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1. Lewis HAMILTON (McLaren
Mercedes), 1h22m44.933s
2. Felipe MASSA (Ferrari), 1h22m59.394s
3. Nick HEIDFELD (BMW Sauber), 1h23m08.777s
Q: Lewis, a sensational victory for you. Talk us through those closing laps
as the rain began to fall.
Lewis HAMILTON: It was an experience and a half. I could see Kimi ahead and
after the second stop he was so far ahead and I was thinking how did he make
such a gap but I did get stuck in traffic. I was just pushing and pushing
and pushing trying to close that gap. I might have been catching him one
tenth per lap but then he would pull out a little bit of time and then I was
relying on traffic. I was hoping that he would catch the traffic at the
right time. Sometimes he caught it on the straight and he got a tow and then
I caught them in mid sector and lost time. It was just mix and match. I was
just praying, I was saying please just rain, rain, rain. I wanted the rain
to come because I knew how to deal with it. The heavens opened a little bit
and I saw Kimi begin to back off a little bit, a lot earlier than he did
normally into turn eight and that was really where I knew it was on, the
fight was on. When I went into turn 12 I was going reasonably wide but then
it looked like, I think it was Rosberg, had done a spin and he was coming
back onto the track and he was coming back on exactly where I was going off,
so I nearly crashed into the side of him. Kimi nearly did the same. I went
over the grass, Kimi spun on the exit of that corner, so I got it back and
from then on it was pretty straightforward from there. But it was incredibly
tough as I had lost all the temperature in the tyres but it was great.
Q: Talk us through that passing incident at the last chicane when you let
Kimi past but then passed him again?
LH: Yeah, I mean to be honest he pushed me wide. I was a little bit ahead
and I was on the outside of turn one. He could have been fair as I had no
room. He pushed me to the point where I would either have been on the kerb
and crashed into him or have to go on the escape route, so I went on the
escape route. I understood I had to let him past, so I did. I got in his tow
and he was ducking and diving left and right and I did the same and managed
to get back to the inside of him. But then he hit me at the apex of the
corner but I think I was pretty much gone from there which was good.
Q: You led the race from the start but you half spun at the start of the
second lap.
LH: I got a good start. I got away and I was feeling comfortable. The
difficulty was that bits of the track were still wet, at the last corner and
turn one, so I was having to make sure I got the braking right. It was still
a bit unknown and I went into turn one and I think on the last downshift it
just locked the rears. It was a pretty pathetic spin but there was nothing I
could do about it. Luckily they weren't so close to each other, so I just
pulled the clutch, boom, and went as quick as possible. I did get ahead but
Kimi slipstreamed me on the straight.
Q: Kimi opened up a gap of around five seconds but on the prime tyre you
pulled the gap back at the beginning of the third stint.
LH: Yeah, that spin really did put us on the back foot. It was a relatively
big mistake from me. If it had stayed dry, we probably could have won if I
had stayed ahead. It could have been quite critical. I think he pulled quite
a big gap and I got held in traffic, I think it was behind Kubica and my
team-mate, and there was nothing I could do about it. When I came out for
the last stint, I just pushed and pushed and pushed. It wasn't over until
it's over. I could see the clouds coming, so I just had to make sure. I
think three or four laps to the end I said I can't catch this guy, so do I
save the engine or do I keep pushing. But then I thought what happens if he
makes a mistake or goes off or something like that, so it is never over
until the fat lady sings and you see the chequered flag.
Q: Felipe, you must be pleased to finish second. What was it like in those
last few laps for you?
Felipe MASSA: Well, to be honest, I was slower than I was supposed to be. I
saw many people going off, especially Kimi, and then Lewis was a little bit
in front, so I said I don't want to risk the right points. I was quite
comfortable going very slow through the corners especially. It was really,
really damp. Sometimes you think you would go off just like that. I made a
mistake on the start as I thought Eau Rouge was wetter than it was, so I
slowed down too much and then Kimi passed me. It was just a mistake. I was
just comfortable in the third place during the whole race. It was difficult
to catch those guys. We were all three doing very similar lap times.
Sometimes I was losing a bit and then sometimes I was catching the pace.
Then suddenly the second place came to me, so I am very pleased. The
championship is still open and we are going to fight race by race to close
the gap and maybe pass those guys.
Q: When Kimi passed you it did look very close from what we could see.
