Tag: F1

  • It is hard to hold pole here, but I will try my best to the 1st corner

    It is hard to hold pole here, but I will try my best to the 1st corner

    DRIVERS
    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
    3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS
    (Conducted by Johnny Herbert) 

    Q: Valtteri, how frustrating was that. That was so close, I think it was seven-hundredths of a second. You tried your best eh?
    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, I knew it was going to be close with Lewis as always and in the end in his first run the lap was really nice and clean, especially in sector three. All-day today I’ve been (inaudible) in sector three, so it was getting better and better, but still not quite good enough. Of course, it’s annoying but he did a good job and as a team again, the first row.

    Q: For the championship, you’re still in it. You’ve still got a chance being on that front row. Do you think you’ve got the car to beat Lewis tomorrow?
    VB: I think the start will be the best opportunity for me. Again, on Friday my long runs were competitive. I will have the pace but still, the start will be the best chance.

    Q: Is it quite simply that you have to get into Turn 1 first or is there more to it?
    VB: I’ll try to get there first. Trust me.

    Q: Lewis, 92nd pole, your fifth in Barcelona. How difficult was that session? Because the temperatures are so high, something that you guys are not used to at all.
    Lewis HAMILTON: I mean it’s summer man! But it’s definitely the first time I’ve been in Barcelona when it’s this hot. It’s tough. It’s so fast around here. It’s the fastest we’ve ever been around here. The forces through your body are pretty intense. The tyres are what we’re really struggling with. You see us crawling around on the out lap, it’s just to keep the temperature out of the tyres. But even with those sort of laps you still have temperatures rising. That’s what we are trying to manage on the laps. I couldn’t go quicker on my second lap. I thought I could but it just wasn’t a great lap. The first one was decent I guess, which did the job thankfully. These guys do such an awesome job. We’re constantly learning. I was here with the guys until 10 pm, just looking over all the details, how we can improve and what are the areas, particularly for the race, that we could get better because these Red Bulls are super fast.

    Q: Give us an idea of how difficult it is to drive around this circuit in these hot conditions. What are your problems – is it understeer or oversteer?
    LH: The problems are all physical. The amount that you are able to brake now, the amount you have to apply to the brake is even heavier before, so there is a lot of stress through your core. You’re flat out through three and through nine, so there is a lot of stress on your neck and your whole body just wants to move to the side of the car. As it’s so hot you have to be even more careful on the throttle not to overheat the tyres. Balance-wise it’s quite windy if you look at the flags. We have a headwind into Turn 1 so it’s pretty good into Turn 1 but then in Turn 4 you have a tailwind, Turn 9 you have a tailwind, 10 you have a tailwind, so there are corners where you know you can push and some that you can’t and you are still trying to find that limit and that’s when the car snaps away. But that’s what we all do and I have a huge amount of respect for all the guys here who are battling the same issues as myself.

    Q: Briefly about tomorrow. Starting on pole position, the perfect place but you’ve got Valtteri who was so close to you in qualifying and Max is there as well?
    LH: Yeah, it’s such a long way down to Turn 1 here, so the job is not done that’s for sure. It’s very hard to follow here. Positioning is good but it will be hard to hold pole position, but that’s what I’ve got to work on and try to get the best out of it I can.

    Q: Max, I suppose that was what you were expecting to happen today. Were you happy with the performance?
    MV: Yeah, I mean that’s the maximum we can do at the moment. The whole weekend we have been P3 so yeah, pretty happy with that. I just hope we can be a bit closer in the race. Yesterday in the long runs it didn’t seem to bad but of course tomorrow is a different day so we’ll have to see.

    Q: You had some good long runs, do you expect it to come your way tomorrow? Do you expect to challenge the Mercedes?
    MV: Difficult to say at the moment. I felt happy in the car. I just hope that I can apply a bit of pressure. I know that it is very hard to overtake around here, but we’re going to do everything we can to be close to them and top try to make a bit difficult.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Lewis, thrilling session. You were fastest in all three sessions of qualifying, how satisfied are you with pole number 92?
    LH: It’s definitely been a good Saturday. I’m smiling under this. But it had been a really big challenge this weekend for us all – the physical demands of this track, being that we’re faster than ever before, but more so just managing these tyres in the temperatures. It’s very, very hot out there and as you can see different people were trying different things on out laps. Also there is always a bit of a gust in the afternoon always here in Barcelona, so it makes for quite a tricky session but overnight progressed forwards rather than backwards, which is always a good thing. Each first lap was strong, which I was happy with. The one in Q3 was solid, but I felt like I could improve, but I wasn’t able to do it on the second lap. Fortunately neither did the strong dude next to me. He’s keeping me honest and it’s obviously very close between us and so every millisecond counts. I’m really just incredibly grateful to the guys for continuing to push. It’s not easy to do weekend in, weekend out. I’m constantly impressed by the open-mindedness and the things we are doing. But tomorrow is going to be tough when we get to the race. The scenario is different. Over a single lap we seem to have the edge over the Red Bulls but this weekend we seem to be pretty much on par on race pace, so it’s going to be a tough battle with Max tomorrow.

    Q: Lewis, you’ve told us many times that you are not motivated by stats, but that is your 150th front-row start in F1. What does that mean?
    LH: Wow! I don’t know really what to say except for… Look, we are the ones who get to sit here and front all this incredible effort from so many people and I have been really, really fortunate over the years, even back to my McLaren days, to work with incredibly intelligent and driven people who have helped me sit in this room. So I am incredibly grateful to those that have helped. And blown away, still to this day, by the decision to move to this team and see the growth that we have had. I don’t’ think we have plateaued at the top with the championships we have, we continuously get better each year, as people see. I’ve been saying for a long time that I am a chink in the chain, without realising that chink is not actually a good thing. I’m just another link in the big chain of so many people and I just try to play my part as best I can.

    Q: Let’s come to you now Valtteri, so fast in that qualifying session, fastest, in fact, in Sectors One and Two – but you weren’t able to grab pole. Are you a little bit frustrated?
    VB: Well, for sure, you know I was trying to get the pole and it was always going to be pretty close, I think between me and Lewis at least, and I knew it was going to be about milliseconds in the end. Sector 1 and 2 started to feel pretty good, so I think by Sector 3… I have to say since this morning Sector 3 was a bit of a problematic Turn 10, Turn 12 was a bit of an issue for me in terms of balance and finding the best way around it, because every day here, with the wind, with the track temperatures different but it was getting better and better in the qualifying – just not quite good enough. I think Lewis was pretty consistent in Sector 3 and he managed to get a good lap in Q3. So yeah, he did a better job today. Of course, it’s annoying for me but I have to look at the big picture. Still starting on the front row, really strong team performance, which always I’m really proud of. And still, there’s all the opportunities for tomorrow.

    Q: How much slippier, compared to normal is this track, in these track temperatures, off-line? Because you’re starting on the inside tomorrow. It’s going to be a drag race down to Turn 1. Do you think it’s going to be difficult to make a good start from P2.
    VB: I have no idea, to be honest, how the track conditions is left and right. Normally we get all that information in the reports. The team will analyse that. For now, I don’t know. I hope it will be good enough grip to grab the lead.

    Q: Max, congratulations, your first top three start here in Barcelona. Was it a clean session for you?
    MV: Yeah. I mean it seems like I have a subscription on P3. I think I’ve been P3 the whole weekend. It was alright. I tried of course, to be as close as possible. Also, pretty happy with my lap. I think we extracted the most out of the car. We can’t complain really. I think the car was pretty competitive. Of course there are still areas where we can do a better job – but we are definitely improving the car, which is good.

    Q: And have you got the car underneath you to beat the guys next to you tomorrow in the race?
    MV: Well, I felt very happy in the long run yesterday, with the balance of the car and the wear of the tyres as well. But yeah, tomorrow again, is a new day and we’ll have to try and show it again. Of course, I hope that I can be close to them and put the pressure on.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to Max. You and Red Bull have made a nice habit of going on a contrary strategy in Q2. Obviously nobody did that this time around. Could you just explain why you didn’t go that way this time?
    MV: Basically because I think the soft tyre is good enough to start the race on. Normally the softest compound is a bit more tricky as it falls apart quite quickly. I think it’s alright at the track here.

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Max. You said in Q1 that the car feels a bit weird. What was the reason for that and the change afterwards?
    MV: I don’t know. I went through Turn 2 and I could see the left-front wheel coming up – which was very odd – but it didn’t happen afterwards. They checked everything, and everything was fine, so I honestly don’t know what felt so weird. It was quite gusty out there as well. Bit odd  but luckily it didn’t come back.

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Question to all three but starting off with Max. Max, you twice referenced the tyres in your previous answers. Pirelli had said, coming into this weekend that this could be one of the hardest weekends for tyres and, mindful of what happened at Silverstone, what are you guys expecting during the race? Would it be anywhere near what Pirelli have possibly predicted?
    MV: I think, first of all, since the new tarmac is on this track, I think it’s a bit better on tyres. Seems like a bit more rear grip. So, I guess that helps. And, of course, the energy in the tyres is not as high as in Silverstone. So, for sure, that is helping to keep the tyres a bit more under control – but that last sector, there’s so many tight corners, you still have to, of course, manage them.

    LH: We expect these guys to be, probably a little bit better I would imagine. It’s definitely not going to be easy for us. I don’t think we’ll have the same problems we had last week – but obviously we’ll find out when we get in the race. We’ve got those hot conditions but we have a harder compound, so fingers crossed that helps. I wouldn’t put it past us having problems tomorrow but we’ll see.

    VB: I think we are expecting less issues than last weekend, just because it’s a different type of track and so far we’ve seen no issues with blistering or things like what happened at Silverstone. I think it’s going to be difficult. Here always if it’s hot it’s just always about the overheating, especially the tyre surface overheating and trying to manage that. And yes, we’ve seen Red Bull is pretty strong when it’s warm, and when it’s all about tyre management. Hopefully better that Silverstone.

    Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) Question to Lewis and Valtteri. Toto yesterday spoke about his future at the team. It was hardly a tub-thumping ‘he’s going to stay’. He’s weighing up his options. I just wanted to gauge your feelings. Will you be happy to sign a new contract with Mercedes knowing that he’s not here? Valtteri, does that change your thinking? Will you miss Toto if he wasn’t part of the team? And if I may, a question to Max as well, which is, is it just a case of putting the pressure on the Mercedes, or it tomorrow just trying to get a result.
    LH: What you’ve got to remember is that it’s a team of so many people. There’s almost 2,000 people in the team, or something like that. It’s not just down to one person, one individual. So yes, that’s not determining whether or not I stay. I think what we’ve built… I’ve been a part of growing with this team and growing with that growth. The strength is there through and through, so, as I said, it’s not just one individual. I think everyone has to do what’s best for them. What’s best for their career and happiness at the end of the day. I think it’s smart for him. I think everyone needs to sit, take a moment and evaluate what they want to do moving forwards. Whether it suits them and their families and their future dreams. We’ve done so much already together in this period of time. I hope he stays because it’s fun working with him, and it’s fun negotiating with him and fun having the up and downs. So, I’m truly grateful to Toto and I’ll be fully supportive in whatever he decides to do.

    VB: I think Toto has been a really important part of the team and being a big part of helping the team to get to the state where it is now but just like Lewis said, it’s not all about one person, we’re a big team, there are so many important personnel in the team and everyone needs to be able to work together so I really agree that whatever he does, I just hope he makes a decision what he really wants to do and it makes him happy. That’s it, that’s what life’s all about: only do things that make you happy, follow your dreams. But of course, it would be a shame to see him go. I have no idea, to be honest, what’s happening in the background. I’m just focusing on driving and yes, I would definitely sign with the team even though Toto wasn’t here because, as Lewis said, it’s not about one person but (he’s a) very important man.

    Q: Max, coming to you, looking at the race tomorrow, is it just a case of putting pressure on Mercedes?
    MV: Well, I mean, I just keep driving behind them. On a distance, it’s not going to happen so yeah, if I have that opportunity, of course, to be close then you have to be there, you have to push it but let’s just wait and see tomorrow. Yesterday I felt good, let’s hope it’s going to be the same tomorrow and then I hope that we just have an entertaining race at the end of the day.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question to all three, slightly leftfield but it was a fairly straightforward qualifying session. All three of you are in a situation at the moment where the two Mercedes drivers have pretty much each other to focus on in qualifying and Max, as you’ve said, you’ve got a subscription to P3. In The Last Dance, the documentary about Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls, Jordan talks about making up little animosities in his mind and things like that, stories lines, to motivate himself when he wants to take himself to a new level. How do you guys motivate yourselves to go to the new level and at the moment, when things are fairly straightforward in qualifying, do you ever employ any tricks like that?
    LH: Me first… I don’t think I’ve had to… I mean Valtteri is on my tail and pushing things to the limit and is exceptionally fast so I don’t really need to find new motivation. Every year, of course, you have to re-focus and figure out what is going to be your motivating factor but yeah, that’s Michael, what works for Michael won’t work for me. Every individual probably has a different way of getting in the zone, finding that courage to go where others perhaps won’t.

    Q: How have your preparations for qualifying changed over the last 14 years?
    LH: Jeez, I don’t even remember but it’s definitely… I mean, I’m a lot older now so the things I know now I didn’t know back when I was 22/23. I naturally had raw ability back then but I had no control and understanding of who I really was and what made me tick, what was good to do, what was not good to do and so a complete different machine to today, I would say. And that’s probably why you see… my consistency was pretty good in that first year but I would say that my consistency has definitely got better over these last five or six years, probably. I think that’s probably been my greatest strength.
    VB: For me I find the motivation is the goal that I have in my career and that dream and goal that I set to myself as a young kid so that gives me motivation, that keeps me pushing myself for more and yeah, when there’s tough times in the end, there’s always that same reason that gets me to get up and move and try to do things better. That’s producing it for me.
    MV: Yeah, I think like Lewis said, everybody is different in the end of it. You find different ways of preparing yourself or the way you behave, the way you perform, so yeah, for me it’s… from a very young age I always had somebody around me, like my Dad, pushing me hard because of course when you’re a little kid initially there’s a lot to learn and I definitely learned that, the motivation, always wanting to perform, always trying to get the best out yourself and how to get the best out of yourself is by never stop learning, never think that it’s good enough. When you win races, when you take pole positions, whatever, there are always things you can improve, there are always little details. In F1 it’s never big things, it’s marginal things but you can always improve so that’s what I just try to look at, even though sometimes it’s not good on my own, P3 whatever, I can all the time, I think there is always room for that improvement so that’s just how I keep myself pushing forward and of course try to close that gap to the guys ahead.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to the two Mercedes drivers please: what was the reason why you didn’t improve on your final laps in Q3? Was there a slight change in the conditions or something on the track, because Lewis, in particular, you said at the start of this you felt that your first run in Q3 was solid but you felt that you could improve but you didn’t, so yeah, why was that?
    VB: I don’t think conditions really changed, at least it felt like they didn’t really improve for the second run. I thought I was going to improve because when I crossed the line I was one tenth up from my previous time but then obviously it went to zero so maybe I just got a bit more distance, that’s how the time delta works. I don’t know, I thought it was a bit better on the second run, but it just wasn’t. I don’t think the track really changed.
    LH: I’m not really sure. There is track ramp and then the track temperature can vary and the wind can vary. Yeah, the first lap felt OK but then in some areas within the limit and so I knew that there were some areas where I could improve and then when I just went on the next one; the tyres just didn’t feel the same and the grip wasn’t the same for me so it was just overall a really poor second lap, but I kept going but it was nowhere near as good as the first one.

