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Next : World Motorcycle Grand Prix: 19-21 OCT 2012
Next : Sepang 1000km: 06-08 DEC 2012
Next : F1 2012: Petronas Malaysia Grand Prix : 23-25 MAR 2012
Next :Malaysia Merdeka Endurance Race: 29 AUG-01 SEP 2012
Next : World Motorcycle Grand Prix: 19-21 OCT 2012
Next : Sepang 1000km: 06-08 DEC 2012
Team principals: Ross Brawn (Brawn GP), John Howett (Toyota), Adam Parr (Williams) and Martin Whitmarsh (McLaren)
Q:
A question to you all. Could you give us an update on how you feel your
teams have done so far looking at Australia and today. Adam?
Adam Parr: Well,
if you got points for practice we would be doing very well but
obviously we need to do better than we did in Australia, that’s for
sure.
Q: How has it gone today?
AP: It has gone okay but it does not really count for anything, does it?
Q: Ross, your feelings so far?
Ross Brawn: Well,
obviously Australia was, as has been said many times, a fairytale.
Thinking about what the team has gone through for the past few months
then to have the result we had in Melbourne was unconceivable and
unbelievable. I have been through many things in Formula One. I have
been lucky enough to have some very special experiences and that
certainly ranks as one of the best, if not the best of my career. It
was achieved with a lot of things from within the company but there are
a lot of people outside the company who helped us survive. Martin was
one of them and Ron did his elder statesman part and did a very good
job and I must say FOTA rallied around. We would not have survived
without the help of those people. Whilst it was a wonderful it shows
that even though we are going through a little bit of a difficult
period with protests and things at the moment there is another side of
our business which is very united and very together in trying to solve
and improve Formula One.
Q: Martin?
Martin Whitmarsh: I
think we are already on record as saying that our car is not quick
enough and I think that was evident last weekend and it is evident
again this weekend. I think after the two massive championship seasons,
frankly, fighting through to the end of the year we put a lot of
resource into that. It was a decision we felt was right in Brazil but
as we stand today we know we have got a lot of catching up to do. On a
positive note I think in week 11, Barcelona test, I think we were very
slow by comparison to every car. I think the team has made a spirited
fight-back to try and drag itself into the pack but the truth is we
have got a lot of work to do and we have got a lot of development
necessary to get ourselves into a position we would expect to be in.
Q: John?
John Howett: I
think it is too early to say really. We had a fairly challenging
weekend in Australia. In qualifying if you look at fuel corrected pace,
definitely Timo (Glock) had a very strong lap and in race pace when we
were running in relatively free air the car was competitive. We need to
wait at least another couple of races, different type of circuits, to
really judge the relative performance of all the teams.
Q:
John and Martin, you both had certain events during last weekend. Any
further comment on what was happening last weekend and what continues
to happen now?
JH: I don’t think so. I mean we have issued press
statements on it, so we will have to wait and see in terms of the
diffuser what happens on April 14. I think as a team we are very
confident that we have interpreted the rules correctly and we have had
verification that our interpretation would appear to be correct and we
just need to wait to see.
MW: Well, okay obviously I have got
to comment on what for our team is a very sad day today. We have
suspended a long standing Sporting Director, Dave Ryan. I think many
people in this room will know Dave and will know of Dave. He has been
with the team for 35 years. I have personally known him for 20 years
and I think anyone who knows him, knows that he is a very straight
forward, dedicated, hard working individual. However, it has become
clear from discussions with Dave last night and through into this
morning that during the stewards’ meeting he was not entirely full and
truthful in answers that he gave the stewards and consequently we had
no alternative today other than to suspend him. As you can imagine I
think it is a very sad day for the team. We have got to deal with this
weekend and we have got to look in a bit more detail at all of the
events that surrounded that. From my perspective obviously it is a
point of deep, deep regret. It is not how I wanted this year in
particular to start and it is something for which the team and myself
are not only deeply embarrassed but deeply regretful. I think for Dave
is has been a shattering day for him.
Q: Another question for
both of you in the front row. Relating to KERS, how do you feel KERS
went and how you have used it so far?
MW: I think at the moment
it is still early days and frankly we had some difficulties with KERS
today and Lewis’s runs in the afternoon were without KERS. It was an
incredibly challenging range of technologies to package KERS on a
Formula One car. I think Mercedes Benz have done a fantastic job and it
was a really successful use of it in Australia. Here it has been a bit
challenging but again it is early days. I am confident that we will
find our way through those difficulties. It’s a technology that is
important to Formula One and there has been just a huge effort to make
it work. I can appreciate that some teams have decided wisely not to
bowl in there with KERS. I think Mercedes Benz and ourselves rolled our
shirt-sleeves up and got stuck into it. It has been a massively
expensive and challenging programme. But we are going to stick at it.
When it is working there is some advantage and we will, I am sure, have
benefit of it as the season progresses.
Q: Will you persevere with it this weekend?
MW: Yes,
we will. I think we had one glitch which caused us for safety and
practical reasons to turn it off. I think we had a small cooling pump
failure which meant we couldn’t run with it on Lewis’s car. We will
obviously look into that and see whether it is anything particular to
these conditions or whether it’s the fact it is a very new technology
and we are working hard to develop it and solve those problems.
Q: John, when will we see KERS on the Toyota?
JH: We
are still monitoring the situation. We are still continuing development
in Cologne. I think we have always said that when we start to see the
advantage in terms of lap time or a competitive advantage we will try
to install KERS on the car. Here you have fairly long straights and a
reasonably long run into the first corner, so we need to evaluate what
advantage KERS will give in those situations.
Q: Adam, can you say when your slightly different system of KERS will be used?
AP: Very
similar to John. We are just working on it flat out and we are also
waiting to see whether it will generate faster lap time. But I think
one thing was quite clear in Melbourne which is that regardless of lap
time there may be tactical advantages in having it on the car, so we
are more determined than ever to have it on as soon as we can.
Q:
Both of you in the back row are independent teams. You have both tasted
a certain amount of success in various ways. How important is that from
a commercial point of view? Ross, obviously, has got the Virgin sticker
on the car and that’s about it. How important is success for you from a
commercial point of view? Adam, perhaps you could start?
AP: It
is why we are here. We were very fortunate in the last few months of
last year that I think 10 of our partners renewed their sponsorship
with us and I think including four upgrades for this year, so they
showed a lot of faith in the team at a time that, as you will
appreciate, was extremely difficult to make a decision like that. We
are very grateful to them and the only way we can reward them on the
track is by performing, so it is absolutely crucial to us to perform.
Q: Ross, has the phone been ringing with people wanting to give you money since last weekend?
RB: It
is not quite that simple but there has been a lot of interest and of
course given the result we had last weekend it was perfect to develop
the commercial side. If we had been at the back of the grid it would
have certainly been a lot more difficult. But it is a tough market out
there at the moment and we all know what the economic situation is. But
things are developing reasonably well but the key objective for us is
to find partners that we can have for the next two, three or more
years, not just someone to come along and have a quick splash and
disappear. We will take our time to develop the right partners. With
Virgin it is starting small but with a lot of potential for the future,
so I think we have made as good a start as we could have dreamed of
with the results we have and the car we have got. With regards to KERS
it is not high on the agenda for us at the moment. We had to make some
compromises to change the engine in the car, so the car has got to be
heavier now than originally intended and that makes it quite difficult
to install KERS. We will have to work hard to get some weight out of
the car before we can get to a position where KERS is a possibility.
Like the rest of the group we will be monitoring the situation. This, I
think, is one of the best tracks for KERS according to our simulations
when we did it and I think you may see that KERS-equipped cars will be
more to the fore here than they perhaps would be on other circuits.
Q: Someone suggested last weekend that is costs more money to have KERS. Is that right?
RB: It certainly costs money.
Q: Is it part of the deal? Is it extra?
