Tag: Valtteri Bottas

  • Valtteri Bottas tops FP1

    Valtteri Bottas tops FP1

    Valtterri Bottas went quickest in the opening practice session for this weekend’s FIA Formula 1 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix, with the Mercedes driver edging team-mate Lewis Hamilton by just four hundredths of a second. Third place in the session went to Red Bull Racing’s Max Verstappen who finished under two hundredths of a second further back.

    The one-hour session got off to a busy start with a flurry of cars taking to the track and top spot changed hands frequently during the opening quarter of an hour. Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was quickly to the fore with Bottas then leaping ahead with the time of 1:20.345s set on hard tyres. That was swiftly beaten by Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Raikkonen though Bottas reclaimed P1 with an improved time of 1:19.312s.

    Sergio Perez went quicker by a tenth of a second to claim top spot for red Bull Racing but his stay at the top was short as Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz dipped below the 1m19s barrier with as P1 lap of 1:18.764s set on hard tyres.

    Hamilton soon edged ahead of that but Sainz grabbed back control with a lap of 1:17.682.

    The first incident of the morning saw AlphaTauri rookie Yuki Tsunodo go off track at the Tamburello chicane and recover before team-mate Pierre Gasly vaulted to the top of the order with a lap on of 1:17.470. Within minutes Bottas was back out on track to reclaim P1 by a little over seven hundredths of a second. Sainz was enjoying the conditions, however, and he soon pushed past Bottas’ benchmark to set the benchmark at 1:17.296s.

    The session was then red-flagged following what appeared to be contact between Pérez and Ocon.

    Pérez exited the Villeneuve chicane with a deflated rear left tyre and with the carcass causing damage to the rear of his car. He slid to a halt as Ocon went past, though the French driver swiftly halted his Alpine a little further up the track with apparent front wing damage.

    After a 10-minute delay the action resumed and with soft tyres on board. Hamilton jumped past Sainz’s time to claim P1 with a lap of 1:16.892s. Verstappen also took to the track on the red-banded compound as he rose to the top of the order with a lap of 1:16.622.

    But both Mercedes driver went out for another attempt and both snuck past the Dutchman with Bottas returning to first place with a lap of 1:16.564. That put him 0.041s ahead of Hamilton and 0.058 in front of Verstappen.

    Behind them, Charles Leclerc took fourth place despite missing a chunk of the session with a technical issue on his Ferrari. Gasly finished fifth ahead of Sainz with Alpine’s Fernando Alonso seventh ahead of Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll. Williams’ Nicholas Latifi was ninth and the top 10 was rounded out by McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo.

    There was late red flag in the session when Haas’ Nikita Mazepin went wide on the exit of Rivazza and slid into the wall near the pitlane entry.

    2021 FIA Formula 1 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:16.564 23 230.818
    2 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:16.605 0.041 25 230.695
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 1:16.622 0.058 21 230.643
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:16.796 0.232 13 230.121
    5 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 1:16.888 0.324 21 229.846
    6 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 1:16.888 0.324 26 229.846
    7 Fernando Alonso Alpine 1:17.457 0.893 23 228.157
    8 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 1:17.489 0.925 19 228.063
    9 Nicholas Latifi Williams 1:17.739 1.175 24 227.329
    10 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 1:17.769 1.205 23 227.242
    11 George Russell Williams 1:17.866 1.302 25 226.959
    12 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo 1:17.883 1.319 16 226.909
    13 Lando Norris McLaren 1:17.935 1.371 16 226.758
    14 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin 1:17.984 1.420 23 226.615
    15 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 1:18.058 1.494 24 226.400
    16 Sergio Pérez Red Bull 1:18.228 1.664 15 225.908
    17 Esteban Ocon Alpine 1:18.360 1.796 20 225.528
    18 Nikita Mazepin Haas 1:18.823 2.259 22 224.203
    19 Mick Schumacher Haas1:19.480 2.916 18 222.350
    20 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 1:19.781 3.217 11 221.511

  • Valtteri Bottas fastest on Day 2: Bahrain pre-season Test

    Valtteri Bottas fastest on Day 2: Bahrain pre-season Test

    Bahrain, 13 March 2021: Valtteri Bottas set the quickest time of pre-season testing so far as Mercedes enjoyed a more productive second day at the Bahrain International Circuit. 

    After troubles on the opening day of the three-day test, Bottas posted 58 laps in the afternoon on his way to the quickest time of the day. However, the Finn needed to bolt on a set of the softest tyres on offer, the red-banded C5 compound Pirelli, to dislodge AlpahTauri’s Pierre Gasly from top spot on the timesheet. Gasly too had used the C5 for his best time of the day and finished just 0.124 behind the Finn. 

    Earlier in the day Bottas’ team-mate Lewis Hamilton also enjoyed a more productive outing with the seven-time world champion also getting through 58 laps of the desert circuit in the morning session, despite an early off. 

    Hamilton, though, restricted himself to hard tyres during his running and finished the day in 15th place on the timesheet.

    A number of drivers moved to soft-tyre running in the latter part of the afternoon session. 

    Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll took third place on the timesheet with a late run on C5 tyres, posting a best time of 1:30.460 to finish 0.171s behind Bottas. 

    Fourth place also went to a Mercedes-powered driver, with McLaren’s Lando Norris as little over a tenth behind Stroll with a best lap of 1:30.586. While the top three used the C5, Norris’ best time was delivered on the C4 compound. 

    Norris was followed by C5 runners Antonio Giovinazzi of Alfa Romeo and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, while Williams’ Nicholas Latifi finished seventh thanks to a C5 time of 1.31.672.

    That was one thousandth of a second ahead of the eighth–placed Red Bull of Sergio Pérez, though the Mexican’s time was set on tyres three steps harder than those on the Williams man’s car.

    Pérez spent the bulk of his running on the C2 hard tyre as day one’s quickest team focused on longer runs and an afternoon race simulation. 

    Pérez’s 117 laps weren’t without issue, however, and after briefly being restricted to the garage by a technical issue in the morning he was sidelined for a longer spell in the afternoon when the left side engine cover of his car blew off while on track. With debris strewn across the start-finish straight the session was red-flagged. Pérez later rejoined the action and completed his race run. 

    McLaren’s Daniel Ricciardo finished in ninth place, while Fernando Alonso, making his return to F1 with Alpine, finished in 10th place as he too focused on the C2 hard tyre.

    AlphaTauri rookie Yuki Tsunoda was 11th on the timesheet ahead of Haas’ Mick Schumacher, the second Ferrari of Carlos Sainz and the second Haas of Nikita Mazepin. 

    There was trouble though for Aston Martin’s Sebastian Vettel as gearbox problems restricted him to just 10 laps in the morning and he finished in 16th and last place. 

    Formula 1 Pre-Season Testing, Bahrain – Day Two
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 58 1:30.289  
    2 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri 87 1:30.413 0.124
    3 Lance Stroll Aston Martin 71 1:30.460 0.171
    4 Lando Norris McLaren 52 1:30.586 0.297
    5 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo 125 1:30.760 0.471
    6 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 73 1:30.886 0.597
    7 Nicholas Latifi Williams 132 1:31.672 1.383
    8 Sergio Perez Red Bull 117 1:31.682 1.393
    9 Daniel Ricciardo McLaren 52 1:32.215 1.926
    10 Fernando Alonso Alpine 128 1:32.339 2.050
    11 Yuki Tsunoda AlphaTauri 57 1:32.684 2.395
    12 Mick Schumacher Haas 88 1:32.883 2.594
    13 Carlos Sainz Ferrari 56 1:33.072 2.783
    14 Nikita Mazepin Haas 76 1:33.101 2.812
    15 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 58 1:33.399 3.110
    16 Sebastian Vettel Aston Martin 10 1:38.849 8.560

  • Max Verstappen takes his first pole in the last race of the season

    Max Verstappen takes his first pole in the last race of the season

    Abu Dhabi, 12 Dec 2020: Max Verstappen scored his first pole position of 2020 and the third of his career with in qualifying for the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, with the Dutchman putting in a phenomenal final lap in Q3 to beat Mercedes Valtteri Bottas by 0.025s. Lewis Hamilton finished third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris.

    Bottas set the pace in the opening segment of qualifying, with the Finn setting an early benchmark of 1:35.699. Hamilton slotted into second place but his lap was swiftly deleted for violating track limits at Turn 20. 

    Verstappen, meanwhile, had a tricky start to the session when Williams released Nicholas Latifi into his path in the pit lane. The Dutchman was forced to lock-up and flat-spotted his tyres. 

    He went out and set a time but in the final minutes of the session he dropped to P10 and was forced to run again. He immediately vaulted to P2 behind Bottas with a lap of 1:35.993. Verstappen was eventually shuffled to P4 as Hamilton grabbed top spot in the final runs and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc took third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris. Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez was sixth and Alex Albon in the second Red Bull progressed in seventh place with a lap of 1:36.106. 

    At the other end of the timesheet, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen was eliminated in 16th place after being beaten to P15 by team-mate Antonio Giovinazzi. The Italian eclipsed his Finnish team-mate by almost half a second to edge their private qualifying battle 9-8. Räikkönen was followed out of the session by Haas’ Kevin Magnussen, Williams’ George Russell, Haas’ Pietro Fittipaldi and Latifi. 

    In Q2 the Bulls and the Mercedes went out on medium tyres but Albonhad his opening lap deleted for a track limits infringement at Turn 21. He dropped to P13 on the timesheet in the closing stages and it meant that he needed a run on soft tyres to guarantee progress. 

    Verstappen, meanwhile, opened with a time of 1:36.236. That landed him P5 and he admitted dissatisfaction with the lap, saying the tyres had gone off in the final sector. 

    He went for another run, on mediums, and in the final moments he jumped to P3 behind Hamilton and Bottas with a lap of 1:35.641. Albonfollowed him across the line with a good lap of 1:35.654 to take P4. 

    Somewhat surprisingly Esteban Ocon and Daniel Ricciardo were eliminated in P10 and P11 respectively, with the Renault being edged out Q3 by the AlphaTauris of Daniil Kvyat and Pierre Gasly. Also eliminated at this stage of the session were 13th-placed Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari followed by Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi and Pérez. Facing a back-of-the-grid start due an engine change, Pérez failed to set a time in Q2. 

    In the final top-10 shootout, Verstappen signalled his intent with his opening run as he posted a lap of 1:35.519 to split with the Mercedes as Bottas took provisional pole. 

    When the final runs began Hamilton was the first out and after setting purple times he took P1 with a lap of 1:35.332. That looked impressive but then Bottas snuck past the benchmark by six hundredths of a seconds and it looked like Mercedes might be heading towards another front row lock-out.