  • Bottas takes pole ahead of Hamilton; Hulkenberg P3

    Bottas takes pole ahead of Hamilton; Hulkenberg P3

    Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas beat Lewis Hamilton to take pole position for Formula 1:s 70th Anniversary Grand Prix, as Nico Hulkenberg took to third for Racing Point in his just his second weekend back in the sport. 

    Hamilton led the way ahead of the final runs of Q1, with the Briton setting the pace with a lap of 1:26.818, set on soft tyres. That left him just under two tenths of a second ahead of team-mate Valtteri Bottas, with Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in third thanks to a lap of 1:27.154. 

    The Dutch driver’s team-mate, Alex Albon, was finding thew going tougher though and after a mistake on his opening run he went into the final runs in P16, in the drop zone ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, the Alfa Romeos of Kimi Räikkönen and the Williams of Nicholas Latifi. 

    However, on his final flying lap the Red Bull driver he set a good time of 1:27.153 to rise to P3, 0.001s ahead of fourth-placed Verstappen. At the top of the order, Bottas took over in P1 ahead of Hamilton with a lap of 1:26.738. 

    Further back, AlphaTauri’s Dany Kvyat had his final lap deleted for exceeding track limits and that put him 15thin the closing moments. And when Renault’s Esteban Ocon improved to P8 with his final lap, Kvyat was eliminated in P16 ahead of Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, Williams’ Nicholas Latifi and the Alfa Romeos of Antonio Giovinazzi and Kimi Räikkönen. 

    In Q2 most drivers went out on medium tyres, except Williams’ George Russell, who stuck with softs, and Verstappen who chose the more radical option of hard compound Pirellis. 

    Bottas set the pace with a lap of 1:25.785 ahead of Hamilton and Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo who was enjoying a good session. Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was fourth and Verstappen slotted into fifth place. 

    At the end of the middle segment 11th-placed Ocon exited the session along with Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Haas’ Romain Grosjean and Williams driver Russell. Ocon was later hit with a three-place grid penalty for impeding Russell in Q1. 

    In the final runs of Q3, Hamilton set the early pace with a time of 1:25.284 with Bottas second ahead of Ricciardo and Hulkenberg. Verstappen and Albon on mediums, took P5 and P6 respectively ahead of Leclerc, Stroll, Gasly and Norris. 

    Hamilton made an improvement in the final run, finding around six hundredths of a second. But Bottas was able to find more and he took pole position with a lap of 1:25.514. 

    Behind the Mercedes pair it might have been expected that Verstappen, now on soft tyres, would take third and though he improved by 0.256s to a time of 1:26.176 it wasn’t good enough to beat surprise package Hulkenberg who went just under a tenth quicker to claim third place in just his second weekend in the Racing Point. 

    Behind the top four Ricciardo took fifth place ahead of the second Racing Point of Stroll. Pierre Gasly scored an excellent seventh place for AlphaTauri with Leclerc eighth for Ferrari. Alex took ninth place with a time of 1:26.669 and he’ll start alongside 10th-placed Lando Norris. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 70thAnniversary Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:25.154 6 249.049
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:25.217 0.063 6 248.865
    3 Nico Hülkenberg Racing Point/Mercedes 1:26.082 0.928 6 246.365
    4 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:26.176 1.022 6 246.096
    5 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:26.297 1.143 6 245.751
    6 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:26.428 1.274 6 245.378
    7 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:26.534 1.380 6 245.078
    8 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:26.614 1.460 6 244.851
    9 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:26.669 1.515 6 244.696
    10 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:26.778 1.624 6 244.389
    11 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:27.011 1.226 6 243.734
    12 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:27.078 1.293 6 243.547
    13 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:27.083 1.298 6 243.533
    14 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:27.254 1.469 7 243.055
    15 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:27.455 1.670 3 242.497
    16 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:27.882 1.144 6 241.319
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:28.236 1.498 9 240.350
    18 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:28.430 1.692 6 239.823
    19 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:28.433 1.695 6 239.815
    20 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:28.493 1.755 6 239.652

  • I will keep the car where it deserves to be: Nico Hulkenberg

    I will keep the car where it deserves to be: Nico Hulkenberg

    DRIVERS

    1 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)

    2 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)

    3 – Nico HÜLKENBERG (Racing Point)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS

    (Conducted by Paul Di Resta) 

    Q: Valtteri, that was a pretty epic lap – right at the end. I was watching the sectors all the way through and you nipped it right in the last sector. What does that feel like?

    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, it feels good. I just love qualifyings and especially when it goes well it’s a good feeling. Really nice to get everything out of myself and out of the car. I thin set-up-wise we made good steps from last weekend and that’s why I think the qualifying performance from me was better today then last weekend. Really pleased with that and proud to drive this amazing car, it’s so quick.

    Q: It’s been a pretty good week – new contract from Mercedes to continue on from after the difficult race you had last week. How has that changes you mentally? Do you think you have come out of stronger because you’ve got that stability and the championship goes on?  

    VB: Well, of course mentally, when you’re starting from the pole, you can only aim to win the race and obviously the starting point is good. I think the race pace is good. The first job is to get a good start off the line, as I had last weekend, and go from there. But the mentality is to try to win it.

    Q: Lewis, it was a pretty close battle with Valtteri. Obviously he just nipped it at the end. Your first lap was very good and your second just improved. What can you say about it? 

    Lewis HAMILTON: I wasn’t that great! Valtteri did a good job and deserved the pole I guess; for me it just wasn’t a perfect last lap.

    Q: Obviously ahead tomorrow. It was difficult to do a one-stop last week, do you feel it’s going to be harder tomorrow with the softer compounds or do you think because you’ve that experience you can manage it differently?

    LH: I don’t think many people will be managing with a softer… I was already managing last weekend and the tyre didn’t make it to the end. It’s highly unlikely I think many people will do a one-stop tomorrow.

    Q: Nico, it’s been some kind of course in the last 10 days but quite a special feeling to be standing there. Only second grand prix in, only drafted in at the last minute – tell us?

    Nico HÜLKENBERG: Yeah, crazy last week, or seven or eight days or whatever it is now. Obviously last week a big high to come back and then the low on Sunday, so very extreme. This weekend I felt much better in the car, much more prepared. Quali was still tricky. In Q2 I made life hard for myself a but and I was scared that I had damaged the car and then Q3, was just head down, full beans, whatever I had. I’m a bit surprised to be honest to stand here but obviously big smile on my face but obviously a lot of respect for the race tomorrow.

    Q: You’ve got a difficult day tomorrow. Obviously fitness is going to a key thing, because preparing for a race is always a hard thing. You didn’t get a chance last week. What can you expect?

    NH: Yeah, that’s definitely going to hurt tomorrow, not having last week’s experience, not having gone through motions there with the start and everything, because it’s still new with this car. But we’ll do what we can. I’ll try to learn fast and to keep the car where it deserves to be.

    Q: And from a marketing point of view, that’s put you back on the list to speak some teams for next year?

    NH: Well, it’s only Saturday. It’s always Sunday that always matters the most, but it’s one of those nice little highlights but you know it’s no time to cheer yet, because tomorrow is the big day.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Valtteri, great lap at the end, just six one hundredths of a second faster than your team-mate. Where did you find the time on that final lap? 

    VB: Thanks. Very good feeling to be on pole. I love the qualifying and especially here in Silverstone. It’s pretty good fun. The feeling was from the practice sessions that the medium could be even faster than the soft tyre so that’s why in Q2, when we had both compounds, I knew that there would be still good opportunities to improve on the second run and yeah, the first run was OK, but I knew there was a bit missing and I could find more. There was no one key place, it was just about getting a nice clean lap and putting sectors together. It was a good lap, no doubt, so good feeling.

    Q: And looking ahead to tomorrow’s race, can you give us any thoughts on strategy?

    VB: To be honest I think one stop could be quite difficult here with the compounds we have here this weekend. So I think things are going to be a bit different than last weekend in terms of strategy. I’m sure the guys will be looking at all the options overnight and obviously myself the expectation tomorrow, there’s nothing more than to win the race when you start from pole.

    Q: Lewis, coming to you, this is the 67th front-row lockout for Mercedes, but the roles are reversed from last weekend between you and Valtteri. How was your car at the end of the session?

    LH: It was good. Valtteri did a fantastic job today; he was just too quick for me. The first lap in qualifying was fairly decent and the last one wasn’t spectacular. Ultimately he did a better job, so I’m happy though for the team to have a 1-2 and to see another great result for Racing Point.

    Q: Let’s move on to Racing Point. What a statement of intent from you, Nico. Tell us how good that lap was at the end and also how much more comfortable you feel in the team and in the car from last week.

    NH: Yeah, much more. Obviously last weekend was really extreme – Formula 1 comeback within 10 hours, just getting back in the paddock without any preparation 10 minutes before a session was challenging to say the least. But good fun at the same time. But this week I had all these days to digest the feelings of the car and I felt much better prepared  for this weekend and he lap in quali was good. In Q2 I made life a bit hard myself, going off in the first run. In Q3 I didn’t think much. I was just giving it everything, trying to squeeze everything out of the car and the tyres and myself, which is also a challenge this weekend and yeah, quite happy to be here.

    Q: What were you expectations coming in?

    NH: This weekend?

    Q: This session? Did you think P3 was on?

    NH: No, I didn’t. I think we always had good one-lap pace this weekend. I was pretty confident we could make it into the top 10. To be third, couldn’t really expect that and didn’t really expect that to be honest. Of course a bit of a surprise but for today a nice one to take.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for Nico. First of all, congratulations. As you’ve mentioned, you’re much better prepared this weekend but something that’s still missing is a race simulation – a proper race simulation – because you didn’t have it last weekend. How were your long runs yesterday? Do you still have to learn the tyres or do you already know them from last year? And also, the Racing Point didn’t look like the best car on race pace the whole season so far – but could the softer tyre choice help you because you have to do two stops?

    NH: The long runs yesterday were quite good. I felt comfortable in the car and, I think, better than last week. I think the team found some good things and made some improvements there in terms of race pace, so that should hopefully help. Tyres is the least of my worries because I think they’re still pretty similar to the last few years and kind of know what to expect – but everything else is obviously going to be new and kind of the first time, so that side is obviously more exciting and a bit more difficult.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question to the two Mercedes drivers. Last weekend when Red Bull were so far off the pace, they admitted they didn’t have an answer to the way you were able to step it up through the weekend. Can you just talk a little bit about the progress you are able to make through qualifying. Do you have extra engine modes you can go to in Q2 and Q3 or is it just natural evolution in the track and yourselves?

    VB: I think, of course from last weekend to this week we’ve been just really working on everything that we can improve with the car, and also for us, me and Lewis, driving-wise, we’ve been trying to find more. I think we’ve been able to in terms of set-up and – at least for me, driving-wise – find a bit more. The same process goes throughout the weekend. So I think we’ve been able to go in the right direction from the beginning of this weekend until the qualifying and in the qualifying session, obviously car set-up-wise there’s not much you can do. There’s obviously tyre temperatures that we are run-by-run learning more and then we tried to nail it in Q3 when it comes to out-laps and all that. And the same with the engine. We know that with the quick car we have, we don’t necessarily have to use the highest engine modes in Q1 and, of course, if we can save the engine, we save it and yeah, obviously towards the end of the quali, we are going to be running the full power, so for sure there is a lap-time difference as well but I think also us drivers, we’re learning throughout the session and the tyre and out-lap performance is pretty important and that improved a lot during the qualifying as well.

    Lewis?

    LH: I haven’t got anything to add. I think Valtteri answered it pretty well.

    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Question to Nico, congratulations on a brilliant result. A lot of fans out there are very excited about you returning this weekend and perhaps breaking that long-awaited podium drought. How special, remarkable, crazy would it be if were to do that tomorrow and finally get that monkey off your back and get a podium?

    NH: Yeah, I knew this was going to come up now, obviously. To be honest, it’s very challenging and difficult circumstances but I know I have a fast car beneath me. So it’s just trying to make sure to do everything right. Obviously it’s starting lap one. It’s going to be also new for me but I think I’ll just try to get it right with all the experience that I have and then we’ll race. Obviously a couple of races behind the other guys but I still remember what it feels like. Just try not to think too much, keep my head down and have a good race tomorrow.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to both Mercedes drivers please. Could you explain the thinking behind the run plan in Q3. Was it a case of going out, getting a banker lap on the Softs and then switching, both of you, to the Mediums or did the team allow you individually to chose what to do – and what was the reason behind the switch in the middle of that session? Thank you.

    LH: I think we decided as a team. We both, Valtteri and I, agreed that the Medium tyre was better, so that’s why we saved it for the end.

    Valtteri, anything to add?

    VB: Yeah, like I said, we saw in practice that there’s not much in it. When it came down to the decisions, we decided the Medium was most likely going to be the faster. That’s why we saved it to the end, because normally at the end of the session the track is the fastest, so wanted to maximise everything.

    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question for Valtteri please. Can you just run through a little bit the process of what you went through since last week to find the car improvements? Roughly, what have you done, what characteristics have you dialled in or dialled out that have allowed you to do this today?

