Formula BMW engineer in interview: What makes Nico Rosberg tick
By Christian Nimmervoll, originally written 27 June 2015 for motorsport-total.com (x)
Between VIVA and Keke: Peter Sieber worked with Nico Rosberg when he wasn't yet a Formula 1 star and remembers the 2002 season in Formula BMW.
Many people have the wrong impression of Nico Rosberg. He comes across as effeminate, pseudo-intellectual, aloof. But envy is something you have to fight for - and level only looks like arrogance from below (to quote some Facebook wisdom). In fact, the Wiesbaden native, who grew up as the son of Finnish Formula 1 champion Keke Rosberg and a German mother, is a well-bred, smart young man who speaks five languages, happens to be an excellent racer, and earns millions doing it.
What's still missing is the world championship title. With his victory at the Austrian Grand Prix last weekend, Rosberg proved that he shouldn't be written off even when his back is supposedly against the wall - there's life in the old dog yet. And in doing so, he gave himself an early birthday present: Today, June 27, the Mercedes driver turns 30 - and is presumably in the prime of his Formula 1 career.
Reason enough for us to talk to a man who not only knows the superstar Nico Rosberg, but also worked with the up-and-coming driver Nico Rosberg when he first came to Formula BMW from karting - and won it outright, as the very first champion of the then new series in 2002. Peter Sieber was hired as race engineer for the world champion's son - and taught him the basics of racing.
Getting to know about Arno Zensen
Question: "Mr. Sieber, how did you meet Keke and Nico Rosberg?"
Peter Sieber: "That went through Arno Zensen, now head of the Rosberg team in the DTM. Arno used to work for Walter Lechner, and we've known each other ever since. Franz Tost was also involved at the time, who is now the boss of Toro Rosso. At the time, they had a South African race engineer at Team Rosberg in Formula BMW who had to go back home. So they asked me if I would like to be Nico's race engineer."
Question: "Can you still remember the very first time you met Nico?"
Sieber: "I had seen him at tests before, when we hadn't worked together yet. My first impression was of a very likeable and well-mannered young guy. In all my years in motorsport, I've noticed one thing: Drivers who have what it takes, who have the potential to make it to the top, don't say anything loud, don't argue, but are professional even at a young age. That was the case with Nico from the very first moment."
"I was a bit scared with him: father Keke Rosberg, Formula 1 world champion, enough money. There are always these father-son stories when the father wants the career more than the son. But that wasn't the case. In terms of people skills, I learned a lot from Keke, namely from the way he dealt with his own son. Nico was always very interested, especially in technology. That's where he always wanted to know what was going on, everywhere."
Question: "They say that Nico was an intelligent student who, if racing hadn't worked out, would have studied aerodynamics or mechanical engineering. When they worked with him, he was still at school."
Sieber: "That's true. The others always said: 'Sure, that's Rosberg's boy, he can test the most and has the best material'. But in truth that wasn't quite the case, because dear Nico had just graduated from high school. So he skipped some tests, which I then had to drive with Kimmo Liimatainen, now team manager at the Rosberg team in the DTM. Because Nico didn't have time."
"Nico didn't have it easy. When he was good, everyone said, 'Sure, I can do it with these prerequisites. And when he wasn't good, they said: 'He's just Rosberg's son, he doesn't have his dad's talent. But Nico didn't want anything as a gift, he wanted to fight for everything. He worked his ass off to achieve that. I was captivated by him right from the start. I always tried to create the best conditions for him."
Spoiled millionaire's son my ass
Question: "Lewis Hamilton said in the 2014 World Championship battle that Nico has always been a spoiled millionaire's boy, while he himself had to work hard for everything. If I'm interpreting you correctly, you don't agree with that at all?"
Sieber: "No. Keke and Nico's mother, Sina, have a very special attitude; they're not aloof people. When we had stopped working together, and Nico later won his first Formula 3 race, Sina still came up to me afterwards and gave me a hug."
"I say to her, 'Sina, I had nothing to do with that, it was Erich.' Erich Baumgärtner, a friend of mine who was Nico's race engineer in Formula 3. But Sina to me: 'No, Peter, I mean it, because you did the dirty work.' That was a statement for me! The first year is always the most difficult - that's when you have to teach a driver style, technique, work ethic. It wasn't easy, but with Nico it was really fun."
