|
||||||||||
|
||||||||||
13 May 2002, 01:54 (Ref:284448) | #1 | |||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 2001
Posts: 7,294
|
FIA Press Conference
Quote from F1-Live.com:
Quote:
Squirm, TGF, squirm! |
|||
__________________
Sunderland Til I Die! |
13 May 2002, 02:15 (Ref:284465) | #2 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Oct 2000
Posts: 1,434
|
They really gave the Ferrari boys a hard time. Montoya seemed to find it funny - he claims he would have done the same in a similar situation - I find that hard to believe but anyway...
the journalists gave them hell and rightfully so. F1-Live is also reporting that journalists were also actually booing Ferrari during the press conference itself. Last edited by Mania; 13 May 2002 at 02:16. |
||
|
13 May 2002, 02:21 (Ref:284470) | #3 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Oct 2000
Posts: 1,434
|
Speaking of which - Todt just opened his beak and gave an interview to pitpass. Here's what he had to say -
Austrian GP: Jean Todt Interview 12 May 2002 Q: Jean, why did you take this decision today? Jean Todt: There was great domination by Ferrari today and the race was between our two drivers and clearly we knew that Michael had 44 points in the championship before this race in the World Drivers' championship and Rubens six points. Michael therefore had a greater chance of winning the Drivers' championship and therefore four points was important and that's why we asked Rubens to let Michael passed. Q: Was it a difficult decision to take for you? JT: It's always a difficult decision to take, to change the finishing order, it's not something you do all the time. Having said that, we've finished too many races in the final race of the year to underestimate our competitors and to prevent taking the slightest. So, today, we are enjoying a favourable period. We have a car that is very competitive, a good engine, remarkable Bridgestone tyres. We cannot be certain, with 11 races to go to the end of the championship that the situation will remain like that, so we are trying to take the maximum at this stage. Q: We are only at six races, wasn't this decision a bit too prudent, given the sport? JT: It was a decision that was perhaps very prudent but history has taught us to be prudent and that things are never easy. Q: What about the sport? JT: The sport has seen Ferrari drive a very good race. We have seen clearly that the moral winner has been Rubens Barrichello, he was a very professional driver like the whole team and it's something that he understands. Q: What would have happened if either of the drivers had broken the contract and not done what they were told? JT: Michael is a very professional driver and as Rubens is a very professional driver. We told them something on the radio, it's quick decisions, quick reaction and they both respected it, what they were told. Q: So was it right you expected him to follow his decision anyway. JT: So they are professional, we are all professional, we try to be. Sometimes you take difficult decisions, but you feel you have to take them, and you accept the consequences. Q: When exactly did you tell him? JT: I think it was lap 63. Both of them. But he did not say no because he passed him, didn't he. Q: Has the reaction of the spectators and the reaction of the media surprised you? JT: Not really. I honestly I prefer this kind of reaction being first and second. At least you have something to write, otherwise you would have said the race was very boring.We just feel... sometimes we have very difficult decisions to take. But we are fighting for a Championship. It is a difficult fight. We lost the championship at the last race in 1997, 98 and 99 so we just want to try to avoid that. Maybe if that had not happened, we would not have reacted like that. But it has happened, we have some hard times and really I had even more people to face, and no result. At least. I know some people are not happy but we have the result and we feel it was the right thing for the team. Q: Don't you feel the image of Ferrari has been damaged? JT: Honestly, I think some people will be against and I've heard different reactions. Some people feel that they are in favour but at the end of the day, it is more damaging if you lose the Championship rather than if you decide who is going to win a specific race after such domination by Ferrari. We did not allow our drivers to fight, you know, because I must say it is hard for me to say, but we were much quicker on the track today, so there was no point to allow our drivers to fight each other, because we have given the game to the others. Q: But Rubens had a big advantage? JT: I mean because we ask them not to go over the limit . The car had a very good potential today. Q: But the situation was different to last year, surely? JT: That is true but we are only at the one third point of the Championship. We have 11 races to go. You know lots of things can happen, so we have seen… last year I think we were almost in the same situation, or was it two years ago? And we retired in three races in a row. Everybody remembers that we had five or six difficult races and we did not score points and we lost the lead. We took the lead in the race before the last. We try not put us in that situation. Q: But surely racing is about risk? JT: This is what we do but then we can calculate some risk and that's what we do. But I cannot ask everybody to accept our decision, but it is our decision and that is it. Q: Does this mean that Rubens must now follow Michael in every race until he wins the championship? JT: At the moment, the priority is to try to win the manufacturer's Championship and Driver's championship. We feel, rightly or wrongly, that Michael has more chance to win the Drivers' Championship. So we have to decide in favour of one, at the moment it's in favour of