    VB: Of course I can’t go too much into set-up details but we’ve been able to improve the car set-up, I think, for me. I think I had a slight deficit last weekend in qualifying, just in terms of the direction I went during last weekend. I don’t think it was a bad race car but I hope now it’s optimised for both. Always between the races we analyse everything from the race weekend set-up, from my driving in qualifying and in the race and I try to be better. At least today I managed to do some things better than I did last weekend. It is a pretty standard process, to be honest. I don’t want to go into details of the set-up, just I feel better in qualifying today than a week ago.

    Valtteri, have you been on the simulator this week back at the factory?

    VB: Yes, I have.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Nico, on the mental and physical challenges of coming back into F1 over the last eight days; mentally, how different have you found it going into these weekends, I guess with less pressure a fulltime driver because maybe expectations are a little bit lower? And physically, how did you feel last week and yesterday on the longer runs, and how do you expect your neck to hold up tomorrow?

    NH: Yeah, I think you’re quite right. Obviously I’m just here as a temporary guest so naturally expectations are a bit different and I’m just going with the flow, especially last week, obviously, you couldn’t expect too much. But emotionally, obviously, the high coming back on Friday and then Sunday the big low not being able to make it to the race and now, back here, so yeah, it’s been a pretty wild week in a positive way. Physically, yeah, it’s been tough, these G-forces. These cars are brutally fast and the change of direction and the peak G is pretty impressive. No gym in the world and no training can really prepare you for that so… I definitely feel it. I’m going to get biggest tape that I have on tomorrow but I think I will survive somehow.

    Q: (Giles Richards – The Guardian) Nico, after all the criticism Racing Point have had over the last few days and the punishment they’ve received, does this result for you feel like vindication for the team and the car they built, and the fact that they are still allowed to continue to race it?

    NH: Well, that’s one side I have not totally kept up with and it’s not really my cup of tea or my problem at the moment. Obviously that’s team management that are dealing with that so I don’t really have anything to say about that.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) A question, again, back to the Mercedes drivers: Max Verstappen will be starting the race from fourth place on the hard tyre; how is that compound in terms of the base? Is it a better race tyre and if so, does that give him an advantage over you guys earlier in the race?

    VB: Yes, the hard this weekend is obviously the same tyre as the medium last weekend. I think it’s a good race tyre. For sure, it can go longer than the compound everyone else is pretty much starting on in the top ten, so obviously there is a small deficit at the race start itself but then it’s a bit more robust, less overheating, more durable. I think everyone learned quite a lot about that tyre already last weekend. I think we have two new sets of hards.

    Q: Were you tempted to try and get through on the hard?

    VB: Not really, no. That was not in – at least, didn’t come into my ears in the discussions. I hope we made the right choice. Obviously we managed to get the front row, so that’s always good.

    Q: Lewis, what’s your take on the hard tyre, Max being on the hard tyre tomorrow?

    LH: I think it could be good. Gives a bit of a difference, it will make it more interesting. We’re not doing it this weekend, last weekend. It will be interesting.

    Q: (Christian Menath – Motorsport-magazin.com) Nico, do you think you have a realistic chance to keep Max behind you tomorrow?

    NH: Whilst I would like to say yes, obviously that’s going to be very tough and challenging given all the circumstances but you never know. I feel the car is decent and this weekend it’s just – since last week – finding my feet with the car but I’m much more connected with it. But I think it’s very tough to answer and obviously speculative but for me it’s not really about that, it’s about getting a good race in and hopefully taking some points home for the team.

    Q: Can we get your thoughts about Max being on the hard tyre at the start?

    NH: Yeah, I think the harder compounds, they have been performing pretty well here so we will definitely, I think… not a bad option for him, I feel. It could play out well for him at the end of the day if he doesn’t miss the train.

    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Lewis, you’ve spoken a few times in the past at the frustration when sometimes other drivers can learn from your tricks and your data etc and in more recent times you’ve spoken how that keeps driving you to continue, but it seems this is a case were obviously Valtteri’s been able to put the effort in, do his homework, learn from everything he did and you did last weekend and find more gains, whereas you’re probably closer to the – last weekend, obviously you were closer to the ultimate ceiling. Although Valtteri’s done a great job, is there a little bit of you that’s thinking it’s part of the… your advantage being eroded by that whole process and the fact that you can’t keep some of that to yourself in competition?

    LH: No. At the end of the day, we driver, we go out and we continue to push. I was in the sim too, although we weren’t particularly working on this race but no, I improved this weekend also so Valtteri just did a better job right at the end. I don’t feel any way about it. Still got a long race tomorrow and I will bring everything I can to try and beat this guy.

    Ends

  • I don’t think Racing Point was in breach, says Toto Wolf

    I don’t think Racing Point was in breach, says Toto Wolf

    TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Cyril ABITEBOUL (Renault), Toto WOLFF (Mercedes), Frédéric VASSEUR (Alfa Romeo)

    Q: We’re celebrating 70 years of Formula 1 this weekend so I’d like to start talking about that. Toto, perhaps we could start with you. What makes Formula 1 so fascinating for you?
    Toto WOLFF: There are many aspects. Formula 1 has grown over these 70 years to a truly global sport with a technical appeal, sporting appeal and then all the things that Bernie Ecclestone created around it. It is always a pool of content and narrative, there is controversy on track and off track. There is personalities that are competing against each other and it’s almost like, for me, it’s the racing side but also it is a big reality show around it that happens live and all this provides content and I think that’s an integral part of this sport.
     
    Cyril, can you describe the moment when you fell in love with Formula 1?
    Cyril ABITEBOUL: Still waiting for the love to come back! I love Formula 1 but Formula 1 doesn’t love me. No, I think there has been great moments in my childhood. It’s a recollection of probably when you have the underdogs winning – and I’m sure we will be talking later on about underdogs – but winning the Monaco Grand Prix where no-one was expecting Panis to win – when was it? It doesn’t mean… It’s this constant man and machine fight with the machine evolving, the man evolving and it’s a constant search for absolute performance and the drive for results, the drive for performance that is so fascinating. And, as Toto is saying, what’s happening, both on track and off track, even though if we prefer the focus to be a bit more on track to see a bit more of the man – specifically the drivers rather than the technical directors to fight. But yeah, I think there is fantastic moments to come also in the future for Formula 1. As the technology is evolving there is so much value that has been created around and in Formula 1 that I’m sure despite all the technological change, the change in society, Formula 1 will be able to keep up with all of those changes.
     
    Fred, coming to you. What does Formula 1 mean to you?
    Frédéric VASSEUR: I think it’s a very good mix between the human performance, show and technology. But on every single aspect of the sport we are pushing to the limit and I think that today, with all the discussion into the paddock, we are reaching perhaps the limit on some topics. But it’s another story. The combination of this is a very unique – and perhaps you have the same in MotoGP – but it’s one of the only shows where you can have this kind of combination.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
     
    Q: (DIETER RENCKEN – RACING LINES) Question for Toto. In the last three or four hours you’ve obviously read the verdict from the stewards that emphatically found Racing Point to be in breach and also found that your team had cooperated with them on the 6th of January this year as well as sharing CAD data at least 10 times. Could you explain how Mercedes got to a point of being so complicitly involved, please?
    TW: Well, we’re not involved Dieter, and we feel 100 per cent comfortable with our position. We’ve read the rules over and over again. The verdict that came out today is extremely complicated. It comes up with an interpretation that is new. New to all of us. We have provided certain data in 2019 which was totally within the rules. The 6th of January that you refer to has no material effect on any of the action because the whole thing was delivered much earlier and all the CAD drawings and designers were delivered much earlier. And Racing Point and ourselves are still of the opinion that is within the regulations. We are prepared to have a discussion on the philosophy – and this is what Cyril and I have discussed last week – whether we want cars to be very similar to other cars; whether we want the cooperation. I see some benefits. I think we have a team that is competing amongst the front running teams now. This was very much the aim. And on the other side, it provides a great source of income for us as a big team. We are able to monetise some of the technologies that otherwise couldn’t, wouldn’t be monetised, and I think it’s a win-win situation. I also get the opinion – and I respect the opinion – of the other side that cars shouldn’t look like some other cars. Now, none of the regulations prohibits that. This special situation arose because a non-listed part became a listed part, so while it was a non-listed part things were supplied. We can have that legal discussion endlessly – but at the end, to be honest, there is zero worry on our side. And when I say zero, I mean zero, that we were in any breach. Nor do I think that Racing Point was in breach. And I believe that if that would go to the ICA, it would be probably a complex matter, because it’s very technical – but I doubt there would be any outcome.
     
    Cyril, can we get your reaction please, to the outcome of the protest?
    CA: Well, I would agree that it’s a complex matter, it’s a matter that actually features two elements in it: there is a very specific and targeted discussion and protest in relation to one part of the car – brake ducts, front, rear – and in relation to that we are satisfied with the fact that the FIA and the stewards confirmed that some of these parts were in breach of the sporting regulation. It’s the sporting regulation but it really is a technical matter that ends up being placed in the sporting regulation – but it is a technical matter. So, we’re satisfied with that conclusion. I think that the question of sanction is open for debate, and as Toto was saying, for another matter, could be discussed endlessly. We will consider that matter, bearing in mind the advantage that was obviously obtained will keep on going for all the season and it’s a very material advantage. Just to put things in perspective, any teams will be spending 20 per cent of its ATR time, of its aerodynamic time, into developing those parts – so it’s not a small part. The second element that’s part of it, as Toto was mentioning, it’s a wide topic of copying a car. I think, again, in that respect, we need to recognise that what Racing Point has done, based on a car that has such an advantage, against anyone else on the grid, has been a shock in the system, has been a disruption, and I think there has been other disruptions in Formula 1 before, like there has been other disruptions in industries before. We need to see how we deal with it. I think yes, copying has been part of the story of Formula 1 but technology has evolved so much that it’s now possible to do things that were not possible to do before. So, our doctrines, our thinking, or regulatory framework needs to evolve with the technologies that allows you to do some stuff that was not possible before, with a level of accuracy that was not possible before. We’ve been pleased with the statement from Nikolas Tombazis this morning, in parallel to the decision of the stewards about his willingness to tackle that matter and to tackle it strongly, without waiting, for next year – but we need to understand exactly what’s behind that statement. That’s why again, we’ll take a little bit of time before deciding what’s our course of action from that point onward.
     
    Toto, have you got anything to add?
    TW: Yeah, I think I agree with Cyril that Racing Point, there performance has somehow disrupted the pecking order. I don’t know how much ATR is really used for brake ducts but I don’t think the brake ducts are the reason that they suddenly compete for the first six positions. I think it’s a splendid engineering team there that has extracted the most from the regulations. I think we can have the debate of ‘do we want this going forward?’ in terms of having copies of whole cars. In our belief there was nothing that was against the regulations because, as Cyril pointed out, the technology exists, and we saw last year on a few occasions, one of our main competitors with the 3D camera – that is quite a thing, you need to have it on your shoulders – scanning our cars. In the garage and outside of the garage. And when you know the technology – it wasn’t you!
     
    Q: Who was it?
    TW: I can’t say – but it’s pretty obviously who it was – scanning the whole car. And when you plug that into a computer, it gives you all the shapes. So this technology exists, there is nothing that prohibits that, everybody has spy photographers sitting on the roofs of the opposite building, zooming into the smallest detail on every car. If we don’t want this to happen then we need to close that avenue. I’m also, as Cyril says, happy with Nikolas coming out very strong this morning and saying ‘OK, maybe we need to adapt the rules, maybe we need to somehow prevent this Spy photography that has existed in Formula 1 since God knows when, and yeah, I don’t know how to do it but maybe they ban all photographers from every position where they can take a picture of a car but I have all the trust and confidence in the FIA and Nikolas to come with a regulation that is clear – because until now there wasn’t any.
     
    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Can I ask your opinion please on a ruling that declares that cars that were designed in non-conformity with the regulations, were run in non-conformity with the regulations, declares that they will continue to be in non-conformity with the regulations but allows that team to continue to use them for the rest of the year?
    CA: Frankly I don’t think that I can comment. I am obviously an interested party into that, so my answer would only be biased. It’s a position of the stewards. Obviously we can only refer to previous cases. Not going very far, ourselves we were found in breach of the sporting regulations last year and we’ve been immediately disqualified from the event and had to remove the contentious device. It was a sporting regulation, not a technical regulation so there is a question of consistency. That’s why, as I said, we are reserving our opposition. But, as I was saying previously, it’s a complex matter but we should not lose sight, despite the complexity, despite indeed the copying that is currently not addressed by the regulatory framework, that there is a black and white situation and judgement and decision on the legality of a part. That’s what we’re going to focus on in the next 22 hours we have left now.
     
    Toto, your thoughts.
    TW: I’m obviously not an integral part of this protest so I’m not sure I should really comment on the case, speaking for Racing Point. As far as I have read the verdict, I think that because the regulations are tremendously complicated, and there has never been a situation where a non-listed part because a listed part, that the FIA tried to somehow bridge the gap of finding a solution that was acceptable to all parties. Obviously for Racing Point, the decision that they strongly feel that they haven’t been in breach, and to come back to Andrew’s question, the breach, as it has been found out, the possible breach, was that they have used… they haven’t’ designed something – the rear brake ducts – from the beginning and it’s not their proprietary design. The breach has happened and they cannot unlearn what they already know. They have had these brake ducts on the car. They can also not change them. So the consequence would be, ‘do you want to disqualify a team from the whole championship?’ Because there is no way of taking those brake ducts away. As a matter of fact, if they were to design them again themselves, the same product would come out. On the same side, I think they were trying to balance the interest of Renault out, in saying ‘OK, you guys were right to point out to that topic.’ Asked by the FIA, it probably swung slightly towards Renault’s position and therefore the fine. But I think, if it would go to the ICA, because Racing Point or Renault decides to appeal, it will be a very long, very messy argument involving QCs and lawyers that will take a few months with the outcome unknown. The outcome unknown for Renault, the outcome unknown for Racing Point. I think the FIA tried to act sensibly here.
     