FM: Yeah, Kimi was so quick he was going to pass me easily for sure but then
he started to close the line and we almost touched wheel to wheel. I found
that a little bit strange as he was going to pass me as he was already much
quicker. But anyway he passed me but then I got the second place which was
pretty lucky given the circumstances. But these things you cannot say are
lucky. I was just looking to finish the race and that was it, we finished
second.
Q: Nick, a fantastic decision to switch to the wet Bridgestone tyres. You
were very competitive in qualifying but that fell apart when you got hit by
Kovalainen.
Nick HEIDFELD: Yeah, exactly. I had a pretty good get away, at least better
than the row in front of me. Alonso was even a bit better. I decided to go
to the outside rather than to the inside as I had a feeling I could crash
there. Unfortunately Kovalainen drove into me. I thought I would spin or the
race would be over with the car damaged. I was just very happy afterwards to
feel that the car was okay and the steering wheel felt straight. Of course I
lost a lot of positions and had to overtake a lot of cars but I still made
up some positions on the first stint.
Q: It must have been real fun on that last stint passing everybody?
NK: It was but it was pretty much a hero or zero decision. First of all I
was stuck behind cars most of the race. I had to stop earlier than some of
them, including Vettel and Robert for the second stop. But I had a pretty
good out lap and managed to overtake Robert and then I was stuck behind
Vettel and it is not easy to overtake here. But then when it started to
drizzle, the first lap it was just a little bit but the second lap it became
more and then I just thought I will take a gamble. I knew there were not
many laps to go and took the decision to go on inters. The team asked me
again what I wanted to do and I think it was the perfect call. When I went
out I asked how many laps to go and they said this one and then another one
and I couldn't see anybody in front of me and thought maybe it was the wrong
decision. But they had to go so slow I managed to overtake a couple of cars
on the last lap. I don't know who was the last car I overtook, whether it
was Alonso or Toro Rosso. Going into turn 10 he blocked pretty hard and I
nearly went into the grass and in wet conditions that could have been quite
dangerous. I just managed to stay on track by going wheel to wheel and
nearly touching his side pods which was not very clever. But I got by, so it
was a fantastic result for me.
Q: Lewis, what a fantastic victory for you and McLaren's 11th victory here.
LH: A fantastic weekend and I am just stoked to have battled through the
tough conditions. I think it was one of the most exciting races of my
career. I love having battles with people like Kimi. It was just great fun
and I think the team did an incredible job as always. The car was great, so
I have to say a big thank you to them. There were a lot of British fans here
as well, so a big thank you to all them for their support. We are going to
keep on pushing. Keep our feet on the ground and keep pushing for the next
few races.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, how hard were you pushing in the dry? Was there anything more you
could do?
LH: No, I was on every limit that I knew that was possible and even beyond
the limit sometimes. I was pushing as hard as you could. But when you are
behind someone that has relatively the same speed as you and you get a few
seconds behind them you lose downforce, so I was having to make up for the
loss of downforce and try and reduce the gap. The closer and closer I got,
the harder it got, so the more I would have to push and find grip in certain
areas. I was pushing but it was so close I probably would not have had the
opportunity to overtake him if it hadn't started to rain, so I thank God for
opening the heavens a little bit as that enabled me to get close to him and
to have, I think, one of the most exciting fight for a long, long time.
Q: Were you expecting the rain?
LH: I wasn't expecting it but I was praying for it. I was hoping. I was
going through Eau Rouge and saying 'please rain.' I wanted it to rain. I
thought just a few droplets would make it harder for us, perhaps not as much
as it did. It did make it that little bit harder for us to get on the edge,
so we could have a good battle towards the end. I think that is what it did.
I thought it was very exciting.
Q: What happened in the pit stops as you lost out in the first one and
gained in the second?
LH: With the mistake I had which was quite costly after the first lap, at
turn one when I had the spin and lost my position, that really put us on the
back foot, so we went for a shorter middle stint on the softer tyre.
Unfortunately I came out in a lot of traffic. I had great pace but I got
stuck in a lot of traffic where I ended up using a lot of the life of my
tyres early on just sticking with them. I think that is where I lost all the
time to Kimi. The second stint I had a great out lap. The pit stop was great
but I had a great out lap and really getting the heat back in my tyres and
getting on it. I think I took quite a chunk out of Kimi for the first few
laps and then it started to balance out. I kept on pushing as much as I
could but it was level for a long time, so I was hoping some of the
backmarkers would influence his pace but they were influencing both of ours,
so I don't think I gained or lost any more than he did.
