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1. Kimi RÄIKKÖNEN (Ferrari),
1h38m19.051s
2. Felipe MASSA (Ferrari), 1h38m22.279s
3. Lewis HAMILTON (McLaren Mercedes), 1h38m23.238
Q: Kimi, pole position, fastest lap and it looked like you were in control
from minute one of the race. A perfect day at the races for you?
Kimi RÄIKKÖNEN: Yes, but I didn’t get the perfect start. But anyhow it was
good enough to stay in front. If we had wanted we could have gone a bit
faster but there is no point to push it when you don’t need to. I think it
was closer than we expected but saying that there were many safety cars, so
without them maybe it would have been looking a little bit different. It was
a good day – everything was brilliant. I am happy that Heikki (Kovalainen)
seems to be okay after his accident. I cannot ask anything more as the guys
did perfect work apart from the second pit stop when I had two cars in
traffic, so it took a little bit too long to get out and I had to wait a bit
for them to pass me. Apart from that it was okay.
Q: It appears it was your great pole lap which allowed you to get the lead
in the race.
KR: This circuit is very difficult to overtake. The start is the best place
and when you have a lot of things going with the safety car you might be
lucky or very unlucky, so the best place to try to win is always from the
front. It was good yesterday and it really helped us today. We had good
speed all weekend.
Q: What were the track conditions like today?
KR: Not too bad. I had one incident in corner three when I was coming in for
my first pit stop. There was massive understeer and then the front bites, so
I always got sideways. Of course sometimes when you get those unexpected
things and it happens in one lap it is more luck than anything else you do
not get off. But apart from that the conditions were pretty good today.
Q: Felipe. It was a great Ferrari one-two. And a good start from you to take
second place into the first corner.
Felipe MASSA: Yes, it was a good start. For sure as you mention before the
qualifying was very important for this race. I had one lap less fuel than
Kimi and I just couldn’t put together my lap on the last try when it counts.
I started third but I did a very good start and could manage to pass
Fernando and that’s it. I had a little moment with the safety car and I saw
that he was going a little bit longer than me. That maybe was a little bit
of a scare for us but then I managed to build the gap in the second stint in
a very good way and it was not a problem to stop one lap before and get in
front. We did our homework and brought two Ferrari’s in the front – first
and second - which is very important for the championship.
Q: It’s a wonderful position in which you find yourself. It appears you have
a great spot for the car now and reliability. Ferrari are in a great place.
FM: We are in the first race of our engine and everything but looking at
what we did in the test the car looks more in the right direction. But let’s
keep working and improving because we saw that our competitors were very
close. If you look in qualifying they were very close and in the race as
well, so we need to pay attention race by race and we need to keep working
like crazy in the factory to improve the car in every area.
Q: Lewis, I guess from your point of view with Ferraris on the front row to
finish third in the Spanish Grand Prix is a great relief.
Lewis HAMILTON: Absolutely, it is good to be back. Obviously when we
qualified fifth we knew that it would be very difficult to beat the
Ferraris. But the key was to get a good start and make as many places as
possible and fortunately I was able to do that. We sort of had a feeling
that Fernando would be a bit lighter and that didn’t cause us any problems.
Especially towards the middle stint and towards the end I had to try and
keep up with Felipe as I knew he was a lap shorter than me, but they seem to
look after their rear tyres a little bit better than us still. In the last
stint I was able to keep quite close and pushing and pushing right to the
last lap. It is amazing how close all the cars are. Even Robert Kubica was
extremely close to me and I kept looking in the mirrors at a certain point
and he was always in the exact same spot. It is very impressive that all the
teams are so close. It is good for the team. Unfortunately it was not a
great day for Heikki and I am glad he is okay but we will keep pushing.
Q: Into the first corner with Robert really defined the race for you. It was
a close battle going into turn one but you won that.
LH: I know from past experiences in F3 that Robert is one of the hardest to
overtake. He is very aggressive on the first lap but I was able to get up
the inside of him. I was pretty much passed him and I just had to make sure
that I covered my ground. It was pretty smooth sailing from there. It was a
good start from us. Again we have had two bad races, so to get back on the
podium is fantastic.
Q: What were you hearing on the radio and seeing on the big screen of
Heikki’s accident?
LH: I came past and saw there was a car in the wall. It just looked red, so
I didn’t know if it was one of us or one of the Ferraris. I did see a
glimpse of the footage on the television and it looked very reminiscent of
my incident last year at the Nürburgring. I was a bit terrified for whoever
it was as I saw the impact was quite heavy. The team told me it was Heikki
but they didn’t know how he was immediately. But Ron Dennis came onto the
radio half-way through and said he was okay but slightly concussed. I am
sure he will bounce back
Q: Afterwards did it cross your mind that it was a mechanical problem which
may have affected your car as well?
LH: No. If you let those things get to your mind then you are in trouble.
