30/08/2010
NEWS STORY
Despite a 28 point advantage over his teammate, with 6 races remaining Mark Webber is refusing to take anything for granted.
The Australian added another 18 points to his championship tally when he finished second in the Belgian Grand Prix. His race was anything but straightforward, however. Starting from his fifth pole position of the year, a technical glitch at the start resulted in him dropping to seventh by the exit of Turn 1.
"The car bogged down as I left on the formation lap," says Webber, "so I made some changes to the settings in the hope that I'd make a better start when it mattered. Unfortunately, that wasn't the case; it was even worse! The car bogged down again and cars streamed past me."
However, he didn't dwell on his misfortune. Almost immediately, he passed Adrian Sutil and he then executed a brilliant move around the outside of Felipe Massa at Rivage to take fifth. Further progress was halted by the deployment of the Safety Car at the end of the opening lap, due to an accident involving Fernando Alonso and Rubens Barrichello.
"After the start the car felt fine," Webber continues, "which was a bit of a relief because we'd only done a handful of dry laps all weekend. I enjoyed my battles with Adrian and Felipe and it was a bit frustrating to be held up, first by the Safety Car and then by Jenson Button once we were back racing. Jenson's slow pace allowed Lewis Hamilton to pull away at the front."
The status quo was altered on lap 17 when Button and Sebastian Vettel collided at the Bus Stop chicane. This promoted Mark to third behind Robert Kubica and he then set about trying to jump ahead of the Polish driver at the pit stops.
"The guys did a fantastic job to turn me around in 3.6s," admits the Australian, "but it wasn't quite enough to emerge ahead of Robert, who also had a good stop. I stayed on his gearbox and waited for another opportunity."
That chance came on lap 35, when rain forced all of the cars to pit for either intermediate or wet tyres. The pit lane was very slippery and Kubica overshot his pit box, which gave Webber the opportunity to move ahead of his rival. It was then a case of stroking his RB6 home in the difficult conditions.
"The track conditions were pretty tricky at the end of the race," says Mark. "We put on intermediates and at one point it looked as though wets might be needed, but we made it to the end of the race fine. Second was a great result, given where I ended the opening lap."
He crossed the line 1.5s behind race winner Lewis Hamilton and the pair are now separated by just three points at the top of the drivers table. With Vettel, Button and Fernando Alonso failing to score in Belgium, the landscape of the 2010 world championship was changed dramatically at the picturesque Spa-Francorchamps circuit.
"I have 28 points more than Seb," says Webber, "with Jenson and Fernando further behind. The picture looks different to how it did 24 hours ago, but there are still six races/150 points available, so I'm not getting too excited. Roll on Monza."