2017 Formula One Italian Grand Prix

Paul Jeffrey

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Welcome to the central place to discuss the 2017 Italian Grand Prix at Monza!

Home of Ferrari and heart of the adoring Tifosi, Monza is one of those instantly recognisable race tracks that never fail to get the blood pumping just that little bit faster when hosting Formula One events.

Old school in design and offering multiple passing opportunities, the Italian Grand Prix at Monza should be an electric affair with Ferrari riding high off the back of a successful season to date.

Can Vettel stem the tide of Mercedes victories in front of his Ferrari home crowd? Will Räikkönen be able to pull something special out of the bag in the other red car, or will Mercedes and their considerable power advantage walk away with another 25 points? I guess we will find out on Sunday afternoon...

Session report links:

Happy viewing everyone!
 
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THURSDAY PRESS CONFERENCE PART 1: DRIVERS – Esteban OCON (Force India), Sergio PÉREZ (Force India), Sebastian VETTEL (Ferrari).

PRESS CONFERENCE

Q: Sebastian, let’s start with you. There seems to have been a real bounce. If you can fight with Mercedes, especially at Spa, then you can fight them anywhere. Has the success of the updates you brought to Hungary and Spa given you clear belief as far as the Championship is concerned?

Sebastian VETTEL: No. It wasn’t necessary. I think there was always belief. If you’re going to come into the race and you don’t have the feeling, or belief that you can achieve something for one race or many races in succession then there’s not much point. But, to really answer your question, I guess, the form we showed in Spa was real and the speed was there in particular in the race which weeks ago, on a similar type of track, maybe wasn’t the case. So that’s very positive. Obviously, we had a smoother weekend all around but still, I think we’ve made improvements on all fronts. So, I was very, very happy with the performance last week.

Q: It’s been a while since a Ferrari driver came to Monza leading the Drivers’ World Championship. With the new commitment that you’ve just made to Ferrari for three more years, do you feel now the full force of tifosi support and is it worth a tenth or two, do you think?

SV: Well it’s worth something! Obviously, we get out tomorrow and then we see for the first time how many people show up but I guess it ramps up also during the weekend. This morning was fairly quiet but considering – I walked the track – but considering it’s only Thursday there were still a lot of people with flags around the track – definitely more than in other places. So, yeah, difficult to quantify but I guess there’s something there. Obviously, it’s a Grand Prix that the whole team enjoys and it’s very special to be part of. So, need to make sure we enjoy it.

Q: Sergio, coming to you, your battle with Esteban has been one of the stories, one of the talking points of the season. Things started to get a little tricky in Canada, then obviously in Baku there was a collision, a little bit of contact in Budapest and then obviously, we had Spa last weekend. Why have things escalated and what’s your side the story?

Sergio PÉREZ: We’ve been racing very closely lately. As you say, we’ve had a couple of incidents in the last races. I think, I had a really good conversation with him, personally, between him and me, and I think it’s time to move forwards. Everyone had his opinion of what happened. The engineers have one opinion, the fans, us… have different opinions on what has been happening. The most important thing is that, from now, we move forwards. The main objective as a team is to finish fourth in the Constructors’ and we cannot afford to lose any more points. I think we’ve lost quite a lot of points in those races you’ve just mentioned, so we will move forwards and I’m very sure that these things will not happen again.

Q: Esteban, what’s your side of the story. Why did things escalate, and escalate particularly during the race in Belgium?

Esteban OCON: We’ve been racing really closely, as Sergio was saying, we're always fighting for the last tenths in qualifying, or in the race so, for sure, it’s really close between us. But yeah, what has happened before has happened. Now we can’t change what happened before. We have to move forwards. As Sergio was saying, we had a talk this morning together, just us two. Yeah, it is time we forget all that, that we work hard for the team. It’s important – that’s what they deserve as well – that we behave as professionals and yeah, we want to keep challenging the others, keep pushing them and we have to keep that fourth place until the end.

Q: So, you look forward. Sergio, the team has indicated they won’t let this happen again, that instructions will be given. As the more senior driver, how would you like that to be managed?

SP: I think we are both mature enough. Esteban has been racing for a long time as well and I think we both know how to handle things. Yeah, although there will be some instructions coming out for us, I think we will put everything in place to make sure the interests of the team come first before us.

Q: And Esteban, is it important for your development that you’ll be allowed to push to the maximum at every event – and how will team instructions affect that?

EO: No, I mean, it doesn’t matter if I’m a rookie or if I have experience or not. At the end, what matters at the end is the result for us, the result for the team and yeah, if there is a team instruction, I will follow it. There is no other points.

Q: Sebastian, quick one for you, at your previous team, you experienced a similarly tense battle with your team-mate. Does there come a point in a relationship where a line is crossed that you can’t go back from – and how do you avoid that?

SV: No, I don’t think… I think you can always talk to each other. On track, let’s be fair, you have occasions where things may not turn out the way both want to. I don’t think any driver ever has really bad intentions over his team mate or any other guy but for sure the duel with your team-mate is a bit more intense. You’re driving the same car, you are therefore naturally fighting for the same position around the track. So, yeah, you want to stay ahead. I think inside the car you want to be the one that is in front. At the time maybe you don’t care much about what else is going on, as they both mentioned. Obviously, the team behind, they don’t really care which driver because they see their cars. It’s a tough line in terms of, y’know, you have to be, in a way, egoistic inside a car. Equally, you want to do the best for the team. But there’s never a line, I think, you cross you can never can come back from. They obviously took the opportunity to talk to each other and y’know, if I look now with Mark, obviously, I guess that’s the one you’re talking about, I have a very good relationship with him and we talked also about stuff that happened years ago with a lot of distance and y’know, now we can laugh about it. We both have our views, I think we both have different views, maybe now on some things that we had back but that’s normal as you go forwards. That’s why I think you can also cross a line again.

