David Brabham has admitted that his first outright win at the Le Mans 24 Hours was taking time to sink in, but here are his first thoughts on exactly how it felt to have finally tasted success while on loan to the factory Peugeot squad.
Q:
Would this victory at Le Mans rank as one of your highest career achievements?
David Brabham:
It was an amazing weekend. You work your whole life to win one of these big races and to finally stand on the top step of the podium as the overall winner was an incredible feeling. I'm still finding it hard to believe that it actually happened.
Q:
For the French manufacturer, Peugeot, how much effort was placed on the Le Mans program?
David Brabham:
Since I first got involved in the program back in January the amount of testing that I have done is just incredible. I've personally done three 30-hour tests and I actually didn't do all of them that the team undertook. The amount of effort that Peugeot put in this year really was amazing. I knew when I did the deal this year I thought I would have a great shot at this race because it was the third year of the program and Audi were starting with a brand new car. Driving with Marc Gene and Alex Wurz was great. We worked so well together, stuck to our game plan, looked after the car and really weren't worried whether we were fast or not. We ended up with an absolutely perfect race. We had nothing go wrong at all throughout the 24 hours and we were in the right position at the end. It was a great job by everyone.
Q:
Were there any moments during the race where you thought you might not be able to take the win?
David Brabham:
We were obviously in good shape after we took the lead after around six hours but the way things were going towards the end of the race it was looking more likely that we might not have been able to pull it off because the #8 Peugeot was running very fast and they could do 13 laps on a tank of fuel, but we could only do twelve, which makes a big difference. We were going to have to do an extra stop towards the end of the race and if that had happened, we probably would have ended up in second place. With about an hour to go, there was a safety car period and the #8 was caught behind the other safety car which was around the other end of the circuit. The track is so large you actually have two safety cars on track. That put a big enough gap between us and both of us were able to make a stop without loosing any ground. When the safety car came out, I then started to feel we could take the win - it was still way up in the air before then.
Q:
Where does this victory fit in amongst your career achievements?
David Brabham:
I have certainly had a great run over the past few years at Le Mans and I would love that to continue. From 2005 to now, I've had a third, a fourth, two class wins then and an overall win at Le Mans, which is an incredible run. It was really interesting in the previous two years with Aston Martin in the GT1 class racing against Corvette. We managed to win the race and head to the podium and I always wondered 'what is it like to win this thing overall'. I wondered whether I would ever experience that and what it would be like. Now when I won it overall this year, I got up on the podium and it was exactly the same - the experience, the emotion - it wasn't any extra feeling of success just because I had won overall. When you are racing in your class you are doing the best you can and racing as hard as you can against the opposition - previously it was Aston Martin vs Corvette, now it was Peugeot vs Audi. It was a really strange experience because it really didn't matter whether it was the class win or the overall win - that's something that I really found very interesting.
Q:
What was the reaction like from your family, friends and colleagues?
David Brabham:
I've had a lot of support over the past few years with the Le Mans victories with Aston Martin but it wasn't until I got home from France that I realised what this overall win was all about. It really has been overwhelming. I came home to more than 300 emails and 100 text messages, it really was incredible. I've never seen anything like it. The overall victory is the one that really hits home for everyone else. Somebody asked me what it was like to take the win - it was a great experience - but what actually means more to me was the response I have got from everyone I know. That means more to me than actually winning the race.
Q:
Your brother Geoff won for Peugeot at Le Mans 16 years ago and your Dad, Sir Jack is celebrating the 50th anniversary of his first F1 world championship - does it feel like everything is just coming together for you in 2009?
David Brabham:
It looks like the stars and the moon are all in align for me this year. Celebrating Dad's 50th anniversary is incredible and I was also able to get the opportunity to drive his F1 championship-winning Cooper Climax car at the Twelve Hours of Sebring earlier this year. For our family, it really is a very big year and to top that off with a win at Le Mans for the same manufacturer that Geoff had his win - you just think 'how can this get any better' - it really is unbelievable."
Q:
Now with Le Mans completed, how much would an overall championship victory in the American Le Mans Series for Patrón Highcroft Racing cap off the year?
David Brabham: