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Barrichello may quit over Button

May 11
Rubens Barrichello says he will "hang up his helmet tomorrow" if he finds out Brawn are favouring team-mate Jenson Button.
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F1 Complete

Saturday Review: Brawn GP

Brawn GP’s Rubens Barrichello delivered an excellent performance in qualifying for the British Grand Prix at Silverstone today to put his Brawn-Mercedes car on the front of the grid for the race tomorrow.
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guardian.co.uk

Barrichello threatens to quit Brawn

• Brazilian disappointed at being overhauled by victorious Briton• Ross Brawn denies policy to favour Button over BarrichelloDespite finishing first and second in the Spanish grand prix, Brawn GP's smooth season hit a potential rough patch when Rubens Barrichello said he felt that he rather than Jenson Button should have won the ­race. The Brazilian, who was at a loss to explain why his lead during the first 19 laps appeared to have been compromised by a more favourable strategy for Button, threatened to quit if his team-mate is getting preferential treatment."I need to find out what happened. I'm sure everything is OK but if I get the slightest sniff of the fact that they have favoured Jenson, I will hang up my helmet ­tomorrow," Barrichello told a reporter from Speed TV.Button's win was due to a change in his pit-stop strategy during the race and a tyre problem for Barrichello. "I'm disappointed I haven't won because I thought it was in the bag today," said Barrichello. "I had a great start and took the lead from Jenson going into the first corner. Everything felt quite comfortable. I was surprised when they told me they had switched Jenson from three stops to two."Barrichello was asked if he feared a repeat of the team preferences which blighted his time with Michael Schumacher at Ferrari, when Ross Brawn determined the Italian team's ­strategy. "I have had experience of that and if it happens I won't follow any team orders," he said. "I'm making this clear now. But we have a much more friendly situation in this team. There's no way I'm going to be crying and saying I should have had this or that. I had the ability to win, and I didn't."Brawn denied that there had been a policy to favour Button. "Absolutely not," he said. "The ­strategy change was my decision. The engineers and drivers pool their information and make their recommendations but I make the call in the pit lane and, good or bad, we stand by it. If Rubens hadn't had his problem, it would have been incredibly close.""Rubens got an amazing start," said Button. "He's has been very quick all weekend and as soon as he was in front I knew it would be difficult to get ahead. Then I thought I was in trouble when they switched me from three stops to two. I had to push really hard and it worked out. But I'm surprised. I really didn't expect to win this one."Button's fourth win in five races puts the Englishman 14 points ahead of Barrichello.BrawnJenson ButtonFormula oneMotor sportguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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ESPN Jenson Button wins Spanish Grand Prix...

Jenson Button has won his fourth Formula One race of the season by taking the Spanish Grand Prix ahead of Brawn GP teammate Rubens Barrichello.
05/10/09
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cbc.ca Jenson Button takes another F1 pole...

Formula One championship leader Jenson Button earned the pole position for the Monaco Grand Prix.
05/23/09
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ESPN Jenson Button claims Turkish Grand...

Brawn GP's Jenson Button has won the Turkish Grand Prix for his sixth victory in seven Formula One races.
06/07/09
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B.B.C. NEWS Brawn soothes Barrichello fears

Ross Brawn insists his Brawn team is not operating a "favouritism" policy following Rubens Barrichello's threat to quit.
05/11/09
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ESPN Jenson Button extends Formula One...

Jenson Button has won the Monaco Grand Prix to stretch out his Formula One championship lead to 16 points.
05/24/09
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B.B.C. NEWS Silky Button eases to Monaco win

Brawn GP's championship leader Jenson Button wins his fifth race out of six this season at the Monaco Grand Prix.
05/24/09
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British grand prix – live!

