Sunday, October 30, 2011

Formula 1 post-race press conference - India


Reproduced with kind permission of the FIA


1 - Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull); 2 - Jenson Button (McLaren); 3 - Fernando Alonso (Ferrari).

Q: Sebastian, pole, you led every lap and set the fastest lap. Was this your most perfect win of the season do you think?
Sebastian Vettel:
 Obviously it was a very good race for us. I enjoyed the time in the lead very much. I had a little bit of a fight with Jenson. It was always around four seconds and strangely he kept closing in around the pit-stops. I don't know, I was pushing very hard into the box and out of the box but we seemed to lose a little bit there so we need to understand. But on the circuit it was crucial to manage the tyres, make sure that you have enough of them left in the end, so all in all it was a very smooth race. The car was very well balanced. I felt even a little bit more confident on the hard tyres at the end, but overall a fantastic performance. Thanks to the whole team. Thanks to Renault. I think exceptional job so far, the whole season without any problems but to be honest with you it is a little bit mixed emotions. On the one hand I am very, very happy. It is the first grand prix in India and I am very proud to be the first winner and I think we can be as a team but on the other hand looking back to last weekend we lost two of our mates. I didn't know Dan Wheldon but he was a big name in motorsport. I got to know this year Marco Simoncelli and out thoughts are with them. Yes, we are ready to take certain risks when we jump into the car but we obviously pray that every time nothing happens but sometimes you get reminded and it is the last thing that we want to see. So, as I said, it is a bit mixed emotions and our thoughts are with them at this moment.

Q: Jenson, your engineer said at one point 'we can race Vettel' but I guess it just proved a little bit too difficult today?
Jenson Button:
 Yeah, it was. The last race I really struggled on the first lap and lost a lot of places so I wanted to redeem myself here. Got a good start and was able to get up to second by Turn Four and then it was basically trying to hang on to Sebastian. His pace was very good, he didn't seem to make any mistakes and every time through the pit stops we gained a little bit. I don't know if it was the stop itself or if it was after the stop, but on tyres when I came out of the box I felt very good. I felt very competitive and that was when I could really close the gap down. But as soon as Seb got into a rhythm I couldn't do anything about it really - but all in all for the team I think we have done a perfect job today. We couldn't have done anything else. Yesterday was a disaster for me in qualifying but I think we have put it right here so a good race but, as Seb said, it is a tough weekend for everyone in motorsport. The last two weekends have been very, very difficult. We have had two fatalities so it is very difficult especially with Dan. I knew Dan from a very early age, he was the guy we always had to beat in the early formulas so very sad also so I think we should dedicate this first Indian race to Dan and obviously Marco, another super talented youngster. He was the most amazing guy to watch on a bike so I think we should dedicate this to them.

Q: Fernando, your battle was with Mark Webber and you got him at the second round of pit-stops. Tell us about your race.


Fernando Alonso: Yeah, we didn't make the perfect start today. To be on a very new circuit and starting on the clean side I think we didn't have the grip that we were expecting and the other side of the grid they started a little better than us and we lost a couple of positions there. Then we race with Mark until the second pit-stop where, a little bit surprisingly, he decided to stop and we did two extra laps so we were able to overtake him so extremely happy to win the podium in this first race here in India. To have this feeling and to taste the champagne is always nice in a first race in a new country. As Sebastian and Jenson said, mixed feelings this weekend with sad weeks for motorsport with the two accidents. I think we all raced for them today and try to go ahead but always remember these two fantastic people.

Q: Sebastian, you have set a new record today for the most laps led in a Formula One season, taking over from Nigel Mansell. I bet you just don't want this year to end?
SV:
 No, I don't mind. I think we can continue. The car is fantastic. The team is enjoying and we are on a run basically since the beginning of the season and it is great. We enjoy every race. The great thing is you walk into the garage every morning and you see the guys and they are flat out. They are pushing very hard and there is no sign of getting lazy and not paying attention to detail. It is really enjoyable to see that knowing that we have already achieved a lot this year, but we are still hungry so we are not lacking motivation at any stage. All the people come back with their questions but we seem to give them the right answers. I love what I do. I think we all do so it is great and in a way we don't want this to end.

Q: Jenson, tell us about your start briefly. You got past Fernando and Mark. Exciting times?
JB:
 It was. The start off the line didn't feel that good but I think there is such low grip off the start line. Then I was able to get Fernando into Turn One. I think he went a little bit deep and I knew I had to get a good exit out of Turn Three. It is such a long straight. Got a good exit, was in Mark's tow and when you are in that situation where there is a car behind you can't do anything about it. He covered the inside, did the right thing, but I had enough speed to go around the outside and carry the speed. It was an exciting part of the race. Then I had Mark behind me for about eight laps, pushing me really very hard. He tried to get down the outside of me into turn four, we both braked very, very late and both ran wide almost off the circuit but kept the position and then I was able to pull away. I think he damaged his tyres quite a bit. But it was a fun race. A little bit frustrating that I couldn't catch up with Seb, but we did a good job this weekend and that's the important thing. Pace isn't quite there, but hopefully in the last two races we can make that little step.

Q: Fernando, what is your side of the story of the battle at the start?
FA:
 Yeah, the start was not perfect so the first two or three seconds we lost too much ground there. Then I tried to recover in Turn One, braking a little bit late, but there was not the grip to brake that late and I lost a little bit more. It didn't compromise the race as I don't think we were able to fight with Sebastian at any point. Being second or third in the first lap it didn't change too much the full picture of the race. We are not that super competitive at this part of the year but we keep on having podiums thanks to the fantastic job here by people at the track. Today again we had a little problem with the front wing on the grid and the mechanics did a fantastic job in the last two or three minutes before we start on the green light so again thanks to the whole team for the fantastic effort with the things that we have in our hands. As everybody knows, next year is our main target and the same for everybody.

Q: Sebastian, just sum up the thoughts about this first ever Indian Grand Prix.
SV:
 It is great, I think, what the people did here in a short amount of time. We heard about it a couple of years ago but to put up this arena is incredible. Surely there are little bits here and there that are not 100 percent finished but now the people know so they will fix that for next year I am quite sure. I think all in all it was fantastic. I am very proud, as I said, to be the first winner here in India. I think it is a very impressive country, very different to what we probably know from Europe, but very inspiring. If you keep you eyes and ears open I think you are able to learn a lot, the way the people handle things here. It is a big country, a lot of people, but sometimes it looks very different but they get along with it and they are very happy here. They enjoy life and in the end that's what it is all about. If your life comes to an end it is more the thoughts, the emotions, the friends, the friendships you take with you rather than whatever you have in your bank account. Even the people have so little here I think in a way they are much richer than a lot of people back in Europe so there is a lot we can learn and it is a great race, great event. The circuit is fantastic so all in all it is fantastic so thanks a lot to India and all the people here.

Q: Sebastian, quite a few people were questioning your motivation earlier on this weekend. That should put an end to all that talk?
SV:
 Yes, I think so. I said everything yesterday, on Friday and Thursday regarding these comments. As I touched on the whole team is still very hungry and the best thing is we still have two races to go so we enjoy it a lot today so motivation is not an issue.

