| 
			 Dominant Mercedes could clinch the constructors' title for the 
			first time, while Britain's Lewis Hamilton is aiming for a ninth win 
			of the season to add to his 10-point lead over German team mate Nico 
			Rosberg but sport will not make all the headlines. 
 Unthinkable in the communist era, when a Ferrari on the streets of 
			Moscow was as rare as a Zil limousine in Las Vegas, the grand prix 
			arrives at a time when many in the west find it unpalatable.
 
 The crisis in Ukraine, with condemnation of Moscow and sanctions 
			imposed by the west, the seizure of Crimea and the downing of a 
			Malaysian airliner near Donetsk in July have all added to criticism 
			of the race going ahead.
 
 Britain's deputy prime minister Nick Clegg said back in July that 
			Russia should not be allowed to host the grand prix.
 
 Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone has shrugged off the critics 
			and President Vladimir Putin, for whom the grand prix is a showcase 
			legacy of the record $51 billion spent on the Winter Games, is 
			expected to attend after celebrating his 62nd birthday on Tuesday.
 
 
			 
			The street race will run around the Black Sea resort's Olympic Park, 
			against a backdrop of some of the venues familiar to television 
			viewers worldwide from last February.
 
 "We are happy, the sponsors appear to be happy, so we carry on," 
			Ecclestone told the Times this week. "No one has spoken to me about 
			this race or told me that we cannot go. The sanctions do not affect 
			us and what we are doing is not illegal.
 
 "The Russian people asked us to come here and that is what we are 
			doing. We are putting on a grand prix - this is nothing to do with 
			politics," added the 83-year-old, who first mooted a race in Russia 
			back in the 1980s.
 
 BIANCHI CRASH
 
 Formula One, a regular visitor to Bahrain despite civil unrest in 
			the Gulf kingdom, is no stranger to controversy but Sunday's race on 
			the streets of Sochi has also been clouded by sadness inside the 
			tightly-knit paddock.
 
 Marussia's French driver Jules Bianchi, a popular member of the only 
			Russian-registered team in the sport, remains in a critical 
			condition in a Japanese hospital after suffering a brain injury in a 
			crash at Suzuka last Sunday.
 
 The accident is the most serious since Brazilian Felipe Massa 
			suffered a life-threatening head injury in Hungary in 2009 and 
			images of the latest crash, not broadcast publicly but circulated on 
			the internet, have proved truly shocking.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
      
		
		 
			Bianchi was also a test driver for Ferrari, the Italian glamor team 
			that for many fans embodies Formula One, and his accident has hit 
			the paddock hard.
 "If you've got a situation like that, especially in our sport, it's 
			totally understandable that people would be in a very pensive and 
			subdued mood," Richard Cregan, who is acting as a consultant to the 
			Sochi organizers, told Reuters.
 
 "When we get a situation like this, it just hits us hard. Especially 
			with a driver like Jules, who is such a nice guy."
 
 Teams were busy setting up their garages at the circuit on 
			Wednesday, with freight being unpacked and the cars put together 
			after the flight from Japan, where a typhoon delayed some 
			departures.
 
 The name of Russian rookie Daniil Kvyat was over the Toro Rosso 
			garage, with the 20-year-old at the center of local attention after 
			champions Red Bull announced he would be driving for them next year 
			following Sebastian Vettel's departure.
 
 Sochi is the only new circuit on the calendar this season, with 
			Ecclestone in Baku on Tuesday to promote another new addition for 
			2016 with Azerbaijan coming in.
 
 Organizers expect a crowd of about 55,000 on Sunday, most of them 
			from within Russia.
 
 British bookmakers William Hill have Hamilton as race favorite at 
			4/6 with Rosberg at 2/1 and Red Bull's Australian Daniel Ricciardo 
			at 12/1.
 
 (Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)
 
			[© 2014 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
			reserved.] Copyright 2014 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
			
			
			 |