    Fred, can we get your thoughts on the verdict please?
    FV: Yeah, even if I’m not involved in the discussion but at the end I’m very surprised with the decision – but I remember that last year I was disqualified for half a millimetre of deflection and two-tenth on the start in Germany. Today, I read quickly the conclusion but it’s clear that if they have asked the FIA before it was banned – but in the end they are allowed to race. It’s just for me a bit un-understandable whether it’s banned or its not banned, they have to take a clear decision.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) I wanted to ask Cyril and Toto to clarify a couple of the comments they’ve made so far. To Cyril, does that mean you and your team are considering whether or not you appeal on the grounds that the sanctions don’t go far enough? And Toto, the comments that you made about not doing anything wrong with the transfer of parts, and obviously the transfer on January 6th not changing anything. The stewards seemed to agree with that – but why was there a transfer in 2020 when obviously the parts had become listed parts?
    CA: Yeah I can confirm we are considering whether or not to appeal. It happens that usually we have one hour to do that but in this particular case, given the complexity, we have 24 hours to do that and then 96 hours to confirm that appeal. So again, because it’s complex, we need to balance carefully the interests of the sport also, and the consistency of the sanction. We are looking whether or not we will appeal the sanction – not obviously on the decision.
     
    Toto?
    TW: I think Scott you seem to have read the verdict of the FIA, why the 6th of January is not material, which we completely agree, and that is the reason parts were supplied, in order to possibly fill a gap for testing. And that’s it. I don’t want to further elaborate on that, because the FIA has been very clear on that point.
     
    Q: (Peter Thomas – Car Magazine via email) We’re talking a lot about technical arrangements but what about the Concorde Agreement for next year. How close are you to signing that? 
    TW: The Concorde Agreement is a complex topic…
    FV: Everything is complex!
    CA: Another one!
    TW: This one is more complex! It obviously involved 10 teams, the FIA and FOM and we respect that everybody has their point of view and the only interest at heart… We from Mercedes made it very clear that we are happy with a more equitable split of the prize fund, the way success is rewarded and possible for everybody we agreed to. We are I would say the biggest victim in terms of prize fund loss in all of that. Ferrari has maintained an advantageous position. For Red Bull it balances out with Toro Rosso (sic). So it’s us that are hurt the most. I feel that Mercedes has contributed to the sport over the last years. We have part from being competitive on track, we have the driver that has clearly the most global appeal and we feel that whilst being in those negotiations we weren’t treated in the way we should have been. Therefore there are a bunch of open topics for us that are legal, commercial and sporting and in our point of view I don’t feel ready to sign a Concorde Agreement.
     
    Q: How far away are you? 
    TW: That depends on the other side. If you are willing to sit at a table, address the critical topics, discuss them, come to a compromise outcome, then I think it can go pretty fast. But I haven’t seen that approach.
     
    Q: Fred, can I get your thoughts?
    FV: I really appreciate the efforts made by all the parties, including the big teams, because the impact is huge for them. We have to understand also that this agreement will manage the sport for the next five or six years and that we have to pay attention to every single event, even if it’s details, but it’s details for the next five years. I would like to go through and take time to fix it and there are some points that we have to clarify. But it’s not a big matter and I think we did the biggest step in the last couple of months and we will find a solution quickly.
     
    Q: And Cyril?
    CA: Nothing much to add. Probably 95% of the terms are agreed but as Fred has mentioned there are a number of details for which we probably need to take a little bit of time, give the time to our lawyers, the lawyers representing the 10 teams, to come up with a solution. I think it’s a balancing exercise between, indeed, not compromising on certain aspects that are important, working on those details but also providing a bit of visibility and stability to a sport in a world that is shaking, that is facing a number of unknowns – that are obviously not connected to the Concorde – but I think that stability and a commitment from teams in order to market the sport for next year and the year after that as again the world is changing is also important and that also needs to be recognised in my opinion. But we are all still pushing for a collaborative process that involves all 10 teams rather than teams signing individually.
     
    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Toto, just on the financial side of Lewis and things. Will he have to take a pay cut?
    TW: This is a very direct question, which I don’t want to comment [upon]. Lewis has been a very important part of the team. We recognise his driving ability, his behaviour and culture within the team, we enjoy his global presence, we respect his opinion on the various topics that are close to his heart and if you look at the impact that he has on Formula 1, not only with him driving exceptionally, he was always worth the expectations in terms of salary, which we respect. Now, the world has changed a lot. We face difficult times and all that. And Lewis completely understands that and we will discuss what that means. I don’t want to lay out financial terms here because it’s truly a matter only between Lewis and I and as we have both expressed we will continue to race with each other – best driver and best team – and come to a solution in whatever amount of time.
     
    Q: Lewis said yesterday that he isn’t in a hurry to sign a contract. Are you in a hurry to get it signed?
    TW: I am of the same mindset as him, because there is such a fundamental base of trust between us we have… our relationship has evolved from a purely professional relationship to something more important and we dislike the discussions about money between us, because at the end we have the same objectives and this is the only area where we have a different approach… What was your question?
     
    Q: Are you in a hurry?
    TW: Ah, no, not at all. You have sat the two French clowns next to me and they keep interrupting and it’s distracting! So, not at all in a hurry. Same feeling as Lewis. We will eventually sit down somewhere, carve it out in a few hours, and go for pizza – like we did last time.
     
    Q: (Luke Smith – Autosport) Another contract question, this time about Valtteri Bottas. Valtteri said in pre-season that he wanted talks to be a lot smoother this year, to try and avoid any outside distractions or unnecessary talk and he seemed much happier yesterday about how talks went. How much happier were you with these talks and do you feel it was a quicker resolution all around?
    LW: With Valtteri it’s the same situation as Lewis. We have an absolute alignment. They are very realistic. There is not a manager on the table who tries to optimise beyond a possible breaking point. And Valtteri was always like that. We are both not optimisers to the end to make one party leave the table with a bad feeling, so the discussion about renewing the contract took five minutes.
     
    Q: Toto, why only the one-year extension?
    TW: In 2022 the regulations change. We love our current line-up, we respect the two, and we need to be open and flexible and see what happens beyond that. It doesn’t mean that we haven’t got any trust in either Valtteri or Lewis but it’s just important to have the option to look at the movements in the whole driver market.

    From Left: Claire Williams, Zak Brown and Mattia Binotto at the second FIA Friday conference. An FIA image

    TEAM REPRESENTATIVES – Claire WILLIAMS (Williams), Zak BROWN (McLaren), Mattia BINOTTO (Ferrari)
     
    Q: We are celebrating 70 years of Formula 1 this weekend, so I’d like to kick this session off discussing that? Mattia, what makes Formula 1 fascinating for you?
    Mattia BINOTTO: First, it’s a great sport, it’s something on which we are passionate. As Scuderia Ferrari, we are very much linked to F1. We have been there since the very start. We are the most successful team in terms of victories and championships, so I think in the end celebrating the 70th is somehow an honour and I’m very happy to be here.
     
    Q: Zak, what’s your first F1 memory?
    Zak BROWN: I can – the 1981 Long Beach Grand Prix. Williams won. I think it was a 1-2 if I’m not mistaken. I was about that big and went with my family and I remember meeting Eddie Cheever and the cars used to be displayed in this aquarium and all the fans had access to them. That was my first Formula 1 race and I’ve loved Formula 1 ever since.
     
    Q: Thanks. Claire, what does Formula 1 mean to you?
    Claire WILLIAMS: My God, where do I start? It means everything. Everybody knows Williams’ history in this sport. We’ve been racing for 44 years now and that’s an awfully long time. It’s a big part of our family – it is our family. We feel incredibly privileged to have raced in this sport for so long and we feel incredibly privileged that we have been so successful in this sport for so long. It’s the pinnacle isn’t it? We all know how privileged we are to work in it, to be surrounded by such incredibly bright people that design these extraordinary race cars. Every time I’m in the garage I look at them and think, “how do these people know how these things work?” It’s an extraordinary sport. The drivers are superheroes. The fact that they get in these cars every weekend and do what they do blows my mind every time I see them. Away from the track as well, everything that goes on behind the scenes. It consumes you. Formula 1 is all-consuming and it’s a wonderful sport to be a part of.
     
    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC) Can I ask all of you for your comments please on a verdict that came out that this morning that declared that the design process for a component to be in breach of regulations, declared that those components were run in breach of regulations, that they would continue to be in breach of regulations if they continue to be run, but allows them to be continued to be run for the rest of the season?
    MB: Obviously it’s a 14 pages verdict and I think we need to go through it very carefully, pay attention on what has been written. One thing that is important is that it has somehow been clarified that there has been a breach of regulation. I think that is the starting point. Obviously that is relative to the braking ducts but as you said there is an entire concept behind, which is about copying: are we allowed to copy or not, an entire concept. But the two things need to be split. But on the braking duct there is a breach of regulation, that is a fact and it has been clarified. Is the penalty sufficient or not? Again, I think we need to go through carefully the 14 pages. There are 24 hours eventually for an intention of appeal. I think as Ferrari we will be very careful in understanding and deciding what is the next step.
     
    Q: Zak?
    ZB: I’ll give you my initial reactions, because like Mattia we are still reviewing the 14-page document. My initial reactions are that Racing Point has been found guilty and I am concerned that they still have those… what were deemed illegal in Austria on the race car now. I think that is confusing for the fans, how something that is not legal in Austria is still on the car. Around this whole copying, obviously they claimed that they had coped the car via photography. It’s clear from reading the document that is BS and therefore you have to question anything else around that car. I think this is, potentially, the top of the iceberg, the starting point of looking at what’s happened here, because I don’t think it’s healthy for the sport. The constructor gets the penalty, but the drivers don’t. As teams we all compete with each other, but then all the drivers compete with each other and they’re able to keep their points when driver drivers are fighting for the Drivers’ Championship. So, I think it’s thrown up a lot more questions than answers and there’s new evidence that we’ve now been able to see and it’s something we are going to review quickly and understand the appeal process and whether that’s something that we potentially want to participate in.
     
    Q: And Claire?
    CW: I agree with everything that Mattia and Zak have said so far. I think for us at Williams we’ve always made of position around this kind of circumstance pretty clear. We’ve always been protective and proud of our status as an independent, true constructor that designs and manufactures our parts ourselves and then takes them to race track and races them. And then the results come thereafter. Obviously it is a very long document that the FIA have sent out and it is within the FIA’s jurisdiction power to determine what penalties are imposed for any breach of sporting or technical regulations and they have done that. Whether I agree personally, or the team, that the reprimand is appropriate or the sanctions that they put in place are appropriate I’ll bite my tongue on that. I think we all need a little bit of time to fully compute the outcome of it and to determine whether or to decide whether we take it any further forwards.
     
    Q: (Christian Nimmervoll – Motorsport.com) To all three: in the earlier part of the press conference, Toto explained how teams use spy photography and 3D cameras to copy parts from other teams, to have a detailed look at them. From your experience, is it possible, by the use of such methods, to copy a complete F1 car to the extent that Racing Point did with last year’s Mercedes?
    MB: I think it’s very difficult or likely impossible. You see that has never happened in 70 years of Formula 1, it means that it’s not an idea that someone simply thought about today but simply because we believe that it’s not possible to simply copy and understand the full concept behind the car. So there is something on which, again, because we sent a letter to the FIA, we really argued the entire process and entire concept. We believe the regulations are clear enough. We believe that there may be a breach of regulations in what is that process but probably at the moment, looking ahead and looking forward, it’s something on which we need to clarify. I don’t think that the verdict of today is sufficient because again it’s only relative, eventually, to the brake ducts but not the entire concept so as Zak said, I think it’s only the… it’s like an iceberg, at the moment it’s only the tip of the iceberg. There is much to discuss further. But back to your question, again, I think that if it has never happened so far, in all the history of F1, you know it means that somehow it’s almost impossible to do.
    ZB: I agree with what Mattia has said. If it was that easy it would have been done before. The sport’s been around a long time. The engineers and designers do take inspiration, if you like, from the things they say on the car, to be able to replicate a car as they’ve done. Everything that I’ve been told by people who are much smarter than me on this topic say there’s no way you do it with a degree of accuracy that they can so I think the brake ducts and the… revealing that they had information beyond photography just begs and question of what else wasn’t done by photography?
    CW: I’m not sure I can add a whole lot more. I certainly don’t believe that you can reverse engineer a car or a complicated element which a brake duct is from a photo, so no, I would disagree. As Mattia and Zak have both said, if you could, then everyone would have been doing it and we would have had a much closer field than we do now, which at times has been separated by four seconds, so no, I don’t believe that this is the case.
     
    Q: (Christian Menath – Motorsport-magazin.com) I understand that you’re a bit confused at the penalty that Racing Point received for the break of regulations, but don’t you think in the end that it’s a wise decision, because what else could you do? If you ban the brake ducts, you probably ban Racing Point from racing the whole year. If you don’t penalise them, you open the door for further copying, so don’t you think that in the end it was a wise decision for Formula 1, in the interests of the sport and Formula 1 should just accept it and move on from now and verify a few points?
    CW: Again, it’s well above my pay grade to tell the FIA what they should have done or shouldn’t have done. As I said earlier, I think the one confusing element is this discrepancy between the sporting and technical in that you can run what has effectively been deemed an illegal part, that shouldn’t have been put on a race car because it was, in effect, copied from another team, to a degree. And to me, that isn’t right. I think, as Zak said, it’s confusing for the fans to have that, to see now that a car that has been in breach of regulations, to still be allowed to run those parts doesn’t make a whole lot of sense to me anyway. But I also think that there are wider implications on this. If the car is in breach but still allowed to race with those parts and not to have to… you know, whenever we take our car and the FIA come to us and say that part’s not quite right, you’ve got two races or whatever to rectify it, then that should be the case in the circumstances, that the very fact they are allowed to continue to race has much broader implications on teams further down the grid, when it comes to prize fund money, when it comes to the order of the championship, but I’m not sure that I agree with that.
    ZB: Yeah, I think a) it still early days in reviewing the document. I’ve got a lot of confidence. The FIA is looking into this matter. Nikolas Tombazis made a statement earlier that they’re going to continue to look into this and modify some rules in ’21 and beyond. I think ten very intelligent teams that are all pushing the envelope and I think there’s a difference between what they’ve been found guilty of in pushing the envelope in a sporting design, interpretation of rules way. And I think, as I mentioned earlier, the drivers, the constructors, the sponsors, the fans… I don’t think running the car with the part that has been deemed illegal… I just don’t see how that makes sense, I don’t see how that’s fair for the sport and as I said, I think the FIA will look into it further because we now know the brake ducts are illegal but how do we know the balance of the car isn’t?
     
