Jean Todt
intimated that finally Ferrari had shown their speed after
Michael Schumacher's narrow victory over Fernando Alonso in
Sunday's San Marino Grand Prix at Imola. But the Ferrari
team principal refused to allow himself to be drawn on the
effect the victory might have on his star driver's decision
regarding his future, to be made later this year.
Todt said that confirmation that Ferrari had a good car came
at the first Grand Prix in Bahrain, even though Renault won
that race and the two since. "In Bahrain we could confirm
that we had a good car, that Bridgestone did an excellent
job over the winter. But for several reasons, which have
already been raised several times, since then we did not get
the best out of the package that we had. We had some
reliability problems with the engine, which penalised us a
lot in the second race. In the third race we made a mistake
in choosing the tyres. It makes me smile because here at
Imola we had too high temperatures for the choice of tyre
that we made. And in Australia we had two hard tyres for the
temperature we had. "It is difficult when you play with the
weather forecast, you don't always make the right choice.
Saying that, we managed today and even if we thought the
temperatures would be cooler we still managed to have
Michael winning the race and Felipe (Massa) securing the
fourth position."
But Imola would not be just a one-off like last year when
Schumacher followed Alonso home, said Todt. "In Bahrain we
were not very competitive last year and we were very
competitive this year. Each race is different. Last year we
were competitive in Imola, the weather conditions were
different. If you remember Alonso won the race and he had no
more tyres. The tyre rules were completely different so we
are talking about two different things. Time will tell. Some
probably think that was our race, Imola, some others don't."
However, in spite of the eventual outcome, his winning
driver still didn't have it all his own way. In the first
stint, Michael was able to lap in 1m 24.5s, but in the
second he was three seconds a lap slower.
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Ferrari team principal Jean Todt refused to allow
himself to be drawn on the effect the victory might
have on his star driver's decision regarding his
future, to be made later this year. |
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Jean Todt intimated that finally Ferrari had shown
their speed after Michael Schumacher's narrow
victory over Fernando Alonso in Sunday's San Marino
Grand Prix at Imola. But the Ferrari team principal
refused to allow himself to be drawn on the effect
the victory might have on his star driver's decision
regarding his future, to be made later this year. |
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"He drove a strategic race to fight Alonso, because of the
temperatures and the fact that he was suffering a little bit
with the tyres he had which were a bit too soft for the
conditions." Jean Todt admitted that he feared that they
could lose the race in the second stint. However, he found
it "pleasing" when Renault called Alonso in early. Ferrari
made "a strategy correction" as a consequence, and brought
Schumacher
in on the next lap of the race which secured him the lead.
Todt had some understanding of Renault's position. "When you
have a lot of pressure like they had and we had, you tend to
make certain decisions and sometimes it is a good decision,
and sometimes it is not a good decision. If Renault would
have decided to stop later, it doesn't mean it would have
worked. Michael may have decided to increase his speed if
necessary to fight for the win, so I don't think we can say
that they lost because we put them in a situation to make
that choice."
Todt went on to say that this was an important victory for
the atmosphere within Ferrari "Everybody has been putting in
so much effort, they have been working so hard and what is
the best reward? To win a race."
Asked if he thought Ferrari winning races again might
encourage Schumacher to stay with the team, Todt replied
"you ask me the question as if I have to react as if Michael
has already decided to stop. I was saying, and I have
mentioned this very often, you are asking people to react to
what has happened half an hour ago. Michael is trying to
analyse the situation in a much deeper way. But one thing is
sure: Michael likes to win, Michael likes to have the
winning car and he knew at the beginning of the year that it
is more like that this year than it was last year. Michael
is bright enough to know that he cannot pretend that for 10
years he will have a car that can win every single race."
Todt also predicted a very tight championship this year -
despite Renault's record of three wins out of four so far.
"It depends so much on the car not the driver. There are
some other potential World Champions - if they get the
proper package. They will be hard fighters and what is sure
is that there are a few teams, a few cars and a few drivers
and the tyres are very close this year. The tyre
manufacturers this year are very close to each other."
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