Just before
the summer break, Kimi
Raikkonen finished second in
Budapest and today, the
Ferrari driver was on the podium
again, this time in third
place after a strong drive.
On his debut for the
Scuderia, Luca Badoer
brought his F60 home in
seventeenth spot. After
Ferrari’s Felipe Massa won
the inaugural race at
Valencia last year, today,
Rubens Barrichello ensured
that the Brazilian National
Anthem was played again, as
he took his first win for
Brawn, his first victory
since his days as a Ferrari
driver. Second place went to
the McLaren-Mercedes of
Lewis Hamilton. While this
result keeps the Scuderia in
third place in the
Constructors’ championship,
McLaren’s return to form in
recent races means the
Anglo-German team is now
only five points behind in
fourth.
The heat and
humidity was as high as the
rest of the weekend as the
grid formed up with Raikkonen on row 3 and his
Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro
team-mate, Luca Badoer on
the back row.
The KERS power
boost at the start saw Raikkonen move immediately up two
places to fourth. Grosjean,
Glock and Buemi all had to
come in at the end of the
opening lap to repair
collision damage, while Luca
crossed the line in
seventeenth, having spun.
The order was Hamilton,
Kovalainen, Barrichello,
Raikkonen, Vettel, Rosberg,
Alonso, Button after a bad
start for the championship
leader, Webber, Heidfeld,
Kubica, Sutil, Fisichella,
Nakajima, Trulli,
Alguersuari, Badoer,
Grosjean, Glock and Buemi.
After 3
laps, Raikkonen was 4.7 seconds
behind the leading McLaren
and 0.7 behind Barrichello’s
third placed Brawn. Button
had to let Webber through to
eighth, as it was deemed the
Englishman had got ahead of
the Australian by cutting
the chicane. By lap 10, Kimi
had dropped to almost 10
seconds behind the leader
and the gap to third placed
Barrichello had also grown
to 2.2.
Lap 15 and
Hamilton pitted from the
lead, followed by Vettel and
Kubica, so that Kovalainen
now led Barrichello and
Kimi. The McLaren Finn came
in on lap 17 and Vettel had
to come in as the fuel had
not gone in at the previous
stop. Kimi refuelled on lap
19 and Button also came in
from ninth. Barrichello came
in from the lead on lap 20
as did Webber. After 21
laps, Hamilton still led,
but the round of pit stops
saw Barrichello get the jump
on Kovalainen to go second,
while Raikkonen was sixth,
although Heidfeld and Sutil
ahead of him had yet to stop
for fuel. The Finn found
himself back in fourth, 5.1
behind third placed fellow
countryman, Kovalainen one
lap later. A puff of smoke
appeared from the back of
Vettel’s Red Bull on lap 23
and his race was over. So
after the first run of
stops, on lap 25, the order
was Hamilton, Barrichello,
Kovalainen, Raikkonen,
Rosberg, Alonso, Webber,
with Fisichella, yet to pit,
eighth. Badoer was 15th and he
too had not made any pit
stops, the Italian Ferrari
driver finally coming in on
lap 28. As he left the pits, Grosjean
in the Renault managed to
squeeze past him while still
in pit lane and then on the
way out of the pit lane,
Badoer unfortunately
got his outside wheels over
the white line which carries
an automatic drive-through
penalty. Among the lead
group, none of the gaps were
small enough to signal the
chance of any overtaking, so
the final order would no
doubt hinge on the timing
and speed of the second run
of pit stops. Badoer’s
difficult debut for Ferrari
was complicated by a spin on
lap 36, but fortunately he
avoided the walls and was
able to continue.
Hamilton made his second
stop on lap 37, allowing
Barrichello to lead and the
McLaren crew appeared to be
late getting the
Englishman’s tyres out,
costing him precious
seconds. Kovalainen
refuelled on lap 38, so that
Kimi was now lying second to
the Brawn, 11.8 seconds
down. Raikkonen and
Barrichello pitted together
on lap 39 and thanks to a
series of fastest laps, the
Brawn driver now got the
jump on Hamilton to lead.
