Australian Grand Prix race winner Jenson Button was joined by Robert Kubica and Felipe Massa in the post-race press conference.
2010 Australian Grand Prix
Sunday Press  Conference Transcript – 28.03.2010
1. Jenson BUTTON (McLaren),  1h33m36.531s
2. Robert KUBICA (Renault), 1h33m48.565s
3.  Felipe MASSA (Ferrari), 1h33m51.019s
TV UNILATERALS 
Q:  Jenson, an incredible race. 50 laps plus on a set of soft tyres. You  made the early gamble for the slick tyres and that was the game changer.  Was that your call?
Jenson BUTTON: It was. I think it is a  lot easier for the drivers to feel the conditions. The team can see it  on TV with the clouds coming in, but we can feel out on the circuit what  is happening. I didn’t have a balance on the inters, I was really  struggling and I lost a couple of places, so I thought let’s get in,  stick the slicks on.’ There was a dry line. A few places were a little  bit wet. When I went into the pit lane I thought I had made a  catastrophic decision as it was soaking wet in the pit lane. But once I  got it going and up to speed, I had a little off at turn three, but the  pace was pretty good and I was able to put in some good laps and  overtake three or four cars when they stopped and put their tyres on, so  it was the right call and I am very happy that I made it.
Q:  How do you feel to win on the second race with your new team?
JB: I mean, it is very special. It has taken me a little while to get to  grips inside the car. The team has been fantastic though. They have  really welcomed me in, but it has taken me a little bit of time to adapt  to inside the cockpit. I don’t know what to say really, it is very  difficult to put it into words. But a very special feeling and we will  take a lot from this. I feel I am just building in confidence and  hopefully when we get to the next race we can do something similar as  this feels too good.
Q: Robert, you went from ninth to fourth  at the start, then decided not to take a second pit stop for a new set  of tyres. How hard was that call for you?
Robert KUBICA: It  was difficult because we struggled with the warm-up, so when we saw  Jenson being very quick we just pitted in the same lap as Felipe did.  Our guys, the mechanics, did a fantastic job and I overtook Felipe in  the pit stop but Jenson was much quicker with one or two laps already on  the tyres. He built the temperature up, so they are very quick on the  straight lines and I was not confident about the conditions as it was my  first lap going through the corners with the slick tyres, so it was  very difficult to fight with Jenson. It was tough. First of all I  thought we would pit again. Then when I had really big degradation I  asked my team if we are going to pit again and they said if we can  manage we will not do it, so I took a bit more care with the tyres. But  on the other hand I had first of all Lewis attacking quite strongly. He  came very quickly behind me and I then…, I don’t know, he decided to  pit. Then  Felipe again, so I was just taking care of the tyres but also  keeping good speed and that we would keep second place to the end.
Q:  Felipe, it looked like pretty hard work early on and then the race came  towards you and two podiums in two races.
Felipe MASSA: It  is just fantastic, especially coming to Australia. My best result here  was sixth. Having a problem in the qualifying and starting last in 2007  and then getting here which I cannot say was the best race for me. In  terms of pace I was struggling a lot yesterday, but I did a fantastic  start. We lost some positions on the pit stop and also a little bit on  the track because of some mistakes with the difficult track. But it is  just fantastic to have one second and one third. We know how important  this is for the championship, especially my past. At the beginning of  the championship I never had a lot of points like I have now, so this is  very nice. The team did a fantastic job, so very happy to finish third  in a difficult race like this.
Q; Jenson, Lewis pitted for a  second set of tyres and complained about it afterwards on the radio. How  did that decision process play out with you and the team and him?