Question: "What does learning style and technique mean? You're hardly going to have ridden in front of Nico like an instructor…"
Sieber: "A young driver makes his first statements at the beginning, and as a race engineer I have to filter out the most important ones right away. Many say eight to ten problems at once, from which I then filter out the main problem. Because when the main problem is solved, the smaller problems usually dissolve as well. Then I see on the data: 'You need to brake earlier, but come out of the curve with more momentum.' Those are the first fundamentals you work on with a young driver."
"A young driver can only tell you about the car if you explain to him beforehand what's important. Nico soaked it all up like a sponge, he fought every second. From home he had the opportunity to race, car, engine, team - others may not be able to afford that. But his driving skills and assertiveness, he fought hard for all of that. Whether it was dry or wet, he was always really good."
Like Father, Like Son
Question: "Nico's former kart team boss Dino Chiesa once said that Nico didn't get a PlayStation game from Keke that he really wanted, and that he also got relatively little pocket money. Which suggests that he felt relatively little of his family's wealth at the time, and was also just a young racer like any other."
Sieber: "I've known Keke for a long time. I can still remember that back then, as a junior driver, he always came to the race track with a trailer and bus. Keke learned to work his way up from the bottom. And he passed that on to Nico for his development."
"I remember the Formula BMW race at the Sachsenring. Officially, testing was banned, but others tested anyway. Our weekend went really poorly. The engineer was not good, the car was not good, the driver was not good. It was a pitch-black weekend, with spins and everything."
"Then Keke arrives, with a cigar in his mouth - and grins at me, who has such a blood pressure you can see my carotid artery: 'Peter, it's going to be all right.' And I: 'Were you in the wrong movie? What I saw was a disaster.' And Keke: 'What I saw is going to be fine.' Because you two are determined to make it together, and it's going to bear fruit.' At first I couldn't do anything with that, but then we improved from race to race."
"At the beginning, it was difficult to work together because I hadn't done all the official tests and first had to get to know the car and Nico. But then we worked our way up and became champions in the end. That season we had a test day at the Nürburgring before the race. I changed the gear ratio then, which is normally done by the mechanic. But there was no time for that because of the rain. And I mistakenly swapped fifth and sixth gear. In other words, where fifth gear should have been, sixth was - and vice versa."
"Nico drove out, came back to the pits very slowly and said with a smile on his face - with a smile, not kind of angry like others would be: 'Master, how do you actually count? One, two, three, four, five, six.' And I said to him: 'But you're doing your school-leaving exams right now, you'll manage that!' So he had to change gears stupidly, skip a gear with the clutch in the sequential gearbox, but he didn't care. The next morning I found a note on the transmission: 'Love from Nico, please put the gears in the right order!' That was Nico. That's the kind of person you live motorsport for."
Criticism always constructive
Question: "Were there also situations in which Nico could get loud?"
Sieber: "No, and that was the nice thing about working with him. If something wasn't okay, it was discussed, but not loudly or in an argument, but positively. He asked questions, contributed good ideas, and the collaboration got better and better. He worked hard for his success."
Question: "Nico already had the sponsor VIVA in 2002, in Formula BMW - and therefore had a lot of media presence earlier than other drivers. Was that an advantage or a disadvantage?"
Sieber: "People were already very attentive: son of Keke Rosberg, VIVA, very well-known among the youth. The hype was sometimes too much."
Question: "Girls, too?"
Sieber: "The girls raved about him anyway. But he didn't care. Nico did his stuff."
Question: "You can't tell me that Nico didn't have a girl at the start now and then…"
Sieber: "No, not at all, really! He wasn't the typical girl hero. Sometimes they are, and then they usually forget that racing should be the most important thing. That wasn't the case with Nico. He was focused and really never had a girl with him. It wasn't until the end of 2002 that I remember there being one - and I think that was his current wife Vivian."
Question: "In 2003, Nico met Lewis Hamilton again in Formula 3. Was it already foreseeable for you back then that this duel would continue into Formula 1?"
Sieber: "In Formula 3, Nico had a different race engineer, but that was a good acquaintance of mine, so I always knew what was going on with him. When we met at the race track, we always chatted. By the way, the contact hasn't completely broken off to this day."
