After the disappointment of Monaco
Michael Schumacher and Ferrari hit back with a superb win in the
European GP at the Nurburgring. The German had a little help from
the opposition, but he put in some amazing early laps to effectively
secure the win within 15 minutes of the start.
What's more good strategy took Rubens Barrichello
to a second place that he might not have earned had he followed
what everyone else was doing. It was pretty much a perfect day for
Ferrari, one that put a smile back on the face of technical director
Ross Brawn.
"It was a great result," he said after
the race. "Both drivers did a fantastic job today, and Michael
was so aggressive. The first part of Michael's race was incredible
– the first eight laps were stunning. That was the key part
of the race. Umberto Agnelli was a huge supporter of the team. We
were very sad to have the news of his death last week, and I hope
this goes a little way to honouring his memory."
Michael stopped incredibly early, on lap 8. That
showed once again that Ferrari has to win pole at all costs. And
it's not just for the obvious reason of being in front at the everyone
else when the lights go out. In Monaco Trulli did the warm-up lap
at walking pace, and that didn't help the Bridgestone runners get
heat into the tyres. By starting at the front, Michael could dictate
the pace.
"Pole was pretty important today. We needed
to control the pace on the parade lap. The Michelin guys can really
slow our drivers up for the start, and that's why we wanted to be
on pole. Then the strategy worked out perfectly."
Even Ross admitted that Michael was helped a lot
by Kimi Raikkonen, who held up the rest in much the same way that
Mark Webber allowed Fernando Alonso to make his escape in Hungary
last year.
"Yes, sure. That did help. But I think even
without that, everything would have worked through OK. It was a
perfect race."
Rubens has often tried different strategies to Michael,
although they don't always work. On this occasion he went for two
stops, something that the Bridgestone runners could afford to try.
He sacrificed grid position but over the long haul it paid off,
although he was certainly helped by Raikkonen slowing potentially
quicker cars in the early laps.
"We face this problem of having two very aggressive
strategies for two drivers. Sometimes you end up with a compromise.
We never truly know which way the tyres are going to go in the race,
and the way the tyres went was perfect for him as well. And then
it was a matter of managing Rubens' pace against Sato. We came out
in front at the pit stop, and that was a little bit exciting."
Barrichello has had some disappointing races of
late, but on this occasion he clearly made the most of the strategy,
putting in the quick laps when he needed to.
"We were giving him all the gaps he had to
hold, and it worked out perfectly. It was a little bit closer than
he would have liked. We thought he would do it, but the danger was
that Sato was on fresh tyres, and he would attack Rubens, which
is exactly what he did."
Last year at the 'Ring Ross was not very impressed
by Juan Pablo Montoya's overtaking move on Michael, although the
rest of the world thought it was great. This time Sato pulled off
an even more dramatic pass on Rubens. Any frustration Brawn might
have felt initially soon evaporated when it became clear that Taku
had come off worst in the encounter.
"I think it was pretty ambitious, but he paid
the price for it, so it was fair enough in the end…"
Montreal is next. Schumacher and Ferrari have enjoyed
some great races there, but like Monaco, it's a quirky track which
can produce strange results. It might not be as straightforward
as the ‘Ring.
"There are a lot of safety cars in Canada,
and other things can run differently. The tyres were great today,
and tyres were absolutely crucial in Canada. We've got a very important
test this week, and we have a new aero package for Canada. So I'm
quite looking forward to the North American races and a change of
continent." |