You begin making mistakes or put yourself in the wrong position. It never
crossed my mind once. I was quite confident we had done a great job and that
the car was reliable. That enabled me to keep pushing.
Q: Kimi, focussing on Turkey now and Ferrari are obviously very strong there
as well.
KR: I think so. If you look what happened here last year it was quite
similar. Last year was a different race. Our car should be quite strong in
Turkey. It is a great circuit and I am looking forward to going there and
trying to do the best job we can. As a team we had a great weekend here and
we will try to repeat it in Turkey and hopefully we can do it. Whatever it
brings we need points and whatever we get is always a bonus.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Kimi, it looked like a pretty perfect day, was the car perfect?
KR: Yeah, it was pretty good. We could still improve it. We always try to
improve it but it was very nice, very good balance all the time, so it
wasn’t too bad.
Q: It looked as if you lost a little bit of time on the harder tyres in
comparison to the McLaren. Both of you were lapping at the same pace,
roughly speaking, but the McLaren was lapping quite a lot quicker on the
harder tyres for the first two or three laps.
KR: We didn’t need to push. If we wanted to push, we could go much faster,
for sure, but there’s no point in risking anything or using the engine more
than you needed to. The first thing was that they were trying to catch us
and the second thing was that they would try to overtake, but if they don’t
even catch us, it’s fine. In the last part of the race, you don’t see the
true speed of most of the people, they slow down if they can.
Q: You also lost a little bit of time to Felipe for about two or three laps
round about lap 40.
KR: No, I lost some time in the traffic with the same car. I think it was
Sato twice. He wasn’t too helpful but apart from that, I don’t know if
something happened. There was no problem with the car. Maybe I made a
mistake or had traffic. I don’t remember.
Q: Felipe, Fernando seemed to come over on you at the start. Was that
acceptable, anything more than usual?
FM: No. I did a good start and even if he came over, he saw that I was on
his side, so there was nothing he could do. It’s not like it was in the
braking point, there you can defend your position. If you have a better
start on acceleration, you cannot do anything. I also got into Kimi’s
slipstream and I also got alongside him on the outside of the first corner,
so I made a very good start. For sure it helps a lot to pass Fernando at the
start, to build a gap, to be a little bit safer.
Q: And after that, did you pretty much settle for second place?
FM: Yes, the race here looks very similar to the last race. I was one lap
earlier on the fuel and the chance to win was very small. For sure, I was
pushing for the first stint, second stint, ready to build the gap to Lewis
but it was pretty much that unless something happened, it would be very
difficult to win the race. I cannot win every race. It was very important to
bring home eight points and make another step forward in the championship
which we know is quite long.
Q: Same question on hard tyres, you weren’t happy on the hard tyres,
presumably?
FM: For sure the softs were much better for us, but as Kimi said, even if
Lewis was quite close, if we didn’t make a mistake for sure he wouldn’t pass
us. I was doing similar lap times to Kimi and was just looking at the gap
behind and it was not such a big problem.
Q: How important was it to get past Robert at the start, Lewis?
LH: Yes, absolutely. Obviously qualifying fifth didn’t really put us in a
great spot to win the race. We knew we had quite a good strategy and
obviously at the beginning I just had to try and make up as many places as
possible. It was great to get past Robert otherwise we would probably have
finished behind him. As you could see, through the race, he was right up my
tail throughout, but the whole race we were doing almost exactly the same
times. I’m very very happy that I got past him at the beginning and I think
it was a solid job by us.
Q: Is it a surprise to have been as close to the Ferraris as you were?
LH: Yeah, for sure you could say it was a surprise because they were
extremely quick, but it was all very very close in qualifying. We had a
feeling they were a little bit lighter than us, maybe it was one or two
laps, whatever. We all seemed to be very close. They just seem to have a
slight edge at the moment but it was impressive. I was really happy with the
balance of the car and the tyres came and went, and came and went. I was
able to maintain quite a good balance and pace and keep up with them. It was
quite close in the middle stint. When you get to within a couple of seconds
of someone, you’re damaging your tyres more and it’s harder to stay behind
them but I was happy with where we came.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Juha Päätalo – Financial Times Germany) Kimi, first of all, when you saw
Heikki’s car in the tyre wall, what did you think?
KR: First of all, we didn’t know which McLaren it was. I asked the team and
they said it was Heikki. It probably looked worse than it was in the end.
Luckily he seems to be OK, so that’s the main thing.
Q: (Juha Päätalo – Financial Times Germany) You now have a nine point lead
in the championship. How much easier does it make your life?
KR: It doesn’t change anything, so far. It’s a good advantage but there are
14 races to go. You have one bad race and it’s all gone. There’s a little
safety in it, in that if you don’t finish one race it’s not totally
disastrous afterwards, but so far it’s been good. We just need to keep on
going and try to improve the car.
Q: (Ian Parkes – The Press Association) Lewis, after what happened to you in
Bahrain, did you perhaps come into this race with a point to prove, to
yourself perhaps?