Raikkonen was currently
fifth, but he had got ahead
of Kovalainen, while Rosberg
in second and Alonso in
fourth would have to stop
again, which meant the
Ferrari man was effectively
looking at a third place
spot on the podium. On lap
42, Alonso brought the
Renault in so Raikkonen was now fourth and the
move up to third came one
lap later, when Rosberg
refuelled the Williams. From
this point on the order did
not change, so the final
result as far as the points
scorers is concerned, was
Barrichello, Hamilton,
Raikkonen,
Kovalainen, Rosberg, Alonso,
Button and Kubica. Badoer
finished seventeenth.
Stefano Domenicali: “Today we did
the maximum with Kimi, who drove an
amazing race to make it to the podium
once again. He was very competitive
throughout the race, pushing at the
decisive moments, at the start and then
when the opportunity arose to get ahead
of Kovalainen. Luca managed to finish
the race, thus completing this learning
weekend, which served as an introduction
course prior to tackling the Belgian
weekend in the best way possible, next
weekend. Clearly, considering our
choices and those of other teams in
terms of developing this year’s car, our
aim of maintaining third place in the
Constructors’ classification is becoming
harder. For our part, we will give it
our best shot, knowing that in some
races we can expect to be more
competitive than in others and we will
have to be ready to exploit every
opportunity that arises.”
Kimi Raikkonen: “I am happy about
this result. Already on Friday we saw
that the car was pretty competitive over
a distance and we therefore thought we
could fight for a podium finish. We were
also aware that, in qualifying, we might
have struggled, especially on light
fuel. Both these predictions proved
correct and today we were once again
able to get on the podium. I managed to
make up a few places at the start and my
first aim was to pull out a bit of a gap
over Rosberg, who was going to stop
after me. In the second part of the
race, I realized that I could close on
Kovalainen and try and make the most of
the run of pit stops to get ahead of him
and I managed it. Now we go to Spa, a
track that I like a lot: we must wait
for Friday to see how competitive we can
be. At this point in the season, if we
manage to get everything right, then we
can aim for the podium and if anything
was to happen to those ahead of us, we
can try and do even better. We must do
all we can to hang on to third place in
the Constructors’ championship.”
Luca Badoer: “I said when I
arrived in Valencia that this Grand Prix
would be a time for me to dust the rust
off my back and get confident in the
role of race driver again. It was
important for me to complete so many
kilometres without making any serious
mistakes and I managed that. From the
physical point of view, I feel fine and
that is another cause for satisfaction.
I got a good start, making up a few
places but then I was hit by Grosjean
and that dropped me back down again. I
tried to run my own race, but it was not
easy to maintain a consistent pace,
especially when I had to let the leaders
by. At the first pit stop, I made a
mistake which cost me one place and then
I was just a whisker over the white line
and so I picked up a drive-through
penalty. Now I am looking forward to Spa
with confidence: it’s a track I know and
I will also be able to count on the
experience gained this weekend. Thanks
to the whole team, who did everything
they could to make me feel comfortable,
without putting me under any pressure
and to Michael, who was a great support
throughout the weekend.”
Chris Dyer: “We are pleased with
Kimi’s third place, which represents the
most we could aspire to today. Driver,
team, car: all these elements came
together in the best possible way and
the result confirms it. As for Luca, it
was another difficult day in an equally
difficult weekend. However, it should be
stressed how much he improved,
continuously day by day, lap after lap.
We are confident that he will find
himself in much better shape next
weekend in Belgium.”
Race details
K. Raikkonen: 3rd 1:36.07.283 +15.994 57 laps 279 chassis
L. Badoer: 17th 1:37.13.273 + 1 giro 56 laps 280 chassis
Weather: air temperature 32/33 °C, track temperature 46/47
°C, sunny
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