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Author: David Bodapati
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F1 Correspondent.
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Neuville tops leaderboard after Day 1: WRC
NESTE OIL RALLY FINLANDQatar World Rally Team driver Thierry Neuville tops the leaderboard of one of the most iconic events in the FIA World Rally Championship, Rally Finland. After the opening afternoon of competition the Belgian heads the field by 5.2 seconds after a very close-fought competition that has seen two drivers jointly lead on no fewer than three stages. Second is held by Championship leader and Volkswagen Motorsport driver Sébastien Ogier while in third is Mads Østberg.Rally Finland runs to a two and a half day format and today’s route took in five stages before heading back to Jyväskylä for the popular super special stage at Killeri. Ogier took the plaudits in the opening stage, but Neuville fought back in the following test, putting him and Mikko Hirvonen jointly in the lead. Such was the tightness of the battle, Ogier’s victory in stage three saw him head the leaderboard alongside Neuville before he was again overhauled by Hirvonen, who then went on to assume equal position with Neuville. However, in the final stage before returning to Jyväskylä, heavy rain hampered Hirvonen, the Finn losing 16 seconds in this single 8.72 kilometre stage. Østberg took the win, leaving Neuville to take a clear and singular lead for the first time in four stages. In the Super Special Stage, Neuville won, but Ogier climbed into second ahead of Østberg.Behind the leading trio and fourth-placed Hirvonen, Juho Hänninen is fifth but battling hard with both Hirvonen ahead and Kris Meeke behind. Meeke has had a fine day in his first competitive outing since Wales Rally GB in 2011, the Briton delighted at the opportunity to drive the Citroën DS3 WRC. He is sixth, despite one puncture, and ahead of Evgeny Novikov who lost time in stage four with an overshoot. Andreas Mikkelsen is eighth, the Norwegian suffering the same fate as Novikov. Dani Sordo has had an uneventful day leaving him trailing in ninth, more than 30 seconds off the lead. Jarkko Nikara rounds off the top ten.Not everyone escaped unscathed today and the leading retirement was Jari-Matti Latvala. The Finn hit a rock in the second stage, damaging the rear suspension. While he and co-driver Miikka Anttila managed to affect repairs after the stage, they were ultimately forced to withdraw from the day with too many stage kilometres to run.Rally Finland – Unofficial Results after Day 11. Thierry Neuville/Nicolas Gilsoul2. Sébastien Ogier/Julien Ingrassia3. Mads Østberg/Jonas Andersson4. Mikko Hirvonen/Jarmo Lehtinen5. Juho Hänninen/Tomi Tuominen6. Kris Meeke/Chris Patterson7. Evgeny Novikov/Ilka Minor8. Andreas Mikkelsen/Mikko Markkula9. Dani Sordo/Carlos Del Barrio10. Jarkko Nikara/Jarkko KalliolepoFord Fiesta RS WRCVolkswagen Polo R WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCCitroën DS3 WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCCitroën DS3 WRCFord Fiesta RS WRCVolkswagen Polo R WRCCitroën DS3 WRCMINI John Cooper Works WRC25 min 33.3sec25 min 38.5sec25 min 42.2sec25 min 47.1sec25 min 50.3sec25 min 50.8sec25 min 54.2sec25 min 56.7sec26 min 10.4sec26 min 21.0sec -
Stay relaxed, be brave: Latvala’s mantra for WRC
2013 FIA WORLD RALLY CHAMPIONSHIPNESTE OIL RALLY FINLANDPre-event Press ConferenceWednesday 31 JulyPresent:Kris Meeke, Abu Dhabi Citroën Total World Rally TeamJari-Matti Latvala, Volkswagen MotorsportMads Østberg, Qatar M-Sport World Rally TeamMikko Hirvonen, Citroën Total Abu Dhabi World Rally TeamQ:Kris, a great opportunity for you this weekend as we see you compete with the Abu Dhabi Citroën Total World Rally Team in a DS3 WRC. How much are you looking forward to the challenge?KM:It’s been a long time. I haven’t actually done any rally since 2011, so to get the call to come to Finland with the Citroën factory team is pretty special and an opportunity I didn’t think would come. I’m really happy and excited and it’s already been a pleasure work to with the team. But now is the opportunity to build the confidence and try to show some good speed once I’m comfortable in the car. I’m coming here and battling with these guys after a year and a half out; I need to have my eyes wide open. The main thing I hope is that we can improve.Q:I believe you did a big test, how many kilometres?KM:We managed 380 kilometres in one day – my neck was very sore after that. We ran through many things and I got confidence in the car. The car was beautiful to drive from the beginning and doing that in this kind of professional environment is the sort of chance that I’ve been after for a very long time. We’ll see what happens…Q:We have not seen you compete at a WRC event in over a year, how ready do you feel to get back to full competitive form? What do you think you can achieve here, can you challenge for a podium spot?KM:Obviously every driver is here to do the best they can. I have to be realistic after a year away and trying to fight for the podium [is unrealistic]… For me I have to take my time and focus on my own driving. I have belief in my own driving. Tonight in qualifying, we beat the stage record by a tenth of a second, but that was only good enough for ninth – these guys move the level all the time. But I’m here with a smile on my face and I’m very happy.Q:At the moment this drive is a one-off? Is there talk of any more opportunities with the team this year?KM:No, at the moment, it’s simply Finland. But what an opportunity on one of the biggest rallies in the world! I drove Ouninpohja last in 2006, when I was in a Junior [World Rally Championship] car, so that’s going to be pretty exciting! My focus is on the rally. I just want to improve on this rally and then you never know what happens after a good result. This is the main focus – let’s see what happens.Q:Jari-Matti, you competed in an Audi Quattro in Estonia recently, does that help get used to the roads here?J-ML:That’s right, I drove the Audi in Estonia; the roads over there are fast like here, but sure the grip is different. I am very happy with the car and with the rear of the car. Maybe I was just a bit careful in the qualifying sometimes today. The driver needs to improve tomorrow, the rally starts tomorrow.Q:It seems this weekend that we will have an epic battle for the win here in Finland. Jost Capito has already stated that he will let you and Ogier fight it out – how are you feeling about the prospect?J-ML:Well, I think there are other hungry drivers next to me and Mikko [Hirvonen] has done the best time in qualifying. It’s going to be a big fight. It’s free from the team, we can fight, but the main thing for the team is the manufacturers’ [championship]. For the team, it doesn’t matter which order we come home as long as we both finish.Q:Is there a secret to winning here?J-ML:It’s five different things. It’s confidence; the commitment of the team; stay relaxed; enjoy; be brave…Q:Do you think the roads will clean? Are you happy with your position on the road?J-ML:I took [position] 10. Last year, Sebastien Loeb was 10th or 11th on the road and I started behind him and could not catch him for the whole rally. On this rally, it doesn’t make a big difference once the road is cleaned – after that there are only very small differences. It will matter how you drive, not the road positions.Q:How much pressure do you put on yourself at your home event?J-ML:Maybe I am still younger on that side, I feel more pressure than Mikko – he has always been better on that side than me; this is the biggest enemy for myself. But I am getting older and closer to 30 – it’s step by step.Q:Mads, it’s been an up and down first half of the season for many reasons but your pace has certainly increased from last year, what is the strategy now for the second half of the season?MO:We know the speed is good. We try to forget the first half [of the season]. There are a lot of nice rallies coming up and this is one. I try to start the new season tomorrow morning and enjoy the second half of the year.Q:Can you challenge for a win here?MO:Everything is possible. At the moment it’s been a bit too difficult in the first half of the season, but the main thing is to find the conditions and then push as hard as we can. In free practice, it worked well. Qualifying was not perfect, but it looks good.Q:How was the test?MO:I am very happy after the test. It was a bit drier and the roads are similar to Friday and Saturday, so I will do some small changes for tomorrow. But nothing too big, I’m quite happy with the speed so far.Q:Mikko, how confident are you ahead of the event?MH:I have a good feeling. It’s going to be a big fight with a lot of drivers. I hope I can do it.Q:I asked Jari-Matti this question… you have won here before: what’s the secret?MH:I only won once – maybe I was just lucky… who knows!Q:You were