Coulthard at sharp end in British GP practice.

Ahead of his final British Grand Prix this weekend, David Coulthard showed he clearly intends going out on a high, by lapping right up at the business end of proceedings in second free practice at Silverstone.

Ahead of his final British Grand Prix this weekend, David Coulthard showed he clearly intends going out on a high, by lapping right up at the business end of proceedings in second free practice at Silverstone.

The experienced Scot - who yesterday (Thursday) announced that he will retire from the top flight at the end of the current campaign [see separate story - click here], having achieved an impressive 13 grand prix victories, 62 rostrum finishes and 533 points over the course of his long and successful career, making him the fourth-most successful driver of all time in terms of points racked up - wound up inside the top ten in both of the day's sessions, placing ninth in the morning and a strong fourth in the afternoon.

"[It was] a normal Friday," summarised 37-year-old, who secured back-to-back triumphs for McLaren-Mercedes at the self-styled 'Home of British Motor Racing' in 1999 and 2000. "It was good to get some more running time, after missing a lot of track time at the test due to the various problems we had there. I didn't have a chance to run the option tyre during the test, so that was my first look at it today."

Team-mate Mark Webber was eleventh-quickest in the morning, improving significantly to sit second on the timesheets in the afternoon, albeit more than half a second shy of pace-setter Heikki Kovalainen in the McLaren-Mercedes.

The Aussie was classified seventh overall at the close of play, two spots and barely seven hundredths in front of Coulthard.

"Not a bad afternoon session," Webber concluded. "We had a look at a few different settings, as conditions were not the same as at the test, but that's normal.

"After a small electronic problem this morning, we had some better running this afternoon when I was much happier with the car. Now we'll wait and see what the weather will do tomorrow."

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