Join Gemma for all the action. Any insights, questions or comments can be e-mailed hereLap 17: Raikkonen (P10) has leap-frogged Nakajima (P11) in those stops. Hamilton - being held up by the slower Kubica - tells his engineer he cannot pass as he has no grip.Lap 16: Kazuki 'I'm running on a wisp of fuel' Nakajima is the first to pit. He stays on the harder tyre. Vettel does another fastest lap. Button is now 27.4 seconds adrift of the leader. Raikkonen also pits.Lap 12: Not much drama to report I'm afraid folks. Here's the order: Vettel, Barrichello, Webber, Nakajima (I know!), Raikkonen, Rosberg, Trulli, Button, Massa, Glock, Fisichella (go on my son), Heidfeld, Alonso, Kubica, Hamilton, Piquet, Bourdais, Buemi, Kovalainen and Sutil.Lap 11: My carefully-positioned boyfriend... erm, sorry, I mean track-side mole... is embedded at Club. But all he has to report is that there are plenty of chips being consumed (gernerous servings too, apparently). And it's a bit chilly.Lap 10: Vettel's lead now 10 seconds and he's just posted another fastest lap. Webber maintains his close pursuit of Barrichello but has not thrown any moves.Lap nine: Hamilton's engineers have told him he must get past Kubica (P14). But the Brit said yesterday that his car is so poor the only way to drive it is slowly.Lap eight: Heidfeld is running well in 12th, having started 15th, despite his poorly nose (on the car, you understand).Lap seven: Vettel's lead is over 7 seconds now, but there's only eight tenths between Barrichello and Webber. Button still in eighth - he's over 15 seconds shy of the race leader now.Lap five: Webber is six seconds behind his team-mate in third. He'll need to get past Barrichello if he wants to hunt him down. Kubica has taken 14th from Hamilton - looks like happened when Alonso (in P13) ran wide and held up Hamilton, allowing the BMW through.Lap four: Over the radio we can hear Heidfeld's engineer telling him 'box! box!' (which means pit, not slam another driver in the face) for a new nose. But the militant German says 'nein'. He'll wait until the first stop. Vettel's lead now 4.4sec.Lap three: Vettel is storming - he made almost a second on Barrichello in that lap. Kovalainen wins the prize for worst start: he lined up in 13th and he's back in 19th.Lap two: Vettel's lead is already 2.5seconds, he's the fastest car on track. Hamilton is up to 14th already - he can see a points finish in his sights. Button has re-passed Massa for eighth.Lap one: Trulli also dropped down the order at the start. The Ferraris both got flyers - Massa looked fantastic surging past Button. The order in the top ten after the first tour: Vettel, Barrichello, Webber, Nakajima, Raikkonen, Rosberg, Trulli, Massa, Button and Glock.The start: Vettel good start, keeps ahead of Barrichello and Webber. Button has dropped down to eighth.Most of the frontrunners - apart from the Williams cars - are starting on the softer option tyres. We're about to get underway...Enough politics. We're counting down to the start of the GP now. It looks a little breezy at the former airfield. Flavio Briatore has told the BBC's Martin Brundle that he "loves" Bernie Ecclestone. Victoria Pendleton "cannot believe" that she's been standing on the Formula One grid. And Lewis Hamilton is casting round for a pair of binoculars so he can get a glimpse of the front of the pack...More breaking news: The Big Row has given Donington Park a 'get out of jail free' card. Apparently, if the planned breakaway goes ahead, the circuit bosses can pull out of their contract to host the GP. Which would help them out of any hole, were they not to achieve the funding necessary to bring the circuit up to scratch, wouldn't it?I think the news editor will pull out my computer's power cable if I don't mention The Big Row. The latest news: in a quote that will leave the City's finest barristers weeping into their copies of the Sunday Times this morning, Max Mosley has said that a resolution is imminent. "I think we would rather talk than litigate," he said. "We are very, very close as far as the facts are concerned. It's just if the teams want to sit down and iron out the last few difficulties." So are we close to a resolution then? Let's hope so: my fingernails are already bitten to the quick and I can handle any more last-minute re-writes. But what do you care about my bleeding hands - email me with your thoughts.Elsewhere on the grid, the Williams pair were light-fuelled and running highly. But the big story had to be Lewis Hamilton's dire 19th position. He wasn't helped by the red flags coming out owing to Adrian Sutil's heafty shunt, but the reigning champion later claimed he had little more to come from his curtailed flying lap. At least it'll be fun to watch him try and work his way up the field. Funny, though, how we've been uttering that line for the past few races. But we absolutely won't say 'what a difference a year makes'. That would be too cliched. Ooops.So Vettel, the only man other than Jenson to have won a grand prix this season, sits on pole. And what a lap it was. Information on the fuel loads released last night showed that the young German's car was carrying two more laps of fuel compared to team-mate Webber - with the Brawn GP drivers' cars carrying less than both the Red Bulls. So you'd have to fancy that the energy drink-powered cars have the edge, right? Both drivers praised recent technical developments made by the Milton Keynes-based squad, while Button could only whinge about his skitterish Brawn.1. Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull-Renault2. Rubens Barrichello, Brawn-Mercedes3. Mark Webber, Red Bull-Renault4. Jarno Trulli, Toyota5. Kazuki Nakajima, Williams-Toyota6. Jenson Button, Brawn-Mercedes7. Nico Rosberg, Williams-Toyota8. Timo Glock, Toyota9. Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari10. Fernando Alonso, Renault11. Felipe Massa, Ferrari12. Robert Kubica, BMW-Sauber13. Heikki Kovalainen, McLaren-Mercedes14. Nelson Piquet, Renault15. Nick Heidfeld, BMW-Sauber16. Giancarlo Fisichella, Force India-Mercedes17. Sebastien Bourdais, Toro Rosso-Ferrari18. Adrian Sutil, Force India-Mercedes19. Lewis Hamilton, McLaren-Mercedes20. Sebastien Buemi, Toro Rosso-FerrariBut let's say 'pah!' to those anoraks at the circuit anyway - they were smugly expecting to watch hero-de-jour Jenson Button triumph, weren't they? Not so confident now though. Sixth on the grid? What's all that about we demanded after yesterday's qualifying session. No grip, according to Sir Jenson of Frome. Skating around like a duckling on an icy pond, apparently. Ole Button has written off his chances of victory already, so what can we expect from today's race? Let's remind ourselves of the grid...Well hello. So you're not one of the 90,000 people who've made the pilgrimage to Silverstone for it's last-ever Formula One grand prix* (*possibly) then? Never mind. I was going to say that it'll probably rain and you're better off tucked up on your sofa watching the action with a mug of tea and a packet of Hob Nobs. But I have to report that when I left home this morning - the Briggs abode being close enough to the track that the fat cats' helicopters were interfering with my television signal as I tried to watch Roary the Racing Car early this morning - the skies were a beautiful blue and not a drop of moisture threatened my 'do.Formula oneMotor sportBrawnToyotaFerrariToro RossoRed BullForce IndiaRenaultSauberWilliamsMcLarenLewis HamiltonJenson Buttonguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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guardian.co.uk

