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1. Jenson BUTTON (Brawn GP),
55m30.622s
2. Nick HEIDFELD (BMW Sauber), 55m53.344s
3. Timo GLOCK (Toyota), 55m54.135s
Q. Jenson, it is never easy. Very difficult at the start and what calls you
had to make with changing weather conditions as your pit stop approached.
Jenson BUTTON: What a crazy race. It really was. My start was pretty bad. I
had a lot of oversteer in the car. I don't think I got heat into the rear
tyres and went back to fourth, got up to third and eventually got back to
the front and I was pretty happy with that. Our pace was good and then the
rain started but choosing the tyres was very difficult. Normally here when
it rains it pours but it didn't to start with.
We went for the full wet tyre and it just destroyed itself and we saw Timo
flying up behind us on the inter, so we put the inter on. Then just as he
came by I saw his tyres were bald and it was raining out the back and he was
struggling quite a bit on it and had to pit. I got one lap in on the inter
with reasonable pace and I was able to get in and put the wet tyre on and
come out in front. A very interesting race and I still haven't seen the
chequered flag without a safety car in front.
Q. Nick, in 2005 from 10th to third and now from 10th to second. Great use
of the conditions with a long fuel strategy. You came in on lap 22, a little
bit earlier than you needed to, and it worked out perfectly for you.
Nick HEIDFELD: Yeah, I think it was a very difficult race obviously in these
conditions. I took the right tyre choice, well, not the perfect tyre choice
as I went straight to extremes. As Jenson said there is normally heavy
rainfall here. Then the team told me there is heavy rain expected and I told
them inters would be a lot quicker now.
Then just when they told me to pit it started to rain heavier and actually
it was just 200 metres from the pit entry and I said 'no, no I stay out as
it starts to rain more heavy.' I tried to preserve my tyres at the beginning
and some other guys were quicker than me on the extreme wets and I knew if
the rain starts then hopefully I can stay out. But still my rear tyres were
destroyed completely and were slicks basically. When it started to rain I
just tried to stay on the circuit.
Q. Timo, a great call to go onto the intermediates as Jenson just said. Talk
us through that.
Timo GLOCK: Yes, it was a tricky race I have to say but in the end I have to
say one of the best races I could ever do. We struggled a bit at the start.
I don't know why we lost so many places. I couldn't believe Fernando and
Kimi were in front of me at the first corner. I didn't know where they came
from and I struggled and I was only, I think, P8 after the first lap and the
traffic was really tricky and after five or six laps I saw already the
clouds were coming and I was asking ‘when is the rain coming, when is the
rain coming' and they said you know it should come in the next couple of
minutes and then I thought it takes so long as you saw the big clouds coming
definitely.
It took just so long and we were so close to the first pit stop, so I said
‘okay I will take the risk and we will go for it and go to inters and then
we will see.' I saw already Felipe Massa was on heavy wets quite early and I
knew that will destroy the tyres as well, so I said ‘come on, we go for it
and take the risk' and in the end it paid off. But the last two laps behind
the safety car it was so confusing. My engineer told me when I did the pit
stop ‘you are leading the race,' so I said ‘okay, I don't push because I
want to save the tyres.' Then I saw Jenson coming out just ahead of me, so I
was P2. Then I jumped out of the car and now I am here I am P3. So hopefully
when I come back down I will still be in P3. That's what I am hoping for.
Q. Jenson, in those closing laps just before the safety car came out you
were racing with Timo in dreadful conditions.
JB: It was really bad conditions and you could not actually see the circuit.
I mean it was that bad. We were behind the safety car and my team, who did a
fantastic job, said all you have got to do is drive around and that was
difficult enough. A few moments I was almost off the circuit. We are going
around at running pace, that slow. The safety car was pulling away from us.
All I had to do was drive around and stay on the circuit. But how slow it
looks. It is embarrassing but that was as quick as we needed to go and if
I'd gone any quicker I'd think I would have ended up in the gravel.
Q. Nick, talk us through the atmosphere on the grid when you were just
sitting there?
NH: Well, actually I thought I was second if the race was stopped now as I
knew that the race is counted not at this lap but one or two laps before
that. But there was a lot of confusion and we were told to be in first
position if the race resumes because apparently (Mark) Webber would have
been at the front. There was a lot of mess and it took a lot of time
standing there but in this maybe half an hour there was a lot of
conversation and a lot of confusion going on.