RB: No,
our engine agreement with McLaren Mercedes is purely an engine supply
agreement. We have had some tentative discussions about KERS but it is
a little bit early for us to engage properly on that.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q:
(Paolo Ianieri - La Gazzetta dello Sport) Talking about what happened
to Mr Ryan. Does it mean that he was lying then to the stewards?
MW: It means he was not truthful and full in his answer which is what I said (becomes inaudible).
Q:
(Ed Gorman -The Times) Martin, to follow that up. The impression we are
getting from the statement is that Dave Ryan did this on his own. Are
you telling us that there was no-one else involved in McLaren, senior
to him, in this process?
MW: Correct, there was no-one else
senior. I think anyone who knows Dave will know that he did not set out
with any deliberate intention to mislead the stewards. He went to that
stewards meeting with Lewis, I am sure, with the intention of being
very clear and straightforward but I think during the course of that
meeting, as we explored it more with him, over the last 24 hours it
became clear that he was not as full and comprehensive as he could have
been.
Q: (Ed Gorman - The Times) Could you explain also what
Lewis’s precise role was because the stewards made it very clear to us
that both Dave Ryan and Lewis specifically said that the team had not
told them to allow (Jarno) Trulli to go past. So what did Lewis do? Did
he follow Ryan?
MW: I think Dave was the senior member of the
team there and Dave has to take responsibility for leading that
process. I think Lewis is going to talk to the media later and I am
sure he will give a full account from his perspective. But this is
something that was still unfolding until literally minutes before the
first practice session. I had to take an incredibly difficult decision.
I have personally known Dave for 20 years. If you go around this
paddock and ask any team in any organisation of their experiences of
Dave in terms of his dedication and commitment, so he is shattered by
what has happened today. We need to take stock of that situation but
there were two people in with the stewards but Dave is part of the
management, he is the Sporting Director of this team, and as such he
had the responsibility to ensure that the stewards received a full and
entirely truthful account of what happened.
Q: (Ed Gorman -
The Times) There have been some very harsh things said about the team,
particularly in the British press, including a suggestion that McLaren
is contaminated by a culture of cheating. Is that the case?
MW: No.
Q: (Ed Gorman - The Times) What is the case?
MW: The
case is that Dave made a very serious error of judgement in going into
that stewards meeting and he is paying the consequences of that. It is
something that he deeply regrets, Lewis and I and the team regret, and
it is something that we have got to put right.
Q: (Juha
Paatalo - Financial Times Germany) You say that Dave was not entirely
truthful in front of the stewards but what about Lewis, was he truthful
in front of the stewards?
MW: No, I think that Lewis was not
entirely truthful but we have spoken to Dave, he was the senior member
of the team and they went into a situation together and I think they
were trying to deal with the situation but they got it wrong. Dave, as
the senior member of the team was responsible for what happened and
therefore I took that decision this morning.
Q: (Jonathan
Legard - BBC) Martin, what is the procedure or the process in terms of
deciding what was going to be said? You were on the pit wall and so was
Ron Dennis as much as Dave and anyone else. When this process was
unfolding and you knew he had to go to the stewards what was done? What
happens?
MW: In truth the situation was that during this
incident we were asking the stewards, well, we were asking race
control, for a decision because we realised that Trulli had been let
past. We did not think that was right because in fact the original
overtake of Trulli was entirely legitimate as Trulli was not on the
circuit. We believed that when all of the facts were presented to the
stewards that they would recognise and they would restore the
positions, so we asked for the race control and the stewards to look
into it and Dave and Lewis went to the stewards to give their account.
Q: (Jonathan Legard - BBC) But did they talk to you about what should be said?
MW: No.
They did not because it was not necessary. We knew what had happened
and there was a belief that a true and honest account of that would get
the result, that the positions would have been reversed.
Q:
(Jonathan Legard - BBC) So what got lost in translation? Lewis gave
this interview or interviews saying ‘I was asked’ and then said ‘no’ in
the stewards’ inquiry. Why, why did that happen?
