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2004 |
April
News |
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| Sunday
April 04, 2004 |
| Bahrain GP -
Race Press Conference |
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Question:
Michael, you scored your third win in a row for
Ferrari by almost half a minute. Well, they say
the epitome of the art is when you make it look
easy from the outside – that's how it looked for
you. What was it like in the cockpit?
Michael Schumacher:
It was hard work because the brakes were sort of
marginal and we had to keep an eye on the tyres.
You saw both tyre companies were fighting with blisters,
so you had to drive on a fine line, not push it
too hard, not overdo it otherwise you would fall
into this problem and that makes it look less spectacular.
But I thought I finished just a couple of seconds
ahead of him [Barrichello] rather than half a minute....
Question:
Well, I was referring to the team, of course....
Michael Schumacher:
No, but it was a superb weekend. We worked our way
through, it was tough at times, we looked reasonable
on Friday, had a bit of difficulty on Saturday to
get the balance right as conditions changed but
in the final moment we had everything spot on, we
managed the first row and we managed the first and
second position – that is obviously the dream result.
Question:
It looked like quite an interesting first corner,
a bit of locking brakes there?
Michael Schumacher:
Yeah, obviously tyres are cold, especially the front
tyres, and I started to lock up my inner side front
wheel. I couldn't allow it to come off the brake
to recover because I was already on the limit in
terms of braking point, so I had to keep it locking.
That caused some vibration, which made it sort of
interesting, those sorts of nine laps I had to go
with that flat spot. But it worked out fine.
Question:
And when you have that sort of concentration is
that a problem lapping slower cars?
Michael Schumacher:
The biggest problem was to stay on line, honestly,
because it was so difficult and slippery just going
a little bit wide and it happened a couple of times
to me because braking was so marginal and tyres
were slippery, were on the edge, that I just ran
a bit wide. Actually, when, I think, I got by Juan.
At the end of the race that was the case, I came
off line and I struggled immediately at the next
corner so it was very tricky.
Question:
Rubens, you backed up Michael with a great team
performance and Ferrari were very dominant today.
How was your car?
Rubens Barrichello:
My car was great. Unfortunately the rain, we had
some drops at the start, didn't come my way again,
just like Malaysia. I hoped that some short-term
rain might help just because my brakes were a little
bit too cold and I needed to warm them up but, at
the same time, I needed to save fuel a little bit
on the out lap.
I almost had to avoid Michael on the first corner
and then he was very, very fast for the first couple
of corners. So he got a gap and it was difficult
to follow, but I was within two or three tenths.
I knew as my brakes were coming better that I would
have a chance to race with him a little bit closer,
but unfortunately I had a small problem on the pit-stops
and he opened up the ten seconds. Even though I
got it sometimes to eight seconds, it was difficult
with traffic and so on, and he was fast anyway,
so it was just that ten seconds it was difficult
to get back.
Question:
Jenson, another great drive, two podium finishes
in a row....
Jenson Button:
It's fantastic, it really is. This one was a little
bit more difficult. Starting sixth wasn't the best
position for me; I was a little bit disappointed
because I think we had too much understeer in the
car, which lost me quite a bit of time in qualifying.
But it was good to fight through, as we did in Malaysia,
and the car seemed very, very good throughout the
race. It was very consistent. But again, as Michael
said, you really had to be careful about staying
on line; it was a little bit dusty off line.
Question:
You had some interesting battles today – you followed
your team-mate Takuma Sato, of course, and you passed
Jarno Trulli in the pit-stop.
Jenson Button:
Yeah, I mean, the guys in the pit-stops normally
do fantastic jobs at our team. We do a lot of practice,
as every team does, but they are simply very good
and I think our strategy really paid off this weekend.
Question:
And how was it with Takuma? Were you racing him
there or just sort of sitting behind him, waiting
to see what happened?
Jenson Button:
I wasn't going to push too hard behind him. It was
very close between what lap we were going to stop
on, so I was conserving fuel a little bit. But then
he made a mistake up the back and I was able to
pull alongside him and get past.
Question:
Well, Michael, I have to ask you – what was the
rosewater like on the podium?
Michael Schumacher:
Smells very good, I have to say. Usually we sort
of smell a bit strange but now all three of us have
a beautiful smell after this race.
Question:
Can you give us a few words after this race about
this first Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix?
Michael Schumacher:
I think everybody here has done a superb job. They
have prepared a circuit for us which was very interesting
to drive, technically very difficult, a big challenge.
As well, the organisation in terms of pits and space
availability, it was just superb. The welcome of
the fans, all the people here, was very warm so
it was a very, very nice experience I guess we all
had here and we look forward to coming back.
Question:
Michael, congratulations, well done. It did look
easy out there, but it seems a knife-edge?