JB: I don’t know what their idea of pitting was. I guess he was stuck  behind Robert and couldn’t get past. I never thought of putting on a  second set. I didn’t think that would be an option really. It was always  to run the race on one set of tyres if we could after it stopped  raining. My pace was not great once I settled into the car. I felt I was  starting to damage the rear tyres, so I settled into a pace that was  consistent to not destroy the rears. The good thing was Robert was not  closing and about 20 laps to go I started pushing just to pull the gap a  little more just in case people had pitted and were two to three  seconds a lap faster and it was just enough to get me to the end  comfortably. We could not have done a better strategy. I think my  decision at the beginning was my call but from a lot of feedback from  what the circuit was doing and the other cars. It is always a team  effort and I need to thank the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes team for all  their hard work and it is good to see we are improving every step of the  way.
Q: Robert, this is the first time you have finished in  Melbourne. What does this result mean for you and the Renault team?
RK: Unfortunately, Australia was never lucky for me. I have been very quick  each year and could finish in the last two years easy on the podium but  for two crashes I didn’t manage it. To be honest we were not expecting  to finish on the podium, so I think for Renault and myself it is a very  special result as we were trying to push really hard during the winter.  This is the best result we could get from the beginning of the season  and it is a big thanks to the guys for all their effort but we have to  keep realistic. We are not up to the pace for fighting for the podium in  a normal race, so we have to keep pushing, keep working and I am sure  we will manage sooner or later to be with the pace of the top teams.
Q:  Felipe, a sweet moment for you at the start and a reverse of what  happened in Bahrain. You passed your team-mate Fernando Alonso. Tell us  about it.
FM: Actually, I had a fantastic start, so I was  able to do the start without wheel spin and I saw many cars in  front, especially Fernando and Webber doing some wheel spin and I was  able to do a very smooth start and pass them in a good way. I was very  happy for the start and also the whole race was very difficult. Lots of  slippery, low grip everywhere and to finish the race was very difficult  today.
Q: Jenson, the track was damp at the start but when it  dried out why was it so much easier today to overtake? Why was there so  much more overtaking than there was in the first grand prix in Bahrain?  Can you explain that?
JB: I think it comes down to  degradation. You had a lot of cars out of place which is different to  Bahrain. The top eight cars were in the top eight slots pretty much.  I  think a lot of it is the degradation of the tyres. There was a lot of  rear graining, some people did two stops, some people did one stop. Some  people were trying to look after tyres, other people were pushing hard.  There were lots of different ideas out there and it is great to see as,  as you said, Bahrain was not the most exciting grand prix. I love that  place and it was disappointing not to have a good grand prix, but here I  knew what was going on. I could see quite a bit on the TV screens  and it did look like a very exciting race. Hopefully we are going to  have more races like this and that is what we all love.
PRESS  CONFERENCE
Q: Jenson, second win here in Australia. You  must be getting to like the place.
JB: It is. It is. The  start of the race wasn’t perfect for me. I touched with Fernando at turn  one. I was half-way alongside him on the inside and I don’t know if he  just couldn’t see me because of the mirrors. I don’t know what, but we  touched. It obviously cost him a lot of time and it cost me a lot of  time. It wasn’t the best start to the race and then on the inters I was  really struggling. I just did not have a balance. A lot of oversteer in  the car. There were very strange grip levels out there on the tyre and I  was really, really struggling. I could see a dry line appearing in most  places and at the rate my rear tyres were going away I knew there must  have been enough grip for slicks. I made the call to pit early as I  thought if I don’t pit early I am just going to keep going backwards. I  thought it was a terrible call initially as the pit lane was so wet and  after my first lap out of the pits I thought it was a pretty  catastrophic mistake. But after that I could get into it. I found on the  dry parts I could push pretty hard and then really it was about picking  people off as they came out onto the circuit. It was a nice feeling as  they are searching for the grip and I know where it is and I am able to  overtake. It was a good feeling. I got up behind Sebastian and made a  little mistake, ran wide, so I couldn’t really have a go at him. He  obviously had his own problems. But from then on I just had to conserve  the tyres. I had a big issue on about lap 15 where the rears just  started going away from me and I had a lot of graining from the rear and  I thought that’s it for me, they’re just going to swallow me up. I  took a lot of front wing out, closed the diff and just hoped for the  best really. Towards the end of the race I could start pushing and got  the balance back and the car felt very good. I was in a very happy place  the last 20 laps knowing I had a good gap and it would have been very  difficult for anyone to catch me.