MW: Well, I
think Lewis got out of the car and gave a truthful account of what
happened. I believe that whilst they were at the stewards, Dave, who
had been party to what had happened in Spa, was highly sensitive and I
think in the heat of the moment, his judgment was to not give a true
account, and I think Lewis was then led by that.
Q: (Jon
McEvoy - The Daily Mail) Martin, I was just wondering what we should
believe is the next step, given that Dave Ryan has been suspended as
opposed to sacked or resigned. What does that mean, how will that
develop?
MW: What it leaves now is that this is something that
happened literally minutes before the first practice session. Dave has
been sent home and we need to, during the course of this weekend,
understand exactly what happened and make the decisions about Dave’s
future.
Q: (Jon McEvoy - The Daily Mail) And finally, from
me, I was wondering if you, given all the fall-out from this, have
given any consideration to whether you would resign from your role?
MW: I
think there’s a lot of things going through my mind today and it’s
happening during an event in which we’re trying to do the best job we
can. I think, as a team, at the moment, we’ve lost someone who is very
much a significant anchor in this organisation and we’ve got to make
sure that we pull together to do the best job that we can this weekend.
I think we’ve got to reflect on everything that’s happened over the
course of the Australian weekend, after this race has finished.
Q: (Jon McEvoy - The Daily Mail) So you don’t rule that in or out?
MW: I
don’t rule anything in or out. I think at the moment, what we are keen
and earnest to do today is make sure that we put our hands up and say
it was a serious error of judgement during that process and that we
make sure that we come clean on that fact.
Q: (Ingo Rorsch
- Sport Bild) Mr Whitmarsh, have you had the chance to see the precise
words which were spoken between the stewards and your two team members?
MW: No, I haven’t. Ordinarily they aren’t minuted and I believe
one of the stewards didn’t bring his notebook from Australia but we
have no access to that. All we can do is ask the driver and the team
manager what was said in that meeting.
Q: (Ingo Rorsch - Sport Bild) But shouldn’t that be recorded for the future?
MW: Well,
again, I think at the moment it’s not for me to make that judgement. I
think what the stewards should rely upon is that when the teams are
called before them, they will give a totally true and open account of
what happened.
Q: (Dan Knutson - National Speed Sport News)
John, relations between FOTA and FOA are a bit strained and tense; do
you see that getting better or worse?
JH: Between FOTA and
FOA? Well, I think at the moment we have progressed significantly.
There was, as you know, some tension over historic payments. They
haven’t, I think, in the teams’ opinion, all been settled but a
significant proportion have been settled and whilst we’ve been in
Australia I believe our lawyers together with FOA’s lawyers have made
significant progress, so I think in terms of the actual agreement, we
all believe, we are extremely close to actually reaching a final
conclusion.
Q: (Anne Giuntini - L’Equipe) To all of those
who are using KERS: how much of an advantage can it be at the start? Is
it quantifiable? Is it possible to know?
MW: Yes, it’s
quantifiable. There are a number of factors but clearly if you can
discharge going down to the first corner, then you do get a
quantifiable advantage that varies from circuit to circuit depending on
whether you’re grip limited and the length to that corner. It also,
frankly, relies upon you being able to deploy that much additional
energy. If you are frankly languishing further back on the grid as we
were at the last Grand Prix, then it’s very rare that you can go to the
first corner braking point at full power, even with or without KERS, so
its benefit is greater, clearly, if you’ve got a clear run at the first
corner.
Q: (Paolo Ianieri - La Gazzetta dello Sport) Ross, how do you see the situation here compared to Australia one week ago?
RB: It’s
still a little bit too early to say. We’re struggling a little bit with
the balance of the car today, it’s not quite as nice as Australia.
Despite what the perceptions are of the car it has actually very good
low speed grip, it’s very good on traction. It’s not a track that
perhaps rewards those elements quite as much and neither driver was
particularly happy with the balance of the car today, so we’ve got to
do a good job tonight to improve that, but I think we’ll be near the
front and fighting at the front. Whenever anyone said a car or a team
were going to be dominant, don’t believe it because this business is
too competitive for anyone to be dominant. We’re going to have to fight
very, very hard to get points this weekend and hopefully get podiums.