Q: You just seemed to set nothing but purple laps. You let Jenson have one or two, but not very many. You were just so quick.
SV:
 Yeah, it was a long race to be honest. A lot of laps. The circuit is quite challenging. It is one of the difficult ones throughout the season and very easy to do a mistake, very easy to go a little bit beyond the limit, a little bit over the limit, get a little bit off line and you end up in the dust and dirt and you have to fight your way back. Not only in that particular corner but also for a couple of corners afterwards. Not so easy with traffic. Quite a big chance to lose a lot of time and as I was racing Jenson in the distance always around three-and-a-half, four-and-a-half seconds. You want to get through and ideally maybe get a little bit of DRS here and there for the straights to get a little bit of extra free lap time. But the car was great. Start obviously was important. I was focussing a lot on Turn Three, the first lap, to make sure I had a bit of a cushion going on that long, long, long back straight. In the first lap you are vulnerable so it was crucial to have a clean exit which I had as we saw with Mark who lost position to Jenson at that stage. Afterwards I was able to pull away in the first couple of laps, maintain the gap, and in the end I was feeling very happy. End of the first stint I was able to pull away. Jenson pitted so we had to react but second stint then wasn't that straightforward as the first one with traffic et cetera. Bit more tricky to manage the tyres and Jenson was at some stages very strong. In the end I found the rhythm again and got quicker but, again, Jenson pitted in front of us and we reacted the lap after. Warm up on the hards wasn't too bad and actually I felt quite comfortable on the hard tyre so I was able to push throughout and also at the end with the strong laps. Got some calls from my engineer reminding me what is the target, there is not trophy for fastest lap. Fortunately we were able to get both. The car was great. All in all it was a fantastic event. The race was fantastic. We were in a comfortable position controlling the race from the front, but always to have Jenson in the mirrors and not willing to disappear doesn't make your life easy so we had to push throughout the whole race and it was enough. At the end we were a bit more comfortable but fantastic. I am very happy, but as I touched on in the press conference earlier obviously mixed emotions with two tragic past weekends. For everyone who is a fan of motorsport It was a hard time we had to go through. On the one hand I am very happy and very proud to be the first winner of this grand prix. There were a lot of people, a big event, great atmosphere, all the grandstands nearly sold out so great to be part of that. But on the other hand we have to pay a certain respect to those two guys who lost their lives. Our thoughts are with them, especially with their families. We should never forget those two young, very committed race drivers.

Q: Jenson, you said yesterday you lacked grip in qualifying. What was it like in the race itself?
JB:
 Well it wasn't too bad, I finished second. Yesterday I struggled in qualifying basically just getting a rhythm. Whatever could go wrong in qualy it seemed to and sometimes you have sessions like that. Sometimes everything goes in your way. The race was very different. I had a good start, got past Fernando into Turn One and then it was about judging where to put the car into Turn Three as I had Mark in front that I wanted to overtake but I also had Fernando behind me trying to overtake me. You have to be very careful where you put the car in the entry into Turn Three but judged it well, got a good run on Mark and was able to get him into Turn Four. Then Mark proceeded to push me for the next eight laps around the circuit, pushed me really hard actually. Had a go into Turn Four, we both braked very late, both ran wide, but kept the position and then I was able to kick in and pull a gap. Then it was about trying to set off after Sebastian. But it was very, very tricky. At the pit stops I think the guys did a tremendous job and we seemed to be good on new tyres or after we had put a new set on and the pace was good. But as soon as Sebastian got into a rhythm we couldn't touch them. But as far as races go I don't think we put a foot wrong and as a team we did a perfect job this weekend but we just didn't have the pace of the Red Bulls and Sebastian. I think we need to say a big congratulations to the Indian people for their efforts on building this circuit because the circuit itself is, I think in years to come, we are going to think of it as one of the greats. It is a very special circuit and I really, really enjoy driving around here. I hope we put on a good show and it is also great to see the excitement in the crowd. The people that are here, as there are quite a few people here, they are really getting into the mood and really getting into the action and it is good to see, really good to see, so a very special weekend and thank you to them.

Q: Fernando, interesting battle with Mark Webber but it seems Mark just doesn't have the straight-line speed or DRS or whatever?
FA:
 Well I think if they have also the straight-line speed it would maybe be too much.

Q: At least you jumped him at the pit-stop?
FA:
 Yeah, we know that with the hard tyres the first two laps maybe they are not as good as the soft and we were a little bit debating on the radio what to do in the second stop. Stop one lap before Mark or wait? The team did the right call, be a little bit calm, wait for Mark to stop and then try to take advantage of the extra lap or the extra two laps expecting some warm up issues with the hard tyre for them. It did happen. After Mark stopped the team told me that we were gaining time so to do an extra lap so we did two laps more than him and we jump Mark at the stop. Then in the last stint it was a question mark as last couple of races we put the hard tyre on and we struggle a lot and we have been overtaken by them quite easy so even if we were third at that point of the race we were not sure and we had to push for 20 laps maximum. Try to defend the position so at the end it was very close. I think Mark crossed the line 1.5 or one second behind me so with more laps I think the podium was getting more and more difficult so the finish arrived in the right moment.

Q: We heard a lot about how good the circuit was in practice et cetera. What was it like to race on for 60 laps?
FA:
 It was fantastic. I agree completely with Jenson and Sebastian. The circuit is very nice to drive. Okay, it was a very narrow line of normal grip and outside that line there was a lot of dust and low grip but this is normal for new circuits and I think with the years that will improve. The circuit has a little bit of everything. Long straights and very wide entries for the hairpins, which allowed us to try some overtaking manoeuvres and put on a good show on Sunday. Two DRS zones that, I think, worked okay today with more overtaking possibilities and then the second and third sector which is a combination of corners in fifth, sixth gear which we normally love to drive and overall it was a fantastic weekend. A lot of people came, very passionate about our sport, to be here the first time and the circuit was completely finished and in a very good condition in a very short period of time. I am sure that things will improve, but already the level is very high, so congratulations.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Sridhar Potdar - Sakaal Media House) Vettel, we have to say V for victory and V for Vettel. Speaking about India, you say that here people don't have money but they're happy, compared to Europe. Is this a very fond memory of the most memorable race of your life so far?
SV:
 Well, as I said, I think some things are very difficult to imagine for us. If you look where we come from, I think it's hard to imagine things if you haven't seen them. The really surprising bit for us… where sometimes you measure happiness in our lives, in our world, with what you have achieved, what you have etc. For the people here, it doesn't really matter, they're happy with what they have, even if you compare they have so little, but they are happy and friendly, helpful, respectful. Obviously I haven't spent a lot of time here, so I can't judge as well as people from India, but it was very inspiring when I had a bit of time to spend in the country. I went to see the Taj Mahal which is obviously a touristy thing to do but driving there by car, and not falling asleep because the roads were pretty… it was a good adventure, let's say. Keeping your eyes open, there are a lot of things which make you appreciate a lot of things much more than you probably do. Yeah, it opens your eyes, as long as you allow yourself to look at certain things, so I think it was an inspiration and something that you should never forget. All in all, it was great to be here, a great circuit, which obviously - speaking about our job, about racing, that's what we judge most, the circuit is fantastic to drive. I was surprised that the race went by pretty quickly. Obviously I was always trying to keep the gap to him (Button), trying to push but my engineer came on the radio and said 'twelve laps to go' and I was surprised because I thought, bloody hell, that went by quickly. It's a good sign, because you enjoy the circuit and there are some great corners as Fernando said, high speed corners which we usually enjoy a lot, because it allows us to put us on the limit, the cars on the limit so great to be here. Having had debuts in different places the last couple of years, this will be one of the races that settles in very quickly and we will all be happy to come back. Even though there has only been one race so far, I'm already looking forward to next year.

Q: (Sudhir Chandran - Chequered Flag,) When Neil Armstrong landed on the moon, he said those famous words 'one small step by a human being and one giant leap for mankind.' Any famous first words?
JB:
 I think it should just be the winner who has these special words.
SV: Dhanyawaad… aapki aankhei bahut khoobsurat hai (thank you, your eyes are beautiful). Obviously that's for the ladies of India. You know the girls, to all the girls in India, you have beautiful women in this country. They have beautiful eyes.
JB: Beautiful smiles.
SV: Thank you very much. As I said we all enjoyed it, everyone is happy to be here and happy to come back which is a good sign.

Q: (Sudhir Chandran - Chequered Flag,) India has an advertising tag-line which says Incredible India. Would you guys like to endorse it or add to it after the weekend you've spent here?
SV:
 I think I answered that question before already. I agree, yes.
JB: Yeah, I agree with Sebastian.
FA: I agree with both.

Q: (Amanpreet Singh - PTI) Vettel, we appreciate you have said good things about India but twice you have mentioned that India is different from what you know in Europe. Would you like to elaborate what impression you had about this country before landing here and what differences you found eventually?
SV:
 Well, it's difficult to say. Expectations, you obviously only know from what people tell you. To be honest I didn't expect anything really. I heard a lot of good things, I heard a lot of bad things. I prefer to come here myself and take a look, so I took a little bit of time to have a look outside the circuit, as I said. Basically what I saw is very inspiring, it's very different. I think you will find the same if you go there. Sometimes it's difficult to imagine for us, which is why I think you really have to come here but it's a country that I think is very interesting to travel around, because I think there are a lot of things you can learn. Some things you have to get used to because they are so different, but it's not a drama, it's a different culture, the people are different but as I said, they are very helpful, very friendly and happy, so that's a good thing.

