Mark Alan Webber (born 27 August 1976
in Queanbeyan, New South Wales) is an Australian Formula
One driver. In 2002 he became the first Australian to race
in Formula One since David Brabham in 1994.
After some racing success in Australia,
Webber moved to the UK in 1995 to further his motorsport
career. He continued to win, although he gained his biggest
headlines while driving for the Mercedes-Benz sports car
squad at Le Mans in 1999 where he had two spectacular accidents
during practice and warm-up in which an aerodynamic fault
caused the car to somersault off the Mulsanne Straight.
After Mercedes' withdrawal from the race, Webber began a
partnership with fellow Australian Paul Stoddart, at that
time owner of the European Racing Formula 3000 team, which
eventually took them both into Formula One when Stoddart
bought the Minardi team.
Webber made his debut in Formula One
in 2002, scoring Minardi's first points in three years at
his and Stoddart's home race. After his first season Jaguar
Racing took him on as lead driver. During two years with
the generally uncompetitive team Webber several times qualified
on the front two rows of the grid and outperformed his team
mates. His best finish in Formula One to date is a second
place at the 2009 Chinese Grand Prix. Webber is a keen sportsman
away from the track. He has won the annual F1 Pro-Am tennis
tournament in Barcelona three times and has recently set
up the 'Mark Webber Pure Tasmania Challenge' trek across
Tasmania to raise funds for cancer charities. Whilst cycling
in the event during November 2008 he was involved in an
accident when he collided head-on with a car. He sustained
a broken leg which kept him out of most winter tests, but
recovered before the start of the 2009 season. Mark Webber
was born in Queanbeyan, New South Wales, son of Alan, the
local motorcycle dealer. He started his relationship with
sport at a young age, working as a ball-boy for premiership
winning rugby league team, the Canberra Raiders, during
the late 1980s. However, motorsport was where his interest
lay, later listing Formula One World Champion Alain Prost
and Grand Prix motorcycle racer Kevin Schwantz as his childhood
heroes. Starting out racing motorcycles, Webber moved to
four wheels in 1991, taking up karting at the age of 14.
He won the New South Wales state championship in 1993, and
moved straight into the Australian Formula Ford Championship
after his father bought him an ex-Craig Lowndes Van Diemen
FF1600. Working as a driving instructor at Sydney's Oran
Park Raceway between races, Webber finished 14th overall
in his debut season. Continuing in the series in 1995, Webber
scored several victories, including a win in the support
race for the Australian Grand Prix at Adelaide. He finished
the series in fourth place but, perhaps more importantly,
teamed up with Championship coordinator Ann Neal, who secured
him a seven-year sponsorship with Australian Yellow Pages,
and would become his manager and accompany him on a trip
to England in an attempt to start a career in Europe.
Webber was given a test at Snetterton
with the Van Diemen team, and subsequently earned a works
drive for the team at the 1995 Formula Ford Festival, held
at Brands Hatch, where he finished third. It was a result
good enough to prompt the team into signing him for the
1996 championship. Before moving to Europe permanently,
Webber won the Formula Holden race at the 1996 Australian
Grand Prix in Melbourne. During the 1996 British Formula
Ford Championship, Webber took four victories on his way
to second place overall, finishing his strong season with
a win in the Formula Ford Festival. He also won the Spa-Francorchamps
race of the Formula Ford Euro Cup, taking third in the series
despite competing in only two of the three rounds. His results
throughout the year saw him voted as Australian motorsport's
"Young Achiever" and "International Achiever"
of 1996. Two days after his Festival victory Webber completed
a successful test for Alan Docking Racing, and was signed
by the team to graduate to Formula Three in 1997.
Without the financial backing he had
enjoyed during his time in Formula Ford, Webber and his
team struggled to find the money to fund their championship
campaign. He was almost forced to quit halfway through the
season, but was able to obtain personal support from Australian
rugby union legend David Campese, which helped him to complete
the year. Webber took victory in just his fourth ever F3
race, at Brands Hatch, leading from start to finish and
setting a new lap record in the process. He took a further
four podium finishes, including a second place in the support
race for the 1997 British Grand Prix, and finished the season
in fourth overall. Webber also took strong finishes in the
Marlboro Masters at Zandvoort (3rd) and the Macau Grand
Prix (4th), both times making his circuit debut.
