6.6.09
After two weeks of throwing toys out of various F1 prams by the top teams
who resented the introduction of a two tier system and having to cut their
budgets down to the level of an MP's expenses, FOTA (The Formula One Teams
Association) handed a letter to Max Mosley on Sunday before the race,
understood
to be signed by all 10 teams asking for the 2010 regulations to be scrapped
in exchange for signing up to a new Concorde agreement which would take
them up to 2012, including the offer to continue cost cutting measures.
More crisis talks will be taking place and time is running out
as the deadline to enter for the 2010 championship is Friday 29th May
(Williams at least has already covered its backside by confirming
that it has lodged the entry paperwork with F1’s governing body so
that it can race in 2010, later Force India did the same); but then it
was
time to get on with business as usual and go racing.
With the new circuits around the world courting Bernie by their governments
throwing their wallets at him, it's good to know that the olde worlde charm
of a Monaco Grand Prix is still warmly appreciated by true motor racing
enthusiasts all over the world. This is the "home race" for many
of the tax-exiled F1 drivers (despite Silverstone being the home GP to the
majority of teams) and is still regarded as ‘The Jewel in the F1 Crown’.
On Saturday Kimi Raikkonen held provisional pole in
the last minute of qualifying, but Button sneaked it back almost immediately
by 0.025 of a second, with birthday boy Barrichello and Vettel slotting
into 3rd and 4th place respectively. Webber was frustrated at his performance
in Q3 and could have been further up the order, but this was nothing
compared
to the shocking afternoon that BMW and Toyota were having, with these
two pairs being the worst performing cars in qualifying.
Lewis Hamilton suffered the indignity of being stuck in 15th position
after damage to his car in Q1 which worsened when Sebastien Buemi in the
Toro Rosso went quicker and punted him down one more place and out of
the first part of qualifying. A precautionary overnight gearbox change
saw Hamilton starting from the very back of the grid.
Felipe Massa found it hard to win from pole position last year, only
managing 3rd place in the race. Could Jenson Button do better this year.?
At the start Button got away well and retained the inside line for the
first corner, team mate Rubens managed to get the jump on the 2nd placed
Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen (equipped with KERS, but it doesn’t operate
until the car reaches 100 km/h, so no use for starting the race) and
by
the end of lap 1 the Brawns had 1.5 seconds of clear air between them
and the nearest Ferrari of Raikkonen. Hamilton had been started light
in foolish hope of scything his way through the field. Even his opening
lap was far from stellar and he only managed to move up one place at
the
wrong end of the pack.
By the 3rd and 4th laps, Barrichello and Button were trading fastest times,
and by lap 7 Massa was being held up by Vettel, even though the Red Bull
had the soft pliable tyres on. Vettel had to defend his position going
through the chicane but the Ferrari driver was getting increasingly frustrated
and on the next lap again made his move coming out of the tunnel, but
overshot the chicane this time. Massa correctly gave the German the place
back but was caught by surprise as Rosberg also sneaked through into 5th
place.
Elsewhere on the circuit Piquet was being shunted off by the careering
Toro Rosso of Buemi who had misjudged the braking and became well entangled
under his rear wing, Piquet rejoined the track but not for long and shortly
retired into the garage with rear end damage.
Vettel had to pit on lap 10 as the soft compound tyres had obviously lost
their advantage as Rosberg, Massa and Kovalainen had moved ahead of him.
(maybe the wrong combination of a double diffuser and super-soft rubber?).
The Scuderia decided to keep Felipe out for at least another 10 laps on
the harder tyres. Quite a few teams elected to run the first short stint
on the soft ones, but found they were causing grip problems sooner than
expected. Worryingly for Barrichello his rears were starting to give up
due to graining by lap 14 and the rival teams were busy on the radio spreading
the good news. Raikkonen is catching him by around 2 seconds a lap and
blinks first to swap like-for-like hard tyres in the pits, while Rubens
wallows around for yet another lap.
Button is driving super smooth and is looking after his tyres better than
his team mate but also experiences oversteer and gets the call to change
them by lap 17. Vettel is out of the race after understeering his Red
Bull into a china shop (sorry I mean tyre wall) at Sainte Devote. Button
rejoins the race in front of Massa and is blatantly holding the Brazilian
up until the new tyres have come up to operating temperature.