    Verstappen, though, had other ideas and with a perfectly constructed lap the Dutch ace found the time required to edge past Bottas to claim his and the team’s first pole position of the year. 

    Behind the top three, McLaren’s Norris took an impressive fourth place to edge Albonby seven hundredths of a second. Sixth place went to Carlos Sainz in the second McLaren with Kvyat an excellent seventh for AlphaTauri’s ahead of Racing Point’s Lance Stroll, Leclerc and Gasly. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Verstappen Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:35.246 6 209.923
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:35.271 0.025 0.026 6 209.868
    3 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:35.332 0.086 0.090 6 209.734
    4 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:35.497 0.251 0.264 6 209.372
    5 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:35.571 0.325 0.341 6 209.209
    6 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:35.815 0.569 0.597 6 208.677
    7 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:35.963 0.717 0.753 6 208.355
    8 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:36.046 0.800 0.840 6 208.175
    9 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:36.065 0.819 0.860 6 208.134
    10 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:36.242 0.996 1.046 6 207.751
    11 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:36.359 0.893 0.935 6 207.499
    12 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:36.406 0.940 0.985 6 207.397
    13 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:36.631 1.165 1.220 6 206.914
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:38.248 2.782 2.914 6 203.509
         Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1
    16 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:37.555 2.027 2.122 6 204.955
    17 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:37.863 2.335 2.444 9 204.310
    18 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:38.045 2.517 2.635 8 203.930
    19 Pietro Fittipaldi Haas/Ferrari 1:38.173 2.645 2.769 9 203.664
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:38.443 2.915 3.051 7 203.106

  • Russell misses pole to Bottas for another Mercedes front-row lockout

    Russell misses pole to Bottas for another Mercedes front-row lockout

    Sakhir, 5 Dec 2020: Valtteri Bottas took his fourth pole position of the year by edging new Mercedes team-mate George Russell by just 0.026s in qualifying for the Sakhir Grand Prix as Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took third just three hundredths of a second further back.

    In Q1 Verstappen was one of the last to take to the track but when he did the Dutchman quickly jumped to the top of the timesheet with a lap of 0:54.037. That remained the benchmark for the bulk of the session, but late in the session Bottas bolted on a set of soft tyres and on the4 red-banded rubber he was able to claim top spot a little over a tenth ahead of the Red Bull driver.

    Behind Russell was third ahead of McLaren’s Lando Norris who had to make a late charge after having an early run deleted for infringing track limits. AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly took fifth place ahead of Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc.

    There was a slightly nervous end to the segment for second Red Bull driver Alex Albon, however. Banking on the safety of his early time of 54.620 his team kept him the garage on the final run and as rivals’ final times came in the Thai driver fell down the order. Fortunately his fall halted at P15 and he went through to Q2 eight hundredths of a second ahead of the first driver eliminated, Kevin Magnussen. 

    Alongside the Haas driver, Williams pair Nicholas Latifi and Jack Aitken, Alfa Romeo’s Kimi Räikkönen and Haas’ Pietro Fittipaldi. 

    In the second segment the Mercedes drivers, both Red Bulls and the Ferrari drievrs went out on medium tyres but while their initial times looked good, the gaps were too tight and in the closing stages every car went out on track again to try to ensure progress. 

    After moving to soft tyres, Verstappen jumped to the top of table with a lap of 53.647, a time that would hold good until the chequered flag. Behind him Pérez took second place ahead of Bottas, Sainz and Russell. Leclerc went through in sixth place ahead of Kvyat, Ricciardo and Gasly. 

    Out, though, went Renault’s Esteban Ocon and two hundredths of a second behind him, Alex Albon. The Thai driver had a poor second sector on his final flying lap and as the lap ebbed away he could find no improvement in the final stretch and so was eliminated in P12 ahead of Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, the Alfa Romeo of Antonio Giovinazzi and the McLaren of Lando Norris. 

    In Q3 Verstappen initially claimed provisional pole with a lap of 53.591 with Leclerc putting in a superb lap to take a provisional front row spot. Both Mercedes drivers had run worn softs tyres on their opening run however and a second run on new rubber pushed both Bottas and Russell ahead of Verstappen. In the end Bottas’ second run time of 53.377 was good enough to take pole but while the Finn couldn’t improve on his third run it briefly looked like Verstappen might challenge it. The Dutchman set the fastest third sector but it wasn’t enough as Russell also improved and in the end Max took third place 0.026s behind Russell and just 0.056s off pole. 

    Behind the top three Leclerc’s time ended up being good enough for fourth and the Ferrari driver will start ahead of Pérez, Kvyat, Ricciardo, Sainz, Gasly and Stroll. 

    Valtteri Bottas
    It’s great to be on pole, I’m happy with that, but this wasn’t my best qualifying. My second run in Q3 was decent, but I think there was still a bit of time missing in Turn 7 and 8. I was the first car out on track on the final run, so I didn’t have a tow and ultimately couldn’t improve. It was fairly close in the end, so I’m pleased it was enough for pole position. It’s great to see George in P2 and that we managed to lock out the front row for the team. I’m not really surprised to see him up there, he kept improving throughout the weekend and particularly through qualifying. We’re starting on the Medium tyre tomorrow, which should put us in a good position in terms of strategy. Max is going to have an advantage for the race start itself with the softer tyre, but we think for the race overall we’re on the better tyre. The track is quite bumpy and it’s actually fairly easy to follow other cars thanks to the tow, but we’re in the best possible position for tomorrow and are looking forward to a fun race.
     
    George Russell
    Valtteri has pushed Lewis a huge amount in qualifying over the years, so I’m really pleased to have finished Q3 just behind him and to be on the front row for tomorrow. It’s been incredibly intense with so much to learn and such a different way of driving in this car. I tried a lot of things in FP3, which didn’t go well at all. After final practice, I’d have been happy to just get through to Q3, so I was a bit nervous heading into qualifying. But I managed to get in the groove and was getting better and better every lap. Obviously, I’m a bit gutted to miss out on pole by 20 milliseconds, but if you’d told me last week that I’d be qualifying P2 on the grid, I wouldn’t have believed you. I’ve got nobody in front of me tomorrow, which I’ve not experienced for a long time. It’s going to be a really tricky race on such a short track layout, but we’re in a good position starting on the Mediums. I’ll give it my all and see what I can do.
     
    Toto Wolff
    Scoring a front row lockout in such a close qualifying session is a fantastic result for the team. This circuit is so short and with lap times below one minute, it was always going to produce very tight gaps and we saw that with less than a tenth between P1 and P3. I’m really happy with the result, Valtteri put in a good lap in Q3, which was enough for him to take pole position. George has settled in really well, particularly when you consider the circumstances, so I’m really pleased with his performance and it’s great to see him up there on the front row. This obviously puts us in a good position for tomorrow and we’re starting on the Medium tyre, which we feel is the best compound for the race. It’s going to be challenging and a bit of a step into the unknown on this track and with so many laps. I’m looking forward to seeing what happens and it’s sure to be very exciting.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Sakhir Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 53.377 9 238.956
    2 George Russell Mercedes 53.403 0.026 9 238.840
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 53.433 0.056 6 238.706
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 53.613 0.236 3 237.904
    5 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 53.790 0.413 6 237.122
    6 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 53.906 0.529 5 236.611
    7 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 53.957 0.580 6 236.388
    8 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 54.010 0.633 6 236.156
    9 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 54.154 0.777 9 235.528
    10 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 54.200 0.823 6 235.328
    11 Esteban Ocon Renault 53.995 0.348 6 236.221
    12 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 54.026 0.379 6 236.086
    13 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 54.175 0.528 8 235.437
    14 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 54.377 0.730 6 234.562
    15 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 54.693 1.046 6 233.207
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 54.705 0.801 9 233.156
    17 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 54.796 0.892 11 232.768
    18 Jack Aitken Williams/Mercedes 54.892 0.988 9 232.361
    19 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 54.963 1.059 11 232.061
    20 Pietro Fittipaldi Haas/Ferrari 55.426 1.522 11 230.123

  • That’s the most important thing: to enjoy what you are doing, says Hamilton

    That’s the most important thing: to enjoy what you are doing, says Hamilton

    DRIVERS

    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)

    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)

    3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS

    (Conducted by David Coulthard) 

    Q: Max, a very familiar qualifying position for you. It did look at one point like you were really putting Valtteri under pressure for that front row. Did you leave anything out on the race track?

    Max VERSTAPPEN: No, I don’t think so. My lap was pretty good, just lacking a bit of rear grip in the lower speed corners to my liking. Overall I think it was quite a decent qualifying and let’s see how we will go tomorrow in the race because it is very hard on tyres, so I hope we made the right compromise on that.

    Q: You say you made the compromise so what can we expect tomorrow? From what you’ve seen through free practice how hard can you push the Mercedes?

    MV: It’s always a bit difficult to say. I definitely do think they picked up their pace today so tomorrow it will be hard to beat but we have different tyres available so let’s see whether that works to our advantage or not. I just hope it will be an exciting race; that’s the most important thing.

    Q: Your teammate Alex lines up beside you, as a sort of rear gunner. Does that give you extra support when you are going into what is a tricky first corner here.

    MV: Yeah, well let’s see what happens. I’ll just try to focus on myself and try to stay close to the Mercedes cars and I’ll see if somebody can follow us.

    Q: Valtteri, well story of the season really. You are close but just a little bit lacking in the outright performance to Lewis. You have the opportunity to see the live data during qualifying, where were you better than Lewis on the lap and where did he have the legs on you today?

    Valtteri BOTTAS: I don’t really know actually. It felt good and that’s the problem, when it feels good and that you are extracting everything out of the car but the lap time is not there. That’s the most confusing part. Yeah, I can’t really say much at the moment. There were no mistakes and the last lap I thought was really good. It’s just like small things here and there. There’s no one clear corner, so I need to find out, but at least it’s another front row lock-out for us.

    Q: That gives you a good opportunity as it is a tricky run down to that first corner. It sounds to me that instinctively you know that was a tidy lap and you say the time is just not there. Do you think that you have an underlying issue in terms of the performance of the car or do you think it’s just one of those things, today the car doesn’t give you the feedback?

    VB: I don’t think there’s any underlying issue really with the performance of the car. I think it’s there and the long runs were good so I’m looking forward to tomorrow.

    Q: Lewis, your 98th pole. By the end of the season you could have done a century. That could be a nice number to round out what has been a championship-winning year. It doesn’t look like the celebration of winning that seventh title slowed you down any!

