Tag: Yas Marina Circuit

  • Massa and Button have opposite race in final race

    Massa and Button have opposite race in final race

    Felipe Massa and Jenson Button had completely different outcomes in the final race for both Formula 1 veterans.

    Massa battled in the opening laps with teammate Valtteri Bottas, swapping ninth and 10th a few times. Bottas, however, retired from the race on the 11th lap with rear suspension issues and Massa was left to carry the banner for Williams.

    He didn’t make much noise in the race hanging out the back half of the top-10 all day. He brought his car home to a ninth-place finish in his final Formula 1 start.

    “To be honest, I feel really happy. I feel proud that I was fighting to the last lap in the same way I was fighting my first lap in my career. I’m really happy for the result for my race today and I am definitely emotional for this moment, but proud for everything I did.

    “I’m really happy and I thank all of you guys that was supporting me.”

    He also took time to congratulate Nico Rosberg on winning the championship.

    “I cannot forget Nico and that he won the championship. He’s a nice story. Looking at his father (Keke Rosberg), was a champion. He’s a champion now. He really deserves the championship.

    “I’m really happy for him.”

    The 15-year journeyman veteran retires with 11 wins, 41 podiums and 250 career starts.

    He reflected on his career and what he was proudest of achieving.

    “Well I’m proud of my career. I’m proud of everything I managed to achieve. Manage to get a lot of dreams, a lot of results, a lot of incredible things….But I am also proud that I always respected people and I feel a lot of respect, and I think that’s a really amazing feeling.”

    The team gave Massa the car he drove at Brazil, which was the same car he drove in today’s race, as a parting gift.

    It was the polar opposite race for one half of the McLaren-Honda stable.

    Driving over the curb at turn 9, the right-front tire of Button’s car caved in, damaging the steering and forcing an early retirement on the 13th lap in what was possibly his final race.

    In his post-race interview, Will Buxton of NBC said to him “it wasn’t supposed to end like this.”

    “Well it’s tricky [about how it’s supposed to end (a bit indiscernible)]. I should’ve won, but I don’t think that was in the cards so I thought I’d retire early,” Button said tongue in cheek and everyone laughed.

    “It doesn’t matter. I said before on social media that this result means nothing. It’s about having fun. It’s about enjoying all the emotions with friends and family and the team and Formula 1 as a whole and fans. I’ve done that. It’s just finished a little bit early, but I can celebrate with the fans when I get out of the car, which is awesome.

    “McLaren’s don’t fail. We don’t have failures. It’s the weirdest thing, but maybe it happened for a reason. I’m going to go enjoy the rest of this day, my last day as an F1 driver. Well, I’m not anymore actually (takes off McLaren hat), and have a jolly good time this evening with friends and family who I love very much.”

    The 2009 world champion, while still under contract with McLaren, steps away from active competition with 15 wins and 50 podiums to his credit.

    He was asked if he reflected on what he’s done in his career.

    “Yeah, last night was amazing with and the friends and family. I had a long day reminiscing and filmed it with a camera, which is a bit dangerous. I hope they lose that camera.

    “But yeah, lot’s of reminiscing and so many special moments, tough moments as well. But also great ones. Finishing early today is not a negative. I just take it for what it is. I get to see these guys sooner rather than later and I’m just celebrating what’s been a very long career.”

  • Hamilton wins the battle, but Rosberg wins the war

    Hamilton wins the battle, but Rosberg wins the war

    Lewis Hamilton did everything in his power he could to be champion with a win in Abu Dhabi, but it wasn’t meant to be as teammate Nico Rosberg finished right behind him to claim the bigger prize.

    Hamilton got a great start off the line and beat Rosberg going into turn 1. The race win was pretty much his from that point on. The Mercedes play their strategy very conservative with their drivers for most of the race to minimize the chances of a penalty and/or race incident, which included pitting their drivers much earlier than other teams.

    A late wrench was thrown into the mix when Sebastian Vettel of Scuderia Ferrari pitted off cycle of the Mercedes drivers. This put him in the lead coming to the last 20 laps of the race before he pitted onto faster super-soft tires.