There was encouraging pace from the Ferraris in the mid point of
the race, but they still had the unpopular softer green striped tyres
to use before the end of the day. Massa was receiving repeated warnings
about his excessive use of the kerbs and advised not to cut the chicanes
by the Stewards. (picture Charlie Whiting wagging his finger if you can..!)
but he still takes to the air one more time to push his luck. Maybe Raikkonen
knew the officials were being lenient today, so decided to join in too.
Jenson is consistently setting laps of 1minute 15.2 seconds (his qualifying
time was 1:14.9) and pits from the lead on lap 51 but exits the pitlane
as a full speed Kimi Raikkonen comes through the finish straight, and
unable to fend off the flying Ferrari slots into a Scuderia sandwich with
Massa now in his mirrors.
The best placed McLaren of Kovalainen also tried bumping over a kerb after
a late entry at the swimming pool, but lost the back end on landing and
wiped the nose of his car on the Armco. Not a good day for McLaren. We
all hoped this would be a race without a safety car, and thanks to the
animated and well drilled marshals it stayed firmly in the garage.
Jenson was only briefly sat behind Raikkonen as the Finn was going to
have to stop again and so it was really just academic. Raikkonen re-emerged
in third from his last stop despite a problem with a sticking right rear
wheel.
Button assumed the lead yet again, now firmly ahead of Barrichello by
13 seconds,
Massa’s pace was short-lived as the Ferrari had pitted for the dreaded
soft compounds, and rejoined in 4th place only 1 ½ seconds behind
Kimi. Webber could also come into the frame, hunting down the Ferrari’s
who were now losing out on performance, but he was running out of laps
with only 7 remaining.
The closing laps ticked away with the same order, Button cruised for home,
only worrying in case mechanical failure robbed him of the win, easing
off the throttle to save the car, avoiding catching back markers and risking
any unnecessary overtaking moves.
There was no real drama left in the remainder of the race, except for
a disaster for Nakajima as he ran out of road at Mirabeau from a non scoring
points position. The Brawn team took the flag and Ross congratulated Jenson
for driving the whole weekend with real finesse, while Rubens was praised
for keeping Raikkonen at bay and bringing home maximum points for the
team from Brackley.
Button still looked fresh faced as he collected the trophy in the royal
box (even after jogging the length of the pitlane), 2nd placed Barrichello
also portrayed a happy chappie, but a flustered looking Raikkonen made
up the podium scene and couldn’t disguise his disappointment
of finishing that low down the order when the red cars were at long
last
beginning to perform satisfactorily.
Another Brilliant one-two for Brawn, and a reasonable three-four for
the Tifosi to celebrate as their best result of the season so far. Could
this
be the turning point for Ferrari...?
Summary
- This result gives Jenson Button 5 race wins out of 6.
- This was Brawn GP's third 1-2 and second in a row.
- After a late charge, Webber finished only 0.6 of a second behind 4th
placed Massa.
- Fastest lap of the race was Felipe Massa 1:15.154, an average speed
of 159.991 km/h
- Button has led 3 times more laps than any other driver this year.
He lapped Lewis Hamilton before the halfway point of the race.
- Pre-tax profits at Virgin Atlantic rocketed to £68.4 million,
thanks partly to Richard Branston keeping his hands in his pocket instead
of expanding his sponsorship on the Brawn cars
- Parking in Monaco is hard to find and so expensive that race winner
Jenson Button had to use the Park-and-Ride to get to the podium (but
then realised that buses don’t run on Sundays).
- Only at the Monaco Grand Prix would Formula 1 team bosses meet to
talk about cutting costs on board a £32 million super-yacht.
- Quote of the day ; Robert Kubica (BMW) “We have to realise we
are bad..!
Stefano Domenicali |
“The
most important thing to come out of today is the confirmation that our car
is back to being competitive, thanks to the great amount of work that everyone
at the Scuderia, both back home and at the track, has put in over these
past few weeks, without getting distracted by everything going on around
us. It's not easy to work in these conditions and I want to thank everyone
for what they are doing. Today, we got a third and a fourth place which,
given the difficult start to our season, is a nice result, but it’s
still not the one we want. Our aim is to be ahead of everyone and we will
do all we can to achieve that as soon as possible. Of course the others
won’t remain idle but we must continue to push as we have done
in these recent times.”
