21 May: Monaco Grand Prix - FIA Saturday Press Conference
DRIVERS: 1. Kimi
RAIKKONEN (McLaren), 1m13.644s 2. Fernando ALONSO (Renault), 1m14.125s 3. Mark Webber (Williams), 1m14.584s
TV
UNILATERALS
Q: Kimi, were the track conditions changed at all by the oil that went down in Ralf Schumacher’s big
accident? Kimi RAIKKONEN: Yes, I would say that it didn’t help. But at least it was on the outside of the circuit, so it
wasn’t too bad I didn’t go around there. But I did take that corner a little bit more carefully, but it didn’t really make
much difference.
Q: You were quickest in all three sectors; it looked from the outside as if that was as good as it gets,
almost a perfect lap. KR: Yeah, I would say that apart from that one corner it was pretty good. The car felt good, better
than in the morning. I was pretty happy. I felt it straight away when I went out, that the tyres and everything was working very
well, so I was quite confident but I didn’t know what the times of the others in front of me were, so… It’s the best place for
tomorrow and at least we have a little gap to the second guy, so maybe we can have quite a good race tomorrow.
Q: I’m
sure you haven’t had a chance to study the data yet, but you were quickest in all three sectors, but Fernando was quickest through
all the speed traps. What do you make of that? KR: It doesn’t make any difference here. You’re not going to get past
anyone if the guy in front of you doesn’t want to let you.
Q: Fernando, a very good lap. A difficult situation for you,
of course, going out when you did, just after Jarno and that Ralf accident. What was it like from your point of view? Fernando
ALONSO: Yes, same as Kimi. It didn’t help at all, especially in my case I didn’t know which line Jarno took in the lap,
because I was on my ‘out’ lap already, so when I arrived there on my timed lap, my only information was that Jarno wasn’t too
slow, he was quite quick, that’s what they informed me on my ‘out’ lap but as Kimi said, we didn’t take the normal racing
line, so we were a little bit risky at the swimming pool chicane, the high speed corner. But anyway, second place is good for today,
it’s good for qualifying tomorrow and hopefully it will be a good strategy for the race as well, because there’s a good gap to
Mark but maybe too much of a gap to Kimi. Now we have to think what we’re going to do next.
Q: You obviously have
momentum with you, you’ve been very quick throughout the weekend so far. What does Monaco mean for you, coming to this great race
at this point of the season, with the momentum you have? FA: Yeah, it’s fantastic. I also like Monaco and I have always
been very quick here with Renault, partially because I like the track, but also the car has always been very competitive here, and
this year even more so. The R25 seems competitive everywhere, I think we have to say thanks again for the Michelin tyres we have
here. I’m hopefully able to fight for pole and for victory tomorrow again, so these days are the best moment in my career, for
sure.
Q: Mark, you didn’t appear that good on the screens in practice, but once again you’re right up there when it
comes to qualifying. It was a great looking lap. Mark WEBBER: Yeah, thanks. I was pretty happy with it. At the start of the
session, the guys looked like they were struggling for a bit of grip, so I thought that it might have been difficult for repeat our
fourth practice session times but in the end the track was pretty good, and I think there should be a pat on the back for all the
guys, especially at Grove. They’ve done a huge job to get everything to this race, especially the last few races trying to catch
these two cars here. They’ve set a very high level and we’re pushing very hard at Williams to try and get it back so we’re all
pushing very hard, and it’s thanks to them. Obviously we’re only halfway through qualifying, we have tomorrow to go and we shall
see how we go.
Q: I don’t want to talk about patterns, but there is a little bit of one here: you qualify very well and
so far we need to get the racing to back that up. Your thoughts as we go towards the race now? MW: Well, I really really
enjoy the races. Qualifying hasn’t proved to be a huge huge drama for us. We can qualify reasonably well but it comes down to all
the data, all the long runs, working hard with Michelin. Michelin have won every Grand Prix this year so they’re clearly doing a
fantastic job and we might be using the tyres a fraction harder but that’s what we’ve got to try and sort out and you always
want to try and push down… every electronics, with the engine, all sorts of stuff, we need to still improve.
PRESS
CONFERENCE
Q: Kimi, 0.48s ahead of everyone else; that’s quite a surprising margin, isn’t it? KR: Yeah, the
car has actually been good all day, two days also but I didn’t really push, we were just driving around a little bit on the first
day. Yeah, I was very happy with the car in qualifying, everything worked well, the tyres were working very well. I don’t know
what happened to the others, but I was already quite confident in the morning that we had a good set-up and a good car. The lap wasn’t
very good this morning so now I pushed a bit harder and it was good.