Q:
This is for Ross Brawn, can you explain for us the development plan for
your car this year? Do you have enough resources to develop the car
while other teams develop their cars, of course?
RB: Yes,
we’ve been through a pretty traumatic winter and unfortunately that
still continued this week because we had a lot of restructuring of the
team to do. We’re not a team with a budget that Honda had, so this week
there has been some unfortunate restructuring. We hope we’re going into
next week with our new team and we can then look forward and the
restructuring has been very focused on performance. It would be no good
having a team with fantastic production facilities and no ideas, so the
team has been structured very strongly around maintaining a good
development programme, so we’ve tried not to impact the technical areas
too much and yes, the development is on-going. We’re planning an
upgrade for Barcelona or just after Barcelona. We obviously have this
appeal hearing next week or the week after next and we need to see what
comes out of that because that may change direction. I’m reasonably
confident but you can’t be one hundred percent confident. So yeah,
we’ve got to move forward. I think these new rules, by definition,
being a new set of rules, the rate of progress will be very rapid as
Martin touched on. At one stage in winter testing they were quite a
long way behind and now they’re getting into the pack and making rapid
progress, so it is an era of very rapid progress and we’ve got to
progress as well as our competitors if we want to have a hope of
winning another race this year.
Q: (Benny Casadei - Il
Giornale) Ross, which is the most important thing you learned at
Ferrari that you are applying leading your new team?
RB: Non
mollare mai - you never give up and there were times over the winter
when it was easy to think this was actually not worth it. It was very,
very difficult at times. The great thing, I must say, is that the team
stuck together. I’ve said before, I had some black days over the
winter. Luckily they didn’t coincide with Nick’s black days or some of
the other management team’s black days. As I said at the beginning, the
support from McLaren and Mercedes was exceptional. They didn’t know
whether we were going to make it or not but they just gave us 110
percent all the time. There was no doubt from their side that they were
going to give us everything we wanted. So if I took something from
Ferrari and from Luca (di Montezemolo) and Jean Todt and Michael
(Schumacher), it was just never give up.
Q: (Chris Lines -
Associated Press) I want to ask all four guys what they think of the
speed and method of Formula One’s decision-making with penalties with
the Hamilton-Trulli situation, with the diffuser situation. Is there
any way these can be sped up? Fans attend the race or they watch on TV
thinking they’ve seen one result; they get home and it’s completely
changed. Is there anything you can think of to improve that process?
JH: I
suppose fundamentally FIA is the Federation, it’s their championship
and it’s their right to determine how they manage it. It could be
something that FOTA, if the members so desired, could try to discuss
openly with the Federation, but I think one has to respect the fact
that as in football, the stewards are there and appointed and have the
right to decide, and I think it’s something that could be expressed as
a future opportunity to improve but I don’t believe it’s something that
we have the right to really interfere with directly.
AP: Yeah,
I think one has to distinguish between the sporting regulations and the
technical regulations. I think the sporting regulations, you have to
try and sort it out as quickly as possible and the only reason to come
back at any distance from the race is if there’s new evidence that is
very significant. On the technical side, I think it’s extremely
difficult because obviously over the winter or before that, we’re
developing cars, we’re seeking clarifications from the FIA as to how to
interpret rules or confirming that we’ve correctly understood them and
it’s not necessarily until we come up to the new season that people get
a sense of what other people are doing. And then the process demands
that you protest after an event or during an event or after
scrutineering. If you look at the process we’re going through now, we
were protested on the Thursday which was the first opportunity that
anybody had to do it. It was well signalled by the teams that they
would do that, very transparently, and we’ve now got a hearing which is
exactly 16 days after that process. You need eight days for the
submissions from the appellants and eight days to respond, and I think
anything less than that would be very difficult. It may look like a
very long drawn-out process but I think it’s dictated by the nature of
the sport.