testing last week, did all go well? Were you testing specific things or was it general?MH:Everything went well. We didn’t do so much, but we have a good feeling with the car. There are some changes from last year, but nothing huge. The car is good to drive. If we have enough power then we should have a good chance?Q:Who is your main rival here?MH:There are many drivers who can fight like we saw in qualification – the guy who was 10th was only two seconds from the front. Last year it was really close. If everybody has a good day it’ll be a close fight through the weekend.Q:This is your home event, how much pressure is there?MH:It’s my birthday today… I think I’m getting too old to take pressure. It’s always the same thing.FIA WRC 2 CHAMPIONSHIPPresent:Elfyn EvansEsapekka LappiQ:Elfyn, the last time we saw you, you were competing in a WRC car in Italy now you are back to WRC 2 business in the all-new R5 Fiesta. How are you finding the car?EE:It was a surprise to be in Italy with the World Rally Car and a really enjoyable experience, but now I focus back on WRC 2. We have a brand new car here, which is a very exciting prospect. I’m really looking forward to seeing how we fare against these very fast Scandinavian drivers.Q:How was the recce?EE:It went well. I was here last year, so I had some notes and the feeling is positive. I’m looking forward to getting going tomorrow now.Q:What do you think will be the toughest thing about this event?EE:It’s knowing what the car will do. This is a very specialist event and defining those jumps and the crests and knowing exactly what tightens and what doesn’t is so important. It’s all about precision and being 100 per cent on the right line. It’s all of that and, of course, you need the commitment.Q:Feeling confident?EE:For sure the car is very new and it’s my first time here in what I would class as a fast car, but generally I’m happy and reasonably confident.Q:Esapekka, you already have one win under your belt this year and here in Finland you will no doubt be favourite for the win. How are you feeling about the weekend ahead?EL:We had a win in Portugal, but now we have the R5 cars [to compete with] and shakedown shows they are really fast – it will be a big struggle. Maybe we struggled in shakedown because I drove different tyres in Asia (Asia-Pacific Rally Championship, where Lappi drives for Team MRF). The grip level is higher here and I did not have so much confidence. I will do my best, but I don’t know if we can reach the podium?Q:How important is it to be competing at home?EL:I think this is the best thing. This is the only race I am looking for the whole year, it’s amazing to be here.Q:What do you expect from the weather? What will it be like if it rains?EL:For sure it’s a different event if it’s wet, it will be more slippery. But it’s the same for everybody. I don’t care.FIA WRC 3 CHAMPIONSHIPPresent:Sébastien ChardonnetJussi VainionpääQ:Sébastien, you lead the WRC 3 Championship and are also joint leader of the Citroën Top Driver series. It’s been a good start to the year…SC:It’s not so bad. We had two good races since the start of the season. It’s very difficult here, but the target is the same. I want to lead in both the races on Saturday night, but this means no mistakes and this is the point for the moment.Q:Did you test before the event?SC:It’s a bit difficult because we didn’t touch the car since Sardinia and the first run at shakedown we are looking for everything to be working on the car. Tomorrow it’s a short day, so we will have time to be comfortable before the second day.Q:Who is your biggest rival?SC:It’s going to be a big fight with all drivers. Maybe there are new drivers in our Championship, they will be fast – maybe he [Jussi Vainionpää] will be fast. We will have to see. I want no mistakes and to focus on my own driving.Q:Have you learned a lot since you were here last year?SC:For sure, last year we learned a lot of things. It was my third race on gravel when I came here last time and I had everything to learn. This year we have some notes and it’s a good thing to be here. We want more experience from this race.Q:
Jussi, you are competing in WRC 3 and join the Citroën Top Driver series for the first time this weekend. You are the only Finnish competitor in the scheme – what is your objective here?JV:This is my first time here in Jyvaskyla and in the WRC – it will be a big race to win it. I have a lot to learn here. I have to challenge the fast drivers, we will try to race and be at the finish and make good stage times.Q:How much preparation have you done?JV:Not much! I drove the car for a few kilometres and then the shakedown. I don’t have much knowledge for the car, this is a big race. I have to be smart.Q:How was the recce?JV:The recce did go well, I guess. There were a few special stages which were a bit tricky, but that’s Jyvaskyla. Ouninpohja is a fantastic stage!Q:Will we see you on any more WRC rounds in a Citroën?JV:I don’t know. I take one step to the next and see where it leads. I am here in this race this year and maybe next year we do a couple more races in WRC.FIA JUNIOR WRC CHAMPIONSHIPPresent:Niko NieminenSander PärnQ:How special is it to be driving at home, Niko?NN:I like driving in Finland, like always. It’s my third time here, we will see, I will do my best.Q:How was your pre-event test?NN:I did not get [the] good feeling. I have the same set-up as my own car, but the feeling is not the same.Q:I understand you have a new co-driver for this event, how difficult will that be and how is the relationship developing?NN:Yes. It’s the first time we are here together and I hope it will go okay.Q:Tell us about the stages here in Finland…NN:Finland stages are fantastic and very fast, very much jumps!Q:Can you win here?NN:Flat out or off…Q:Sander, you are currently third in the Junior WRC Championship. This is also your first season, what have you thought of your performance so far?SP:Actually I am not satisfied with Portugal – it was a disaster for me to retire on day one. Greece was much better and third in the season is good. In Estonia I found some good speed.Q:Can you win here?SP:I think there is a chance, but it won’t be easy. There are so many other good competitors and there are tough stages. I would like to be on the podium, so why not the win? The roads are like Estonia.Q:Are you happy with the car?SP:Yesterday, we had a test and I am quite satisfied with today’s speed, it is better than Portugal and Greece. When I won’t make any mistakes then everything is possible.Q:We have seen you compete on lots of events at home and at Rally Estonia – how similar are the stages in Estonia to here?SP:The roads in Estonia are a little bit similar, but the surface is much harder here.Q:What are your hopes here?SP:It’s my third time, so it’s a bit easier and some stages are quite familiar here. But the other guys are all very fast – everybody can be fast here. -
It’s an incredible feeling: Hamilton
FIA transcript of the DRIVERS press conference after the race at the Hungarian GP on Sunday 28 July 2013:
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Kimi RÄIKKÖNEN (Lotus)
3 – Sebastian VETTEL (Red Bull Racing)PODIUM INTERVIEW (Conducted by Martin Brundle)
Q: Lewis, when we spoke last night you didn’t believe you could be on pole position and you gave yourself no chance of winning today’s race. How on Earth does it feel now?
Lewis HAMILTON: It’s an incredible feeling. I really have to say a big thank you to all the fans today for turning up. It was great to see their support. And my team: they just did an incredible job. We studied a lot last night. We were hoping the tyres were going to work for us. We had no idea it was going to go that well — but the last 20 laps was just managing the tyres and cruising.
Q: Well you got a great start but there were two key moments where you overtook Jenson, so you didn’t lose any time behind him down into turn one and then that turn three pass on Mark Webber, that was just incredible.
LH: Yeah, I think you could tell I was hungry for it today. I was just going all-out. I needed to get past those people and usually I get stuck in traffic, generally in my races, and today I wasn’t having it. I was going for every move I had.
Q: Incredible support here for you as always Kimi. P2 on the podium, you really had to work hard for that today.
Kimi RÄIKKÖNEN: Yeah, obviously I keep making my life difficult on Saturdays so then we pay a price but I had a good car and we managed to do two stops so that was the only way really to jump people. In the end it was a bit tight with Seb but in the end it paid off for us and we gained some points in the Championship. So that’s good.
Q: You made the last set of tyres last 33 laps which is quite spectacular today in these conditions. Surely you thought he was going to have a great chance to pass you towards the end but you just seemed to park your car in the middle of the track and make it so difficult.
KR: Yeah, I mean I knew it was going to be a bit tight but I felt that the tyres were good still in the last ten laps. So maybe last two laps they drop off quite badly but I didn’t really have any doubts that I couldn’t keep him behind. I had good speed through the last sector so I knew that in the first corner they will not have a chance. Obviously you take a chance always when you make so many laps with a set of tyres – but like I said, the team worked well, everything worked well for us and unfortunately yesterday wasn’t an easy day so otherwise we could probably have fight for a win. But anyhow, we are here.
Q: Satisfied you take a few points off the World Championship leader?
KR: Yeah, it’s better than nothing.
Q: Sebastian, only third but the fans seem pretty happy with that. How do you feel about it?
Sebastian VETTEL: Well, it was not the best race. The start was difficult but was able to defend second and then Lewis pulled in, we thought we had a little bit more on the soft but the rear tyres seemed to fall apart pretty quickly and then I lost a bit, came out behind Jenson which was crucial and struggled to get past, damaged my front wing which didn’t help, after that managed to get past. It was a long time but lost a bit of speed and basically tried to hang in there, tried to fight back. Very close with Kimi in the end but as he mentioned, he was very quick through the last two corners and then I couldn’t really get him on the straight. So yeah, I did all we could but surely wanted a little bit more today.
Q: You felt Kimi didn’t leave you enough room at turn four towards the end of the race. You felt that was a bit too close?
SV: Yeah, I told him but he was laughing only. It was fine. Obviously in the heat of the moment it was quite tight getting into there, I tried to prepare the next corner but nearly lost the car. That’s racing.
Q: Lewis, two very quick questions. Does this put your World Championship crusade very much back on course and how does this race today compare with your other victories?
LH: I think this is probably one of the most important grand prix wins of my career. To move to a new team and to win for Mercedes-Benz is just a real privilege. The guys have done an exceptional job, I’m so glad I could be a part of the team and I really couldn’t be happier. I hope there’s many more to come.
Q: And this year’s World Championship? Surely you’ve still got a chance of it, you’ve got to work hard.
LH: We’ve got to work hard, you never know how the tyres are going to last elsewhere but if we come here and make our tyres last then we should be able to do it anywhere. So, fingers crossed.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, congratulations. You weren’t too optimistic yesterday but a lot of factors obviously worked well for you today: good start, getting the traffic right as well and some great overtaking manoeuvres. Tell us about them.
LH: It’s been a great weekend, really a great weekend. Really didn’t expect it coming in. It’s probably been one of the toughest weeks for me. Obviously we hadn’t had the test, we didn’t do the test, we were on the back foot when we came in. Really wasn’t even expecting to be on pole. Really surprised with that and then yeah, at the start of the race the pace was OK. I think maybe Sebastian perhaps was just as quick or a little bit quicker but fortunately he was behind and my tyres went off just maybe a lap or two before his. I think I called the pitstop just right – the first one – and after that it was just managing the gap. I had to make sure I got past people. I normally get held up in my… I thought when I came behind Jenson I thought it was just my luck because that’s what usually happens. But I got past him and was surprised to see Sebastian and the others get stuck behind him as well. I guess he did me a favour there. But I think generally we had the pace on everyone today. I know I was really controlling the pace, particularly through the second, third and last stint, particularly on the last stint. This is just down to an exceptional job from the team. We came here with upgrades and constantly doing work to try and understand these tyres. I think today we bolted them on and they just worked for us. I really was not inspecting it.
Q: Kimi, that was a robust defence at the end of the race. I’m not certain if it was a good job interview for joining Red Bull Racing for next year but tell us about it.
KR: Obviously I don’t have anything for next year so I mean it does matter what happens on a race circuit for that matter. I knew that my tyres are pretty OK and I was good through the last sector so I was pretty sure there was no chance to try to overtake me into the first corner but then obviously turn two was a bit more tricky for me all race. He got a good run, Sebastian once before and then second time and I defended. Maybe I’m over a bit on the right and it’s a bit tight but then I kept him behind and that was the only time he had a good run on me. In there it is very difficult to overtake because it is so narrow on top of the hill. After that I had no issues. That was the only part of the circuit that I really had some problems with the tyres. But it was good work for the team, the car was working well but unfortunately I keep making Saturdays… after Saturdays making the race a bit difficult for myself. Hopefully we can fix that a little bit and be a bit more on the front at the beginning of the race.
Q: Sebastian a little bit of trouble behind traffic during the race itself. What do you feel about third place?
SV: Generally happy. Not the best circuit to be stuck in traffic because it’s quite difficult to overtake. I think we had not enough speed on the straights to put people under enough pressure so yeah, obviously got stuck behind Jenson for a long time. Damaged my front wing as well which dropped us back and after that obviously it was about the fight back as much as we could. In the middle of the race I didn’t know where I was. I just tried to hang in there and try to come back as much as we can. In the end obviously quite close with Kimi. We were faster, I had fresher tyres but as I said, no way past. Once I was pretty close up the hill. I think I didn’t have enough room on the outside but it’s pretty difficult to judge. Obviously I couldn’t go around the outside and pass him but I was trying to maybe put him under pressure for the next couple of corners and try to create my chance but yeah, was not a decent gap anyways. So, I tried, didn’t work, we have to be happy with third. The car was good all weekend, there wasn’t much missing. But as I said, I should have done a better job with Jenson in the beginning and especially not damaged my front wing – and then it could have been a different race. But would, could, should. In the end I think we’re happy with third.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Abhishek Tackle – Midday) Lewis, track temperatures were in their fifties today; would you say you’ve turned the corner with your tyre wear issues and how much of that was work going on back at the factory, and how much of that was the new tyres, new constructions?LH: I think it was a bit of both. As I said, coming into the weekend, we are making improvement but not big enough to make the difference it did today so I’m assuming that a large part of that was the tyres. I really wasn’t expecting it. Our long runs didn’t look that great in P2 but I got the balance just spot on today with the front wing and yeah, if we can be quick here in a race with these track temperatures then I’m very hopeful that we can be competitive everywhere else, so this could be a really good… could be a good turning point for us.
Q: (Leonid Novozhilov – F1 Life) Lewis, which of the ingredients made the difference in your success today?
LH: Teamwork, absolutely teamwork. The guys have just been phenomenal all year with the work they do in the garage, preparation of the car, the reliability has been exceptional – obviously not for Nico today – and the team’s in the position where it’s beginning to develop the car still through the season. At this point of the year, last year, they said they weren’t anywhere near making improvements so it’s good to see that. I think hopefully I’m a part of that as well. I feel like I really earned my keep today so I’m really happy for that.
Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto Motor) Sebastian, we have heard you complaining a bit over the radio two laps from the end when you thought that Kimi didn’t leave you enough room in turn four. Was it serious?
SV: In the heat of the moment, for sure, obviously it’s narrow there. As I said before, it was clear… or it was to me at that stage that I didn’t find a way past around the outside. First of all, Kimi is not an idiot and secondly, it’s a narrow part of the track so it was clear but I was pushing very hard, trying to create a chance, put him under pressure and as I said, it was clear I didn’t pass him there, but maybe two corners later or something. Yeah, I was not too happy but as I said, it was quite hot this afternoon, I was pushing very hard and it was quite narrow and I was a little bit on the dirt, turning in. You feel that you have to say something so that’s what I said.
Q: (Kate Walker – GP Week) Sebastian, three weeks ago in Germany, I asked you if you would relish the challenge of having Kimi as your teammate next year and you said you would enjoy having such a competitive teammate. I was wondering if your opinion had changed, now that you had finished behind him.
