Author Topic: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey  (Read 3468 times)

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Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« on: August 26, 2007, 06:27:04 PM »
By Matt Beer Sunday, August 26th 2007, 13:33 GMT


Felipe Massa resisted race-long pressure from Kimi Raikkonen to lead a Ferrari one-two in the Turkish Grand Prix, on a day when championship leader Lewis Hamilton could only finish fifth after suffering a puncture.

Hamilton had been on course for third, close behind the Ferraris, until his right-front tyre failed shortly before his second pitstop.

The consequent delay dropped him behind his McLaren teammate Fernando Alonso - who had lost ground with a poor start - and BMW's Nick Heidfeld.

Neither McLaren got away well at the start of the race, with Hamilton immediately losing second to Raikkonen and Alonso dropping to sixth behind the two BMWs.

Although the world champion managed to re-pass both Robert Kubica and Heidfeld during the first pit sequence, Alonso had already fallen 14 seconds adrift of the leaders by this time.

He proceeded to match Hamilton's pace, but could not gain any ground and would not have bettered fourth place if his teammate's race had run trouble-free.

The Ferraris ran in very close company throughout the race, with Raikkonen often appearing to have more pace than Massa. But the Finn stopped one lap earlier at each pit top, and the additional lap on low fuel made all the difference, as Massa managed to stay ahead of Raikkonen at both stops.

The closest they came to a change of position was when Massa locked up and ran wide into the final complex as Raikkonen put him under heavy pressure just before the final stops, but the Brazilian was able to regain his momentum before Raikkonen could pounce.

Having emerged behind Massa again after his last stop, Raikkonen then backed off in the closing stages, before proving a point by setting the fastest lap with two laps to go. It was to no avail, as Massa repeated his 2006 Istanbul victory with a 2.2 second winning margin.

Hamilton closed in on the Ferraris by running longer in his first stint, and was set to do likewise at the second stops. But the puncture cost him two places, and with the flailing rubber having damaged the McLaren's front wing, all Hamilton could do was nurse the car home in fifth behind Alonso and Heidfeld.

The result brings Alonso to within five points of Hamilton in the standings, with Massa still 17 points behind.

Renault's Heikki Kovalainen drove a strong race to sixth place, and even led briefly thanks to a late first pitstop. He closed in on Hamilton in the final laps, but could not get near enough to try a pass.

Kubica's strategy of making early pitstops cost the BMW driver dear, as he fell behind Alonso, Heidfeld and Kovalainen in the first sequence, and then lost out to Williams' Nico Rosberg at the final stops. He chased the Williams to the flag, but Rosberg managed to fend him off and secure seventh.

Giancarlo Fisichella tapped Jarno Trulli into a spin at the first corner of the race and then lost time avoiding the rotating Toyota. He recovered to ninth, ahead of David Coulthard. Mark Webber was running in company with his Red Bull teammate early on, before suffering another hydraulic failure.

The delayed Trulli could only make it back up to 16th, while his teammate Ralf Schumacher came through from 17th on the grid to 12th, behind Alex Wurz.

Jenson Button made better progress than his Honda teammate and back row partner Rubens Barrichello, as they finished 13th and 16th respectively, split by Vitantonio Liuzzi and Anthony Davidson.

Liuzzi had run as high as ninth after a fine start and by avoiding the first corner incident but later fell back, while Davidson lost ground off the line and could not turn his superb qualifying result into a top ten finish.

PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTS

The Turkish Grand Prix
Istanbul, Turkey;
58 laps; 309.396km;
Weather: Sunny.

