Monaco Grand Prix Preview
In advance of this week's Monaco Grand Prix, the Etihad Aldar
Spyker Formula One Team has conducted Q&As with drivers
Christijan Albers and Adrian Sutil.
Driver Q&A
Christijan Albers, (car no 21, F8-VII/02)
Both cars finished again in Spain. Were you happy with the
overall performance?
It's getting better and better. It's just a shame about the
drivethrough I got. Anyway, it's done! In the beginning Adrian
walked a little bit away from me. We had a good pit stop,
and I came quite close to him. I had a reasonable set of tyres
and I could catch him again, but then I had traffic and the
drivethrough while we quite strong on this set of tyres, so
it was really a shame. You have lap times up and down, and
you're just chasing yourself. But when we changed to the hard
tyres we had a problem in the pits which stalled the engine,
but we finished the race, which was important as we needed
to get as much data as possible and to learn as much as possible
from the car. Sometimes in the race it was really good to
drive it, and sometimes it was difficult. That's always what
you have!
Drivers with a more aggressive style, like yourself,
seem to have found life difficult with the harder tyres this
year. How are you trying to adapt?
I am trying to adapt myself, and I'm also trying to find something
in the car with my engineers to get the car better. People
who drive aggressively, like Kubica or Alonso, and maybe also
Kimi, I think they are struggling like me. You just have to
try to adapt yourself as quickly as possible.
When you don't really feel comfortable with the car,
do you lose a bit of confidence?
If you don't know what you had, you just learn how it is.
But if you come from last year, it's much harder. Adrian is
doing a good job, he's a really quick driver, but also he
didn't have to adapt to how it was. He couldn't expect something
else like we had last year, because with last year's tyres
it was really an F1 car, you turned in, you could push, it
was really good to drive the car. It's good now also of course,
but it's more difficult, and you see that. I think it's the
same for Lewis.
Do you feel that you are making progress?
Yes. I'm really happy now. Maybe it sounds strange, but we
are improving all the time, the set-up as well as myself,
and you see I'm coming closer. I should have been in front
of Adrian in qualifying, but I had traffic on the last outing.
Four cars in the first corner, and the second time it was
three cars. But I have to say that I'd rather have bad luck
now than through the season, when we have the new car. I'm
really looking forward to that.
Are you excited about going to Monaco?
Yes of course, but for a driver it's a really difficult weekend,
because there are a lot of distractions. It's a very busy
place, the garages are very small, and so on. But I think
on Sunday night everybody will relax and everything will be
easy!
Adrian Sutil, (car no 20, F8-VII/03)
How excited are you about going to Monaco?
I think it's the highlight of this year for me, so I'm really
looking forward to it. I really like the track. In F3 it was
already a really nice event, very challenging for sure. Everything
is very narrow, the barriers are very close, so you need to
find the middle and not push too hard at the beginning. You
have to learn the circuit and not crash the car! That's very
important, especially in the first and second practice sessions."
You obviously watched the race on TV and maybe played
computer games. When you went there, did you feel like you
knew it already?
My first time there was in F3 when I raced in 2005, but I
knew the corners already for sure, but reality is always different,
all the bumps and so on. You're much more careful then! It
was a good weekend, and actually I still have the track record
with an F3 car and started on pole position there in 2005.
In the second race I crashed in the first corner. It's really
easy to go out there, so I know already some tricky places.
Have you raced on other street circuits?
Yes. Norisring, which is a bit more open, Pau, and last year
Macau for the first time.
How do you approach the weekend mentally?
You want to show what you can do, but you can't afford to
crash. I think on the first day you just have to take it easy,
and try to learn as much as you can. Then on the second day,
Saturday, you have to push. You can risk something later in
qualifying.
Do you see the race as a big chance for Spyker to
be a bit closer to the front?
Maybe. Last year was quite good for the car in Monaco. Usually
we have a problem with drag, long straights are not good for
us, and in Monaco we only have short straights. It won't be
so easy, but we should be all right there. It's also a place
where you can do something if you're a really good driver.
Do you enjoy the weekend as a whole?
I think it will be a lot of fun. Every day there's a big event,
you've got all the boats, and the atmosphere is very special
and very exclusive. It's nice to have it once a year. But
for me it's quite hard to spend money there, because it's
too expensive!
|