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Grand Prix of Spain
Final Notes & Quotes

30 May 1999

Grand Prix of Spain
Final Results

             1. Mika Hakkinen (McLaren-Mercedes), 1hr 34:13.665s (195.608 km/h)
             2. David Coulthard (McLaren-Mercedes), 6.238 seconds behind
             3. Michael Schumacher (Ferrari), 10.845 seconds behind

Q. Mika, that looked like an effortless drive to victory today. Was it as 
easy as it looked?

Mika Hakkinen: No, obviously not. I guess it's never easy, although 
sometimes it looks as though it is. But you need enormous concentration all 
the way through the race, especially when you are in the lead. I had a big 
advantage over David and Michael through the race, which made it difficult 
to maintain maximum concentration all the way. I also had to be careful 
with the back markers and sometimes also with oil on the track, which was 
the cause of the situation I had at Monaco when I ran wide on someone's oil 
and lost a place. Things like that can happen at any time through the race, 
and when you are in the lead you have to double your concentration. 
Otherwise, though, it was a fantastic race.


Q. How close were you to driving the car at 100 per cent?

MH: I was always at 100 per cent.


Q. In speed?

MH: Also ...


Q. David, a great start put you into 2nd place at the first corner and you 
were happily following Mika from close behind. But you seemed to lose some of 
that pace in the middle section. Was there something wrong?

David Coulthard: When I was still on the first set I seemed to have a bit 
of oversteer, so I called in [by radio] to tell my crew, and they made an 
adjustment to the pressures of the second set of tyres.  Unfortunately, 
that gave me understeer in the high speed corners while I still had 
oversteer in the slower corners. In fact it made the problem even worse, 
which made it very difficult for me to push. Obviously I could see that 
Michael was catching me, and then I seemed to find a lot of traffic, again.
Every time I came up behind a group of cars I was losing at least one 
second per lap, which helped Michael to close up. I had already made things 
difficult for myself by running too long into my pit at my first stop. 
Nonetheless, we managed to get back again still in front of Michael. Then 
on the last set of tyres the balance was much better after another adjustment.


Q. Were the backmarkers as obstructive here as they were at Imola?

DC: It was nothing like as bad as it was at Imola. I did spend over a lap 
behind Damon Hill, though, and I was just beginning to think he should know 
better than that when he moved over. This didn't really fit with the 
agreement that we have between us all as drivers, and I realise that he was 
involved in a battle with someone else, but Michael was still able to catch 
up towards the end, and that is never a comfortable situation.


Q. Michael, at Monaco it appeared that you won the race in the first 50 
metres after the start, while here you lost it in the first 50 metres. 
What happened to you there?

MS: Actually I took off quite well. But then I found myself blocked between 
Eddie [Irvine] and David [Coulthard] and I couldn't go anywhere. I actually 
had to brake, to avoid driving into them. That gave Villeneuve the chance 
to pass me -- and that was it, really. I could have caught him in turn 5 on 
the first lap, but it would have involved a lot of risk. I thought to myself, 
'don't do it, wait for the later stages.' Then the race started to get 
interesting, because I was only 15 seconds or so behind David and I was able 
to catch up before the second pit stops. Unfortunately I came in at the same 
time as someone in an Arrows, and he took a very slow entry to the pits. 
That cost me the necessary time, for sure, to be able to pass David. Nevertheless, 
we had a good race and I got four useful championship points.


Q. After the race you spent a long time in parc ferme examining the back 
end of the McLaren. What were you looking for?

MH: He wanted to see how beautiful it is. I am not surprised!

MS: Obviously these guys have a good car, and you always want to look out 
for anything that might be interesting. You always find something 
interesting. I was just looking at details ...


Q. Mika, the next race is in Canada, on a circuit which is artificial like 
Melbourne. How do you rate your chances there?

MH: Well, our car is definitely not yet at its optimum performance. We 
still have a lot of work to do, to make it faster. The engineers are working 
very hard, they are closely studying all of the data from the tests and races, 
and there is still a lot of performance to come, from both the chassis and 
the engine. I believe they will find it, and although it may take a while, 
we are going to get there. Let's see what happens and how fast we can go by 
the end of the year. But there is a lot more to come, I guarantee it.


Source: FIA