Per la serie, quando i numeri dicono tutto… Quella conquistata oggi da Lewis Hamilton sul circuito di Sochi, nel primo GP di Russia, è la sua 38° pole in carriera, la 7° della stagione, la 15° per la Mercedes (su 16 gare) che, grazie al secondo posto di Nico Rosberg, registra la quinta prima fila consecutiva e la 9° del 2014. Strapotere? No, di più.
Lewis Hamilton: “It’s an amazing feeling to come to this beautiful place and to race on this track. It’s fun to drive. Today, the laps in practice felt more special. In qualifying it seemed a bit harder to get that special lap but I’m grateful that I was able to improve. I crossed the line and I was just hoping I got it; when they tell you, it’s the biggest relief – a great feeling. The corners are mostly medium and high speed where you need a lot of downforce, so tomorrow should be a challenge. It’s a long run down to Turn One and we need to be mindful there are opportunities to overtake here. It was great to see such a strong turnout for the first Saturday of running at this new track. Hopefully we can give them a good show tomorrow“.
Nico Rosberg: “That was a very difficult qualifying today; we had to adapt a lot of things. The track is new and so unique: the tyres last very long as the surface is very smooth. Lewis was just quicker today so I need to have a good start tomorrow. Starting from the front-row is still a good position to begin the race. I guess this will be an exciting Grand Prix; there will be some opportunities to overtake on the straights and I am sure we will see plenty of action on track“.
Terzo, grandioso, con un traverso all’ultima curva mentre cercava di artigliare a tutti i costi la prima posizione, un grande Valtteri Bottas, con una Williams felice a metà, visti i problemi (sembra di pressione carburante) che hanno visto Massa uscire di scena nel Q1 (“I’m very disappointed as the car has been looking very competitive at this track and we should have been looking at the second row at least, but a problem with the car in Q1 has pushed us down the grid. I had no real power throughout qualifying and we were trying different things to resolve this out on track but in the end there was nothing I could do. P18 is far from ideal but I know I have the car underneath me to overtake tomorrow so we should have a chance to score points and limit the damage“).
Prosegue molto bene il weekend della McLaren, con Jenson Button e Kevin Magnussen in 4° e 6° posizione, anche se il danese perderà 5 posizioni per la sostituzione del cambio. Tra i due, Daniil Kvyat, spinto dall’aria di casa (e probabilmente dall’entusiasmo per la promozione nel 2015 alla RBR) in 5° posizione, con la Toro Rosso che entra nella top 10 anche con Jean-Eric Vergne, 10.
Daniil Kvyat: “It feels great securing P5 in today’s qualifying here in my home country. It was already looking quite promising yesterday, so I’m very happy we could put it all together and achieve my best ever Qualifying result today. The car felt very good and everything worked out well, so well done to the team. I will do my best in tomorrow’s race and I will definitely aim to finish the race at least in fifth position.”
Settimo crono per la prima delle Red Bull, quella di Daniel Ricciardo (che limita così i danni per il team in un weekend decisamente no, vista l’eliminazione in Q2 di Sebastian Vettel, solo 11°, a 0.123s da Vergne), davanti alle Ferrari di Fernando Alonso e Kimi Raikkonen.
Sebastian Vettel: “I wasn’t comfortable in the car today. It was very difficult, I think we took a step back from this morning and we expected the rear to be a lot stronger and the track to pick up more than it did. The car felt nervous, so I couldn’t take the speed into the corners, I lost the rear many times around the lap and therefore wasn’t quick enough.”
Ovviamente domani in griglia tutti i piloti da Ricciardo guadagneranno una posizione, vista la penalizzazione di Magnussen, che scatterà dall’11° piazzola.
Dodicesimo e 13° tempo per le due Force India di Nico Hulkenberg e Sergio Perez, anche lui penalizzato domani di 5 posizioni per sostituzione del cambio. In casa Sauber la spunta Esteban Gutierrez, di 4 decimi più veloce di Adrian Sutil (che, onestamente, ammiriamo con tutte le nostre forze per essere in pista…). Sedicesima la Lotus di Romain Grosjean, seguito dalla Caterham di Marcus Ericsson, il migliore degli eliminati in Q1, dalla Williams di Felipe Massa, dalla seconda Caterham di Kamui Kobayashi, dalla Lotus di Pastor Maldonado (rallentato da un problema per il quale il team si è scusato con lui via radio) e che dovrà pure scontare le restanti 5 posizioni rimaste dal Giappone, per l’uso del sesto motore, quindi partirà ultimo, davanti alla Marussia di Max Chilton, che al termine delle qualifiche ha dichiarato: “A tough weekend and one that hasn’t got any easier as we’ve progressed towards the race. I’m grateful for having the whole team around me as I think that it is helping all of us to focus. Performance-wise, we didn’t get the qualifying position we wanted today, but there are some reasons for that. This morning we experienced a driveshaft problem and missed the latter part of the FP3 session, and therefore the Soft tyre run. As this is a new circuit for us, that’s quite a disadvantage going into qualifying. I was fairly happy with the balance and looking at the three free practice sessions as a whole, I think we have done a good job and there is more to come in the race. We’ll keep pushing hard this evening, and do our best to get ahead of the Caterhams tomorrow, but the fact is, it’s not the same without my teammate.”
Proprio così, qualifiche pesanti, con la Marussia di Jules lì, nel box, e quella scritta sull’asfalto, gli adesivi sui caschi dei colleghi, quando con la testa tutti siamo qui, al lavoro (che, come ha detto Felipe Massa, aiuta a non pensare…), ma con il cuore all’ospedale di Mie, dove si sta disputando la gara vera, l’unica che conti. #ForzaJules
Barbara Premoli