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1. Felipe MASSA (Ferrari),
1m27.617s
2. Heikki KOVALAINEN (McLaren Mercedes), 1m27.808s
3. Lewis HAMILTON (McLaren Mercedes), 1m27.923
Q: Felipe, another fantastic pole for you. Very quick as last year in sector
three as well. It looked to be a very good qualifying session for you.
Felipe MASSA: For sure, I think I put together a very good lap. I couldn’t
put together a good lap in Q2. I was a bit on the traffic and I was
disturbed a little bit. But then in Q3 I managed to warm up the tyres in the
right direction and also not be behind somebody. I even passed Fernando
Alonso on the out lap just to be sure that I could have got a clean lap. I
have to say I put two very good laps together. On the first lap it was a
very good try and on the second lap I just improved a little bit, but it was
enough to be on pole. I am just so happy coming the third time here and for
the third time being on pole position. It would be fantastic to repeat that
tomorrow.
Q: Your team-mate Kimi Räikkönen is starting fourth, but obviously you love
this race track.
FM: It is a fantastic track for me. I have a lot of pleasure to drive on a
track like that to be honest. You come to turn eight and it is very
challenging with so many drivers correcting oversteer there, even these two
guys beside me. So many times you are going into oversteer trying to get the
maximum of the car and also on the corners which are quite technical and
quite a lot of change of direction in the first sector, so I really enjoy
coming here and they are always very welcoming here as well, so it is a big
pleasure.
Q: You love winning from the pole, that is a great record that you have.
Equally every Turkish Grand Prix has been won from the pole as well, so you
must be looking forward to tomorrow I guess.
FM: I am looking forward to tomorrow definitely to try and have the best
race possible. For sure it won’t be easy as we know our competitors are
quite strong and quite close and the race will be not so easy, so let’s try
to do everything right and also put all the tyres on at the right moment and
use the car in the right direction as well.
Q: Heikki, what a week for you coming back here and having passed that
medical after your big accident in the Spanish Grand Prix and now qualifying
on the front row.
Heikki KOVALAINEN: It has been a roller-coaster the last couple of weeks.
Obviously I had a big accident in Spain, but I was very lucky to survive
without any injuries and my recovery has been fantastic. I have got to say
many thanks to the medical people in Spain and then when I got back to
Finland I did some medical check-ups there and I did some training as well.
Coming here I knew that I would pass the medical because I felt 100 per
cent. This week already yesterday I felt very happy with my car and I have
been feeling confident all the time. The second lap in Q3 was nice and
clean, so it is a pleasure to start from the front row and we should have a
god race tomorrow.
Q: Just take us back to Friday, the first lap you drove after that accident,
how did it feel from your point of view?
HK: It felt pretty normal. Like I said, I would not have come here if I did
not feel I was in 100 per cent fitness. Already at the end of last week I
was feeling back to normal and this week I have been able to do normal
physical preparation, if anything a bit tougher, just to test the body and
to make sure that there are no headaches or no effects from the impacts. It
has been all going very well. Still I must say the first few corners on
Friday I was feeling a little bit how everything is, but straight away I
felt it was okay and after that I just tried to attack the maximum I could.
Q: It was interesting to see you and your team-mate choose different types
of Bridgestone tyre going into Q3. Can you talk us through that a little
bit.
HK: I think it is a tricky one this weekend. At some point of the weekend
and sometime whenever I go out, however the tyre is, they feel good or not
good, so it is very difficult to make your mind up. Hopefully at least it
looks like I made the right decision in qualifying. But we will see
tomorrow, hopefully the trend continues but like Felipe said it is going to
be very tricky. It is very easy to make a mistake and if conditions, the
temperature or the wind changes a little bit it can mislead you a little
bit.
Q: Lewis, you chose the harder of the two Bridgestone tyres and a very nice
moment was captured on television when the back-end jumped out going through
turn right. We called it nice, but you probably didn’t.
Lewis HAMILTON: No, not really. It was a tough qualifying session for me.
Obviously at the beginning I had a fantastic lap in Q1. In Q2 I struggled a
little bit on the option tyre and therefore I opted for the prime tyre as I
thought perhaps it would be a more consistent tyre especially through the
lap. I guess I made the wrong decision.
Q: You say you made the wrong decision but to be that near on the prime tyre
it was a pretty impressive lap.
LH: It was not too bad. I struggled in my first Q3 lap, it was terrible. I
think I was in the 1:29s. The second one for sure was an improvement but
still it was not quick enough.
Q: How do you see the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes race pace relative to
Ferrari?
LH: I think we have got a good package this weekend and as myself and Heikki
have shown we are up there with the Ferraris and I think we should be able
to push them hard in the race.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Felipe, three poles, can you make it three wins?
FM: I don’t know. I hope so. At least it’s the best I could have done today,
so it helps a lot for the race tomorrow and for sure it’s quite nice and
special for me to come here and have the third pole in a row on this track.
Q: You were saying how much you enjoy this circuit, apart from turn eight.