    Lewis HAMILTON: That’s because I didn’t really celebrate too much. I really didn’t celebrate to be honest. I was training and making sure I was ready for this; keeping my mind and my eye on the ball. This is the continuation of what we are able to do together as a team. I continue to be amazed by my guys that work so hard weekend-in, weekend-out. Now they’re away from their families for three weeks. No matter the seasons throw at us it’s always a really tough year and I appreciate them. To be out here in Bahrain and put laps like that together… I came today and I was like ‘let’s just have fun and enjoy’. That’s the most important thing: to enjoy what you are doing. I think with the pressure a little bit off, it’s a bit of a release to go and drive like I just did.

    Q: I’ve heard you before that you’ve never driven the perfect lap. That you aspire to it but there’s always somewhere you could have improved. So what was this Bahrain pole like?

    LH: What was the lap like?

    Q: If there was more time to be gained, could you? And why didn’t you?

    LH: I am on the ragged edge naturally. You know how it is on a lap. It’s about trying to find that perfect balance. You want to take quite a lot on the way in and keep the exit. You want to have your cake and eat it. It’s about just chipping away at it during the lap. I think the lap started off really well. There was probably a little bit of time in Turn 1. Just a little underperformed I would say a little bit towards the apex but after that it was good. Six was a little slow; I probably could have gone a little better there. I could talk you through the lap and I can tell you there is always a little bit here and there but the next lap I go out maybe I’ll improve there and lose somewhere else. Otherwise it was a very clean lap. I generally stayed about two and a half tenths up throughout it, so I was really happy with it.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Lewis, a tremendous lap to taker the 98th pole of your career and your 10th of 2020. You found half a second on your final lap of Q3. How pleased were you with how it all came together?

    LH: Yeah, well it has been a good weekend so far in terms of the steps we have taken and understanding the car. It was quite a difficult day yesterday, with practice and using different tyres; it was quiet confusing. But today has been a good day. We did some really good work overnight and the decisions we took after P3 into qualifying were pretty spot on. I was really happy with the car from the get-go in Q1. All the laps had been good and then I got to Q3 and Q3 run one was OK, but there was plenty of room for improvement. Fortunately I managed to do that on the last night, so really happy with that and really grateful to the guys who I think this weekend seem a little bit more relaxed, naturally, as the pressure is off. I think we are all enjoying it a lot more. It’s definitely more enjoyable when you don’t have the pressure as much and you can just do what you do to the best of your ability without any additional added pressure.

    Q: After the slippery conditions of Turkey last time out, how much fun was it to push on a track like this?

    LH: Oh man, it’s been night and day. To go from there to here where it’s a really aggressive track surface on our tyres, naturally. It’s not even too hot here. In times before we have come here and it’s been 50˚C or 60˚C, track temp I mean. The track is not even at 30˚C. But it’s high-speed corners and there’s a lot of surface temperature that we create with these tyres. That’s why you see us going out and doing these laps, back to what we used to do earlier on in the season. The car feels so much better when the tyres are working naturally, so I much preferred driving this weekend.

    Q: Valtteri, you pulled yourself onto the front row in the dying moments of the session. Just talk us through the lap at the end of Q3?

    VB: The end of Q3 lap was actually really good. It felt like there was not much more to really find, that was the feeling when I crossed the line, so I was pleased with that. But obviously it wasn’t enough for pole and I was quite surprised when I saw the gap. I think we ended up with quite different set-ups, with Lewis, and we’ll see if that makes any difference tomorrow. He’s had a really good weekend overall, every session and all the time I’ve had the feeling that I definitely have the speed but I haven’t quite put it all together. I got it together at the end but obviously it wasn’t enough.

    Q: Is it unusual for Lewis and you to have different set-ups?

    VB: No, not at all. There have been times when it has been nearly identical and times when it has been different. That’s how it goes.

    Q: Max just one tenth of a second off Valtteri in P2. How good was your final lap in Q3?

    MV: Yeah, it was alright to be honest. Just following a bit the track progression and stuff and yeah, not much to say really, it was alright.

    Q: Are you pleased with your car’s performance relative to the Mercedes so far this weekend?

    MV: you always want more. But it’s more important to just stay realistic and work on the little things, right? And there is of course still some work to do. Overall, I think the weekend in general was pretty positive, just lacking a little bit too much in qualifying I think. I don’t know why that was exactly. We have to find out. But first we’ll see what we can do tomorrow. It’s quite aggressive on tyres here so hopefully it will be quite an interesting race.

    Q: Do you think you are in the running for victory tomorrow?

    MV: This is always difficult to say at the moment. First we’ll have a good sleep and then find out tomorrow.

    Q: How much track evolution was there during the session?

    MV: I think initially in Q1 it was really big, because you have to drive off the rubber of the previous categories. I don’t know what was driving before, the Porsches I think. I was one of the first cars on track, which was maybe not the best choice but the lap was good enough. From Q2 to Q3 the steps were smaller but the evolution was there.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Question for both Mercedes drivers. You did a lot of testing yesterday with the 2021 Pirelli tyre. Do you think you are a bit on the back foot when it comes to race simulations for this weekend?

    VB: I would say that we compromised performance for this weekend to try to learn about the tyres that could be the tyres for next year. Obviously as a team we have won the Constructors’. Lewis has won the Driver’s so it’s better to focus on the future. So, for sure a little bit compromised as you’re trying different tyres. As a driver it’s more difficult to find the rhythm and, for sure, we lacked a bit of long runs with the car on tyres. I believe we still have a strong car but, as always, there is question marks. I think Red Bull is pretty good on the race pace.

    Lewis, more question marks as a result of running the prototype tyre yesterday?

    LH: A bit like what Valtteri said. Naturally, it’s a small compromise but I think ultimately it was the right decision for us in terms of the findings and the learnings that we decided to try to gain. I’m pretty happy with where I have my car, I think. It’s not the first time we’ve raced here so we’ll have just make do with what we have. The Red Bull’s and Max have been incredibly fast this weekend, as we’ve seen through practice. I think maybe in the race they’re potentially faster than us, so we will see that tomorrow. Hopefully it’s close between us.

    MV: At least you enjoyed driving the prototype tyres, right?

    LH: [laughs] How did you like it?

    MV: I thought I was having difficulties – and then I was behind you, and then I saw you driving and thought ‘mmmm… I think I’m good’.

    LH: Yeah… drifting.

    MV: Maybe they should make it a drift championship next year…

    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Question for Lewis please. You can get to a century of poles before the end of the year, so with the title in the bag, how much of a motivating factor is that and how proud would you be of reaching three figures? It’s a feat that no other driver has got anywhere near to doing before.

    LH: I really haven’t even thought that far, and honestly I think it’s been such an incredible year so anything from now is just an added bonus. I think it’s close between the three of us and we’ve got a couple of tricky races ahead of us, I think, also. It’s not something I’m thinking about. I’ll get there eventually but it’s not necessary it’s in the next two – but I’ll be pushing as hard as I can, that’s for sure.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question for Lewis, and maybe Valtteri if he’s got anything to add. Mercedes said it’s stopped developing the 2020 car a while ago – so is it surprising to still have an advantage of several tenths over the Red Bull? And do you expect the knock-on effect to be significant as that obviously has an impact on preparations for 2021 and then you can devote more work next year to 2022 etcetera, etcetera.

    LH: I think… the thing is, we’re always learning about our car, even if we’re not bringing upgrades. They are still developing, naturally, it is still fundamentally the same car next year so we’re constantly trying to understand the characteristics of our car more and the demands and things that we need to move the car forwards, so there’s a lot of work that goes on in the background. Yes, we have not brought updates because there are shifts and changes for next year and if definitely is amazing that we have been able to continue to improve. Whilst we’ve not brought updates we have continued to improve through the season, particularly after we’ve stopped developing the car because we’re understanding the tyres more and understanding the whole package more and more and refining how we use it more and more, so I think it’s been a really interesting process – but that’s how it often goes. I think we’re in a good position in terms of trying to prepare for next year but I haven’t’ been to the wind tunnel or anything, I haven’t been back to the factory hardly at all this year, so I have no idea where the next package is – but I have naturally full faith in the squad back at the factory. But you’ve seen the Red Bulls also continuing to improve. I think they have a very, very good car and perhaps with some more development of their engine I think they would even closer next year.

    Valtteri, anything you’d like to add?

    VB: No, I think Lewis said pretty much everything, nothing to add.

    Max, are you surprised by the gap to Mercedes?

    MV: No, not really. I mean we are pushing hard, of course, to close it but we know there are some weaknesses in the car that we can’t fix this year so we have to wait until next year. Of course, I would have liked to be closer but we’re just learning about this car. Of course we know we have to make some changes for next year and we will try to put it all together for next year and hopefully then we will be closer.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question to the two Mercedes drivers please, and following up on what Lewis said at the start about the good work you guys, or the team, did overnight. The team also said that you didn’t do much or any set-up work on the cars because you were focussed on understanding those 2021 tyres, so how much did that change what you had to do when you finally got out on track in FP3 today, and were you still finding handling improvements as qualifying went on?

    LH: It felt like a test day, a tyre test say, the days that I generally am not a fan of. I hate test days…

    MV: I love them!

    LH: Oh God! Fortunately it didn’t last too long, fortunately, but when you’re hopping between different tyres and you’re feeling different things, it makes it very difficult to know where the balance is. As you go on from one to the next you forget what the balance is on the most important tyre, which is the tyre that you’re racing on, so it can be very, very confusing and, at times, frustrating. You’ve just got to remember what the goal is. I still think that we got a decent amount of information at the end of yesterday, and I didn’t feel too compromised in terms of getting the set-up for today. Once you set the set-up for qualifying obviously it is what it is – but I think we looked pretty good with the direction that we took, I think. In terms of where we are tomorrow, we haven’t had any real long runs on the Medium or the Hard tyre, so it will be interesting to see how that goes tomorrow.

    Valtteri?

    VB: Yeah, you definitely lose some time for the set-up work but it’s nothing new really, this season. We’ve had races where it’s been racing on Friday or race weekend with just one practice but looking back this weekend, if I’d have had one more session I’d have probably tried something different based on the result today in qualifying – but the rule is when you qualify, you can’t change the car any more, that’s what it is, but I just really hope it’s good for the race trim.

    Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) A question from memory here but I think that was Lewis’s tenth pole of the season, now looking for his 11th win of the year. I just wondered is there’s anything that Valtteri and Max think that they can do just to stop him in his tracks because we know he’s run away with the title but he keeps winning even now that the pressure of that has gone? Is there anything that they can do to stop him?

