Sports / Motor Racing |
Feature-Super Aguri dreaming of future success(Reuters)Updated: 2006-12-05 11:26 LONDON, Dec 5 - This time last year, the fledgling Super Aguri team did not know whether they had a place in Formula One. They had no car and little more than a skeleton staff and the governing body had left them off a list of teams accepted for the 2006 season because they had failed to pay a $48-million bond in time. Now, with Britain's Anthony Davidson partnering Japan's Takuma Sato, they are dreaming of moving up the grid next year and maybe even winning a race in 2008 when new rules take effect. Even if they failed to score a point and finished last of the 11 teams this year, Super Aguri cannot be accused of lacking ambition. "We want to show the world that we are not losers," managing director Daniele Audetto told Reuters. "Now that we have the base of the team, mechanics and engineers, we really want to prove that we can fight for a better position. "I think if we are as good as we proved to be with the old car (this year), maybe in 2008 we can be potential winners of one grand prix," he said. Just competing this year has been something of an achievement. It took the approval of all 10 rival teams, as well as the necessary payment, before Aguri's application was finally accepted in late January by the International Automobile Federation (FIA). When they started the season, it was with a revamped, four-year-old Arrows chassis bought in a hurry from departing Minardi owner Paul Stoddart with the team based in the old Arrows factory in central England. STEP UP Founded by former grand prix racer Aguri Suzuki, they lined up for their first race in Bahrain with Sato nearly six seconds off the pace. By the final round in Brazil, he was around 2.5 seconds off Brazilian Felipe Massa's pole position for Ferrari and finished the race 10th with the seventh fastest lap. Sato's performance did not go unnoticed, even on a day dominated by Michael Schumacher's farewell and Fernando Alonso's second title with Renault, and next season could see another step up. Super Aguri tested an interim car last week that looked very similar to this year's Honda RA106, a machine that took Briton Jenson Button to victory in Hungary in August. In 2008, teams will be allowed to sell complete cars to each other but until then they must design and build their own -- which means that rivals will be looking very closely to make sure Aguri do not turn up in Australia next March with a re-painted Honda. Audetto said everything would be in order. "The car that we tested in Barcelona is just an interim car that will gather all the information regarding the new tyres which we will bring to the new SA07, which we will probably present at the beginning of February," he said. "It will be a Super Aguri 100 percent." The main aim for 2007 will be to finish among the top 10 teams, although
fellow tail-enders Toro Rosso and Spyker have switched to Ferrari engines.
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