Q: What about the pace of  Sebastian? Do you think you could have got on terms with him?
JB: I was catching him initially and it was strange. He would start pulling  away and I would start pulling him in. Then the team said you have got  to look after these tyres. You are going to try and do the whole race on  these tyres, 45, 50 laps, and I thought we will back off a little bit  and see where we are. From previous experience, I don’t know if it is  the case now, but the Red Bulls have been quite tough on their rear  tyres. I just settled into a pace and we would see what would happen. I  don’t know. If he had stayed in the race there are always ifs and buts  and we don’t know how he would have ended up. The important thing is we  came away with a win for whatever reason and I am very happy. The team  should be very proud of themselves. We didn’t put a foot wrong.
Q:  Robert, surprised to be second?
RK: After yesterday, yes.  Before the season, I think after two tests, I called my friend and I  said I think in Australia it will be possible to finish on the podium.’  It was around two months ago. Of course we were planning to finish on  the podium with our pace. As we saw yesterday our pace was far off the  podium but with this strange race we were able to make a lot of places  and finish second.
Q: Do you think the higher temperature  today was better for you whereas the low temperature yesterday wasn’t so  good?
RK: We know where we are struggling and I think  yesterday was unfortunately a good example. We were very strong in P1  where there was a lot of sunshine and hot track conditions. Extremely  competitive. Then unfortunately clouds came in for all weekend and the  temperature dropped down and we were just struggling. We were not able  to stress the tyre and increase the temperature, especially every lap of  their usage. This was the case in qualifying. Okay, we are still not up  to the pace of the top cars but today was a good example of not giving  up and with a hard job, sometimes you get paid back.
Q: How  much of a challenge did you have from the Ferrari?
RK: I  had more challenge from Hamilton and I was very surprised he pitted.  First of all I thought it was a drive through as for me it was strange  that he was pitting. He was much quicker than me. He was not far behind  Jenson and at that point of the race if he had managed to overtake me,  most probably he would go for it. He had quite a difficult time to catch  me although there were a couple of places where he was very close to me  and I think once he overshoot the braking. We were very close to touch,  but then I had to take care of my tyres. Felipe came quite quickly  behind me but I knew the cars behind they would struggle even more with  the tyres, so I just settled to the consistent lap. As soon as I tried  to push I did like three or four-tenths quicker a lap but then the lap  again was four-tenths slower, so I just put up my pace which I thought  would be reasonable without mistakes and try to bring the car home.
Q:  Felipe, tell us a little bit about the first corner. What happened  there?
FM: The start?
Q: Yes.
FM: I  just did a great start, so I was able to spin the wheels much less than  the cars in front. I was changing gears very quickly just to not get it  to go into the wheel spin as the grip was very low. That gave me a lot  of possibilities to just go through. I saw Fernando and Mark spinning  the wheels and that was just great, especially to arrive at the first  corner. It was very slippery to brake at the right place and not try to  fight with everybody. It was a good point of the race.
Q: And  you had quite big challenges from both Mark and Lewis during the race.
FM: Yes, I made some mistakes. My tyres were suffering, trying to keep  the tyres in the right condition, at the right temperature, especially  at the beginning of the race. I was suffering from that yesterday as  well. But then after 20 laps, let’s say, they started to improve a lot.  Maybe I picked up the pace with a bit of degradation and I started to do  my race twenty laps after I changed my tyres. For sure, we had some  fights and I lost some positions in the race. But the team did a great  job with the strategy, not to stop, and I think that was a great job for  the top three.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q:  (Paolo Ianieri  La Gazzetta dello Sport) Jenson, would you have ever  thought that it would take you only two races to win your first race  with McLaren?