Q: (S.S. ShreeKumar - New Indian Express, Bangalore) Alonso, you said things will improve in future. What areas do you think need improvement?
FA:
 I think when you host the first race even in a new country, there are things that for sure you learn and you improve. I think the paddock, even if it's finished and it's working fine, I think next year it will be even better, in terms of how the teams will settle, how the electricity will work, after we had some problems on Thursday, which is very normal for a first time that we use an environment like this one. I think the circuit itself will improve as well. There was too much sand on the circuit on the first day and now the circuit is in a very good condition, on Sunday, after the race. I think the starting point next year will be a lot better than the starting point this year. We saw a couple of issues with kerbs with Felipe, yesterday breaking his suspension, today again another suspension, so I'm sure that they will find a better solution for this type of kerb, obviously stopping us cutting the corner but in a different way, to avoid any risk or any accident that it can cause at the moment. As I said, the starting point is already very high, from zero to ten maybe it's nine so it's very good but the ten will be reached very soon.

Q: (Flavio Vanetti - Il Corriere della Sera) Fernando, two races left and 13 points behind Jenson, do you still believe it's possible for you to cover the gap and get second place in the championship?
FA:
 Yes, perfectly possible, that's for sure, because there are 50 points available but as we said a couple of races ago, OK, finishing second is maybe better than finishing fifth. We are four drivers all together: Hamilton, Jenson, Mark and me but it's not a big priority for us. If I finish second it's OK, if I finish fourth it's OK. I will not remember the 2011 season if I finish second or third. I will probably remember the win in Silverstone and a couple of nice starts and a couple of nice races, but the position of the championship, once you are no longer in the hunt for the World Championship win, the other positions are less relevant. I think we will try to do two last good races, try to be on the podium if we can, which is always a good feeling, taste the champagne and take the trophy after a hard weekend, as it was this one. I think I have to congratulate the team, they did a fantastic job to maximise the potential we have in our hands now, we know that the car is not as competitive as it was a couple of months ago but we are still fighting for podiums. Today we had a problem on the front wing on the lap to the grid, twenty minutes before the start, and they worked until the last minute just to put it all together and they did it perfectly right and the car was very well balanced all through the races. Everyone is doing 100 percent of his job to maximise the potential and the podiums are very welcome. In the last two races, I think we will continue in this direction.

Q: (Michael Schmidt - Auto, Motor und Sport) Jenson, when you look at the lap times, sector one and sector two were pretty evenly matched, but you consistently lost to Sebastian in the last sector, three to four tenths. It's the shortest sector with just four corners; where are you losing?
JB:
 I haven't got a clue! That's the first I know about it. I don't know. I'm guessing turn 13, 14, 15 and 16 probably! I don't know why that's different to the other sectors. I'm surprised that I didn't lose more in the middle sector because that's been a little bit of a weakness throughout the weekend but we've obviously sorted that out, but yeah, there are two high speed corners in that sector and two low speed corners so it's strange why there's such a difference.

Q: (Sarah Holt - BBC Sport) Jenson, Sebastian's not going to be untouchable in the last couple of races is he? I know, when you get the chance, you can push him hard during the race, and just for Fernando, what is your priority then in the next two races? Have you got one?
JB:
 I don't have an answer for you really. Is he going to be untouchable? I don't know. I hope not, and we're going to do everything we can to make sure that he doesn't win the next two races but he's obviously been very strong all year. It's very, very difficult to challenge Red Bull and Sebastian, but we're doing everything we can and I think today we did everything right but we just weren't quick enough, so for the next two weeks, we've got to hope that we can make some improvements for Abu Dhabi, a circuit where they're generally very quick but then again, they were generally very quick in Japan, Suzuka, so… Hopefully we will work well there and we will get everything right and we can challenge Sebastian.
FA: Our priority will be 2012, car, team, me. I cannot tell you where I need to improve!

Q: (L. P Sahi - The Telegraph) Sebastian, I was just curious to know: new circuit, new track. In terms of strategy and tactics, how was this much more demanding for you and your team to get onto the circuit and to emerge the winner straight away?
SV:
 I think it's always… if you have a debut on a new track, the first time you're here there are a lot of questions to be answered. Obviously the tyre choice, with hindsight, was conservative compared to some of the other races, so we knew that the soft tyre will be the quicker compound, will be faster, just how long is it going to survive? We weren't sure if we would have to pit twice or three times. In the end we only came in twice. As I said, it's difficult to know what to expect. Obviously these days we get a little bit of an idea on the simulator about the track, about the kerbs, about the layout, about the speed of the corners, but it's different when we come here. The circuit was very dusty on Friday, improved pretty quickly on the racing line, once it was clear of dust it was very grippy, the grip level was very high and we could go very quickly and I think the lap times were very quick as well. Obviously for next year we have a lot of things we can take out of this year to improve, to learn, to understand about the car, the set-up. Yes, the cars will change but the circuit is not unknown, so it's always more difficult if you talk about something that you don't know for everything, strategy, set-up. Obviously throughout the weekend it was dry, the conditions were consistent, so we were able to get the information on the Friday which helped us a lot yesterday and today so that made our lives a bit easier but, as I said, if you race somewhere for the first time, there are always a lot of boxes to be ticked.

Q: (Livio Oricchio - O Estado de Sao Paulo) There is an important meeting on Thursday in Geneva with the F1 Commission. One of the subjects to be discussed is the possibility of one team to supply another team with a car. What's your opinion about that, is that good or bad for Formula One?
JB:
 About the car, I think it's something we need to think about. It's not something we should jump straight into and give a comment. I think it's difficult for the teams that do build their own car. They put all the effort into designing a car and working on that car over a winter to suddenly be racing against a Red Bull re-badged or something or a McLaren re-badged or a Ferrari re-badged. It's a little bit unfair on teams that are in the middle of the pack and they build their own car, but I don't know the full extent of the conversations that are going to take place and when this is going to be for.
SV: It's the first time I heard about it as well. I think I agree a little bit with Jenson. Obviously you put a lot of effort in your car, the whole team is pushing. I know there are a lot of people behind us here on the track, it's not only the guys you see here changing the wheels during the race and working on the cars at the race track, there's a lot of people at the factory. They push hard to build these two cars and yeah, obviously if you have a good car… I don't know if the idea is to sell that to someone else. I don't know if it's the idea of Formula One. It's the first time I heard about it, so I don't know.

Q: (Heikki Kulta - Turun Sanomat) Jenson, McLaren sealed second place in the Constructors' championship today. How would rate second place in the Drivers' championship if you get it as well?
JB:
 First of all, yeah, congratulations to the team for second. It's sad always to say congratulations for second but it does make a big difference to the team, moving into the new season. Second in the drivers' doesn't mean as much as second in the constructors'. I think when you've won a World Championship, nothing else will do really except for first place. The important thing is that we're strong; for the next couple of races and every race I'm going into I'm fighting for a win. I'm not going to give up on that until it's the end of the season. I'm very excited about the challenge of Abu Dhabi and especially Brazil - I saw you (Sebastian) look over then! Yeah, that's exciting, very exciting. Second in the championship? You've beaten everyone except one person and it's that one person that you really want to beat.

Vettel win..First formula one India Grand Prix...


Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel crushed his opposition to score an easy victory in Buddh International Circuit, Noida, India on Sunday,He win 11 th Victory of the Season, despite major late-race pressure from McLaren's Jenson Button, whom he had outrun early on. And it was Button's presence in second place that prevented Vettel from confirming his second consecutive world championship by a mere point. 10th podium of the season Jenson Button.
Fernando Alonso grab the 3rd position in 2011 formula 1 India.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

Qualifying analysis - India victory there for the taking


Sebastian Vettel took a clear pole in New Delhi on Saturday, but with Felipe Massa's dramatic shunt bringing out the yellow flags at the end of Q3, the timesheets didn't tell the full story. Red Bull, McLaren and Ferrari all believe they have a genuine chance of winning the inaugural Indian Grand Prix on Sunday…

Red Bull
Sebastian Vettel, 1m 24.178s, P1
Mark Webber, 1m 24.508s, P3, will start P2

Vettel said his RB7 has been brilliant all weekend and it just keeps getting better. He thought he could improve on his first run, which was only very slightly quicker than Hamilton's, and duly lopped off another three-tenths to match Fangio's tally of 29 pole positions and to bring Red Bull's season total to a record 16. Webber was happy to get out of some strife he encountered in Q2 with his first run in Q3, but said the first sector of that one could have been better. Massa's yellow flags stole his chance of a second run. With Hamilton's penalty, however, he joins Vettel on the front row.