Q: With five races to go what are your thoughts on the championship now?
LH: Well, as you know it is still open. Felipe has had another impressive
race and came away with eight points, so I have not really made a huge
difference in the points system. I have a good lead, I must have an eight
points now and we are going to continue with the reliability and the pace
that we have. It is just going to be a very tough fight but I will do
everything I can to make sure I come to the next race just as strong if not
stronger. I know I can get stronger, so we the team is going to do that and
we are going to keep on improving.
Q: Felipe, are you pleased with second?
FM: Yeah, I mean looking at the circumstances and how crazy the race was,
especially the start. I lost second place at Eau Rouge because I thought
there was more water than there was and I backed off too much and Kimi
passed. I had reasonable pace but I was not 100 per cent happy with the car
because we took away a little bit of downforce on Saturday morning, from
Friday to Saturday, as normally that is the right direction to go. Then I
think for the conditions we had today, the wind conditions especially which
were very strong, I was not very happy with the balance and I lost a little
bit of the stability. I was not very comfortable like I was yesterday. But
anyway, I think it was a very safe third place and then the rain came. I saw
these guys fighting like crazy and I was just thinking about the
championship. I was just cruising and trying to bring the car home as I knew
eight points can be very important. Two races ago we lost 10 like that, so I
didn't want to lose anything, I just wanted to bring the car home. That's
it, so I am quite happy with the second place and I am quite happy also with
the job that we did inside the team and also the engine. This is the second
race with the engine, so I think that is quite encouraging for the next
races.
Q: What was the difference between the tyres?
FM: On the last stint I think we went much slower than the first and second
stint, all three guys. I think the hard tyre was just too hard with no grip
and the car was sliding around and was less quick. The car was more
inconsistent in terms of balance but the soft was pretty consistent, pretty
reasonable.
Q: Nick, four laps from the end you were seventh, so you must be pretty
pleased to be on the podium.
NH: Yeah, you figured that out pretty well. It was fantastic for me. I lost
some places at the first corner. The start was not too bad but Kovalainen
drove into me and after that it was a pretty tough fight to overtake a
couple of cars but then I was struggling to overtake some others like
Robert. On the circuit it was impossible to overtake Vettel. I was clearly
quicker but you just could not get a lot closer and as Lewis said at the
same time you start to destroy your tyres. In the end I saw that drops were
coming, up the hill, and the next lap it was small drizzle. I thought it
would get worse from lap to lap. Obviously I knew it was not long to go and
actually I was pretty sure that nobody would have the balls to change the
tyres, so I thought I would try. I took a gamble and it paid out. After I
came out I asked the team again and they said this one and another one and
then I thought maybe it was not the right choice but on the last lap I
overtook a lot of cars. I did bed in some tyres on purpose yesterday and
they were just in the right conditions for a little bit of water.
Q: After your problems in the last few races what does this podium mean to
you?
NH: It is a great result at a time when I struggled, or at least I struggled
heavily in Valencia. But more importantly for me I have shown that my
qualifying performance was good. That's where I have struggled before but I
achieved the maximum there yesterday with fifth position. I think everybody
knows that I can do good races and I showed that today and obviously it is
always great to be on the podium.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Ed Gorman - The Times) Lewis, can you just talk us through the very last
lap when you were absolutely tip-toeing around, what was going through your
mind then? You could have gone off at any moment, couldn't you?
LH: I could have. It was very, very slippery. I had no temperature in my
tyres, just because we had been driving around in the wet for a lap and a
half. It's incredible you know. You brake very, very early thinking 'I've
braked 400 meters earlier than I should' and you still arrive at the corner
and you're not really sure what's going to happen, the car will step out…
There's just nothing you can do about it, you are just guessing where the
grip is and making sure your senses become a lot more… you turn them on full
power basically and just wait, making sure that you can react to every
oversteer moment you have. I was looking in my mirrors, I was looking at the
gap between me and Felipe and I realised that it went from five to ten
(seconds), so I realised that he was going even slower, so I went even
slower. I just went as slow as I could. There was no need to push, just make
sure you bring it home, there's one lap to go. The thought of Kimi coming
off on the second to last lap… it's a long, long way to go and to then just
throw it away and so I just brought it home.
Q: (Ed Gorman - The Times) Lewis, are you aware that the stewards have
announced they are investigating an incident between yourself and Kimi?