Q: Quick question to all three of you: it is Ferrari’s 70th anniversary, as Sebastian’s hat tells us. A quick specific Ferrari memory, either from your childhood or your racing career, any special Ferrari Formula One memory.

SP: I think the one that’s comes to my mind was the first test that I did for Ferrari when I was a member of the Ferrari academy. Was a very special day and that will stick with me forever. Ferrari is the team that we all admire, that we all want to do well as a Formula One fan. So that moment was very special.

EO: Yeah, also, I tested for Ferrari back in 2014, at the end of the year. It was just magical. Testing in Fiorano on that beautiful track, driving a Ferrari, working with Italian engineers, Italian mechanics. I also speak Italian, I’ve lived in Italy, I’ve raced a lot in go-kart in Italy and you know what Ferrari is for motorsport. It’s something massive. I’m also a big fan of Michael and I was watching on TV when I was really young and I will also remember looking at the Ferrari ahead.

And finally Sebastian, you’ve obviously got a pretty decent scrapbook of your own memories of Ferrari – any before that in particular?

SV: Yeah, as another big admirer of Michael, most of my memories as a child of watching Formula One are linked to Michael and in that case linked to Ferrari. So, big admiration for him but for the car he was racing, for the team and obviously the dream came true when I was able to join the team – but yeah, lots of memories. Childhood, I remember I was always racing with toy cars and the red car always won. Don’t know why! It’s sort of what I was taught by the world around me, I guess, is that that car should be in the front, or has to be in front. Yeah, and obviously since then when I had the opportunity through Michael to be in the Ferrari garage for the time, I think Nurburgring 2003 for a short time. Just magical to see the guys moving around, everybody dressed in red. These kind of things really matter to you as a child and make a difference. Now, obviously, I’m there whenever I want to be, which is quite nice. So, lots of very, very special memories.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Question to both Force India drivers. Can we know when you talked to each other and what was the talking about? What have you said?

SP: It was this morning and it was mainly… I went to Esteban’s room and I had a talk with him. We basically said like… I mean… the engineers have their view, it’s pointless going again through each of the incidents because everyone has their point to say, so let’s just move on together. Let’s forget the past and go forwards together. I believe that a new relationship can start from now on and I really hope that from now on we can be working as a team and we can put the interests of the team first, and we both came to that agreement and it was quite simple.

Esteban?

EO: He said everything.

Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) To both Force India drivers. Obviously given the fact you’re so closely matched in the same cars it’s inevitable you’re going to be together, whether it’s this year or next year. Is it not possibly time that one of you considered going elsewhere. You’re both in the frame for a Renault drive – who’s going to sign first?

SP: I think that’s not the way I look at things. I want to do the best for the current team that I am with and I want to do the best results. I think we both know that we have done wrong in the past for this team so my main target, I’m not thinking to run away. I believe that working with Esteban is still possible. It can still be a successful partnership and I’m not thinking to move elsewhere.

EO: I think I’m not thinking of that at the moment. There is a big challenge ahead. We have a car and a great team behind us, which we can score points at every race doing a great job, so at the moment I’m focussing to the drive with Force India and not to next year – but I fully trust my management side and I’m sure I will have an opportunity to drive F1 next year.

Q: (David Croft – Sky Sports) Sorry guys, another question for Esteban and Sergio, who mentioned the points that Force India have lost this year. Esteban you say you need to behave as professionals. Do you both feel that you haven’t behaved as professionals on the track at times this year. Is that a fair comment to make?

EO: I think we both crossed the line, that’s for sure. We touched so of course something was wrong in there. I’m not going to argue because it’s all behind now and we want to move forwards but for sure we crossed the line and we can’t do that in the future for the purpose of the team and even for us.

SP: Same.

Q: (Marco Privitera – LiveGP.it) A question for Seb. We have seen a big fight in Spa with Lewis in the final part of the race. If you would be here in Monza in the same situation, would you attack him in a stronger way in order to make a special gift to Ferrari’s tifosi, or would you rather think about your championship hopes?

SV: I think you are racing to win the race. I think that has priority. Obviously you need to be aware of what you are doing but it wasn't like I was saving myself. I tried everything I had at the time. I stick with him the whole race, so I was battling, I think the whole race with him. Maybe not wheel-to-wheel but it was really close and intense from a driving point of view. So I enjoyed that a lot but obviously he had the upper hand in the end. So there can be only one of the top step of the podium. I think there are some things that I learned from Spa, that we learned as a team but I learned as a driver. Things that I would do a bit different. But at the time it felt like the right thing to do, with hindsight it was a bit more clever. Here I think it’s a different track. Generally it’s possible to overtake. We’ll see where we are in the race. I think going into this weekend we need to be fair and say that the track layout suits Mercedes but the performance that we showed last week gives us hope. So, we tried to do the best. Obviously, yeah, there should be quite a good atmosphere and a lot of support so for sure we try to give all the love and passion that we’ve received so far this year, we try to also give something back from our side.