    VB: Is there anything to stop Lewis? Of course there, we’re trying. I’ve tried my best and even though he’s got the title this year, knowing him from the previous years and how he is as a racing driver and how most racing drivers are – you’re here to win, you try everything you can – and I’m here to win as well. I know that starting from second on the grid, there’s all the opportunities but you need a perfect race. For sure, we’ll push hard and try and not give up. I’m pretty sure that’s what Max is thinking as well.

    MV: Well, I think, as Lewis is showing, he’s definitely one of the best drivers ever in Formula 1 but at the moment I don’t have the same, like, equal chances, let’s say it like that. That doesn’t take away anything from Lewis but yeah, I’m just pushing as hard as I can with the material I have and sometimes it’s closer, sometimes it’s a bit further away. Some races it looks pretty competitive. Today was less competitive.

    Q: (Christian Nimmervoll – motorsport.com) Lewis, during qualifying we could see on the driver performance page that the first mini sectors of your pole lap actually weren’t quicker than the one before, only towards the end of the first sector you really started to push. Was that a conscious decision to save tyres or did you just mess up in the first corner?

    LH: Hunh. Attention to detail, that’s super detail.

    MV: It sure is like +0.005s or something

    LH: Well, I guess I can’t really answer that too well because it’s giving away trade secrets. I can tell you that I didn’t make any mistakes. Look, we do these really slow out laps and each time we’re trying to have the tyres in the optimal window for the start and each time we go out, they can vary between one and five degrees so most of often the result of that discrepancy is tyre temp and they generally get better to a point in the lap and then they start going over temp and then you start struggling with the tyre a little bit more and so that’s some of the answer.

    Q: (Andrew Benson – BBC Sport) On the subject of the 2021 tyres – this is for all three of you – most of the drivers appear to have been pretty unhappy with them. Is there any going to be any pressure or has there already been any pressure applied to Pirelli or the teams to stick with the current tyres next year?

    LH: Come on Max, give it what you’ve got man. Come on. We need you.  

    MV: You want me to repeat what I said yesterday? I think it’s important that we discuss these things, you know? Yeah, I think that’s the most important… we just have to talk to Pirelli and I hope they also listen a bit to the drivers. We anyway are cutting the downforce with the floor, right, so I think naturally the pressure on the tyres will be a bit less. I mean with the pressure we run in the tyres anyway it’s almost like a balloon, so I don’t think you can go much higher so I don’t think we need… well, if they would be faster than yeah, great, amazing, but I don’t think they are and of course the cars are not fully set up for these tyres but honestly, the difference we had yesterday in practice is not set-up, like you can adjust a few things but if the tyre is not turning, it’s not working, then you can turn the car upside, it’s not going to be the same speed. Yeah. I hope we will not use them but let’s see. Was that an honest answer?

    LH: I already said too much yesterday about it. The problem is for me is that I – I mentioned it yesterday – I see all the guys from Pirelli and I really have so much respect for the guys here. I think I’ve got a good relationship with the majority of them. It’s difficult for us drivers to say… we try to be constructive, we try to be supportive in the back and nothing changes. And then even when we say something not too positive in the media nothing changes so… I do miss the tyre war that used to happen in Formula 1. I think with that it’s great. When you don’t have any competition you’ve got no one to base yourself on. Just imagine us as a team or for Max and his team and none of us were here, they wouldn’t develop as they do now because they’re chasing and competing against other people. Formula 1 needs to do something different in the future and that’s something we need to do.

    VB: There’s not much more to add. Obviously our understanding with the new tyres, the main difference was in terms of reliability, so they got a lot heavier like just because there’s more material to try and prevent any punctures or failures that we had which is an important thing, but then on the other hand, the performance was not quite there, as expected, so quite a bit slower and not that nice feeling to drive. I wasn’t a big fan of those tyres, personally, but obviously… I don’t know who decides in the end what tyres we’re going to be using next year but we’ll see.

    LH: Can I just say that the tyre that we do have right now it’s been a really good tyre, it really has. It’s been the best tyre that Pirelli has given us apart from that hyper or ultra or whatever it was, the hypersoft, which was a good compound for one lap, it was pretty awesome. I’m personally happy to continue with the tyre that we have. Of course we would want more grip moving forwards but that’s definitely not what we’ve been given so far.

    Ends

  • Hamilton beats Bottas to take 98th career pole

    Hamilton beats Bottas to take 98th career pole

    Bahrain, 28 Nov 2020: Lewis Hamilton beat team-mate Valtteri Bottas by almost three tenths of a second to claim the 98th pole position of his career as Mercedes locked out the front row for tomorrow’s Bahrain Grand Prix. Max Verstappen will line up third beside team-mate Alex Albon in an all-Red Bull second row. 

    Verstappen was the first to set a timed lap in Q, with the Dutchman setting an early benchmark of 1:28.885. The sparked the rest of the pit lane into life and the entire field soon took to the track.

    Hamilton quickly moved ahead of the Red Bull man, with the Mercedes driver setting a new P1 time of 1:28.343. His team-mate Valtteri Bottas then took P2. 

    Further down the order, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc hovered close to the danger zone as the final runs began, with the Monegasque drive in P15, ahead of Russell. There were substantial improvements throughout in the final runs, however, and after jumping to P6 with his lap of 1:29.137 he eventually made it through to Q2 in P9 as better times came in. 

    The best of those improvements came from Racing Point’s Lance Stroll who claimed P2 three tenths of a second behind Hamilton. Albon too made a step forward, taking P3 behind the Canadian with a lap of 1:28.732. Verstappen, though, chose to stay in the garage for the final runs and he progressed to Q2 in P5 behind Bottas. 

    However, there was no progress for Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi who finished in P16 ahead of fellow Q1 drop outs Kimi Räikkönen in the second Alfa, the Haas cars of Kevin Magnussen and Romain Grosjean and the Williams of Nicholas Latifi.

    In Q2, the bulk of the remaining drivers went out on track on medium tyres, through the notable exceptions were the AlphaTauri drivers who stuck with the red-banded soft tyres for their first run.

    The initial runs were all scrapped, however, when Carlos Sainz spun and stopped at the edge of the track in Turn 1. The McLaren driver looked in control as he started his flying lap but his right rear wheel locked unexpectedly on entry to the corner and after saying he had “no drive” he was left stranded on the kerb. His team later attributed the incident to brake failure. 

    Sainz’s issue brought out the red flags as the car was recovered and when the session started again there were just nine minutes left on the clock.Verstappen and Albon were quickly on track and the Dutchman went quickest with a lap of 1:28.025. Hamilton, though, was quicker and the Mercedes driver set a time of 1:27.586. Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo went through in fourth place ahead of Albon, with Norris sixth for McLaren ahead of Racing Point’s Sergio Perez, the second Renault of Esteban Ocon and the twin AlphaTauri cars of Daniil Kvyat and Pierre Gasly who took fresh medium tyres for their final efforts in the segment. Eliminated were 11th Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari team-mate Leclerc, Stroll, Russell and Sainz. 

    In the first runs of Q3 it looked like Verstappen might challenge for pole position when his opening lap of 1:27.83 split the Mercedes and left him just 0.146s behind Hamilton and a tenth clear of Bottas. However, all three drivers improved on their final run with Hamilton taking pole ahead of Bottas who managed to edge Verstappen by just over a tenth of a second.

    Albon, meanwhile, found himself in P7 after the first runs but he made big gains on his final run to rise to fourth alongside Verstappen. Behind him Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez took fifth ahead of the Renault’s of Daniel Ricciardo and Esteban Ocon. Eighth place went to AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly, with McLaren’s Lando Norris ninth ahead of the second AlphaTauri of Daniil Kvyat.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Bahrain Grand Prix – Qualifying 
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:27.264 6 223.267
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:27.553 0.289 6 222.530
    3 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:27.678 0.414 6 222.213
    4 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:28.274 1.010 6 220.712
    5 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:28.322 1.058 6 220.592
    6 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:28.417 1.153 6 220.355
    7 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:28.419 1.155 6 220.350
    8 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:28.448 1.184 6 220.278
    9 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:28.542 1.278 6 220.044
    10 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:28.618 1.354 6 219.856
    11 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:29.149 1.563 5 218.546
    12 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:29.165 1.579 5 218.507
    13 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:29.557 1.971 5 217.550
    14 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:31.218 3.632 3 213.589 
     –  Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren/Renault 2 
    16 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:29.491 1.148 6 217.711
    17 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:29.810 1.467 6 216.937
    18 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:30.111 1.768 6 216.213
    19 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:30.138 1.795 6 216.148
    20 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:30.182 1.839 6 216.043

  • Hamilton-Bottas 1-2 seals record 7th Constructors’ title for Mercedes AMG Petronas

    Hamilton-Bottas 1-2 seals record 7th Constructors’ title for Mercedes AMG Petronas

    Imola, 1 Nov 2020: Lewis Hamilton won Formula 1’s Emilia Romagna Grand Prix ahead of team-mate Valtteri Bottas as Mercedes sealed a seventh consecutive Constructors’ title. Daniel Ricciardo finished third for Renault as a late safety car for a puncture that took Red Bull’s Max Verstappen out of the race shuffled the order at the flag as Sergio Perez of Racing Point lost position and a possible podium due to a misjudged pit-stop call in the 13th round of the FIA Formul 1 World Championship here on Sunday.

    When the lights went out for the start, pole position man Bottas got away well but second-placed Hamilton made a poor getaway, and as the field surged towards Tamburello Verstappen was able to get past to claim P2. 

    Behind the top three, Ricciardo rose to fourth place as AlphaTauri’s Pierre Gasly was forced wide by a defensive Hamilton.

    The front three began to quickly pull away from the pack and after seven laps Ricciardo was already 5.8 seconds behind third-placed Hamilton. Behind the Australian, Gasly led Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. However, on lap 9 Gasly was told to box and retire his AlphaTauri due to a loss of water pressure. 

    Verstappen pitted and made a switch to hard tyres on lap 19 and Mercedes responded by pitting Bottas for hard tyres on the following lap, keeping the Finn ahead of the Dutch driver. Ahead, Hamilton stayed out on his starting mediums and he soon began to pull away at over half a second a lap. 

    On lap 31 the race swung towards Hamilton when Renault’s Esteban Ocon stopped at the side of track on the exit of Turn 13. A Virtual Safety Car was deployed and Hamilton took the opportunity to pit for hard tyres. He resumed in the lead ahead of his team-mate and Verstappen. 

    Bottas was nursing a car wounded by a collision with debris on the second lap, however, and by half distance Verstappen was beginning to exert heaby pressure on the Mercedes driver. On lap 42 he forced Bottas into a mistake at Rivazza. The Finn locked up and ran wide and the error allowed Verstappen to sweep past the Mercedes at the start of the following lap and reclaim P2. 