Q: Just tell us the importance of pole position? KR:
I think it’s important to be on pole, or on the front row at every race, but here it’s pretty much impossible to overtake anyone
so if you have pole position and you can get in the lead at the start it’s always going to help you a lot during the race. So you
try to do everything to get there and so far it’s going well, but tomorrow there’s another run and we need to still try to get
pole position. At least we have a margin over the others but it’s never sure, so we just need to work hard tomorrow also.
Q:
Two very different circuits: Barcelona where you won, this one. It must give you great hope and encouragement to be quick on both
circuits. KR: Yes, I was expecting it to be quite difficult here because the Renault is usually very good on these sorts of
circuits, but looking at it today – I don’t know what happened, maybe they didn’t have the best run – but the car seems to
be very good here also. As I said before the start of the weekend, I think this is the best car that I’ve driven here, so I was
quite confident that I would have a good week and so far it has been very good. Hopefully we can keep it up.
Q: Fernando,
is that margin of 0.48s between you and Kimi a bit of a surprise? FA: Yes and no. With the conditions we had after Ralf’s
accident, anything was possible. I think it was too much from our point of view, so it’s a surprise, but at the same time, we have
a good margin to third position, so both gaps are a little bit surprising for us but the good thing for us is that we are on the
front row at the moment and that is, as Kimi said, very important here in Monaco.
Q: What were the track conditions like
when you were out there, considering there had just been the delay? FA: It was very difficult in that particular corner. I
think the rest of the track was good, better than for the first cars, obviously, but in that corner I didn’t know any information,
because when Jarno was doing his lap, I was on my ‘out’ lap, so when I went there I just avoided the oil and the dirty part and
I was in the middle of the track. It was a little bit different but I don’t think I lost too much time.
Q: What effect
does a delay like that have on you? Do you go off the boil a little bit? FA: It’s not helping, for sure. You warm your body
up a little bit before going into the car so you are ready for the start, but when you are sitting in the car for 15 minutes or so
without any movement you are a little bit cold when you go out.
Q: Mark, is third a bit of a surprise? MW: Maybe a
little bit, but the gap is quite big so that’s more concerning. The position is not bad but that gap to these guys is not very
impressive so there’s a lot more work to do.
Q: Third place, there is a bit of a margin between yourself and Kimi, 0.9s,
what can you do about that? MW: Nothing, overnight: brake later, press the pedal harder, nothing. The cars are in parc ferme
now, we can change the fuel for tomorrow. It’s good that qualifying, hopefully from the next race, we don’t have to wait the
next day. We know the grid that night so hopefully it is like that so you guys can report on the real qualifying tonight (Saturday).
Q:
Yes, that’s a potential change in the qualifying regulations. Are you both in favour of the potential change in qualifying to one
run? Fernando? FA: Same for everybody, but the only problem is the order for this qualifying. If you finish the previous race
it is good, but if not maybe it doesn’t help at all. But it’s the same for everybody, and at least you know on Saturday night
which position you are going to be.
Q: Kimi, your thoughts on that? KR: Yeah, I don’t know how it’s going to be,
I haven’t heard anything and if they change it, they change it. For me it seems to be pretty okay, so let’s see what happens.
They have been talking about changing something since the beginning of the season and nothing has happened so I will wait as long as
something really happens and then we will see.
Q: To all three of you, there was an incident going up the hill. Is the
visibility very difficult there? KR: Not really, you can very easily see the other cars but then if someone is going very
slowly, suddenly, and there are many cars behind him then it starts to be a problem. I think it’s going to be a difficult lapping
people in the race because some cars are quite a bit slower than the leading cars. So you might pass them many times but as long as
the teams give good notice we should be okay, but it’s not the easiest place for sure.
FA: Same thing. I don’t
think it’s that difficult, but in practice we all try to slow down to have a nice gap to do a clear lap and all these changes in
speed are dangerous here in Monaco.
MW: Yeah, as the guys have said, it’s like that but going up the hill it was a
bit strange. Someone was going slowly for some reason. There are different places you can go slowly and some places where you can’t
so I don’t really know what happened, but it looked a bit strange.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: Kimi, in
Barcelona you dominated the weekend. Do you think you are in the same shape here, better, do you feel more confident than you were
in Barcelona? KR: It is difficult to say really. Today it was really good, but then tomorrow it might be really different. I
would say that I am really happy with the car and the way things have gone here, better than in Barcelona on the Saturday, so
looking back I would say we are in good shape, but I am not expecting to have such a nice easy race. In Monaco anything can happen
in the race, so we just need to do the best we can and hopefully we can try to win the race.
