Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Hamilton, Toyota, Marquez: Three motorsport giants still writing history

Feature
Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Hamilton, Toyota, Marquez: Three motorsport giants still writing history

Racing Line spot-on for big rise in Autosport National Rankings

National
Racing Line spot-on for big rise in Autosport National Rankings

Why Gasly's Monaco GP penalty saga risks a regulatory labyrinth with no way out for F1

Formula 1
Why Gasly's Monaco GP penalty saga risks a regulatory labyrinth with no way out for F1

Alex Marquez to return to MotoGP action a month after horror Barcelona crash

MotoGP
Czech GP
Alex Marquez to return to MotoGP action a month after horror Barcelona crash

FIA president sets timeline on new WRC commercial rights holder

WRC
Rally Greece
FIA president sets timeline on new WRC commercial rights holder

Peugeot to upgrade 9X8 Hypercar for 2027 WEC

WEC
24 Hours of Le Mans
Peugeot to upgrade 9X8 Hypercar for 2027 WEC

Why we should get ready for a dramatic F1 silly season

Feature
Formula 1
Why we should get ready for a dramatic F1 silly season

Will Mercedes stop its drivers fighting now with Hamilton chasing?

Formula 1
Barcelona-Catalunya GP
Will Mercedes stop its drivers fighting now with Hamilton chasing?

Q & A with Jenson Button

Conducted and provided by Jenson Button's website.

Q. Let's start with the inevitable - you've had several days to think about it, so what are your thoughts on the accident that took you out of the race?

Jenson Button: "My thoughts haven't really changed, to be honest. At the time, I was pretty confused by what Sebastian did. Now, I still think what he did was completely unnecessary ' he didn't need to pass me at that point, and I wasn't making his life difficult, so his car shouldn't have been on such a knife-edge when he hit me.

"What's most frustrating is that I've lost out on a good handful of championship points at a time when neither Sebastian or Fernando were able to score. I know there are 150 points still up for grabs, but it doesn't help to now be 35 points behind Lewis.

"On a more positive note, under the old points system, that would still only be about 15 points, so anything's still possible. But at this point in the season, you've got to take every point you can ' and the incident in Spa certainly didn't help."

Q. Christian Horner claimed that you braked earlier than normal into the Bus Stop - is that right?

JB: "No, absolutely not. Obviously, I'd lost the floor-plate of one of my front wing endplates ' and that was affecting the car's balance ' but I didn't brake any earlier for the Bus Stop on the lap of the crash.

"I'd had to crank more front wing in to help the handling, and that had made the back-end a bit more skittish, so I was just driving carefully. I knew I still had good straight-line speed, so I was concentrating on getting into the slower corners cleanly, so that I could maximise my traction at the exit and maintain the gap along the straights. But that's just common sense when you're racing.

"After the race, I actually checked the data with my race engineer, and it shows that I braked at exactly the same point on the lap before the collision. We even looked at the braking profile, and that also showed that, at the point of impact - about 1.5s after I'd started applying the brakes ' I'd travelled exactly the same distance on both laps. So to suggest I'd braked earlier wouldn't be accurate."

Q. If you'd been able to continue, the race was looking positive, wasn't it?

JB: "I was in second place. Okay, you could say it wasn't a comfortable second because I had the slight issue with the endplate, which was slowing me down, but you look at the results and two cars that were running behind me before I retired both finished on the podium. So I think it's realistic to say that I could have been on the podium on Sunday.

"And I knew I would have been strong in the closing laps of the race, too. We had a car that was working perfectly in the greasy conditions, and I think I would only have been stronger when the rain started to fall again. So it's a missed opportunity."

Q. Nonetheless, the team's performance at Spa must be encouraging for the future, surely?

JB: "We were very pleased with our performance. We were on the pace for the whole weekend, and we had one of the fastest cars - probably the fastest car in mixed conditions, so that's all very positive.

"While Spa wasn't a personal highlight for me, I think Lewis's win came at exactly the right time for the whole team ' Hungary was probably the low point of our season, so to be able to bounce back so strongly will have given the team the assurance that we're headed in the right direction for the rest of the championship.

"We know it won't be easy, and that some circuits won't favour our car as much as Spa, but we're heading into the final six races in full-on battle mode. We know how to win and we want to keep winning."

Previous article Italy preview quotes: Lotus
Next article Button: I can still win the title

Top Comments