'I want to win. It's all about me winning'

Dismissed as a playboy who lacked the killer instinct, Jenson Button looked set to remain a formula one also-ran, but he always knew he was fastWe're on the main road in Monte Carlo just before it is closed to the public and turned into Monaco's famous grand prix track. Jenson Button is driving frustratingly slowly in his adopted home. The pace, or lack of it, is making me twitch. Get a move on, Jenson, this is pathetic. "Traffic. It's not normally this bad," he says apologetically. Whatever. I feel safe - possibly too safe. It could be an elderly uncle driving. Put your foot down, son, go for it. He's looking in the rear-view mirror, tutting at the opposition on the road. "People are very relaxed when they drive - they don't concentrate enough. You can see they're not paying attention and their peripheral vision is not there. It is scary. Driving on the road is probably more dangerous than driving on a circuit."What! No, really, he means it. Formula one is so much safer than it used to be, he insists. On the weekend that Ayrton Senna and Roland Ratzenberger were killed at the 1994 San Marino grand prix, Button was a 14-year-old boy go-karting in Italy. "The race just stopped. Everybody was glued to the television. It was horrible." Didn't it put him off racing? "No. But a lot's changed since then. The accident Ayrton had was not really a big impact accident. If you had that these days you'd be fine." Maybe.Button has had one bad crash - as he came out of the tunnel here in Monaco in 2003. People marvelled that it was possible to crash at such speed and survive virtually unscathed. Did he think he was a goner? "I didn't have time to think. I could hear tyres screeching when I hit the first wall, then I was unconscious. I woke up and saw all the people in orange around me. I thought, where am I? Why is everyone wearing orange? They started cutting off my suit and sticking needles in me. The main doctor came over and said, 'Jenson, are you OK?' and I said, 'Well, not really, my legs hurt.' Which one? I go, the left one, then I go, no, the right one, then I say, no, everything. Then I start laughing. It was the most surreal feeling, it must have been what they were pumping into me. It was good because you realise you can walk away after an accident at 180 miles per hour."We've come to a stop - traffic jam. There is just one car moving behind us, determined to get into a right-hand lane that doesn't exist. Button looks in the mirror disapprovingly, then grins. "That's my dad behind us." He points to the Honda doing a risky jig. "Or is it? Yeah it is. He's going to get into trouble if there's a policeman here."At 20 years old, Button was the envy of formula one. He had everything - talent, youth (he was F1's youngest driver), looks, easy charm and a name fit for an action hero. There was one problem. He couldn't win a race. He made a promising start, finishing eighth in his first season in 2000, and rising up the ranks to third by 2004. It only seemed a matter of time. But still he couldn't clinch that victory. It wasn't until 2006, 113 races on, that he managed one. This was expected to be the turning point. But it wasn't. For three more years he toiled without triumph. His car became more and more uncompetitive, he appeared to lose confidence, nobody even talked about him any more once Lewis Hamilton, the new British uber-racer, emerged fully formed. Who cared about Jenson Button? He was just another also-ran - the perennial underachiever with the aspirational name. The former boy wonder finished 15th in 2007, and 18th last year as Hamilton won the world championship.In December 2008, things reached a nadir when his cash-strapped Honda team announced it was quitting formula one. If nobody bought Honda, he would be left without a team. And why would any other team be keen to sign up a serial loser? Fast-forward five months. Button is now not only racing, he is destroying the opposition. A few days after we meet he wins his fifth race in six outings this season - a record equalled by only a handful of drivers. Formula one's Nearly Man became the Nowhere Man. Now he's simply The Man. It's a remarkable turnaround. He's 29 now, six foot tall, casually dressed, with unpruned facial hair which never quite makes the full beard. There is not an ounce of fat on him, and he's smiling. Button has always smiled. The experts and cod-psychologists suggested that was his flaw - too easy-going, lacked the killer instinct."It would make an amazing film, wouldn't it?" he says of his recent success. "You wouldn't need to add the Hollywood bits in. They are already there." There is something so boyish, so guileless about Button. I've barely met him, and I'm already telling him to make sure he doesn't screw up from this position. "I know! I know!"But there is an intensity beneath the smile. Button is aware that six months ago it was more likely he'd be heading for the jobcentre than the chequered flag. We're now sitting on the terrace cafe of a salubrious Monaco hotel looking over the mountains. Every few seconds the latest Porsche or Ferrari whizzes past. Monaco is the home of fast cars, playboys and pretty girls. It smells of petrol, perfume and privilege. It's where grand prix