McLaren
Lewis Hamilton, 1m 24.474s, P2, will start P5
Jenson Button, 1m 24.950s, P5, will start P4



Hamilton said his first lap was the best he could have got from his McLaren, and that he aborted his second run when it was clear it would not be an improvement. He regretted his 'silly mistake' in FP1 which cost him three grid places, but believes that he still has a chance of winning a long race. Button struggled horribly for grip in Q1 and only jumped to third right at the end of that session. His car was unbalanced by Q3, and he had to back off on a good lap when Massa went off and the yellows came out.

Ferrari
Fernando Alonso, 1m 24.519s, P4, will start P3
Felipe Massa, 1m 25.122s, P6

Alonso was in strong form with a competitive fourth fastest Q3 run. With Hamilton's penalty, however, he crucially switches to third place and the cleaner side of the grid. With the strong starts he has been making recently, he could be a real threat in the race. Massa starts sixth despite not completing the session after going off the track when his right front suspension broke on impact with the inside kerb at Turn 8.

Mercedes
Nico Rosberg, 1m 25.451s, P7
Michael Schumacher, 1m 26.337s, P12, will start P11

Rosberg hit a kerb quite hard in Q1 which damaged the floor and lost him some downforce for the rest of qualifying. Then in Q3 his second run was quicker until he had to back off because of Massa's accident. Schumacher once again encountered tyre vibrations on the final lap of his second run in Q2, and just missed out on Q3 by 0.018s.

Force India
Adrian Sutil, No time, P8
Paul di Resta, 1m 26.503s, P13, will start P12

Sutil was delighted with one of his best qualifying performances of the year in a race that is so important to the 'home' team, but Di Resta found that the slightly cooler conditions promoted understeer which ruined the balance he had enjoyed while going very quickly in FP3.

Toro Rosso
Sebastien Buemi, No time, P9
Jaime Alguersuari, No time, P10

Once again Toro Rosso were strong and both drivers enjoyed trouble-free qualifying sessions.

Renault
Vitaly Petrov, 1m 26.319s, P11, will start P16
Bruno Senna, 1m 26.651s, P15, will start P14

Petrov set the fastest time in Q1, mainly because he ran at the right time and when the frontrunners decided they'd done enough to get through. In Q2, however, he failed to go as quickly after making mistakes in the final corners. Senna was disappointed that changes made to the car after FP3 took him in the wrong direction for Q1.

Williams
Pastor Maldonado, 1m 26.537s, P14, will start P13
Rubens Barrichello, 1m 27.247s, P16, will start P15

Williams reported a reasonably pleasing session, in which Maldonado got the best out of the car but Barrichello found his FW33's balance waning on his second set of tyres in Q2.

Sauber
Sergio Perez 1m 27.562s, P17, will start P20
Kamui Kobayashi, 1m 27.876s, P18, will start P17

Sauber had an unhappy time trying to balance their cars, which was compounded by Perez's three grid place drop.

Lotus
Heikki Kovalainen, 1m 28.565s, P19, will start P18
Jarno Trulli, 1m 28.752s, P20, will start P19

Lotus took another step forward and Kovalainen was happy to find decent balance when he needed it after struggling earlier to get heat into his tyres. Trulli was reasonably happy, but said he lost out to traffic.

Virgin
Jerome d'Ambrosio, 1m 30.866s, P23, will start P21
Timo Glock, 1m 34.046s, P24

Glock lost fifth gear after his first run and failed to beat the 107% bogey time, but has been allowed to start based on practice form. D'Ambrosio struggled with his car's balance and was never happy with it.

HRT
Daniel Ricciardo, 1m 30.216s, P21, will start P22
Narain Karthikeyan, 1m 30.238s, P22, will start P23

HRT looked good after out-qualifying the Virgins, and yet again Karthikeyan did a fine job to run within hundredths of a second of Ricciardo. But they each drop back five grid positions, the Australian because of a gearbox change earlier on, the Indian because he was adjudged to have impeded Schumacher in Q1.

Formula one race India Qualifying Teams and driver India quotes


HRT's Narain Karthikeyan and Daniel Ricciardo on outpacing the Virgins in Q1; Michael Schumacher on how vibration at the rear of his Mercedes saw him miss out on the top-ten shootout; Ferrari's Felipe Massa on breaking the front suspension of his Ferrari and crashing out in the dying moments of Q3; and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel on securing his 13th pole position of the season. All 24 drivers and senior team personnel report back on Saturday's action…

Toro Rosso
Jaime Alguersuari (10th, Q3 - 1m s)

"I am very happy, especially for the team as we are both in good positions and Sebastien was really fast, right from yesterday, when I had some problems. Today he drove a brilliant lap. We solved my problems overnight so that I could also be competitive today. Tomorrow, we have a good chance of doing well starting from these positions and it could be useful in terms of the championship as our main rivals, the Saubers, are starting behind us. Strategy will be important and if we do everything right then maybe we can bring home a big points score. The increase in performance at this point of the season is down to the great job the whole company has done in developing the car. I am hoping for a top eight finish tomorrow."



Sebastien Buemi (13th, Q3 - 1m s)
"I am very happy for the team as they did a fantastic job and I congratulate them and thank them for it. Having both cars in Q3 is amazing. Now, I hope we can have a good race tomorrow, because there are no points for what we did today. The first race at this circuit is bound to be an interesting experience. It was teamwork that delivered today's result, with everyone giving their maximum since we arrived here in India."

Laurent Mekies, Toro Rosso chief engineer
"A great performance from the drivers and the team today means we have both cars in the top ten on the grid for the first time since China. It has been a complicated task managing the situation of having massive track improvement from one session to the next , combined with the fact this is a new circuit for all of us. Our car is definitely getting faster as we approach the end of the season. We were quite happy with the progress we saw in Korea and today's performance is a confirmation that we are working in the right direction. This is good for everyone back at the factory and in the wind tunnel who are pushing hard on the development of the car. Of course, there are no points for qualifying and although today's result puts us in a strong position for the race, there are question marks over what the track conditions will be like and how much tyre degradation we will see. I expect it will be an exciting race for the spectators, with various different strategies coming into play and hopefully we can make the most of our opportunities and secure a good result, on our first visit to this fantastic track."

Sauber
Sergio Perez (17th, Q2 - 1m 27.562s)

"This was obviously a very bad qualifying for me. After our performance in the third free practice this morning we were clearly expecting to do better in qualifying. The key problem was that we couldn't switch on the tyres to get them really to work. Knowing this, and given the fact that I had the grid penalty from yesterday, we decided to put only the used tyres on again in Q2, as it was better to save the fresh ones for the race."

Kamui Kobayashi (18th, Q1 - 1m 27.876s)
"The pace of the car was certainly good enough for Q2, I was convinced about it and I also think our race performance should be alright. However, in qualifying it took me a lot of time to warm up the tyres, and then in the end I was unlucky. I had just started my final flying lap when Felipe (Massa) came out of the pit lane in front of me. Although there wasn't enough time left in the session for him to do another run he didn't give room. I am disappointed with today, but I will keep myself together and have a positive approach to the race. At least I have some fresh tyres left and this circuit offers opportunities for overtaking."

Monisha Kaltenborn, Sauber chief executive
"We are obviously disappointed about the result, especially after free practice went quite well. Today, the whole team was not able to extract the full potential out of the car. The good thing, however, is that both drivers have two sets of new soft tyres left, which will put them in a position to attack in tomorrow's race."