Felipe Massa |
"It’s
a real shame to have lost two places in the final stages, even if
we’ve
finally made it to the scoreboard. We knew we couldn’t match the
pace of the Brawns but we had managed to get ahead of the Red Bulls
and, but
for the fuel problem, I could have certainly stayed ahead of Vettel and
Alonso. The final part of the race was a pain. I was already struggling
on the harder tyres and then I had to try and save fuel as much as possible,
while at the same time staying ahead of Vettel. Then the team told that
if I wanted to make it to the finish, I would have to let Vettel by and
slow down a lot: if I had made another pit stop I would have finished
out
of the points. Today, the car’s pace on the softer tyre was reasonably
good, even if we’re still lacking a few tenths, but at least we
are back to fighting for the top places.”
Kimi Raikkonen |
“I am very
happy with today’s performance. The car was very competitive: it’s
clear we are on the way up and hopefully we can soon be back to fighting
for the win. At the start, I lost a lot of time behind Vettel and then,
because I made a mistake, I was also passed by Rosberg. But after that I
quickly got back up the order and I think I could also have passed Kimi.
In the three laps I had longer than him, at the second pit stop, I found
myself right behind Button and so I wasn’t able to exploit the opportunity.
Starting on the hard tyres was the best choice: we still lack a bit of aerodynamic
downforce to be up with the Brawns, but it is too early to claim to be the
second best team in the championship. What is sure is that we are working
well and I am sure we will see further results of that soon.”
THE MONACO GRAND
PRIX, MONTE CARLO, MONACO, MONACO;
78 LAP. WEATHER: SUNNY. |
Classified: |
Pos |
Driver |
Team |
|
Time |
1. |
Button |
Brawn |
|
1.40:44.282 |
2. |
Barrichello |
Brawn |
|
+ 7.666 |
3. |
Raikkonen |
Ferrari |
|
+ 13.443
|
4. |
Massa |
Ferrari |
|
+ 15.110 |
5. |
Webber |
Red Bull |
|
+ 15.730 |
6. |
Rosberg |
Williams |
|
+ 33.586 |
7. |
Alonso |
Renault |
|
+ 37.839
|
8. |
Bourdais |
Toro Rosso-Ferrari |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Fastest lap: Massa,
1:15.154 |
World Championship Standings, Round 6 |
|
|
|
Drivers: |
|
Constructors: |
1. |
Button |
51 |
|
1. |
Brawn GP |
86 |
2. |
Barrichello |
35 |
|
2. |
Red Bull |
42.5 |
3. |
Vettel |
23 |
|
3. |
Toyota |
26.5 |
4. |
Webber |
19.5 |
|
4. |
Ferrari |
17 |
5. |
Trulli |
14.5 |
|
5. |
McLaren |
13 |
6. |
Glock |
12 |
|
6. |
Renault |
|
7. |
Alonso |
|
|
6. |
Williams |
7.5 |
8. |
Hamilton |
9 |
|
7. |
BMW Sauber |
6 |
9. |
Raikkonen |
9 |
|
9. |
Toro-Rosso-Ferrari |
5 |
10. |
Massa |
8 |
|
|
|
|
11. |
Rosberg |
7.5 |
|
|
|
|
12. |
Heidfeld |
6 |
|
|
|
|
13. |
Kovalainen |
4 |
|
|
|
|
14. |
Buemi |
3 |
|
|
|
|
15. |
Bourdais |
2 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
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Geography
matters in true ambiente |
|
|
More
Monaco ambiente |
|
|
Super-soft
tyre traction catapulted Brawns into the lead at the start |
|
|
Buemi
makes a proper job of rear-ending the hapless Piquet.... |
|
|
....but
his Toro Rosso team-mate Bourdais made it home in the points |
|
|
Williams
and Rosberg converted speed into points again |
|
|
Webber
was fifth... |
|
|
....and
closing on Massa at the end |
|
|
Raikkonen
scored Ferrari's first podium of the year |
|
|
Consummate performance from Brawn
GP to give them their second 1-2 in a row
|
|
|
Jens
gives it "My Way" full-on, whereas the Kimster looks a
bit glum |
|
|
Kubica
says Bimmer are bad (and he doesn't mean in a good way) |
|
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Click
for FIA lap chart |
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pics by
Ferrari Media, FIA, Reuters, XPB, LAT, Sutton & unknown |
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