Michael Schumacher:
Yeah, that was the secret of the weekend, not to
overdo it and just stay always within or slightly
below the limit. That is why you probably saw very
little corrections on the steering, just driving
very smoothly.
Question:
How much of an advantage was it that it was slightly
cooler today, that your tyres perhaps adapted better
than your rivals' did to the temperature change?
Michael Schumacher:
I don't know who on the opposition was on soft or
hard tyres and that may have an effect. But, as
far as I am aware, Montoya was on soft tyres, so
I think that was equally the condition. For the
guys that were on hard tyres, maybe it paid a little
bit, it was a penalty.
Question:
Now, the last three times we have had a new circuit
in grand prix racing – Malaysia, Indianapolis and
now here – it has been a Ferrari pole position and
a Ferrari one-two. Is that just coincidence or do
you prepare better than anyone else?
Michael Schumacher:
I guess it is coincidence in respect that there
is no special secret, other than that we are prepared
properly in terms of having a very good car and
a very good team, so we are using our opportunity.
I have no other explanation and I don't think that
it is specifically down that others don't do as
good a job over the weekend. I wouldn't say so.
Question:
One point about the race itself, the only time you
actually lost time to Rubens was early in the third
set of tyres. You just lost a little bit of time
to Rubens before you pulled away again. Is there
any reason for that?
Michael Schumacher:
At certain stages of the race there was traffic
out there and maybe it was this, I don't know. At
some stages of the race, anyway, Rubens was very
strong. In other stages I was stronger, so it went
one way or the other, depending on the stage of
the race.
Question:
Did you have any worries about your brakes?
Michael Schumacher:
We had to be sort of looking after them and not
overdo it, but predictions were right.
Question:
Rubens, did you have any worries with the brakes,
especially after Malaysia?
Rubens Barrichello:
Mmm, no. Again, as Michael said, we had to be conservative,
we had to look after them, but in a way, my brake
pedal stayed quite consistent.
Question:
What about the start? You were off-line, was it
very dirty?
Rubens Barrichello:
More than being off-line, I was a little bit more
worried by the fact that there was a little bit
of oil from a historic Formula One car on my rear
tyres, so people were cleaning it and so on. When
you are concentrated and you're so cool and focused
and something like that happens, you might get a
little bit worried because I didn't want to lose
out for sure, but having seen the other races, like
the Formula BMW and the historics, the second car
on the grid always pulled alongside the first one,
so I was looking good. In fact, I was on his [Michael's]
rear tyre going into the first corner. It was a
little bit marginal because both brakes were cold
but he managed to out-brake me a little bit more.
Question:
Then, during those opening laps, Michael was pulling
away from you, what was happening there?
Rubens Barrichello:
The track was a little bit tricky at that point
and my brakes didn't really start to work until
the second lap and, at that stage, Michael already
had a lead of 2.5secs and he was going quite fast.
I knew he had a little bit less fuel than I had,
so I just had to try to do the same times and stay
with him. Unfortunately, he just pulled out more
than I thought – he was something like four seconds
ahead at the first pit-stop – but I came really
strongly then.
Unfortunately, I had that small problem in the pit-lane
and then in the pit-stop, and then I lost something
like five seconds. So for him, for a champion of
his calibre, some ten seconds is too easy, because
then he can just manage the gap in a way. On this
circuit, here, it's easy to go faster if you go
slower, but if you try to push, you can lose more
than a second in one corner. So I was really pushing
the whole time, not making a gap but I had moments
in my race when it was better with tyres than others,
so I had good moments and bad moments.
Question:
Jenson, what happened at the start? It was pretty
lively for you, I think?
Jenson Button:
It was. I didn't actually get a very good start.
My start off the line wasn't too bad but, into turn
one, I was stuck behind Ralf, who also got a bad
start. I dropped back to eighth position, I think
it was. I was able to get back past the Toyota into
turn three, and then I found that I had quite a
lot of understeer in the car, so I was losing quite
a bit of time through high speed corners, especially
being so close to the cars in front. So, at the
first stop, we made a wing change and it was a big
improvement.
Question:
Any panics at the end of the race this time?
Jenson Button:
Not at all. The car was working very well. I worked
my brakes very hard trying to catch Juan Pablo and
then he had his problems, so the next lap I cooled
them down quite a bit, but apart from that, the
car was working very well.;
Question:
You were catching Jarno and Jarno was catching Juan
Pablo until his problem got much worse. But the
tactics in getting past Jarno were extraordinary…
Jenson Button:
Yeah, I know. I think we had very good strategy
again as we did in Malaysia. They always seem to
come out of the pits in front of us at the first
stop, Renault, or Jarno does, but by the end of
the last stop, we're back in front again by a few
seconds. We did have a very good strategy and it's
great to be on the podium again.