Classified:

Pos  Driver        Team                      Time
 1.  Massa         Ferrari              (B)  1h26:42.161
 2.  Raikkonen     Ferrari              (B)  +     2.275
 3.  Alonso        McLaren-Mercedes     (B)  +    26.181
 4.  Heidfeld      BMW Sauber           (B)  +    39.674
 5.  Hamilton      McLaren-Mercedes     (B)  +    45.085
 6.  Kovalainen    Renault              (B)  +    46.169
 7.  Rosberg       Williams-Toyota      (B)  +    55.778
 8.  Kubica        BMW Sauber           (B)  +    56.707
 9.  Fisichella    Renault              (B)  +    59.491
10.  Coulthard     Red Bull-Renault     (B)  +  1:11.009
11.  Wurz          Williams-Toyota      (B)  +  1:19.628
12.  R.Schumacher  Toyota               (B)  +     1 lap
13.  Button        Honda                (B)  +     1 lap
14.  Davidson      Super Aguri-Honda    (B)  +     1 lap
15.  Liuzzi        Toro Rosso-Ferrari   (B)  +     1 lap
16.  Trulli        Toyota               (B)  +     1 lap
17.  Barrichello   Honda                (B)  +     1 lap
18.  Sato          Super Aguri-Honda    (B)  +     1 lap
19.  Vettel        Toro Rosso-Ferrari   (B)  +     1 lap
20.  Yamamoto      Spyker-Ferrari       (B)  +    2 laps
21.  Sutil         Spyker-Ferrari       (B)  +    4 laps

Fastest lap: Raikkonen, 1:27.295

Not classified/retirements:

Driver        Team                      On lap
Webber        Red Bull-Renault     (B)    10


World Championship standings, round 12:               

Drivers:                    Constructors:             
 1.  Hamilton      84        1.  McLaren-Mercedes     148
 2.  Alonso        79        2.  Ferrari              137
 3.  Massa         69        3.  BMW Sauber            77
 4.  Raikkonen     68        4.  Renault               36
 5.  Heidfeld      47        5.  Williams-Toyota       22
 6.  Kubica        29        6.  Red Bull-Renault      16
 7.  Kovalainen    19        7.  Toyota                12
 8.  Fisichella    17        8.  Super Aguri-Honda      4
 9.  Wurz          13        9.  Honda                  1
10.  Rosberg        9       
11.  Coulthard      8       
12.  Webber         8       
13.  Trulli         7       
14.  R.Schumacher   5       
15.  Sato           4       
16.  Vettel         1       
17.  Button         1       
       
All timing unofficial


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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #1 on: August 26, 2007, 06:28:19 PM »
Massa celebrates 'amazing' victory

By Pablo Elizalde Sunday, August 26th 2007, 13:56 GMT


Felipe Massa celebrated an "amazing" victory after leading Ferrari teammate Kimi Raikkonen to his seconds consecutive win in Turkey.

Massa, who last year scored his first pole and his first win in Formula One, repeated the feat after leading Raikkonen from the start.

Despite the Finn's pressure, Massa stayed in control and took his third victory of the year.

"It is amazing," said an emotional Massa. "Really fantastic. I love the track, love the place. Here was where my career made a switch, where I started winning races and fighting with the front-runners.

"It is a special place for me. Having he second win is special, it is difficult to find the right words," added Massa, who had his family at the track.

"It was an emotional podium, the team likes to take this feeling from the people. I am proud to win in front of him and my mother."

Massa's only problem during the race seemed to come when he had to remove a part of his helmet when it broke.

"I had a crack on the cooling system on the helmet and I had a big turbulence and my head was going up and down and I lost concentration and I took it away. I cracked it completely and took it off and it was better," he said.

Massa, 15 points behind championship leader Lewis Hamilton, is now looking to keep the momentum going in Ferrari's home race in Monza.

"It is a very special race for us so hopefully we can repeat the result here for the team, the people, the tifosi. I'm looking forward to the race."


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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #2 on: August 26, 2007, 06:32:39 PM »
Happy Alonso laments poor start

By Pablo Elizalde Sunday, August 26th 2007, 14:17 GMT


Fernando Alonso was left lamenting his poor start at the Turkish Grand Prix after dropping from fourth to sixth by the first corner.

The McLaren driver was overtaken by both the BMWs of Robert Kubica and Nick Heidfeld, and the Spaniard spent several laps behind the German driver.

When he finally moved ahead of Heidfeld, Alonso was already out of contention for victory and had to settle for a distant third place.

