Zitat..Kimi Räikkönen driving a special 1967 Shelby G.T.500.
if true, that would be team 67 then
ZitatTeam Black Bull Power from Finland, Mika & Harri, driving the Gumball 3000 Rally in a 1967 Shelby G.T.500. The legend Carroll Shelby lives through his classic works!
Zitat von BoudicaDid anyone look at the agenda, there is no way Kimi will do this whole event. Kimi will properly be involved in some leg of the event at some stage.
It looks like a really fun event. Hopefully we will get some pictures from it.
yeah, it's impossible, they arrive in Monaco on Friday while Kimi obviously has to be there earlier so he could either just drive till Helsinki or he might be at the start only.
Zitat17/05/2013 KIMI RÄIKKÖNEN ON THE MONACO GRAND PRIX After five races and four podiums, Kimi heads to Monaco a tantalising four points off the Drivers’ Championship lead. As our Iceman explains, the challenge of Monaco is quite different from that of the circuits seen so far this season
YOU MUST BE FEELING PRETTY GOOD WITH YOUR CHAMPIONSHIP POSITION AND THE PERFORMANCE OF THE CAR THIS SEASON? Well, we’re not in first place so we can’t be too happy. For sure it’s not a nightmare, but we’ve still got a lot of races yet to come and anything can happen in Formula 1. Monaco is a different challenge, so we’ll have to see what happens there this year.
LAST YEAR’S MONACO GRAND PRIX WAS NOT ONE OF THE TEAM’S BETTER OUTINGS, SO YOU’LL BE HOPING FOR BETTER THIS YEAR? We certainly won’t make the mistakes we made last time. There were a few things we didn’t do right over the weekend and we suffered because of that. Sometimes that’s the way it goes, but the important thing is not to make the same mistakes again.
HOW DO YOU DEFINE THE MONACO GRAND PRIX? It’s useless to put races in different categories, because all of them are as important as each other if you want to win a Championship. However, as a real special race there is nothing like Monaco; there is no better feeling than to get things going well there. To race in the streets of Monte Carlo is really different from everywhere else and it’s a challenge I look forward to every year. It is very, very difficult – almost impossible in fact – to have a clean weekend down there.
YOU WON IN MONACO IN 2005; HOW DID THAT FEEL? I’ve only managed to get it right once before and you really experience the greatest feeling you can get by winning it. My win in 2005 ranks up there with my most memorable, so to win it again would be just as special.
WHAT’S THE CHALLENGE BEHIND THE WHEEL? It’s such a narrow, twisty track; you have to be extra sharp and focused through every single metre. It gives such a good feeling; a fast lap around Monaco. Overtaking is almost impossible, so to really enjoy racing there you have to be in the front.
WHAT ABOUT THE ATMOSPHERE? It’s an interesting place to go to, with a lot of fans and a lot of parties going on; or so I’m told Monaco is always special. It’s an interesting place to go to, with a lot of fans and a lot of parties going on; or so I’m told. It’s a completely different atmosphere from anywhere else.
WHAT’S YOUR APPROACH TO THE WEEKEND? We have to focus on qualifying. It’s a difficult place to race as it’s so narrow and – as I said before – passing is nearly impossible. I was stuck behind Rubens [Barrichello] in 2009 and we had KERS then, but you just couldn’t get past. We’ll have to see how the tyres perform and if there are any good strategies to be made, but the most important thing is to qualify well. It’s difficult to know how good the car will be in Monaco as you can’t simulate its characteristics; certainly not at any of the circuits we’ve visited so far this year anyway. We can say the E21’s been fast everywhere else so let’s hope it’s also fast there.
WITH QUALIFYING SO IMPORTANT, IS IT A WORRY THAT THIS DOESN’T SEEM TO BE ONE OF THE E21’S STRONGEST AREAS? We’ll do the best we can, but of course everyone will be trying to be on the front row. It’s not impossible for us, but we won’t know how good we are until we get there. We know that tyre changes have to be made so there are opportunities if you run a different strategy to your rivals, but it’s certainly more difficult here than anywhere else.
Follow Kimi Raikkonen, Tony Hawk and Nero at the Gumball3000 using Live Twitter Map
Rawnet are helping everyone to track the Gumballers’ progress en route from Copenhagen to Monaco with their Interactive Live Map. Gumballers simply capture a picture on their phone, then tweet the photo adding the hashtag #rawnet. By enabling Location Services on their mobile devices, they can share moments and memories from the rally on the Live Tweet map in mere seconds. It’s a great way for Gumballers to update all of their followers, fans and fellow drivers on their position while effortlessly creating their own photo blog throughout the event. Whoever takes the picture that best captures the ‘Spirit of Gumball’ will win a Nikon D5100 along with a signed copy of the winning picture from founder, Maximillion Cooper.
So, get involved and experience a taste of the action at www.rawnet.com/gumball3000 from Sunday 19th May 2013 where the adventure begins in Copenhagen. Accompany us on a journey that winds through Stockholm, Helsinki, St.Petersburg, Riga, Warsaw and Vienna before rocking up in Monaco just in time for the Formula 1 Grand Prix on Sunday 26th May.