Giampaolo Dall'Ara, Sauber head of track engineering
"Lately we have been falling into a difficult situation performance wise. Everyone in the team, in the factory and at the track has been working very hard to understand and fix these problems we have had since the last race. Despite having reviewed our approach quite a bit, so far it hasn't produced a significant improvement. We are definitely unhappy about the day. Still the race is tomorrow, and we will keep the motivation up and we will try to catch up as much possible."

Lotus
Heikki Kovalainen (19th, Q1 - 1m 28.565s)

"I think I got as much out of the car as I could in quali and it's good to put in a lap like that right towards the end of the run. Honestly, I've been struggling all weekend to find a balance and put heat into the tyres, so to come out on Saturday and hook up a lap within 0.7 of Kamui feels pretty good. As the weekend's continuing the track's getting better and better and I have to say I'm really enjoying myself out there, so tomorrow will be fun, particularly as we've shown recently that we can fight with the cars in front throughout the race."

Jarno Trulli (20th, Q1 - 1m 28.752s)
"I was a bit unlucky with traffic on my quick laps and I think there were a couple of tenths to find but we were pretty close to pushing as hard as we could today in qualifying. We've taken a step forward since yesterday as the times show, but we know our qualifying pace doesn't reflect what we can do in the race so I want to make sure I can get back to the great race starts I'd been making a couple of races back and see where we end up tomorrow afternoon."

Riad Asmat, Lotus Group CEO
"We did okay here. Both drivers have struggled a little with the tyres here but I think our qualifying performance today shows some of the hard work put in last night and this morning has brought us back to where we know we should be. Now we want to maintain the very good reliability we have seen all weekend and make sure both cars finish well tomorrow. I think the race itself is going to be a momentous occasion for everyone involved in the Indian Grand Prix and I hope the fans have something to cheer for, no matter what team they are following."

Mike Gascoyne, Lotus chief technical officer 
"I think we can be reasonably pleased with our qualifying performance here. Our drivers were close to the maximum on their quickest laps and even though they had a couple of issues with traffic and struggled to generate heat in both compounds of tyres, we finished Q1 close to the group ahead. We know we can fight with a number of cars in the race so the aim for Sunday has to be a repeat of our races in Japan and Korea and maintain the strong end to the season we have been enjoying over the last few races."

Formula one India Qualifying - Vettel on pole for inaugural Indian race


Lewis Hamilton's three-place grid penalty came back to haunt him in qualifying for the Indian Grand Prix. The 2008 champion was right on Sebastian Vettel's tail after their first runs in Q3, the German lapping in 1m 24.437s in the Red Bull, the Englishman 1m 24.474s in the McLaren.

But while there was no point in the latter pushing harder on a second run, as Mark Webber was not going to improve his own third fastest 1m 24.508s, Vettel went out again and trimmed down to 1m 24.178s to secure his 13th pole position of the year.

Behind the top three, Fernando Alonso had to be content with fourth place on 1m 24.519s, while McLaren's Jenson Button was in the process of pushing Felipe Massa down a place with 1m 24.950s at the very moment when the Brazilian was spearing off the track as his Ferrari's right-front suspension broke after he had clobbered a kerb. He had to rely on 1m 25.122s for his sixth place.

Nico Rosberg was seventh for Mercedes on 1m 25.451s, as Force India's Adrian Sutil, Toro Rosso's Sebastien Buemi and Jaime Alguersuari took the remaining top-10 places but didn't set times.

Vettel had shredded the weekend's fastest time with 1m 24.657s in Q2, with Hamilton next up on 1m 25.019s and Alonso on 1m 25.158s.

Renault caught a tough break when Vitaly Petrov actually lapped in 1m 26.319s, the same time as Jaime Alguersuari had done for Toro Rosso, but the Spaniard did it first which meant that the Russian did not make it through to Q3.

Behind him was Michael Schumacher, suffering vibrations on his Mercedes as he lapped in 1m 26.337s, then came a disappointed Paul di Resta who'd been ahead of Force India team mate Sutil until their final runs when he failed to improve on 1m 26.503s which left him 13th as the German took P8. Pastor Maldonado was 14th for Williams with 1m 26.537s, ahead of Renault's Bruno Senna on 1m 26.651s, Rubens Barrichello in the other Williams on 1m 27.247s and Sauber's Sergio Perez on 1m 27.562s.

The big talk of Q1 was whether McLaren's Jenson Button might miss out as he was struggling for grip and down in 16th place until the very last lap when he jumped up to third behind surprise fastest man Petrov and Vettel.

Kamui Kobayashi had looked good for a while but never got things together and his 1m 27.876s made him the first faller in 18th place. Heikki Kovalainen took charge at Lotus to take 19th from Jarno Trulli, 1m 28.565s to 1m 28.752s. Then came the HRTs, as Daniel Ricciardo just kept ahead of local hero Narain Karthikeyan who continued to do an excellent job. The Australian lapped in 1m 30.216s, the Indian 1m 30.238s.

Behind them, Jerome D'Ambrosio was 23rd for Virgin on 1m 30.866s as team mate Timo Glock could not better 1m 34.046s after mechanical trouble. That left him outside the 107 percent time of 1m 32.222s, so he will be allowed to race at the stewards' discretion.

There are grid place drops to consider, however. Hamilton and Perez drop three apiece, Petrov five and Ricciardo five, the Russian for his indiscretion in Korea, the Australian for a gearbox change. Thus the starting order will be: Vettel, Webber; Alonso, Button; Hamilton, Massa; Rosberg, Sutil; Buemi, Alguersuari; Schumacher, di Resta; Maldonado, Senna; Barrichello, Petrov; Kobayashi, Kovalainen; Trulli, Perez; Karthikeyan, D'Ambrosio; Ricciardo, Glock.

F1 race India Final practice - Red Bull versus McLaren at Buddh

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel did his best to lower Ferrari and McLaren's aspirations for the 2011 Formula 1 Airtel Grand Prix of India on Saturday morning, even though he left it literally until the chequered flag fell in practice to set the fastest time by more than three-tenths of a second.

After everyone had a run on Pirelli's hard tyres just to check out their performance level for the race, the fast runs began on the softer rubber in the final 15 minutes. As the end of the hour approached, Jenson Button had the quickest time for McLaren with 1m 25.191s ahead of Red Bull's Mark Webber, who had just split the two silver cars.

The Australian's 1m 25.203s didn't unseat Button, but it pushed Lewis Hamilton down a place after the Englishman had recorded 1m 25.288s. But then Vettel got in another great lap, despite having to flash past one of the Saubers at a critical point on the circuit, and there was the weekend's first sub-1m 25s lap: a demoralising 1m 24.824s which put him 0.367s clear.

Behind the top four, Ferrari lost a little pace as Fernando Alonso was fifth on 1m 25.784s and Felipe Massa sixth on 1m 26.058s.

Then there was another gap as Paul di Resta continued his impressive season with 1m 26.785s to take seventh for Force India, ahead of Nico Rosberg's Mercedes on 1m 26.873s and Adrian Sutil on 1m 26.958s in the second Force India.

Sebastien Buemi continued to look like a top 10 contender for qualifying, with 1m 27.146s in his Toro Rosso, ahead of Michael Schumacher on 1m 27.217s in the other Mercedes, Bruno Senna on 1m 27.235s for Renault despite a few off-track excursions, Kamui Kobayashi on 1m 27.262s in the lead Sauber, Vitaly Petrov on 1m 27.280s in the second Renault, Jaime Alguersuari on 1m 27.387s in the other Toro Rosso, Sergio Perez on 1m 27.749s in the second Sauber, and the Williamses of Pastor Maldonado and Rubens Barrichello on 1m 27.793s and 1m 27.875s respectively.

Jarno Trulli continued to rule the Lotus roost with 1m 29.355s to Heikki Kovalainen's 1m 29.750s, and Timo Glock was similarly in charge at Virgin with 1m 30.683s for 21st, but local hero Narain Karthikeyan continued his impressive weekend by shadowing him with 1m 30.900s for HRT. Their respective team mates had less happy sessions; Jerome D'Ambrosio couldn't get below 1m 32.851s in his Virgin, while Daniel Ricciardo had a troubled time with gearbox trouble for HRT en route to 1m 33.246s.