Q: (Peter Hardy – BMF1) Sorry Sebastian, this is for the two guys. From a psychological point of view, how is it to be called into an interview like this where you know that you will be asked a lot of questions about the incidents that have happened?

EO: It’s part of the job, you know. You know that when you are a Formula One driver that you will be facing a lot of media, it’s not only the driving side, it’s also looking at this that you have to handle yourself and face what the journalists are going to say. At the end, it’s, as I said, part of the job.

Sergio?

SP: Yeah, I think Esteban is doing well.

Q: (Silvia Arias - Parabrisas) Seb, if you had the possibility to choose, what would be important to you: to win one championship with Ferrari or two with another team?

SV: Well, I’m not with another team, so I think I prioritise to win here. Obviously I have been very, very fortunate in the past to have the success I have had. It’s like a drug, you want to do it again, you want to get that feeling again, you want to stand on top of the podium and yeah, I think if you manage to achieve your target at the end of the year – talking about the championship – then it makes it very, very special. It’s something that has been a while and I want to do it again. For sure, it always feels a bit different if you are with a different team. How it feels with Ferrari, I don’t know, that’s what I’m trying to find out.

Q: (Ralf Bach - Sportbild) A question to Seb. Coming back to Spa, it was the first situation after Baku where you were behind him with the safety car. Do you think he learned from Baku and his behaviour was better? What do you think about what he did?

SV: What, specifically? The re-start?

Q: (Ralf Bach - Sportbild) Braking, not braking?

SV: I don’t know how it felt… I was the first one following, I don’t know how it felt further down

EO: Quite scary.

SV: I tried to react. There have been a couple of re-starts, everybody has his style and you need to obviously try and do your best. I wasn’t thinking about Baku too much to be honest. I was thinking of trying… basically the same things as in Baku, trying to stay as close as possible and have a good re-start. I had a chance and I wanted to make sure I stay with him and use it. All went well, so nothing to think about, but I can understand if further back it was feeling a bit stop and go.

Q: (Adrian Rodriguez Huber – Agencia EFE) A question for Checo. I want to know your memories about 2012. I don’t know if that was the greatest moment, or at least one of the greatest, for you in Formula One?

SP: Yeah, it was a very special day that race, beating both Ferraris in Monza and making it to the podium; getting so close to the win actually. It was definitely one of my best races; had incredible pace. So yeah, definitely great memories of that day.

Q: (Lennart Bloemhof – De Volksrant) A question for Sebastian. In Spa you said Ferrari has something that other teams don’t have. Can you tell me what that is and do you think F1 is more important for Ferrari or is it the other way round?

SV: How can I describe? I guess, don’t get me wrong, maybe you have, but I guess you don’t have a Ferrari? No. Have you ever sat in a Ferrari? No. Then I strongly recommend that you do. Just to sit in a Ferrari… there are a lot of great sports cars around the planet, I don’t know all of them, at least that’s the way I feel and that for me is something unique and it’s similar and it probably describes or answers your questions, or tries to at least. It’s the feeling when you step into a Ferrari, when you sit in a Ferrari, I don’t know, you can step into another car but you don’t get the same feeling. When the engine then starts and you have the chance to drive yourself then I think everybody who likes cars and has a passion for racing falls in love with the cars straight away. Maybe you should ask whoever you are writing for to give you the opportunity to sign off a day in a Ferrari. That would be the best way to answer the question.

Q: (Ibraim Ignacio Artimuno - Momento GP) A question for Sebastian. How does it feel to return to a circuit where you won for the first time?

SV: Yeah, it’s a special place. It’s many years ago, a long time ago, but still a very strong emotion. There are people inside the team now that I have been working with back then. Obviously we had a Ferrari engine in the car with Toro Rosso in those days. The whole weekend was magical. Saturday to have the pole, and to win the race on Sunday the way we did. Pretty amazing memories and when I walked the track this morning there are some pictures coming back. In fact, I’m working with the same race engineer now as I did back then, with Ricardo. It’s a memory we shared together and yeah, it makes this place definitely one of the most special places for me.

Q: (Alex Combralier – Nextgen-Auto) A question for Sebastian. At Mercedes we could see team orders between Hamilton and Bottas this week. Do you think that team orders are now necessary in your team and do you think that Räikkönen would agree with that?

SV: No, and I think the second part of your questions is also no. I am a bit surprised by the way things are put. I think Kimi and myself, I can’t speak for other people, but Kimi and myself I think we have been racing each other all year. I read or I heard after the Hungarian Grand Prix that he was protecting me. I think if you speak to him he can make it pretty clear. He was, how can I say, I don’t think he was leaving anything behind. I think if he had the opportunity properly to pass me he would have tried and that’s fair enough. I think it would have been the same the other way round. I think we are racing for the team, we’re both trying to our best, if it happens that you race for the same spot then you might meet yourself on track, as these guys have proven. You’re both fighting for yourself but you’re also fighting for the team, so it’s something you need to keep in the back of your mind. I don’t know what other teams are doing, but for us, I think we both go flat out and see what happens. Normally you can always talk about a lot of things, scenarios and so on, but it always turns out to be a bit different from that.

Q: (Benjamin Vinel – Motorsport.com) A question for Esteban and Sergio. Do you think with the standings currently, with Force India extremely likely to finish fourth, quite far away from Red Bull but quite far ahead of other teams, that the team could afford to let you race until the end of the year?