We're not sure exactly which one it was. Are you aware of that and what
could your thoughts be? Is there any part where you felt that you'd
contravened the rules?
LH: Absolutely not. I will explain what happened. It began to rain. I caught
Kimi and I got a good tow from him down the back straight and I was in a
good position to dive down the inside at turn 18. He covered his spot, which
was fair, but he braked very, very early, so I was able to outbrake him and
go round the outside which I did. I left him enough room, I didn't close the
gap so much that he had to go on a kerb, I left him enough room, yet he
accelerated or picked up more pace going into the corner, and drove me as
wide as he possibly could. I had no road left. There was a question I had to
ask: if I stay where I am, I'm going to go over the Astroturf… there's some
green bit behind the big kerb, the last kerb… and go over it and hit him. Or
I go left. That was the option I had to do, I did it. I knew that I had to
let him past and also the team came over the radio and said 'you have to let
him past' which I did. I was accelerating so that I didn't lose too much
ground because I thought that would be unfair. Fortunately I got back in his
slipstream and again, he moved to the inside and back to the outside and
again, I dodged him and went up the inside and at the apex to the corner he
hit me at the back, and that nearly caused me to spin, but fortunately I
kept hold of it and went on from there. That was a great fight and I don't
think there was anything wrong there. The rules say you should let him back
past which I did.
Q: (Ian Parkes - The Press Association) Lewis, given the explanation that
you've just given us, would you be surprised now if the stewards did decide
to punish you in any kind of way?
LH: Absolutely, absolutely. This is motor racing and if there's a penalty,
then there's something wrong because I was ahead going into that corner, so
I didn't gain an advantage from it. We were still able to race at the next
corner and I gave him his spot back, and I think it was fair and square, so
I think it would be absolutely wrong. But you know what they're like, so we
will see.
Q: (Mark Danby - Auto Magazine) Lewis, later around that lap, just talk us
through what it was like going through Pouhon when you both went wide and
then going into Fagnes when you got onto the grass. Did you think you'd lost
the race at that point?
LH: Going across the grass? I did. Well, we went into turn ten and I think
we both had an oversteer moment going in, very, very fortunate to catch it.
Then I think Kimi took a much wider line than me and we went into turn 12
and I braked very early. I could see that Rosberg ahead had obviously had a
spin, and instead of driving around that way, he drove round more towards me
and was coming back onto the track, and at that point I was going relatively
wide towards him. I had to turn left to avoid him, but then Kimi was with me
as well, he nearly hit him, so we both nearly hit him but I think Kimi
managed to keep it on the track somehow. I went across the grass, I thought
that I had lost it then but then I saw Kimi spin it. It was just chopping
and changing, it was just so much fun and my heart was racing, probably more
than it ever has before. What an exciting race and what a great feeling it
is to bring it back in those conditions. It's beyond anything you can
imagine, so the ones who did bring it home on slicks have done a great job.
Q: (James Allen - ITV) I've got two questions for Lewis. When you came
across the line after the incident you've just described, he was definitely
in front of you. It said Räikkönen - Hamilton, first and second. That was on
the timing screens and it will on the charts, but maybe at issue is the fact
that you hadn't lost enough momentum or something. You said you were still
accelerating, so could you just explain exactly what you did to let him
past? And then the second thing is there was an incident before that where I
think you both had a bit of a moment with a Williams and you both nearly hit
each other and the Williams was coming back on the track. There were some
yellow flags waving there. Was the Williams actually off the track and came
back on? It was very hard to tell on the television.
LH: Firstly, what I did, I'd basically taken a short-cut, so I couldn't just
accelerate straight from there and keep going, I had to wait - he was in my
blind spot - I had to wait until I could see him. I didn't want to wait
until he'd flown past because we were still racing. Eventually I could see
him accelerating and I knew, OK, this is alright, so I began to accelerate
but slowly. I don't believe I was full throttle, I was waiting for him to
accelerate past which he did. What more could I do, I don't know what more I
could have done?
And the second question: there were yellow flags, I was looking in the
mirror, hoping that Kimi wouldn't crash into me. Rosberg was off the circuit
and I was running wide but I wasn't going off, I was just running wide
towards the white line, but then Rosberg was coming back on, exactly at the
point in which I was heading, so I had to turn left to avoid him and take
the exit road and go across the grass, otherwise I would have crashed with
him.