    Kimi Räikkönen was the last of the medium-tyre starters to make his pit stop with the Alfa Romeo driver stopped on lap 50 for soft tyres and it appeared then that the order might settle. 

    However, just a lap later disaster struck Verstappen when he suffered a tyre failure and spun off track at Tamburello. The Safety Car was swiftly deployed and cars flooded towards the pit lane. 

    Ricciardo and Red Bull’s Alex Albon in though, stayed out on track and behind the Safety Car the Renault rose to third and the Red Bull drive to fifth place behind the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc. 

    When racing resumed at the start of lap 58, Hamilton held his lead from Bottas but further back Albon was immediately put under pressure by Racing Point’s Sergio Pérez, who had pitted from third for softs under the SC.

    The Mexican got past around the outside into Tamburello and as he tried to fight back Albin spun off. He was able to rejoin but dropped to the back of the field, where he would eventually finish.

    At the front, Hamilton was in total control, and five laps late he took the chequered flag, 5.7s ahead of Bottas as Mercedes sealed their seventh consecutive Constructors’ Championship title. 

    Ricciardo, benefiting from staying out during the safety car, took his second podium finish of the season. Behind him Daniil Kvyat used a new set of softs tyres to good effect to charge through to fourth at the flag ahead of Leclerc and Pérez. Carlos Sainz was sixth ahead of McLaren team-mate Lando Norris, while Alfa Romeo scored a double points finish with Räikkönen taking P9 ahead of team-mate Antonio Giovinazzi.

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Emilia Romagna Grand Prix – Race
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 63 1:28’32.430 
    2 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 63 1:28’38.213 5.783
    3 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 63 1:28’46.750 14.320
    4 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 63 1:28’47.571 15.141
    5 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 63 1:28’51.541 19.111
    6 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 63 1:28’52.082 19.652
    7 Carlos Sainz Jr. McLaren/Renault 63 1:28’52.660 20.230
    8 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 63 1:28’53.561 21.131
    9 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 63 1:28’54.654 22.224
    10 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 63 1:28’58.828 26.398
    11 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 63 1:28’59.565 27.135
    12 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 63 1:29’00.883 28.453
    13 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 63 1:29’01.593 29.163
    14 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 63 1:29’05.365 32.935
    15 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 63 1:29’29.714 57.284
         George Russell Williams/Mercedes 51 1:09’44.149 Spun off
         Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 50 1:06’23.648 Puncture
         Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 47 1:04’14.971 Physical
         Esteban Ocon Renault 27 36’58.496 Clutch
         Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 8 10’56.787 Overheating
     

  • Not just Toto, I may not be there next year; Team is not just one person, says Hamilton

    Not just Toto, I may not be there next year; Team is not just one person, says Hamilton

    DRIVERS

    1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)

    2 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes)

    3 – Daniel RICCIARDO (Renault)

    TRACK INTERVIEWS

    (Conducted by Paul Di Resta) 

    Q: Daniel, you’re getting pretty used to being up here. Another third place in three races. How did that pan out?

    Daniel RICCIARDO: It was a bizarre one. I got into fourth off the start and I felt that was obviously the best we could do with the three at the front. But then Pérez had really good pace. He passed us through the pit sequence and then I think he pitted for the soft at the end with the safety car. We obviously kept track position. I’m not sure what happened to Max but that obviously put us in the fight. Kvyat came out of nowhere in the last few laps, but it was fun. Two podiums in three races as you say. It all just happened very quickly at the end there. It was fun.

    Q: Good opportunity to do another Shoey. Is Cyril going to get another tattoo on the other side now as well?

    DR: He actually just said: “congrats, but I’m not getting a second tattoo”. So maybe someone else in the team. But today I won’t forget the shoey.

    Q: Is it a cool track to race on?

    Daniel RICCIARDO: It is. It obviously is pretty difficult for overtaking but the actual circuit itself is awesome. It’s mega.

    Q: Valtteri, you started on pole, you got away perfectly. But you were fighting wounded there. I think you picked up some damage up towards Turn 7 that you couldn’t avoid?

    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, I think that made quite a big effect today. The start was good. That was one of the main things to get right today. But on lap 2, suddenly, out of Turn 7, there was debris. I didn’t have time to avoid it…

    Q: Did you see the debris then?

    VB: Yeah, I saw it. I aimed in the middle of the car, at least I tried to no run over that with the tyres but obviously it caused some damage or something that made the car quick difficult to drive.

    Q: I guess it was very difficult because we saw Max pressuring you towards the end – a few mistakes and lock-ups – but I guess we can put that down to a lack of downforce?

    VB: I was really pushing hard to try to avoid Max getting through. I had to push over my limits and that led to a few mistakes so unlucky.

    Q: Lewis, outstanding. You obviously broke the record for wins last time out but to come here, perfectly managed on the radio, your strategy, how it all played out and I guess you are delighted? 

    Lewis HAMILTON: It was an exhausting race, the speed we were having to go. Obviously I had a poor start. It’s just very overwhelming right now because I look at my crew, this team here. And I know all the guys and girls… the men and women back at the factory, back at the factory in Brackley and Brixworth who… They are the unsung heroes. They are the ones that have really grafted away and never given up. They have just continued to push and elevate and innovate. People watching maybe think we are used to it but it always feels like the first with this team and I think that’s because of the spirit and so I am forever grateful to everyone to be a part of it, to be a part of breaking a breaking record like this. No team has done this before. We have a great leader in our team and also a big thank you to Mercedes, Petronas and all of our partners. We wouldn’t be able to do what we do without them.

    Q: Seven consecutive Constructors’ Championships. That’s mighty force behind you?

    LH: It’s unbelievable. To come back year on year… I’ll tell you, whilst we have great performance it’s not easy to deliver weekend-in, weekend-out, and for everyone, they are so precise with how they take the car apart and put it back together. Whoo! Seven-time champs. That’s something I’m going to be able to tell my grandchildren one day.

    Q: Toto, can you come in please. Toto, we don’t often see you as elevated as you are. That’s seven consecutive Constructors’ Championships. Lewis broke the record for wins last time out, you can  see what that means to all those involved here and equally back at the factory?

    Toto WOLFF: Yeah, I’m not so much into numbers but this is something to be proud of really. We have a group that is just amazing together. We’ve stayed together, we’ve tried to push the benchmark to new levels and we’ve achieved that and it’s just a super proud moment with all these guys and being part of it.

    Q: Where do you go from here? I guess you just regroup and you just set that bar even higher again?

    TW: Yeah, as long as we stay motivated and energised, and you see that within these guys, then I think we can push it furthermore. There will be competition, no doubt, next year, with Max and Honda trying to do a really good job towards the end of the season, so we are looking forward to a new challenge.

    Q: You don’t win these championships without having two good drivers. Valtteri was wounded today though. What happened there?

    TW: Valtteri had a, I think it was a Ferrari piece or a Racing Point piece, about that size, stuck underneath his car. It was debris his overran on lap two. He couldn’t avoid it.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Lewis, another great win to add to your collection – and a shoey! Be honest, what did it taste like?

    LH: Hahaha! Toe jam!

    DR: Not as bad as you thought?

    LH: It definitely didn’t taste great. I mean I don’t really like Champagne as it is, but it definitely tastes worse. But what’s positive is that Daniel’s mum thinks I was a good sport, so I’m grateful for that. I think Daniel had said that I’d once said never, that I would never do it. So there’s a lesson – never say never. It was a good moment… I don’t know I’m just feeling incredibly proud of this team and you know, to live in a moment where we see a team so successful and to be a part of it is quite phenomenal. Something that it the real honour of my life, working for this team and for all these people back at the two factories, Brixworth and Brackley. You know they really are the unsung heroes that are not on TV every weekend. They’re the guys that are working flat out every day during the weeks, crazy hours, to build and to innovate, to raise the bar, so that we can come here and do what we have done today and this year. I really don’t take it for granted that we have had this success. People could say ‘oh, you must be used to it’, and obviously maybe the fans are used to it, but from working inside the sport, you never get used to it. From tomorrow we’ll be focused on what’s next. We’ll be focusing on how we can be better. On Wednesday we’ll be having a big team meeting, trying to understand what could have been done better. We’ll have an analysis of what the next car looks like and what’s needed to raise the bar with the engine, with the driveability, with the ride, with tyre usage, all these different things. That’s because at the core of this team is some real heart and so a big thank you to everyone.

    Q: How different does winning the Constructors’ title feel to winning the Drivers’ title?

    LH: It’s almost more exciting winning the team one. It’s a very strange sport in the sense that it is as team sport but there are two championships and then there is an individual championship, but what is at the core our job is to deliver points and results for the team. So when you win a team championship I think it’s almost better than an individual because it’s something you do collectively, with a large group of people and whilst we are the ones standing on top of the podium we are not above anybody. We are on the same level, we are all part of the chain links. You can tell that everyone is so happy when they get the Constructors’ title. When we do the Christmas party and we celebrate with everyone, everyone just knows that they did a remarkable job and that they have done something that nobody else has done before. That’s cool to be a part of. Even if I was to stop today that would be something that I would be able to share with that large group of people for the rest of my life.

    Q: And a quick word on the race. What was it like in the cockpit?

    LH: It was incredibly intense, very hard, physically quite draining as well, and mentally, mainly because it’s a very fast circuit, very bumpy. Valtteri got a great start. I thought I would get a better start today but it didn’t turn out the way I would have liked and I fell to third. My next strategy was to try and get by the Red Bull but it was just impossible to get close and in trying to get close I was killing the front tyres. So I backed off and just tried to keep within distance. Then Max stopped much earlier than I thought he would and Valtteri stopped to cover him and there was no way I was doing the same. Naturally, at the beginning of the race we get given a bunch of different options of strategy and I understood that if I was in that position the only way to do something was to do something different – to extend as long as I could. But I didn’t know how long that tyre would go, but I think that’s where the race was won today.

    Q: Valtteri, before we talk about your race, can we just have a few words from you on the team’s achievement this year? You’ve been at Mercedes for four years. Four world titles.

    VB: Yeah, for me it’s crazy to think that I’ve now been part of the team four years in a row to be part of winning the Constructors’ Championship. It’s quite unreal – but I think everything that Lewis said. For me, I’m just really thinking the same. I’m so proud of every single team member, what they’re doing. All the factories and in the race team. We keep raising the bar for every single team member but we do it united. We support each other but the spirit the team has, it’s making these things possible. And I’m really, really proud to be part of it. I think for all of us in the team, it takes a bit of time to understand what we’re doing and what we are achieving – but we should definitely enjoy it because it is amazing and I’m really proud of everyone. So, thanks, team.