SV: There have been races where I have finished behind him, especially in the beginning of my career – I finished nearly every race behind him. And there are races where I’ve finished ahead of him so that doesn’t really matter. As I said, I think he’s one of the drivers I get along most with. He’s been very honest all the time which I appreciate a lot. I think at the end of the day we’re a group of 20, 22 guys; some of them you like, others you don’t. I think at the end of the day you have to beat everyone. Obviously we enjoy it a lot more as well if you’re fighting other drivers in similar cars, meaning with similar pace, because it’s kind of boring when you’re only fighting your teammate. I think this is something we all enjoy.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Sebastian, at Nurburgring, after your battle with Kimi, you said that one day you will feel as angry as Kimi felt that day. Do you feel angry now?
SV: I don’t think it was really really angry but obviously it was a battle for the win so I was happy that I succeeded. Today was for second, but still, you know, second is better than third. I’m not entirely happy with my race because I think the car was probably a little bit better than where we finished today but as I described, with the race that I had, I think P3 is what we have to be happy with. It’s not a disaster. We were still on the podium which is nice, a lot of people here which is still very special so I think we have to keep our feet on the ground. I’ve always said that there will be days when there will be people ahead of us and there will be days when we will be ahead of them so it’s just life.
Q: (Andrea Cremonesi – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Lewis, do you think that with nine races to go it’s possible to fight for the championship?
LH: I think it’s too early to… still far too early to… of course, when you have a win like this, you get excited and you think anything is possible and obviously today shows that anything is possible but I think it’s still too early for us to say whether or not we can challenge these guys. I know the guys are working hard so that we can close the gap and I hope today is the first step in doing so but we’ve got a lot of tough races coming up. I just hope that that’s not the last time my tyres work for me.
Q: (Andrea Cremonesi – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Sebastian, do you think that today there is some complaint about the strategy because as you said before, you were twice stuck behind McLaren when you came out of the pits?
SV: Usually in the past it was not a bad thing when you came out behind a McLaren but this year’s a bit different. Yeah, I’m not blaming the team. I think it’s pretty easy (to see) what happened. In the first stint I lost more time on the way to the pits, because the tyres were falling apart (more) than they expected, probably around 1.5s. If you take those away, I come out ahead of him, so I think in terms of strategy they did the right call. Second time round, I think he was on a very used set of soft tyres which was going away quickly and I found my way past pretty quickly as well, so I’m not blaming them. If there’s anything to blame, today, then it’s me because I damaged my wing which wasn’t the best thing.
Q: (Michael Neudecker – Sud Deutsche Zeitung) To all three of you: how did the high temperatures today affect you, your performance?
LH: Physically it was quite easy, to be honest. I wasn’t on the ragged edge the whole way. Particularly the last twenty laps I was able to really chill, I was drinking a lot and just trying to bring it home, look after the car and the tyres, yeah, for the first time ever that I can remember my tyres not being a problem. I think this track has always been good to me. I hope there’s many more like this.
KR: Obviously I was bit out of tyres at the end because we did a run with a set of tyres but apart from that it was OK. It was a bit hot but as normal as any hot race. No problem.
SV: Yeah, it was pretty hot, especially, obviously, towards the end of the race when the drink is not cool any more, it’s more like tea, which isn’t the nicest to cool down. But yeah, I think we were probably in a bit of a different situation to Lewis, still fighting towards the end, I was pushing very hard. Every time you get close, you lose some grip. I was struggling to get past, didn’t succeed but yeah, it’s not the only hot race we have during the season.
Q: (Anthony Rowlinson – F1 Racing) Lewis, does it feel different winning for Mercedes than it did for McLaren?
LH: I think it feels different. It always feels like it’s the first time, that’s for sure, when you win. I remember the first time I won it was exceptional, an exceptional feeling and today it was a really calming, relaxing feeling when I came across the line. I really wasn’t expecting it. As I said yesterday, I talked it down a lot because I really was expecting a real tough race today, I thought we were going to fall behind. The experiences I had at McLaren were some of my greatest but I think this is one of the highlights of my career up to now. Moving to a new team and a team that was struggling massively last year and to finally get a win with them after the first nine or ten races is a great feeling.
Q: (Heikki Kulta – Turun Sanomat) Kimi, now you’ve got some feeling with the new tyres, do you think you have the right package to win in Spa?
KR: I don’t know. It’s a different circuit. I have no idea. Last year we were not very strong there. I think we know the reasons and for sure our car is better this year but is it good enough for fighting for a win? We will see in Spa in one month.
Q: (Peter Vamosi – Vas Nepe) Kimi, you are now second in the championship. What does this mean now, at this time, for you and for the next four weeks? Will you go to Enstone and help to develop the car or just have fun and holiday?
KR: I don’t design the car so there’s not much use for me there. Everybody has to be off work in a week’s time so there’s nothing happening at any of the factories, at least, that’s how it should be. I will do something and see what happens at the next race in four weeks.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – O Estado de Sao Paulo) Sebastian, if, at the end of the first bend you were first in the race after the start, the story of this race might have been different. And Lewis, I would also like to hear your opinion about that.
SV: Well I wasn’t so, hard to… If. If. If I was sick today I wouldn’t race so… I think Lewis did a great job today, a good lap yesterday and deserved to win today no doubt. I think we had a bit stronger pace than what we probably had towards the end of the race, but I didn’t do the best job either. I damaged my front wing, I got stuck behind Jenson, didn’t find a way past unlike Lewis so yeah, there are things that I could have done better but it’s hard to say where we could have been without those two things. I think it would have been close. Obviously he had track position, overtaking is difficult, maybe we would have been a bit closer, maybe with strategy we could have found a way past, I don’t know. But in the end, as I said, it wasn’t the case.
LH: It’s nothing I really want to think about. I got into turn one first, that’s the most important thing. I think if Sebastian was out in the lead it would have been hard to have kept a hold of him but I think generally my second and third and fourth stints were pretty strong. I think I would hopefully have had as good a pace as he would have had so I think it could have been a close race.
Q: (Gabor Joo – Index) Kimi, last year you finished second, this year you finished second as well. Are you satisfied with the progress Lotus is making in terms of car development?
KR: Obviously we always hope for more, myself and the team hopes for more. I think we’ve made progress, for sure. Now we have tyres that are a little bit different and I wasn’t so happy with how things ran on Friday and yesterday – more happy in qualifying than the whole weekend before that but still not ideal and in the race we usually run better than in qualifying. I was happy with the car in the race but obviously when you start from such a bad starting place it’s difficult to make big progress on this kind of circuit but I managed to do two stops and we’re still pretty competitive so we’re happy how we’ve done but we’re here to try to win races and if we keep finishing second and third like we’ve done many times this year, it’s probably not enough for the championship but the best thing today when we finished second we gained a few points on Sebastian, so it’s better than nothing but with a win it would have been a much bigger difference.
Q: (Sarah Holt – CNN.com) Lewis, tyre problems cost you your first chance of a win for Mercedes at Silverstone and it’s ironic that now, because of that, the tyres have been changed and here we have them, you’ve got your first win, so does this make up for everything that happened in Britain and if the tyres now suit you, it could have ironically set you up for the rest of the season?
LH: Well thank you. Yeah, yeah, you can’t really make up for Silverstone. That was my home Grand Prix, we were in a good position to have won that so I don’t know when I will ever get a chance to win at Silverstone again in front of my home crowd. But this is definitely a great feeling to finally get the win. I’ve been on pole position for the last three races, it’s good to finally not lose position and just stay and be able to hold it and maintain position throughout the race, it’s a good feeling. I came here saying and praying that when we put on these tyres that they would come towards us more than away from us and it seems like they’ve done that: 52/55 degrees track temperatures today, one of the hottest races I think I can remember doing and for a team that really struggles with tyre degradation today was a walk in the park. I’m really baffled… I used all the technique I could possibly use to look after the tyres which I’m sure everyone is doing, but it worked today. I really really hope that when we go to the next race it happens, that we’re able to do the same.
Q: (Geza Suranyi – Heves Megyei Hirlap) Lewis, you said that this circuit is a classic, so as a four time winner of the Hungarian Grand Prix, perhaps it’s about time to name a corner after you. Which corner would you chose?