JB: No. I thought it would take longer than  this, but a lot of it depends on what sort of car you come out of the  box with. This race was obviously unusual. I don’t know where we would  stand in general pace but it’s not what all racing is about. It’s about  strategy, it’s about thinking and it’s about conserving and we did it  correctly today and we came away with a good victory. This is very  special. Whatever happens over the next few races, this means a lot to  me, to be in this position right now. After being with one team for  seven years and clinching the title and here, after two races, getting a  victory is very special to me. A lot of that goes to the team for their  efforts and making me feel welcome within the team, because that’s  something I do need, to be competitive, and I have that. So now we’ve  just got to look at improving the car because out and outright pace in  qualifying is something that we’re lacking a little bit, so it’s an area  we desperately need to work on. When you can get good points’ finishes  like this it really does mean a lot to you when you don’t have a car  that you think is quick enough to win races every weekend, so these are  important points for us and we’ve just got to work hard and hope that we  can bring some good packages to the next few races.
Q:  Jenson, there’s been a lot of talk over the last couple of days over  Bahrain; is this the race that might put the suggestions to rest for a  while?
JB: I don’t think there’s any getting away from  the fact that we probably all thought that the last race was not the  most exciting and what were we going to do about it now, but I’m glad  that we haven’t really jumped to too many conclusions or ideas, because I  think this race was a great race. I had a lot of fun; obviously when  you win the race you have more fun than any other position but  overtaking cars on the circuit and watching on the screen I could see  that there was a lot of action going on. I hope it’s not just because of  the weather conditions. I hope that we can have races like this because  this is what we love and hopefully these sorts of races are here to  stay. You are going to have races that aren’t the most exhilarating  experience for us but that’s the way it is. Not every football match is  fun to watch. It’s got to be a bit of a balance, I think. One thing that  was pretty tricky in this race was the light. I had a clear visor and  at the end of the race I was struggling to see on the last few laps. It  seemed a lot darker than last year. I suppose it was because there was  no sunlight, it was all behind clouds, so that might be something we  need to look at a little bit.
Q: (Flavio Vanetti  Corriere  della Sera) Felipe, did you have a real chance to catch Robert, and what  about the duels you had during the race with Fernando, except of course  the first one at the first turn?
FM: Well, I caught  Robert but we didn’t have very good top speed on the straight and when I  got very close, I lost a lot of grip, so it was not possible to get  close enough to try to pass. So the only time I was passed was because I  made a mistake in the second last corner, and then Lewis passed me and  then I also made a mistake in turn one and then Mark passed me, so that  was the only way I lost a position. So when you get very close, it was  quite difficult and also Fernando, when he was behind me, sometimes he  was just locking wheels. Then you see a guy coming closer and then you  just do two good laps and then he’s far away with no possibility to  pass, but it was a good fight from everybody, not just from me and  Fernando but from most of the cars on the track. Most of the cars on the  track were fighting the whole race, I think.
Q: (Joris  Fioriti  AFP) To all of you; Red Bull has the fastest car but they are  off the podium for the second race running. What do you think of that?
RK: Better for us.
JB: I think they have got a very quick car  and for whatever reason they aren’t here. I think reliability was the  issue for Sebastian at the first race and I don’t know what happened  here, so I can’t really say much on that.
Q: (Sudhir Chandran   Chequered Flag) Robert, you mentioned about those laps with Lewis  behind you. Was it as difficult to keep him behind you as it appeared to  us?