    Q: Zak, it’s probably worth pointing out for everybody, the brake ducts themselves aren’t illegal; it’s the process, not the part, isn’t it?
    ZB: Correct. It’s pretty confusing for the fans out there. I understand the technicality behind that. When you go through technical inspection something has to be a certain weight, size, dimension and it passes that test but how it actually arrived on the car has been deemed illegal, so I think that needs to be clarified and cleaned up for the future, that you can breach the sporting regulation but be clear in the technical regulation and then it continues on because if you read the documentation, there were docked because of the unfair competitive advantage that they had in Austria. But aren’t they still carrying that unfair advantage this weekend? So, as I said, it’s confusing and that’s why it needs to be cleared up.
    MB: I don’t think there is much to add to what has been said. As I said initially, the most important point that has at least been clarified is that there has been a breach of regulation and now is the penalty and the verdict the right one? I think we’ve got 24 hours to go through the document and understand it, so I would not judge it right now. That’s all.
     
    Q: (Jonathan McEvoy – Daily Mail) Zak, what’s your feeling about the man who runs Mercedes also being a shareholder – in the light of today’s events – in Aston Martin? Do you think that’s a little bit smelly or are you at ease with that?
    ZB: I think the sport has had, over the years, owners that have had multiple relationships. Red Bull owns two racing teams. Some sports, you’re not allowed to have ownership that crosses over into other sports. I’m quite relaxed that the sport… you know, some people who promote tracks but also own teams in it, so I think the sport has navigated that and it just needs to continue to do so.
     
    Q: While we’re talking about finances in a loose sense, can I ask you three please about the Concorde Agreement, because Toto Wolff earlier told us that he was still some way off signing the new agreement? Where are you guys at, please?
    MB: I think we already mentioned it a couple of weeks ago. I think as Scuderia Ferrari we are ready to sign. I think the deadline of the 12th of August is coming pretty soon. There is still very little (elements of) wording that need to be addressed – it’s only a legal matter – but on all the principles, we are somehow happy. It’s a long time that we discussing with FOM so it’s not here on the last day that now we are putting a long discussion we’ve had so I think we have a great understanding with Chase. I think that the proposal is certainly helping the small teams, which is important. As Ferrari, I think our role has been recognised which for us is quite important and overall, as I said, we are ready to sign so it’s clearly waiting for it and quite excited.
     
    Q: Zak, are you ready to sign?
    ZB: Yeah, McLaren’s in the same position as Ferrari. We’ve all been negotiating this for some time. We’re ready to sign. We’ll be able to hit the August 12 deadline. Some very small dotting the i’s, crossing the T’s but all the fundamentals are there and I’m really excited for the future of Formula 1. I think the new Concorde Agreement – I’m not even sure we’re calling it the Concorde – but to do that by deed pole, is going to bring a much healthier sport, more competitive sport and the biggest winners are going to be the fans and if we have a lot of happy fans around the world then that means a lot of happy promoters and happy sponsors and very healthy competitive racing teams.
     
    Q: Claire?
    CW: Yes, you’ve got the triple, you’ve got the three most historic teams in Formula 1 ready to sign the Concorde Agreement. Williams are in a position to do so as Mattia is. We’ve got some minor legal issues to resolve but we would be ready to sign it to meet the deadline. As Zak said, I think it’s fantastic for the sport, we can move forwards. We’ve got some great new regulations coming online for 2021 which is certainly going to level the playing field and make this sport… or give it a much brighter future which we’re really excited about.
     
    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Question to Claire to start off with, it’s all to do with the Concorde Agreement. Claire you said something about the Racing Point situation affecting the prize money and I would imagine here you were talking about the fact that a team could finish higher up the order than it normally would and therefore get more money. But is it not also true that in order to qualify for any prize money whatsoever, a team has to be a constructor and that is defined – and I’m reading from the Concorde – as a person who designs the listed parts as defined below for its cars, and also that it should only use those listed parts on its own cars. So could a case not be made that in terms of the verdict, that maybe the team against which the verdict went may not qualify for prize money at all this year?
    And then the other question is to all three: could you see yourselves signing the Concorde without, say, Mercedes who seem to be trying to delay the process?
    CW: If I understand Dieter’s question correctly, about prize fund money, I think, you do qualify, obviously, as a constructor for your prize fund money and it is important that we are quoting the definition of being a constructor. I don’t want to say a whole lot about it but I think it’s only right that teams should operate within the regulations that are laid out, they’re there for a very particular reason and it would put other teams at a disadvantage, teams like ours which rely heavily on the prize fund money, when we’re operating within the regulations, we feel very fairly or very rightly that the playing field should be fair for everybody and should be operating within those regulations in order to qualify for their prize fund.
     
    Q: And Claire, would you be happy to sign the Concorde Agreement without Mercedes?
    CW: As I said, Williams are ready to sign the Concorde Agreement and that’s our decision and we will be ready to do so next week.
     
    Q: Zak?
    ZB: Yeah, we’re ready to sign the Concorde. I believe that all ten teams that compete in Formula 1 today will be on the grid in ’21 so I’m not too worried about it, but McLaren’s committed to Formula 1 and I’m sure everyone else will come along whether they all sign at the same time or it’s staggered. I’m confident you’ll see all these ten teams on the grid next year.
     
    Q: Mattia?
    MB: As I said, we are ready to sign so I think we will go for it. On the other side, I don’t know what will be Mercedes position; that’s up to them to decide. I hope they will sign, I think it will be great to have Mercedes with us next year and the followings. I think we are the only ones who have been there since the very start of Formula One, 70 years, so it’s true as well that some things sometimes are there and cannot be there, so at the end, I think Ferrari will be there, they have always been part of the history. We’ll be there in the future, we are fully committed and we will certainly sign.
     
    Q: (Sandor Meszaros – Autosport es Formula Magazine) I think it’s fair to say that Andreas Seidl has contributed a lot to the re-vitalisation to McLaren since he joined last year. Would you be so kind as to summarise how delighted you are with him about his contribution, working methods and what’s he like as a team principal?
    ZB: I’m extremely happy with Andreas. I’m not going to get up and dance! He’s done an outstanding job. I’ve known Andreas for some time, before he joined us in Formula 1. He’s exactly what we needed to provide leadership direction to our racing team. Of course, the racing team is made up for a bunch of great men and women so it’s not any one person that makes the car fast. The team enjoys working with him, he’s a no nonsense type of individual. We have a great relationship. I know what my role is, he knows what his role is and together I think we’re doing a good job getting the team back towards the front of field but we still have a long ways to go but very happy, extremely happy with the work that Andreas is doing.
     
    Q: Mattia, the performance development division has allowed you to step back from the technical department; do you do that with a heavy heart after 25 years at Ferrari in the technical team and how hard is it going to be to resist getting involved? 
    MB: As you said, 25 years. Since the very start, I grow up, different roles. I think each time you jump into a new role, you need somehow to organise yourself to work so when last year I moved into the team principal role, we had to re-organise ourselves. I was technical director, I don’t think you change that in one day. It took some time but more than a year after, I can say that at least today we’ve got a technical department which is well organised with clear responsibilities, senior people leading it, now full responsibility but all the tools and my support to do it. I think having technical feedback, certainly, I will always be very curious and interested and certainly I will share with them the progress and the direction.

  • Tyres suffered extremely long use: Pirelli

    Tyres suffered extremely long use: Pirelli

    Milan, August 4, 2020 – Pirelli has concluded its initial analysis on a number of tyres that were run at the British Grand Prix last weekend. This allowed to identify the cause of the failures followed by deflations that affected both Mercedes and the McLaren of Carlos Sainz.

    The key reason is down to a set of individual race circumstances that led to an extremely long use of the second set of tyres. The second safety car period prompted nearly all the teams to anticipate their planned pit stop and so carry out a particularly long final stint: around 40 laps, which is more than three-quarters the total race length on one of the most demanding tracks of the calendar.

    Combined with the notably increased pace of the 2020 Formula 1 cars (pole position was 1.2 seconds faster compared to 2019) this made the final laps of the British Grand Prix especially tough, as a consequence of the biggest forces ever seen on tyres generated by the fastest Formula 1 cars in history.

    The overall result was the most challenging operating conditions for tyres. These led to the front-left tyre (which is well-known for working hardest at Silverstone) being placed under maximum stress after a very high number of laps, with the resulting high wear meaning that it was less protected from the extreme forces in play.

    For the second race at Silverstone this weekend, Pirelli confirms the nominated compounds: C2, C3, and C4, being one step softer than those seen at the last GP.

    Also the usage prescription will be reviewed, increasing the minimum tyre pressures to reduce the stress on the construction.

  • Unexpected tyre deflations bring in drama to British GP race

    Unexpected tyre deflations bring in drama to British GP race

    By Malhaar Khaladkar*

    New Delhi, 3 August 2020: Defending champion Lewis Hamilton limped home to a record 7th British GP victory on three tyres, in the dramatic last few laps. A controlled, dominant victory and 1-2 finish for Hamilton and Mercedes was not on the cards as Valtteri Bottas finished out of points after suffering a similar issue, albeit two laps earlier, and Hamilton scraped through to take the win from the charging Bull of Max Verstappen.

    Mercedes have taken pole position at this track since 2013, and this year is no exception. Hamilton started on pole with Bottas lining up second. Behind them were the duo of Verstappen and Leclerc. McLarens started in P5 and P7, Lando Norris out-qualified Carlos Sainz and Lance Stroll was sandwiched between them in P6. Renault lined up in P8 & P9. Sebastian Vettel’s miserable weekend continued as he could only manage P10 on the starting grid. Gasly and sister teammate Albon started alongside. F1 returnee Nico Hulkenberg was due to line-up P13 on the grid but didn’t start the race due to drivetrain issues was held up in the garage. George Russel had a 5-place grid penalty for infringement of yellow flags in qualifying starting last, two places behind his teammate. Haas and Alfa Romeo had a miserable qualifying, unable to make it out of Q1.

    The predicted and fastest strategy was a one-stop from either the medium or the soft onto the hard tyre to the end of the race. Pirelli predicted the hard tyre could do about 40 laps.

    Graphic courtesy Pirelli

    By the end of Lap 1, Safety Car was out as Alex Albon collided with Kevin Magnussen, subsequently, the latter went into the barrier. Safety Car came in on Lap 5 as Normal running resumed. Safety Car was leading the field again on Lap 12 as Daniil Kvyat lost control of his car entering Maggots, the Turn 10. It was suggested according to Alpha Tauri team principal Franz Tost, that the crash happened due to a rear right tyre puncture.

    The whole field, barring Romain Grosjean and Alex Albon pitted for hard tyres on Laps 12 and 13 to go till the end. This resulted in Grosjean running in P5 ahead of the likes of McLaren, Renault and the sole Racing Point of Lance Stroll but the gamble failed to yield the expected result. Safety Car came in at the end of Lap 18. Till this point, only half a dozen laps of normal racing had taken place.

    As racing got underway Norris made his way past Ricciardo as the McLaren’s overtook Grosjean and running P5 and P6 by Lap 27. Ricciardo followed suit on Lap 36. Grosjean hit the cliff as he pitted on Lap 38 dropping him to P15. Meanwhile, Albon was slapped with a 5-second time penalty for his altercation with Magnussen. He served it when he made a second pitstop on Lap 31. At the front it was relatively smooth sailing for the top 4. Hamilton maintained a 2-second lead over his teammate Bottas while Verstappen was in no-man”s land. Charles Leclerc was 4-seconds ahead of future teammate Sainz.

    Stroll started losing pace as he was overtaken by Ocon and eventually Gasly. With that Racing Point’s promising pace faded away in the later stages of the race. Ultimately, Stroll finished in P9. Gasly rubbed salt on the wounds of Vettel as he overtook him on Lap 39, outside of Stowe (Turn 15). Vettel’s weekend plummetted further…

    Bottas pits in 2020 British Grand Prix, Sunday- Steve Etherington

    Ten laps to the end, Bottas informed the team of vibrations in his left front tyre. He dropped significantly from the back of his teammate. Sainz had similar issues. Meanwhile, Raikkonen went off track and damaged half of his front wing, leaving debris on track.

    It all kicked off on Lap 49 as Bottas’ left front tyre deflated while going through Turn 3. He managed to get back to the pits but lost time and track position due to running on three tyres. Eventually, he finished P11. Thus with P2 assured, Verstappen pitted for soft tyres on Lap 50 to set the Fastest Lap, for that extra point. Sainz too had his left front tyre lose its shape on the penultimate lap, ultimately finishing P13. Hamilton was instructed by his team to back off to preserve tyre integrity. The drama was not finished yet, as Hamilton’s front left tyre deflated on the old start/finish straight. With only half a lap to go, and Verstappen 30 seconds behind and closing fast, Hamilton limped home to a record his 7th British GP victory. Verstappen finished 5.856s behind and Leclerc got an unexpected podium. Daniel Ricciardo finished P4 and Esteban Ocon P6, earning Renault their best result of the season. Lando Norris finished P5. Albon recovered to P8. Alfa Romeo and Williams were unable to score points but Russell finished an encouraging P12.

    Silverstone further cemented the advantage of the Mercedes as they qualified over a second to the nearest car. They are also a class apart as far as race pace is concerned. Red Bull were trying a lot of new pieces on the car to improve the balance. Both drivers commented about the improved race pace compared to leaders Mercedes. Ferrari had a radical approach to this GP as they stripped the car off, of downforce, for gains in straight-line speed, their weakness, and better qualifying performance. It meant they would struggle in the race. Less downforce means less energy going through tyres and difficulty in their warm-up. They were quite off the pace to Mercedes and Red Bull but had enough race pace to hold off the McLaren, in part helped by Grosjean being a mobile chicane behind Leclerc.

    One more disaplpointing week-end for Sebastian Vettel. A Ferrari image

    Renault has weaker qualifying pace and stronger race pace compared to rivals McLaren who are in a vice versa situation. McLaren had brought new bargeboards to this race for airflow management around the sidepods. They were faster than Racing Point in one-lap but seemed to lose out in the race to Renault.

    Racing Point were predicted to be second quickest car before the start of the weekend, owing to a similar design concept to Mercedes. But they underperformed again, in qualifying and lost out in race pace to McLaren, Renault and even Alpha Tauri. Williams showed improved race pace while both Ferrari customers, Haas and Alfa Romeo, struggled through the weekend.

