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#110954
A little article for those who might want to know more about the phyiscal side of F1 for its drivers.

Doctor Doctor
Dr. Ceccarelli on the demands of F1
22/04/09 12:17
http://en.f1-live.com/f1/en/headlines/n ... 1715.shtml

We're used to hearing from the drivers and team bosses, but rarely do we hear from other key members of the teams. Ricardo Ceccarelli is the Team Doctor for Toyota and his role is very much like a family doctor who travels with the team around the globe.

"I deal with every problem that comes up," Ceccarelli begins. "I have a small censored with me and I treat team members so they can recover as soon as possible and work at their best. If the condition is more serious I decide whether it is necessary to visit the medical centre or even a hospital, where I stay with them to make sure they receive the proper care."

Driving a modern day Formula One car is no longer simply about bravado, it requires supreme fitness to cope with the heat and the physical pounding the body endures in a typical Grand Prix.

"There is no other sport in the world which compares to the demands Formula One puts on the heart," Ceccarelli continues. "The heat rate of a top driver can average over 180bpm for a race distance of 90 minutes or more. This is huge and no other sport keeps a heart rate so high for such a long time. On top of that there is a lot of muscle work for the whole body - heavy work for neck muscles to cope with the g-forces, high loads on legs and arms and good lumbar strength to stabilise the body. A normal person could do two or three laps in a Formula One car under those stresses before physically they couldn't continue."

What about the mental aspect of driving? "The demand on the muscles is important but the load on the brain is amazing. Formula One is a sport where the brain has to be working hard for the whole race.

In tennis you have a break every few seconds, in boxing you break every three minutes, in shooting you break all the time. This means a Formula One driver's brain is working in a different way. When you compare a Formula One driver's brain to an average person, the way it works is completely different."

Drivers can lose up to 3kg in a race and if you lose four percent of your bodyweight you lose around 40percent of your psycho-physical capacity. So it is normal in hot conditions that a driver would lose a bit of performance if nothing is done to combat the effect of heat.

“The small things, if you put them all together, can be quite effective,” Ceccarelli said when asked how to combat the fluid loss. “First of all drink a lot and always have a bottle of fluid available; mainly this is water but also you can add some minerals. The second thing is to be very careful with nutrition. It is best to eat simple food which is easy to digest; fruit and vegetables are the best things to eat. Finally, for a driver, you try to get him as cool as possible before the race, which means putting ice in his helmet, his shoes in the fridge, that kind of thing, so when he first steps into the car he is not already overheating.”

It’s all worth a thought when we see Jarno Trulli, Timo Glock and the others lining up on the grid this Sunday in Bahrain.

#110957
I remember Mark Webber driving at a race in '07 with food poisoning, that was mega impressive... you even heard him wretching on the team radio! :vomit:
#110992
Yup, nice to read about that aspect of F1. Quite often I have to defend F1 drivers against people who don't know. They'd say things like 'How difficult could it be to drive around in a car for 90 minutes' or 'F1 is not a sport like boxing or soccer or whatever because all the driver does is sit in a car that does all the work'.
I always try to explain how demanding this sport is and that F1 drivers (beginning with MS) are some of the fittest athletes in the world.
#111003
I hate to correct you on this one, but I think you'll find the fitness aspect of F1 drivers was first fully shown in Senna, Schumacher just took it to another level.


I knew that was coming. However, I consider MS's fitness the ultimate and first to reach that level, thus, I take his level for comparison with athletes from other very demanding sports - AS was nowhere near that level.
#111006
I hate to correct you on this one, but I think you'll find the fitness aspect of F1 drivers was first fully shown in Senna, Schumacher just took it to another level.


I knew that was coming. However, I consider MS's fitness the ultimate and first to reach that level, thus, I take his level for comparison with athletes from other very demanding sports - AS was nowhere near that level.


I fully agree with what you are saying about Schumacher's comittment and how that pushed the bar very high. But I believe that it started with Senna. He was the one who got the paddock talking and so moves were made by other drivers for this to happen. Without Senna's actions, maybe Schumacher wouldn't have been as fit.
#111010
I hate to correct you on this one, but I think you'll find the fitness aspect of F1 drivers was first fully shown in Senna, Schumacher just took it to another level.


I knew that was coming. However, I consider MS's fitness the ultimate and first to reach that level, thus, I take his level for comparison with athletes from other very demanding sports - AS was nowhere near that level.


I fully agree with what you are saying about Schumacher's comittment and how that pushed the bar very high. But I believe that it started with Senna. He was the one who got the paddock talking and so moves were made by other drivers for this to happen. Without Senna's actions, maybe Schumacher wouldn't have been as fit.



Read my original statement again and I'm sure you'll agree with me, now that I have explained it more.
I don't care who started the trend, but the first who reached the level of fitness to be compared with other high-power athletes was MS and that's what my statement said in the first place :wink:
#111017
Ah on that point I agree with you, indeed.
However Senna wasn't terribly shabby himself. :hehe:


He nearly collapsed on the podium once...


Indeed and he couldn't get out of his car sometimes after races because of cramp.
All I'm point out is that Senna began the push to achieve peak fitness. I'm not suggesting he was anywhere near that of Schumacher.
#111029
Ayrton Senna's resting heart rate was 40 something beats per minute. So, I'd say Schumacher's fans are showing more evidence of their delusions and confirmation biases. The reason why Senna was sometimes more physically drained than Schumacher was after Grands Prix was because of his physique (he was a little bit of a weed, to be honest) and a medical condition. Not because Schumacher upped the ante in fitness training terms.
Last edited by McLaren Fan on 22 Apr 09, 18:28, edited 1 time in total.
#111031
I think Schumacher did though. It's how sports works, its a constant escalation of force. Schumacher was the most supremely physically prepared F1 driver of all time by 2000 and the drivers coming into the sport at that time had him (and to an extent Senna) to emulate. There are probably going to be guys in the near future who achieve fitness levels higher than Schumacher's, that's just how it goes
#111044
I think Schumacher did though. It's how sports works, its a constant escalation of force. Schumacher was the most supremely physically prepared F1 driver of all time by 2000 and the drivers coming into the sport at that time had him (and to an extent Senna) to emulate. There are probably going to be guys in the near future who achieve fitness levels higher than Schumacher's, that's just how it goes

That was exactly what my point was.
#111163
I think if everyone in had a work-out routine like any F1 driver, there would be a lot more healthier people on this whole planet. I would kill for a chance to have a week with an F1 trainer.
#111165
I think if everyone in had a work-out routine like any F1 driver, there would be a lot more healthier people on this whole planet. I would kill for a chance to have a week with an F1 trainer.


Do you own a firearm? If yes, I won't come anywhere near East Lansing :yikes:

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