"And yes, for me it was already foreseeable that this could go into Formula 1, because Nico simply has a very special way. He didn't have it as easy as Hamilton claims, as a spoiled boy who gets everything dumped in his lap. Our last race in Formula BMW in 2002 was at Hockenheim. Nico won, both races, in the rain and in the dry. Afterwards, there was the award ceremony for ADAC and BMW. Keke didn't go at all, but his mom, a few mechanics and I did."
Tears at Formula BMW victory ceremony 2002
"Nico had a knitted cap on, I remember it like yesterday. Then they called him up and said they had another 'little' present for him. I wonder what that will be? A Formula 1 test drive at Williams! That's when he really broke down, sat down, put his hands in front of his eyes and cried. He was so happy at that moment because he was so disciplined, he did without so much. That's very difficult for a young lad."
"And: He himself had done it - not because he was Keke Rosberg's son, but because he was the first Formula BMW champion. That's when I realized what racing meant to him. I still remember that day today as if it were yesterday - it has stuck in my heart. He said: 'It was always my dream to drive Formula 1 one day. That's what I've worked for.' That was an honest moment. As honest as Nico is."
Question: "Do you think it sometimes hurt Nico to be reduced to Keke Rosberg's son? Did that get to him?"
Sieber: "I think it was close to him. As I said before, if he was good, then it was the good material, but if not, then he's just Rosberg's son, but not as good as Keke. But Keke always stood behind him and told him: 'Nico, you have the greatest job in the world, you are a racing driver. People are all coming here to see your race. Enjoy it and have fun.'"
"And so he took all the pressure off the kid. That was awesome. That was Keke. People were brutal to Nico sometimes. When all he ever wanted was for them to just respect that he was doing his job, that he was doing everything he could to get into Formula One, and that he had talent. The Rosberg name was very positive for Nico, but on the other hand it didn't make it easy for him either.
Question: "It doesn't sound like Keke interfered much with Nico.
Sieber: "No. He left us alone. If he saw something that the competition was doing, for example, he told me, but without interfering. He would say, 'You can worry about that.' That was it, but then he was gone again."
Always looked up to father Keke
Question: "Nico's former karting team boss Dino Chiesa says that it was always important for Nico to once be as good as or better than Keke. Is that true in your opinion?"
Sieber: "He always looked up to his father, because Keke achieved a lot and was a driving force for Nico. But Nico was self-motivated enough to go this way and achieve something himself. He was looking in the right direction, he fought for it. Nico was an intelligent young man for his age. Of course, he sometimes took his cue from his father."
Question: "Were there ever moments when Nico cried to you about Keke?"
Sieber: "No, never. I admire the way Keke handled his boy. Keke always managed to motivate us all. In a positive sense, he was a gangster! It's okay to write that, I mean it in a positive way. Once he came to see me at the Nürburgring, Formula 1 weekend, and Nico had finished third in Formula BMW on Saturday. The conditions were difficult, race started in the rain, then it dried up."
"Keke comes up to me afterwards and is really happy about third place, but in the same breath says, 'We're not good enough, the others are better!' Inside I was boiling. That's when he lit a spark in me, so that even in the hotel I was still thinking about the car. And then we won on Sunday. Grins Keke: 'Oh, did it work?' Motivating his people, Keke always understood that."
Question: "Mr. Sieber, is there anything else you would like to add?"
Sieber: "Yes, two things. First, my son has a problem with his spine. I told Nico about it once in passing, and he said to me, 'Hey, my physio Daniel, he also had a back operation. I'll put you in touch with him, I'm sure he can recommend a good specialist. And that's what he did. He wouldn't have to do something like that - others don't."
"And another story: For the 2002 championship title, he got the Formula 1 test that Keke and Nico wanted to take me to. Unfortunately, my son was ill and I had to stay at home with a heavy heart. So they sent me a video after the test and talked to me live on the phone during the test. And Nico gave me his helmet, with which he became Formula BMW champion and tested Formula 1 for the first time, as a small consolation. That's just the way Nico is.
Question: "Will you wish him a happy 30th birthday?"
Sieber: "Yes, for sure. I'll think of something! We still see each other from time to time. Last year, for example, he invited me to the German Grand Prix."
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Writers Tag Game!
The tried and true strategy of using song lyrics as fic titles.....we've all been there.
How do song lyric titles measure up in your fic?
