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DRIVERS: Jenson BUTTON
(Honda), Heikki KOVALAINEN (McLaren Mercedes), Robert KUBICA (BMW Sauber),
Kazuki NAKAJIMA (Williams)
Q: Kazuki, this is a circuit like in Spain which you’ve been to before, if
not in an F1 car. What are your feelings about coming here and how has it
been to come to circuits that you’ve known before?
Kazuki NAKAJIMA: It is much better. Even Malaysia and Bahrain I have been
there and also Melbourne, so it doesn’t make too much difference. Obviously
Barcelona was one I knew much better than the other circuits. I raced here
last year and the GP2 race was not bad for me, it was not a bad result in
terms of speed, so I am looking forward to racing here. It is a great track
to drive, it has got a lot of tricky corners and some high speed corners, so
I think this going to be good.
Q: So far this year you have scored points in two out of the four races
which is an excellent effort. Has that surprised you?
KN: Not surprised but I think this year the fight for the points is very
tough and I think it is very important to get points when you have the
opportunity. I think I have done well and so far have scored five points, so
I think in some ways maybe I am surprised I have scored five points. But
that’s my job to score points and for that I am quite happy.
Q: Qualifying seems to go up and down a fair amount. Is it the car or what
do you think it is?
KN: I think it is a bit of everything. But like in Barcelona when everything
was working I think I showed I can do a good job in qualifying. That is the
target to do well in qualifying consistently. I am getting more and more
experience at the moment, so we will see from here to the rest of the season
I think it will be fine.
Q: Obviously points for you in the last race as well. That must have been
encouraging especially with the upgrade you had as well.
Jenson BUTTON: Yes, it was very encouraging. The first few races, in
qualifying, were reasonable but I struggled in the race to have a good
performance basically because twice I crashed at turn one. It was finally
nice to get to the end of a grand prix and to be not just scoring one point,
but to get three points on the board. It was a good race and the pace of the
car was reasonable. There is a lot of work still to be done but the
positives are we are improving and every race we go to we feel we are
getting a little bit more out of the car, and so far everything is going to
plan.
Q: Have you got more bits coming here?
JB: A few little things. We have got a few tweaks here which should make a
bit of time. Also this is a circuit which I think will suit our car a little
bit more than Barcelona which is very bumpy and I think that ride quality is
an area where we are lacking. We have got a few tweaks on that side and it
is a smoother circuit, so I will be looking for a good performance in
qualifying and then we will see. If everyone finishes it is very difficult
to score points because you have got six very fast cars and you are fighting
over two points but we will aim for points for sure.
Q: What about the lack of traction control here? How much of a difference is
that going to make?
JB: On this circuit in some places it’s not going to be an issue at all
because you have got a lot of positive camber which helps you through the
corner. There will be other places where it will be difficult. The last
three corners are very slow, so it is going to be interesting there. But
also the temperatures aren’t high here, so we are not going to be
overheating the tyres or causing problems to the rear tyres in that way. But
because it is a low temperature we might have issues with the graining on
the softer tyre. We will have to wait and see.
Q: It is a milestone for your team-mate Rubens Barrichello this weekend and
he will no doubt be out celebrating.
JB: It’s 257 races this weekend, I’ve been told.
Q: It is!
JB: That’s fantastic. And he doesn’t look a day over 37!
Q: Is he showing any signs of slowing down in his old age?
JB: No, he has been on it this year. He has been doing a very good job. It
is good to have a competitive team-mate and a very experienced team-mate as
he is. We have got a very good team and a very good team atmosphere and he
is good to have alongside.
Q: Robert, obviously you made your debut here in 2006. Fifth on the grid and
eighth last year and this year, having said that, your positions so far this
year have been second, third and fourth of the races you’ve finished. How do
you feel things are going at the moment?
Robert KUBICA: I mean Turkey is not really a favourite track for me and not
the one where I have been lucky. In 2006 in my second race in F1 we had some
problems with the tyres, last year I started pretty well but then faced some
graining problems. I am looking forward as this year’s car is a bit easier
for me to drive and I am performing better, so I hope to turn it a different
way on this track and hope to be competitive.