LH: I’d forgotten that it’s four times here. That’s incredible, absolutely incredible, I’m so happy with that. I love it here: the weather’s great, the fans, we have such a great turnout, they have beautiful women here, great food, I really can’t say more about it. A great track. If I was to chose a corner, I would say turn two.
Ends
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Hamilton’s 1st win for Mercedes; Raikkonen pips Vettel for 2nd
Budapest, 28 July 2013: Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton took a convincing first win of the season at the Hungarian Grand Prix ahead of Lotus’ Kimi Raikkonen and Red Bull Racing’s Sebastian Vettel. Hamilton’s fourth career victory at the Hungaroring puts him level with Michael Schumacher for most wins at the Budapest track.
“This is probably one of the most important grand prix wins of my career,” said Hamilton after finishing almost 11 seconds ahead of Raikkonen. “To move to a new team and to win for Mercedes-Benz is just a real privilege. I’m so glad I could be a part of the team and I really couldn’t be happier. I hope there’s many more to come.”
Hamilton made a good start from pole position and with Vettel making a slower getaway on the dirty side of the track, the Mercedes driver comfortably held his lead into the first corner. Vettel retained his P2 starting position despite a strong challenge from Lotus’ Romain Grosjean and the trio began to build a gap to the chasing pack, an FIA release said.

Hamilton after winning the Hungarian GP on Sunday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas photo Behind them Mark Webber made a good start for Red Bull Racing to rise from P10 on the grid to seventh by the end of lap two. With everyone in front of him starting on soft tyres and set to stop earlier, Webber, who started on medium tyres, had the opportunity to do a long first stint. When the front runners pitted for their own sets of medium rubber, Webber assumed the lead and in clear air began to make up time.
Hamilton was the first to stop on lap nine and emerged behind Jenson Button, who had also started on the medium tyre and was working his way through a long first stint. The Mercedes driver quickly passed his former team-mate but Vettel had no such luck. After his first stop on lap 11, the German also rejoined behind Button but for the next 13 laps he could find no way past and lost precious time behind the slower McLaren. Vettel attempted a bold move on lap 17 but it only resulted in a minor collision that damaged his front wing and which compromised his pace. The Red Bull driver eventually found a way past, but by that time Hamilton had opened up a significant gap and the battle for P1 was done.
“Coming out behind Jenson was crucial and I struggled to get past,” said Vettel. “I damaged my front wing, which didn’t help. After that I managed to get past. It was a long time. I lost a bit of speed and basically tried to hang in there, tried to fight back.”
The race then settled into a battle of competing strategies with positions changing hands according to starting tyre choice. While the bulk of the front-runners cycled through their mid-race stints without issues, Grosjean hit trouble.
After pressuring Vettel hard in the early stages of the race, the Frenchman found himself behind Button and in passing made contact with the McLaren, a clash that saw both being investigated by the stewards after the race. After his second stop Grosjean then found himself behind Ferrari’s Felipe Massa. He passed the Brazilian but did so off the track and was soon handed a drive-through penalty by the stewards. The punishment lost him valuable time and he dropped down the field to eventually finish sixth.
In the final stint, it was Raikkonen and Webber who profited most. The Finn took on a final set of mediums on lap 42 and clung on until the end, despite the close attentions of Vettel who pushed hard in the final 10 laps to chase down the Lotus driver.
“I knew it was going to be a bit tight but I felt that the tyres were good in the last ten laps,” said Raikkonen. “Maybe in the last two laps they dropped off quite badly but I didn’t really have any doubts that I could keep him [Vettel] behind. I had good speed through the last sector, so I knew that in the first corner he would not have a chance. Obviously you take a chance when you make so many laps with a set of tyres – but like I said, the team worked well, everything worked well for us.”
Webber, meanwhile was on a charge of his own. He took on a mandatory set of softs on lap 59 and emerged in fourth place. At times running almost two seconds a lap quicker than his team-mate he closed rapidly but then his times dropped away and he settled for fourth.
Fernando Alonso finished where he started, in fifth. With Grosjean, seventh was left to Button who finished ahead of Massa. The final points positions went to Sergio Perez and Pastor Maldonado.
Vettel’s third place means he maintains control of the Drivers’ Championship standings. He now has 172 points, with Raikkonen in second place with 134. Alonso is third on 133, while Hamilton’s win gives him a total of 124 points and fourth place.
In the Constructors’ battle, Red Bull Racing marginally increase their grip on the top of the standing, adding two points to the 67-point advantage they enjoyed over Mercedes before the start of the weekend. The Austrian team now has 277 points, Mercedes 208 and Ferrari 194. Lotus are fourth 11 points further back.
2013 Hungarian Grand Prix result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:42:29.445 25
2 Kimi Räikkönen Lotus +10.9 secs 18
3 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing +12.4 secs 15
4 Mark Webber Red Bull Racing +18.0 secs 12
5 Fernando Alonso Ferrari +31.4 secs 10
6 Romain Grosjean Lotus +32.2 secs 8
7 Jenson Button McLaren +53.8 secs 6
8 Felipe Massa Ferrari +56.4 secs 4
9 Sergio Pérez McLaren +1 Lap 2
10 Pastor Maldonado Williams +1 Lap 1
11 Nico Hülkenberg Sauber +1 Lap
12 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso +1 Lap
13 Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso +1 Lap
14 Giedo van der Garde Caterham +2 Laps
15 Charles Pic Caterham +2 Laps
16 Jules Bianchi Marussia +3 Laps
17 Max Chilton Marussia +3 Laps
18 Paul di Resta Force India Hydraulics
19 Nico Rosberg Mercedes +6 Laps
Ret Valtteri Bottas Williams+28 Laps
Ret Esteban Gutiérrez Sauber +42 Laps
Ret Adrian Sutil Force India Hydraulicsends
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Sutil’s 100th race ends in disappointment
Budapest, 28 July 2013: It was a tough afternoon for Sahara Force India in Budapest as both Paul Di Resta and Adrian Sutil retired from the Hungarian Grand Prix. The team is still handing on to the 5th position in the battle for Constructors’ title but with both McLaren drivers finishing in points the lead was narrowed to just two points at the half-way stage of the 19-race Formula One World Championship. In the tenth race of the season at Hungaroring, Jenson Button of team McLaren Mercedes finished 7th with teammate Sergio Perez managing 9th to gain 6 and 2 points respectively. Now Force India has 59 points after 10 races to McLaren’s 57. The Benz team is expected to do well in the second half of the season.Meanwhile, Lewis Hamilton has taken his first win for Mercedes in Hungary, using a three-stop strategy in some of the hottest conditions seen all year, with ambient temperatures peaking at 35 degrees centigrade. Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen was second with a two-stop strategy while Sebastian Vettel finished third for Red Bull to extend his championship lead over Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso heading into the Formula One summer break.Today, Paul di Resta, who started on P18, made a brilliant start and was on P12 at one point of time. But he lost balance and unable to manage tyres, retired. Sutil also retired much earlier.After the race Paul said: “I made a good start and was very aggressive on the opening lap. I think I was up to about P12, but from there on it was difficult because I was struggling with the balance and tyre performance. Without the speed we did not have the flexibility to make the strategy work and points were looking out of reach. Towards the end of the race the team called me to the pits because it seems we had picked up a hydraulic issue, similar to the problem with the other car. Over the summer break we will regroup, analyse things properly and take a fresh approach into the second part of the year.”Adrian Sutil had a disappointing 100th race of his career. “It’s disappointing not to finish, especially as the race was coming back to me after a poor start on the medium tyres. Just before my pit stop I had a problem with the gear shifts and I could not shift up any more. I came into the pits and it became clear we had a hydraulic problem so the team immediately told me to park the car,” he said.Vijay Mallya, Team Principal and Managing Director, said: “It’s not been the easiest of weekends for us and it’s disappointing to come away from Budapest without any points. Adrian celebrated his 100th Grand Prix this weekend, but he remained out of luck in Hungary and had to retire early with a hydraulic problem. His strategy was looking good so he missed a chance of points today. Paul’s race was quite straightforward, but we did not have the speed to make his three-stop strategy work – despite his superb start. With a few laps to go we noticed a similar hydraulic issue with his car and he also had to retire. With the next race coming up in four weeks’ time, we will analyse our performance and work hard to recapture our form in Spa.” -
15-year Tarun is youngest winner of MRF 1600 race
Irungattukottai, (Chennai) 28 July 2013: The 15-year-old Tarun Reddy won in only his third racing round ahead of Japanese driver Yudai Jinkawa and Ashwin Sundar in Race 2 of the MRF 1600 race at Round 3 of the National Racing Championship in Chennai on Sunday.
