing showed, it's at higher speeds than ever before. Great!
7. Kasey Kahne's ill-advised Twitter rant. Kasey Kahne may be headed to greener pastures at Hendrick Motorsports, but he managed to tick off an entire nation of breastfeeding moms along the way.
8. The reworking of the 29 team. Kevin Harvick has finished third two years in a row, and that's just not enough for Happy. Sent packing was former crew chief Gil Martin, and brought on board was former Clint Bowyer crew chief Shane Wilson. Will the change pay dividends?
9. The consolidation of sponsors. Carl Edwards now has pretty much every sponsor in the known universe lining up to get on his car, but we knew that already. Best Buy's departure from the RPM 43 to Matt Kenseth was a deep blow to the Petty team, and more sponsor shuffling is likely ahead.
[Related: Carl Edwards to quit Nationwide Series]
10. The existence of Dale Earnhardt Jr.'s girlfriend. This might be the most amazing news of the offseason: she's real!
All right, your turn. What have been your biggest stories so far? And are there more yet to come?
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Mike Beuttler Birabongse Bhanubandh Lucien Bianchi Gino Bianco
Source: http://adamcooperf1.com/2012/02/06/sebastian-vettel-qa-well-see-how-we-get-on-with-the-new-car/
Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/02/03/key-leaves-sauber/
Source: http://joesaward.wordpress.com/2012/02/02/finding-the-positive-in-everything/
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Earlier this week, Formula 1 driver Adrian Sutil was given an 18 month suspended sentence and fined for a nightclub altercation with Lotus co-owner Eric Lux.
And given the circumstances surrounding the sentence, it makes the confrontations that have occurred recently in the Cup Series pretty tame. Sutil and Lux were at a nightclub after the Chinese Grand Prix in April and the two got into an argument.
Sutil had told the court on the first day of proceedings on Monday that he had repeatedly apologised to Lux and denied it was his intention to hurt him but rather to throw a drink in his face.
The prosecution, however, had asked for a 21-month sentence and a 300,000 euro fine, saying that as a professional athlete Sutil should not have acted that way.
The glass hit Lux in the throat, resulting in 24 stitches to close the resulting wound. Sutil has maintained that the incident was an accident.
Fellow Formula 1 driver Lewis Hamilton was also at the nightclub when the incident happened, and didn't testify in the trial, citing previous commitments with his McLaren team.
For that, Sutil called Hamilton a "coward."
In other F1 news, the week has been filled with the reveals of the 2012 cars, with the most (negative or otherwise) reception given to the 2012 Ferrari. For more pictures of 2012 cars, head over to Yahoo! Eurosport.