Ferrari was left with unanswered questions at the end of the opening day's practice for this weekend's Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps, despite comfortably having held the upper hand over chief rivals McLaren-Mercedes throughout.
Felipe Massa paced the dry morning session to the tune of almost four tenths of a second ahead of team-mate
Kimi Raikkonen, with the fastest of the two McLarens that of
Formula 1 World Championship leader
Lewis Hamilton barely able to get within six tenths of a second of the Brazilian.
The 27-year-old then added to that by going second-quickest to former double world champion
Fernando Alonso as the rain fell in the afternoon though he acknowledged afterwards that the inclement conditions had made it difficult to draw any firm conclusions from the day.
It was an unusual day because of the changing weather, underlined Massa, currently six points adrift of Hamilton in the drivers' title chase but following his dominant performances in both Budapest and Valencia incontrovertibly the man with the momentum on his side. Overall, I am happy with the work we did over the three hours. The car is working well and responds positively to the set-up changes we have made.
We tried various solutions, and now we must study the data to draw the right conclusions. The tyres worked as we had expected them to; the softer ones seem to offer more performance. I think we are moving in the right direction.
Raikkonen, though who has been under something of a cloud for much of the middle part of the 2008 campaign, having not now triumphed since Barcelona all the way back in April came a cropper in the tricky conditions, as he skated off the circuit at turn nine in the afternoon, swiping the circuit barriers as his bid to make it four consecutive Belgian Grand Prix victories did not get off to the most flawless of starts.