During the 1997 season, Webber was approached
by Mercedes-AMG to compete in a sports car race. Although
he initially declined the offer he was persuaded at the
end of the year when invited to participate in a test session
for the team at the A1-Ring in Austria. AMG were suitably
impressed with Webber, and he was signed as the official
Mercedes works junior driver for the 1998 FIA GT Championship,
alongside reigning champion Bernd Schneider. Travelling
around the world, including the United States, Japan and
Europe, the pair won five of the ten rounds on their way
to second in the overall standings, remarkably beaten to
the Championship by teammates Klaus Ludwig and Ricardo Zonta
by just eight seconds in the final race at Laguna Seca.
Webber remained with the AMG team for 1999, and was promoted
to his own race car for the season. However, his sportscar
career came to an early end after he flipped twice on the
main straight during practice events for the 1999 24 Hours
of Le Mans race. An aerodynamic fault on the team's Mercedes-Benz
CLRs caused Webber to spectacularly become airborne during
both practice and race-day warm up, with the same fate befalling
teammate Peter Dumbreck five hours into the race. Both drivers
escaped uninjured, but the crashes forced Mercedes to shelve
their sportscar program for the year and Webber to reconsider
a return to open wheel racing. Webber spoke to Formula One
team owner Eddie Jordan, who introduced him to fellow Australian
Paul Stoddart. Stoddart offered to undercut the necessary
$1.1 million budget for Webber, and gave him a drive in
his Eurobet Arrows Formula 3000 team for 2000. As a result,
Webber also got his first taste of a Formula One car, completing
a two-day test at Barcelona in December 1999 for the Arrows
F1 team.
Webber was signed as test driver for
the Arrows F1 team for 2000, and also gained sponsorship
from Australian beer company Foster's whilst competing in
the F3000 Championship. Webber took victory in round two
of the season at Silverstone Circuit, and finished the series
with two fastest laps and three podiums on his way to third
overall the highest position of any rookie that year. Contract
issues meant that Webber was never able to drive the Arrows
A21 car, and rejected an offer of a full contract for 2001
in July. However, he was offered a three day evaluation
test for Benetton at the end of the year, outpacing F1 drivers
Ralf Schumacher and Giancarlo Fisichella at Estoril. The
results were good enough to earn him the test driver role
with the team for 2001, and he also agreed to take on team
boss Flavio Briatore as manager in return for finance for
a further F3000 season. Webber joined the championship-winning
Super Nova Racing team, and despite winning at Imola, Monaco
and Magny-Cours, he finished second overall to British driver
Justin Wilson. Webber was replaced as test driver for Benetton
for 2002 by Fernando Alonso, but Briatore managed to secure
Webber a contract to race alongside Alex Yoong in the Stoddart-owned
Minardi team, making him the first Australian in Formula
One since David Brabham in 1994.
Webber made his Formula One debut at
his home race, the 2002 Australian Grand Prix. This was
the first race of an initial three race contract and was
extended until the end of the season after his first race.
He qualified 18th of the 22 cars, over 4 seconds away from
the pole position time, but 1.4 seconds ahead of team-mate
Yoong. The start of the race featured a spectacular accident
between Ralf Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello, the aftermath
of which forced 8 cars to retire from the race. Webber,
who had a problem with his launch control at the start,
battled with a broken differential to fend off the experienced
Mika Salo and finish fifth. The result made Webber just
the fourth Australian F1 driver to score World Championship
points, and the first Minardi driver to score points since
Marc Gené in 1999. Webber was forced into retirement
in the Malaysian Grand Prix, before picking up consecutive
11th-place finishes in the following two races. He, along
with Yoong, was forced to pull out of the Spanish Grand
Prix due to potentially dangerous wing failures during the
weekend.
Webber picked up two more 11th place
finishes, but was unable to score points for the remainder
of the year, his next best result coming in the French Grand
Prix, where he finished 8th. In the Hungarian Grand Prix,
Webber lost two kilograms in weight over the length of the
race as he was forced to drive without a drink after his
water bottle broke. Webber was able to outqualify Yoong
(and Anthony Davidson, who replaced Yoong for the Hungarian
and Belgian Grands Prix) in every race, and his two points
in Australia were the only points that Minardi scored all
season, helping them to 9th in the Constructors' Championship,
ahead of Toyota and Arrows. Webber's results earned him
the "Rookie of the Year" award in F1 Racing magazine's
annual Man of the Year awards (receiving 53.70% of public
votes), the Autosport.com "Rookie of the Year"
award and "F1 Newcomer of the Year" at the annual
Grand Prix Party "Bernie" Awards. In light of
his season, notable Formula One journalist Peter Windsor
related Webber to 1992 World Champion Nigel Mansell, saying
they had similar amounts of "raw talent". In November
2002 it was announced that Webber would join Jaguar Racing
for the following season alongside Brazilian Williams test
driver Antônio Pizzonia.
Webber's Jaguar career started disappointingly
when he qualified in 14th place for the 2003 Australian
Grand Prix before being forced to retire on lap 15 with
a rear suspension failure. The following race in Malaysia
was problematic for Webber; Giancarlo Fisichella began reversing
towards him on the starting grid and then Webber's in-car
fire extinguisher discharged into his face. He was eventually
forced to retire from 8th position with an oil consumption
problem. Webber took provisional pole position in Friday
qualifying of the Brazilian Grand Prix, outqualifying local
driver Rubens Barrichello by 0.138 seconds in a remarkable
drive during a rain-affected session. He continued his good
performance in the Saturday session taking a career-best
3rd on the grid, Jaguar Racing's best qualifying performance
in their four-year Formula 1 history. In the race, which
was hit heavily by rain, Webber was in seventh place when
he attempted to cool his tyres by driving through a puddle
lying off-line in the final corner. The resultant lack of
grip caused Webber to crash heavily into the pit straight
tyre barriers, leaving debris on the track which caused
a second major crash. The race was subsequently red-flagged,
and although Webber was originally classified in 7th, an
FIA investigation found a timekeeping error which meant
that Webber was placed 9th in the re-classification. Webber's
good qualifying form continued into the San Marino Grand
Prix but at the start of the race he had dropped from 5th
to 11th by the first corner due to a launch control failure
that affected both Jaguars. He retired from the race after
54 laps with a driveshaft failure, his fourth consecutive
non-finish for the year. His luck improved in the following
races though, taking his first points in Spain and signing
a new 2-year contract with the team reportedly worth $US6
million per season. He then went on to score points in five
of the next six races on his way to moving into the top
10 in the World Drivers' Championship, the run of results
interrupted only by an engine failure in Monaco. One of
his best races came in Austria where despite starting from
the pitlane and suffering a drive-through penalty he set
the race's third fastest lap, behind only the Ferraris of
Michael Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello, finishing in
7th place. At the British Grand Prix, as the procession
of cars exited the Becketts corner onto the Hangar straight
on the 11th lap, now-defrocked priest Neil Horan cleared
the fence wearing a kilt whilst waving banners with the
statements "Read the Bible" and "The Bible
is always right". Horan ran towards the sequence of
cars forcing several cars to swerve to avoid him. Webber
came closest to hitting Horan in a terrifying parallel to
the accident at the 1977 South African Grand Prix where
volunteer track marshal, Jansen Van Vuuren, ran across the
main straight to aid a car and was hit at 170mph by Welsh
driver Tom Pryce. The safety car was deployed to remove
Horan from the track, and Webber eventually finished 14th.
After Silverstone, Webber had scored 12 Championship points,
compared to Pizzonia's 0, and after much speculation it
was announced that Minardi driver Justin Wilson would replace
the Brazilian for the remainder of the year. The German
Grand Prix saw Webber's sixth retirement for the season
after he made a last lap lunge on Jenson Button in an attempt
to salvage a point from the weekend. Consecutive points
finishes in Hungary and Italy saw Webber climb to ninth
in the drivers' standings with a 5 point margin over Button.
He was unable to hold onto his position however after one
too many laps on dry tyres saw him spin out from the lead
of the United States Grand Prix, and a disappointing 11th-place
result in the Japanese Grand Prix. These meant that he had
finished on equal points with Button but lost out on a countback.
Although Wilson scored a point in the United States Grand
Prix, Webber had still never been outqualified by a team-mate
and, late in the year, Jaguar announced that rookie Christian
Klien would team up with Webber for the 2004 season. Webber's
results again earned him plaudits in the press, winning
the 2003 "Driver of the Year" award from Autocar
magazine.
Continuing with Jaguar in 2004 Webber
qualified sixth-fastest for the first race of the season,
the Australian Grand Prix, but faced his second consecutive
retirement from his home race this time due to a gearbox
failure. At the following race, the Malaysian Grand Prix,
Webber produced the best qualifying performance of his career
by splitting the dominant Ferraris to line up 2nd on the
grid. The race was less rewarding with a stall at the start
meaning he was well outside the top 10 by the time the cars
reached turn 1. An aggressive lap saw him move up to ninth
place but during an exciting battle with Ralf Schumacher
they collided forcing Webber to pit with damage to his front
wing and tyre. In his desperation to make up for the lost
time Webber exceeded the pitlane speed limit and was handed
a drive-through penalty which left him even further behind.
More frustration eventually led to the end of his race as
he spun into the gravel trap on the outside of the final
corner on lap 23. The situation improved for the following
race in Bahrain though as Webber picked up his first point
for the season despite a small mistake in qualifying which
left him starting 14th and marked the first time he had
been outqualified by his team-mate in F1. He was unable
to continue his point scoring form, however, as intermittent
electrical problems in San Marino and a lack of grip in
Spain meant that he could do no better than 13th and 12th
in those races. Webber suffered two engine failures in practice
for the Monaco Grand Prix, the first of which forced Webber
to extinguish it himself after being unable to find a track-side
marshal willing to help. In the race Webber was forced to
retire due to a loss of engine power. He was able to pick
up two Championship points in the following race with a
seventh place finish in the European Grand Prix. Webber
had lined up 14th on the grid, after being handed a one-second
penalty for yellow flag infringements during Friday practice,
but was able to move through the field to take his points
tally to 3. After the race he was criticised by Michael
Schumacher for refusing to yield when Webber had emerged
from his pit stop slightly ahead of (but one lap behind)
Schumacher. Upon hearing the comments Webber said he "would
do exactly the same again" in the same situation.
There were consecutive retirements in
Canada, where he was hit by Klien, and the United States
where he suffered an oil leak. A change of luck gained him
a 9th place finish in the French Grand Prix and preceded
a further championship point in the British Grand Prix;
although his total of 4 points compared unfavourably to
his 12 scored by the same time in the previous season. It
was at this stage that former team-mate Pizzonia returned
to racing as a replacement for the injured Ralf Schumacher
and accused Jaguar of favouritism towards Webber during
their time as team-mates saying that Webber received new
car parts one or two races before Pizzonia. The claims were
categorically denied by Jaguar boss David Pitchforth, and
whilst Webber did not publicly comment on the situation
at the time he had his best result of the season finishing
sixth in the German Grand Prix, running ahead of Pizzonia
for the entire race. Meanwhile reports emerged that Jaguar
could not guarantee that they would compete in Formula One
for the 2005 season and on July 28 it was announced that
Webber would drive for WilliamsF1 for 2005 and beyond. He
would later admit this was the team that his "heart
was always set on". Webber was unable to build on his
points tally, however, and 10th place in Hungary followed
by a first-lap accident in Belgium with 9th in Italy and
10th in China saw him sitting 13th in the Championship.
The penultimate race of the season in Japan saw Webber produce
another good qualifying effort as he set the third fastest
time. His race ended prematurely though when he suffered
from a badly overheating cockpit the cause of which could
not be determined by Jaguar. The Brazilian Grand Prix marked
both Webber's last race for Jaguar and Jaguar's last race
in Formula One, ending sadly for the team, as Klien turned
in to a corner colliding with Webber as the Australian attempted
to make up for a pit stop delay earlier in the race. Webber
was forced to retire due to the damage and watched the remainder
of the race from the grass on the outside of turn 1 as Klien
finished 14th. Webber was granted an early release from
his Jaguar contract to be allowed to test with his new team
Williams over the winter. Williams had announced that Jenson
Button would drive for the team in 2005 alongside Webber
but, after claims the Brit was still contracted to BAR,
his contract with Williams was overturned. With his new
team-mate undecided and going down to a "shootout"
between Nick Heidfeld and Pizzonia Webber hit back at Pizzonia's
claims of unfair treatment during 2003, claiming the Brazilian
was lying and saying he was a "loser" for believing
that there was favouritism towards Webber, comments which
led to a reprimand from his new team.
Heidfeld was finally announced as Webber's
2005 team-mate at the Williams season launch on January
31, with Webber admitting he was pleased with the eventual
decision. Webber's move to Williams brought about comparisons
to Alan Jones, Australia's last F1 World Champion, also
in a Williams. Expectations were high as Webber's former
team boss Paul Stoddart predicted Webber would take his
first victory in 2005 while Williams technical director
Sam Michael said Webber would eventually win the World Championship
with Williams. In his first race for the team, the 2005
Australian Grand Prix, Webber took 3rd on the grid but was
beaten to the first corner by David Coulthard and eventually
finished fifth still unable to improve on his best
F1 finish. His best chance to do so though came in the following
race in Malaysia. After qualifying fourth Webber was behind
the Renault of Giancarlo Fisichella who was struggling due
to a lack of downforce and tyre grip. Webber closed in and
attempted a pass around the outside at turn 15 but Fisichella
locked his brakes sliding into the side of Webber's car
and eliminating both drivers from the race. Fisichella was
later reprimanded by race stewards because of the incident
and Heidfeld took third place. The weekend epitomised Webber's
growing reputation as a fast qualifier who did not perform
well under pressure in race situations. It was later revealed
that Webber had competed in the first two races suffering
a fractured rib, from an injury he had sustained during
pre-season testing at Barcelona, though he "didn't
want to make a fuss" about it and would be fully fit
in time for the Bahrain Grand Prix. After qualifying fifth
in Bahrain Webber had been as high as third place in the
race but he ultimately finished sixth, taking his points
tally to 7 for the season. He followed this up by qualifying
fourth and finishing a disappointing 10th after twice running
wide off the track in the San Marino Grand Prix, although
his position was revised to 7th after the disqualification
of the BAR team and a resulting penalty to Ralf Schumacher.