"For sure the start did not go as we planned and to be overtaken by two cars and find yourself sixth is not great," said Alonso. "And the race is a little bit over from that time.

"Also I was following Nick for 17 laps and as Kimi said these days it is difficult to overtake. You need to wait for a mistake from car in front. Nick was very consistent and driving very well. I was lucky to overtake him and then my race started.

"I was 30 seconds behind at that point. I kept my pace to be consistent and wait for the miracle that only happened with Hamilton and I only took that place for the podium but third is not the best result for the weekend."

"Our start is probably not the best. The BMWs start really well every weekend. For us it is true that at the beginning of the season we had good starts: I remember Malaysia, we are not making worse starts, we keep improving, but for sure the Ferraris made a step forward bigger than us."

Alonso benefited from Lewis Hamilton's tyre failure to close the gap to the Briton, the world champion now five points behind the rookie, fifth today.

The race, however, was dominated by the Ferraris, with Felipe Massa leading Kimi Raikkonen home. Alonso finished 26 seconds behind, and he believes the Italian squad are a step ahead.

"I think it is the car to be honest," said Alonso of the gap to Ferrari. "I think the tyres we found the prime very, very similar compared to the option, slightly better and more consistent. It is just a car difference.

"More or less we knew that we come from some races where we saw their potential. At Magny-Cours they were very, very quick, Silverstone very quick again. The only race that we were back on pace was Hungary and that was no surprise with that type of circuit, it was like Monaco.

"On a normal circuit like Turkey they were on top again and we know we need to improve but the next race we will be better."

Alonso, celebrating his 100th Grand Prix, admitted he was pleased with the result, and he reckons is still all to play for in the championship.

"The 100th GP I felt good and I feel good now," he said. "I feel happy especially for the result, that was the best news from th weekend. Finishing on the podium is always a nice feeling. I will not remember all my life this Grand Prix but it has been quite good in the end.

"My chances for the title, they are still there for everybody, there are two McLaren drivers and two Ferrari drivers with possibilities to win the title. It depends on the weekends, how lucky you are. With five races to go the better one, the luckier one will win again."



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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #3 on: August 26, 2007, 06:37:14 PM »
Hamilton remains upbeat about title race

By Biranit Goren and Pablo Elizalde Sunday, August 26th 2007, 14:25 GMT


Lewis Hamilton is not concerned about his chances in the championship despite his disappointing finish to the Turkish Grand Prix.

The McLaren driver looked set to finish in third place until a late puncture dropped him to fifth position, where he went on to finish.

The result allowed teammate Fernando Alonso to move five points behind Hamilton, while Ferrari driver Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen, first and second today, are now 15 and 16 points adrift.

"It was a little bit unfortunate, but still, we did a good job, the team did a fantastic job all weekend," Hamilton told ITV after the race.

"We had the pace of the Ferraris, I think; when you're behind them, you lose a little bit of downforce, I think we were just matching them for the majority of the race.

"But yeah, really unfortunate. I saw some bits start flying off the tyre, and it blew. I was quite unfortunate I didn't put it in the gravel, and I still got points."

He added: "I couldn't stop the car. That wheel was locked and I think the rear wheel was sort of coming up, so it was extremely tricky.

"Some people, when they have that, they break their front wing or they break their suspension, so I had to be careful but at the same time try to get back as soon as possible without losing too many places. So with that problem, I think it's a good job.

"I did think that the front wing would be broken and I don't know why (the team didn't change it), I think because it's too much time to change it. But, yeah, it made a huge difference and I had a huge understeer and I couldn't get around corners, so I couldn't challenge the BMW."

Despite the disappointment, Hamilton believes his championship hopes remain intact.

"It's just a little bit of a problem," he said. "You always have setbacks; we won the last race, and we still got five races to go. But I'm still leading with five points, so it's not over, don't worry."



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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #4 on: August 26, 2007, 06:38:50 PM »
Post-race press conference - Turkey

 Sunday, August 26th 2007, 16:26 GMT


TV Unilaterals

Q. Felipe, from the pole you have won your second Turkish Grand Prix.

Felipe Massa: It's amazing. The third time here in Istanbul but the second race in a row winning from pole. I love the track, I love the place and here is where my career made a switch and I started to win races and fight with the front runners. It is a very special place for me and to have a second consecutive win here, it's difficult to find the right words...