SP: Well, what we cannot afford, us, is to lose more points. Things change really quickly in Formula One. We see other teams are closing up in terms of pace. We definitely need to score in strong races, such as Spa and Monza, they are probably the two strongest races for us, so we definitely have to make sure that we score as many points as we possibly can. That’s just for the good of the team you know. Everyone works so hard at the track, at the factory, we really need to take the maximum out of both cars every single weekend. It’s not only about finishing fourth; it’s about how we do it and that’s why we definitely have to make sure we do it properly.

EO: Yeah, I agree with Sergio. We have to get the bosses’ trust back and maybe after some races they will let us race again.

Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto Motor) Sebastian, your car has been pretty reliable this year in general, apart from that hiccup in Hungary with the steering. Have the team discovered what the problem was, was it a mechanical problem, or just an impact? Did you have to take any countermeasures to make sure it doesn’t happen again?

SV: In Hungary? Yeah, we found the issue; it was an issue with the track rod. It was mechanical, we fixed it and it was fine ever after the race. Yeah, I think in terms of reliability, it’s true, things have been going really well. You’re trying to push the limits as hard as possible, but certainly we are not yet where we want to be. We can always improve. There is a lot of work and effort going on but certainly in Hungary it was a bit uncertain, also in the car, how the race would finish, if I would finish at all. I saved the car as much as I could, which turned out to be the right thing before it could have led to a DNF.

Q: (Dieter Rencken – Racing Lines) Sebastian, the way that Mercedes have played the oil burn regulation: do you believe they have stolen a march over Ferrari, that maybe Ferrari missed a trick after Spa?

SV: No, not really. I don’t know whether that was always the plan for them, or whether they reacted to that and pulled it forward. I think for us we are pretty much on target. Obviously we know the change that is happening from here, on what is it? We don’t have a new engine for this weekend. I think it would be quite silly to miss for that, if that was your purposes, just for one week, so I think we are on plan, but as I said, I don’t know whether that was their sole intention or whether they had other issues.

Q: (Louis Dekker - NOS) A question for Sebastian: the new cars they will be quicker than last year and it is a power circuit but the difference will be in the corners I think. Can you give a description of what it will be like?

SV: Well, here I guess it will be fairly small, the difference, because on paper it’s probably the track that suits the old cars best, meaning that with long straights and more drag this year and because of more downforce naturally the cars will be a bit slower down the straights. They will still be quick because the engines are a bit better and so on, but yeah, I don’t know, the lap time will I guess be similar. I don’t expect it to be faster, like we went in Spa, not by that amount. But I don’t know, generally it’s lower downforce here, so the car is very light, but there are some epic corners on this track – the two Lesmos, especially the first one, it’s one of my favourites, Ascari, Parabolica, so with more grip normally they feel nicer, so they should be quite enjoyable this year.

Q: (Frederic Ferret – L’Equipe) Can you explain to us the difficulty of towing during qualifying and are you planning to use that on Saturday?

SP: Yeah, it’s a great challenge to get it right. You have to kind of wait around five to six seconds, but it depends a lot what the car in front does. With Kimi, last time, I was close to him, it worked well but he aborted the lap in sector two so I got too close to him and then you lose a lot of downforce. If you can do it without it, it’s just better.

SV: It’s always very difficult to time and you need to be lucky to get the most out of it. It’s one of those things… you can’t plan what other people are doing. You can’t plan ahead and you can only look after yourself. For sure you can position yourself so that it should be helping you or not helping but whether it works out or not is very difficult to time, unless you do something that you agree on before with your teammate or others. Let’s put it this way: the likelihood of getting it wrong is far higher than getting it right.

EO: Yeah, you always want a tow, basically, in a straight line but then the guy to move over before the corner so it’s pretty difficult to get. You are maybe lucky once in every three or four years to get that but as Seb just said, if you can get it without, it’s always the best solution.
 
THURSDAY PRESS CONFERENCE PART 2: DRIVERS – Romain GROSJEAN (Haas), Nico HULKENBERG (Renault), Carlos SAINZ (Scuderia Toro Rosso)

Q: Romain, strong run in Spa, seventh place finish means that Haas have actually now gone past their 2016 points total with another eight races to go, so does that feel like progress or is it just a case of having two drivers that are scoring points?

Romain GROSJEAN: I think it’s progress. Last year we scored most of our points in the first two races and then we struggled a little bit to get them but this year we’ve been a bit more consistent. We still need to improve that aspect, clearly, because there are a few races where we were fighting at the front like Austria or Belgium but some other races like Budapest where we were really struggling. It’s all part of the learning curve, we have only a year and a half experience but I think we are much stronger in year two than we were in year one.

Q: Can you clear up for us what’s being going on with the brakes in particular because it seems to have been a bit of a running narrative with your car; either it flies like in Spa or you’re on the radio saying these brakes are doing my head in. Can you explain what the problem is, why it’s taking a while to get on top of it?

RG: I think the problem is the media. I haven’t complained – yeah, in Spa we had one set where one brake – the front left – we had an issue with that brake and we only had two sets and one wasn’t working so we tried to make it work, couldn’t better. Since… actually after Baku or Canada we’ve had the parts that we want to run and we’ve been swapping with CI and Brembo, depending on the track layout and it’s been fine.

Q: So what was it, what was the issue?

RG: Inconsistency, some of it was the running temperature that was… it was the way we were operating the brakes, some of the materials of the brake being inconsistent but in between those two factors we’ve struggled a little bit to find the right balance. It’s better, I would say we’ve reached 100 percent but to be fair, we haven’t complained much about it recently.