The race was a poor one for Williams (Heidfeld was 9th before
the reclassification), but Webber hit back at the Spanish
Grand Prix, qualifying 2nd and finishing 6th his fourth
pointscoring finish in the first five races. The following
race in Monaco saw Webber take third place, the first podium
finish of his career. On the rostrum Webber looked noticeably
disappointed with the result after losing second place to
team-mate Heidfeld due to the Williams team pitting Heidfeld
before Webber causing Webber to lose time behind the slow
Alonso. Webber had been ahead of Heidfeld for most of the
race and would probably still have been second had the team
pitted them in the more regular sequence. This best result
of Webber's career was followed by one of his worst at the
European Grand Prix when, after qualifying third, he locked
his brakes in the very first corner of the race and collided
with Juan Pablo Montoya, forcing him to retire. Heidfeld
started from pole position to finish in second place overtaking
Webber in championship points in the process. The race in
Canada was affected by this previous result, as Webber was
only able to qualify 14th, but he was pleased with an eventual
5th-place finish and a further 4 Championship points. The
United States Grand Prix was the beginning of a lean streak
for Webber with just one point scoring finish in the next
seven races, a seventh in Hungary, and by this stage he
had slipped from 6th to 10th in the World Championship.
Webber had another poor race in Turkey where he collided
with Michael Schumacher, causing extensive damage to both
cars.
With Heidfeld injured, Webber's former
Jaguar team-mate Antonio Pizzonia stepped into the second
Williams seat adding pressure on Webber to perform well
given the public argument the pair had towards the end of
2004. The Italian Grand Prix saw Pizzonia driving to seventh
whilst Webber was caught up in a first-corner incident which
led to him finishing 14th. The roles were reversed for the
following race in Belgium as Webber finished in fourth place
and Pizzonia retired after a collision with Juan Pablo Montoya
in the closing laps. With rumours spreading that Heidfeld
had in fact signed with BMW Sauber for the 2006 season Pizzonia
continued in the race seat, and in the Brazilian Grand Prix,
was clipped by David Coulthard in turn one. The contact
caused Pizzonia to spin into the path of Webber forcing
extensive repairs to the Australian's car. Webber took 17th
place, setting the 8th fastest lap of the race, but was
not classified as a finisher. The final two races of the
season saw Webber take 4th and 7th to consolidate his 10th
place in the Drivers' Championship. Webber described the
2005 season as "frustrating" and acknowledged
that his reputation had somewhat diminished but opted to
stay on with Williams despite an offer from BMW Sauber.
Webber's team-mate for 2006 would be German Nico Rosberg,
becoming the seventh driver to partner Webber since 2002.
For the first time in Webber's career the first race of
the season was not held in Melbourne, but in Bahrain, due
to the original date clashing with the Commonwealth Games.
Webber qualified 7th and had a solid race to finish 6th
and pick up 3 Championship points. Although Webber was considered
by some to have the better race performance, this was generally
overlooked when Rosberg set the fastest lap in his debut
race and moved up through the field despite a first-lap
incident. Webber's two following races in Malaysia and Australia
were cut short due to mechanical problems. In Malaysia,
Webber started 4th on the grid and was still running in
that position before a hydraulics failure ended his race
on lap 14. In his home race, Webber qualified seventh and
was leading the race before his gearbox failed on lap 22.
A sixth-place finish in San Marino saw Webber move up to
9th in the Championship. In the European Grand Prix hydraulics
failure struck again ending his race after he had fought
his way back to 12th from his 19th place start on the grid
due to a mid-weekend engine change. The Spanish Grand Prix
marked the first time Webber failed to make the top 10 cut-off
in the new qualifying system and he struggled during the
race finishing ninth. Monaco, however, saw a huge improvement
with Webber qualifying on the front row, after Michael Schumacher's
grid penalty, holding third for a large part of the race
before retiring when his exhaust burned a wiring loom. The
pace Webber showed displayed his raw talent as aerodynamic
efficiency is not as important at Monaco and Webber's car
was not as disadvantaged as at most other venues. In the
2006 British Grand Prix Webber crashed out on the first
lap after an incident with Ralf Schumacher and Scott Speed.