Q. It looked like a dominating win from the outside. Talk about it from your perspective. We saw a little drama with your helmet at one point and of course a big surprise for everybody in the pit lane to see both Ferraris on the softer of the two Bridgestone tyres for the first two stints.

FM: The helmet had a crack on the cooling system and I had big turbulence. My head started to go up and I was losing a lot of concentration, so I just took it away and it made a bit of strange behaviour on the straight but then it was better. With the tyres, on Friday we made a long run on both tyres and it was pretty similar, with maybe just one or two tenths between them.

We knew that Friday to Sunday the track changes a lot and the soft tyre should improve even more, so we took a bit of a gamble although it was a pretty safe risk. Especially for the start, we knew that the soft would be better and we had fantastic starts; Kimi overtook Lewis and we had a very good race on the soft.

Q. A great day for you to have your family at the race, your Dad had a lot of TV time!

FM: Yes! He is very emotional, like me, and on the podium for sure the TV likes to take this kind of experience from people. But I am really proud to win in front of him, and my mother as well.

Q. Kimi, it looked like a frustrating day for you. As Felipe said, you got into second place from the start but that's where you stayed. You pushed Felipe pretty hard going into the second pit stop.

Kimi Raikkonen: Yeah, we had a pretty good car but unfortunately these days in Formula One it's pretty difficult to get past, so the race was really decided yesterday already. If nothing else I pushed hard and got as close as I could and tried to do something at the pit stops, but when two teammates are fighting it is usually that whoever is first is going to stay there. The car was really good but there was nothing I could have done.

Q. Again you chose the softer of the two Bridgestone tyres. Was that a big decision going into the race, how it was going to perform?

KR: I think as Felipe said we were pretty confident that both tyres would work pretty well. It was not a big difference and we decided to take the soft one for the start for many reasons and it worked well. It was still difficult to say which one would have been better. They were very equal.

Q. Fernando, you were beaten off the line and into the first corner by the two BMWs so, I guess, to be here in P3 is a nice reward for you?

Fernando Alonso: Yeah, for sure. The start did not go to plan and to be overtaken by two cars and find yourself sixth at the first corner was not great. My race was a little bit over from that time. I was following Nick for 17 laps and as Kimi said, these days in Formula One it is very, very difficult to overtake.

You need to wait for a mistake from the car in front of you and Nick was very consistent and driving very well, so I waited for the pit stop and I was lucky to overtake him. Then my race started but I was half a minute behind everybody at that point and I just took my pace and concentrated on being consistent, not making a mistake and waiting for the miracle, which only happened with Hamilton. But third, for sure, is not the best result from the weekend.

Q. Ferrari was pulling away from you and Lewis pretty comprehensively in the closing stages of the race. How much of that was tyre choice perhaps, taking the race as a whole, and how much of it was the difference between the two cars on this circuit?

FA: I think that it was the car to be honest. I think with the tyres we found the prime very similar compared with the option but slightly better, more consistent and I still think the prime was the right choice for the race, to be sure.

The last stint I did with the option I found the car to be a little bit worse, so that confirms that the prime tyre was better for our car. It was very windy today and we know when it is windy we have more difficulty and found that again today.

Q. Well Felipe, we now go to the Italian Grand Prix with Ferrari having another 1-2 behind them, so what's that race going to be like for you and the team?

FM: It is a very special race for us so hopefully we can repeat the result here. It would be fantastic for the team, for the people, for the tifosi, so I'm looking forward to the race.

Press Conference

Q. As I said yesterday, Felipe, you're a bit of a Turkish specialist now.

FM: Maybe after three races and two wins here it can be a special track for me. It is fantastic to win for the second time in a row here in Turkey, starting from the pole, having a good car. A difficult race but I managed to keep my concentration.