Ashwin Sundar finished first in Race 3 ahead of Shinya Michimi and Yudai Jinkawa to further extend his championship lead. Indian rallying champion Gaurav Gill continued his impressive comeback to the Indian Touring Car championship with convincing victories in both races, according to a Press Release from Adrenna Communications for the Federation of Motor Sports Clubs of India (FMSCI)
.Prashanth K and S Narendran continued their perfect weekend in the LGB Formula Swift and F4 categories respectively with yet another win. Diljith won Race 3 of the the Toyota Etios Motor Racing (EMR) Trophy while Feroze Khan continued his unbeaten run with yet another victory in the Indian Junior Touring Cars.
In the first race of the day Prashanth K won comfortably ahead of Deepak Chinappa and Suhail Sabharwal to win in the Formula Swift category. S Narendran put on yet another flawless display to win by over 27 seconds ahead of C Rajaram and Sudanand DR.
Race 2 saw the MRF 1600 take to track with Jinkawa starting on pole ahead of Tarun Reddy and Ashwin Sundar. Tarun had a great start and went around the outside of Jinkawa in the first corner to take the lead with Ashwin in third. Ashwin then went off track and dropped back to sixth place at the end of the second lap. Tarun pulled away from Jinkawa at an impressive pace at over a half a second a lap. Ashwin meanwhile made up 3 positions to get back into 3rd position. Tarun crossed the line in first position to become the youngest winner at the MMRT with Jinkawa in 2nd and Ashwin in 3rd place.
Diljith won Race 3 of the Toyota EMR Trophy ahead of Abhinay Bikkani and karting graduate Akhil Rabindra. Diljith started on pole position and led from start to finish comfortably. The battle behind him was very close with four cars fighting for the remaining two podium spots. In the Abhinay and Akhil managed to hold off the challenge from Keith D’Souza and Arjun Narendran to finish on the podium.
Gaurav Gill won Race 1 of the Indian Touring Cars while championship leader Arjun Balu struggled in his new Volkswagen Vento and was forced to retire. His title rival N Leelakrishnan finished in second place ahead of Ashish Ramaswamy. Gill led comfortably and was not matched all race long.
Feroze Khan finished a perfect weekend when he led from start to finish in Race 3 of the Indian Junior Touring Cars. Behind him R Rajan finished in second place ahead of Vidyuth Iyer. There was a great battle for 4th position with 5 cars involved in a close battle. Fahad Kutty finally won that battle to finish in 4th place.
Ashwin Sundar got back to the top step of the podium with a win in the MRF 1600 category. Ashwin had a good start and battled with Jinkawa for the top spot in the first three laps before pulling away. Jinkawa and Race 2 winner Tarun Reddy were battling for second position before the both went off and lost places. Japanese driver Shinya Michimi took advantage of the situation to finish in second place. Jinkawa and Tarun recovered to finish in third and fourth places respectively.
In the last race of the weekend Gaurav made it two out of two with another commanding win on a damp track. Title contenders Arjun Balu and N Leelakrishnan could not match Gill’s pace and had to settle for second and third position.
ends
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Hamilton takes pole; Grosjean favourite from P3
Hungaroring, 27 July 2013: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton claimed his third pole position in a row and his fourth of the season to edge out the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel by less than four hundredths of a second in a tense qualifying session ahead of the Hungarian Grand Prix.
Red Bull Racing driver Vettel looked set for his own fourth pole of the season after setting an early Q3 benchmark of 1:19.506, eight tenths ahead of Hamilton’s first timed lap of the segment. The championship leader looked to be even more secure when, with his final run, he managed to shave another tenth off his best time, FIA said.
Hamilton and Mercedes have dominated over a single lap at recent races, and it was not different in Budapest. A superb first sector saw the three-time Hungarian GP winner running three tenths quicker than the Red Bull Racing driver and though he lost time in the middle sector it was a strong enough foundation to allow the Briton to cross the line in P1.
Afterwards, Hamilton said he had been sure Vettel would be at the head of field.
“I was surprised when I came across the line and they said I’d got pole,” he admitted. “I had been expecting Sebastian to get it as he’d shown some serious pace. I didn’t even feel that I’d done that great a lap, so I was very surprised.”
Vettel, meanwhile, felt there “had not been much missing” from his lap and professed himself confident of a good race from P2 on the grid.
“I think Lewis did a good job,” he said. “I put a strong lap in. I had two sets of new tyres and I was pretty happy with both laps. Maybe on the second try I was losing out a little bit in the middle sector. Maybe I wasn’t aggressive enough there. I would have loved to have been a little bit faster and been on pole but I think it puts us in a great place for tomorrow.”
Romain Grosjean took third place for Lotus, out-qualifying sixth-placed team-mate Kimi Raikkonen for just the second time this year. Hamilton’s team-mate Nico Rosberg was fourth, with Fernando Alonso fifth for Ferrari ahead of Raikkonen and the second Ferrari of Felipe Massa.
Toro Rosso’s Daniel Ricciardo enjoyed another good qualifying session and will line up eighth on the grid. Afterwards he said he had got the maximum from his STR8.
“It was good to get into Q3 again,” he said. “We seem to make a habit of finding a little bit extra for qualifying, although ideally, I’d like to be on the pace right from Friday and chip away at the lap times within the top ten. I think we got the most out of the car this afternoon. I was happy with the way I drove and I am pleased with my form at the moment.”
Behind him, McLaren’s Sergio Perez recovered from a FP3 crash that left his crew building his car around him at the start of qualifying to claim ninth.
For Mark Webber, though, it was a frustrating session. A soon as he took to the track for the first time in Q1, the Red Bull Racing driver was told he had a KERS failure. He made it through to the second phase of the session in P13 and dug deep in Q2 to claim P8 and a spot in the top-10 shootout. However, on his first run in the final segment, he encountered another problem and abandoned his run. He failed to emerge from the garage again and will line up tenth.
“That was a massively disappointing qualifying session,” said Webber. “Obviously we had a lot of issues with the car and we left a lot of lap time in the garage, with items which weren’t working on the car at their optimum. We had no KERS, and a basic gearbox setting that we couldn’t get out of, which cost a lot of lap time.”
Elsewhere there were few surprises, save for the Q1 exit of Paul Di Resta. The Scot will line up 18th and afterwards said he had no explanation for his lack of pace.
“A tough session and I am a bit confused as to why we struggled so much on the soft tyre,” he said. “Throughout all the sessions we’ve looked more competitive on the softs, but in Q1 they just didn’t switch on. We’ve given ourselves a lot of work to do tomorrow, but we will go away and come back refreshed and ready to fight.”
2013 Hungarian Grand Prix Qualifying result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:19.388
2 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 1:19.426
3 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:19.595
4 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:19.720
5 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:19.791
6 Kimi Räikkönen Lotus 1:19.851
7 Felipe Massa Ferrari 1:19.929
8 Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso 1:20.641
9 Sergio Pérez McLaren 1:22.398
10 Mark Webber Red Bull Racing no time
11 Adrian Sutil Force India 1:20.569
12 Nico Hülkenberg Sauber 1:20.580
13 Jenson Button McLaren 1:20.777
14 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 1:21.029
15 Pastor Maldonado Williams 1:21.133
16 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:21.219
17 Esteban Gutiérrez Sauber 1:21.724
18 Paul di Resta Force India 1:22.043
19 Charles Pic Caterham 1:23.007
20 Giedo van der Garde Caterham 1:23.333
21 Jules Bianchi Marussia 1:23.787
|22 Max Chilton Marussia 1:23.997ends
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I was surprised with pole position: Hamilton
DRIVERS
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Sebastian VETTEL (Red Bull Racing)
3 – Romain GROSJEAN (Lotus)TV UNILATERAL
Q: Congratulations Lewis, a phenomenal pole position, a phenomenal time on what is a very challenging circuit I think.