LH: Not really. Mistakes happen, it was just one of those
character-building… it was a learning curve I guess. But I didn’t feel that
I had to come here and do anything extra or do anything different. You know
what I can do. I don’t feel I need to improve it. I just wanted to come here
and do a solid job for the team and get points for both of us. I’m really
happy with where we’ve come, especially after not the best qualifying but to
see the reliability of the car, how much we could push at the end and to see
the pace of the car improving throughout the race. It was quite encouraging.
Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Was there any point, Lewis,
after the accident to Heikki, that the team was discussing that you might
retire, just for safety or was that never taken into consideration?
LH: For me, at least, it never crossed my mind, and the team never came onto
the radio and said you might need to. I think the reliability of our car is
very very good and so obviously we will go back and try and look at and
understand what happened to Heikki’s car. But mine was perfect, I was quite
happy with it.
Q: Lorenzo Garmendia – Berria) Lewis, Heikki’s having some hard times, not
just because of today’s accident but in the championship. Do you feel you
have to take over the responsibility to push the team, even if you are only
in your second year?
LH: No, I don’t. I get on very well with Heikki and I think an important
thing, which showed last year, whether or not you saw it, myself and
Fernando worked very very closely in terms of developing the car and pushing
the team forward and I think it’s important to have both drivers doing that
and so I feel that I share equal responsibility with Heikki. Today was
unfortunate but there’s no doubt that we will go to the next race, we will
keep pushing together. It’s not a one man team, there’s a huge amount of us
but especially me and Heikki need to keep pushing and try and bring the
points in for everyone.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Felipe, Bahrain seemed to be your circuit,
in a way, compared to Kimi. Do you think that Turkey will be the same for
you?
FM: To be honest, it doesn’t mean that because you won last year, you are
stronger on the track. I feel strong on whatever track we go to and I feel
that I can win any time. You need to find the opportunities, you need to
pull everything together to win. For sure, here Kimi did a great job,
especially in qualifying with a good strategy and the picture was exactly
the opposite to Bahrain, so I think it’s important to bring the points home,
as I said, and start to build a gap in comparison to our competitors.
Whatever opportunity we get to win, we need to take it and today was not
possible, but I’m happy with second and I’m sure it’s very important points
for the team and for both of us.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – O Estado de Sao Paulo) Kimi, were you afraid at the
second pit stop when you were two seconds slower than Felipe? Did you think
you could lose your lead?
KR: You’re always thinking about it because you’re going slower and the
other guys are going full speed on the circuit but it was only because there
was traffic coming when my car was being refuelled and I needed to wait,
because there were two cars, Lewis and a BMW at the same time, so I just
needed to wait. Once they went, I could leave my pit. You cannot see but the
team always tries to tell me (what’s going on) and I had a reasonable gap,
so I didn’t really worry about it too much, but you would rather go when you
can and not have to wait.
Q: (Rodrigo Franca – VIP Magazine) Question for Kimi and Felipe: Michael
Schumacher was here all weekend. How much did he help you and Felipe to win
this race, and during the tests and during the briefings etc?
KR: I saw him yesterday for the first time, so I think he’s helpful for the
team overall. During the season he did some tests but I do my work with the
engineers and he’s not involved. He’s a part of the team and he’s always
been there, so if we wanted some help from him, he would help, for sure.
FM: I think he did a good job, for sure, last week, working for next year on
the slick tyres and so many things on the car. I think he was very useful
there. I didn’t see him so much this weekend but as Kimi said, I’m sure he
works very closely with our engineers and Michael will not come one day and
start to tell us to do a lot of things that we have to do. That’s not how we
work. As I said, he’s very important in the team but we work together in
many areas, not just coming here and saying that we need to stop.
Q: (Richard Williams – The Guardian) Lewis, you started on the clean side.
Could you talk a little bit more detail about the start? You came across
behind Robert. Did he hesitate to give you the chance to go on the inside of
him, and was there any possibility that Heikki touched you?
LH: No, the start was quite straightforward. I got good traction, I just
immediately moved to the right. I noticed that I seemed to have good
traction and seemed to be moving at a similar pace to Robert. I moved to the
right, I think Heikki was quite a bit away from me. I didn’t see him at all
and I didn’t feel any problems with my car and I think Robert was focusing
on going to the left perhaps, to slipstream one of these guys, but I was
carrying so much speed that there was no time for him to react and go back
to the right. I don’t think he hesitated but I don’t think he was expecting
it.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Kimi, in 2005 you won the race almost in a
similar fashion and you said after the race that it was very boring. How was
the feeling now? Was it as boring as it was then?
KR: I think my race was much easier that race. OK, we had a safety car then
also, but it was on the first lap, so it was a pretty clear race. Now,
during the race when you get the safety car, you have got to get back
together, you never know if they have even more fuel or less fuel and you
need to push again. For sure, I needed to push all the time, so it wasn’t
the easiest. |