Q: Nico, you’ve had more top six finishes than Renault managed in the previous three years combined and you’ve started seventh or better on the grid four times this year and that made Cyril Abiteboul – in our press conference in Belgium – say that he believes now you clearly have the fourth fastest car in Formula One. What will it take to make the next step?

Nico HULKENBERG: It will take more hard work and more of the same of what we’re doing. Obviously we had three races in a row where we were the fourth fastest team so that’s pretty good. The team is working extremely hard. Every weekend we have new bits arriving but it’s all in the detail so you can just feel the package coming together, better and better. That allows me to push harder, build my confidence. Just a nice feeling overall. But yeah, obviously the gap to the top three teams is very large. Also I saw Kimi, how he came flying past me in Spa after his penalty; it’s quite amazing to see the pace they have so it will take a lot of hard work from us and all the other teams to try and close that gap.

Q: The seat alongside you next season is now pretty much the most attractive one on the driver market. What’s the right experience profile for your teammate if your team is to move forward, as you’ve just talked about?

NH: You’re asking me that? Why?

Q: I’m just interested!

NH: I think it’s not my decision at all so probably a decision for Cyril and the management. I think they just want a good competitive driver package. I’d be happy to race with anyone, alongside anyone. For me, I’m obviously focused on myself and make sure everything is moving in the right direction there with me.

Q: And Carlos, coming to you, your 23rd birthday tomorrow, I believe, so happy birthday in advance.

Carlos SAINZ: Thank you very much.

Q: You’ve scored points in every race you’ve finished this season and you reached 100 career points with Toro Rosso which makes you, in points terms, Toro Rosso’s most successful driver ever. So does it feel like a positive year and do you feel that you’re moving forward in your career?

CS: Yeah, many nice statistics coming together there. Thanks for the info, I didn’t really know but yeah, I think we’ve had quite a successful year for us. We’ve been pushing hard all year to get into the points and the result of that is whenever we finish, we finish in the points, so hopefully we can keep that statistic going. I think the team can be extremely proud of that and we will push hard to continue like that.

Q: And intriguingly, you’re one of four teams, including the two alongside, four teams in midfield from fifth place to eighth place which I believe are separated by just I think it’s 11 points, something like that, so does every race feel like a tense battle for points, and does Toro Rosso have enough in the pipeline to finish on the right side of this battle?

CS: It is a very interesting situation, a very tight battle that we’ve been doing… going on the whole year, really, in which every single detail makes a difference. At the moment, I think it’s even more interesting because we have Williams at the front which are maybe struggling a bit but then Renault and McLaren coming from behind, pushing very hard with development, so I expect the second half of the season will be really, really exciting. We will do our best to keep ourselves in P5, P6, in that area there but I know it’s going to be tough.

Q: Before we throw it open to the floor, just asking everyone about Ferrari’s seventieth anniversary being celebrated this weekend, just one particularly Ferrari Formula One memory… can be from your childhood or from your racing experience in Formula One. Just pick one in particular. Romain?

RG: Ferrari is… when you’re a kid, one of my first cars must have been red and that’s the Ferrari spirit. Memories in Formula One, I guess every time they went to Monza I could see all the tifosi going crazy and it’s very, very special and I guess being a Ferrari driver is one of the best things in the world.

NH: Memories obviously going back to when I was still a teenager and I was a kid, looking at Michael when he was scoring many many world titles with Ferrari. These were the years when I was dreaming about Formula One and obviously working towards it and a lot of history written there and a very special brand.

CS: Yes, probably the same as Nico, watching Michael either win or lose titles when I was starting to follow Formula One, was probably my best and biggest memory at the moment but the thing that really impressed me a lot is when I arrived to Monza in 2015 for my first Formula One race and I saw all the tifosi queueing in the paddock and trying to get an autograph of all the drivers. It’s probably the most special feeling you can have, to see them all queueing, doing half an hour of queues every day just to get a sign and it’s incredible.

QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

Q: (Manuel Franco – Diaros As) Carlos, has there been any change about your future because there are rumours of Honda, Toro Rosso, Renault and a question to Nico, do you like Carlos as teammate for next year?

CS: I’ll go first. Well, one thing I’ve learned this year is to comment in (indistinct) is not the best thing to do in press conferences.

RG: What are you talking about?

CS: Apart from that, I think I was very clear after Austria what I want and I want of my future. I have full trust in Red Bull that they’re going to do the right thing for me. It’s all in their hands. I have full trust in them, they’ve always done the right thing for me in my career and I hope it goes like that.

Q: Nico, you shook your head when he asked the question.

NH: Yeah, to go back to your question, 23 is too young, sorry!

Q: (Alex Combralier – Nextgen-Auto) Romain, we know that in Monza it is one of the toughest braking points of the season and particularly at the first turn so do you now have full confidence in your brakes, in Carbon or Brembo?

RG: I think we are on top of things.

Q: (Peter Farkas – Auto Motor) Nico, it’s been mentioned that the Renault car is now very quick, also in race trim, not only in qualifying. Could you please describe how different the car behaviour feels from the cockpit since the latest big aerodynamic update with the new floor, where it feels quicker especially in quick corners, slow corners, braking things like that?