Michael. Q: At the launch in Maranello this year, Rubens said that if he was in the lead, he would not be asked to pull over for Michael? JT: OK. It did not happen in the first race, it happened in the sixth race where we had one driver with 44 points and the other one with six points so we feel today that Michael has, again, maybe rightly or wrongly, we feel that Michael has more opportunity to win the Championship. Q: There was a sense of trust for him, what happened? JT: Because the championship is not starting, we are at the sixth race of the Championship. We just renewed the contract with Rubens, with a clear situation and clear understanding, and I mean Rubens understands that. May be you don't understand it, I'm sorry for you, but I must say that in all fairness that I'd rather have Rubens understand than you! Q: What does this mean for Monaco? JT: You know first of all it should mean that we must come first and second in Monaco, and we are far off that. We are far off that. Remember that we have been dominating this championship if you take the six first races, but the first race we were dominating but second race the others were dominating. So there is a long way to go. Q: What do you feel about this reaction? JT: It will calm down Q: How do you feel this will affect Ferrari's image? JT: I think it will be very good for Ferrari's image to be first and second, and to be performing, but then again I may not change your opinion, but we have been deciding what we feel on what there was to be decided. Q: You made it quite obvious what you wanted, didn't you? JT: Because I think it is much better to show what we have decided. It would have been unfair to ask Rubens to simulate being overtaken which we could easily organized. It was enough to put 10 more kilos of fuel in Michael's car (he meant Rubens's, I think) and he would have passed him in the pitstop, which we did not do. Then it was Rubens symbolic that Rubens was the moral winner, he just focussed on Michael to win for the Championship. Q: Do you have any regrets? JT: Like I said, it was a difficult decision to take. We took the decision and I explained why we took the decision. I don't say that it is the right decision, it is the decision we took. Sometimes you make good decision, bad decision, it's the decision we took. Q: When did you start thinking about it? JT: We discussed about that after the last pitstop, considering the situation of our competitors. Q: Were you surprised by the reaction of the spectators? JT: I think they were happy to see Ferrari winning! OK, we had to make decision and we took the decision. I am sorry that a lot of people are unhappy, but some other people are happy. Some of our mechanics are happy as well. May be they will realise by the end of the seasons that the decision was right decision. I am sure again that the important thing is to have a competitive car,a competitive package and to be able to be successful, and Rubens will be able to win races. Q: Do you think will have damaged Michael's image? JT: I think rightly or wrongly you are reacting to one race. You should not judge Micheal on one race. In Monte Carlo, it will the 100th race that he drives for Ferrari and so we should judge him on his hundred races. Q: Most of Michael's wins have been worthy, what does he think of this one? JT: It's more than a win because he knows that morally speaking it is Rubens's. What is important is the points, so ten points go to Michael who is today in an even more advantageous position in the World Championship. Morally, Rubens is the winner as was the case when Mika Salo allowed Eddie Irvine to win in 1999, when Michael, after his accident at Silverstone, let Irvine past so it isn't something that has never happened before, it's something that has happened before and that was the case today. Q: What about Ferrari's image and your own popularity? JT: Well Ferrari's image is all about having trying to have a competitive team to win races, and I think that Ferrari's image today, even if it is slightly contested by the decision taken by the team, there is a great image of domination which seems to be important in a discipline as hard as Formula One. Q: And you when you read the papers in the coming days? JT: Well, I shall look at the papers but it isn't the most important thing. The most important is to have worked well for the company and to have made a decision which has benefited the company, even if it isn't the most popular. Q: The people in the stands didn't think much of that decision? JT: Listen, there's often some emotion in people's reaction so you have to give them time to calm down and think of our development programme. Next week we are going to be in Italy in order to make the car more competitive and to encourage our fans and the team for Monte Carlo. Last edited by Mania; 13 May 2002 at 02:22. |
||
|
13 May 2002, 02:39 (Ref:284494) | #4 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Feb 1999
Posts: 12,451
|
In other words: " the fans and the media too. And most of all sportsmanship."
|
||
__________________
"If we won all the time, we'd be as unpopular as Ferrari, and we want to avoid that. We enjoy being a team that everybody likes." Flavio Briatore |
13 May 2002, 02:42 (Ref:284497) | #5 | ||
Veteran
Join Date: Jul 1999
Posts: 2,156
|
Jean Todt is the biggest hypocrite to have entered the sport of formula one.. no wonder Michael loves him.
|
||
__________________
Stop the fr*** rule changes, Moseley! |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Press Conference Tidbits | Dov | ChampCar World Series | 6 | 24 Sep 2004 19:29 |
Who is the Press conference interviewer? | Williamp | Formula One | 9 | 26 Mar 2004 12:16 |
Toyota press conference | macdaddy | ChampCar World Series | 6 | 24 May 2002 19:53 |
the press conference | Kid Prozac | Formula One | 2 | 13 May 2002 14:12 |