Belgian Grand Prix – A Magical Trip

Wow, what an event!  Our trip to the Belgian Grand Prix was something.  This one’s been on my bucket list for a long time, and you often hear that if you can only go to one race, the Belgian Grand Prix is the one you want.  Now I know why: beautiful surroundings, historic track, wonderful layout, great fans, fries & beer, and of course the racing…

Belgian Grand Prix

Belgian Grand Prix – The Logistics

Getting to Belgium, down to the Spa Francorchamps area, and into the circuit were all easier than I expected.  Of course, coming from California, you can only make it so easy getting to Belgium, but one relatively short stop thru Atlanta on Delta was as straightforward as can be.  From Brussels Airport down to Francorchamps was a little over 1.5 hours drive in our rental Renault.  Because we confirmed this trip pretty late (didn’t get race tickets until less than two weeks before the race) we had to pick up our tickets at the main F1 Ticket Collection Point in Francorchamps instead of having them shipped, so we went there first late Thursday morning in case there were any hiccups.  There were none.  With less than two weeks to go, the only way to get other than General Admission tickets was thru a broker.  I was a bit nervous about dropping over $1000 for race tickets with a broker on the promise they’d be there at will call when I arrived.  After a little research, I chose to buy my tickets at Gootickets.com.  They seemed to be legitimate, AND they had the best seats at the best prices.

My nervousness was completely unfounded.  I called them twice, once before and once after I placed my order, and both times I reached very helpful, English-speaking ladies.  At the F1 Ticket collection point, Gootickets.com had their own desk, again staffed with helpful young ladies, and my ticket packet was complete, correct, and ready for pickup – two tickets in the Gold 3 covered grandstand at Eau Rouge.  I would not hesitate to buy from them again; Gootickets.com gets a big thumbs up from me.  Getting two tickets to the Belgium Grand Prix within two weeks of race day at one of the best grand stands and at a reasonable price was definitely a good score.  I also had ordered a three-day parking pass directly from the F1 site, and they also had everything ready for pickup (parking passes & maps) at the same place as my tickets.  Within 5 minutes, I’d found a place to ditch the car, run across the street pick up my tickets and parking passes, and get back to the car to find a cash machine a proper parking place.  Gootickets.com certainly helped make it easy: along with my ticket voucher, their site had explicit and simple directions to the collection point as well as pictures of the what the building looks like from the street.  So far so good for the Belgium Grand Prix.

Belgian Grand Prix – Friday Practice

Picking up the tickets and parking passes on Thursday was definitely the right call.  Traffic for the main exit (#10) to Francorchamps off the E42 even for Friday practice was really heavy with a long backup.  Who knows how hard it would have been to get to the ticket collection point on Friday.  Fortunately our parking passes allowed us to take a separate, seemingly temporary exit for those with ‘official’ parking passes.  We were directed along a couple of miles of narrow country roads, all moving one-way inbound toward the track.  Our lot (#15) was in a great location just northeast of La Source, and it was a short walk to the grandstand area outside the run down to Eau Rouge.  Moving around at the Belgium Grand Prix was quite easy, and there no frisking, metal detectors, or bag inspectors so common at US events.  Our tickets were quickly scanned at the entrance to the parking lot, and that was it.  We could have brought in a cooler of food and drinks, chairs, anything (if we had them) – and many people did.

We stopped for a bit to walk around the F1 Village behind the grandstand, and then we made our way to check out our seats overlooking Eau Rouge.  Here’s the view from our seats, about one-third from right to left as you sit and about halfway up:

Belgian Grand Prix - Gold 3 Grandstand

Another thumbs up on our Belgium Grand Prix experience so far.  We’d get a great view of the run from La Source thru Eau Rouge, we’d stay dry if it rained, there was a refreshment stand within our private grandstand area, and we could see a big screen TV down the hill right in front of us.  While we were at the Gold 3 grandstand, I was able to poke my camera thru the hole in the fencing to snap these:

Belgian Grand Prix - Jean-Eric Vergne

Belgian Grand Prix - Adrian Sutil

We spent the rest of the day on Friday walking the General Admission area around the entire track, first clockwise from Eau Rouge, up the Kemmel Straight, past Les Combes, down to Pouhon, across to Blanchimont, and up to the Bus Stop Chicane, and then back the same way counter-clockwise.  We really enjoyed this walk and being able to see and feel the elevation changes and see just about the entire Circuit de Spa Francorchamps.  Of course, fries and beer were consumed along the way.  The weather changed pretty dramatically throughout our walk, and by the afternoon practice session it looked like this:

Belgian Grand Prix - Kimi Raikkonen

Belgian Grand Prix - Fernando Alonso

Belgian Grand Prix - Kemmel Straight

Here’s a recording of cars downshifting near the end of Kemmel Straight, not too far from where the above picture was taken.  I’ll miss the sound of these awesome V8s:

 

Belgian Grand Prix – Saturday Qualification

Traffic getting into the circuit was quite a bit heavier than Friday, but was still manageable. Having official parking was a big advantage.  Crowds in the General Admission areas were also heavier than Friday, so we decided to watch some practice from just up hill from Eau Rouge and watch the cars charge up the hill thru Raidillon and on toward the Kemmel Straight:

Belgian Grand Prix - Lewis Hamilton

Belgian Grand Prix - Kimi Raikkonen

The compression of the cars thru the apex of Eau Rouge and beyond was amazing.

For the qualification session, we decided to watch from our grandstand seats as the crowd was building.  The changing weather conditions throughout qualification added to the excitement – and to a certain extent confusion.  In Q3, at first it seemed like perhaps Paul di Resta was the only person to complete a lap on slicks when in fact, he was the first person to go out of intermediate tires as the rain began.  His time held as the best until the final minute or so of the session as a dry line appeared and the track got faster with every second.  First Nico Rosberg, then Mark Webber, Sebastian Vettel, and finally Lewis Hamilton successively went to the top of the time sheets.  The top ten spots were:

 1.  Lewis Hamilton      Mercedes               2m01.012s           
 2.  Sebastian Vettel    Red Bull-Renault       2m01.200s  + 0.188s 
 3.  Mark Webber         Red Bull-Renault       2m01.325s  + 0.313s 
 4.  Nico Rosberg        Mercedes               2m02.251s  + 1.239s 
 5.  Paul di Resta       Force India-Mercedes   2m02.332s  + 1.320s 
 6.  Jenson Button       McLaren-Mercedes       2m03.075s  + 2.063s 
 7.  Romain Grosjean     Lotus-Renault          2m03.081s  + 2.069s 
 8.  Kimi Raikkonen      Lotus-Renault          2m03.390s  + 2.378s 
 9.  Fernando Alonso     Ferrari                2m03.482s  + 2.470s 
10.  Felipe Massa        Ferrari                2m04.059s  + 3.047s

Belgian Grand Prix - Raikkonen & Rosberg

After the F1 qualification session was over, we watched the GP2 race from up the hill toward La Source looking toward Eau Rouge & Raidillon:

Belgian Grand Prix - GP2 start

For an added bonus, fellow Californian Alexander Rossi took a spot on the GP2 podium.

Belgian Grand Prix – Race Day!

The exits from E42 to the Circuit de Spa Francorchamps were jammed on Sunday morning, and getting to our parking lot was a long slog.  We still got to the circuit with plenty of time for the race.  Sunday was the coolest day in Belgium so far, and the forecast called for a possibility of rain before the race was over. People were filling every spot with a decent sight line of the track:

When the lights went out, the front-runners except for Webber got off to good starts; Alonso had a great start, moving from ninth to fifth in the first lap.