Q. What was happening when Kimi was catching you at the end of the second stint?

FM: The gap was pretty similar throughout the stint but then Kimi started to run two tenths quicker and I started to push again. Then I just made a small mistake going into Turn 7 and Kimi was just able to close the gap completely. But the gap was okay to control, the balance was okay and the car was easy to drive, so it was not so difficult but the small mistake made my life a little bit more difficult.

Q. Just explain again what the problem was with your helmet, the visor?

FM: We have a cooling system just on the top and the plastic part cracked and started to go up and so I had huge turbulence and my head started to move a lot - going up and under braking going completely down. That was disturbing me a lot and so I just broke the cooling flap completely and managed to take it away.

Q. How many laps did you suffer that for?

FM: Five or six laps before I broke it. It was still a bit difficult in terms of turbulence but a lot better.

Q. Kimi, tell us about the start.

KR: I got a good start as we were hoping for but that's about it ? I was following Felipe all race long and there was nothing I could have done.

Q. How did you see the end of that first stint?

KR: It was good. I had a little bit too much understeer at the start and I couldn't push as hard as I wanted. The car got better and better and in the end was very good and very easy to drive. But I had big difficulties with the handling at the start of the second stint. At the end I could go very fast but when you have two guys behind each other in the same team, usually the second guy has to pit first and there is nothing more I could have done.

Q. But a little bit of a statement two laps from the end?

KR: Yeah, but it's so boring behind other cars. Unfortunately in Formula One these days the races are pretty much decided after qualifying, so it's a shame.

Q. Fastest lap, two laps from the end, similar to Hungary?

KR: Yeah, it's something to do.

Q. Fernando, close behind Heidfeld but you weren't catching Lewis. That gap remained pretty much the same between the two of you, about 14 seconds in the second stint.

FA: Yes. The start was quite bad and after I found myself sixth on the first lap, I thought the race was over because if you overtake them quite quickly in the first five laps, you still have a possibility but if not, it becomes very difficult. It was exactly like that. Lap 18, when I pitted, I managed to get in front of Nick and start my race but I was 14 seconds behind the third guy and I pushed, as hard as I could, but the gap always remained the same. I was just cruising a little bit to the end, from lap 30.

Q. But as Peter said, to be on the rostrum having been sixth must be something of a relief.

FA: Yeah, for sure. If someone told me on lap two that I would be on the podium it would not have been easy to believe and I would be very happy and I would sign anywhere if someone told me that. At the end, the final result is the best thing of the weekend for sure, but there are some other moments that were not so good: like yesterday in qualifying, today the start, the pace of the Ferraris compared to us in the race, many things that we need to improve for the next Grand Prix.

Q. Is the pace of the Ferraris quite worrying?

FA: Well, we more or less knew that, because we are coming from some races where we saw their potential: in Magny-Cours they were very very quick, in Silverstone they were very quick again. The only race where we were back on the pace was maybe Hungary and that was not a surprise because it's a very slow circuit and something like Monaco. We know that that type of circuit is quite good for us, but coming to a normal circuit like Turkey, they are on top again. We know that we need to improve but next race will be better.

Questions From The Floor

Q. (Juha Paatalo ? Financial Times Germany) Kimi, you already said that this is your second race in a row where you are following the leading car and you said it's a little bit boring being there, but having said that, you did the fastest lap in both races. Is that just to keep you awake or is it more to try and see how much you can get out of the car?

KR: I think we can get more out of the car if we really push but there's no point in really wasting your second position to push like crazy and maybe go off so? It was just that I wanted to try and see how good the car was and maybe we can learn something. As I said, it's a bit boring because you quite often know, especially after the pit stop, where the other cars will stop and that's it. You know that you cannot really do anything if you don't get past the guys and it's very difficult to get past.

Q. (Sal Zanca ? Associated Press) Fernando, do miracles happen and what did you say to yourself when Hamilton's tyre shredded?