Q: (James Allen - ITV) Sorry, could we just be clear: so you were in front
of Räikkönen at that point, because he came out of that incident in front of
you?
LH: He was behind me. I turned left to dodge the Williams. I don't know what
happened to Kimi. I thought he was right with me at the time on my inside. I
thought he was going to crash with him (Rosberg) as well, so I just tried to
avoid it, over the grass, and Kimi overtook, I believe, both of us. I think
he took both of us, and I went over the grass, they both went round the
corner and then at the exit he spun.
Q: (Flavio Vanetti - Corriere dello Sport) Felipe, do you expect that
Ferrari will now make a choice between you and Kimi and put all the effort
for the title towards you?
FM: I don't know. You are asking the question to the wrong guy. I'm just
doing my job and I'm sure the team will make all the effort to help me to
win the championship, but this question is difficult for me to answer.
Q: (Michael Schmidt - Auto Motor und Sport) Lewis, knowing how tricky the
circuit was when it was wet, did you ever consider doing the same as Nick
Heidfeld and change tyres on the very last lap?
NH: The thought didn't cross my mind once. I didn't think about anyone else
changing tyres, I didn't really take that into consideration. I was just
trying to pass Kimi and that's all that mattered. I knew that I would be
able to keep the car on the track if it did rain, and I knew there were only
two laps left so, in my position, I didn't think it would be a risk that I
would have benefitted from. So I didn't think about it.
Q: (Ian Parkes - The Press Association) Felipe and Lewis: do you think that
now, given the position Kimi is in - I think he's 23 points behind you
Lewis, and 15 behind you Felipe - that he's almost out of the title race now
with five races to go. I know that mathematically it's still possible but
theoretically and realistically, do you think it's too much of a gap now at
this stage of the season?
FM: Well, for sure it's difficult but if you look at last year, he was 17
points behind with two or three races (to go) and he won the championship,
so for sure it's not easy, but it's not impossible.
LH: I think the same. As Felipe said, anything can happen and I think the
gap is bigger than normal. He's got a lot of work to do, the pressure's on
him to try and catch us up. I think Felipe's doing a better job than him in
his team, and we've just got to continue to try and do a better job, and
continue to be consistent.
Q: (Andrea Cremonesi - La Gazzetta dello Sport) Felipe, in the unilaterals
you said you felt strange when Kimi passed you after Eau Rouge. Didn't you
expect something like this?
FM: No, because he was so quick he was passing me and then suddenly he was
closing the line a little bit, it just felt a little bit strange, but anyway
nothing happened, he just passed me anyway and that's it. I think it was
more my mistake in which I backed off too much in Eau Rouge and I gave him
the possibility to pass me.
Q: (Ed Gorman - The Times) Lewis, I'm intrigued by one thing: at Valencia we
seemed to get the message that you were going to go for the championship at
all costs and you would drive sensibly and you wouldn't be drawn into
anything mad if you could get eight points safely. And here today you just
produced one of the most amazing pieces of driving we've ever seen you
produce. Did that theory just go right out of the window at the end?
LH: It's always on my mind that I want to get the points. The championship
is definitely always on your mind. I never focus on one race, that this is
the most important thing, winning this race. I had eight points. There was a
point while it was dry that I was behind and catching Kimi - a little bit
ragged - and I was thinking well, again, it would be pretty bad if I did
come off now and lost these points. But then again, I'm a racing driver,
this is what I do best. I won't come off. You can't come off, you've got to
keep going. You race down to the last minute, you don't turn the engine down
and back off and just take the points. In that situation, I was comfortable
pushing and trying to close the gap and therefore I did. Towards the end,
the conditions made it look a lot more spectacular than it was, for sure,
but I don't believe I took too many risks. I wanted to get past, I wanted to
win. I was in the position, it was now or never, and when you get into that
position, you have to take the decision 'do I overtake or do I stay behind?'
I'm going past. But I'm still focused on the championship.
Q: (Marco Degl'Innocenti - La Gazzetta dello Sport) Lewis, do you now expect
Kimi to help Felipe for the next races?
LH: I don't believe that that will be the case. I'm pretty sure that, as a
team, they will work together and that's the team's job. I don't know
whether it's in the rules, you're now not allowed to have any team orders. I
believe that Kimi's going to keep on pushing to try and close the gap and
come back as he did last year. I think they're both just out there to race
as far as I see it, but for sure they are in the fortunate position where
they could use one another to help each other go further in the
championship, but we will have to wait and see. |