Q. What was your feeling and the feeling amongst the drivers in terms of the
conditions and a possible restart?
NH: Well, it was very clearly impossible to drive if the rain would have
kept as strong as it was when the race was quite rightly stopped. As Jenson
and Timo just said it felt like walking speed we were driving and still
spinning off, so it was the right decision. And I think now outside it's
dark already, so no chance to carry on.
Q. Timo, how was your start? Talk us through that.
TG: I mean you can see already I had massive wheel spin and I just could not
pull away and then suddenly on the left side there is Fernando and Kimi
coming and it was unbelievable. I couldn't believe it that Fernando was on
the inside. We struggled quite a lot at the start as it was just really,
really tricky, so at the end I was happy to keep my front wing in one piece.
But that destroyed a little bit the race as we could not go the speed we
should have done as Fernando was holding us up and Mark a little bit. Every
time I was close enough I couldn't just attempt. One time I tried and
damaged a bit the front wing. But the biggest problem was just traction. I
could not get close enough to overtake.
Q. Jenson, you had a bit of a moment on the outside of turn one?
JB: I mean all weekend the circuit has been quite similar but there was such
little grip I was really, really surprised and I went a little bit deep into
turn one and got a big snap of oversteer and that carried throughout the
first lap. I was really, really struggling with the rear end as (Fernando)
Alonso was in front of me. I have never seen a car so sideways before. But I
eventually got past Alonso coming into the second to last corner and then I
had to chase down Jarno (Trulli) and Nico (Rosberg). An exciting race. I
would rather have a boring race but we had an exciting one today and I came
out on top, so I am happy.
One final thing. Can I just say a massive thank you to my engineer who was
on the podium with me today. We have been through a lot of tough times but
he has been wicked and today as we saw we came out on top and a lot of it
was down to him, so ‘thank you very much.'
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q. Jenson, this could become a habit.
JB: Finishing behind the safety car you mean. Wow, what a race. We had
everything in that race. It was very enjoyable. It was not the easiest start
for me and I had a big snap of oversteer, pretty much at every corner on the
first lap from the grid. I really struggled with the rear end. But then I
closed up to Jarno and Nico and knew I was going longer and when they pitted
I could put in a couple of quick laps. It got me in front and it was looking
like it was going to be fine until I looked up and saw the clouds come over
and it started raining. Unusual for Sepang it just started spitting and we
went for the full wets thinking it is going to chuck it down.
But it didn't to start with. A few other people made the correct choice but
we had a 16-18 second lead at that point. So I carried on and it started
chewing itself up, so I pitted for inters as this guy (Timo) was flying. I
came out just behind him but my inter was obviously new and his was very old
and I was able to get past him on the wetter part of the circuit just before
he pitted.
I got one good lap on the inter but then it started chucking it down, so I
came in for the full went but then it was the safety car. It was a tough
race and it was tough keeping it on the circuit. We were driving around it
as if it was walking pace and you are still scared that you are going to
chuck it off because you could not see the circuit to start with. It was not
like it was rivers, it was a lake.
Q. You were worried about going off the grid anyway because you were on the
dirty side of the grid?
JB: Yeah, it was true. Timo also suffered from the grid. I didn't get a bad
start. The start was reasonable but the right hand side just shot past and
the KERS cars came up, so I lost time there and turn one was messy really. I
got a massive snap of oversteer at the exit and I couldn't get back from
there.
Q. And you have never driven on the wets before?
JB: No, and the balance was definitely not right on the full wet. The
circuit was reasonably dry, so it was difficult to get a balance. But I had
massive oversteer on the first couple of laps and then the front started
graining. There is a lot of work we need to do to sort our pace and balance
out on the wet tyres but as I said it is just nice to get to the end of the
race and we ended up on the top because, I think, of a good strategy and
also looking at what other people were doing on the different types of tyres
and we ended up on top. Congratulations to all the guys who work on the car
but also the engineers and the strategy guys who got us here really.
Q. As I was saying just now Nick, you're eighth second place, but I'm sure
you're happy with it today.
NH: Yes, exactly, I'm more than happy with that position. I started tenth
and I couldn't have wished for more, basically.