    Vettel was posting the fastest laps of the race in the closing laps and it started to cause angst in the Mercedes garage. Hamilton used it to his advantage by backing his pace and forcing Rosberg to fight with Max Verstappen and Vettel for second and possibly lose the title.

    Vettel made the pass on Verstappen for third with five laps to go. This prompted Paddy Lowe, technical director at Mercedes, to tell Hamilton to pick up his pace and he responded as follows, “I’m actually in the lead and quite comfortable.”

    He also said he was “losing the world championship so right now I don’t really care whether I win or lose this race.”

    It made no difference in the end as Hamilton crossed the line first to win the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix and Rosberg crossed runner-up to secure the championship by a five-point margin.

    “Honestly, I feel great,” Hamilton said on the podium. “First off, I’d like to say a big thanks to everyone who came out to support us. I want to say thanks to my family for all their support and thanks to the team and especially to the team for doing such a great job. It’s been a real privilege being part of this team and achieving the success we had this year. I never would’ve thought when I joined this team that I’d have that many wins.

    “And a big congratulations to Nico (Rosberg) of course on his first world championship. Good job man.”

    It’s his 53rd career victory and 104th career podium finish.

    “I did everything I could these last four races and that’s all I could really ask of ourselves,” he said when asked his emotional state following losing the title. “So I leave here and have a lot of fun tonight celebrating with the team and everyone.

    “You can’t win them all. Obviously, we had a lot of problems this year. So that’s why I’m in this position. But I’m still grateful for all the success up and down we had as a team.”

    Rosberg’s 57th career podium finish was enough to win him the 2016 championship.

    “That was definitely not the most enjoyable race I’ve ever had, with Max (Verstappen) in the beginning and then with those guys coming up in the end,” Rosberg said when asked if this was “just another day in the office” on the podium. “Really not very enjoyable those last laps. Very very glad it’s over and unbelievably ecstatic. (Indiscernibly gives thanks to wife Vivian and daughter Alaia for their support)…and I’ll thank everybody else afterwards.”

    He and his father Keke Rosberg join Graham and Damon Hill as the only father/son pairs to have won drivers titles in Formula 1.

    “Very proud of course to have done the same feat as my dad achieved,” he added. “He’s going to be coming in half an hour I think. It’s going to be exciting to see him.”

    Vettel’s third place finish was his 86th career podium finish and only his second in 13 races.

    He started off by congratulating Rosberg on his championship victory before answering the question of why it took him so long to get back to a podium finish.

    “Well it’s tough all day,” Vettel said. “The last couple of laps, I didn’t want to be in his (Nico Rosberg) shoes. I was trying to get close and have another go. I was thinking ‘Why not pass both of them’ if Lewis (Hamilton) is going that slow in front. But yeah, it was difficult because my tires were dropping more towards the end.

    “A bit stuck at the beginning of the race, couldn’t really unfold my pace. I was starting to get a bit frustrated. But once I had clean air, I could really unleash the pace that we had today.”

    Verstappen finished fourth gambling on a one-stop strategy because of his lap 1 spin in the first turn following contact with Nico Hulkenburg.

    In his post-race interview, he said the race “was very enjoyable. Of course after the start, I was a bit like ‘Well, let’s see where we end up now after the spin.’ Good pace and managed to hold onto the super-softs for quite a long time. Basically just recused my race a little bit. Of course, it’s still not an ideal strategy to do with one stop because you’re always protecting the tires. But yeah, I enjoyed it a lot overtaking that many cars and finishing fourth in the end was a great result.”

    He was asked if one stopping was the plan the whole time.

    “It was not Plan A,” he added. “So yeah we had to change it, but it worked.”

    Teammate Daniel Ricciardo rounded out the top-five.

    Kimi Raikkonen finished sixth, Hulkenburg finished seventh, Sergio Perez finished eighth, Felipe Massa finished ninth in his final F1 race and Fernando Alonso rounded out the top-10.

    The Haas F1 drivers finished 11th (Romain Grosjean) and 12th (Esteban Gutierrez).

    Jolyon Palmer was handed a five-second time penalty for causing a collision with Carlos Sainz on lap 42.

    Five cars retired from the race, including Jenson Button who was making his final F1 start.