Friday, October 28, 2011

Friday practice - selected team and driver quotes


As expected, day one in India was a bit of a mixed bag, as everyone attempted to find their feet on the new track. All the drivers, and team personnel, give their first impressions of the New Delhi circuit…

Ferrari
Felipe Massa, P1 - 1:28.644, 7th; P2 - 1:25.706, 1st

"It's always nice to be in first place at the end of a day's work, however we know that Friday's results are all relative. Sure, it would be nice to move through the weekend in the same position, but that will be very difficult to achieve. Today, we concentrated on finding the best set-up on the car and on tyre behaviour on this new circuit. I like the track, it is very interesting and there are corners where driving skill can make the difference. In some places the actual track surface is very wide and so it will therefore be possible to take various different lines in the race, which could make overtaking easier. The car seems competitive, but we must wait and see what McLaren and Red Bull can do tomorrow, as they are still very strong. The tyres? Probably the hards are too hard for this track and it would have been possible to run the same compounds we had in Korea in two weeks ago, because the track surface is very smooth."
Fernando Alonso, P1 - 1:35.899, 24th; P2 - 1:25.930, 3rd
"I lost almost the entire morning session because of an engine problem on my car, but fortunately I managed to make up for it in the afternoon, when I was able to run without any problems. Today's priority was getting to know the circuit. Furthermore, given the condition of the track surface, I don't think I lost out that much compared to the others. First impressions are positive: the car seems to behave well and we hope to continue down this route. I like the track, even if it is very dirty and if you go just the slightest bit off line it's like driving on ice: this could create problems during overtaking moves on Sunday, but maybe by then the situation will have changed. It's very nice that the track is wide in some corners and I think it will add to the spectacle, because it means you can take different lines and I think even qualifying should be very exciting, given the rather high average speed, especially through the final sector."

Pat Fry, Ferrari chassis director
"It was a very busy Friday, partly because of the work we had planned to carry out and also because of the difficulties we encountered in the first session of the day. In fact, an engine problem meant Fernando missed pretty much all of the morning practice so his work schedule had to be compressed into the afternoon to try and make up for the time lost this morning. That aside, we continued with the now usual parallel programmes: on the one hand looking for the best set-up for the car at this circuit and on the other, working to get a greater understanding of the latest aerodynamic updates, with the new car project in mind. Obviously, we tried to understand as much as possible about the tyre behaviour, but, because of the lack of time it was not possible to do many laps with a high fuel load. Two drivers in the top three? Friday's result has virtually no significance and maybe that's even more the case when there are even more unknown factors than usual, which was the case today. Never before, given we find ourselves at a brand new track, have we had so much data to analyse and so much work to do this afternoon and tonight to be as well prepared as possible for the rest of the weekend."

Red Bull
Sebastian Vettel, P1 - 1:27.416, 2nd; P2 - 1:25.794, 2nd

"It's an interesting track, a good challenge. It was very dusty to start with, but the track seems fun, especially the wide entries which give a lot of options to all the drivers. It should be a good race on Sunday. It's dusty off-line, which makes it tricky, so we'll have to make sure we stay on the racing line. It's a good circuit for overtaking I think, with long straights and wide entries. The long run seemed good today, so let's see how we go tomorrow."

Mark Webber, P1 - 1:27.428, 3rd; P2 - 1:26.500, 5th
"It's a good track with good Formula One corners, there are quick left-rights and you can take a lot of the corners in 5th gear. Turn Three is a unique corner, it's very slow, but it's uphill and quite extreme on the elevation. Turn Four is also not straightforward, so they're both challenging and I like the two quick chicanes - they're enjoyable. Even though the track is wide, it's quite greasy off-line, so most people will follow the racing line. This morning went well; this afternoon less so, but we'll get it back tomorrow."

McLaren
Lewis Hamilton, P1 - 1:26.836, 1st; P2 - 1:26.454, 4th

"The track is fantastic - the organisers here in India have done a great job. It's very fast and flowing, the grip-level is fantastic, the run-off areas seem to be good, and the kerbs are probably the best of any circuit we visit: nice rumble-strips that you can drive on. Like any brand-new circuit, it's been gripping-up throughout the day.

"We looked quick this morning. This afternoon, however, I had a problem with the driveshaft - it felt like it was causing some wear and tear so it prompted me to end the session a little early. We'll fit a new gearbox for tomorrow, so the car will hopefully start behaving a bit better. That should make things closer at the front.

"Sunday's race will be a long one. Nevertheless, there will be opportunities to overtake: it's a high-downforce circuit and, although it'll be very hard to follow other cars closely, the double-DRS zone should make it a bit easier. We'll get a clearer idea tomorrow of just how quick we really are."

Jenson Button, P1 - 1:28.394, 4th; P2 - 1:26.714, 6th
"I really like this circuit. It's great fun to drive. There are some tough corners, like Turns Three and Five, but there's also a lot of high-speed stuff and it feels a lot faster than we initially thought it would.

"What's also been quite a surprise is the amount of grip out there, particularly in the faster corners where the downforce is really working for you. And, because the high-speed corners are pretty smooth, you can really carry a lot of speed through them.

"It's difficult to get the tyres up to their optimal working temperature range, but, once they're in the operating window, the high-speed grip is phenomenal. From Turn Five onwards, the track is actually very quick.

"We'll have a lot of fun this weekend and we're hopefully going to be fighting for the win on Sunday."

Martin Whitmarsh, McLaren team principal 
"First of all, I want to congratulate the promoters here in Delhi for having created a truly excellent circuit. The drivers love it, and the teams' facilities are very good too. And of course India, whose population is second in magnitude only to that of China, is a hugely important new addition to the Formula One calendar.

"As is often the case when the Formula One circus travels to a brand-new circuit, today was a day of experimentation. As it happened, the circuit offered up more grip than we'd anticipated, which required a set-up review early on.

"I think we've got a little more work to do in order to unlock our latent first-lap performance, but Jenson in particular completed an extremely encouraging long run. By contrast, Lewis's long run was interrupted by a driveshaft issue, which unfortunately prevented him from being able to complete it.

"Now, we'll analyse our findings from today, and tomorrow we intend to convert that analysis in to a strong qualifying performance."

Force India
Adrian Sutil, P1 - 1:28.705, 8th; P2 - 1:27.316, 7th

"We had a good couple of sessions today. We ran an aero upgrade on the car this morning and I could feel the difference in stability straight away, so I think we are going to run it for the race. The circuit is good fun and very nicely done. It has some challenging corners and there seem to be plenty of opportunities to overtake. It should make for an interesting and exciting race on Sunday."

Paul di Resta, P1 - 1:29.700, 11th; P2 - 1:27.853, 9th 
"It was a new experience today for everyone and we had a lot to get through with our programme. The track is quite exciting and the grip seems to be building nicely. It won't be an easy race with the DRS zones being so effective and likely to result in lots of overtaking, but from our work today we are getting where we need to be in terms of the set-up. I still need to find a little bit of speed, but once we sit down and analyse the data I'm confident of more good runs tomorrow."

Dr Vijay Mallya, Force India team principal and managing director
"Arriving at the Buddh International Circuit and hearing the sound of Formula One engines in India once again was a very special moment. It's something I have dreamed of for over thirty years and this weekend will be a very emotional one for me. Seeing both Sahara Force Indias as the first cars out on track when free practice began also brought a smile to my face. The Jaypee Group has done an excellent job with this circuit and we can all be very proud of this amazing facility. The drivers have been praising the layout and we all expect a thrilling race. On the track today there was a great deal to learn, but we can be pleased with the work we have achieved. I've made no secret of my desire to see both Sahara Force India cars racing well inside the points on Sunday afternoon and today's work has taken us a step closer to achieving this."

Dominic Harlow, Force India chief race engineer 
"It was great to get practice underway here at the Buddh International Circuit in India, which has proved to be an excellent track. There was some early dust on the circuit in FP1, but that quickly cleared and we saw grip levels rise. With an additional set of soft tyres invaluable for our programmes we evaluated some aerodynamic changes to the front and rear of the car with positive indications from the data. Obviously we targeted a slightly higher mileage to increase our data on the circuit and to evaluate the tyre behaviour. Overnight there is much to do to review our results and simulations looking ahead to the rest of the weekend."