NH: Well, everywhere pretty much. The updates that we’ve introduced at Silverstone just made the car a lot more competitive so especially the aerodynamics, I think they work a lot better, allows me to brake later, to carry more speed into the corners, to get on the power earlier so overall it’s just a much better (indistinct) scenario, more grip, allows you to go faster, quite simple.

Q: (Louis Dekker – NOS) Carlos and Nico, there’s been a lot of talk in the Dutch press about Max, his problems with the Renault engine and the reliability. Can you tell us what your experience has been in the twelve races?
CS:
I think the works driver can answer that better.

NH: Well, what did I have, I think I had the gearbox problem in Monaco. Apart from that, obviously another gearbox penalty in Budapest but engine-wise I think I’ve been pretty OK.

Q: (Silvia Arias – Parabrisas) For all three drivers: which are the new parts or modifications do you have for this race and especially on your cars?

RG: We’ve got a rear wing for here. There’s a front wing flap going with it, that’s mainly what we’ve got here.

NH: Yeah, it’s just the low downforce configuration really for Monza, a few small things to try, to test tomorrow on the floor, that’s it.

CS: Same really: low downforce configuration for the weekend and we will try some bits and bobs for hopefully upcoming races but nothing that we will run.

Q: (Ysef Harding – Xiro Xone News) Romain, with all this good food here in Italy and you love to cook, what is your favourite Italian dish?

RG: That’s a good question, how long have you got in front of you? Italian kitchen cooking is amazing. Between the north and the south it is so different that I cannot really pick up one. From the simple pizza that you can find on the motorway to the three Michelin star chefs that I know in Italy, it’s all amazing.
 
QUICK NEWS
  • Pirelli will bring the Medium, Supersoft and Soft tyre compound.
  • Ricciardo, Verstappen, Carlos Sainz, Fernando Alonso all set to receive grid penalties.
  • Renault rule themselves out of contention for securing Alonso signature ahead of 2018.
 
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CHAMPIONSHIP STANDINGS (after 12 of 20 races)
  1. Sebastian Vettel - GER - Ferrari - 220
  2. Lewis Hamilton - GBR - Mercedes - 213
  3. Valtteri Bottas - FIN - Mercedes - 179
  4. Daniel Ricciardo - AUS - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 132
  5. Kimi Räikkönen - FIN - Ferrari - 128
  6. Max Verstappen - NED - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 67
  7. Sergio Perez - MEX - Force India Mercedes - 56
  8. Esteban Ocon - FRA - Force India Mercedes - 47
  9. Carlos Sainz - ESP - Toro Rosso - 36
  10. Nico Hulkenberg - GER - Renault - 34
  11. Felipe Massa - BRA - Williams Mercedes - 27
  12. Romain Grosjean - FRA - Haas Ferrari - 24
  13. Lance Stroll - CAN - Williams Mercedes - 18
  14. Kevin Magnussen - DEN - Haas Ferrari - 11
  15. Fernando Alonso - ESP - McLaren Honda - 10
  16. Pascal Wehrlein - GER - Sauber Ferrari - 5
  17. Daniil Kvyat - RUS - Toro Rosso - 4
  18. Stoffel Vandoorne - BEL - McLaren Honda - 1
  19. Jolyon Palmer - GBR - Renault - 0
  20. Marcus Ericsson - SWE - Sauber Ferrari - 0
  21. Antonio Giovinazzi - ITA - Sauber Ferrari - 0
 
FREE PRACTICE ONE REPORT

Mercedes Dominate in Monza Opening Session.

Italian Grand Prix FP1.jpg

Lewis Hamilton and Valterri Bottas dominated opening practice for the Italian Grand Prix this morning, topping the first session and laying down an early marker to rivals Ferrari.

Ferrari would wind up in third position after the open running of the weekend, with Sebastian Vettel unable to hold a candle to the silver cars in front of his passionate home crowd, ending up a depressing 1.115 seconds adrift of Hamilton at the head of the field.

On a positive note for Ferrari fans it does appear as if the Scuderia are well placed as best of the rest, with team mate Kimi Raikkonen ending up just under half a tenth away from his team leader in fourth, edging out a surprisingly quick Red Bull team of Daniel Ricciardo and Max Verstappen in fifth and sixth, a further half a tenth away from Raikkonen.

Rain continues to threaten the opening day in Italy with several menacing dark clouds appearing above the circuit throughout the morning. With something of a mixed forecast for the remainder of the weekend, it may not yet be quite the easy ride to victory for Mercedes that many predicted ahead of the weekend.

Provisional FP1 Results:
  1. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes 1:21.537 28
  2. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes 1:21.972 +0.435s 31
  3. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari 1:22.652 +1.115s 24
  4. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari 1:22.689 +1.152s 28
  5. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:22.742 +1.205s 28
  6. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:22.749 +1.212s 23
  7. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1:23.317 +1.780s 36
  8. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 1:23.400 +1.863s 34
  9. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Honda 1:23.465 +1.928s 24
  10. Felipe Massa - Williams Mercedes 1:23.561 +2.024s 37
  11. Carlos Sainz - Toro Rosso 1:23.680 +2.143s 22
  12. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1:23.973 +2.436s 22
  13. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1:23.991 +2.454s 30
  14. Daniil Kvyat - Toro Rosso 1:24.012 +2.475s 27
  15. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Honda 1:24.015 +2.478s 17
  16. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1:24.079 +2.542s 22
  17. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault 1:24.542 +3.005s 17
  18. Jolyon Palmer - Renault 1:25.166 +3.629s 21
  19. Pascal Wehrlein - Sauber Ferrari 1:25.223 +3.686s 26
  20. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1:25.687 +4.150s 17
 
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FREE PRACTICE TWO REPORT

Mercedes Again as Field Tightens Ahead of Qualifying


Italian Grand Prix FP2.jpg

Mercedes once again topped practice in Monza on Friday, however it was the Finnish star Valtteri Bottas who went quickest with just 4 tenths of a second covering the top two teams.