Q: Qualifying, however, is still good. It is just in the races that the
positions are going down this year.
RK: I think it depends where you look and how much fuel you get. In
Australia I was first row but unfortunately I could not finish the race due
to the accident with Nakajima. In Malaysia I started with a heavy car and
improved my position. Okay, in Bahrain it was difficult to face Ferrari and
in Barcelona we were very close with McLaren, so we knew we had to stay in
front of them after the first lap. We didn’t manage with Lewis Hamilton but
still the race pace I think was very strong.
Q: Heikki, good to see you and glad that you have passed the test this
morning. Can you give us some idea of what you had to do?
Heikki KOVALAINEN: It’s basically a test all the drivers have to go through
when they start their career in F1. When I started last year in Australia I
did the base line test. It is a combination of tests and calculations.
Basically they check how your brain and body is working and the reactions. I
redid the test this morning and improved the score, so the impact seems to
have a good effect.
Q: Have you noticed how you have been getting better since the accident
itself?
HK: Yes. Obviously the Monday morning after the accident I had a little bit
of a headache. But since then it has improved quite rapidly. It was on
Thursday when I got out of Spain and on Saturday I started normal training
in Finland. I went to a sports institute that is doing work with McLaren and
together with our team doctor I went over there and started to prepare for
this race. Since then everything has been normal and I am looking forward to
hopefully a strong weekend and to getting back in the car and I feel 100 per
cent.
Q: When I asked Robert this question in France last year about his accident
in Montreal there was a certain amount of hilarity. Have you seen it on
television and what has been your reaction?
HK: I have seen it on television afterwards. It was a serious accident I
managed to walk away from. I think I was a little bit lucky but also must
stress that all the safety standards that the FIA has been pushing for
worked very well there. The chassis took the impact reasonably well as did
the barriers. The FIA medical team and the marshals did a fantastic job to
get me out of there quickly and in a short period of time I am able to make
a recovery without any injuries in my body. I think it is something that we
must still keep working on but the work paid off that day.
Q: Are you surprised that Heikki has such a quick recovery, as you, of
course, weren’t able to race the week after and had to wait.
RK: I am not really surprised. He said he was lucky he only had headache the
day after. It was a bit similar with me. I didn’t have headache but I had a
pain in my ankle. But I was one week later in America and I could not race,
but I think we are all happy that he is back. I think if he does a good
weekend everyone will say he is stronger after accident which was the case
with me but which was completely not right.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Will Buxton – Australasian Motorsport News) Just a few words from all
four on the current level of safety and the job that the FIA does to ensure
you guys are all safe over a grand prix weekend.
HK: As I have said already, I think all the parts of the accident – the car,
the barrier and then the lift from the car and to the medical centre and
then further to the medical centre in the city - that all worked very well.
It is not only luck that I came out of the crash. It is really the work that
has paid off. I can’t be more than thankful about that. But we should carry
on working on improving as much as we can. If there are any other areas we
think we can improve then we should go for it.
RK: I think similar to Heikki. The FIA has done a fantastic job. His
accident and my accident in Canada have shown that safety standards in F1
are very high and we have people working on it trying to improve more. I
think these two accidents have shown that standards are very high.
JB: Everything that has been said. It is great that all the time we are
taking a view to try and help safety. As the Grand Prix Drivers’ Association
that’s our main aim as well. It is good that we are all working together for
a safer sport. It is never going to be the safest sport in the world, we all
know that. But there are certain things we can work on to not take away the
excitement but to make the sport a little bit safer.
KN: Same for everybody. Safety has improved a lot. It is good to work
together with the FIA and the drivers to help improve. We just need to do
that.
Q: (Will Buxton – Australasian Motorsport News) For Jenson, Robert and
Heikki: Jenson, Monaco 2003, Robert last year in Canada, and Heikki in
Spain. I believe all three of you lost consciousness and had no real
recollection of the crashes that you had. Having no recollection, how much
does that actually help you get over it, not having the mental image in your
mind of exactly how it all played out?