Total number of fics: 65 (all on Ao3)
Number of fics with 'song lyric' titles: 15
Number of fics with lyrics (in parenthesis): 2
Go crazy, go stupid, list all your song lyric fics and what song you used as the title(if you so wish):
Long Live [BBC Merlin, title from Long Live,Taylor Swift]
Rose Colored Boy [Helluva Boss, Rose Colored Boy, Paramore]
When I Ruled The World [BBC Merlin, Viva la Vida, Coldplay]
A Health to Those Who Dance By The Fires [BBC Merlin, Beltane Fires, Gaia's Consort]
The Joker(s) [The Mechanisms, The Joker, Steve Miller Band]
Count to Seventeen (Close Your Eyes) [Danger Days, S/C/A/R/E/C/R/O/W, My Chemical Romance]
The Edges of What We Might Be [The Mechanisms, Pieces, The Mechanisms]
You Want a Revelation, Some Kind of Resolution [BBC Merlin, No Light, No Light, Florence + The Machine]
It Must Be Love [The Umbrella Academy, You Got Me, Colbie Callait]
It Wasn't Worth It [Supernatural, 1,000 Years, The Gaslight Anthem]
And Make It Our Own [Danger Days, Take the World, Ray Toro]
And If I Thought It Would Help (I Would Carve Your Name Into My Heart) [Danger Days, Dark Places, The Gaslight Anthem]
If In The End I End With You [The Locked Tomb Series, The Weatherman, The Gaslight Anthem]
LET IT OUT LET IT OUT LET IT OUT YOU'RE DOING ALL RIGHT [Danger Days, Id'a Called You Woody, Joe, The Gaslight Anthem]
They'll Wish The First Life They'd Taken Was Mine [Danger Days, Gay Werewolf Murder Ballad, The Forgetmenauts]
Tag Writer Friends: @alfalfairy @rusalkaandtheshepherdgirl @bsideheart AND ANYONE ELSE WHO WANTS TO PARTICIPATE
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La leggenda Sioux sul vero amore
Un giorno Toro Bravo e Nube Azzurra giunsero tenendosi per mano alla tenda del vecchio stregone della tribù e gli chiesero:
“Noi ci amiamo e ci vogliamo sposare. Ma ci amiamo così tanto che vogliamo un consiglio che ci garantisca di restare per sempre insieme, che ci assicuri di restare l’uno accanto all’altra fino alla morte. Che cosa possiamo fare?”.
Il vecchio saggio, emozionato nel vederli così giovani e così innamorati, così ansiosi di una buona parola, disse:
“Fate ciò che deve essere fatto. Tu, Nube Azzurra, devi scalare il monte al Nord del villaggio. Solo con una rete, devi prendere il falco più forte e portarlo qui vivo, il terzo giorno dopo la luna nuova. E tu, Toro Bravo, devi scalare la montagna del tuono; in cima troverai la più forte di tutte le aquile. Solo con una rete dovrai prenderla e portarla a me, viva!”.
I giovani si abbracciarono teneramente e poi partirono per compiere la missione. Il giorno stabilito, davanti alla stregone, i due attendevano con i loro uccelli. Il vecchio saggio li tolse dal sacco e costatò che erano veramente begli esemplari degli animali richiesti.
“E adesso, che dobbiamo fare?”, chiesero i giovani.
“Prendete gli uccelli e legateli fra loro per una zampa con questi lacci di cuoio. Quando saranno legati, lasciateli andare perché volino liberi” – rispose il vecchio saggio Sioux.
Fecero quanto era stato ordinato e liberarono gli uccelli. L’aquila e il falco tentarono di volare, ma riuscirono solo a fare piccoli balzi sul terreno. Dopo un po’, irritati per l’impossibilità di volare,gli uccelli cominciarono ad aggredirsi l’un altro beccandosi fino a ferirsi.
Allora, il vecchio saggio disse:
“Non dimenticate mai quello che state vedendo. Il mio consiglio è questo: voi siete come l’aquila e il falco. Se vi terrete legati l’uno all’altro, fosse pure per amore, non solo vivrete facendovi del male ma, prima o poi, comincerete a ferirvi a vicenda. Se volete che l’amore fra voi duri a lungo, volate assieme, ma non rimanendo legati con l’impossibilità di essere voi stessi”.
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