    The left-front tyre deflations were unexpected and none of the three cars showed immediate signs apart from vibrations. Pirelli launched an investigation and are still analysing the cause. The left-front tyre is frequently loaded due to a majority of high-speed corners being right-hand turns on this circuit. Abbey (T1), Copse (T9), Stowe (T15) and Club (T18). The left-front tyre had started delaminating on both Mercedes cars. Another reason for the tyres deflating could be due to the debris left on track by Raikkonen’s front wing.

    It is surprising that as soon as Bottas suffered the puncture and Verstappen pitted, Mercedes left Hamilton out. Hamilton also commented about pitting on the last lap as they had over a pit stops gap to Verstappen. In hindsight, if Verstappen had not pitted he would have overtaken Hamilton and won. Red Bull later justified their decision to pit, by confirming that they had “no guarantee Verstappen would have got till the end”. The hard tyre that came off of Verstappen’s car had deep grooves and quite a lot of lacerations. It was safer to pit and cement P2 rather than lose everything.

    The Emirates Formula 1 – 70th Anniversary Grand Prix 2020, the fifth round will be at the same track in Silverstone next Sunday.

    *Malhaar Khaladkar is an intern with INDIAinF1 and will be writing on F1 and technical aspects of the sport. The passionate student is also a keen student of the sport. This is his second article and you can read the first article here. We invite your comments below.

  • My heart nearly stopped, says Hamilton

    My heart nearly stopped, says Hamilton

    DRIVERS
    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
    3 – Charles LECLERC (Ferrari)
     
    TRACK INTERVIEWS
    (Conducted by David Coulthard) 
     
    Q: Max you could have come so close to winning this grand prix, as it turns out, with hindsight, if you hadn’t come in for that pit stop for new tyres. But you must be still very satisfied with second place? 
    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it’s lucky and unlucky. I think anyway Mercedes in the race were too quick. The tyres at one point didn’t look great, with 10 laps to go, so I was already on the radio saying “guys, you know, the right front doesn’t look very pretty. Then of course Valtteri got a puncture so I came on the radio and said I was going to back it out and then they boxed me to go for the fastest lap and then unfortunately Lewis got a puncture himself. But I’m very happy with second, it’s a very good result for us again.
     
    Q: Otherwise, it was a fairly lonely race. We didn’t see much of you when you’re not racing wheel-to-wheel. Any other notable points from the race?
    MV: No, I told my engineer to drink. Stay hydrated, it’s very important around here. It was pretty lonely, I was just trying to manage my pace and trying to look after the tyres.
     
    Q: Charles, that’s as good as you could hope for today. The racing gods shone on you. You didn’t have the tyre issues your main rivals of course Mercedes had. Both had delaminations at the end there.
    Charles LECLERC: Yeah, as soon as I heard that Valtteri had a tyre problem then I slowed down quite a lot but then I think Carlos had it a lap later and the Lewis a lap later. So on that we have been lucky but apart from that looking at us I think we have the done the best we could have done today. I’m very happy the way I managed the tyres from the beginning to the end, very happy with the balance of the car. Yes, the performance of the car is not where we want it to be, but today we took every opportunity and I’m very happy with today.
     
    Q: We spoke before about next week’s tyre choices, which are softer again. Do you think that will be under review given what has happened today?
    CL: I don’t know what are the causes, whether there was debris on the track or whatsoever, but I think Lewis cut the corner at another place on the track than Valtteri, so yeah it’s probably to review. But I can’t say. The Pirelli guys will investigate that.
     
    Q: Finally, the winning machine that is Lewis Hamilton. I’ve heard rumour that they are going to rename Silverstone to Hamitonstone. Man, you made it difficult there for yourself. Our hearts were in our mouths when we first Valtteri have that delamination and then yourself. Talk us through that last lap?
    Lewis HAMILTON: Up until that last lap everything was relatively smooth sailing. They tyres felt great. Valtteri was really pushing incredibly hard. I was doing some management of that tyre; he looked like he wasn’t doing any. When I heard that his tyre went I was just looking at mine and everything seemed fine and the car was turning no problem, so I was thinking “maybe it’s OK”. Anyways, those last few laps I started to back off and then just down the straight it just deflated. I just noticed the shape just shift a little bit. And that was definitely a heart-in-the-mouth kind of feeling because I wasn’t quite sure if it had gone down until I hit the brakes and you could see that the tyre was falling off the rim. And then just driving it, trying to keep the speed up, because sometimes it will come off and brake the wing and all these different things and oh, my God, I was just praying to try to get it round and not be too slow. I nearly didn’t get it round the last two corners. But thank God we did. I owe it to the team. I think ultimately maybe we should have stopped towards the end when we saw the delaminations.
     
    Q: I guess it was Red Bull keeping you honest. There wasn’t a big enough of a gap there for you to make that decision. But you prayed and the racing gods listened you. Talk us through any communication you had on that final lap you had with your engineers, trying to understand where Max was?
    LH: You’d be really surprised, well you may or not be surprised, but I was really chilled for some reason at the end. Bonno was giving me the information about the gap, I think it was 30 seconds at one stage, and it was coming down quite quickly, and in my mind I was thinking “how far is it to the end of the lap”. But the car seemed to turn OK through Maggotts and Becketts thankfully. I got to 15 and that’s where it really was a bit of a struggle and I could hear the gap coming down from 19 to 10 and I remember giving it full gas from 15 to 16 and the thing wasn’t stopping, so I got to the corner with a lot of understeer and then I heard him go, nine, eight, seven and I was like “just get back on the power and try to get the thing to turn”. I’ve definitely never experience anything like that on a last lap and my heart definitely probably nearly stopped. I think that’s probably how cool it was because my heart nearly stopped.
     
    PRESS CONFERENCE
     
    Q: Lewis many congratulations. What a weekend! You’ve won at Silverstone many times but never before have you crossed the line on three wheels. Can you just sum it all up for us?
    LH: Well, yeah, just as the minutes go by I feel worse and worse as I realise what just happened. I think in the heat of the moment you have the adrenalin going and I guess that fight for survival instinct comes out. I was able to stay calm and really measured and try to bring the car home but of course, I’m just sitting here thinking of all the things that could have happened, if the tyre gave up in a high-speed corner or something it would have been a much different picture. So I feel incredibly grateful that it didn’t and we just managed, but I heard that Max was catching at crazy speed. I think I got onto Hangar Straight and I could hear I think “you’re at 19 seconds” at that point and I was trying to pick up the speed down that straight but the wheel was obviously making a real mess and I was thinking “jeez, how am I going to get through these last few corners without losing too much time”. But fortunately I got round 15 and then once I got to the last two corners that was really when it was a disaster. I could hear “seven, six, five…” and I just managed to keep it together. As I said, I’m just really grateful. My team did a fantastic job through the weekend but I think we have to look into
     Why we had this tyre problem. I know a few people did but maybe it was debris or something like that or maybe the tyre was just worn out.
     
    Q: How much warning did you get?
    LH: None. I was constantly looking at the tyre. It was quite smooth and was working really well through Turn 3, the thing was turning fine. So I was trying to gauge just how worn it was but I didn’t have any feeling of wear, it being particularly worn. And then it was just down the straight the thing, you could feel the RPM as I was full speed. The RPM drops as you start getting extra friction from the tyre as it’s not roiling at the same speed and you feel the balance shift to the left. So, it was a bit of panic for a second and I nearly didn’t make it round Turn 7 but after that I managed to make it through all the corners.
    Q: Max, coming to you. I don’t want to labour the point at all, but had you not pitted at the end, that win might have been yours. Can you talk us through how much discussion there was on the radio about whether or not to pit and go for fastest lap?
    MV: Well, it’s away easy to say afterwards but I think we were also lucky today that Valtteri had a puncture, so we gained a position, so I’m actually not disappointed at all, or anything. Once Valtteri had that puncture, OK, it’s an easy P2. So we just pitted for new tyres to make sure because I was also not sure what was going on with my tyres because normally, when you see other cars having punctures and you have pitted on the same lap you are like, well, might happen to you as well. So, you don’t want to have that problem, so we pitted just to be sure. We go out, of course with the Soft tyres and then Lewis has his puncture but also that’s unlucky. It could have been lucky for me but unlucky for Lewis, so at the end it is what it is and I’m very happy with second.
     
    Q: And your race pace was closer to Mercedes today. Are you pleased wiwth the progress you’ve made?
    MV: Yeah. It was a pretty boring race for me. At one point I didn’t see a car in front or behind, so I reminded my engineer to hydrate – to drink – I had nothing else to do. So, yeah, we still need to improve but yeah. It is what it is. We try to find things to do while driving, just keep enjoying it.
     
    Q: Charles, coming to you. You finished third here last year. If you were to compare the two races: 2019, 2020, do you get more satisfaction from this third place?
    CL: Yeah. It’s definitely a lot more unexpected for this year. That’s for sure. We know we’ve been lucky to get on the podium but apart from that I’m pretty satisfied with the way we’ve been working throughout the weekend. For sure we don’t want to be fighting for fourth place for so long but at the moment that’s what the car is capable of. I think we extracted absolutely everything out of the strategy and the car. Very happy and a very unexpected podium but probably more satisfied than last year for the third place, yes.
     
    Q: And in terms of your own performance, is this on a parallel with what you did in Austria?
    CL: Yes, I’m very happy with it, especially with the tyre management. It was easy. We had a very aggressive downforce level coming here, so we had quite a lot of speed in the straights but very difficult around the corners. We were quite worried for the race pace, especially for the tyre degradation – but we managed to do quite a good job on that.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question for Lewis. How in control were you and Valtteri throughout the majority of the race. It seemed to be fairly straightforward right up until the drama at the end. Was that maximum attack or were you holding back. And at the same time, was the team giving you any warnings to manage the tyres, to potentially avoid what happened at the end?
    LH: Yeah, we were pretty flat-chat to be honest. Valtteri was obviously chasing and keeping the gap. It was between 1.2-2.0 seconds for a good period and then all of a sudden he started to fall away, so I managed to keep good pace and he started to drop away. I think it got to seven seconds at one stage. So, I’m not really sure what… I’m sure he just killed that left-front tyre, I’m assuming, and it started to drop off for him. For me, the car was feeling fine, so I kind of kept up the decent pace. To see the Red Bulls as close as they were in terms of pace, I think that’s real. And it wasn’t the case of us turning down or anything like that, or backing off. So, we can have a close race potentially next race maybe.
     
    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Lewis, can you talk us through the process when you pitted. I think the Safety Car was the second everyone came to the pits which was a bit unscheduled. Did you think you could make it to the end with these tyres – and what did you talk about in the briefings before the race? How long the Hard tyre would last.
    LH: Normally, this tyre usually has a long life expectancy. They said we could do almost a whole race distance with it but whether or not that’s at the pace we were going. Valtteri was obviously pushing at a serious pace for which I had to respond to, so it was quite difficult to manage it. I think they had spoken of a two-stopper that was generally a slower option for us. In hindsight, probably we would have stopped as soon as we saw Valtteri’s tyre go, we would have stopped – especially as Max had done so – as we should have come out just ahead and still had the position. But yeah, hindsight is always a great thing, as Max had said so.
     
    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Question to Max. Although there was no way to foresee what happened with Lewis’ puncture, do you think in future there might be an argument for, if you’re close enough to maybe pick up the pieces if they the lead car does have a problem in the last few laps to perhaps be more conservative in terms of not taking that fastest lap point and staying out, just on the off-chance? Because this is rare – but it does happen every now and again, and the gain could be potentially massive when you’ve got a car that isn’t good enough to beat Mercedes on merit?
    MV: Yeah – but I could also pick up a puncture, you know, and I could lose a lot more. That’s the thing, it’s always so easy to say afterwards that we should have just continued – but who would have said that Lewis would have got a puncture? How often does this happen? Normally, never. So, I don’t regret anything. I think we made the right decision. Easy to comment afterwards. You don’t know at the time – and we felt that was the right decision, and I still think it is the right decision. It is what it is. Normally, you don’t really get punctures. Yeah. They are also the deserved winners. It’s not like I’m sitting here upset or disappointed. I’m actually very happy to be second. Normally it would have been third, so…
     
    Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) Question to Lewis. Just wondered if you’ve ever won or finished a race before on three tyres. Second question. Much improved anti-racism message at the start. Just wanted to get your take on that. Were you happy with the efforts this time around?
    LH: I don’t think I’ve won a race on three wheels, no. There was a race when I was in Formula Renault, at Croft, where the rear suspension, there’s two rear springs and one had snapped off and so I remember driving through the corners, through the left-handers with one wheel in the air, and through the right-handers it was fine, something like that. So that was a race where I was in the lead and I managed to still win the race – just. I don’t even know how I managed to make that one work. So, that was a little bit similar to today but of course it was more extreme today and the cost was obviously a lot higher. In terms of the start, I’ve been really, really happy with what the organisers have done, Formula 1 have really put in the time. I think last week I had really great Zoom calls with Chase and Ross and then another one with Ellie [Norman] to go through the different… y’know, what we could do better together and how we could really solidify our approach and our unity together. I don’t know how it looked on TV but it felt like it was much, much better organised and it didn’t really take a lot for us to have that extra ten minutes. I think what’s really important is that we continue to keep that up because ultimately we have this incredible platform. There’s so many people watching and every single one of us needs to be reminded every now and then of how serious things can be, so that people are aware. And obviously more important is that we follow through, or they follow through particularly on the promises that they said before the first race, in terms of how they’re going to try to attack the issue within our industry. So, that will be an ongoing discussion but I feel really confident and to see, as I said, everyone’s view and movement towards it.
     