JB: I think when you walk away and you’re fine the next day, you get over it
very quickly. So obviously if you have an injury you think about it more,
but when the accident’s happened, you know you’ve walked away from a
situation which you probably didn’t think you would walk away from. You have
a lot of confidence in the car that you’re driving and the circuits that
you’re racing on.
RK: I think very similarly. It was a bit different in my case, I think,
because I remember most of my accident. When I was asked if I had seen my
accident, I saw it for real. It was just what Jenson said: it gives you more
confidence and in some ways you are lucky but in other ways it shows how
safe Formula One is and how strong F1 cars are.
HK: All I should really add is that I don’t think I lost consciousness at
any point. The first people who arrived at the scene reported me being awake
and assisting getting myself out of there but I don’t have any idea, I don’t
remember that. But after such a hit on the head, I think it’s a bit of a
shutdown by the body to protect your brain and your organs. I don’t have any
issues with that. It would be good if one day the whole image came back into
my head. I don’t think I would have any problem with that, but at the moment
all that I can talk about is what I saw on the video.
Q: (Marc Surer – Premiere TV) Heikki, another question. The first moment
when you were stuck in the tyres, did you have the tyres on your head, do
you remember that? You were stuck in the car, or you don’t remember that at
all?
HK: Yeah, I’ve obviously seen it on the images, that the tyres were over me
and I sort of penetrated through the tyre wall, but I don’t remember that
moment.
Q: (Marc Surer – Premiere TV) Did you have marks on your helmet?
HK: Yes, quite a lot of marks, but I think the helmet did its work, it took
the impact very well and I didn’t have any injuries to my head, that’s the
most important thing.
Q: (Marc Surer – Premiere TV) Jenson, you mentioned the tyres just now. You
have hard tyres here and last year it was 50 degrees on the asphalt, now we
maybe have 20-something. Do you think it will be a problem to get the hard
tyres up to temperature?
JB: I think it’s going to be very different, for sure, but in the winter we
do a lot of testing in colder temperatures and we are able to get tyre
temperature, but it’s just going to be very different to what we’re used to
here. The tyres are obviously going to work in a very different way and over
the next two days, that’s what we’re going to be working on and working
with. The information from last year will also be useful but it’s going to
be very different to what we’ll experience this year, for sure, both tyres
(compounds), not just one tyre.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Heikki, was that the first black-out of
your career and was that the most serious accident that you’ve had?
HK: I think it’s yes to both question. I haven’t had a black-out before.
I’ve had a couple of serious accidents before but I never knocked myself out
like that and therefore it’s got to be the most serious accident so far.
Q: (Dominic Fugere – Le Journal de Montreal) Question for all four of you: I
would like you to fast forward one month from now and just give me a quick
answer: if I say to you Montreal, what do you reply?
JB: Great, great steak, fantastic steak. Four weeks from now, I wouldn’t
have a clue. I think we will have a greater understanding of the title
contenders. For us, as a team, I think you will see us improving, for sure,
not enough to fight with the title contenders, but improving all the same.
Q: I just wanted a quick word association, that was all.
JB: Steak was my quick answer. There are loads of good restaurants. There’s
one called Buena Notte which is fantastic.
KN: Well, ...
JB: Girls, girls, that’s a good one.
KN: The views.
HK: I don’t know, I don’t know what to say. It’s a great city, great circuit
but there’s no point in looking too much into the future. I’d rather live in
the present time and try to make the right decisions in every-day life,
whether it’s racing or normal life.
RK: It’s not one of my favourite race tracks.
Q: (Dan Knutson – National Speed Sport News) Heikki, you were awake, but
what was your first memory after the accident?
HK: I remember being in intensive care in the hospital in the city, a lot of
people around me. I was a bit confused what had happened, so I asked my team
doctor Mr Hintsa ‘what are we doing here?’ and he explained what happened
and then after that, the memory has been normal and I was aware of
everything after that. That’s where I got back on track.
Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto Moto und Sport) Heikki, the tyres did a good job
in terms of deceleration but on the other hand it took quite a while before
they dug you out of there. Is that a worry?
HK: Yeah, of course, it’s something that we all should look very carefully
at and see if there are better compromises but luckily I had no injuries and
I was not in a hurry to get out of there, my life was not threatened because
of that, so in this case, the tyres did the work very well. But had I
injured myself while hitting the barrier, maybe then it was more important
to get myself out of there quickly and it would have been a bit marginal.
