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The Right Formula
Pace ace Narain Karthikeyan’s arrival on the F-1 stage could spark off a new craze in India, especially with sponsorship dollars coming from India Inc.

By V Krishnaswamy

The craze for Formula One is not really new in India. For the past few years, pubs and restaurants in major cities across the country have been having special screenings on the Race Days and the places have been overflowing. And all that without an Indian in the F1 circuit. Now that is set to change, with 28-year-old Narain Karthikeyan revving up his Jordan at the start of Formula One’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on March 6. He did not have podium finish that Sunday and he well fail to finish in the top three the entire season—unless there is a miracle of sorts—but a new chapter in Indian sport has been written.

And the mandarins on the F-1 circuit are also watching the arrival of Karthikeyan with great interest. It is now a well-acknowledged fact that India and China are the new big markets for everything. Both countries with their billion-plus populations present a huge opportunity for every marketing manager.

Asia has already been on the F-1 circuit with races in Kuala Lumpur, Bahrain and China and there is talk of India coming onto the circuit in about five years. With a Karthikeyan on the circuit, and young drivers like Karun Chandhok waiting in the wings, that may no longer be as far-fetched as it seemed sometime back.

Karthikeyan’s confirmation on the Jordan team for 2005 along with Portuguese Tiago Monteiro could bring in huge sponsorships for the Disney-Murdoch backed ESPN-Star Sports channel, which beams the races in India. Already F-1 races are packed with sponsors and an Indian interest can only add to it.

The first race on March 6, which clashed with the India-Pakistan Test series, gave an indication of how the F-1 measured up. Race Days have been hugely popular with the urban youth and young executives all around, and it reached feverish pitch as Karthikeyan rubbed shoulders with the likes of Michael Schumacher and Juan Pablo Montoya. On race day, despite the fact that ESPN was telecasting the race live at 7 a.m., ratings of the channel went through the roof.

Karthikeyan is billed as the “fastest Indian on wheels” and Jordan’s new backers Midland Group—owned by Russian-born Canadian businessman Alex Shnaider—are likely to invest in heavy industry in India over the next few years. Karthikeyan’s presence in F-1 will give them a headstart.

Jordan, never really a premier team in terms of news stories, has already been seeing an upsurge in interest, as the Indian media has been hounding Karthikeyan for interviews day in and day out. This when Karthikeyan has not even been in India. He has been at Jordan’s headquarters in Silverstone. And then testing out in Barcelona. Karthikeyan’s three main sponsors — the Tata Group, India’s second largest business house, Bharat Petroleum and JK Tyres —are said to have put up close to $30 million to get Jordan to hire him.

A year ago, Karthikeyan had come close to a Minardi F1 berth in 2003. But it was widely believed that he lost out to Hungarian drivers, simply because he could not raise the kind of money that F-1 racing demands.

Son of former national rally champion G.R. Karthikeyan, Narain grew up in the southern town of Coimbatore. His only dream was to drive fast and he dreamt of F-1. He raced in British Formula Three and the Nissan World Series for eight years.

Twice he came close to F-1, when he tested with both Jaguar and Jordan in 2001. Then he got a test drive with Minardi in 2003, but he could not get the sponsorship needed by the cash-strapped team to secure his place. It must have been most crushing, but this time around the Tatas, Bharat Petroleum and JK Tyres seem to have ensured that the opportunity did not slip by.
 
What’s more, Karthikeyan’s presence on the F-1 tour will spur other youngsters like Karun Chandok and Armaan Ebrahim. Karun has already raced in F-3 and will be in the Nissan World Series this year. Add to that the possibility that plans to have an F-1 racing track may be revived, if not in Hyderabad, then at least somewhere else. All this put together could change the face of motor sports in India.Chandhok, considered one of the brightest sparks in Indian motor sports, sees Karthikeyan’s achievement as a huge fillip for the sport in India.

“Narain’s achievement is the biggest thing for all us,” Chandhok was quoted as saying. “There will be a lot of corporate interest, public awareness and media interest for this game. It will change the whole profile of the game in India.”

Within a week of Karthikeyan’s acceptance into F-1, Chandhok is said to have received three proposals for sponsorships from companies, which see him as the next big name. He is already dreaming of getting into F-1 in 2006 or 2007.

Also enthusiastic is Armaan Ebrahim, the first Indian to participate in the World Junior Rotax finals. Corporate doors could soon be opening for him, too. Karthikeyan’s career began with a podium finish on his debut race at Sriperumpudur. And from then on it was up and up all the way. He came back to India in 1993 after training at the prestigious ELF Winfield Racing School in France. On his return he joined the Formula Maruti team in 1993 and soon moved to Britain to race in the Formula Vauxhall Junior championship the same year. The following year Karthikeyan joined the Formula Ford Zetec.


 He became the first Indian to win the British Formula Ford Winter series, one of his many firsts. The arrival onto F-1 is came just when many had started thinking he may not be able to fulfill his dream.
Karthikeyan has performed well on some of the most challenging circuits like the Brands Hatch Grand Prix circuit, Spa, Macau, Magny Cours and has earned the reputation of being a wet-weather specialist.

She is being seen as a role model for the young. Her good looks, fresh and smiling face, her gutsy performances on the court and her down-to-earth charm make her a dream model. She has been appointed ambassador of the ‘Save the Girl Child’ campaign of the ministry of health and family welfare in a country where female infanticide is common.

And at the same time, as a devout Muslim she has shown how strong Indian foundations are as a secular society as the whole nations rises as one to applaud her. Sania’s family is religious. The members pray five times a day, read the Koran and observe fast during Ramzan. Imran Mirza and his wife, Naseema, are both graduates.

The new rule changes, which stops drivers from being over aggressive could be an advantage for a newcomer like Karthikeyan. Also the fact that the team will have to use the same set of tyres for the entire race means they could be going at slower speeds. So the times will slower, giving drivers like Karthikeyan a chance to come close.Also the same engine will be used for two races, so it is not going to all hunky-dory even for the big teams.

 
Karthikeyan is quick to put to rest any unrealistic hopes. He has said that while teams like Ferrari have been testing since November, he and Monteiro, his teammate at Jordan, have only tested for a few days. But he cannot hide his pleasure at racing against Michael Schumacher. “I met him once, very briefly, when I test drove for Jaguar (in 2001). He’s my hero. Suddenly I’m going to be driving alongside him,” he gushed to the media.He has warned, “I just want people to think realistically. I don’t want them thinking that I can beat the likes of Schumacher.” Well, it’s only a matter of time, and perhaps timing.