In France Webber suffered a spectacular tyre blowout at
maximum speed which he managed to control and return to
the pits parking in the garage. Germany was one of Webber's
strongest races of the year where he was on target for a
podium finish until mechanical failure stopped him with
only 9 laps to go. The Hungarian Grand Prix was another
retirement for Webber as he slid into a barrier in the wet
conditions and crushed his front wing under the chassis
of the Williams.
Webber's two-year contract with Williams
ended at the end of 2006. The team held an option on his
services for 2007 which they choose not to take up on its
original terms and although Webber had expressed his desire
to stay with the team, Williams offered Webber a considerably
smaller salary than had been stipulated in the original
contract for the option year. Under advice from his manager,
Flavio Briatore, Webber then sought another drive. Williams
quickly elected to promote current test driver Alexander
Wurz to a race seat.[69] Williams team boss Sir Frank Williams
stated that he was reluctant to wait for Webber to commit
to the team once the option for future years had expired,
though he did not blame Webber for waiting to see if there
was a seat available at another team.
After some speculation of Webber joining
the Renault team, which is run by his manager Flavio Briatore,
it was announced on 7 August 2006 that Webber would join
Red Bull Racing for 2007 to partner David Coulthard, replacing
former Jaguar Racing team mate Christian Klien. It is rumoured
that Flavio Briatore arranged an agreement with Red Bull
that, if they offered Webber a race seat, Renault would
supply the with engines. On 26 January 2007 the new Red
Bull RB3 challenger was unveiled in Spain, a car that had
Webber's hopes pinned upon it, and Webber drove the car
in a shakedown at the Barcelona circuit on the same day.
The car featured heavy revisions to the team's previous
cars and looked very much like designer Adrian Newey's previous
cars which had either won or come close to the World Title.
The car was fitted with a Renault RS27 engine. At the first
race of the season in Melbourne, Webber qualified in 7th
place and held that position for the early part of the race,
managing to finish in 13th position after the RB3 suffered
from a throttle-related malfunction and a jammed fuel flap.
At the Malaysian Grand Prix he again out-qualified his more
experienced team-mate Coulthard and finished tenth, which
was encouraging for the team in such a new and radical car.
Bahrain was also going well for both drivers, who were running
in sixth and seventh positions, until both cars retired
due to mechanical malfunctions. Webber again was hampered
by the aforementioned jammed fuel flap, radically affecting
the aerodynamic drag, a vital set-up consideration for the
Sakhir circuit. The potential of both the car and Webber,
who had certainly worked well to out-qualify his vastly
more experienced team-mate, was highlighted by the closeness
they had to other teams which ran the Renault engine and
although the Newey-designed car had flaws which contributed
to Webber's scoreless season to that point. Though the pace
of the car seemed to be picking up, with Coulthard qualifying
in the top-10 for the Spanish Grand Prix, Webber was unable
to convert his early weekend pace into a competitive grid
position due to hydraulic problems. His race was much the
same with a similar hydraulic problem leading to him retiring
early in the race whilst team-mate Coulthard notched up
the team's first points with a fifth place finish. Webber
finally recorded the second podium of his career at the
European Grand Prix after qualifying in 6th position. A
rain spiced race and the retirement of Kimi Raikkonen, who
was running third at the time, allowed Webber to claim third
on the podium despite almost losing the position on the
penultimate corner as he battled with Alexander Wurz.
His best chance at winning a race occurred
at the 2007 Japanese Grand Prix where, in the wet conditions,
Webber ran in 2nd place, setting the 3rd fastest lap of
the race after the two McLarens. Towards the end of the
race, Webber was running 2nd behind Lewis Hamilton, with
no further pit stops to make, when Sebastian Vettel, driver
for sister team Scuderia Toro Rosso, ran into the back of
him when Hamilton suddenly reduced his speed in poor visibility
and heavy rain under a safety car, taking both cars out
of the race. He had been lapping faster than Hamilton due
to damage on the McLaren's sidepod from contact with Robert
Kubica. Out of the current Formula One drivers, Webber has
had the second highest number of starts without a win, and
is often referred to as the "unluckiest man in modern
Formula One", a title that was reinforced in Japan
as Webber started the race suffering from food poisoning
and vomited inside his helmet during the first safety car
period. When questioned by ITV's Louise Goodman about the
race ending collision Webber commented: "Well it's
kids, isn't it. Kids with not enough experience, doing a
good job then they fuck it all up," referring to Vettel
running into the back of him behind the safety car. Webber
again looked strong at the final race of the season at Interlagos
in Brazil. Webber qualified fifth in front of both BMW Saubers
and behind only the Ferraris and McLarens. Webber looked
strong in the race, running as high as fourth, before yet
another mechanical failure brought an end to a disappointing
but promising season for the Australian. As per his contract,
Webber started the year in Melbourne with Red Bull Racing.
