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The Minardi PS01 was the car with which the Minardi team competed in the Formula One season. It was initially driven by Tarso Marques, who returned to the team after last driving an F1 car in , and Fernando Alonso, a rookie who had graduated from Formula 3000 and was in a long-term contract to Flavio Briatore's driver management scheme. The PS01 marked a new beginning for Minardi. The chassis designation referred to the fact that it was the first car to be races under the ownership of Paul Stoddart, who had bought the team from the terminally-ill Gabriele Rumi only two months before the first race of the season. In between, the PS01 was hurriedly built, with Marques' car still being assembled at the Australian GP. The car was a tidy, efficient design by Gustav Brunner, but it was hamstrung by a lack of testing and horsepower from an elderly engine (which was badged "European", after Stoddart's aviation company). Despite this lack of preparation, the cars were surprisingly competitive, with Marques only failing to qualify once and future champion Alonso able to compete in the lower reaches of the midfield. However, the team scored no points and were hit hard when Brunner defected to the fledgling Toyota F1 team mid-season. As the season drew to a close, the frustrated Marques agreed to leave the team, allowing the well-funded Alex Yoong to become Malaysia's first F1 driver. The team also raced an updated car, featuring a revised rear end and gearbox, from the Belgian GP onwards. This chassis was designated as the Minardi PS01B. The team were unclassified in the Constructors' Championship, with no points. ==Racing history== At the season-opening Australian Grand Prix, Alonso and Marques set the nineteenth and twenty-second quickest times in qualifying: Marques failed to make the 107% mark after spinning into the gravel in his race car but was allowed to race at the digression of the stewards, but this was despite the fact that he had not managed to set a time within the 107% mark in any session all weekend.〔Henry (ed.) (2001), p. 115.〕 Marques' car only lasted four laps of the race before retiring with an engine problem caused by a misfiring battery, but Alonso finished twelfth for the car's first classified finish, albeit two laps adrift of the winner but one lap ahead of Giancarlo Fisichella's thirteenth-placed Benetton. Minardi had a spare car completed in time for the Malaysian round. Marques and Alonso started twentieth and twenty-first on the grid as Arrows driver Enrique Bernoldi was sent to the rear of the field for running his front wing too low to the ground. In the race, which was held in mixed weather conditions, both drivers achieved the Minardi PS01's first double finish, with Alonso and Marques finishing in thirteenth and fourteenth positions respectively; Marques had a punctured right-rear tyre which damaged his rear wing and the Minardi team lost communication with both drivers and personnel when a torrential downpour hit the circuit and damaged their equipment early in the race. At the Brazilian Grand Prix, Alonso qualified in nineteenth position, ahead of Jenson Button and Gastón Mazzacane, with Marques starting at the rear of the field in twenty-second. During the race, Marques achieved the best result for the PS01 with ninth place, whilst Alonso retired after completing twenty-six laps with an issue with his throttle potentiometer which affected his engine's behaviour. At the San Marino round, Alonso started in eighteenth, ahead of both Benetton cars and Mazzacane, whilst Marques qualified twenty-second for the second consecutive Grand Prix. In the race, Alonso crashed out heavily on the sixth lap which was caused by a leaking brake calliper and Marques retired on the race's fifty-fourth lap with an fuel line problem. At the Spanish Grand Prix Alonso outqualified Marques by one and a half seconds after alternations were made to Alonso's car; the drivers started from eighteenth and twenty-second on the grid and were sandwiched by the Benetton drivers and Jaguar's Pedro de la Rosa. Alonso ran strongly in the race and finished in thirteenth position and Marques took sixteenth despite struggling with handling problems throughout. Two weeks later in the Austrian Grand Prix Alonso clinched his third consecutive eighteenth position in qualifying whilst Marques set the twenty-second fastest time and was separated by both Benettons and Jean Alesi in a Prost. Alonso and Marques ran in the midfield early in the race but both drivers retired after forty laps because of gearbox issues. Alonso continued his good form in qualifying at the Monaco Grand Prix where he took eighteenth place whilst Marques in twenty-second was behind the Arrows pairing of Jos