    Q: And looking at your race. As Lewis said, you made a great start – but then you were carrying debris for a large chunk of the race. How did that affect the performance of your car?

    VB: Actually it was lap two, out of Turn Seven. Like, on the racing line, I didn’t have enough time to react. I saw a big piece of carbon, so I decided the only chance… what I had to do, what I had time to do was aim at least how to hit it. I decided to go straight over it instead of hitting one of the tyres and possibly getting a puncture but, unluckily, it got stuck on the floor – under the floor – and apparently it was like 50 points of downforce which, in lap time, is quite a big chunk. How it affected me, I would say mainly in high-speed corners. I could feel that the car was sliding a bit and in some brakings it was a bit unpredictable, so sometimes I would lock the wheels and sometimes it would stop pretty quickly. It was not really consistent, the downforce I had in the car. It made it really tricky and I could see I just didn’t quite have the pace and Max was putting a lot of pressure and in the end he got through because I had to push over my limits to try and maintain the position. I had a lock-up and that was it. Not my day. I didn’t have a chance with that debris in the car to fight for the win today, unfortunately. But at least we could secure a 1-2, which is a perfect way to secure the seventh title for the team in a row.

    Q: Daniel, great to see you back on the podium. Second time in three races. How satisfying is this third place?

    DR: They’ll all pretty good, for sure. As Lewis touched on, with the wins, I’m also not going to take this for granted. It’s the second in three races but I’m as excited as I was in Nürburgring. It was a bit more… I feel it was a bit more unexpected, this one. We were running P5 with roughly 15 laps to go, I think, and then there was the issue with Max, so that brought out the Safety Car. So I guess that put me in fourth on track, and then Pérez pitted which, yeah, obviously I was smiling about because I was ‘well, that’s given me third on track’ and I knew hanging on with the Hard on the restart was going to be tricky but I was more than happy to fight for it at the end. Track position’s obviously very important around here, so yeah, I think both myself and the team were very willing to keep me out on track. We held on. I think the threat at the end was Kvyat and that was very surprising. I wasn’t sure where he came from but I was told he was on the Soft and he was coming on obviously very strong – but held on and just very, very happy. It’s pretty surreal actually, the first one and to get two now in such close proximity. It’s awesome.

    Q: And now Renault third in the Constructors’ Championship, one point ahead of McLaren.

    DR: OK. It’s so close! That’s awesome. Obviously I saw Esteban off fairly early in the race I believe with a mechanical, so that’s a shame. I don’t know where he was on track but I know he would have had the pace to collect points today I’m sure. So, obviously it’s great that we got big points with one car but I think if we’re going to keep our nose in front for sure we need both cars in the points. It’s a shame, I guess he had some reliability issues today but still got a few races to go and I think we’ll fight until the end for sure – so I’m excited for that.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) It’s a question for Lewis. Do you might talking us through what happened at the start. It sounds like it didn’t quite go as you expected. And also, there was a stage under the Safety Car where the team was quite concerned about you and the delta time – what was happening there?

    LH: The start, I don’t really know. Just poor grip and… I’d have to look back it but it just felt like it wasn’t particularly fast and obviously I lost ground to both Valtteri and Max. Max, I think, was fortunate to be in P3. In hindsight I could have done a different job. Now I know. Hindsight’s a great thing but I’ll know for next time. And delta, I think just overly cautious and, for whatever reason, the Safety Car was out and the delta wasn’t an issue at that point. We were quite down on the delta.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question to Lewis please. I believe that before the 2014 engine era started, Aldo Costa said internally at Mercedes that the targets hadn’t been set high enough and the team should aim for multiple titles in a row. Obviously, I would imagine, this has surpassed anybody’s wildest expectations at the beginning. Could you just explain how you believe the team has evolved from when you joined in 2013 and made this success possible?

    LH: There’s been a lot of changes over the time. What’s really crazy – for me – is that I was brought in, ultimately, to replace Michael, which was such a strange position to be in because, obviously, I’d watched this man dominate the sport and achieve such great things and he was stopping and I was going to be taking his place. The guys that I worked with were his previous mechanics and engineers and what a privileged position to be in. However, they had had quite a difficult time and the car hadn’t been good. I think what was really great was that, when I joined, I was personally able to put my stamp on the car and make a lot of alterations, particularly in 2013. And then we just collectively worked together. I knew that we would have a great engine because they had already started developing the engine before I’d even made my decision to join the team, before I’d signed the contract. Being that I was with Mercedes at McLaren, I was able to go to the factory, I knew what Mercedes was doing, I knew that McLaren was coming out of contract with Mercedes and I knew that I wanted to be with Mercedes-Benz because I think it’s such an iconic brand and I think they were so passionate about what they wanted to achieve. They’ve got such a great history and I knew that they had the power to turn things around. But it took so many incredibly hard working people to collectively come together to really innovate and design some incredibly… some of the most incredible bits of the car… to come together… the puzzle. It’s obviously a big puzzle. To watch it all come together is a real joy and, at the end of the day, there’s only two of us that get to drive it. I think also, the guys are just very level-headed. Even when you’re on the podium, the guys are never too overly-excited. They’re not out celebrating; they’re back at their desks already right now. I know for sure they’ll be back at their desks right now, already doing emails, working on what spares there are for the next race, working on what’s next to try to get ahead of the curve. And that’s what this team’s always been about.

    Q: Lewis, were you surprised that Toto Wolff didn’t come on the podium today with you guys?

    LH: I thought that he was so I was a bit surprised. I thought that’s why he was at the front. We very rarely see him at the front there and he came and did an interview, so I thought that he was coming up – but I think whilst it would have been nice for him to be up there with us, I think that’s a real showing of a leader. He’s not trying to be at the front of every photo. He’s not trying to claim anything. He puts the team first. I think that’s… without doubt he is the best leader here. It doesn’t matter what anyone says, no-one has done as good a job as he has. I think it’s his mentality, the balance of drive, compassion, understanding and ego. All of them come together to create the best boss you could have. Every single person in the team, no-one’s below him, and he really cares about how everyone is doing: ‘how’re things away from the track?’, ‘how’s things at home with your family – is there anything we can do so you can be better at the office?’ He’s a great guy and I feel privileged to have him as our leader. We wouldn’t have been able to do this without his guidance.

    Q: (Ben Hunt – The Sun) Kind of following on from Lewis’s comments there, I wanted to ask… Toto’s just been on Sky saying that he’s reached the end of his shelf life in his current position. He’s earmarked a replacement, he’s not saying who it is, the big indication, of course, is that he’s not going to be within the same role next year. With that in mind, just how concerned are you about next year and – obviously we’re a long way off – but the fact that he won’t be there… you talk about what big effect he in the team, if he’s not there to lead the team, are there any concerns going forward that he won’t be able to repeat this same level of success that you’ve had this year?

    LH: I don’t even know if I’m going to be here next year so it’s not really a concern for me at the moment. No, I think I understand and we have a lot of deep conversations, Toto and I, so I’m very, very aware of where he is mentally and we share a lot of … and carry a lot of the weight together, I think. Jeez, yeah, I’ve been in a long, long time. I can definitely understand wanting to pull back and give more time to family and those things. I don’t know who he would be replaced with but again, he’s a leader, he’s not going to put anyone that’s not going to be able to do the job, not going to be up to it, who’s not going to be geared up. He will find the right people. That’s why we have the success we have, we’ve found the right people and put them in the position to be able to shine as bright as possible. He’s just empowered every single person in the team, to be the best they can be. So he will find somebody that’s able to take on and continue… But you know, it’s not one person. The team is not about one person, it’s a collective of a lot of people. Toto doesn’t build the car, it’s a real team effort. But I’m supportive of him, whatever he wants to do, moving forwards.

    Q: Valtteri, can we get your thoughts on Toto? You’ve worked with him for many years, even before you were at Mercedes.

    VB: I think, to be honest, Lewis said everything. I just copy paste it, because I really think the same, that he’s going to be a tough guy to replace in the future and the way he leads the team, he’s a smart guy and he knows exactly what kind of support each team member needs, how much they need, criticism and how to help them to be a better version of themselves and that applies to every single team member and he can really read people well and he’s supportive and he’s done something incredible and I’m fortunate that I’ve known him since 2008 so quite some long time now and he was a bit part of my early career as well. He’s a great guy and whatever he’s going to do in the future I’m going to respect that as well because in the end you’re living for yourself in this life and that’s how it goes.

    Q: (Christian Nimmervoll – motorsport.com) Valtteri, are you a bit surprised, in a way, that last week in Portimao you were not allowed to change onto the softs which you actually demanded on the radio whereas this week Lewis was allowed an offset strategy? Is that in line with what you call racing intent?

    VB: It was two different scenarios, I would say. We went through the plans this morning, what happens if one of us gets under pressure and there’s a possibility that Red Bull could undercut and that was me today, so obviously I had to react and it would have been the same case if I was in Lewis’s position that the only thing I wanted to do is to go long and seek the opportunities and it really paid off for Lewis today and if we were the other way round it would have been the same for me. Obviously Lewis, he had the pace advantage, I think, honestly, partly, for sure today because of the debris I had but we were pretty strong but two completely different scenarios and actually in Portimao, even though I asked for the soft but I couldn’t achieve the target lap anyway, to get the soft to last until the end. The racing intent is good and is working and we are following the rules and it’s completely fair. It’s one of the thing that allows us as a team to actually do the things that we’re doing.

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) Valtteri, we’ve seen the debris that was caught under your car, it’s quite a massive part. Are you surprised that no one realised it and that we didn’t see a VSC or a yellow flag or whatever? And are you asking these questions to Michael?

    VB: Actually, I got a warning from my engineers that they could see some gravel, maybe, on lap two in turn seven because they could see some kind of warning somewhere but there was no yellow flag but it was big piece of debris and I didn’t have enough time to react, to go around it so I would have time to decide how I’m going to hit the debris and I decided to go, like, straight over instead of with the tyres. Yeah, it would be good to get more of an understanding why there was not any sign of big piece of carbon because obviously it’s dangerous if there’s flying things around but it sure didn’t help my race today.

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Lewis, I don’t know if you’ve had a chance already looking at the trophy but obviously it’s the circuit layout and then there’s a diamond where the Senna tragedy happened. What do you think of the trophy? Does it mean something to you?