    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) A question to Charles. It appears that Ferrari have leaned-off the downforce a little bit this weekend to get the straight line speed for qualifying. How difficult did that make the car to drive in qualifying trim, in terms of it moving around a lot, and how worried were you about the tyre performance in the race, and happy that the race panned out the way it did, when you could have ended-up dropping back if you struggled on the tyres?
    CL: For qualifying, I don’t think we were too worried. I think we were pretty confident that was the right choice but we were pretty worried for the race. It wasn’t easy today, especially during the Safety Car and for the restart after the Safety Car I’ve been struggling massively. I couldn’t put any temperatures in the tyres for many laps, and the guys behind were actually pretty close. Romain was on an used Medium and was putting me under a lot of pressure. So that was the tricky part of the race – but once the tyres were in temperature it wasn’t actually that tricky. I expected worse. We’ve done quite a good job, I think, with the set-up of the car and with the balance of the car. That was very nice to drive today.
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to Lewis. Next weekend obviously we’re back here at Silverstone but the tyres are going to be a step softer. So, given what happened in the last few laps, how concerned are you about that now? And to Max, if I may on the same subject, does this give you a chance to beat Mercedes next weekend?
    LH: One step softer is going to be a challenge for us all and no doubt will move us all to at least a two-stop. And obviously our cars are a lot quicker this year, we’re using the same tyres as last year, they weren’t able to develop a better tyre to deal with the forces for this season, so it’s going to be a serious challenge I think, next week – but everyone’s in the same boat and naturally from today we’ll get a much better understanding of the tyre life and what we can do to be better prepared next week for the softer set that they bring.
     
    MV: Yeah, I think everybody will probably end up doing a two-stop you know? I don’t think it will change a lot. Also, for me, I don’t think there will be a lot of changes to the way I will be driving. So I’ll probably be counting some sheep next to the track.
     
    Do you expect to be closer to Mercedes next weekend?
    MV: Normally not. It’s so big, c’mon! Maybe you find a tenth, or one-and-a-half, OK and we we are a bit closer – but it’s not close enough. I’m trying but it’s not possible at the moment. You have to be realistic. I mean you can dream, and you can hope but I think it’s way more important to be realistic because that’s how you move forward. If you keep dreaming about those chances, it’s not going to happen. We just have to keep working.
     
    Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) Question to Max and Charles. The man in the middle there now has a 30-point lead in the Drivers’ Championship after only four races. Simple question: can anyone stop him from winning the title this year. I know it’s early days – but can anyone stop him?
    MV: No.
    CL: The question is ‘can anybody stop Lewis?’ No. I think the guy that has some chances is Valtteri – but that’s it.
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) A question for Charles. It looked like once you’d got through that tyre warm-up issue after the restart, it looked like you were in control, obviously a bit isolated behind Max but, without Grosjean being behind you at that restart, do you think you would have been able to stay ahead of the McLarens, or was that what gave you that much of a gap to stay ahead?
    CL: I think we were pretty lucky having the Haas in between the McLaren and myself. Whether I would have been able to keep them behind or not, I don’t know but it would have definitely been quite a lot more difficult.
     
    Q: (Chris Medland – Racer) Question to Lewis. Just off the back of what Max and Charles were both asked. They say one no-one can stop you winning the title this year. How difficult from your perspective where you’ve got a comfortable lead already – you can afford a DNF and you’ll stay in the Championship lead – and this car does look so strong it is hard to see anyone other than Valtteri being a threat to you.
    LH: Honestly, look, I’m a through and through racer at heart. I’ve grown up, particularly when you’re in karting, you’ve got the wheel-to-wheel racing, that’s what has always excited me, and that’s what gets me up in the morning. I definitely… this is not the championship fight I would have hoped for. I’d much, much prefer to be having a super-close battle with these two here because that’s what gets me going. Having to really put in… I think I’m still putting in the laps that are required but it’s not a close battle with Max in qualifying and the same with Charles. I really, really hope that in future it’s closer. It’s rules. Ultimately every team is given rules and at the end of the day we’ve just done an exceptional job collectively and you can’t fault my team for that. That’s not our fault. You have to look at the people that run the sport doing a better job moving forwards, I would say, ruling-wise. I think they’re showing some signs… I think Ross is showing us a car for the future that’s going to have us all closer. Hopefully it’s not as slow as a GP2 car, and then hopefully we’ll get some more-like karting races in the future.  
     
    EN

  • Hamilton crawls to his 7th British GP victory

    Hamilton crawls to his 7th British GP victory

    Silverstone, 2 August 2020: Lewis Hamilton took his third win in a row and his seventh British Grand Prix victory despite a puncture on the final lap that threatened to rob him of another triumph on home soil at Silverstone. 

    Mercedes had just seen Hamilton’s team-mate Valtteri Bottas drop out of the podium positions due to a deflation of his ageing front-left hard compound tyres when Hamilton’s also let go. And after a straightforward race in which his lead was never threatened, that put Hamilton under enormous pressure. The threat was compounded by the knowledge that Red Bull’s Max Verstappen was closing in fast having inherited second when Bottas dropped back. 

    However, the Dutchman had pitted for fresh tyres and an attempt at fastest lap in the wake of the Bottas incident and he was therefore unable to catch Hamilton before the Briton was able to limp across the line to claim his 87thcareer win. Verstappen took second ahead of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc.

    At the start Hamilton got away ahead of Bottas while Verstappen had a brief battle with Leclerc before taking a grip on third. 

    At the end of the opening lap Alex Albon in the second Red Bull tangled with Haas’ Kevin Magnussen at Club corner. Abon made contact with the Dane’s front wheel and Magnussen spun out, hitting the barriers hard, though he quickly emerged unscathed from the incident. Albon was able to continue but the incident hampered his race when he was later hit with a time penalty for causing the collision. 

    The safety car left that track at the end of lap five and on the re-start Hamilton retained his lead ahead of Bottas and Verstappen. Behind the top three Leclerc was now fourth ahead of McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo and the second McLaren of Lando Norris. 

    At the end of lap 12 Daniil Kvyat slid off at high speed as he went into Becketts. The AlphaTauri driver’s impact was heavy but after coming to rest on the grass verge at side of the track he was quickly on the radio to tell his team he was OK.

    The incident brought out the safety car for a second time and that provoked a rush of midfield pit stops, with all taking on hard tyres. On the following lap the leaders, Hamilton, Bottas and Verstappen included, made their stops and they also opted for the white-banded tyres. 

    An exception was Haas’ Romain Grosjean who stayed out on track on his starting medium tyres and the Frenchman jumped to fifth in the order behind Hamilton, Bottas, Max and Leclerc. 

    The action resumed at the end of lap 18 and almost immediately after the re-start Albin was handed a five-second penalty. He pitted on lap 31 and after serving the penalty bolted on a new set of medium tyres for remainder of the race. 

    Further ahead, on lap 33, Hamilton now led Bottas by 1.4 seconds, with Veratappen a lonely third, eight seconds adrift of the Finn and 15.6s ahead of fourth-placed Charles Leclerc. Sainz and Norris were now fifth and sixth respectively, while Grosjean was clinging on to seventh ahead of Ricciardo, while Stroll was ninth ahead of Ocon. Grosjean was struggling with his tyres though and after being passed by Ricciardo and Stroll, he pitted for hard tyres and dropped back. 

    The race then settled and with the bulk of the field locked into a one-stop race it looked as though the order at the front would remain static until the flag.

    However, in the final five lap Bottas began to slow and while those around him were lapping in the 1m29s bracket the Finn quickly drifted out 1m31s. And suddenly, two laps from the flag, his front left tyre deflated and sent him off track. He recovered but not before Verstappen had powered past to take P2. 

    With a significant margin ahead to Hamilton and with a huge advantage over Leclerc, Red Bull opted to pit Verstappen for a new set of soft tyres for a fastest lap attempt. Within moments of the Dutch driver rejoining, however, pursuit of fastest lap became pursuit of victory when Hamilton too suffered a front left deflation. The Briton was halfway round the track when the failure occurred and the Red Bull driver immediately began to hunt down the Mercedes man. 

    However, despite almost going off track in the final corners, Hamilton was able to hold it together and he managed to cross the line in the lead, though he only had 5.8s in hand over Verstappen.

    Leclerc followed to take third place with Ricciardo fourth ahead of Norris and Ocon. Gasly earned good points for AlphaTauri with seventh place. 

    The Frenchman did well to hold the position as just 1.4s behind him at the flag was Albon. The Thai driver had charged through from the back of the field in the closing stages and thanks to the tyres failures for Bottas and Carlos Sainz he claimed eighth place ahead of Racing Point’s Lance Stroll and 10th-placed Sebastian Vettel. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix – Race 

    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 52 1’28:01.283 
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 52 1:28’07.139 5.856
    3 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 52 1:28’19.757 18.474
    4 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 52 1:28’20.933 19.650
    5 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 52 1:28’23.560 22.277
    6 Esteban Ocon Renault 52 1:28’28.220 26.937
    7 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 52 1:28’32.471 31.188
    8 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 52 1:28’33.953 32.670
    9 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 52 1:28’38.594 37.311
    10 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 52 1:28’43.140 41.857
    11 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 52 1:28’43.450 42.167
    12 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 52 1:28’53.287 52.004
    13 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 52 1:28’54.653 53.370
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 52 1:28’55.488 54.205
    15 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 52 1:28’55.832 54.549
    16 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 52 1:28’56.333 55.050
    17 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 51 1:28’40.265 1 Lap
    Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 11 20’32.601 Puncture
    Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1 1’43.753 Collision
    Nico Hülkenberg Racing Point/Mercedes 0 Not started

  • The buzz is missing at Silverstone: Hamilton

    The buzz is missing at Silverstone: Hamilton

    DRIVERS
    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)
    3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull Racing)
    TRACK INTERVIEWS
    (Conducted by Jenson Button) 
     
    Q: Lewis, not the easiest route to that pole position but an amazing couple of laps there in Q3?
    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, ultimately, obviously there is a relatively big gap between us and third place, but it doesn’t matter. At the end of the day Valtteri is pushing me right to the limit and he’d been doing such a fantastic job all weekend and I made some changes going into qualifying and it was worse, so it was a real struggle out there. This track is just awesome because, as you know, with a gust of wind, you have a head wind, a tail wind, a cross wind in different parts of the circuit. It’s like juggling balls whilst you’re on a moving plate, at high speed. Then, obviously we had that spin. Qualifying is a lot about confidence building, as you know, and damn, I had that spin. I was already down, I was struggling through the first section every lap and I don’t know how but with some deep breaths I managed to compose myself and Q3 started off the right way. It still wasn’t perfect the first laps but still a really clean lap and the second one even better. It never gets old for sure.
     
    Q: I bet. As you can see this is quite an unusual British Grand Prix. I know how you love the fans, it really does lift you here. Have you got a message for the guys who aren’t able to be here today?
    LH: Yeah, honestly… look, you see them [the grandstands], all empty here. Normally you have the sirens going off, you see the flags everywhere, you see smoke and the atmosphere here is buzzing normally. You normally get out of the car and there is a different energy, so we definitely miss them. But hopefully they are happy with that turnaround back home and I again just want to say a huge thank you to the team, the guys at the factory, not far away from here, who are constantly working tirelessly to push us forwards, develop and we’re continuing to do so and I’m really proud to be a part of it.
     
    Q: Valtteri, it was looking so strong through Q1, Q2 and this guy, after a spin, was just, just able to pip you in Q3? 
    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, it was a pretty good qualifying in Q3 really. I felt really comfortable with the car and with both tyre compounds and I was really just waiting for Q3 to get everything right. But by the time of Q3 I started to drift a bit more with the rear end than I was hoping. I don’t really know, Lewis found more than me, so ultimately he did a really good job today. It’s disappointing and I need to look into it. 
     
    Q: Looking to tomorrow, it looks like it’s a two-horse race tomorrow, you guys are so far in front of the rest. Are you able to do anything with the strategy, to find a different way to the finish line to challenge Lewis?
    VB: I think my long run performance this weekend has been really good and I believe there will be opportunities and Lewis last year managed to win it from second place with a different strategy to me, so yeah, everything is still wide open and no doubt the guys will try to mix it up behind so we will see.
     
    Q: Max, it must be really tricky after a session like that. You’ve got the maximum out of the car and you’re a second behind the guys in front pretty much. What can you take from this qualifying session?
    Max VERSTAPPEN: Well, I think the lap itself at the end of Q3 was pretty good, but you could see of course very early onwards in qualifying they were just way too fast, like they have been the last few races. You just have to accept that. You try to do the best we can and that’s P3 for us. So I’m pretty pleased with that. Also, after Hungary, to come back and be P3 in qualifying I think is a good start. In the race, you know, again, it’s different. Automatically you’re a little bit closer in the race. I don’t say I’m going to fight them but at least you have a fighting chance starting third.
     
    Q: We know you’re going to fight them, Max. How is the car around here. We all know Silverstone is a very open track, very windy today. Does that have a big effect on what the car is doing?
    MV: With these new type of cars from the last few years they are very sensitive to wind because they are that big and that wide. And especially here in Silverstone, you could really feel, like yesterday, for example, it was really tricky in the low-speed corners and today the wind changes and it becomes a completely different car. Luckily, in the right way, because today it was a lot more fun to drive. But yes, it is very sensitive.
     
    PRESS CONFERENCE
     
    Q: Lewis, pole number 91 was certainly a very good one. What were your expectations going into Q3. Did you think a 24.3 was possible? 
    LH: Well, honestly I don’t really know what the previous records are or laps that we have done in previous years here. I don’t really look at that. It’s not really necessarily the number I’m looking at. What matter is what the position is. I don’t even really look at the time when I come across the line. I’m generally just trying to make sure that I’m up on my previous best time. But it’s pretty incredible the performance here this weekend. This track is really one of the best tracks in the world, especially when the wind is right, like today, and the temperatures are just right. It’s so fast and flowing. The speed that we’re able to carry through Maggotts and Becketts is… I remember when I did my first test here I never would have thought that one day we would be doing the speeds we are at some stage. And then secondly, this team is remarkable and I’m incredibly grateful to everyone who continues to do a great job back at the factory and also here during the weekends, because bit by bit we continue to step forwards. We’re still powering ahead, we’re not resting on the performance that we have, we’re trying to push the boundaries and the limits and that’s the most impressive thing I think about this team.
     