Belgian Grand Prix

Vettel had an extremely powerful run thru Eau Rouge, Raidillon, and onto the Kemmel Straight where he passed Hamilton well before Les Combes to take a lead he would never relinquish. Alonso gradually worked his way forward, taking second place before long, which is where he finished. Pole sitter Lewis Hamilton took the final spot on the podium.  Here’s a video from our seats of first Vettel and then Alonso toward the end of the race:

The final results for the Belgian Grand Prix were:

 1.  Sebastian Vettel     Red Bull-Renault          1h23m42.196s
 2.  Fernando Alonso      Ferrari                       +16.869s
 3.  Lewis Hamilton       Mercedes                      +27.734s
 4.  Nico Rosberg         Mercedes                      +29.872s
 5.  Mark Webber          Red Bull-Renault              +33.845s
 6.  Jenson Button        McLaren-Mercedes              +40.794s
 7.  Felipe Massa         Ferrari                       +53.922s
 8.  Romain Grosjean      Lotus-Renault                 +55.846s
 9.  Adrian Sutil         Force India-Mercedes        +1m09.547s
10.  Daniel Ricciardo     Toro Rosso-Ferrari          +1m13.470s
11.  Sergio Perez         McLaren-Mercedes            +1m21.936s
12.  Jean-Eric Vergne     Toro Rosso-Ferrari          +1m26.740s
13.  Nico Hulkenberg      Sauber-Ferrari              +1m28.258s
14.  Esteban Gutierrez    Sauber-Ferrari              +1m40.436s
15.  Valtteri Bottas      Williams-Renault            +1m47.456s
16.  Giedo van der Garde  Caterham-Renault                +1 lap
17.  Pastor Maldonado     Williams-Renault                +1 lap
18.  Jules Bianchi        Marussia-Cosworth               +1 lap
19.  Max Chilton          Marussia-Cosworth              +2 laps

Paul di Resta, Kimi Raikkonen, and Charles Pic all retired and were not classified.

Belgian Grand Prix – Final Thoughts

For a Formula 1 fan, the Belgian Grand Prix is a must see.  The whole of the experience exceeded my expectations, which were high going in.  What would I do differently?  I would lock in my trip much earlier so that I could stay in one of the charming villages in the vicinity of the track.  By the time we committed to the trip, anything very near was either sold out or far beyond our budget.  We stayed in Liege, which has plenty of lodging options for any budget and would normally be less than an hour from the circuit.  During race week, travel time depends on how early you set out and which route you take (depending up parking/destination).  Booking early would also provide many more ticket options, but I was very happy with the Gold 3 seats we got from Gootickets.com.  For first timers, EnterF1.com has a great seating guide that I recommend.  I would certainly have an iPad with the F1 timing app along (along with a compatible data plan, of course).  Folks sitting right behind us had one, and it made the race much easier to follow and more interesting.  After each day, I would try to spend time at the surrounding towns like Francorchamps, Malmedy, Stavelot, and Spa, and I would certainly try to drive the ‘old’ circuit on the public roads linking Les Combes with Malmedy and Stavelot.  This is a trip I really can’t wait to repeat.

Note: many more pictures posted at my Belgian Grand Prix 2013 gallery.

Belgian Grand Prix – Resources

Gootickets.com – my ticket broker

Spa GP – Belgian Grand Prix promotor’s site

Circuit de Spa Francorchamps – circuit site

EnterF1.com – Belgian Grand Prix seating guide

Booking.com – excellent site for finding accommodations

UPDATE: for those interested in history, you must watch this video of the 1955 Belgian Grand Prix commissioned by Shell:

US Grand Prix – Wrap Up

US Grand Prix – The Race

US Grand Prix

Vettel leads the field into Turn 3 on the opening lap of the US Grand Prix.

What a race for the first US Grand Prix in five years!  Lots of drama and on track action.  A great start by Fernando Alonso moving from his seventh place spot of the grid (thanks to team-imposed penalty on his teammate, Felipe Massa, which moved him up one spot and off the dirty side of the track) to fourth after the first turn, a gutsy charge up through the pack by the same Felipe Massa to finish fourth, some great passes at different places on the track, an electrical failure for Mark Webber, and a thrilling battle at the front between Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton were the key highlights of the show.

The front of the grid got away well at the start of the US Grand Prix, with Webber just edging out Hamilton for second place thru Turn 1 behind his teammate Vettel.  Alonso had the most remarkable start, taking a deep but quick line through the first turn to move up three spots going into Turn 2.  Overall, it was a relatively clean start with none of the carnage that some expected.  Hamilton successfully passed Webber at Turn 12 on lap 4 after a failed attempt on lap 3, and then Vettel and Hamilton gradually gapped the field.  On lap 13, Kimi Raikkonen made a great pass on Nico Hulkenberg around the outside of Turn 2 and into Turn 3.  Shortly after that bit of excitement, we left our Turn 4 seats and gradually worked our way down to the Turn 11 hairpin.