FA: Nothing, to be honest, because the race was still going on, and I had 20 or 18 laps to go or whatever. The team told me on the radio 'be careful because it seems that you may have the same problem that happened on Lewis's car because at the pit stop we are seeing that your tyres are not in perfect shape either, so take care of the car in these last 15 or 18 laps, in order not to have the same problem.' So I wasn't thinking anything special, I was just taking care of my car.

Q. (Ian Parkes ? The Press Association) For all three of you: how much has Lewis's puncture helped your title chances?

FA: Nothing changes, to be honest. The gap for me is only two points difference, so at the end of the day it's just a second and third place, or a first and second. I'm still losing points from the last two races.

If you take Hungary and here, I recovered two points here, I lost five in Hungary, so I'm three worse than what I was in Nurburgring so it's still the same. As long as all four top cars finish all the races, the gaps don't increase or decrease too much, so it's still very open for the last final three races that will probably be the last chance for everybody.

FM: It helped me six points.

KR: Yeah, it was definitely better for us. We know that anything can happen in a race, we gained more than if we had finished third, so it's helping but there are still many races to go, so we just need to keep pushing and try to win and see what happens.

Q. (Andrea Cremonesi ? La Gazzetta dello Sport) A question for the two Ferrari drivers: did the positions on the grid decide who will stop earlier than the other in the two different stints?

FM: It was decided yesterday in qualifying. I had one lap more fuel than him (Kimi).

Q. (Andrea Cremonesi ? La Gazzetta dello Sport) Fernando, your Grand Prix was not very good from the beginning; is it because you don't like this circuit or was there something else that disturbed you during this weekend?

FA: No, no, nothing special. It's true that from Friday it was not an easy weekend, but we found the pace yesterday in qualifying - especially in Q1 and Q2 the car felt good again. Q3 was looking good until the last new tyre run, so we found the pace there.

Today, starting fourth, if I was fourth in turn one I would probably follow everybody, overtaking would maybe be impossible but maybe I was fourth following everybody with no problems. It's true that it hasn't been an easy weekend but nothing was disturbing me.

Q. (Heikki Kulta ? Turun Sanomat) Kimi, is starting from pole the only way to win at Monza also?

KR: Not really. It depends how much fuel you have against the others but racing with teammates, you know exactly much fuel the other guy has, so when you are in that situation, you pretty much know what will happen in the race. If it's someone else it's a different story but for sure, pole position makes your life easier, you have better chances but it doesn't really decide the race completely.

Q. (Adrian Rodriguez Huber ? Agencia Efe) Fernando, how are your feelings after this one hundredth GP? Are you happy, could you be happier? And of the last five races, which ones do you think will be best for you and how confident do you feel in winning your third title?

FA: I can't remember the first question any more! The hundredth Grand Prix. I felt good and I'm feeling good now. I feel happy, as I said before, especially because of the result; that was the best news of the weekend. To be on the podium is always a nice feeling and given the start of the race, it was a nice finish to the weekend, to be on the podium.

I won't remember this Grand Prix for the rest of my life but it has been quite good at the end. And the chances for the title? They are still there for everybody, still all four drivers ? two McLaren and two Ferrari drivers ? with possibilities to win the title. You see ups and downs for everybody. It depends on how the weekend goes, how lucky you are in that particular weekend, so five races to go and the better one and the lucky one will win in the end.

Q. (Peter Hesseler ? Auto Bild) Fernando and the Ferrari drivers as well. Is it the wrong impression that you have generally started worse this year or has it changed since the beginning of the year when Ferrari lost some places?

FA: It's true that our start is probably not the best. We know that the BMWs start really really well, every weekend. For us, it's true that at the beginning of the championship we were having good starts, sometimes overtaking the Ferraris. I remember Malaysia, I remember Australia or I don't know where. Obviously we haven't made our starts worse, we keep improving but for sure the Ferraris did a bigger step forward than us.


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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #5 on: August 27, 2007, 11:14:57 AM »
McLaren: we made life easy for Ferrari

By Jonathan Noble Monday, August 27th 2007, 10:41 GMT


McLaren believe they made life too easy for Ferrari in the Turkish Grand Prix after seeing their title rivals take a dominant 1-2 victory.

Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen were unstoppable as they delivered a result that closed down McLaren's advantage in both the drivers' and constructors' championships.

And after looking back on the event, McLaren F1 CEO Martin Whitmarsh thinks that the team could have done a better job in making Ferrari work harder for their success.

"It was disappointing," he said after the race. "I think Ferrari were good here - they were strong. Overall I think we can say we were a little bit unfortunate to just miss out in qualifying.

"Perhaps our launch control wasn't good enough, but we were on the wrong side of the track and maybe we had the wrong tyres on as well. Those things played into it and Ferrari did a good solid job.

"It was pretty close between the two of us and in the end we didn't quite get them in qualifying. We made poor starts and then Fernando (Alonso) lost time behind BMW, and Lewis (Hamilton) got the puncture. We made it a bit too easy for them in the end."

Whitmarsh believes that without his puncture, Hamilton was poised to jump at least one of the Ferraris at his final stop ? having been fuelled for a longer middle stint than his rivals.

"They were all pushing hard at that stage ? and Lewis was running five laps longer. If he could have been within three seconds he could have got at least one of them at that final stop. With the puncture he had to come in early, lost that much time and had a damaged car too.

"But overall, we go away still leading both championships and have done a lot of work to bring performance to Monza. I'm sure Ferrari want to show well there too."


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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #6 on: August 27, 2007, 11:20:44 AM »
Haug encouraged by salvaged points

By Jonathan Noble Monday, August 27th 2007, 14:02 GMT


Lewis Hamilton could look back on the Turkish Grand Prix as perhaps the most decisive race of the championship - because he still managed to take home four points despite his tyre failure.

That is the view of Mercedes Benz motorsport boss Norbert Haug, who thinks that Hamilton may come to look back on the events at Istanbul as a blessing rather that feeling disappointed at missing out on a certain third place.

"With the tyre failure, I see it this way - maybe these will be the most important points of the season," he said about Hamilton's fifth placed finish.

"Those four points maybe they are very valuable at the end of the day. Of course you can say that maybe we could have made eight, maybe we could have made six, but the reality is that you could have made zero with something like that."

Bridgestone is still investigating the cause of Hamilton's front right tyre failure, with initial examination of the rubber at the track last night failing to provide any answers. Further tests are now likely to take place back at the Japanese tyre manufacturer's headquarters.

Haug was in an upbeat mood about McLaren's chances for the championship, despite Ferrari's 1-2 finish.

"The most important thing is that if you have a tyre failure, you still bring home four points. That is why I feel good.

"We made 10 points, we want to make 18, but the reality is that after 15 races we are 15 points ahead of the best Ferrari driver. We would have bought that at the beginning of the season.

"We are still not there, but I think nobody can say that Ferrari will walk away with it. They are strong, they were strong in Australia and there we all thought something different. It looked like they were going to disappear in the distance. But now it is quite balanced."


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Re: Massa leads Ferrari 1-2 in Turkey
« Reply #7 on: August 27, 2007, 05:14:00 PM »
Haug puzzled by Alonso's complaint

By Jonathan Noble Monday, August 27th 2007, 19:02 GMT


Mercedes Benz motorsport boss Norbert Haug admits he is puzzled by Fernando Alonso's attitude to McLaren, after further criticisms of the team by the Spaniard last weekend.

Alonso said in Turkey that he did not feel rewarded for the efforts he had made in helping improve McLaren's fortunes this year.

"That doesn't help, and seriously, I saw the quote and the impression that was made," Haug said when asked about Alonso's comments. "We should not respond. It was an emotion of course.

"We are fighting very hard and a lot of people are working and pushing in the right direction. I think Alonso is quite satisfied after 12 races being five points behind the lead. These are the statistics and this is realistic.

"It will create stories if we have a problem like Hungary, but I think we did our utmost to balance it out. And management-wise it was quite a good job."

Haug believes that McLaren have put the events of Hungary behind them, but admits that there will always be tension at an outfit that is in their position.

"It will always be tense if you are fighting for first place in the championship," he said. "That is for sure. But it is a very good position to have."