Lewis HAMILTON: Thank you. Yeah, it is. Especially with the temperatures and everything. That makes it pretty tough but I was really surprised when I came across the line and they said I got pole. I was expecting Sebastian to get it because he had shown some serious pace before. And it didn’t even feel that great a lap so that’s why I was quite surprised.
Q: When we saw Sebastian’s time we thought surely it’s not possible to beat him – yet you did so.
LH: As I said, I’m really surprised. I felt maybe he made a mistake or something. But I think as always it’s down to the… we bought some upgrades this weekend. The guys have been working incredibly hard to try to catch everyone and they’re just doing a phenomenal job. It’s a result of all the hard work they’ve put in.
Q: A tough circuit here. Surely pole position is very, very important because it’s so difficult to overtake?
LH: It definitely helps. It’s very difficult to follow here. If you can get off the… it’s a long way down to Turn One from the start but if you can get into Turn One first, try and hold your position then it’s definitely advantageous. But looking after the tyres in these conditions is going to be, as always, trouble. These guys are going to be ridiculously fast so trying to keep ahead of them or hold onto them is going to be the challenge tomorrow.
Q: Sebastian. I have to say we thought you surely had it in the bag with that time. Did you feel the same?
Sebastian VETTEL: Well there wasn’t much missing so I think Lewis did a good job. I put a strong lap in, I had two sets of new tyres and I was pretty happy with both laps. Maybe on the second try I was losing out a little bit in the middle sector. It’s very twisty and a lot of corners in a short amount of time. Maybe I wasn’t aggressive enough there. But it’s stupid to sit here now and say “we should have done this, we should have done that.” At the end of the day I was pretty happy with my lap but it was just not quick enough. Obviously Mercedes have a very strong pace in qualifying. I think Lewis did an exceptional job today if you look also at the gap to Nico, so you have to be fair and respect that. I’m not arguing with that. Surely I would have loved to be a little bit faster and to be on pole but still I think it puts us in a great place for tomorrow. I think we have a good car and good pace also for the race. Shame that in the other car Mark had an issue. He didn’t have KERS and had a problem with the gearbox so had slow upshifts so he was basically not having an attempt for the front and the first couple of positions but still I think we should have a good race tomorrow because the car feels fine. I’m quite confident.
Q: Romain, you were second on the grid here last year, finished third. You’re in the first three again this year. It must be a lucky circuit for you, do you feel that?
Romain GROSJEAN: Well I don’t know! I quite like the circuit but it doesn’t mean much unfortunately. It has been a good weekend so far, been working pretty hard with the team, trying to get the best out of the car. Our last lap was a pretty good lap, not missing much to get even more ahead but those guys were really quick so I think it’s good to be here. The race is very long tomorrow and it’s hot so we will see what we can do and what we can get as a best result.
Q: And both the long and short runs have been good in practice?
RG: Yeah, they were pretty all right yesterday. I think the Option is quite a tough tyre to make last but then the medium one was all right on our car. With the temperature coming up it can change a little bit the things. It was the case last race. My first stint was very long just because the tyres held up pretty well. Hopefully tomorrow is going to be the case again and then I can try to have a go. But we’ll decide when the time comes.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, how much of a worry is the long-run pace for the race tomorrow? Particularly given the heat?
LH: It is what it is, y’know? It’s been the same for a long time. We don’t come into the race and it’s a surprise to us. That’s what it is. It’s great to have the pole position but it doesn’t really mean a lot throughout the weekend. Obviously the race is where we score the points. It’s going to be tough tomorrow. It didn’t feel like a disaster through our long runs but it definitely wasn’t as good as the guys next to me. So, that’s the way it is.
Q: Sebastian, this is a trophy that’s missing from the trophy cabinet. You reduced that number by one last time in the German Grand Prix. How badly do you want this one?
SV: Well, hopefully… I’m not that young anymore but hopefully I’ve got a couple of years left and I’m not in a rush. Obviously it’s a very nice race, a lot of fans coming, especially from Austria to support our team. So, yeah, that’s great, a great atmosphere and it would be very nice to win here. It’s a shame that they don’t have the nice, traditionally trophy any more. Instead we get this, I don’t know, this six-legged dog as the trophy on the podium the last couple of years. But, no, I think we are in a good position. Pretty happy with qualifying, obviously I would have loved to have been on pole but Lewis did a good job, as I said before. So we’ll see what we can do tomorrow. I’m sure it’s going to be hot and a lot will be decided over the tyres. We’ll see what we can do.
Romain, you were on the podium last year. Is there a certain confidence after last year’s performance and this year’s performance as well? You were fastest this morning and now here you arte third fastest on the grid.
RG: As I said, this has been a pretty good weekend so far and the car is behaving pretty well. The main job was to try to get those new tyres to work properly and it didn’t change night and day, so that was a good surprise from yesterday morning. And then, just trying to improve the car lap after lap, and that’s what we did. The long run yesterday was OK. It felt OK in the car, which was important. Then tomorrow we will see with the race. We will see different strategies I guess and we’ll try to get the best of our car when we get free air and stuff like that.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto-Motor) Sebastian you have mentioned in the [TV] press conference that maybe you were not aggressive in the middle sector. Was it because you though you virtually had pole and you didn’t want to take too many risks.
SV: No, surely not. In the end, I wasn’t on holiday. If you could, then I would say have a go and try to do the same time. I lost a little bit of time there and should have been more aggressive. That doesn’t mean I didn’t push but maybe I should have pushed a little bit harder and a little bit extra to get some more time. I think the time Lewis did was in the car but it’s always easy with hindsight to say you could have done a little bit more here or there but as a fact, we did not, so we deserve P2 today.
Q: (Leonid Novozhilov – F1 Life) Romain, what does it mean your little smile. Is this success for you, this third place, or maybe you want more?
RG: I do always smile, so it’s hard to read on that. It’s OK. You always want better and I think we had a tough quali and it’s really hot in the car and I gave a good effort to get there. It’s good to be in the top three. This morning we were fastest but we knew it would be very tight and again it is. I’m, pretty pleased with the gap which is behind. Tomorrow’s race is long and a different story. I was a bit surprised by the Mercedes being that quick but in the race we know it’s a different story.
Q: (Kate Walker – GP Week) Lewis, your pole has demonstrated that your qualifying pace has not been affected by the new Pirelli constructions. What kind of feelings do you have about your long run pace, about the race tomorrow and especially the fifty degree plus track temperatures we are anticipating?
LH: I’m not really looking forward to it. I was just saying to Sebastian, it’s just a shame that we obviously have good pace… we’ve got a good car so I think if we didn’t have the tyre issues we would be able to compete with the guys in the race. It sucks in the way that I’m not able to have a race with these guys but we will do the best we can tomorrow. The tyre degradation is an issue and no matter what rules change or whatever solutions we find, so far, generally it seems very difficult for us to improve. But we’re just working away at it and hopefully we will get there before the rules change again for next year, different tyres come in. Otherwise it’s just trying to get as many points as we can and trying to hold on to Sebastian for as long as I can.
Q: (Peter Vamosi – Vas Népe) Lewis, Michael Schumacher won here four times at the Hungaroring with two different teams. You can be the next one tomorrow. Is there any more pressure because of that?