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Question:
This is for Rubens. What exactly was the problem
at the pit-stop, which cost you these five seconds;
and then we were told about an incident with Jarno,
but we didn't see it?
Rubens Barrichello:
At the pit-stop, I'm not so sure what happened,
but I think it's something that happened on the
right rear wheel because I thought they told me
to go, I thought I had seen the lollipop move up,
but then the car didn't depart and when I looked,
I was still on the rear jack. So then I had to pull
it all… I may have lost five to six seconds there.
I don't know what really happened. I think it was
this.
With Jarno, it was the same thing that happened
to me in Malaysia. I was coming down the pit-lane
and he cut across me and I had to brake. I don't
think it was as severe as he was with me because
the problem here is that the pit-lane surface, compared
to the asphalt, has so much less grip, so the speed
that I had compared to Jarno was much greater on
his side. So I was trying to slowly get off this
surface because I had no grip, and I was actually
having problems and, when I saw him, I actually
braked to avoid him, because he was going past me.
But, nevertheless, the team told me to keep on pushing
because I might get a penalty because of that. It
was a bit worrying and a bit sad if that does happen,
because it was not my intention to block Jarno at
that point.
Question:
Rubens, you sound quite tired and you're quite red
in the face as well. Did you find it a very exhausting
race?
Rubens
Barrichello:
No, I sweat a little bit more than I normally do…
but, like Malaysia, it was no problem at all. I
didn't have a very good night's sleep for the last
couple of nights, so I was a little bit tired three-quarters
of the way through the race, and I kept on pushing.
I just sweat a bit more than normal.
Michael Schumacher:
It was the champagne he got!
Rubens
Barrichello:
Yeah, I drunk the champagne before the race!
Question:
This is to Mr Schumacher. You are already a six-time
world champion and it seems you are all set to become
the seven time world champion. Is there anything,
according to you, that you have yet to achieve?
Michael
Schumacher:
I don't' want to talk about what might happen or
what might not happen, but the fact is that I love
the sport and may I keep going as long as I love
it.
Question:
I hesitate to say this Michael, but this is looking
a lot like 2002 again. Is it feeling that way? Three
in a row...
Michael
Schumacher:
Well, you might be able to compare it this way.
I don't have any problem with that honestly! [laughter]
Question:
But for the rest it's looking ominous, isn't it?
I mean you've again had such a fast start to the
season so…
Michael
Schumacher:
Yeah but, I'm afraid that I think the others will
raise their game and they will come back to competition
- but it's not down to us.
Question:
Do you really think they will? You would have said
that in 2002…
Michael
Schumacher:
Sure, but did you think that after last year, Australia,
we would have a championship? I think you made the
same question or comment after Australia last year.
I simply believe we have done three out of 18 races
- there's a long way to go.
Question:
Yesterday, you talked about a very comfortable car,
a very easy car. Now we go back to Europe and it
will be the real starting point in the development
of the F1 cars. Do you think there is a big enough
margin of progress in your incredible Ferrari?
Michael
Schumacher:
Naturally, as the situation is what it is, I guess
we have less margin to improve our car, though we
will keep on trying. Compared to the others, there
will be more margin and we deeply believe that the
others will catch up strongly and we'd better be
prepared, otherwise we have the same situation as
last year, and we'd rather finish a bit more comfortably
than last year.
Question:
Jenson, you were first in the third and fourth qualifying
sessions [practice sessions], but you were still
third in the race. What do you think you still have
to do to finish first?
Jenson Button:
I wasn't actually first in the qualifying sessions
- that was in the morning practice. We were very
quick on Saturday morning, but we lost a lot of
time when we got to qualifying. I don't really understand
what the reason was, but that's something we really
need to look at in the data. It's all gaining experience
for us. This is our third race with Michelin tyres
and working out how they work is not as easy as
it seems. We're gaining experience and hopefully
by the next race we can make another step forward.
Question:
Jenson, what is the secret behind BAR's dramatic
improvement in performance here?
Jenson
Button:
I'm going to say the same as I always do. We've
worked very hard over the winter and I think we
gained a lot of experience last year. We're still
a very young team in comparison and that's it really.
We've all worked very hard, it's not just in one
area, it's in every area that we've stepped up our
game and everyone is very determined in the team
so it's a very exciting season for us.
Question:
Jenson, when you were chasing Takuma, how hard did
you have to work, or were you just sitting back
waiting for the inevitable?
Jenson
Button:
Inevitable? I think I was being held up, but it
wasn't a bad thing because I was able to conserve
fuel and able to pit a bit later than we expected,
so it wasn't a big issue.
Question:
To all three of you, how different is fruit juice
to champagne?
Michael
Schumacher:
Smells better afterwards! [laughter]
Jenson
Button:
We smell like ladies now! [laughter].
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