drivers come to chill out and avoid tax. Despite another disastrous season (in the final race the car caught fire), Button was feeling optimistic at the end of last year. After producing increasingly useless racing cars, in 2007 Honda hired the legendary designer Ross Brawn, who helped Michael Schumacher to five successive F1 world titles. Brawn was already uniting a divided team, and Honda was finally building a car that could compete. In the close season Button got himself fitter than ever, bonded with his colleagues and talked up the future. Then he got the phone call. "I'd just got off a plane and it was my manager saying, 'Just to let you know, Jenson, we've got a bit of bad news - Honda have pulled out of formula one.' I didn't believe him at first. Then you get that tingle down your spine. I was just silent on the other end of the phone. He said, 'Sorry, I didn't know another way of telling you.' I was sat at Gatwick, waiting for my bags for about an hour, and I thought, what am I going to do?" Did he think that was the end of his career? "Yeah, I did," he says baldly. Button wasn't the only one facing the dole. There were 700 workers on the Honda F1 team. He decided that the most important thing was to get to the factory, show solidarity and boost morale. "So I started speaking to the engineers in the room and I got a bit emotional ... A bit embarrassing in front of 100 men. And the voice goes ... And they're looking at me, and I'm saying, I came here to try to keep everyone positive but I'm finding it difficult myself. And they said, well, Jenson, obviously it's an emotional time, but we're staying positive, and as soon as you leave this room we're going to get back to work, and we know that nobody will be interested in buying this team or putting money into it unless we can prove to them that we're working our arses off. And it was like, I came here to help you guys out and you've helped me out more than I've helped you." He looks embarrassed even thinking about it. In a bid to save Honda, Button insisted on a 50% wage cut (you needn't feel sorry for him - even now he is paid £4m a year). Still no bidders.On 5 March 2009, only three weeks before the season started and with Button and team-mate Rubens Barrichello resigned to a spell on the sidelines at best, Ross Brawn announced he had raised the capital to buy out Honda F1. The team was reborn as Brawn GP, backed by Richard Branson. On 29 March, Button won the first grand prix of the season in Australia, and Barrichello finished second, in the new Brawn GP cars. World champion Hamilton qualified only in 18th and was eventually disqualified, and it was apparent that the McLaren car, which had seen off all comers a few months before, was now a no-hoper. Within a single race, formula one had been turned on its head.After all the criticism, Button must have felt vindicated. He sips his tea and shakes his head. No, he always knew he was fast. But so many people had written him off. I start to throw some of the insults in his face. In 2007 former formula one champion Nigel Mansell said he lacked the hunger and partied too much. "Jenson had the opportunity and didn't take it; there won't be any more," he concluded. I'm trying to goad Button, but he's still smiling. "I don't need to say anything, do I?" When he won his fourth race of the season in Barcelona, Button raised four triumphant fingers, almost in disbelief. Will he raise another digit for every race he wins? "Hopefully. That's the plan." What if he runs out of fingers? "Well, I've got an 11th finger, haven't I?" He grins suggestively and you remember how phallocentric the world of formula one is. But laddishness doesn't come naturally to him. He sounds more like a teenager who knows he's pushed the boundaries.Button, who grew up in Frome, Somerset, was named after the Jensen car. His father, John, was a successful rallycross driver and secondhand car salesman, his mother, Simone, a housewife. His parents divorced when he was seven, and for him it was a blessing. For one thing, he was no longer caught in the crossfire of their arguments, and secondly it meant two sets of Christmas presents. Who bought the better presents? "Well, Dad bought me a go-kart," he replies instantly. Was he a spoilt boy? He thinks about it. Well, yes, his three older sisters spoiled him, but he wasn't really spoilt. It was more that he was easily bored. He tells me the story of the go-kart by way of example. "My dad bought me the kart just before my eighth birthday and I drove it out of his place down the road and into a pub car park - and I drove round the pub car park in a few circles. Nobody was there because it was Christmas Day, and I got out and said, 'Dad, this is lovely, I'm bored, can we go somewhere else?' So we jumped in the car and shot down to an old disused runway half an hour from the house and I drove round there for a while." How fast? "As fast as the thing would go ... 