Motorsports

2014 Japanese Grand Prix a Sobering Reminder to the Sport

Words John Clark | October 06, 2014
Our thoughts and prayers and those of the entire AMG Petronas team are with Jules Bianchi, his family and the Marussia F1 Team at this time
Words John Clark October 06, 2014

Before discussing Sunday’s Japanese Grand Prix, it is important to note that our thoughts and prayers and those of the entire AMG Petronas team are with Jules Bianchi, his family and the Marussia F1 Team at this time.

2014 Japanese Grand Prix

2014 Japanese Grand Prix

After a premature red flag end after Bianchi’s accident, Lewis Hamilton won the 2014 Japanese Grand Prix with Nico Rosberg second, scoring the team’s eighth 1-2 finish of the year.

  • The race began behind the Safety Car in wet conditions, then was suspended at the end of lap two.
  • The race resumed at 15:25, once again behind the Safety Car, which then pitted at the end of lap 9.
  • From this point, the race ran uninterrupted on a wet track in mixed weather conditions.
  • Both drivers made two pit-stops (HAM: L14, L35; ROS: L13, L33) and ran wet/intermediate/intermediate tyres.
  • The race was brought to a premature end by a red flag on lap 44 after an accident for Jules Bianchi at Turn 7.
2014 Japanese Grand Prix

2014 Japanese Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton

Our first thoughts go to Jules – it overshadows everything else when one of our colleagues is injured and we are praying for him. Next to this, the race result doesn’t seem significant at all. Nico and I had a tough battle‎, we were pushing really hard. I had a big moment at Turn One when I was too late getting off the DRS as I was just pushing so hard but fortunately I was able to get back on track. The conditions were difficult throughout but I had more pace than Nico today and could follow him quite comfortably in the early stages. This is not an easy circuit for following another car or for overtaking, but he made a mistake out of the last corner and I was able to pass. The whole approach then needed to change to look after the tyres and make sure I stayed in the lead until the end of the race. But like I said, that’s not what matters today; our thoughts are with Jules.

Nico Rosberg

My thoughts are with our colleague Jules and his family and team-mates, and we are hoping for some positive news. Today was a really tough race with the wet conditions. I struggled a lot with the balance of my car on the intermediate tyres, so I had to push hard to keep Lewis behind me. I had a lot of oversteering which is why the rear end of my car was very nervous. That was really strange and I didn’t have the necessary confidence in the corners; we need to look into that in the next few days. It meant that Lewis was quicker today and deserved the win. It was damage limitation with losing only seven points to him. For the team it was a good result with another1-2.

Toto Wolff

At this stage, the only important thing is that Jules Bianchi is okay and recovers; the sport is not as important as that now.

Paddy Lowe

Our thoughts are now with Jules Bianchi as we wait for more news of his condition. We had predicted a difficult race from the moment we saw the forecast for this weekend but the weather didn’t prove as bad as we had perhaps expected. It was a tricky start behind the Safety Car but then much of the race unfolded in intermediate tyre conditions. We pulled out a lead at the beginning which meant we were able to shadow our competitors with the pit stops and let the drivers battle it out on track. They had a hard dice and Lewis managed an impressive overtake at Turn One. In conditions like we saw today, a one-two finish is a good achievement for the team. I would also like to thank the fans, who were fantastic in their support this weekend – as always in Japan – and who make it such a pleasure to race here. But most importantly of all, we are all hoping to hear some positive news about Jules soon.