RK: It was quite difficult because we are quite  quick on the straight but McLaren, with the device that they are using,  they are extremely quick and it was very, very difficult. He was much  quicker than me, his tyres were in better shape and he had a more  competitive car. I knew that without a mistake it would be difficult for  him to overtake me, but I think he once tried before corner eleven and I  didn’t see him in the mirrors and I thought he was on the inside. I  left a space and it just shows that they were really quick. Jenson was  side-by-side with me in the middle of the straight going into turn 13.  That’s how it is. I was surprised when he pitted. It was very good for  me, because I could just concentrate on saving the tyres, driving my  pace and not concentrating on looking in the mirror and just blocking  him, so it was a much better, much easier race for me.
Q:  (Chris Lines  Associated Press) Jenson, could you tell us about the  decision-making within McLaren? You stayed out, Lewis was called in. How  much of that was the driver’s call and how much of it was the team’s  call? Also, your thoughts on the first corner: Fernando got caught  between you and Michael (Schumacher).
JB: It’s always a  very tricky corner here. It’s very, very narrow. When one person gets a  bad start it can be a bit of a nightmare. Fernando got a poor start, so  that meant that I was on the inside, Michael was on the outside and it’s  difficult for three cars to get through turn one as we saw. But when  you’re in a racing environment it’s very difficult and it can also be  very dangerous to back out of that situation, because if you hit the  brakes during the straight, you can cause a big accident behind you. I  think it was just one of those things and I’m sorry for Fernando that he  was turned around. It cost me a lot of places as well. So that was turn  one, really. It was very slippery as well, so it was tricky for us on  heavy fuel.
As for the stops, I don’t know if it was Lewis’s decision  or the team’s. For me, I didn’t think we would be pitting at all,  because that was never the idea for us, and that’s why I was looking  after the tyres. Maybe he was graining the rears or maybe he  flat-spotted a front or something, I don’t know. But it’s very tricky to  look after the tyres when you’re behind another car as we’ve seen many  times before, so maybe his tyres were getting seriously damaged behind  Robert.
Q: An open question: how difficult is it to pass, with  the cars’ aerodynamics the way they are, because we saw Hamilton and  Webber really struggling towards the end with obviously better tyres. Is  it extremely difficult this year or is it just the same as other years?
JB: I found it very difficult in Bahrain. You’ve got a  much smaller front tyre, so mechanically you have less grip, so when you  lose the downforce by following other cars, which inevitably happens,  you have less mechanical grip, so you have less grip. I think it’s more  difficult this year. If we have another race like this where we have  mixed conditions and the tyres are graining and people do two stops and  some people do one, I think we can have a great race and especially in  somewhere like Malaysia where it’s wide, it’s open, you can overtake, I  think we can have a really exciting race, but here you’re a little bit  limited to overtaking, so I’m surprised there was so much.
RK: I  don’t think it’s just the tyres. For me actually it’s easier to  overtake this year than it was in the past, because I’m driving a car  that has better top speed. There’s quite a lot of percentage if you have  good top speed or not and you want to overtake. If you are the quickest  car in a straight line it’s easier to overtake than if you are the  slowest. I don’t think it’s just the tyres, it’s everything. It’s always  been very difficult to overtake in F1.
Q: (Tom Cary  The  Daily Telegraph) Jenson, you appear very calm at the moment; how does  the first win for McLaren compare with you first win with Brawn 12  months ago?
JB: You can’t really compare victories like  that. They are both very special but they are very different and the  emotions that were going through my head before and after the race were  very different also than last year. This one is a special victory  because I’ve only been with this team for a short period of time but  this is one of the main reasons why I wanted to be here. I think that  the Vodafone McLaren Mercedes team is pretty much always fighting it out  for victories and as a driver you want to be in that situation. But on  the other hand, I think the conditions helped us in this race,  definitely. We’re not in the position to go to the next two or three  races and walk away with victories, so we’ve got to enjoy this moment  and think that we’ve got some good points when we’re not the quickest  and we’ve got to work on the areas where we think we’re weak. We’re  doing that right now and I think that every race we go to from here we  will be closer and closer to the front when it comes to qualifying and  hopefully race pace is pretty much there now.