US Grand Prix - Kimi Raikkonen

Kimi Raikkonen at Turn 4 at US Grand Prix.

US Grand PrixBy lap 16, Hamilton had worked his way to within 1 second of Vettel enabling him to us the DRS.  In the meantime, Alonso was also closing in on Webber, whose KERS failed on lap 17, followed by a complete electrical system failure.  Amazingly, Alonso was now in third.  Vettel gradually pulled away from Hamilton a bit over the next interval, and then after pit stops, Hamilton once again closed the gap.

US Grand Prix - Sergio Perez

Sergio Perez in his next to last race with Sauber before joining McLaren.

US Grand Prix

Vettel leads Hamilton thru Turn 10 at US Grand Prix.

By lap 33, Hamilton was within 1 second of Vettel, allowing use of the DRS.  Nine laps later, after closing the gap further, Hamilton finally passed Vettel for the lead at Turn 12.  On lap 46, Jenson Button , who had made a nice run up from twelfth, passed Raikkonen for fifth after running side by side through Turns 12 and 13.  Vettel tried in vain to catch Hamilton over the last few laps of the race; he did manage to set fast lap of the race.  Congratulations to Lewis Hamilton on winning the inaugural US Grand Prix at the Circuit of the Americas in Austin.

US Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton leads Sebastian Vettel unto Turn 11 at US Grand Prix.

US Grand Prix – Results

The top ten (points scoring) positions were:

  1. Lewis Hamilton – McLaren
  2. Sebastian Vettel – Red Bell
  3. Fernando Alonso – Ferrari
  4. Felipe Massa – Ferrari
  5. Jenson Button – McLaren
  6. Kimi Raikkonen – Lotus
  7. Roman Grosjean – Lotus
  8. Nico Hulkenberg – Force India
  9. Pastor Maldonado – Williams
  10. Bruno Senna – Williams

US Grand Prix – Overall Impression

Overall, the US Grand Prix experience at Circuit of the Americas exceeded my expectations substantially.  Evidently > 120,000 people showed up for the race on Sunday, and I have heard reports that more than 25% of those came from Mexico – to see their hero Sergio Perez.  The facilities were great with none of the hiccups seen in Korea or India in their maiden Grands Prix.  The sight lines were superb at many places around the track which made walking about worthwhile and enjoyable.  A nice margarita could be had in a cool souvenir glass for a mere $12.  The weather was great the entire weekend.  And logistics were relatively smooth: we left the track as the interviews were wrapping up, and we were cruising along toward Austin at 60 MPH within about 20 minutes.  Great job to the organizers and the Circuit of the Americas, and congratulations to Austin on the first US Grand Prix in five years and the best one in a long time.

I took over a thousand pictures throughout the weekend, and I’ll be posting them here gradually as I sort through and pick out the best.  Use coupon code USGP2012 for a discount on pics and other goodies.

US Grand Prix – Saturday Update: Qualifying

US Grand Prix – Qualifying

The US Grand Prix qualifying results were no surprise, at least at the top of the time sheets.    Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel and McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton were both very quick throughout the practice sessions, and these two drivers have been consistently battling for the front in the last several races.  Vettel ultimately claimed the pole position by 0.1 seconds.  Somewhat surprising was the poor showing by Ferrari.  Both Fernando Alonso and Felipe Mass struggled to get performance out of their tires and finished qualifying in ninth and seventh respectively.  Fernando will need a tremendous performance in tomorrow’s US Grand Prix to keep Vettel from all but wrapping up the Formula 1 Championship.

