Paul di Resta aims to beat the Mercedes in the Hungarian Grand Prix
Paul di Resta has set his sights on beating Mercedes drivers Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg in the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Perez thinks his race form in Hungary will be even stronger than in qualifying
Sergio Perez expects Sauber to continue its trend of being more competitive in race trim after earning the best starting position of his career in qualifying for the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Alonso tips McLaren duo as Hungarian Grand Prix favourites
Fernando Alonso has tipped the McLarens as his favourites for victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix - although which of its two drivers succeeds will depend on the run to the first corner, he feels.
McLaren pair say title hopes rising after recent results
McLaren duo Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton say that recent successes for their team and Ferrari have lifted hopes that Sebastian Vettel can be beaten to the world championship this year.
Button says he still has more titles in him as he reaching 200 grands prix
Jenson Button is confident that he has the capability to win another world championship before he leaves Formula 1, having celebrated his 200th grand prix start in Hungary this weekend.
Sky/BBC deal 'saved free-to-air' F1 coverage in UK
Williams chairman Adam Parr believes Bernie Ecclestone did the right thing in putting together that BBC/Sky shared broadcast deal for next year - because there was a risk of Formula 1 coverage being off free-to-air television entirely.
@Imaan1
Bro, I am not saying that your way of discussion is not sensible or anything like that, if the words in my previous comment looks like that then I am really sorry. I am more then happy to see a new F1 fan on this forum who wants to discuss F1.
About my comments, I was just describing the purpose of this thread and what are the intentions of Pakwheels F1 Fan Club is and just for information this fan club was not started by me, I am only following up what some other members have started 6 years back as they are now busy with their daily life.
No bro, it takes the money first before anything else to host a GP by any country because if we follow your logic then it means France and Holland are not interested in hosting a race at all and Germany the home of 3 big automobile groups who owns many successful brands is having trouble in organising a race on one circuit alone.
I am sure you have watch the races in China and Turkey, and you also seen the amount of F1 fans that were present on those circuits on the raceday let alone the whole weekend. In China the situation is so worse that they have to cover many stands with Chinese words just to hide the lack of attendance. Even the majority of those that were present are part of Chinese Armed Forces personnel in civilian dresses who jusy want to fill the seats and have no interest in F1 at all.
AbuDhabi and Bahrain have got the races because of money and not f1 fans. The reality is in current economic conditions Asian Countries have far more money then European nations and thats why we are having more races in Asia then we have in Europe.