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

The post-race FIA press conference from the Korea International Circuit in Yeongam, South Korea with Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing), Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) and Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1).
06.10.2013- The Podium, winner Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB9, 2nd Kimi Raikkonen (FIN)
06.10.2013- The Podium, winner Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing RB9,…
© PHOTO 4

Drivers: Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull Racing), Kimi Raikkonen (Lotus F1) and Romain Grosjean (Lotus F1).

Questions From The Floor

Q: (Ian Parks - Press Association)
Seb, at the start of the second safety car period, were you aware that between turns one and two the car ahead of you was not the official safety car? Did you have any thoughts about it at all? Was there anything on the team radio, did they say anything, because Bernd Maylander was actually at the back of the field?

Sebastian Vettel:
I saw... I think it was a BMW or... no sorry, it looked like a BMW. I think it was a Hyundai or Kia SUV. You want the number plate? It was not Bernd Maylander's, so it was not the safety car. I saw that. Obviously then the team said 'yellow flag', it wasn't quite clear that it was the safety car but then the safety car board was flashing and I lifted and obviously saw that there was another car on the track, took quite easy to make sure I got past. I didn't know what the incident was until I saw the smoke and so on. Obviously they said there was a crash. So I knew it was not the safety car.

Q: (Ian Parks - Press Association)
You now have a 77 point lead in the championship - I don't know if you're aware - but you can now win the title in Japan next week. What does it meant to you now to be standing on the brink of that fourth successive world title?

Sebastian Vettel:
Yeah. I'm trying not to think about it to be honest. I'm trying to focus more on the present I think we obviously had the incredible chance, I think two years ago, to do so. We did it but I think there are still a lot of points to get, even though it looks very good for us. There's still a chance for Fernando, I think, so we have to stay on top of our game but to be honest, I think I said on the podium, we're just having a good time. We enjoy the fact that the team is working very well. The car is working... it's on the edge to be honest, more so than you would probably think from the outside but it's obviously nice when you get the results like Singapore or this weekend. To be honest with you, I don't really care. I look forward to Japan because it's one of the nicest tracks of the whole season.

Q: (Livio Oricchio - O Estado de Sao Paulo)
Romain, can you describe to us the conversation with the team when you were in the situation to fight with Kimi? We could hear some parts of the conversation but not all of it.

Romain Grosjean:
Our radio is quite bad, I have to say. I don't hear most of the conversations either. I just made a mistake, Kimi could go for it and the unfortunately there was a yellow flag at turn three so I couldn't get my place back. I was quicker today but then we have rules not to fight. It's a track where it is most impossible to overtake even though there are long straights. I mean in sector two and three there is so much issue with the front tyres so you cannot get close enough and then lose a lot of downforce, lose a lot of lap time. I should have avoided that astroturf in turn 15 and it would have been the end of the conversation.

Q: (Abhishek Takle - Midday)
Sebastian, you spoke earlier on the podium about this circuit being a little bit difficult on the front right tyre and we heard radio transmission from Rocky (race engineer Guillaume Rocquelin) saying 'it's opening up, take it easy' but then you set the fastest lap. Was it perhaps more of a concern on the pit wall than in the cockpit?

Sebastian Vettel:
No, I think they obviously have a lot of data that they go through and they could obviously follow pretty well what was happening on the track. Obviously I have my eye on the front right, it's quite easy to see. It's more tricky with the rear tyres in the mirrors, but we know that this track is pretty monster for the front tyres, especially front right, also from previous years. And then obviously - Romain described it pretty well - once the tyre does come back, inside the cockpit at least you have the feeling that the car is alive again, the car is alive but actually the tyre is dead, there is no more rubber to grain so the tyre is more or less worn, so it's quite tricky, because if you have a big lock-up, that could mean that it's the end of the race. You have to come into the pits because you have a massive flat spot so I was aware but I could see that there was still a lot of rubber left and that the tyre was still graining. I think I was aware of the risk but it was still OK.

Q: (Frederic Ferret - L'Equipe)
To Romain and Sebastian, do you think the Lotus had the pace to beat the Red Bull today without the safety cars?