LH: No. I really am not bothered at all about beating someone else’s record or matching someone else’s record. I’ve been very fortunate to have had a good car for quite a few years when I’ve come here with McLaren and I was privileged to have the opportunity with them and obviously now we are in a good position but now I don’t envisage tomorrow being a win for us. We’ve got a steep hill to climb tomorrow with these tyres and in these conditions. If we did win it would be a miracle and I would be really happy with it of course but I still feel the win is a while off.
Q: (Sarah Holt – CNN.com) Romain, it looked like the new tyres have actually helped you as opposed to your teammate. Is that a fair reading?
RG: No, I don’t think it is. I think at Silverstone and Nurburgring we were very competitive and to be honest I haven’t really found exactly the same feeling as I had last year with the tyres. I think we are just doing a good job with the car. That we struggled at the beginning of the year is not a secret with mapping and stuff like that, but since then we have found what I need to bring the car where I want to and it’s getting better and better. I don’t think those tyres have changed the deal massively.
Q: (Sarah Holt – CNN.com) There was another close race between you and Seb in Germany; now you have another chance to do that tomorrow. Is there any chance that Lewis might hinder you as you chase after him tomorrow?
RG: Well, he’s on pole at the moment, so he’s the one with the advantage on the grid but then it’s just up to how the tyre reacts in the race, what the degradation is like, when people pit, the strategy and stuff like that. We know the track is quite short and you can easily fall into traffic which cost me the win here last year in the second stint, so it’s just up to us to get the best out of everything I can.
Q: (Abhishek Takle – Midday) Sebastian, how difficult do you think it’s going to be for you to keep Romain behind, given that he’s qualified so close to you and he could potentially run longer on the soft tyre?
SV: Well, it depends, obviously. We know that the Lotus usually is very good with its tyres, exceptional to everybody else. I think we are in a good position too so we will see. At the moment, as Romain said, Lewis is leading the pack and then we go from there. The race is long, the first corner is only a small part of it so we will see what happens at the start and after that it could be all different already. It’s a long way to go, it’s a lot of laps here, 70 laps, it’s a long race, it’s going to be hot so I think it will be tough for drivers but also for the cars in terms of cooling. I think we’re all on the limit. It will be a long race and surely tyres will be important but I think we are confident, as confident as we can be. How strong the Lotus will be I don’t know. On the long runs they don’t look anything special but we saw the same at Nurburgring on the Friday so let’s see what happens tomorrow.
Q: (Zolt Godina – Best of Radio) Lewis, do you have problems with the car in terms of driving, as in the first part of the season?
LH: It’s still not the easiest to set up but we’ve not done a bad job this weekend as we have managed to get through the last couple of races, getting quite high up. I love the car and I’m constantly growing with it and improving with it. Each qualifying I get into I’m getting stronger and more confident as to how to get the best out of the car. I hope there’s more to come.
Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto Motor) We are hearing – it will be announced tomorrow – that the contract for the Hungaroring will be extended until 2021. Could you please all comment on that, if you are happy to come to the Hungaroring?
LH: I love it here. I love the track, I’ve had good experiences every time I’ve come since 2006. Budapest is a beautiful place. We have a good turn-out every time we come, great weather. We can’t really complain so I’m happy that it’s on the calendar. It’s a historic circuit so I’m proud to have put my name to it and when I retire someone else will come but I’m grateful to be around when it’s here.
SV: Yeah, not much more to add. I think the race has been here since ’86 so it is already a tradition to come here. Obviously it’s very special to have a lot of fans always coming despite the fact that it’s very hot and they usually leave the track with big sunburn. Yeah, they love coming here, a lot of people from Germany, from Austria which is obviously very special for us. Looking forward to the next couple of years and I think it’s a good message. The only downside probably is the fact that usually overtaking around here is not that easy but I think it’s a great place, nevertheless.
RG: I was planning to stay on holiday a little bit next year after the race so it’s great news. I love the city, I love the place so I’m pleased with that.
Q: (Jerome Pugmire – Associated Press) Yesterday, team principals were divided in opinion as to whether there should be more races on the calendar. As drivers, do you think there should be more?
SV: I think it’s enough, twenty is enough races. Maybe for us (drivers) it’s possible to have another one here or there but especially for the teams, in terms of logistics and for team staff I think it’s already a big effort, very little time, very few weekends to spend at home with their families, with their kids. I think you mustn’t forget about that and therefore I think twenty races is already a lot. Five years ago or ten years it was only 16 races so it’s already a lot more and I don’t think more than twenty races is good for the teams.
LH: I love racing so I could race every weekend if I had to, but as Sebastian said, it’s difficult for the guys in the garage and people back at the factory. They’re constantly on the edge, and particular the guys who are travelling, as you said, seeing their families and stuff. I’m sure if I went into the garage and asked my guys if they wanted to race more I’m sure they would say they would but they would also miss their families.
RG: I quite agree with Seb. Twenty is pretty alright and it’s tough for everyone so why not some more testing but twenty races is about good.
Q: (Jeroen Huis in T Veld – Jhed Media B.V) We’ve talked about the heat a lot and what it does to the tyres but what does it do to you, Lewis, physically and even more, in tomorrow’s race for two hours in the heat?
LH: It’s not really that bad, to be honest. I’ve not really noticed the heat too much so far this weekend. Malaysia is usually the biggest killer and Singapore, obviously, with the humidity but it’s not that humid here. It’s nice and warm and of course it would be nice to be cooler in the car but by this time of the season you are used to it so just have to make sure you drink plenty and that’s it.
Q: (Gabor Joo– Index) Romain, do you expect one pit stop less than the other two guys tomorrow?
RG: How much do you plan? I don’t know. It really depends on how it goes. I think again it’s a question of how long you can go in the first stint without losing too much time or gaining time and then the strategy guy will be on the pit wall making all the calculations and working harder to give me the best chance.
Ends

Hamilton takes pole ahead of Sebastian Vettel (left) and third placed Romain Grosjean, who is expected to have a better grip of tyres on race day. A M -
Alonso, Pedro de la Rosa launch Shell Lego Challenge
Scuderia Ferrari Official Driver Fernando Alonso and Test Driver Pedro de la Rosa launch the Shell LEGO Challenge Scuderia Ferrari Official Driver Fernando Alonso and Test Driver Pedro de la Rosa were on hand in the Ferrari motorhome today to help launch the Shell LEGO Challenge. The drivers went head to head to see who could build the Ferrari F1® model LEGO car in the quickest time. De la Rosa was in impressive form and took an early lead, never looking back as he took the chequered flag with an impressive time of 2:45.44, Alonso coming in a close second with a time of 4:08.68. This meant de la Rosa took his place in pole position on the Shell leader board with Alonso joining him on the front row. Throughout the Formula One Hungarian Grand Prix race weekend, Shell will also be putting members of the accredited media through their paces as they too attempt the #ShellLEGOChallenge. Media will strive to beat the Scuderia Ferrari duo’s times, as well as each other’s. They will battle it out to take pride of place at the top of the Shell leader board with a chance to win some fantastic Shell LEGO prizes.
Shell has worked closely with both Ferrari and LEGO to produce six exclusive Ferrari model LEGO cars based on some of the most iconic vehicles in Ferrari’s motoring history: the Ferrari 150° Italia, the Ferrari 250 GT Berlinetta short wheel base, the Ferrari F40, the Ferrari FXX, the Ferrari 458 Italia and a Scuderia Ferrari Truck. The Shell LEGO promotion is available in a number of countries – contact Shell’s Motorsport Press Officer, Amanda Hunt, for more details.
Alonso commented after the challenge: “The Shell LEGO Challenge was a lot of fun; obviously there was a great deal of pressure to build the car as quickly as possible. It was a close contest, but Pedro got a great start and I wasn’t able to catch him to take pole on the Shell leader board grid.”
The results of the #ShellLEGOchallenge will be announced on Saturday 27 July and the winners will be presented with their prizes on Sunday 28 July at 10:30, before the race, by Scuderia Ferrari Official Driver Felipe Massa and Test Driver Marc Gené.
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