40/50mph."Did it feel dangerous? He looks at me as if I'm batty. "Eight years old - no, I don't think so! So I drive round this runway for a while and get bored and I say to Dad, 'I need some more excitement', so he took me to a circuit called Clay Pigeon in Yeovil. And I drove round there and I was like, 'Dad, this is great fun and everything, but there's something missing.' And he's like [he does an impression of his father exhaling with resignation], 'I'll have to put him into a race' and he did a couple of weeks later. I crossed the line first and it was like, 'Dad, this is amazing, I'm not bored now, this is what I love. This is the bit that was missing - the competitiveness.' "After that he didn't have much time for school. He took one GCSE, in French, because he was too busy karting to bother with the rest. At 11, he won all 34 races in the 1991 British Open Kart Championship. At 17, he became the youngest winner of the European Super A Championship. By 18, he had moved into cars and won the British Formula Ford Championship. After one season in formula three, in which he finished third, he progressed to formula one, the highest form of auto racing with speeds of up to 220mph and engines revving up to 18,000rpm.John Button followed Jenson out to Monaco to keep him company. He's close to all his family, and says they've kept him sane in a stressful business. He looks at me. "Nobody believes me when I say it's stressful." He reckons outsiders think that the life of an F1 driver is dossing, nightclubs and the occasional drive, but he's out there training most of the time. "Do you know why we have to be so fit?" He doesn't let me answer. "So we can get the ladies." Button grins, enjoying his little joke. His resting heart rate is in the 40s (the average is 70bpm) and rises to 140-150bpm when he's driving. No other sport puts such stress on the heart - many top drivers average 180bpm through a race and can hit 200bpm when coming into a heavy-braking corner - and it would kill most of us. "I'm a little more relaxed than some drivers." Driving also places enormous stress on the neck muscles because of the gravitational pull when turning corners. Today, he looks perfectly proportioned except for a neck that could belong to the Incredible Hulk. "It's a bit of a freaky neck. I have to buy bigger shirts in the season."Of all the stressful times, the worst was probably karting as a child. It wasn't the boys he was racing against who caused the problems, it was their fathers. "Karting dads were a nightmare because they think their kids are the new superstar, and if another kid beats them they're obviously cheating. Ach, it's unbelievable." Fights would often break out mid-race on the sidelines. So what was your father like? "My dad was pretty calm, actually. He wasn't pushy ... " He pauses. "I was winning." And if you hadn't been? "I don't know. He is quite a calm person. He never pushed me, which is good."A couple of years ago Button took up the triathlon - a hugely demanding endurance event featuring swimming, cycling and running races. He had begun to doubt whether he really was a sportsman. "I went into triathlons when things weren't going very well. It was tough at the weekends, not achieving on the circuit. So doing the training and racing in triathlons was something to enjoy and to know it was all down to me, it's not down to the bike or the goggles."It can't have helped that Lewis Hamilton became the formula one poster boy. He looks me in the eye. But it did, he says, you wouldn't believe how much it helped. At last people didn't care about him. "It was a great relief because we didn't get any media. Everybody concentrated on Lewis. We didn't have to deal with the press saying bad things because they weren't interested." But you must have been jealous? He nods. "You would be of any world champion. If I had a brother and he was winning, I would hate it because I want to win. It's all about me winning." Perhaps the past few years have been toughest on his father. While Jenson found a new way of focusing his energy, John Button was left to brood on his son's failure. "He lives on his own here in Monaco, and he'd arrive home and get very depressed. Every second of the day it would be running through his mind, whereas I could switch off and I had other things to do."Button is having his picture taken, high in the hills at Monaco's botanical garden, Jardin Exotique. From here, we can look over the whole principality. Does he live here for tax reasons? He points to the sea and the mountains, and says who wouldn't want to live here. I'm not so sure.Do all the drivers live here? "A lot live in Switzerland now. The people I see most here are Nico [Rosberg] and Felipe [Massa], and a lot of drivers who were in F1." When they see each other down the supermarket, do they ... He finishes the sentence off for me. "Race?" He bursts out laughing. "Brrrum brrrum," and he starts revving up his invisible trolley. "If I saw another driver in the supermarket and they weren't with their girlfriend or kids - cos that would be a bit embarrassing - I probably would give it the old brrrum brrrum. Yeah, I'm going to go every day now and hopefully see someone."We're back in the car, heading for the tunnel that almost did for him. What makes him such a good driver? "I'm precise with everything, gentle with everything. The more gradual and gentle you are with a racing car, the more precise you are, so you hit the targets and look after the car much better. If you're more aggressive, you damage the tyres, you damage the engine more, you use more fuel, you