Renault
Bruno Senna, P1 - 1:29.799, 13th; P2 - 1:27.498, 8th

"I enjoyed today. Both LRGP cars were in the positions they should be and the track looks like it could be an ally for our car. We need to develop and extract more from the set-up, but we definitely have potential here. The track is very good, that's for sure. When I walked it yesterday it was clear it was going to be very dusty, and that was also the case this morning, but it is improving all the time. The corners are very fast and they encourage you to push, push, push so I think we can have a good weekend here. As the grip to improves and the racing line widens we should be able to push even harder!"

Vitaly Petrov, P1 - 1:29.705, 12th; P2 - 1:27.890, 11th
"The track was very dirty which makes it difficult to get the maximum from the car but it's the same for everyone. We completed today's programme without any mechanical problems which is always beneficial. I am feeling positive about the car and the set-up; we just need to improve a little but we have potential for a good weekend. The layout of the circuit is quite tricky. On some corners you can't see the apex which makes it difficult to find your braking point and turning in point. But we've found more or less a good line and hopefully we'll gain some more speed through P3 tomorrow morning before qualifying."

James Allison, Renault technical director
"The track started the day very dusty and also damp in places after it had been washed. A dog on track brought out red flags early in the morning practice session. We ran hard and soft tyres in the morning session and concentrated on soft tyre runs in the afternoon including some runs.

"We saw a lot of track evolution as you'd expect from a new circuit, which is still extremely dusty off the racing line. Our simulations proved accurate with regards to wing levels and gearing. The soft tyre provides good grip with reasonable life and low degradation as it is a very usable race tyre. The hard tyre is considerably slower that the soft and is unlikely to be favoured in the race."

Toro Rosso
Sebastien Buemi, P1 - 1:29.219, 9th; P2 - 1:27.868, 10th

"It's always exciting to drive a new track for the first time and today I managed to do a lot of laps, with no issues on the car, so I could push myself to the limit, which is always a good thing. I think we have everything we need in terms of data and understanding to prepare ourselves for qualifying and the race. Therefore I am happy with the way today went overall, the car ran reliably and the team did a good job. Now it's up to us to put everything together for qualifying. In terms of performance we hope we can continue the trend we saw in Korea a fortnight ago. The track is quite similar to what we saw on the simulator. It's a beautiful circuit, I'm happy to be here and I hope we will have a lot of spectators on Saturday and Sunday."

Jaime Alguersuari, P1 - 1:30.566, 16th; P2 - 1:28.552, 14th
"The track looks really nice and it's a pleasure to drive it. The lap time makes it look like a short lap, because it is so quick, but from a driver's point of view, it is very interesting. We tried a set-up today that did not suit me and I found it quite difficult to keep the car in a straight line out there. I did not feel comfortable and I felt I was on the edge. In the morning, I went over it, losing control and hitting the barrier with the rear of the car at Turn Nine. The guys did a good job to get it all repaired for the start of the second session. I am sure we can have a better feeling for the car tomorrow and improve our position."

Laurent Mekies, Toro Rosso chief engineer
"Quite a good day for us, as we completed the bulk of our planned programme, doing a lot of laps, which delivered plenty of data for the rest of the weekend. The track layout is great and I'm sure all the drivers enjoyed it, as it presents a great challenge with its high speed corners and long straight. The cars ran well today but it is quite difficult to analyse their true performance, because as you can imagine, the track improvement was massive throughout the day, which is normal for a new circuit."

Sauber
Kamui Kobayashi, P1 - 1:29.355, 10th; P2 - 1:28.050, 12th

"The lay-out of the track is really nice, and I have a good feeling driving the circuit. Because it is new it was very dusty and slippery, especially in the morning. The first laps were like driving in the wet. Here we have the soft and the hard tyre compounds. With the hard ones you cannot really drive here, while with the soft tyres it was still not easy to heat them up and get them to work properly, but there is no comparison to the hard ones."

Sergio Perez, P1 - 1:30.132, 14th; P2 - 1:28.289, 13th
"The circuit is very nice, and I really enjoy driving here. Regarding the set-up work, it is quite challenging because you have many changes of direction and several fast corners as well as slow corners too. But we could complete our programme and have the feeling we are getting there. Of course the track conditions were improving during the course of the day. The hard tyre compound doesn't work, so it won't be easy to create a race strategy in which it makes really sense. However, everyone has to use it in a dry race."

Giampaolo Dall'Ara, head of track engineering
"When you come to a new venue it is always important that you have a trouble free first day, and this is what we had. We completed our normal Friday programme as planned and worked on the set-up of the car. It is impossible to get grip from the hard tyre compound but this didn't come as a surprise."

Williams
Rubens Barrichello, P1 - 1:30.367, 15th; P2 - 1:28.691, 15th

"It was nice to get to know the Buddh circuit today. We obviously encountered the dirt, like everyone else, and quite normal for a new circuit. We don't know where we stand at the moment because the track is evolving all the time, but hopefully we will have a good qualifying tomorrow."

Pastor Maldonado, P1 - 1:30.669, 17th; P2 - 1:28.708, 16th
"I would like to thank the mechanics for working so hard to change engines in time for this afternoon's session. The balance of the car seems ok and I am confident we will have a good race pace. Tyre degradation isn't that high, but we will have to look at our strategy as the hard option tyre isn't the best fit with our package."

Mark Gillan, Williams chief operations engineer
"This is a new circuit so the main purpose today was to familiarise ourselves with it. In spite of some challenges, both drivers completed their full Friday race preparation and tyre programme."

Lotus
Heikki Kovalainen, P2 - 1:30.241, 18th

"I'm reasonably pleased with how it went this afternoon but think I suffered a bit from not running this morning. Still, you have to deal with what you have in front of you so we worked hard in the afternoon session to get used to the track and find a balance that gave me the confidence to push. There's definitely quite a lot more to come from the car and as the track evolves I think we'll see that the fact we're pretty kind to the soft tyres should help us, probably more on Sunday than tomorrow, but we'll see."

Karun Chandhok, P1 - 1:32.487, 19th
"It felt great to finally be able to drive an F1 car here at the Buddh International Circuit, and it was a real honour to be the first car to set a timed lap in front of the fans. I want to thank the team for giving me that chance, and everyone at the Jaypee Group and all the people involved in helping create the first ever Indian Grand Prix for doing such a great job on the whole event. In the car I was pretty pleased with how it went today. We completed most of the morning programme and without the yellow flags at the end of the session I'm pretty sure there was another second in hand on my final lap time. The track itself is really enjoyable to drive, particularly the middle section which is very quick, and as it evolves and the times keep coming down I think we'll see some very good racing here all weekend."

Jarno Trulli, P1 - 1:30.818, 18th; P2 - 1:29.332, 17th
"That was a very smooth Friday and we made good progress in both sessions, both on learning the track and on the best setup here in India. The track is not too hard to learn but it's interesting - there are a few different lines you can take and I think that will encourage overtaking, so Sunday's definitely going to be fun. The track surface developed quickly today and I hope it continues to do so - off line it's still very dusty and that could catch out a few people, so let's see how it evolves over the weekend. On the tyre side I think we've seen some interesting results today. The softs seem to hang on very well over the long runs but the hard tyres have almost no grip and it seems pretty tough to get them up to temperature. We'll have to see if that's the same tomorrow as it could change as the track keeps developing."

Mike Gascoyne, Lotus chief technical officer
"An excellent first day here in India for us. We were able to complete a very decent number of laps on both cars and completed the whole program we had set for all three drivers today. This morning Karun was the first car out to set a timed lap here and that was obviously a special moment for him, but he focused on the job he had to do and worked through the aero program we had set him. This afternoon we worked on tyre evaluation and we made good progress on a track that looks to be very exciting for the drivers and fans, and a good challenge for the engineers, so from our perspective this has been a very good day."

