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

How Caterham’s success is rooted in continual evolution

Feature
National
How Caterham’s success is rooted in continual evolution

From Benetton to Gucci: Is Briatore closing the circle at Enstone?

Feature
Formula 1
From Benetton to Gucci: Is Briatore closing the circle at Enstone?

MotoGP proposes four safety solutions following Barcelona drama

MotoGP
MotoGP proposes four safety solutions following Barcelona drama

WRC Rally Japan: Evans makes road position count to maintain lead

WRC
Rally Japan
WRC Rally Japan: Evans makes road position count to maintain lead

FIA scraps F1 straight mode in Monaco GP – here's what that means for the pecking order

Formula 1
Monaco GP
FIA scraps F1 straight mode in Monaco GP – here's what that means for the pecking order

You Ask The Questions: Valtteri Bottas

Feature
Formula 1
Canadian GP
You Ask The Questions: Valtteri Bottas

WRC Rally Japan: Evans leads with Solberg delayed by deer, Katsuta frustrated

WRC
Rally Japan
WRC Rally Japan: Evans leads with Solberg delayed by deer, Katsuta frustrated

Verstappen and Sainz urge FIA “to be tough”, but F1 manufacturers must look in the mirror

Feature
Formula 1
Canadian GP
Verstappen and Sainz urge FIA “to be tough”, but F1 manufacturers must look in the mirror

Italian GP: Mercedes not ruling out Monza victory

Mercedes drivers Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg are not ruling out fighting for victory in the Italian Grand Prix, although the pair do concede that beating McLaren will be a tough ask

Schumacher and Rosberg will start fourth and sixth respectively, and with the race shaping up to be a one-stopper, Rosberg is confident that the Mercedes will have plenty of race pace following his long runs during Friday's practice sessions.

"We prepared very well for it [on Friday] with long runs," he said.

"We have a good understanding of what the tyres are going to do, so I'm quite confident that we can have a good race, and be in the region where we were in qualifying, or maybe even look forward."

Schumacher even went as far as to suggest that McLaren could be a target during the race, despite Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button locking out the front row.

"We need to see how the day tomorrow will develop, because we are not that far off," said the seven-time world champion.

"But we might be just enough behind that it might be difficult to challenge them. If you take the qualifying performance and you extract that to the race, maybe that's not completely true. It's something to prove tomorrow."

After a tough weekend in Belgian at the last round, Rosberg said he was happy to be closer to the front, before warning that the improvement was more down to the circuit than the car.

"It's been very nice coming here. Already on Friday it was clear that we were looking much better, and that's a really nice feeling. The car feels better, and you know you have a chance to be right up there. We worked well this weekend in qualifying in the end.

"For sure it's circuit specific. We didn't bring any specific things to massively improve the performance of the car, it's just a different package for this sort of track, and this sort of track seems to suit us a lot better than, for example, Spa and Hungary.

"That's also an area which we will know review and learn from, why our car is looking stronger here and not so much at a place like Spa."

Previous article Ferrari chief Luca di Montezemolo calls for Formula 1 revamp
Next article Robert Kubica still aiming for Formula 1 return

Top Comments

Latest news