Nerves are normal
Every sportsman gets nervous. It's such a high speed sport, and there's a lot of danger involved. Once the adrenaline starts flowing you get a real buzz. You don't want to arrive at a race and suddenly think 'I'm here at the start.' Then you get very nervous and you're not in control. If you build it up through the morning before the race, you get to the race and the adrenaline is pumping, but you're in control.
Profile
Name:
Jenson Button
Born:
19 January 1980
From:
Frome, Somerset
Height:
1.82m
Weight:
70.5kg
Sport:
Formula 1
Team:
Brawn GP
Achievements:
- Winner - Turkish Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Monaco Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Spanish Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Malaysian Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Bahrain Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Australian Grand Prix (2009)
- Winner - Hungarian Grand Prix (2006)
Visualise your goals
Before the race you have to be relaxed and you need to understand the strategy. You're never going to know everything that can happen. You can't plan the first corner, because so many different things can happen. I don't have someone that tells me what to do. I run through the race and visualise a lap of the circuit. For me, visualising qualifying is very important.
It's good to review
You need to pick up on the positives and the negatives, and there are always both.
When we finish we go into the engineers' room, sit down with them and discuss the strategy, the car, the engine and the tyres. We look at where we could have been better and where we think we did well.
In the days after a race we discuss what improvements we're going to make to the car for the next race. It's about understanding that you're never at the peak, you always need to be thinking of ways in which you can improve.
Look forward
You have to be careful not to dwell on things too much because you'll end up living in the past. There are certain points of the race that stand out to you. We get the timings of every single lap we do, and every single lap other cars do, along with the distances between cars. I run over all the information and I think it's helpful. I think most drivers do.
Focus on your dream
In this career you have to be very dedicated. You have to be focused and you have to give everything. In five or six years time, when I've decided I want to go and do something else, then I can spend more time with my family. It's worth putting up with because this is my dream. This is what I love and I won't give up until I achieve something great.
See also
Elsewhere on the BBC
Elsewhere on the web
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I will be back tomorrow and I will do better.
Olympic silver medal long distance runner
Training ground
Speed reading
Get through revision and homework faster with our guide to speed reading.

