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Felipe Massa started the second half of
his 2009 campaign in fine style, with his first podium and the team's
second of the season, when he finished the German Grand Prix in third
place. Kimi was forced to retire with a mechanical problem, having
completed 34 laps. The race was won by Mark Webber, the Red Bull Renault
driver thus securing his first ever grand prix victory in his eighth
season of Formula 1. He finished ahead of his team-mate Sebastian
Vettel. In the Constructors’ classification, the Scuderia is still
fourth, now only 2.5 points behind Toyota .
After qualifying had been hit by rain on Saturday, the race started
under sunny skies and a temperature of 18 degrees. Felipe Massa was
eighth on the grid with his Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro team-mate, Kimi
Raikkonen in ninth. Timo Glock in the Toyota would start from the pit
lane.
KERS played its part at the start as Felipe immediately moved up four
places to fourth and Kimi was seventh. Hamilton had charged up from
fifth and almost led but he went off the track and his car appeared
damaged as he dropped to last. At the start of the second lap, Button
got his Brawn past Felipe, so the Brazilian was now fifth, with Vettel
right behind him in the Red Bull.
The order after two laps was Barrichello, Webber, Kovalainen, another
KERS start from sixth to third, Button, Felipe, Vettel, Kimi, Sutil,
Rosberg, with Kubica rounding off the top ten. The Brawns were on a
three stop strategy. After six laps, while Barrichello was one second
clear of Webber and the Australian had a 9.3 second gap to Kovalainen,
behind the Finn was a train made up of Button, Massa and Vettel, with
Kimi in seventh, 1.8 behind the German.
On lap 8, Vettel made a move on Felipe, but he could not get past. On
lap 11, the Stewards decided that Webber had caused a collision – he
pulled over on Barrichello at the start – and he was given a drive
through penalty.
Button was the first to pit on lap 13 with team mate Barrichello coming
in on 14, at the same time that Webber took his penalty. Kovalainen who
had been holding up most of the field came in on 15. Unusually, Webber
now found himself in the lead, although he would have to come in again
for his refuelling which you cannot do at the same time as a penalty.
Felipe was second, running a long first stint, ahead of fellow
countryman, Barrichello, with Vettel fourth ahead of Kimi, with Sutil an
amazing sixth in the Force India.
By lap 23, Felipe was leading after Barrichello pitted, with the Brawn
driver still second, ahead of Kimi, Sutil and Rosberg and then Kimi was
the first of the two F60s to refuel on lap 24. Felipe came in on lap 25.
Of the leaders, only Sutil in second and Rosberg in third had yet to pit
and Felipe and Kimi were down in ninth and tenth respectively, behind
Vettel. The Force India man came in on lap 27 and when he left the pits
he collided with Kimi, removing part of his front wing. After the race,
the Stewards deemed it was just a racing accident and no action was
taken. After Rosberg finally refuelled on lap 29, the order one lap
later at the halfway point of the 60 lap race was Barrichello, Webber,
Button, Vettel, Felipe now fifth, but Rosberg now split the two Ferraris
with Kimi seventh ahead of Kovalainen, Nakajima (yet to pit,) and
Fisichella tenth.
Button made his second of three stops on lap 31 and his team mate
Barrichello came in next, leaving Webber back in the lead again. The
Brazilian had a longer stop and he came out in fifth, just ahead of
Kimi, while Felipe had now moved up to third. Button also got past the
Finn on lap 33.Kimi slowed dramatically, obviously having some sort of
problem with the car, eventually pulling into the garage to retire.
Barrichello was also having a bad day, as he had to come in again after
there had been a problem with the refuelling rig at his previous stop,
not putting enough fuel in the car. In third place, Felipe was 1.1 down
on Vettel, but lapping fractionally quicker than the German, who trailed
his team-mate and race leader by 22.6 seconds. But with 20 laps to go,
the Vettel-Massa gap had grown to 2.2.
The race leader made his second and final pit stop on lap 43, coming out
just ahead of Felipe, who was temporarily second when Vettel came in
next time round. The Ferrari man made a very quick final stop on lap 45,
rejoining in sixth place behind Vettel. Barrichello came in again on lap
50, followed by Button next time round. So with eight laps to go and
most of the significant pit stops completed, the order was Webber,
Vettel, Felipe, Rosberg, Button, Barrichello, Alonso and Kovalainen in
the last of the points positions. And that was the order at the
chequered flag, with a happy Felipe delighted to stand on a podium once
again.
Stefano Domenicali: “It’s a nice feeling to be back on the podium
and this result for Felipe is a good reward for all the effort put in by
him in producing a perfect race and by all the team, at the track and in
Maranello. A shame for Kimi who could have secured a good finish: it was
really unlucky. Our aim, as we’ve already said is to finish third in the
Constructors’ championship and today’s result has helped us make up some
ground on the squad ahead of us. However, we have to work very hard to
succeed, because this season is still very hard to interpret: once again
this weekend we have seen an incredible see-sawing in performance
between some of the teams compared to the previous race and within this
Grand Prix itself. There are many variables, especially those linked to
the behaviour of the tyres which does not seem to be completely under
control: getting to grips with this could be very important for the rest
of the championship.”
Felipe Massa: “It’s been such a long time since I made it to the
podium! I really wanted it after a very difficult first half of the
season. Little bit little, we are improving and we will do all we can to
get back to winning ways this season: I want to start hearing the
Italian and Brazilian national anthems as soon as possible! A great
start and the strategy were the keys to this result. In the first
fifteen laps I was struggling to keep Vettel behind me, but than I think
he too was also struggling a bit with the tyres. Maybe I could have
managed to get one place higher, if we had brought the pit stop forward
a bit, because I too was struggling with my tyres, but it's easy to say
these things with hindsight. Before the race however, I didn’t think I’d
end up on the podium as a place in the top five already seemed a lot to
ask. But then we saw that cars that in theory are quicker than us ended
up behind us and so we realized we had a good chance. We have to
continue in this direction.”
Kimi Raikkonen: “Germany definitely doesn’t seem to bring me
luck. I don’t know how many times a problem beyond my control has forced
me to retire and this time it was down to debris. A shame, as I think I
could have got a good result. The car was a bit difficult to drive at
the start, but I think it was the same for everyone. Around lap 14, we
began to see that something wasn’t right and we tried to manage the
situation. Then I started to lose a lot of power and the team asked me
to pit because there was nothing that could be done anymore. The
incident with Sutil? These things happen in racing, we spoke to one
another and I think that he also sees it that way, as indeed did the
Stewards.”
Chris Dyer: “This podium from Felipe is a really great reward for
the whole team, who did a great job this weekend and in preparing for
this race. However, we are also very disappointed about what happened to
Kimi, who could have brought home some important points. This result is
a great motivation for the rest of the season. We must continue to work
with the same intensity to get back to where we want to be. The choice
to stick with the softer tyre for the second stint of the race was based
on what we had seen in the first stint, where it’s true that Felipe had
suffered a bit, while Kimi had no problems. We were also concerned about
how the harder compound would work in these temperatures.”
Source - Ferrari Media |