Tell us about its attractions.
FM: Well, it’s a very nice circuit. Everybody knows that turn eight is very
challenging for all the drivers. You need a good car there, for sure, but
it’s very challenging. But also I like the layout. You have quite a bit of
change of direction in the first sector, turn one which is quite tricky
because you brake and you never know if you brake in the right place or
maybe a little bit too much or too early, because it’s a bit downhill and a
bit tricky there. And also you have the last sector which is pretty slow.
You have everything in one track which is quite nice.
Q: When you set that time in Q1, a high 1m25s, fastest that we’ve seen all
weekend, did you think then you could be on pole?
FM: No, for sure not, because I think Lewis did a fantastic lap time
straight away which for us was already a little bit… we were already
thinking that we were not as strong as we looked in practice. But at the
end, I think it was maybe coming from us that we didn’t do the right lap and
then I tried another set of tyres to be sure, and then I managed to do a
very good lap but then in Q2 on soft tyres I was a little bit in traffic and
was a little bit disturbed on my lap. I was a little bit behind but then in
Q3 I had two very clean laps, very good, and I was able to get the best out
of the car.
Q: And were there any problems warming up the tyres? It’s been a problem for
a lot of people this weekend.
FM: Yeah, I think it was a big problem yesterday. Today has been a little
bit better and slightly better in qualifying but I think it’s very difficult
because you cannot push so hard but you cannot go very slowly on the out
lap, especially for us. It is not so easy to have the right grip
straightaway at the beginning of the lap and while you can do a very very
good lap on one tyre, sometimes you put on the same tyres but then you just
lose a little bit, maybe it’s coming from the out lap, maybe it’s coming
from grip or whatever.
Q: Heikki, you seem to have bounced back even stronger.
HK: Yeah, maybe it was good to get hit on the head in Barcelona but I very
much doubt that, to be honest! I’ve felt very happy all the way through the
weekend here and the most important thing is that arriving here, I felt one
hundred percent fit and I would have not turned up here if I didn’t think I
was in full health and fitness. We’ve done a lot of tests and a lot of
medical checks and very heavy exercising leading up to this Grand Prix, just
to test the barrier after the incident, but I was able to survive that
incident which is great news. This is one of the circuits that I really
like. I’ve always enjoyed here and driving around here, so I was very much
looking forward to coming here. And then today, I think qualifying went
quite well. Some of the laps were better than the others but we went through
all the sessions and then coming to Q3, the first lap was a bit all over the
place, was not very clean, but the second lap was much tidier and everything
came together. Hopefully tomorrow we can do a good race from this position.
It’s my best starting position in Formula One, so it’s looking good at the
moment.
Q: Yes, surely that’s another milestone ticked off, the fact that you’re on
the front row for the first time.
HK: Yeah, but it’s not that big a milestone. It would be better to be on
pole, then you would be happier. But it’s better to be second than behind.
Q: Lewis, the fact that you set your time on hard tyres surely looks good
for the race itself, even if it maybe wasn’t the right choice?
LH: Yeah, for sure. I’m expecting to be quick tomorrow in the race.
Q: Was that something that was in your mind when you were on those harder
tyres?
LH: No, not really. As I said, Q1 seemed to go a lot better than Q2 and I
felt that perhaps the prime tyre was so close that it would probably give me
a better performance throughout the lap and I think that was a mistake.
Q: Third on the grid, you’re ahead of Kimi, still a good position?
LH: Could be better, for sure, and the lap wasn’t very good either, so
pretty disappointed in qualifying. Not frustrating, disappointing.
Q: How crucial was tyre warming?
LH: Didn’t seem to be much of a problem for me on both sets of tyres. For
sure you had to work them well enough but I managed to be able to get them
up to temperature and it was OK.
Q: You were saying disappointed, but it is a circuit where you can overtake.
LH: It is, it is, so we should have an exciting race tomorrow.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Ian Stafford – The Mail on Sunday) Heikki, you’ve played down the fact
that you’ve had the crash, you’re here, you’re second, your best ever
starting position, but can you just talk a little bit more about how
delighted you must be not just to be second but on the back of what happened
in Spain, and maybe how you felt really, for the first lap or two yesterday,
and how relieved and how pleased – what a story it is really that you
bounced back from that to be where you are now.
HK: Well, of course I am very pleased to be here and the fact that I didn’t
get any physical injuries in the accident really shows what the FIA has done
in the past, how they have improved the safety and all I have to do is thank
those people who have been putting their effort into work on that. Having
said that, there is still more to do and I think everybody should look into
that more and more. Apart from that, you might try to get a big story out of
it but honestly, all I can say is that three days after the accident I felt
that my headache went away and by then, I had done all the scans in Spain,
all the checks for my neck and head, and everything that was affected by the
impact and we knew that I didn’t have any physical injuries. There were no
injuries to the head, just a headache which was normal. If someone hits you
on the head with a baseball bat I’m sure you would have a headache for three
days at least. But after that, the recovery has been very good. I went back
to Finland to a special sports institute, I worked with specialists who
helped people recover from head injuries and they all did a great job. They
knew exactly where we were going and I was increasing my physical training
and fitness training all the time. And coming here, I had done the maximum
effort training to make sure my body could take the stress and when I did
the tests in Finland, I knew that I wouldn’t have any problem passing the
medical here and that’s the reason why I turned up here. Then for the first
laps yesterday perhaps I was a little bit more nervous than normal but only
for the first half of the lap. After that I could feel that I didn’t have
any side effects, everything seemed to be functioning like normal. After
that it’s just been business as usual. No one in our team has asked ‘how do
you feel?’ I told them after the installation lap everything’s fine, let’s
get on with it, and since then it’s been normal set-up work and trying to
make the most out of the car and get everything up to speed.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Heikki, you Finnish guys are on the
dirtier side of the track. Does it make a big difference here?
HK: Well, it’s difficult to say but traditionally it doesn’t help you, but
what can I do? I can’t change the sides anymore, so I just have to try to
make the most of it and then anyway we are near the front of the grid, so
it’s nothing to worry about, there’s no reason to worry about it too much.
But the way you ask the question, I’m sure it doesn’t help.
Q: (Panos Diamantis – Car and Driver Magazine) Felipe, if the temperature is
the same for the race as it is today, is it OK for you and do you have any
concerns for your stint on hard tyres during the race?
FM: Well, for sure the temperature is pretty low compared to what we’re used
to having here in the past but it’s the same for everybody and you just need
to make sure you warm up the tyres in the right way before going to the grid
and also making the right choice of tyres, in order not to lose any grip but
also to try to use the best tyres at the right time. The difference between
the hard and the soft here is not so big, so it’s important to chose the
right one.
Q: (Fulvio Solms – Corriere dello Sport) Question for Felipe: at how many
circuits in the championship do you have the same good feelings as you have
here?
FM: I have good feelings in many circuits, for sure. It doesn’t mean that
because I won here, that I cannot win at other tracks. For sure, it’s a
fantastic circuit and I always feel happy to come here, and it’s my third
pole position in a row here with Ferrari, so for sure that’s a big pleasure,
but I think I can be competitive in many tracks.
Q: (Fulvio Solms – Corriere dello Sport) Could you clarify which circuits
where you have the best feelings?
FM: Many, many. Last year I set six pole positions, so it means that I can
be competitive on many tracks and I started a lot on the front row, so even
this year I can be competitive at every race, so I cannot say this yes and
this not. Every race I can be competitive.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – O Estado de Sao Paulo) A question for all drivers:
sorry to come back to the question of the temperature of the tyres but are
you worried in the case of the safety car on the first lap of the race when
it restarts?
FM: For sure, we need to warm up our tyres even more under the safety car.
In cool temperatures like these, when you back off, for sure you lose a lot
of temperature in the tyres, so you need to be even stronger when you’re
warming up.
HK: Exactly the same as Felipe said: you just need to work them a bit more.
Apart from that, I don’t think it’s any concern in terms of safety but I
think we are nowhere near the limit of being dangerous, so no problem.
LH: No problems.
Q: (Frédéric Ferret – L’Equipe) I have two problems for Lewis: first of all
about qualifying. You seem quite unhappy with your lap, any mistake or was
it because of the handling of the car or traffic or something else?
LH: I chose the wrong tyre. It didn’t give me the performance and the car
didn’t feel great, no.
Q: (Frédéric Ferret – L’Equipe) The second question is about the race
tomorrow: you said on Thursday that you miss winning, do you think you can
win tomorrow?
LH: I think tomorrow we just have to wait and see. For sure we are not in
the best position to do so.
Q: (Ian Parkes – The Press Association) Lewis, you have said you are very
disappointed and your body language suggests you are not too happy if you
don’t mind me saying…
LH: I just need the toilet, that’s all! And I’m really wondering whether
Heikki’s really Finnish because his answers are longer than I’ve ever known!
Q: (Ian Parkes – The Press Association) …is this a question of perhaps being
a bit too hard on yourself?
LH: No, definitely not. I’m always hard on myself and that’s the way I do
it, that’s how I do my business, that’s how I go about it. I don’t feel that
I made any mistakes, I did the best I could with the car, that’s the
quickest it’s ever gone. But we need to improve in terms of preparing and
making decisions. I do it all on my own.
Q: (Juha Päätalo – Financial Times Germany) This is for Heikki and Lewis:
until now, this weekend, McLaren has been quite close to Ferrari but how
confident are you for the race, strategy-wise and looking at long-run
performance?
HK: I think it looks like we are closer but having said that, we know the
Ferraris are always going to be strong, whether it’s in qualifying or
whether it’s in the race or whether it’s in free practice or whatever. And
even the other teams are going to be strong, so I think the fact is that we
cannot take anything for granted and we just have to push everything to the
maximum. But hopefully the feeling this weekend is that we are closer. |