It’s something we should have a look at.
Q: (Heinz Prüller – ORF) Can I ask you a private question: it’s Mothers’ Day
on Sunday, can I have a few words from you about your early days, the first
help your mother gave you, maybe sacrificing or giving you your first car to
drive, helping you in your career, whatever?
JB: Whoops. Is it Mothers’ Day on Sunday? OK. I think we can say that our
mums have been a big part of our lives. Yeah, my Mum is a big fan of racing…
you can ask her, she’s going to be in Monaco. She’s been a big fan of my
racing, been a big supporter. She’s kept my feet on the ground for sure.
KN: Right, I didn’t know that, I’m afraid. Yeah, when I was doing go-karting
my mother was always taking me to the track and taking me home again. She
was helping me a lot, so that was the biggest contribution from my mother.
HK: Well, obviously she’s always been very interested in what all of the
kids in our family are doing and she’s always supported myself. I think on
Sunday she was actually working while I was racing. My dad called her and
told her that ‘Heikki’s had an accident’ and she was like ‘OK’. And then she
got home and actually saw what happened and she went a bit crazy, but she’s
just about recovered now. I think I should try to give her a better Mothers’
Day present rather than a call from hospital to say ‘I had a crash.’
RK: Well, I think a mum is quite an important person for everybody here, one
of the most important in my life and thanks to my mum and my father I am
here.
Q: (Flavio Vanetti – Corriere della Sera) Jenson, it is said that Honda
didn’t want the Super Aguri team any longer. What can you say about that,
and how bad is it for Formula One to lose a team during the season?
JB: Personally, I think you need to speak to Oshima-san or Nick Fry who will
be here over the weekend. They will be able to give you a much better answer
than I can. But obviously for the drivers, for Takuma and Anthony, I’m very
sorry for them, because I’m sure it’s very difficult doing the first few
races and then not having a job racing in F1 from then on, so really just
sorry to those guys and hopefully they can get back into Formula One in the
future.
Q: (Dominic Fugere – Le Journal de Montreal) To go back to the safety
barrier, would you guys feel happier if you had a safety barrier which
didn’t have bits and pieces flying off; that there was just foam behind a
steel wall as is being used in America?
JB: I think the angles at which we hit the wall are far greater than what
they do in America, on the ovals. I think if any of us had hit a safer
barrier, it wouldn’t have been that safe, the speed and the angle at which
we would have hit it. What do you think, Heikki?
HK: Yeah, I agree with that answer exactly. I think we probably should look
more individually at the most dangerous corners. We can see ourselves which
are the most critical places and probably make decisions accordingly and
it’s not that straightforward, just adding some kind of wall here and
everywhere. It’s not that simple. For myself, at Turn Nine in Barcelona, it
worked very well this time and we’ve just got to see if we can do anything
better and look at other corners as well.
Q: (Marco Degl’Innocenti – La Gazzetta dello Sport) I’m not sure I caught
what you said before: you said that your first memory after the accident was
in the hospital? But we saw you raising your hand when they took you away
from the circuit. At that moment, what were you thinking? Were you not
awake?
HK: Exactly what I said before: I have no idea about waving my hand but also
the fact, as I said earli key thing is that they can be competitive, because
it would be a shame if, purely because they were a female driver, they got
put in the car and couldn’t compete properly, but if they can compete
properly, absolutely, it would be great.
NH: We ran Sarah Fisher at Indianapolis once. I fully agree with what Ross
has said. I think the key is to be competitive and if that is the case, I
think motor sport is… it’s certainly not possible in soccer to compete
against these fellows. In various sports it’s not possible but it should be
basically possible in motor sports as the Indy Racing League has proven; or
as, for example, DTM shows but the key is to be competitive. We had a winner
in touring cars years ago – many years ago, 16 years ago, I think – with
Ellen Lohr beating her team-mate Keke Rosberg at that stage, which was not
very pleasing for my friend Keke, but anyway, it is possible and hopefully
Formula One will experience that in the future. |