Romain Grosjean:
I don't know how much Sebastian left in his pocket. I figured it was pretty close after the... well, while I was close to him, I didn't want to close the gap too early, because you know that if follow a car by too much, we are all aware that the front tyre is the issue so you lose a lot of downforce from the fronts so you grain even more. So every time he was a little bit ahead I was giving a gap and then following the gap and I was surprised how our pace at one stage... I thought the front tyres were going away but I was surprised our lap time was still improving, so I was catching a little bit back and I think the last stints would have been pretty epic without the safety car, because that was basically the longest one on the tyres and we were going right to the end of their life so that could have been either the gamble to go for the lead... maybe both of us... I don't know if we would have reacted but it would have been close and no more rubber on the tyres.

Sebastian Vettel:
Yeah, I think it would have been close. You never know whether the safety car helps you or not. I think Lotus probably had more range today. I think we had a little bit more pace initially but I think Romain could have afforded for the last stint to pit a little bit earlier than us. Maybe we could not react to that immediately because we know that it will be tight for our range, so I think it would have been close without the safety car, but in the end, I think Kimi was obviously quite consistent, doing lap times around 1m 42.0s and we just had two or three tenths in hand. Maybe at the very end, a little bit more. I think he was also controlling the gap to Romain behind but as I said, maybe in terms of raw pace we were a little bit quicker, but in terms of range, the Lotus was again very strong.

Q: (Trent Price - Richland F1)
Question for both Lotus drivers: you said after the first initial graining phase that the times were improving but that safety car... was there anything on your Friday data to suggest that you might have actually made it to the end, without the safety car?

Kimi Raikkonen:
We would probably have tried it, or looked at some point at how the tyres... without the safety car we gained a lot of time and lap places if we'd stopped earlier in the last pit stops, so who knows? In the end we didn't stop again now. You can always say that if but it makes no difference. You have to react and do what you think is the right thing and sometimes certain things help you. My front tyre was pretty done in the end but we finished the race in a pretty good position. We would probably try to run until then anyhow.

Romain Grosjean:
Well, I think we hold the long runs on Friday to see how it goes and we choose which tyre we preferred. I think everybody did, it was the medium tyres and now we know after one stage it would balance the car a little bit. The question is how much to push at the beginning because the first few laps are the most critical from the front tyres. Yeah, it more or less looked as it was on the plan and then once you fit the prime tyres and you do your second stint, you know how much you can extend the last one and they can try to calculate the degradation and so on to give you the best chance to have the longest stint possible.

Q: (Luigi Perna - La Gazzetta dello Sport)
Kimi, you had some action moments in this race, coming from the back, first with Fernando Alonso, then with Romain. From the start of the race to the finish of the race, can you describe it and did you enjoy it?

Kimi Raikkonen:
Yeah, it was nice, I think we had pretty OK speed and then we made the most of it after yesterday. The car still wasn't ideal today but we managed to be a bit faster on used tyres than some others. At the beginning I managed to overtake a few cars and then I got stuck on the second... after the pit stop I got stuck with the same cars again and then decided to stop earlier. I was pretty OK after the restart. Romain made a mistake and I managed to pass him and just didn't have enough speed at the end and not enough tyres were left compared to them, because they stopped later. It was good fun but I would rather start in the front and finish in the front. It would have made our life a bit easier.

Q: (Abhishek Takle - Midday)
Sebastian, the three world titles you've won so far have all come at different circuits. At which circuit would it be the most special for you to win your fourth World Championship?

Sebastian Vettel:
To be honest, I don't think it really matters. I think it's an exceptional situation anyway. Even though it looks very good, it's still not over so we shouldn't feel too comfortable. Which track? It's not really important. Sure, there are a couple of tracks that probably mean a little bit more to the drivers than others. I think generally there's no track on the calendar that I dislike but there are a couple of highlights. I think I mentioned on the podium next week, Japan, is one of the highlights in the year, but regarding the championship I think our target is to win the championship and not to win it in one place in particular.

Transcript courtesy FIA.

Read More