Q. Amazing that you had one pit stop whereas these guys had three or four.
NH: It started to rain and as Jenson said, it was clear that it would rain
heavily, so we went on the extra wets and as it was pretty dry still, I
tried to preserve my tyres, especially the rear tyres and therefore at the
beginning there were a couple of cars quicker than me. I was even overtaken
by one guy, some people were driving away from me, but I knew that they
would kill their tyres and if it would start drizzling or raining a bit
more, I would then have the tyre and I would be able to stay out.
After that, the team told me all the time ‘OK, heavy rain expected in the
next two minutes' but it just didn't happen, didn't happen, didn't happen.
Just when they called me in, it started to rain heavily and just 300 metres
before the pit entry I said ‘no, no, I will stay out, now it starts
raining.' That was the right call, a bit lucky, obviously, but stopping once
they told me to.
Q. And you got away with a spin right at the end as well, a very slow
spin...
NH: Yes, it was. The safety car was out already, I had contact with the
pits, they told me that I should observe the safety car's speed which we
have on the dash and not go quicker than that. And I was laughing, telling
them that I would be happy if I could go that quick. There was already a car
which had spun there, so I thought ‘OK, I will go as slow as possible' but
it was aquaplaning not only on the tyres but also on the plank. I spun and I
was happy that I didn't go into the gravel. I don't think it would have
mattered in the end anyway, because the result was taken from a lap earlier
but that shows that it was the right thing to stop the race because it was
just undriveable.
Q. Timo, that was an extraordinary race. You were basically part of the
group bottled up behind Alonso before your first stop.
TG: Yeah, it was a bit disappointing at the start, I have to say. I went
from third to eighth after the start, I think. I couldn't believe that Kimi
passed me on the outside in turn one and Fernando on the inside, so I
thought again that the KERS cars were in front of me. I struggled behind
Mark Webber especially to get close enough to really go for it.
One time I tried it and damaged the front wing a bit and that was it really,
so I had to stay behind. In the middle of the race I saw the rain was
coming, the rain was coming but it took so long that I thought OK, when it
takes so long then I go for intermediates because everybody else was already
on heavy wets and I saw they struggled really and destroyed them, so I said
‘we go for inters and take the risk'.
I was driving around, driving around, overtaking cars, overtaking cars, and
found that my tyres were going off as well, but my engineer told me ‘you're
still the quickest on the track, you're still the quickest.' I think it was
worse in turns seven and eight and that was the direction that the rain was
coming from. It came to the point where I had to pit because my tyres were
going off completely and I said ‘OK, I have to come in.'
It was just at that moment that Jenson overtook me again. Then we stayed on
heavy wets and tried to follow the safety car and that was difficult, I was
swimming around. I couldn't believe it because Jenson was sometimes going
quite quickly and I was just swimming around. This morning we were joking
around that hopefully everybody knows how to swim in those weather
conditions, and I have to say that in the end it was like this, it was just
unbelievable and impossible for me to drive at the end. I think it was the
right call to stop the race.
Q. Sorry about the second place…
TG: Yeah, it was a bit tricky. My engineer told me ‘you're P2, P2'. Then I
came up here and now I'm P3.
JB: You're behind me.
NH: I'm fine with second.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q. (Paulo Ianieri - La Gazzetta dello Sport) Do you think the decision to
stop the race came a little bit too late? Do you think that a five o' clock
start is still a good idea?
JB: We thought it was a fantastic idea before. The reason for it in
Melbourne was because of the light and the poor light and the reflection you
get on the visor, I found it very difficult to see the corner exits. But
here, it obviously gets dark very quickly and as we all know, there's
normally rain storms here at five or six o' clock in the evening and that
proved to be correct. The race was way too wet and I think that the call was
correct. It rained so hard so quickly that I think they did the right thing.
It was very difficult for them to judge how wet the circuit is and in Fuji,
for me, two years ago it was too wet but this year I think they made the
right call to stop it at the right time.
NH: I think it was roughly at the right time. It was also not easy for me to
judge because my tyres were worn down completely, so for me it was obviously
difficult to drive. Maybe other drivers on fresh tyres would say we could
have driven half a lap more but I think it was a good call. The safety car
was just out for 20 seconds, that's when I saw the board, and then they put
out the red flag, so I thought it was very well done.
JB: When the safety car is pulling away at 20 seconds a lap, you know that
it's too wet for an F1 car.
Q. (Paulo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Two wins in a row, is it more
than you expected?
JB: For me I think it's more amazing that we've done it in these conditions,
because Australia wasn't easy with the safety cars and here with the
changing weather conditions it made it a lot more difficult. These two here
were not the guys that were fighting me at the start of the race, so the
great thing is that we could see what was going on behind us and we could
react to it and react to it quickly and that's why we're sat here at the
moment. I'm very happy and it would be nice going to Shanghai leading by a
few points, I think five points, and hopefully we can have a straightforward
race and we can see where we stand.
Q. Nick, how was the KERS during the race, did you use it in the wet?
NH: You can use it, just a bit later than in the dry and I have to say that
I was happy that it did work because it was the very first time that we had
it on the car in the wet conditions, because it has to pass some tests first
obviously in the wet and we were not ready in testing, so it was the very
first time on the car and it worked OK.
Q. (Livio Oricchio – O Estado de Sao Paulo) To all of you, when you stopped
the cars on the straight after the red flag, did they listen to you
regarding the possibility of continuing the race? JB: Yes, that was always a
possibility and as far as I knew we were always planning for a restart,
that's why all the cars were moved around, but the problem was that so many
cars span off on the last lap that I think it was very difficult
understanding who was in what position.
So that was why we were all moving around a lot on the grid, but we were all
planning to start the race again. I am happy it didn't start again because
we would have spent ten laps behind a safety car and every lap, every corner
you got to you would be scared that you were going to throw it off the road,
it's out of your control, it matters what position the river is in on the
apex, you can't see it. So I think it was the right thing to do for sure.
But we were planning for a restart.
Q. (Paulo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) If it was up to you, would you
want to start again?
JB: No, I would obviously love to have the ten points, but this is the best
we could have done, I think, and realistically it was the right thing to do.
I'm sure some people will say ‘we didn't see the whole race and it's
disappointing' but you have to think about the safety sometimes. I am here
to race, as we all are but there are limits to what we can do with the cars
that we have.
NH: I used the time to change my visor because it was getting dark and I put
on a lighter visor because I thought I would not see anything otherwise. And
I was on the radio telling our team manager and Charlie (Whiting) and the
guys who normally listen anyway that I think it was undriveable in these
conditions and I'm sure they listened to all the conversations that were
going on.
TG: For me it was the same. I said to the engineers there was no way to
drive anymore and then I was ready to jump out of the car but they said we
had to prepare (for a restart) again and we would go behind the safety car,
so I just put my helmet on and got ready and then they said ‘no, that's it,
it's over.' At the end, you have to understand what Jenson said, it gets
dark quite quickly and I think running around behind the safety car is not
the best show and we have to stop at the right moment, I think.
Q. (Flavio Vanetti – Corriere della Sera) Jenson, if I'm not wrong, I think
it's the first time you drove the Brawn in wet conditions. How was the
behaviour of the car and can we say that the Brawn is suitable for every
situation?
JB: Yeah, I'm sure it is but the conditions that we were running in today
was a very unusual situation to have: full wets, or the extremes as they
were, in slightly greasy conditions. We had to go for that option because we
thought it was going to rain. There was no use taking a gamble being in the
lead, so we took that tyre and obviously it felt pretty terrible. At high
speed, you were slowing the car down to third gear because you just couldn't
carry any speed because the rear was always trying to break away.
So the balance felt pretty awful but I think that's more down to the
conditions we ran the tyres in, it was not the correct conditions. When we
put the intermediates on for one lap, the car felt reasonably good. I had a
good balance, because that was the correct conditions for that tyre until it
started raining hard and then obviously no tyre was useable.
Q. (Michael Schmidt – Auto Motor und Sport) Timo, you said it was a risk to
go onto the inters. Was it a long conversation with the race engineer, did
you have to convince them that you wanted to take them or did they want to
convince you that it was better to go onto wets?
TG: No, no, they just said ‘Timo, it's up to you, just take a look at the
conditions' and I said ‘let's take the risk, we'll go for inters,' so at the
end it was my call and it was the right one, I have to say, because like I
said, it took a long time before the rain came down really hard. It was just
the right call. Sometimes you have to have some luck and this time it was
the right decision at the right moment. Unfortunately at the end, we had the
late pit stop, we lost a little bit of position but in the end we have to be
happy about this. |