Ferrari have shown much improved form over the second session of the weekend in Monza, with Vettel substantially decreasing the gap to rivals Mercedes around the iconic 5.793km circuit, ending running just under a tenth and a half away from the pace and putting much needed space between himself and the ever persistent Red Bull team, who once again finished up behind Mercedes and Ferrari but remained over a second away from the front running cars.

Overall laptime wouldn't be the ultimate concern for Red Bull on Friday as both drivers are expecting grid penalties on Saturday, leaving the potential for something of a different looking grid for Sundays race. Force India and incredibly McLaren would look competitive throughout the opening exchanges, trading places for strong top ten results and looking hopeful to make up ground once the various (and ridiculous) grid penalty positions have been handed out by the stewards.

The session was fairly straightforward for most teams as the weather continued to hold off over in Italy, with the vast majority of teams completing their program of works over the course of the two sessions.

Official F1 action continues tomorrow for FP3 and Qualifying.

Provisional FP2 Results
  1. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes - 1:21.406 25
  2. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes - 1:21.462 +0.056s 24
  3. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari - 1:21.546 +0.140s 33
  4. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari - 1:21.804 +0.398s 34
  5. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 1:22.409 +1.003s 34
  6. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 1:22.752 +1.346s 22
  7. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Honda - 1:22.947 +1.541s 31
  8. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Honda - 1:22.968 +1.562s 31
  9. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes - 1:22.977 +1.571s 43
  10. Felipe Massa - Williams Mercedes - 1:22.985 +1.579s 42
  11. Carlos Sainz - Toro Rosso - 1:23.150 +1.744s 21
  12. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault - 1:23.272 +1.866s 14
  13. Jolyon Palmer - Renault - 1:23.317 +1.911s 34
  14. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes - 1:23.352 +1.946s 43
  15. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes - 1:23.403 +1.997s 36
  16. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari - 1:23.567 +2.161s 31
  17. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari - 1:23.650 +2.244s 20
  18. Daniil Kvyat - Toro Rosso - 1:24.253 +2.847s 28
  19. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari - 1:24.894 +3.488s 39
  20. Pascal Wehrlein - Sauber Ferrari - 1:25.295 +3.889s 25
 
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FREE PRACTICE THREE REPORT

Massa Tops Abandoned Session as Rain Stops Play.

Italian Grand Prix FP3.jpg

The rain fell hard on the Monza Grand Prix circuit in Italy this morning, rendering any serious running out of the question for the teams ahead of qualifying this afternoon, with very few cars venturing out onto the sodden circuit .

Of those that did make an effort to circulate in the rain it would be Tifosi favourite Felipe Massa who ended up quickest, tiptoeing round the track to record a 1:40.660 and quickest time of the seven runners to take to the circuit.

Proceedings would be delayed considerably as overnight rain showers drenched the circuit and made safe running impossible for the teams. The spectacle for those at home would be somewhat slow going over the course of the next 45 minutes as the Mercedes safety car powered round the circuit several times, with Race Control finally deeming the conditions suitable for action with 16 minutes remaining.

Provision FP3 Results
  1. Felipe Massa - Williams Mercedes 1:40.660 4
  2. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1:40.888 +0.228s 4
  3. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault 1:41.491 +0.831s 4
  4. Carlos Sainz - Toro Rosso 1:41.515 +0.855s 5
  5. Jolyon Palmer - Renault 1:44.369 +3.709s 4
  6. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1:44.701 +4.041s 3
  7. Daniil Kvyat - Toro Rosso 1:45.033 +4.373s 4
  8. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1
  9. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1
  10. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari 3
  11. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari 4
  12. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Honda 2
  13. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Honda 4
  14. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1
  15. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1
  16. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 2
  17. Pascal Wehrlein - Sauber Ferrari 2
  18. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes 1
  19. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1
  20. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes 1
 
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QUALIFYING REPORT

Hamilton Heads Topsy-Turvy Monza Grid.

Italian Grand Prix Quali.jpg

Lewis Hamilton avoided any major slip-ups in qualifying on a wet Saturday afternoon to take pole position for the Italian Grand Prix, ahead of some surprising performances from Williams and Force India.

After the various ridiculous grid penalties have been handed out it would once again be a Mercedes powered front row in Monza, however rather than the usual Hamilton / Bottas combination it would be Williams Mercedes rookie Lance Stroll in P2, becoming the youngest ever front row starter and taking away another of Max Verstappen's Formula One Records!

Speaking of records, pole for Hamilton today marks the 69th occasion the Briton has started from the very front of the Grand Prix field since making his debut for McLaren in 2007, promoting the driver to the head of the all time pole position record pile in front of such greats as Michael Schumacher (68) and Ayrton Senna (65).

Qualifying was again a much interrupted affair due to weather, with the session seeing a red flag just five minutes in following an accident for Haas F1 driver Romain Grosjean, who aquaplaned off the circuit and brought to a conclusion his running for the session, ending with a time that would eventually prove to be outside of the 107% qualification rule.

