Raikkonen: No reason why we shouldn’t be fighting for another podium
13 July, 2012
Jul.13 (Lotus) He’s never won in Germany – whether in the European Grand Prix (held in the country some years ago) or the German Grand Prix itself – the latter of which has seen Kimi Räikkönen retire no less than six times in his career. Can this finally be the year for the Iceman to run hot at Hockenheim?
Do you have everything you need to be successful at Hockenheim?
Kimi Raikkonen: Yes. We’ve got a good car, we understand the tyres quite well, we’ve shown that we can be fast and race well… there’s no reason why we shouldn’t be fighting for another podium.
What is it about Germany that hasn’t been kind to you in the past?
KR: I don’t know, maybe I did something bad in a former life? I’ve always enjoyed driving in Germany, but the problem is that luck has never been on my side there and something has always happened to stop me winning. I’ve had four pole positions which shows my speed on German soil, but six retirements haven’t been what I wanted.
Does it set you more of a challenge having raced in Germany fifteen times but never taken a win?
KR: Not really. A race is just a race and you always try to do your best. In the past, the races I’ve contested in Germany have never gone as I had been hoping for. Obviously both circuits – Hockenheim and the Nürburgring – have not been very kind to me. I like them both and I have always been very competitive there. Maybe it will all come together this year.
Looking back to Silverstone, the E20 seemed to be going well?
KR: We were really quick on the hard tyres, especially at the end of the race. It’s just a shame we didn’t have the space on track to use it for the whole race as unfortunately I spent quite a lot of time stuck behind slower cars so we couldn’t show our full pace until we were in clear air. We were close to Felipe [Massa] at the end, but we just didn’t have enough laps left to get another position. I was really pleased with the car. It felt good all weekend and we’re definitely getting closer to finding the full speed from it.
What do you need for a fast lap at Hockenheim?
KR: The car can make all the difference here, and luckily we’ve got a good one. You need good traction out of the corners and if you’re lacking rear grip it’s hard to get the pace from the car to challenge for the top positions.
How important is it to qualify at the front?
KR: When I was last in Hockenheim in 2008 overtaking was quite difficult. Not as tricky as some circuits, but not easy at all. This year with the tyres, the KERS and the DRS it could be easier to overtake, especially if we are better on our tyres than the opposition. It’s not all about qualifying at Hockenheim, but certainly it makes life easier when you start from the front and have clean air.
So a start from the front and clean air ahead; anything else you’d like in Germany?
KR: Some hot weather would be good. Usually in Hockenheim it has been very hot and everybody has had problems with the tyres going off. Obviously, for us, the hot weather suits the car fine. Our car prefers the hot temperatures and in the long runs it’s not that hard on tyres. Let’s have some real summer weather in Hockenheim.
Subbed by AJN.
Related posts:
- Raikkonen: I am disappointed not to have a win yet
- Raikkonen: I love winning and I’ve never won in Valencia, so it’s a good target
- Raikkonen: We’re still looking over the data but it’s looking good
- Vettel wins Bahrain GP as Raikkonen makes return to the F1 podium
- Schumacher: No reason to be disappointed





its unfair to imply that by aiming for a triple, Grosjean is not being realistic. That Lotus can. And if it had one of the big three, a top step would have gone down already.
@pitwall
Kimi has a lot of confidence in himself, in fact he is over-confident, but I have the feeling he has had less confidence in the car as he has not fully come to grips with the Pirellis and is not pushing as hard as he can. Remember what happened in China. For the first time he said that ‘we understand the tyres very well’, so he seems to be more confident than ever with the car. He is also a bit race rusty and still has issues with pumping enough heat into the tyres during qualifying. He knows he can go faster if certain issues are resolved and keeps reminding the team of this fact. The point is if Lotus can resolve them and give him a car to his liking before the season is over.
Doubt Kimi had confidence issues at any time of his career.
It’s good Grosjean finding him self, Kimi frankly never cared about his teammates, he just doing his own thing.
@dimitris yeah you may be right. I just feel like Gosjean is racing on pure confidence right now just like Hamilton did in his first 2 years… I’d rather have confidence than raw speed. Its the mental game you need to win first before you win races, and Grosjean has it in spades.
The ICEMAN cometh…..
Perhaps because Kimi is more realistic than Romain. He had four poles in Gernany and has never won. He had also 6DNFs. He obviouslty has not taken everything out of the car so far, especially in qualifying, as Romain has, but he appears to be, for the first time, confident and sure of the car.
Raikkonen is talking about podiums, Grosjean is talking about wins in his interview…
If he has the chance he will ring the neck out of the car all the way to the line. But luck is also a factor at Hockenheim.
i hope Kimi is not waiting for Spa to get his first win!lol