- 01 Nov 08, 20:06#77372
Ayrton Senna: WDC 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
McLaren: WCC 1974, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1998, 1999, 2007
McLaren: WDC 1974, 1976, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1998, 1999, 2008
From F1 Live:
Lewis Hamilton put a brave face on things after qualifying fourth for the Brazilian Grand Prix as title rival Felipe Massa stormed to the pole position. Hamilton however does have the luxury in knowing that even if Massa takes the win at Interlagos, a fifth position will crown him world champion.
While it was not Hamilton's cleanest of qualifying runs, he starts ahead of team-mate Heikki Kovalainen who was again unable to mix it with the front runners to aid Hamilton's title challenge.
Tomorrow could be championship day and both Hamilton and McLaren will be looking for a conservative run to try and wrap up the drivers' title.
In the constructors' championship it is certainly advantage Ferrari as McLaren trail their Italian rivals by 11 points and start behind both Massa and outgoing champion Kimi Raikkonen.
Lewis Hamilton
"Congratulations to Felipe for achieving pole position in front of his home crowd - he did a great job today. But, tomorrow, I will be focusing on my own race: it will be a tough afternoon but I’m comfortable with the fuel strategy we chose; the guys in front are probably on a different strategy. But we’re in a good position to finish in the same place as we are today - and that’s got to be our aim. We don’t need to do anything spectacular."
Heikki Kovalainen
"I think we had a straightforward qualifying. My car felt good from the beginning of Q1 and the good balance and performance have been demonstrated by my overall fastest time in Q2.
For sure, we'd rather be on the front row - however we'll have to see which strategy the competition in front of us will have in the race. We feel confident about our strategy and should have a solid baseline for a good race tomorrow."
Ron Dennis
"We're comfortable with the outcome of today's qualifying session. There may be rain tomorrow - and, if there is, we may well see the deployment of the Safety Car. That being the case, it's possible that aggressive race strategies may be affected by those unpredictable variables. We've therefore opted for a race strategy that ought to allow us to protect against such interventions. Now, our focus is to avoid any trouble at the start, after which both our drivers should be in a position to put in strong, competitive performances."
Norbert Haug
"With Lewis on the second row and Heikki on the third we have a good basis for tomorrow's race. We will probably see different strategies once the race unfolds and I am confident about ours. Our speed is good as we showed in Q1 and Q2 when Heikki was fastest of the day and, if our reliability and performance is there, we will get the job done."
E.A. © CAPSIS International
A safety car is an issue, granted, but usually teams hedge their bets and have one car on a non-safety car strategy and one on a safety-car strategy. The fuel effect at Interlagos isn't so big, so both Ferraris must be running on fumes and/or both McLarens must be pretty well tanked up.
Lewis Hamilton put a brave face on things after qualifying fourth for the Brazilian Grand Prix as title rival Felipe Massa stormed to the pole position. Hamilton however does have the luxury in knowing that even if Massa takes the win at Interlagos, a fifth position will crown him world champion.
While it was not Hamilton's cleanest of qualifying runs, he starts ahead of team-mate Heikki Kovalainen who was again unable to mix it with the front runners to aid Hamilton's title challenge.
Tomorrow could be championship day and both Hamilton and McLaren will be looking for a conservative run to try and wrap up the drivers' title.
In the constructors' championship it is certainly advantage Ferrari as McLaren trail their Italian rivals by 11 points and start behind both Massa and outgoing champion Kimi Raikkonen.
Lewis Hamilton
"Congratulations to Felipe for achieving pole position in front of his home crowd - he did a great job today. But, tomorrow, I will be focusing on my own race: it will be a tough afternoon but I’m comfortable with the fuel strategy we chose; the guys in front are probably on a different strategy. But we’re in a good position to finish in the same place as we are today - and that’s got to be our aim. We don’t need to do anything spectacular."
Heikki Kovalainen
"I think we had a straightforward qualifying. My car felt good from the beginning of Q1 and the good balance and performance have been demonstrated by my overall fastest time in Q2.
For sure, we'd rather be on the front row - however we'll have to see which strategy the competition in front of us will have in the race. We feel confident about our strategy and should have a solid baseline for a good race tomorrow."
Ron Dennis
"We're comfortable with the outcome of today's qualifying session. There may be rain tomorrow - and, if there is, we may well see the deployment of the Safety Car. That being the case, it's possible that aggressive race strategies may be affected by those unpredictable variables. We've therefore opted for a race strategy that ought to allow us to protect against such interventions. Now, our focus is to avoid any trouble at the start, after which both our drivers should be in a position to put in strong, competitive performances."
Norbert Haug
"With Lewis on the second row and Heikki on the third we have a good basis for tomorrow's race. We will probably see different strategies once the race unfolds and I am confident about ours. Our speed is good as we showed in Q1 and Q2 when Heikki was fastest of the day and, if our reliability and performance is there, we will get the job done."
E.A. © CAPSIS International
A safety car is an issue, granted, but usually teams hedge their bets and have one car on a non-safety car strategy and one on a safety-car strategy. The fuel effect at Interlagos isn't so big, so both Ferraris must be running on fumes and/or both McLarens must be pretty well tanked up.

Ayrton Senna: WDC 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991
McLaren: WCC 1974, 1984, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1998, 1999, 2007
McLaren: WDC 1974, 1976, 1984, 1985, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1991, 1998, 1999, 2008