Tony Fernandes, Lotus team principal
"I am delighted to see the Indian Grand Prix get under way in such a good style, both for the Indian fans and the team that put the race together, and for our team who have had a very good Friday on track. It started with an historic moment for Karun as he became the first driver ever to record a timed lap in an F1 car at the Indian Grand Prix, and I am very pleased for him that he finished the session as the fastest Indian driver out there, having completed his program and putting in another strong performance. This afternoon both Jarno and Heikki were also very strong, Jarno finishing FP1 a couple of tenths away from the cars ahead and in the afternoon session both drivers looking strong on heavy fuel on both tyre compounds, which bodes well for the race. We are finishing the season extremely well, both in terms of reliability and performance, and I think that gives us good cause for optimism for the last three races this year, and looking ahead to 2012."

Mercedes GP
Nico Rosberg, P1 - 1:28.542, 6th; P2 - 1:31.098, 19th

"The new track here in India is awesome. It has some very interesting corners, and that's why it takes a bit longer to get used to the layout than at some of the other new circuits. Turn two for example is very different; you come from downhill, then go up looking into the sky and so you see the hairpin very late, just before you arrive. In general we had two good sessions and learned quite a few things today so I have a good feeling for this weekend. Hopefully that feeling will continue tomorrow."

Michael Schumacher, P1 - 1:28.531, 5th; P2 - 1:31.804, 21st
"This is a very interesting track with a challenging layout, and it's certainly enjoyable to drive. As we expected, off-line it is extremely dusty but the racing line became quite grippy over the day. This morning, I was happy with the balance of the car, however this afternoon was more challenging for us. We weren't really able to get into working properly for various reasons, including the red flag, and therefore tomorrow we need to work on the set-up for both qualifying and the race."

Ross Brawn, Mercedes GP team principal 
"We've had a useful first day of practice around the new Buddh International Circuit today. It's always interesting to explore a new track for the first time, and the grip levels changed a great deal during the two sessions, so the trick will be anticipating where they will be by the race on Sunday. The majority of our programme today focused on race preparation and the car seems in reasonable shape. It's exciting to face a new challenge here and I'm sure there will be plenty of opportunities this weekend. We've been very impressed with the new track layout and the drivers seem to really enjoy it."

Norbert Haug, vice-president, Mercedes-Benz Motorsport 
"First of all, congratulations and compliments to the Indian Grand Prix organisers for building this state-of-the-art race track which certainly does not need to hide behind the best ones in Europe. It is a pleasure for Formula One to be here in India; the friendliness of the Indian people is overwhelming and the excitement to have a Formula One World Championship event in their country quite obviously and understandably makes them proud. Our programme today concentrated on race simulations during the afternoon. We learned a lot and gained experience which should help us tomorrow and on Sunday."

Virgin
Timo Glock, P1 - 1:32.771, 20th; P2 - 1:31.469, 20th

"It's been a good first day here in India. The track is just awesome and really good fun to drive. It's been an enjoyable day without any problems. The car felt okay, it has a reasonable balance to it and we were able to get through the entire programme and achieve good set-up work. Now we just have to analyse the data overnight and see what we can do for tomorrow. I can't wait to get back in the car again here!"

Jerome d'Ambrosio, P1 - 1:35.796, 23rd; P2 - 1:32.593, 22nd
"The afternoon session ended quite early for me as I made a mistake out of Turn 11 and hit the wall, damaging the rear wing and right rear corner a bit. But apart from that I think I was running fine until then. We have lost some track time but we still have tomorrow's FP3 to make up for it, so that will be the plan."

John Booth, Virgin team principal
"From the moment we arrived in India and finally got to see the track at first hand, we've all been incredibly impressed with the layout of the circuit and the two days of preparation seemed like an eternity before we were able to see the cars in action. Certainly watching the cars here you can see that the drivers are enjoying this track, however it has caught a number of them out during the two sessions today. FP1 was a fairly straightforward programme for both our cars with a few aero experiments on front wings, followed by runs on the hard tyre to familiarise the drivers with the track. Into FP2 we split the programme, with Timo concentrating more on set-up work with two sets of the Soft tyre and Jerome conducting some of the long run tyre work. Unfortunately, Jerome ended up being one of the drivers that was caught out by the track, however I'm sure he will maximise his time tonight looking through the data and completing his final preparations in FP3 tomorrow ahead of qualifying. Timo and his crew have had a fantastic day and he seems to be pushing his set-ups in a new direction, which is working well for him. Hopefully he will continue building this into a solid qualifying performance."

HRT
Daniel Ricciardo, P1 - 1:34.113, 21st; P2 - 1:32.768, 23rd

"It was our first day here and I can say that it is quite a fun circuit, I'm happy with the layout and I think that most drivers will enjoy it. This morning the track was cleaning all the time so we just did as many laps as we could which is the most important thing. This afternoon we started to work a bit with both compounds. I'm not as happy as in the morning since we made some changes which didn't work as well as we thought they could do. We'll analyse that and work on it for tomorrow. I think we can compete with our main competitors here and give them a good run for their money."

Narain Karthikeyan, P1 - 1:33.928, 22nd; P2 - 1:32.824, 24th
"The first lap was very special; I felt so many emotions driving in India. I just couldn't believe it and there were so many things running through my head. In the first practice we were just trying to get into the swing of things and the second one went much better and we have a lot of things to try for tomorrow. Overall it was a good session for me, considering I haven't driven a full race distance since July, so the body needs to wake up a bit. The track evolved a lot and so times were improving too. We have a few things to try ahead of tomorrow so I'm quite excited to see how qualifying goes."

Colin Kolles, HRT team principal
"Apart from what we had heard from Narain, we came to the Indian Grand Prix without knowing much about what we would find and I have to say that we are positively surprised. They did a really good job with the track within a short time. The down side is the amount of dust all over. For us it has been a positive day. We had a program with Daniel and Narain that we managed to follow perfectly. Both drivers improved throughout each one of the sessions and did what they were supposed to, gaining in confidence and taking the cars to the limit without going beyond it. Under such tricky conditions, it was important not to cross the line and bring the cars safely back to the garage. For tomorrow I hope that we can fine tune the cars' set up for qualifying tomorrow and take another step forward."

Pirelli
Paul Hembery, Pirelli motorsport director

"It's been a busy day, which matched our expectations - underlining the quality of the simulation data that we created before the start of the event. Our first impressions of the track are very positive, and from what we can see there will be a number of good overtaking opportunities. The layout provides an interesting work-out for our tyres, due to the mix of high-speed straights, constant loaded corners and heavy braking areas. Working out exactly how the tyres degrade is tricky because the track is still cleaning, having started off very dusty before clear racing lines emerged. This dust has a significant effect on tyre performance, as the tyres can grain due to sliding and rear wheelspin. As the performance gap between the soft tyre and the hard tyre is notable here, the key to race strategy will be getting the softs to last for as long as possible. It will be interesting to see what all the different teams come up with to achieve that goal. We can see from our data so far that wear levels are in line with a two to three stop strategy."

Second free practice results - Indian Formula 1 Grand Prix 2011

1

Felipe Massa

Ferrari

01:25.7

33

2

Sebastian Vettel

Red Bull

01:25.8

34

3

Fernando Alonso

Ferrari

01:25.9

34

4

Lewis Hamilton

McLaren

01:26.5

26

5

Mark Webber

Red Bull

01:26.5

30

6

Jenson Button

McLaren

01:26.7

28

7

Adrian Sutil

Force India

01:27.3

34

8

Bruno Senna

Lotus Renault

01:27.5

36

9

Paul di Resta

Force India

01:27.9

35

10

Sebastien Buemi

Toro Rosso

01:27.9

35

11

Vitaly Petrov

Lotus Renault

01:27.9

35

12

Kamui Kobayashi

Sauber

01:28.1

34

13

Sergio Perez

Sauber

01:28.3

36

14

Jaime Alguersuari

Toro Rosso

01:28.6

31

15

Rubens Barrichello

Williams

01:28.7

29

16

Pastor Maldonado

Williams

01:28.7

24

17

Jarno Trulli

Team Lotus

01:29.3

39

18

Heikki Kovalainen

Team Lotus

01:30.2

41

19

Nico Rosberg

Mercedes

01:31.1

38

20

Timo Glock

Virgin

01:31.5

32

21

Michael Schumacher

Mercedes

01:31.8

28

22

Jerome d` Ambrosio

Virgin

01:32.6

12

23

Daniel Ricciardo

HRT

01:32.8

33

24

Narain Karthikeyan

HRT

01:32.8

33