He recorded the fifth-fastest time in the first Friday practice
session, second-fastest in the second, sixth-fastest in
the Saturday practice session and was on his way to the
top ten in the qualifying session when the front right brake
disk in his car failed going into turn 6 during Q2, plunging
him into the sand trap ending his qualifying session and
resulting in 15th position on the grid. Although starting
well, he momentarily went off the track at turn 1 to avoid
being involved in contact that had already erupted. Webber
made several positions by turn 3 but an incident involving
himself, Kazuki Nakajima and Anthony Davidson when he was
slightly contacted by Davidson whilst trying to avoid the
struggle between the other two drivers, ended his race.
Despite the retirement in Australia, the next 5 rounds saw
a string of point-scoring positions, including a 4th at
Monaco in the wet, one of the few finishers not to have
made a mistake and subsequent pit-in, however his performance
was overshadowed by Hamilton's win.. As of May 2008, Webber
had made his best start to an F1 season since 2005 with
Williams, managing five consecutive points scoring races.
On the Thursday of the 2008 British Grand
Prix weekend it was announced that Webber had agreed to
a one year extension to his contract at Red Bull Racing,
leaving him contracted there until the end of the 2009 season.
During qualifying for the Grand Prix, Webber equalled his
best qualifying position with 2nd position on the grid,
in front of Kimi R\ikkonen and behind only pole position-holder
Heikki Kovalainen. As a result of Timo Glock's penalty from
the Belgian Grand Prix for illegally passing Webber under
yellow flags in the final lap(s) of the race, Webber was
awarded 8th place and the point that came with it. At the
first night race in F1, the Singapore Grand Prix, Webber
qualified in 13th position. Red Bull pulled in both Webber
and David Coulthard for their pit stops as soon as they
could when the safety car came on track, due to Nelson Piquet,
Jr. crashing, giving them both great track position. This
lead to Webber running in 2nd place before a gearbox issue
put him out of the race on lap 29. Webber qualified 13th
at the Japanese Grand Prix. After some first corner incidents
he was stranded in last place; from there he progressed
up the order, at one point in time sitting in fourth. Following
his pit stop he emerged in 10th, with Nick Heidfeld and
Nico Rosberg yet to pit, from where he continued to push
giving consistent lap times. He regained 8th once the two
drivers in 8th and 9th both went in for their final pit
stops. With two laps to go Webber's tyres were close to
bald being compared to slicks. Losing almost 3 seconds
a lap to the chasing Ferrari of Felipe Massa, who was on
fresh tyres, he defended his point vigorously. Pressured
by the Ferrari he was out-powered by the superior engine
of Massa and although great attempts at saving his place
were shown, he finished in a hard-fought 9th position, on
a one stop strategy which was then upgraded to 8th position
after a post-race penalty to Sebastien Bourdais. In China,
Webber's engine failed on the home straight during the final
practice session leaving him with a ten-place grid penalty.
During qualifying on Saturday afternoon he ended in 6th
after Heidfeld was demoted for impeding Webber's team-mate
Coulthard, and so Webber had to start from 16th after his
penalty. Webber was on the grid in 16th and managed to end
the first lap up four places in 12th before taking the 11th
position off Glock on the second lap. By the first pit stop
Webber had overtaken Rubens Barichello and Piquet Jr. for
9th place, but inevitably dropped back once he had entered
the pits. The two-stop strategy that the team had adopted
was not successful and Webber finished in 14th place. The
Brazilian Grand Prix team-mate Coulthard's last race before
his retirement from F1. Practice was close with the leading
seven cars, including Webber in 7th, being less than a second
apart. In Saturday afternoon qualifying Webber managed 10th
on the grid, and finished the race in 9th position. Webber
finished the season in 11th place in the Drivers Championship
with a total of 21 points, his most successful season behind
2005 at Williams.