Track action would resume a full two hours and 35 minutes later in slightly improved conditions, with a threat of renewed rain showers prompting all teams to scramble out on to the circuit in an attempt to set meaningful lap times before rain once again stops play.

In a session that would prove to be very much a moving feast of performance for many of the cars, with lap times tumbling as more water found itself displaced by the intermediate shod drivers practically constantly circulating the circuit it would again be Hamilton who finished on top, no doubt delighted to put plenty of space between himself and championship rival Vettel, who could do no better than a disastrous eighth (sixth following the Red Bull penalties).

Provisional qualifying results
  1. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes 1:36.009 1:34.660 1:35.554 29
  2. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:37.344 1:36.113 1:36.702 29
  3. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer 1:38.304 1:37.313 1:36.841 26
  4. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes 1:37.653 1:37.002 1:37.032 27
  5. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes 1:38.775 1:37.580 1:37.719 29
  6. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes 1:35.716 1:35.396 1:37.833 29
  7. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari 1:38.235 1:37.031 1:37.987 30
  8. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari 1:37.198 1:36.223 1:38.064 28
  9. Felipe Massa - Williams Mercedes 1:38.338 1:37.456 1:38.251 27
  10. Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Honda 1:38.767 1:37.471 1:39.157 25
  11. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes 1:38.511 1:37.582 19
  12. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault 1:39.242 1:38.059 20
  13. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Honda 1:39.134 1:38.202 11
  14. Daniil Kvyat - Toro Rosso 1:39.183 1:38.245 21
  15. Carlos Sainz - Toro Rosso 1:39.788 1:38.526 21
  16. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari 1:40.489 12
  17. Jolyon Palmer - Renault 1:40.646 10
  18. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari 1:41.732 11
  19. Pascal Wehrlein - Sauber Ferrari 1:41.875 9
  20. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari 1:43.355 3

Q1 107% Time - 1:42.416. Note - Grosjean failed to set a time within the 107% requirement and races at the stewards' discretion. Penalised for use of additional power unit elements: Alonso 35 grid places, Ricciardo 20, Verstappen 20, Sainz 10, Hulkenberg 10, Palmer 15. Ricciardo penalised a further 5 places for an unscheduled gearbox change.
 
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RACE REPORT

Hamilton Dominates and Takes Championship Lead in Italy

Italian Grand Prix Race Report 3.jpg

AMG Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton produced a peerless performance to win in Monza and take with it the championship lead for the first time this season.

With Vettel only managing to recover to third place by the chequered flag, it would be Mercedes man Hamilton who leaves Italy with the championship lead, three points ahead of his big rival and very much riding the crest of a wave from his recent successes.

The race in Italy would be a fairly drama free affair throughout the 53 laps, with only early contact for Verstappen and Massa and further late race Williams battles between Massa again and Lance Stroll for the minor points places alleviating the boredom for fans watching at home.

Further down the field the initially impressive McLaren team would have another nightmare race on Sunday, with both cars heading into retirement and bringing yet more pressure to an already strained relationship between McLaren and Honda. Alonso would be heard on the team radio asking for updates on the fastest lap to date towards the end of the race, however the Spaniard wouldn't get the chance to strap on new tyres for a late quick lap as his McLaren team called the orange car into an early retirement, with suspected engine troubles.

Of the more impressive performances in Italy would be that of Williams rookie Lance Stroll, converting his excellent P2 qualifying result to a very solid sixth place finish, withstanding some severe pressure from team mate Felipe Massa on the very final lap to come home with a solid haul of points.

Despite the rather processional nature of the race one thing that Monza always guarantees is atmosphere, something that was in evidence once again in Italy as the every passionate Tifosi stormed the track in their thousands to celebrate with the top three podium finishers.

Provisional Race Result:
  1. Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes - 53 1:15:32.312 0
  2. Valtteri Bottas - Mercedes - 53 +4.471s 0
  3. Sebastian Vettel - Ferrari - 53 +36.317s 0
  4. Daniel Ricciardo - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 53 +40.335s 0
  5. Kimi Räikkönen - Ferrari - 53 +60.082s 0
  6. Esteban Ocon - Force India Mercedes - 53 +71.528s 0
  7. Lance Stroll - Williams Mercedes - 53 +74.156s 0
  8. Felipe Massa - Williams Mercedes - 53 +74.834s 0
  9. Sergio Perez - Force India Mercedes - 53 +75.276s 0
  10. Max Verstappen - Red Bull Racing TAG Heuer - 52 +1 lap 0
  11. Kevin Magnussen - Haas Ferrari - 52 +1 lap 0
  12. Daniil Kvyat - Toro Rosso - 52 +1 lap 0
  13. Nico Hulkenberg - Renault - 52 +1 lap 0
  14. Carlos Sainz - Toro Rosso - 52 +1 lap 0
  15. Romain Grosjean - Haas Ferrari - 52 +1 lap 0
  16. Pascal Wehrlein - Sauber Ferrari - 51 +2 laps 0
  17. Fernando Alonso - McLaren Honda - 50 DNF 0
  18. Marcus Ericsson - Sauber Ferrari - 49 DNF 0

NC 2 Stoffel Vandoorne - McLaren Honda 33 DNF 0
NC 30 Jolyon Palmer - Renault 29 DNF 0


Italian Grand Prix Race Report 1.jpg
Italian Grand Prix Race Report 2.jpg
 
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