Verstappen and Bernoldi as well as Luciano Burti's Prost. Both Alonso and Marques again ran strongly in the race running in the mid-field before both drivers retired after three-quarter distance with mechanical issues. At the Canadian Grand Prix Alonso had originally qualified in twenty-first but had his fastest qualifying lap time disallowed because of a front wing technical infringement and was required to start behind team-mate Marques in twenty-second. Marques equalled his best result of the season with a ninth-place finish despite struggling from blistering tyres and broken bargeboard mountings in the race's final ten laps, whilst Alonso retired after seven laps because of a broken driveshaft CV joint. The cars again occupied the back row of the grid at the European Grand Prix with Alonso ahead of Marques. The PS01s were both nearly four seconds off the polesitter's time, but only four-thousands of a second behind Button. Marques retired after completing seven laps from a voltage fluctuation in his electronics system which broke his gearbox and shut down his engine, whilst Alonso moved up from twenty-first to finish fourteenth. Alonso outqualified Marques by four tenths of a second in the French Grand Prix and both drivers again shared the back row of the grid. In the race, which was held in hot weather conditions meaning there was an increased likelihood of mechanical attrition, Marques finished in fifteenth place whilst Alonso was called into his garage five laps before the race concluded with a suspected engine problems located on the Minardi telemetry equipment, although Alonso was classified in seventeenth place. At the British Grand Prix Alonso set the twenty-first fastest lap time in qualifying, but Marques fell foul of the 107% rule for the second time in the season and was not allowed to start by the stewards on this occasion. During the race, Alonso had moved from twenty-first to fourteenth by the 38th lap and raced competitively with the Benetton cars and Bernoldi's Arrows before his left-front hand wheel became detached from his car which necessitated an unscheduled pit stop and finished in sixteenth. Both drivers lined up at the rear of the field for the German Grand Prix with Alonso out-qualifying Marques by eight tenths of a second. For the race both drivers started from the pit lane because of technical difficulties; the Grand Prix was halted on the first lap because of an major accident involving Burti and Ferrari's Michael Schumacher. Both Minardi cars underwent further repairs for the restart with Alonso and Marques making their way up the field as some of their rivals retired from the race; Marques retired after twenty-seven laps with a gearbox issue whilst Alonso claimed his best result of the season with a tenth-place finish. Alonso took eighteenth on the grid at the Hungarian Grand Prix with Marques starting twenty-second and were separated by Burti's Prost and the two Arrows. Alonso moved up several places at the start of the race and matched the pace of his main rivals before his rear wheels locked up resulting from braking difficulties and retired after going into a gravel trap on the Hungaroring circuit on lap 37 whilst Marques was ordered by Minardi via radio to switch off his engine because of concerns over his engine oil pressure on the race's 64th lap. During preparation for the Belgian Grand Prix, the team announced that Malaysian driver Alex Yoong would replace Marques from at the Italian Grand Prix onwards. Marques remained at the team as their test and reserve driver, and assisted in developing Minardi's 2002 car, the PS02. The qualifying session in Belgium was held in wet weather conditions and where which the track steadily dried and saw Alonso and Marques fail to record a lap time within 107% of the pole sitters time; both drivers were allowed to start the race and were sandwiched by Bernoldi.〔Mansell (ed.), pp. 353, 379, 495.〕 Before the event Alonso used the spare Minardi monocoque after a heavy accident in the event's warm-up session and Marques stalled his engine at the first start; since he started last, the penalty was nullified. Alonso retired from the race after two and a half laps because of gear selection problems whilst Marques finished in fourteenth place despite encountering suspension issues and a punctured tyre. In his first Formula One qualifying session, Yoong qualified in twenty-second position behind Alonso. Yoong drove strongly in the race and ran as high as fifteenth behind Alonso before spinning off eight laps before the finish; Alonso also drove strongly to claim thirteenth position. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Minardi PS01」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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