    Q: Awesome in Q3 Lewis, bit of a wake-up call for you in Q2. Just talk us through that incident down at Luffield?
    LH: Yeah, it really wasn’t a nice qualifying session for me. We’d made some big changes overnight, we went out in FP3 and the car was actually feeling… night and day difference probably for everyone with the wind change, and the track temperature change… and the car was feeling pretty good but the easy thing is to stay where you are and just leave it and hope for the best but we’re always, as I said, looking to move forwards and so made a couple of subtle changes and it was worse and you’re stuck with that once the qualifying starts. So, I had this inconsistency with the balance of the car and I was struggling and obviously I got into Q2, had that big snap and spin – which is my first spin in some time. Luckily the tyres were fine. We came in, I got to go back out on another fresh set, which was fine, but then it’s just really trying to recompose yourself and get yourself back in line because it’s really just building blocks when you go through qualifying. And that was probably the hardest turnaround, I would say, knowing that Valtteri had just been putting in quick lap after quick lap. So to go into Q3 with a kind of fresh reset mentally, and putting in those two laps, yeah, I feel great. But Valtteri’s been pushing me all weekend. He’s incredibly quick here, so I think I had a tenth-and-a-half advantage to him after the first lap and I knew that he would pick up some pace in that second run, so the pressure was still on to go out and do better. So, really grateful. While we really, really missed the roar of the fans and the energy of the fans here this weekend, hopefully back home they enjoyed that today.
     
    VB: As Lewis says, it was quick lap after quick lap from you but you talked earlier about the rear end causing you a few problems in Q3. Can you talk to us a little bit more about that? Where was it causing you problems?
    VB: It was a pretty smooth session otherwise. Had some really clean laps and could really build on lap by lap. The car was feeling pretty good, just the balance of the car throughout the qualifying was drifting a bit more towards oversteer. I don’t know if the track temp was getting higher or what was it but on both runs in Q3 I really struggled to attack the slow speed corners as I did before – and the same in Turn 12 – Turn 13. I started to struggle with the rear end – just a bit snappy. And at the same time Lewis obviously had a perfect lap in the end – or at least near to perfection. It was a pretty impressive lap time and I just couldn’t quite match it with the balance I had but otherwise it was OK. Obviously a bit disappointed being second, as it was a strong session otherwise – but yeah, that’s the usual. It is tomorrow that counts but at this point really thankful the car is so strong. It’s amazing and the team is doing such a great job with it and it’s a pleasure to drive.
     
    Q: Max, talk us through your session and how good your lap was in Q3. And then just tell us, are you surprised or not by the gap to Lewis Hamilton. One Second.
    MV: No, I’m not surprised. We are clearly still learning about the car, trying to improve it. But I think overall the qualifying itself was pretty OK. I mean, I was pretty much all the time in third. There’s not much more I think I could do. I think also my final lap in Q3 was pretty good. I had a bit of a moment out of the last corner but… it’s just a big gap and just tried to do the best we can and for us, that’s third at the moment. So we did that. Yeah, it’s a better position than seventh, let’s say that, to start the race.
     
    Q: Can you take the fight to Mercedes tomorrow?
    MV: Normally not, but we just hope to have a clean start and from there onwards I just try to do the best I can in the car and if that’s try to follow them a bit, we can be happy with that and score some points.
     
    VIDEO CONFERENCE
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to both of the Mercedes drivers please. It looked like you struggled quite a lot yesterday in practice, obviously it was very, very hot and windy but in a different direction. Was that cured by the changing conditions today, particularly the lower temperatures, or was it just significant set-up gains that you guys found overnight? Thank you.
    LH: I think it was probably a mixture of both. I think really fantastic work by the engineers overnight just analysing where we were and how to perfect the balance of the car. Part of it was that, and then I think today, just being 10°C cooler – or whatever it is – and the wind being in a slightly different direction, really shifted things I think for us. And the hotter it got for us yesterday, it got generally worse for us. We have understood that overnight and we corrected that today.
     
    Anything to add to that Valtteri?
    VB: No, that’s all.
     
    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for both Mercedes drivers. Do you expect to be allowed to use different race strategies to race each other tomorrow?
    LH: Honestly, I think it’s the same as always. We have a philosophy and an approach as a team and we just continue to… we don’t change things unnecessarily. So, I don’t think that there will be any difference here. Also, it’s not really of a benefit. Today it is quite clear which strategy on tracks like this, just like last year. Actually, it was a little bit less clear, I think perhaps, than last year but it’s generally pretty straightforward, so it’s unlikely we’re going to change anything.
     
    Q: Valtteri, what do you have to do to beat the guy on your left?
    VB: For sure we’ll try everything. It’s still very close between us in the championship points, so of course I’m going to do everything I can and of course will look overnight with the engineers what we can do and if there’s anything different I can do. But yes, we have a certain philosophy and usually the car ahead can kind of choose the strategy a bit more, as a bit of a priority, which is fair enough. That’s how it goes – but you never know. We saw a pretty different race from mine and Lewis’ side last year. So, we’ll see.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Max, Christian Horner was telling us yesterday that the team made a big effort to try and understand the data gained from Hungary and putting it into action here. Do you feel that the car is more well sorted than it was in Hungary, and now it’s just a question of pace or are you still struggling to find exactly where the balance is?
    MV: I think, yeah, compared to Hungary it’s for sure better. Hungary was not really good. Of course, there are still things that need to be improved and we are working on it, but I think it’s now just purely working on balance as well, yeah, finding more performance in that. We do understand where it’s coming from; now it’s just time, of course, to put different parts onto the car and make it faster.
     
    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, you usually used to have 140,000 people coming here to watch you race at Silverstone and cheer you on. How much of a motivating factor would it be to deliver that win to them watching at home tomorrow, particularly given everything that’s going on in the world at the moment? And secondly, is there any sort of movement on your new Mercedes contract?
    LH: To the second part, no, there’s no discussion at all, nothing decided. Yeah, obviously with the… I kept it in mind. Normally when I approach this weekend there this much much different feeling, I think it’s part excitement and also nerves when you come to this race, knowing how many people do come. And that nervousness is just really through just wanting to excel and deliver for everybody, because you go on a pretty incredible journey together. And so I try to keep that in mind still this weekend; whilst I didn’t have that same feeling coming, knowing that no-one’s going to be here, and I just really tried to remember how… reminisce the last years and try and somehow get that energy and utilise it today which is not so easy but I do, as I said, I hope… I can’t imagine how many people watching and if it’s the same energy-wise back home where they are, if it’s the same as it is when we’re at the track. But I hope this gives some people some hope.
     
    Q: (Edd Straw – The Race) Max, obviously last year Red Bull had some struggles at the start of the season but the upgrades introduced, Canada through to France, that sort of time, really switched on the car and got it going. Do you think something similar can happen this year in terms of relatively small changes, with time can really unlock the potential? Do you think there’s a slightly wider ranging problem that will take a little bit longer to sort out and make the car both have the performance and the consistency that you need?
    MV: I didn’t think, yeah, for sure we can improve the car quite a bit, but the problem is that the gap is so big to the guys ahead that it will be very hard to close so yeah, I believe the guys are working flat out of course to improve the car, so I’m confident they can do that but of course also the others are not standing still so yeah, we have a lot of hard work in front of us but let’s see what we can do.
     
    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) To Max: looking at what we saw in practice yesterday when it was very, very hot and you were able to get close to the Mercedes’ times on the long runs, and then there’s a big gap today when the temperature comes down, do you think that Red Bull is closer to Mercedes when the temperatures are higher?
    MV: Oh yeah, but we would still be quite a few tenths down. I don’t think the warm weather makes such a big difference. If it would have been 35 degrees today I would still be third, so it wouldn’t… it would have helped me maybe a little bit but not that much.
     
    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) To all three: obviously Nico Hulkenberg is back on the grid, very last minute. He is basically three Grand Prix weekends and three pre-season test days behind you guys so I guess he’s physically going through what you went through on the first day of Barcelona testing, except he hasn’t spent the last few months physically preparing for that. How difficult do you think he’ll find it in the Grand Prix with I guess, mainly on his neck, how big a challenge do you think it is?
    LH: Definitely not the best one to come to, your first practice, your first race for the neck. Copse is flat out so it’s a pretty intense combination of corners so I wouldn’t be surprised if this morning he woke up with quite a few bruises and sore but he’s generally always been really in good shape. I saw him walking in, he looked like he never left. But think it’s even more so, it’s probably the prep is a big part, your understanding of the car, that’s probably the biggest part. When you don’t know the car, you don’t know the tools you have or the simulations that the team uses. I can’t even tell you how far behind he is with that. But he is a great driver but if anyone can do it. It will be him, for sure.
    MV: I could see after the first practice his neck was hanging to one side. He has quite a long neck so that is also… that’s not nice to have in F1. It’s tough, because I spoke to him about it  back in the day when he was still in F1 fulltime. He didn’t enjoy that. It’s tough, you can train as much as you want; the first time you go in an F1 car with these speeds, especially around here, you will be sore. You can train every day with your neck but the first time it’s always going to be sore so I’m 100 per cent sure of course, when he woke up today he felt it. But anyway, it doesn’t matter to him anyway, he’s happy to be here and he should be here anyway because I think he still deserves his spot on the grid.
    VB: Yeah, I’m sure he will be sore and as you said, he’s probably not been prepared, physically, to drive a Formula 1 like we all did for the first race but I think he’s done really good, I think it’s a big challenge for him, with such short notice, he was setting some good lap times but obviously big experience from the past. I hope he has a good race tomorrow.

  • Mercedes’ Hamilton sets blistering pace to take British GP pole

    Mercedes’ Hamilton sets blistering pace to take British GP pole

    Silverstone, 1 August 2020: Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton set a blistering pace at Silverstone to take the seventh British Grand Prix pole position of his career with a new track record time of 1:24.303. Valtteri Bottas will line up alongside his Mercedes team-mate on the front row, while Max Verstappen qualified in third place for Red Bull Racing, a full second behind Hamilton. 

    Botta held sway early in the sesson, with the Finn taking control of Q1, two hundredths of a second clear of Verstappen, with Hamilton third and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in fourth place. Friday afternoon’s fastest man, Lance Stroll of Racing Point, slotted into fifth place ahead of Red Bull’s Alex Albon who set an opening time of 1:26.565 as he attempted to recover from missin out on the second half of FP2 following a crash and most of FP3 as a electrical issue with his RB16 left him stranded in the team’s garage. 

    After making a mistake on his first run, Hamilton improved on his next and he rose above Verstappen with a lap of 1:25.900. That wasn’t enough to dislodge Bottas, though, as the Finn had also improved to 1:25.801. 

    With three minutes left in the session the men in danger in the drop zone were Haas’ Kevin Magnussen in P16 followed by the Alfa Romeo cars of Kimi Räikkönen and Antonio Giovinazzi, the Williams of Nicholas Latifi and the second Haas of Romain Grosjean. 

    Giovinazzi was able to leapfrog Räikkönen to take P17 and Latifi dropped to the foot of the order when he spun off at Luffield, but none of the bottom five was able to escape elimination. 

    It was a different story further up, as behind the pace-setting Mercedes drivers, Verstappen and Stroll, Nico Hulkenberg put in a good lap in the second Racing Point to climb to P5 ahead of AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly and Renault’s Esteban Ocon. Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel made a late jump up the order, too, claiming P8 ahead of team-mate Charles Leclerc. That meant that Albon progressed to Q2 in P10, ahead of Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo, McLaren’s Carlos Sainz, Williams’ George Russell, the second AlphaTauri of Daniil Kvyat and the second McLaren of Lando Norris. 

    At the start of Q2 Mercedes, Red Bull, Racing Point all sent their drivers out on medium tyres, with Leclerc also opting for the yellow-banded compound. Bottas led the way in the opening runs by beating his 2019 pole time with a new track marker of 1:25.015. 

    Hamilton, though, made a mistake on his first flying lap and spun at Luffield. The incident resulted in gravel being spread across the track and the red flags were soon displayed so that the surface could be cleared. 

    Under the red flags Bottas headed the order in front of Verstappen and Leclerc. Ocon was fourth ahead of Sainz, Norris and Vettel. Strolll was eighth and Alex ninth ahead of Hulkenberg. In the drop zone were Russell, Hamilton, Ricciardo, Gasly and Kvyat, with the latter three being unable to set a time due to Hamilton’s spin. 

    Hamilton was the first out on track for the final runs and he claimed P2 with a medium-tyre time of 1:25.347, pushing him safely through to Q3. Albon, though, was in trouble. On track on softs for his final run of the session, he couldn’t find the time required and his lap of 1:26.545 was only good enough for 12thplace and he was eliminated along with P11 driver Gasly, 13th-placed Hulkenberg, Kvyat and Russell. 

    Both Mercedes drivers backed out of their final lap on softs, as did third-placed Verstappen and they, along with Leclerc and Stroll, will start the race on medium tyres. Sainz made it through to Q3 in fourth place ahead of Leclerc, Ocon and Ricciardo. Norris went through in eighth ahead of Vettel and Leclerc. 

    In Q3, Hamilton set blistering pace to take control of qualifying for the first time and the Briton powered past his team-mate’s earlier track record to claim P1 with a lap of 1:24.616. Verstappen slotted into third place behind Bottas with a time of 1:25.763 and that left him two tenths of a second clear of Stroll in fourth. Leclerc’s first run netted him fifth place ahead of team-mate Vettel, Norris, Sainz and the Renaults of Ocon and Ricciardo. 

    Bottas managed to exactly match his team-mate’s opening time in the final runs but there was simply not stopping Hamilton as he found even more time to claim his seventh Silverstone pole position with a time of 1:24.303. Verstappen took P3 behind Bottas thanks to an improvement of four tenths of a second to 1:25.325, while Leclerc was left with fourth place ahead of Norris, with Stroll in sixth. Leclerc was set to be investigated after the session for a possible unsafe release in front of the Canadian Racing Point driver. Sainz qualified in P7, with Ricciardo and Ocon in eighth and ninth respectively. The final top 10 place was taken by Sebastian Vettel. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 British Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:24.303 6 251.564
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:24.616 0.313 6 250.633
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:25.325 1.022 6 248.550
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:25.427 1.124 6 248.254
    5 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:25.782 1.479 6 247.226
    6 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:25.839 1.536 6 247.062
    7 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren/Renault 1:25.965 1.662 6 246.700
    8 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:26.009 1.706 6 246.574
    9 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:26.209 1.906 6 246.002
    10 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:26.339 2.036 6 245.631
    11 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:26.501 1.486 4 245.171
    12 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:26.545 1.530 6 245.047
    13 Nico Hülkenberg Racing Point/Mercedes 1:26.566 1.551 6 244.987
    14 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:26.744 1.729 4 244.484
    15 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:27.092 2.077 6 243.508
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:27.158 1.357 9 243.323
    17 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:27.164 1.363 9 243.306
    18 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:27.366 1.565 9 242.744
    19 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:27.643 1.842 9 241.977
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:27.705 1.904 7 241.806