Webber remained with Red Bull for 2009,
where he was joined by Sebastian Vettel after David Coulthard's
retirement in 2008. After sustaining a broken leg in a road
accident during his charity event in Tasmania in the off-season,
he returned to testing on February 11 with steel rods in
his leg. At the opening round in Australia, both Webber
and Vettel performed well in practices and qualifying, with
Red Bull one of the top competitive teams behind Brawn GP
and Toyota, but an error in qualifying left him in 10th
on the grid for the start of the 2009 Australian Grand Prix.
An incident with Rubens Barrichello, Heikki Kovalainen and
Nick Heidfeld saw Webber in a highly damaged vehicle for
the remainder of the race, eventually finishing last under
the safety car. Post-race, Webber related his disappointment
for not being able to perform well at his home GP after
recovering from his broken leg. The 2009 Malaysian Grand
Prix got off to a better start, with Webber qualifying 7th
and gaining two positions due to penalties to other drivers.
Webber was overtaken off the line by the KERS-running cars
of Fernando Alonso and Kimi Räikkönen, but a series
of bold moves coupled with good race pace over the next
few laps saw him move up back to fifth. The RB5 performed
well as weather conditions worsened, Webber driving his
way to second before pitting to change to full wet-weather
tyres. The race, which was halted early due to monsoonal
rains, ended under the safety car with Webber in fourth.
A list later announced his position as eighth. Further investigation
brought his position up to sixth. He was awarded 1.5 points
due to the half-points decision at the conclusion of the
race. Webber was on track for a podium had the race not
been red flagged. In Chinese Grand Prix proved a breakthrough
for Webber. Starting in third position, the race began under
the safety car due to heavy rain. 25 minutes into the event,
the safety car eventually re-entered the pit lane. Webber,
who had gained a position with Alonso pitting, held strong
in second position in extreme wet conditions until his first
pit stop. Re-emerging in sixth position, he fought his way
up the order, eventually having a tight-battle with Brawn
GP's Jenson Button. He eventually overcame the pressure
from Button and continued to pull away from him. Emerging
after his second, and final, pit stop, he found himself
in third position: Button ahead and Barrichello behind.
Pulling away from Rubens, he eventually gained the advantage
over Button during Jenson's pit stop. Gaining 9 seconds
on his team mate in the last 15 laps, he brought his car
home in 2nd position, 12 seconds behind Vettel. This event
marked Webber's career-best finish and was also the first
win (and one-two finish) for the Red Bull team.
Webber won his first Formula One race at the 2009 German
Grand Prix.The Spanish Grand Prix saw Webber qualifying
fifth fastest and finishing third in the race, with Brawn
GP's Barrichello in second and Red Bull Racing team mate
Vettel in fourth. The pace of the RB5 had given Webber the
speed necessary to compete regularly for podiums. Webber
took 5th in Monaco and followed this up with his equal career
best 2nd place in Turkey, equalling this result in the subsequent
British Grand Prix at Silverstone. Webber qualified on pole
for the first time in Formula One at the Nürburgring
for the German Grand Prix on Saturday, 11 July. This was
the first time an Australian driver had claimed pole position
since Alan Jones in 1980. He went on to achieve his first
Formula One victory despite receiving a drive through penalty
early in the race for causing an avoidable collision at
the start when he hit the Brawn GP of Rubens Barrichello.
Webber went on to dominate the race and win ahead of his
teammate Vettel, heading a Red Bull 1-2 and closing the
gap on the Brawns in the constructors championship. Webber
moved up to third in the drivers' championship after his
win, at that time his best position in Formula One, passing
Barrichello in the championship standings.
On 23 July, Webber signed a new contract
committing him to the Red Bull team for the 2010 Formula
One season. Three days later he finished third in the Hungarian
Grand Prix, moving into second place in the drivers' championship.
Webber also set his first ever fastest lap in Formula One.
On 21 September 2009 the FIA banned Webber's manager, Flavio
Briatore, from all FIA related activities and announced
that it would not renew the superlicence for any driver
managed or otherwise associated with Briatore. Following
his podium at the Hungarian GP, two 9th placings, two retirements
and an unlucky Japanese GP saw him drop to 4th in the Championship,
collecting no points. However, Webber went on to win his
second Formula 1 race at the 2009 Brazilian Grand Prix,
starting from second position on the grid, securing 4th
place in the 2009 Championship. In
the final race of the 2009 Formula 1 season, Webber managed
2nd behind teammate Vettel following a brake problem on
pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton's MP4-24. The result was Red
Bull Racing's 4th 1-2 result of the season.
Webber
teamed up with Red Bull boss Christian Horner to start a
team in the new GP3 series, named MW Arden.
(c)
Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 2010