    LH: Well, every trophy does, for sure. When we came back, just before we came in the podium, we saw there was a lady there doing the engraving, which is probably the first time I’ve seen that being done, just before… do they always do that? There was a time when trophies were… when you’re from the young days, from karting, little plastic… but they’re so special, they all had such a great meaning and then as you get through the categories they would get nicer, they would get more expensive and you got to Formula 1 and they were so stunning and… but then we went through a patch where they really did a cost-cutting scheme and we had some really dodgy, really flimsy trophies, those ones did not survive the time but this one, particularly, I think, being that we’ve not had a race here for a long time, it is where I remember the day when I was in karting in ’94 at Rye House when Ayrton passed away so to think that we’re here, 26 year, whatever it is, 26 years later and to be able to win here as he had done many times and so yes, the trophy definitely is a keeper and it felt it had good weight to it so it felt like a… it didn’t feel like a cheapy.

    Q: (Rebecca Clancy – The Times) Lewis, just wanted to follow up on something you said earlier, you said you don’t even know if you’re going to be here next year. Most take it as a given that you’re going to sign another contract with Mercedes but is there actually a real chance that you won’t be racing in Formula 1 next year?

    LH: Well, we’re in November and I’m still… it’s crazy that it’s Christmas isn’t that far away. Naturally, I feel great, I still feel very strong, I feel like I could keep going for plenty of months but you know, you mentioned about Toto and shelf-life so there’s multiple things that do stay on the top of my mind but I would like to be here next year but there’s no guarantee of that, for sure. There’s a lot that excites me of the after life so time will tell.

    Q: (Phil Duncan – PA) Lewis, the World Championship is now on the horizon, you can take the title in Turkey next time out. How does it feel to be on the brink on further history and what do you think it says about your performances this year, that you can seal the title in a 17 race season with three races to spare?

    LH: We, as a team, have done such a remarkable job, so I fully acknowledge that it’s a collective and we wouldn’t be able to get these one-twos if it wasn’t for these great people behind us. But still, I’ve got a phenomenal driver and teammate who comes in weekend in and weekend out and makes my life very very difficult and so this year, I think it’s… being that you’ve seen the different steps that Valtteri’s taken, he’s getting stronger and stronger, he’s picking up his game, every year, it’s been a great challenge to race alongside him. I definitely think these last couple of years I’ve been able to step into a different… really step it up, quite big strides, I would say, in positive areas and I think that’s come with age. I’m getting older now and whilst not letting my physical side drop off, I’ve been able to really… you’ve seen in the race today… I think getting stronger which feels good. I think this year has been feeling that, being getting stronger and stronger. Definitely really proud of this year’s performances but I couldn’t have done it without these great people working behind me who really provide us with the solid foundation of a reliable car, a fast car, to do what we’ve done, so it’s pretty awesome.

    Ends

  • Bottas does the talking on the track, I have great respect for him, says Hamilton

    Bottas does the talking on the track, I have great respect for him, says Hamilton

    Imola, 31 October 2020: The following drivers attended the post-qualifying FIA press conference on Saturday.

    1 – Valtteri BOTTAS (Mercedes); 2 –Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes); 3 – Max VERSTAPPEN (Red Bull).

    TRACK INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Johnny Herbert) 

    Q: Max, that was a bit of a tough session for you, obviously you had that problem earlier on. Tell us about getting yourself into third position?

    Max VERSTAPPEN: Yeah, it was not a great qualifying because of that. I only did two laps in Q1 and then you want to go out and get that run in in Q2 and then with the trouble it was a bit tricky. Also, on the medium tyres: OK we got through and we did our lap but then it just doesn’t give you a good reference to get into Q3 and we definitely seemed to struggle a bit with that. The first run in Q3 – just not a lot of grip. I think the second run was a little bit better but yeah, just difficult. At the end of the day P3 – not bad. I personally expected to be a little bit closer, to be able to fight them a little bit more but I think after Q2 we just lost our way a little bit.

    Q: What about the race track itself. It’s great that we have come back to Imola but is there a particular part of the track where you think: “this is good fun round here”?

    MV: The track is really cool. It’s really enjoyable to drive. I initially though it was going to be a bit too narrow for these cars but it’s fine. I really enjoy it. I hope that tomorrow we can also have a really cool race here.

    Q: Valtteri, pole position man, you must be a happy one because that’s your 15th, but you had to fight for it.

    Valtteri BOTTAS: Yeah, you always have to. It’s never to get pole positions. I really enjoy this track when you push flat out; it’s beautiful. I knew I had to improve on the last lap and I found those small gains that were needed and it’s a great feeling when you get those and definitely I had the shakes after. It’s good fun.

    Q: Tell us about that. It seemed to be that last sector that was not quite there. What did you do differently to get that extra bit of speed?

    VB: For me it was Turns 2 and 3, that’s something I was really working on today and only got there at the end. And the last couple of corners as well. I struggled when I tried to risk and go for it. I struggled with a bit of instability with the car. But I knew that on the last lap I had to try so I risked it and the car it just managed to turn in nicely. It was good.

    Q: That must give you a lot of confidence taking it into tomorrow. What are you expecting to have from your team-mate going into Turn 1? And again your race is something. It’s going to be interesting to see how the race pans out for you?

    VB: Yeah it’s going to be a good fight. It’s one of the longest runs on the calendar into Turn 1, so no doubt Lewis and Max will be chasing me but it’s a good place to start and hopefully the pace is good and yeah, game on.

    Q: Lewis, second position, you must be a bit frustrated about that. But he just finally pipped you on that last lap you did.

    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, Valtteri did a great job and it was a pretty piss poor lap from myself! But these things happen. You can’t always get it perfect. But what a beautiful place we’re in here in Italy. The track: it’s unbelievable the speeds we are going round this track. Grateful to be here. Grateful for the performance we have, which is really remarkable. It feels better than it did in the last race. Yeah, it was a real challenge out there, but I enjoyed it.

    Q: What about the race, because your team-mate is always going to be a threat but Max? They had a few problems in that session but overall do you think he’s going to be a bigger threat tomorrow compared to last time?

    LH: Yeah, they were very strong on their race runs. What is unfortunate really with this track is that it is so beautiful to drive but you are going to see… I’m pretty certain you are going to see a pretty boring race tomorrow. You can overtake on this long straight but it’s quite narrow. But you can’t follow. Once you get into Turn 1 there is no single place to overtake anywhere else. It’s going to be a challenge for people following but as I said the DRS will hopefully give some overtaking opportunities into Turn 1 for people. For us, that means… as you see we are within half a tenth of each other and to have an opportunity of overtaking I think you have to have a gain of something like two seconds or something to the car ahead to have a chance. Nonetheless, I’m going to give it everything I’ve got tomorrow and fingers crossed.

    Q: What’s the best part of the track and why?

    LH: I would say location. They don’t build tracks this anymore. I don’t know why the new guys can’t build a track like this. It’s just a classic and it has the history, which helps, and I would say location, it’s in one of the most beautiful places here in Italy.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Valtteri, many congratulations. So close between you and Lewis. How good was that final lap of Q3?

    VB: Well, obviously I didn’t have much experience of this track but once we got down to the qualifying session and the laps keep getting faster and faster and you really start to appreciate this track more and more and towards the end of qualifying when you are flat out on this track it’s really beautiful and enjoyable to drive. A proper old school track and that’s what we all like. The last lap it was good enough. I think no one, I doubt they had perfect laps with the short amount of practice and having to be on the limit just in one day, getting the rhythm quickly. But it was good enough and definitely better than the first lap I had in Q3. There were a few places on track where I had to make big gains and luckily most of the losses I managed tyo minimise and the areas I was quick I tried to make them even better.

    Q: With only practice session ahead of qualifying, how much of an unknown is the race tomorrow?

    VB: For sure it’s unknown. We got some long runs in practice. I think quite a lot of cars had graining on the soft tyre. That’s one of the reasons we qualified on the medium tyres. That felt OK. For surer there are questions marks but at least the starting point for the race is good.

    Q: Lewis, it was a great battle between team-mates for pole position. In the end, just less than a tenth between you. You didn’t seem happy immediately after the session. Were there any particular issues on your laps in Q3?

    LH: What do you mean ‘I didn’t seem happy?’ I’m second! I think I was fine. Valtteri did a great job today, so ultimately in Q3 both laps weren’t that great, to be honest. The first lap was OK and the second one was pretty poor. To only have been that far away, considering, it’s not so bad. We live to fight another day tomorrow.

    Q: You’ve said it’s a beautiful track. Can you give us some idea of the challenge of Imola?

    LH: The speed that we’re doing from Turn 2 onwards. It’s really intense. The lap is just non-stop, medium-high speed. The grip is very, very high and so, naturally, the faster you’re going, the harder it is to be inch-perfect. And so, Valtteri did a great job today. It’s not going to be a great race circuit, that’s for sure. I’d be really surprised if it’s a great race to watch tomorrow – because once you get into Turn 2, you can’t follow. Yeah. I hope I’m wrong.

    Q: So the key to winning the Grand Prix is the start?

    LH: Qualifying is… it’s perhaps a little bit like Monaco in that sense. I think the strategy as well. It’s going to be interesting tomorrow. There are usually only a couple of options. It won’t be as good as the last race in terms of the opportunities to overtake, places that you can follow. But, as I said, maybe we’ll be surprised.

    Q: Max, coming to you. It seemed like a tough qualifying. First up, what was the issue in Q2 that kept you in the garage for so long?

    MV: I don’t know exactly what it was. Of course, the bodywork had to go off and I think the mechanics did a very good job to fix my car but it ruined, a bit, my qualifying because you have to go out on a Medium, try to nail the lap. We just managed to go through, of course, on that, but yeah, the reference was a bit off. The first lap then in Q3, the tyres were too cold because I was a bit in the middle of the train. I never really got into a nice rhythm where you know that, ‘OK, I have a bit of time left here, I can push a bit harder’ It was all a bit messy so, even in Q3, the last lap, I was, ‘well, I think we could have done a bit better here if we just had a smoother qualifying. But if you have that in Q2 and you have to qualify on a different tyre as well, mid-way through then yeah, it’s not great. I didn’t expect, of course, to beat them in qualifying. I just wanted to be a bit closer, make it a bit more exciting – but today, it was just very tricky and I never really found that rhythm that you get throughout qualifying, that you know ‘OK we put a new tyre-set on and I know where to find my lap time’. I was just still learning to go faster. Bit of a shame but still, P3, so back in my seat!

    Q: Do you expect to be closer to these guys tomorrow?

    MV: Long run was alright, so hopefully we’ll be a bit similar tomorrow. Let’s hope that, top-speed-wise, we’re on a good position tomorrow. I don’t think it’s going to be very easy to pass anyway but we’ll see. We’ll see what we can do.

    VIDEO CONFERENCE

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Question for Valtteri please. You mentioned when you got out of the car that you had to really risk it on that last, final lap. Could you explain where in particular you felt you had to take those extra risks – and how close to the edge did you come with those? Thank you.

    VB: There’s a couple of points on this track – every track but this one especially with such a limited practice and experience – I had some issues sometimes in Turn 2 with locking up, trying to brake too late. Sometimes into the last two corners, the downhill braking, I braked too late, and that’s why I lost a bit of momentum out of those corners, so it’s just small things like that. There was no time to be wasted under braking, which I wasn’t in places yet quite comfortable – but I’m glad I could get there eventually and, in the last run for sure you’re not holding back. You either go for it or go home. I’m glad it was a good-enough lap.

    Q: (Christian Menath – motorsport-magazin.com) First part of the question for Max. Can you explain how it felt in the car in Q2 when you lost the power? Was it feeling like you don’t have the MGU-K power? And then for all three of you, how was the programme today in the only practice session with the long runs? How many did you do compared to a normal weekend? Thank you.

    MV: No, I had power. Then not. Then it kicked in again. Then not. They told me to keep going but I said, ‘guys, I’m losing quite a bit of lap-time here on the straight’ because at one point I aborted because it didn’t make sense to continue. We’ll have more detailed look what exactly went wrong. I didn’t speak to my engineers yet because it doesn’t make sense to go through qualifying discussing what broke. Just focus on the job. It’s not so lovely but luckily we’re still here.

    Q: And Max, your programme today?

    MV: Yeah, it was nice. We hit the ground running, quite smoothly. I didn’t really have a lot of problems with the car, like no balance issues, so then of course it’s great when you have only one practice session but of course when you’re struggling a bit more with the car then you would like to have another practice session, so I guess sometimes it’s good, sometimes you will experience a bit more trouble.

    VB: For sure, it’s always a compromise. You know you can’t only do short runs or only do long runs, so you have to compromise the time a bit but what was a nice thing was actually to have three sets of tyres so it meant we could run pretty much the whole practice instead of… we see sometimes on Friday that we’re sitting around quite a bit because of the limited tyres so that was nice and put up the session, but for sure a compromise between short and long runs.

    LH: The same as theirs. It was great. I much prefer just the two days.

    Q: (Scott Mitchell – The Race) Question for the two Mercedes drivers: Valtteri, you’ve had some choice words for your critics at times. This is, I think, your fourth pole this year and on an old school track as well so do you think your performances are under-rated? And Lewis, you often speak about how hard Valtteri pushes you. Could you just give your view on how high a level he’s performing at, please?

    VB: I don’t really think about that, how people rate me. It’s something that I think is a wrong area to focus on and for sure, sometimes we get criticism – I think everyone does, that’s normal in life and there’s always people who want to drag you down but I just try to turn it into positive energy and try to use it was a strength. So I’m not really one to comment if I’m under rated or over rated, whatever. It’s not something that I should think about, I’m just focusing on my driving, trying to get pole, trying to get wins, that’s my job, that’s what I like to do.

    LH: I don’t really think I need to say much. I mean, Jeez, he just got pole position. He’s ahead of me. I have more poles than anyone here so it’s not like I’m a slowpoke, so he’s doing an amazing job and I think his result today speaks for itself. I don’t really need to say much more. He does his talking on the track and that’s the great thing about Valtteri, but I don’t think there’s many people who can do what he’s doing, if I’m really honest, so I’ve got a huge amount of respect for him.

    Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Max, you seem to be a lot closer to the Mercedes in qualifying but not so much in the race. I know what you said just now that you hoped to be closer, but if we look at the past couple of races it appears as though you’re closer in qualifying, not so much the race. Do you put this down to a difference in the hybrid systems or what do you put it down to? And then the other question is given the number of issues you’ve had with Honda recently, do you really believe it’s the right way for the team to go with Honda engines in the future, under their own brand or whatever independent engine they’re going to have?

    MV: Well, first of all, that last bit: I don’t know how to comment on that, to be honest. I guess we just have to wait and see what’s going to happen. OK, we have had two retirements this year but I think in general they’ve done a great job and I’m very happy to work with Honda, they’re great guys and they are very, very motivated and they will never give up and I like that mentality. I think it’s a bit track-dependent, so where, for example, you are clipping a lot, it seems that we are a bit more prone to that so of course you lose a bit more lap time on the straights so if you compare to last year as well, it seems like last year from qualifying to the race we would gain a bit and it seems like maybe now qualifying seems a little bit better and then in the race we struggle a bit more with that. But yeah, it’s not on every track. To be honest, I mean, Nürburgring wasn’t that bad. I think we were quite competitive. It was just a few corners where it seemed like we were struggling a bit and that’s why Lewis was just opening the gap on me. Last race, I don’t know, I just found it very tricky to comment on that one because of first of all the first lap but also the tarmac and everything. I was on a different strategy. I don’t think there is a trend. I just see that when you are a bit more limited with the energy you can lose over a lap in the race, it seems like it’s… yeah, we don’t have the same amount of release, at least on the straights, so we’ll have to work harder to try and improve that.

    Q: (Alex Kalinauckas – Autosport) Again, to the two Mercedes drivers: again, you’re starting on the medium tyres at the start of the race. Obviously a harder compound, we saw what happened last weekend. Are you expecting a similar thing to happen, or is that negated by the softer tyres this weekend and a different track surface. And also, to Valtteri, it looks as if pole position is slightly off the racing line; does that give you a little bit of a disadvantage compared to starting second?

    VB: I don’t know the facts: is there more grip on the left or right hand side? For sure it’s maybe not as clean as some other places. There are some different bits of tarmac on the grid in some places, so it’s an unknown. That’s something we’re going to find out tomorrow. Yeah, for sure, try and get more heat than last weekend. I think the rain played quite a big part in Portimão and the new tarmac. I’m sure we will try everything we can. I think even though it could be tricky at the beginning of the race, I really hope and there’s always a reason why we go for the medium, that it is a better race tyre but we’ll see.

    LH: Yeah, pretty much the same as Valtteri. It should be different here; the surface is different.

    Ends

  • Valtteri Bottas quickest again in Red-flag punctuated FP2

    Valtteri Bottas quickest again in Red-flag punctuated FP2

    Portimao, 23 October 2020: Valtttei Bottas continued to set the pace in practice for this weekend’s FIA Formula 1 Portuguese Grand Prix with the Mercedes driver beating Red Bull’s Max Verstappen to the top of the FP2 timesheet in a session defined by two red flag spells. 

    The session began with a 30-minute spell during which teams tested unmarked 13-inch prototype slick tyres for next year, according to a run plan to be defined by Pirelli. The aim of the test was to validate the development of tyres for 2021. 

    During the test period it was Bottas who went quickest with the Finn setting a best time of 1:21.662, with Leclerc slotting into P2 thanks to a lap of 1m22.043s. Bottas’s time was almost three seconds of the timesheet-topping pace he’d shown on this weekend’s medium tyres in FP1, though fuel loads for the test were unspecified. 

    With a third of the session run, teams then returned to the work of this weekend and with medium tyres on board Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel soon jumped to the top of the order with a lap of 1:19.936. The German lowered the benchmark to 1:19. 175 but then had a small spin at Turn 14 on his next lap. 

    Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took up the challenge and improved to 1:19.033 and then improved to 1:18.535 before Bottas became the first man to move to a qualifying simulation on soft tyres. The red rubber provided immediate reward and the Mercedes man reclaimed top spot with a good lap of 1:17.940. 

    His was only qualifying simulation for some time, however, as soon after the Finn had set a new target time the red flags were shown when Pierre Gasly pulled over at the side of track with the rear of his AlphaTauri in flames. Running was halted for some 15 minutes as the fire was extinguished and Gasly’s car recovered. 

    When the action resumed with half an hour left on the clock most drivers returned to the track on soft tyres. Once again though the green light spell was shortlived as just five minutes later Verstappen and Racing Point’s Lance Stroll collided on track and the red flags were once again displayed. 

    Stroll, just back after testing positive for COVID-19 after the Eifel Grand Prix two weeks ago, was ahead of Verstappen into Turn 1. But amid confusion about the Canadian’s intentions on the lap, the Red Bull driver hit the right-rear of the Canadian’s Racing Point, with the result that Stroll was pitched into the gravel and Verstappen was forced back to the pits. The incident was placed under investigation by the stewards.

    The session finally got going again with a little over seven minutes and again a stream of cars headed for the pit exit on soft tyres.

    While the top two positions remained unchanged, with Verstappen lapping on mediums again, McLaren’s Lando Norris made the most of the short amount of running to climb to third on the timesheet with a late lap of 1:18.743. 

    Fourth place went to Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc with the Monegasque driver just under a tenths of a second behind Norris. Carlos Sainz took fifth place in the second McLaren, 1.1s behind Bottas and Vettel looked more comfortable with his Ferrari than at recent races as he took sixth spot 1.235s behind the pacesetting Mercedes. 

    The unfortunate Gasly was just three thousandths of a second slower than Vettel in seventh place, while championship leader Lewis Hamilton finished eighth ahead of Renault’s Esteban Ocon and the second Red Bull of Alex Albon. 

    2020 FIA Formula 1 Portuguese Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 1:17.940 32 214.919
    2 Max Verstappen Red Bull/Honda 1:18.535 0.595 34 213.290
    3 Lando Norris McLaren/Renault 1:18.743 0.803 35 212.727
    4 Charles Leclerc Ferrari 1:18.838 0.898 34 212.471
    5 Carlos Sainz McLaren/Renault 1:19.113 1.173 32 211.732
    6 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:19.175 1.235 34 211.566
    7 Pierre Gasly AlphaTauri/Honda 1:19.178 1.238 26 211.558
    8 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:19.308 1.368 27 211.211
    9 Esteban Ocon Renault 1:19.496 1.556 32 210.712
    10 Alexander Albon Red Bull/Honda 1:19.643 1.703 37 210.323
    11 George Russell Williams/Mercedes 1:19.821 1.881 33 209.854
    12 Sergio Pérez Racing Point/Mercedes 1:19.901 1.961 34 209.644
    13 Daniel Ricciardo Renault 1:19.987 2.047 28 209.419
    14 Nicholas Latifi Williams/Mercedes 1:20.465 2.525 33 208.174
    15 Kimi Räikkönen Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:20.490 2.550 34 208.110
    16 Kevin Magnussen Haas/Ferrari 1:20.680 2.740 29 207.620
    17 Daniil Kvyat AlphaTauri/Honda 1:20.729 2.789 33 207.494
    18 Romain Grosjean Haas/Ferrari 1:20.867 2.927 32 207.140
    19 Lance Stroll Racing Point/Mercedes 1:20.983 3.043 26 206.843
    20 Antonio Giovinazzi Alfa Romeo/Ferrari 1:21.396 3.456 34 205.793