Q: Kimi, was that your best
ever qualifying lap? KR: It is always difficult to say, comparing old laps, I think. I have had good qualifying sessions here
before also, but I guess it was one of the good ones. As long as it is good enough for pole that is all that really matters.
Q:
Fernando, after finishing your lap you raised your finger to show you were happy with your lap. Did you think that would be enough
for pole position? FA: No. I was happy because the lap was good from my point of view and I did the maximum of the car. As I
said before it was a risky moment when we went through the part that was oily because we took a different line, one we have never
taken in the whole weekend, and even with that you see with the maximum throttle, full, we have to close the eyes a little bit and
risk at that moment a little bit and when you cross the line you are on the front row at the moment anyway you are really happy with
yourself.
Q: Kimi, what were your first thoughts when you saw the gap of almost half a second? KR: I heard it from
the radio of my team. Of course, it is better than it was in the last race so maybe we can play with the fuel a little bit tomorrow,
but I don’t know. It is a good gap but a little bit surprising. I think the circuit was a bit funny because of the oil situation
and you didn’t really know where to go and we tried different line, so I would say that this may be not a completely clear
picture.
Q: Mark, do you find that from a PR point of view that this race is a total pain because you have to be dragged
all over the place to please the sponsors? MW: Well, it is definitely busier than Magny-Cours, that’s for sure. No-one
really wants to go and show off in the pitlane in Magny-Cours and everyone wants to come and show off in Monaco, because a lot of
the legends are here and everyone that is supposedly rich and famous. But, anyway, you have to do what you have to do. We have a lot
of important sponsors that are here and some special guests actually so we have to be flexible to understand that there are some big
guns here and we have got to try and please them. They let us go racing as well, but let’s try to find a line where it doesn’t
get inside your driving.
Q: Kimi, you have such a good advantage over Fernando for second qualifying. How much will it
allow you to play with your strategy for the race? KR: I don’t know, we need to have a look. We don’t know what the
others will do so we have to be careful, but it is better this way than if we would be one tenth ahead or so. I think it can help,
but we still need a good lap tomorrow so we just need to be a bit careful.
Q: Fernando and Kimi, how do you explain the gap
to your team-mates despite the fact there was the oil on the track? KR: I think they were a little bit earlier so the circuit
was not as good, but you need to ask Juan that. FA: The driving improves every lap, especially here in Monaco, and we were the last
two, so maybe it was an advantage, in 18 corners.
Q: Kimi, you told us many times about the new engine but you seem to be
struggling a lot less than at the beginning driving the car. Is it much easier to drive now than it was at the start of the year? KR:
I would say it is not much easier. Okay, maybe the car is better now than it was in the first races, but if you have more horsepower
and the car is quicker anyhow then you maybe don’t need to push over the limit as easily, so that helps you. I think the car was
quick at the beginning of the year but we needed to push as hard as we could to get the timing close to the others, so then you make
mistakes more easily and it is going to cost you. If you have a quicker car it is always going to be easier, so I think that’s the
biggest difference.
Q: Are you always convinced that Ferrari can come back? KR: I think the biggest problem is tyres
for them, Michelin is giving good tyres for us and I think Bridgestone right now is a bit lost so they don’t really have the best
tyres and I don’t think it is as bad as it looks as a car and as a team because you cannot just lose time and the drivers cannot
just be so much slower than last year. FA: The same.
Q: Fernando and Kimi, supposing tomorrow we will have the same
situation with you on the front row and knowing that Fernando is very fast at the start, are you afraid of a collision in the first
corner? FA: No, no, I don’t think so. Historically our car has always been good in the starts but I think this year it is
quite similar to the others, we saw in the last couple of races that Kimi and me started together, in Imola in the front row and in
Barcelona first and third, and nothing happened there so it should be okay here as well.
Q: All three drivers, your
team-mates are almost one second behind you. How do you comment on that? MW: I think the guys commented on their team-mates
and everyone is in the race to make up the race, actually, and people have to fall into their positions where they are. I don’t
think I am one second quicker than Nick, anyway, but Monaco is always a tight and twisty circuit and everyone is trying to get to
the chequered flag as quickly as possible, so where our team-mates are is not really our problem, we concentrate on ourselves.