US Grand Prix – Circuit of the Americas

Even though crowds were much larger today, logistics seem to be holding up quite well at the Circuit of the Americas.  Traffic was heavier, and getting into a specific parking lot took longer, but overall, not too bad.  The weather in Austin was absolutely spectacular, which made it easier to bear with crowds and minor inconveniences.  The highlight of my day was getting to relax in the Turn 20 Hospitality Suite after qualifying with a well-connected great friend.  As the sun was getting low on the horizon, I decided to take the new, 85 MPH limit, Route 130 toll road back toward San Antonio.  Just over an hour track-to-hotel.  Nice.

US Grand Prix: Friday Night Update

US Grand Prix – The Good

We made it from our hotel in San Antonio to the Circuit of the Americas, home of the US Grand Prix, in about 1:20, which wasn’t too bad at all.  Traffic moves along pretty quickly, and when we exited the toll road it was a breeze to get to our parking area.  Parking in Lot L was quick and easy, and there as an entry gate just a few minutes walk away at Turn 11.  Great start to the day.  Even better were the sight lines from the south side of the track.  I’d almost call this a ‘stadium course’.  There are plenty of amphitheaters – natural or man-made I don’t know, but I’d suspect man-made – from which to watch the action or take pictures that aren’t obstructed even by fencing.  As I walked along from the hairpin at Turn 11 to the esses at Turn 4, it occurred to me that a general admission ticket might be a damn good deal here, especially once they have some grass grown around the track.

Our seats at Turn 4 are pretty good; we can see cars as they come out of Turn 2 all the way to the Turn 5/6 complex.  It seems like a pretty technical area of the track that could be important in qualifying, but we won’t see much passing.  Watching the cars scream by with multiple high speed direction changes is a pretty awesome sight.  Previously I said it might be something like Suzuka, but I’ve also seen it compared to Maggotts/Becketts at Silverstone, and I think that’s a better comparison.  If I had to do it over again, I’d pick the Turn 9 grandstands, which, depending upon where you sit, will have a view from the exit of Turn 6 all the way to the exit of Turn 11 down the long back straight.  Note for next time.

My overall impression of the track and facilities is that it’s quite spectacular.  Not  Abu Dhabi, mind you, but considering this place was a field of dirt a year ago and the US Grand Prix was in doubt multiple times, the people who had a hand in building this place deserve a big round of applause.  We’ll see how it holds up with qualification crowds tomorrow and the race crowd on Sunday.

US Grand Prix – The Practice

Surprise, surprise, Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel set the fastest time in both P1 and P2.  Most  impressive was the fact that he sat in the garage for almost an hour of P2 as the team dealt with a water system issue.  Vettel’s teammate, Mark Webber, was at the top of the time sheets for most of P2 until Vettel came back out and gapped the field by 3/4 of a second.  Until then, Vettel’s rival for the championship, Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso was very close behind Webber and looking quite strong.  At the end of P2, the top five looked like this:

  1. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1:37.718
  2. Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:38.475 (+ 0.757)
  3. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:38.483 (+ 0.765)
  4. Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:38.748 (+ 1.030)
  5. Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:38.786 (+ 1.068)

 US Grand Prix – The Not So Good

I needed to make a call after P2, so out to the parking lot I headed for some quiet.  Unfortunately, the mobile signal coverage at the Circuit of the Americas leaves something to be desired – at least with AT&T’s network.  So I let the exit crowd subside a bit, and then I set off in my car to find civilization.  Getting out of and away from the track was surprisingly quick, and within a few minutes I was in the parking lot of a small strip mall making my call.  When I finished, there was still 20 minutes until the start of GT3 practice, so I decided to head back in, figuring it would be pretty quiet by then.  Well, to clear the area, most roads are one way traffic outbound, so I had to take ‘the long way’ back to the same place where I entered originally.  No problem so far, but by now, the GT3 cars were already on track.  I couldn’t get back to my designated parking area, because that road was outbound only as well.  After more fighting of temporary one way roads going the wrong way, I found a place to park just in time to see the GT3s exiting the track.  Oh well.

Now for the worst part.  After all the track activity was done, getting away from the area was a real problem.  After about an hour and a half, I was still within sight of the Austin Airport, and any road heading toward Austin was jammed, so about face and back to San Antonio, from where I write this update while enjoying a Shiner Wild Hare Pale Ale…