Red Bulls on top in Korea practice
Korean GP: Lewis Hamilton baffled by lack of McLaren pace
Lewis Hamilton was mystified as to why he was so far off the pace in Korean Grand Prix practice.
The McLaren driver, who was quickest in the first session, ended the day eighth fastest, 0.885 seconds behind Sebastian Vettel's pace-setting Red Bull.
Hamilton said: "We were quite quick in the first session but I don't really know what happened in the second.
"We were struggling a bit, just trying different things, and for some reason I wasn't able to get a good time."
Lewis Hamilton“We just have to be calm and figure out which way to go. Jenson was not in a bad position so the car has some pace and we just need to extract it. I think we'll be OK”
Hamilton was 0.498secs slower than Button, who was fourth fastest behind Vettel, the German's Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.
"It was such a big difference from P1 to P2 and the car wasn't really that different. Just a small change on the rear ride-height which is nothing," he said.
"We just have to be calm and figure out which way to go. Jenson was not in a bad position so the car has some pace and we just need to extract it. I think we'll be OK."
Asked if he thought he could fight with the Red Bulls for pole position, Hamilton said: "I'm not sure. The Red Bulls seem very quick."
Button was more encouraged, especially by his pace on his race-simulation run with a high fuel load, when he was faster than the Red Bull and only marginally slower than Alonso and his Ferrari team-mate Felipe Massa.
Button said: "We have made good progress. Still not quick enough but I think we're going in the right direction.
"Red Bull have that 0.4secs again in practice. They are going to be very difficult to beat in qualifying. They seem to have that strength back.
"Our race pace seemed to be competitive but over one lap we are still lacking so it's an area we need to work on.
Second practice top 10
1. Sebastian Vettel - Red Bull - 1:38.832
2. Mark Webber - Red Bull - 1:38.864
3. Fernando Alonso - Ferrari - 1:39.160
4. Jenson Button - McLaren 1:39.219
5. Michael Schumacher - Mercedes - 1:39.330
6. Felipe Massa - Ferrari - 1:39.422
7. Nico Rosberg - Mercedes - 1:39.584
8. Lewis Hamilton - McLaren - 1:39.717
9. Nico Hulkenberg - Force India - 1:39.739
10. Kimi Raikkonen - Lotus - 1:39.839
"But the direction we have gone with the car is positive so there is still more to come."
Alonso heads into the weekend with a narrow four-point lead in the championship following his failure to finish last Sunday in Japan, where Vettel won.
The Ferraris looked competitive on race fuel and Red Bull's closest challengers on outright one-lap pace, but Alonso said he was not sure where he stood.
"It's hard to say where we are compared to the others because we focused mainly on ourselves," the Spaniard said.
"We must wait until tomorrow to have a more precise picture of the situation."
Vettel said he was content with his team's progress.
"All in all we can be quite happy,' he said. "It looks extremely tight. We have to improve ourselves to match the others."
Korean Grand Prix 2012, day two
- Saturday, 13 October: Third practice 02:55 BST; Red Button, 5 live Sports Extra and online. Qualifying 06:00 BST; BBC One (from 05:00), online and BBC Radio 5 live Sports Extra (from 05:55). Qualifying replay 13:00; BBC One.
Korean Grand Prix 2012, day three
- Sunday, 14 October: Race 07:00 BST; BBC One (from 06:00), online and BBC Radio 5 live (from 06:55). Race replay 14:05 BST; BBC One. Highlights 19:00 BST; BBC Three.
Comments
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Comment number 149.
MiG200914th October 2012 - 11:55
If 'no-grip Jenson Button' requires "help" from the team in order to beat Lewis how do they expect him to lead the team and beat Vettel or Alonso, lol.
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Comment number 148.
GrimreaperF114th October 2012 - 10:50
2 rear suspension issues in 2 races? clipping the wall in Singapore, still makes me wonder if the rear suspension parts were not changed as McLaren assumed that the damage was minimal but should have erred on the side of caution and changed all the rear end parts. 74 points have been lost in the last 3 races now.
75 points gained by Vettel
Link to this (Comment number 148)
Comment number 147.
Andrew Montgomery14th October 2012 - 8:56
There you go again - Lewis running a very strong 4th and then same old same old. No other driver has to put up with such poor leadership and team support, and with losing so many points to so many pit mistakes and car issues. Whitmarsh worse than useless. A tragedy that such a superb talent has watsed a year at such a disgrace of a team.
Link to this (Comment number 147)
Comment number 146.
JYS-GOAT14th October 2012 - 5:50
Sorry Lewis, but I fear McLaren may have nobbled your car. Let's face it they want JB at the front now. You are yesterday's man to them. Can't have the No.1 going to the Opposition. Race plan undecided? Do a Prost and park-up after 1 lap claiming the car's undriveable. That'll teach them for treating you so badly this year. Good luck at Mercedes - you're going to need it!
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Comment number 145.
FelipeinSpain13th October 2012 - 19:08
@143.
wayne &142.
Del What a pair of numb-nut Button fans you pair are. Louis will score good points tomorrow. Perhaps you dis not notice that your hero is starting behind both 'slower cars' ; that says a lot about Button's commitment to McLarenj compared to Hamilton's. Even though Hamilton is leaving, Button still cannot live with him.It will be interesting to see if he can live with Perez.
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Comments 5 of 149