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Italian GP - Post-race press conference - Pt.2

Drivers: Rubens Barrichello (Brawn GP), Jenson Button (Brawn GP) and Kimi Raikkonen (Ferrari).



Questions from the floor.


Q: (Bob McKenzie – The Daily Express).
Jenson and Rubens, it looks like it's between you two now, the Red Bulls are so far back. Is it possible to continue to be friends and close team-mates, exchanging information when you've got four races to go and you need every point possible?

Jenson Button:
I don't know. I've put on a brave face lately but I absolutely hate this guy! He doesn't know his a*** from his elbow when it comes to racing cars! Is this more fun or…? No, we've got a good relationship and we've been team-mates for many years now. We're working together, we've had to pull our car to the front, we will see how it goes from here, but I think we're still going to be sharing information because there's always the possibility that the Red Bulls will be strong, you never know, and we might have some bad luck. But when we go on the circuit we're obviously fierce rivals. We're not going to give up until the end. I've obviously got the advantage of 14 points; it's got smaller at the last couple of races but Rubens is going to be a very tough rival for sure. He's skilled behind the wheel, as we've seen for many years and he's been able to show his talent. Yeah, it's going to be a tough few races, but it's an exciting challenge and as I said, it's nice to get this result today. I think we've shown that the Brawn car is good. A few people were questioning us a couple of races ago, but we've put a lot of effort into improving this car and it works at this downforce level which is great and I think when we go to Singapore we should have a strong car there as well. I would say that it's more than likely between us two but you can never count the Red Bulls out.

Rubens Barrichello:
If it is between us two, there's that old saying that you can only win in Formula One if you're tough. We're both nice guys, so this is the end of it! I think the best thing in life is respect. Obviously, when we're finding that the softer spring or the harder spring is the better thing for the car, you go to the other side of the garage and tell them that's what you have found. But it's an open book there. We have our meetings and we both go through the check list at the same time, live, so we both can hear. At the end of the day, the cars get very similar but that's fine, that's how it is.

Q: (Ian Parkes – The Press Association).
Jenson, Rubens, you've both been on the one-stop strategy today; can we put that down to the tactical genius that is Ross Brawn?

JB:
You can't put a race win down to one individual, I don't think. It's down to a group of individuals. We've got a lot of very talented people within our team that come up with the strategies. Ross Brawn is not the strategist in our team. We have certain people within the team that go through all the different scenarios throughout a race. They came up with the idea. A two-stop was still a possibility but we went for a one-stop because we just thought we had to get off the line first and lead into turn one otherwise it wouldn't have worked. The strategists talk to the engineers and talk to Ross and talk to the drivers and we decide whatever strategy to go for. Some of us disagree sometimes but we normally come up with the right option. Ross is a great individual, but he would say it's not down to one person, any race victory and one-two.

Q: (Ed Gorman – The Times).
Rubens, after all the frustrating years at Ferrari when you couldn't race your team-mate and we know what happened to you there, how much do you relish this opportunity to go head-to-head with your team-mate with the championship fully within your grasp and four races to go? What does that mean to you?

RB:
It means a lot. It means that I can show my true me. For many years people may ask why didn't he leave Ferrari before, because the car was the best available and I had to overcome all the problems and I had to overcome some World Champion called Michael (Schumacher) and he was great, he was great behind the wheel. Like I said before, I think that Michael might have had more skill than I had, but if you threw both of us into a goal with a tiger I might get out alive and I'm not so sure about him. That's life. You learn, you learn by your mistakes, you learn by everything. I didn't say this to criticise because I had fun, I really had fun at Ferrari. It made me a better driver as well, so everything that's happening now is because of all the times that I had in Formula One. The only thing that is more important than anything else is that you have to believe in yourself and that's the main thing, the whole thing in life itself. It's you waking up, thanking for the chance that you have and going for it. It's as good as that and as I said before, for me it's already a winning year. I went through the first of January, I went through the first of February, not knowing if I was going to be racing. I remember like it was yesterday. Jenson did the first four laps in the car and I went to ask him (about the car) and he said 'it's a great car.' And I will never forget that. And I said 'get the hell out of there, I want to drive!' It was a great feeling and it's a winning year already. It feels good to be challenging and fighting your team-mate.

Q: (Paulo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport).
Rubens, what do you have to do to try to catch him: it's four races, fourteen points which is quite a lot? What do you have to do and what kind of pressure do you think you can put on him?

RB:
Nothing more than I'm doing right now: pushing to the limit, taking everything you can, feeling good, feeling happy with the challenge and just going for it. Experience does help with all those years but as I've already said, if you have experience and no speed it means nothing. If you have speed, experience comes and it feels good. I don't think I have to do anything else. We are very competitive, both of us, and we just have to go for it.

Q: (Paulo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport).
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Related Images

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Rubens Barrichello celebrates his first victory of 2009 for Brawn GP in the European Grand Prix in Valencia [pic credit: Brawn GP]
Jenson Button (GBR) Brawn BGP001, German F1 Grand Prix, Nurburgring, 10-12th, July 2009
Kimi Raikkonen (FIN) Ferrari F60, British F1, Silverstone, 19th-21st, June, 2009
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