RB: I think it is always a bit unfortunate when
fans go away and there’s still debate going on about decisions and I
wish it were possible to walk away from a race that was black and white
but it’s a very complicated sport, particularly when you start to move
into the technical side. I think the process that we’re going through
is fair and proper. I’ve been on the wrong side of protests and
appeals, I’ve been on the right side of protests and appeals and it is
a very, very complicated sport, and particularly with new regulations
coming in, three teams took an interpretation which they’re very
comfortable with and several other teams aren’t happy with that
interpretation. It has to be resolved, so I think the process is as
good as it can be. On the sporting side, even if you make a final
decision and it’s the wrong decision that’s probably worse than it
being a good decision that takes a little bit longer.
MW: I’m
afraid, no particular ideas, but I think inevitably that we have to try
and get everyone to work together, the teams and the Federation, to
ensure that we find ways to shorten that process because clearly we
recognise that it’s not the best thing for the sport but I think the
teams are as much a part of that as the Federation. We’ve perhaps got
to be more transparent, more clear in our dealings with the sporting
body, so I think we shouldn’t be looking to any one party, we’re all
part of this sport and we’ve got to look at how we can contribute to
improving it.
Q: (Jon McEvoy - The Daily Mail) Where do
Lewis and his manager stand with the team at the moment, how are
relations between them and you and whether their reaction to what’s
gone on was the factor in Dave Ryan going and whether it’s still a
factor in how you’re evaluating your next step as well?
MW: No,
it’s not a factor. Lewis is not only a very committed member of the
team, he’s a long-standing friend of many of us in the team who have
known him since he was a lad. Anthony is similarly well-regarded. They
are solid supporters of the team, consider themselves to be part of it.
They weren’t involved in the sad decision with Dave Ryan, they learned
after the event, Lewis didn’t know until after P1 this morning. So they
had no bearing on it, they weren’t involved in it. We have to manage
the business, they know and understand that and I would say the
relationship - at the moment, it’s a very difficult time for the team.
We’ve got to make sure that we come out of it understanding and
learning and hopefully with even stronger relationships than we started
with.
Q: (Dieter Rencken -The Citizen) Ross, I wonder
whether you could clarify some points please. After your restructure,
will the team be a small big team or a big small team? Secondly, for
what reason was the team accepted as a new team and not a continuation
of the Honda team? And then finally, with regard to the commercial
Concorde Agreement, where the team stands in that regard at this point?
RB: Well, I hope it’s both. I hope it’s a big small team and a
small big team. In terms of the structuring, we looked very carefully
at where we felt performance came from, reliability. We will be pretty
lean in terms of the number of spares we carry. I think we’ve got 55
people here whereas last year we would have had 90 at a race. So it’s a
different era for us but one which is quite exciting and quite
challenging. There will be times when we will be very frustrated,
because we can’t do something that we would have liked to do and that
was a luxury and a nice thing, and I don’t mean travelling at the sharp
end of the plane, I mean the engineering things that we were able to do
with the number of people and the budgets that we had before. With
regard to the entry, the FIA determined that we were a new entry. I
understand the reasons why they made that decision and we respect that.
On the commercial side, it’s not something I feel I want to comment on
but something I would say that FOTA has been very supportive of, and
FOM in finding a solution, to give the team the best chance of a way
forward in the future.
Q: (Paolo Ianieri - La Gazzetta
dello Sport) There’s one thing that I don’t understand very much, Mr
Whitmarsh. Does it mean that you only learned this morning from Mr Ryan
that he was not entirely truthful, because yesterday when you talked to
us, it was something completely different, and it was after you read
what the stewards sent out as a press release that you saw there was
some inconsistency from what you said and what you knew?
MW:
I think in these situations people strive to convince themselves that
they have been entirely true and honest in all of their answers and of
course you can technically answer something and convince yourself that
it is truth. Dave was clear that he had not lied and we believed that.
As we dealt with the unfolding situation of yesterday, the more that we
discussed it, the more that we believed that the answers that were
given were not full and honest in the way that we would expect them to
be.
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