tire yourself out more, you tire the brakes out more."He struggles into a space in the cleanest car park in the world. A siren warns him that he's about to hit the back wall. "Never been able to reverse," he says. Button failed his driving test first time round. "They said that I went through a gap that wasn't there. The woman coming the other way mounted the curve cos she didn't think she could fit through, but there was an inch either side of the wing mirror." He'd been driving 10 years at this point. Yes, he says, of course his friends took the mick. We pass a yellow Opal GT. He gives it an admiring glance. "Nice."Over the years, Button has taken a fair battering from his peers. His team-mate Jacques Villeneuve said he was better suited to a boyband than F1. In 2001, after he qualified 17th on the grid at Monaco, his new team boss at Renault, Flavio Briatore, asked him if it was true he was looking for a place to buy in Monte Carlo. When Button said yes, he remarked, "Well, would you mind not looking around during qualifying." It was a comment that still stings. "It might be funny and it might be clever, but for someone within your team to say that ... It doesn't do much for your confidence. And every interview after you're asked the same question. Or told the same - you're a playboy." And was he? "I don't think playboy is the right word. In 2000 I bought a boat and a Ferrari, and I think I did get excited by being an F1 driver." He looks sheepish. "I was 20 years old, you know, and the people looking after me were like, come on, you need to look like a formula one driver, you need to feel like a formula one driver." But he knows he can't just blame others. "I took my eye off the ball." There was certainly a time when his girlfriends attracted more attention than his driving. He was engaged to Fame Academy starlet Louise Griffiths, and his friendships with athlete Emma Davis and It Girl Beverley Bloom were fodder for the gossip columns. The thing is, he insists, all this was the exuberance of youth, way back when, and throughout the long years when things were going so horribly wrong, he was doing everything right. He insists nothing has changed. He is driving no better than in recent seasons, he is working no harder. Sure, he's never been fitter, but he was super fit anyway. Look, I say, baffled, I don't get it - how can Lewis Hamilton be so brilliant one year and so shit the next, and the opposite happen to you. "Shit!" He giggles. Has Hamilton become a rubbish driver overnight? "No, I think Lewis is driving well, and I actually think he has been driving better this year than some of last year." That doesn't make sense, I say. "I know - it's the situation I've been in for years." So does that mean it's all down to the car? No, he says patiently. But it's a hell of a lot to do with it, and this year's rule changes (to do with tyres, engine, aerodynamic downforce and any number of things I don't understand) meant the F1 teams had to start all over again, so the ones in the lead lost their advantage. He gives me a brief history of F1. In the days of James Hunt and Niki Lauda, then Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, there were only a few genuine contenders. Many of the drivers were making up the numbers. "Some paid to be there." Nowadays Button reckons most of them could win the championship with the right car and team. "Now nobody pays to race, and you're qualifying on pole by half a tenth of a second." He thinks the rival Red Bull car this year is faster than the Brawn. But even if you did have a vastly superior car, you still have to beat your team-mate - which he has done consistently this year.Surely formula one would make more sense if all the drivers drove the same car? Then we'd really know who was best. "Well, the sport wouldn't exist," he says. Why not? "Because you wouldn't have any manufacturers involved." Ah, money - always at the heart of F1. But wouldn't he enjoy it as a sportsman if they all started on a level footing? "Yeah, I would. Yeah. It would be enjoyable. And a lot of us have been in that form of racing before. People would find it fun, but that's not what formula one is. It's not an individual sport, it is a team sport. That's why we have the constructors' championship as well as the drivers' championship." It's such a paradoxical beast, F1 - the most individualistic of sports wholly reliant on hundreds of anonymous mechanics; the ultimate form of racing where it is often impossible to overtake and the winner is predetermined on the practice laps. No wonder Button likes the simple escapism of the triathlon.I notice a tiny tattoo on his arm. Is that a wheel? He laughs. "No, it's a button." Has he got a Jensen car on the other arm? "No, I've got Jenson. That's down here in Japanese." He lifts his T-shirt to show off the elegant calligraphy on his stomach. "My girlfriend did it. She did the writing, and they transferred it on." Is it correctly spelt? "She's Japanese, mate, she pays attention to detail." He corrects himself. "Half-Japanese, half-Argentine - everything is Japanese, except the bottom which is Argentine. The attitude is Japanese. She's very calm, very respectful, but also has a stong personality." Jessica Michibata is a model (of course) and writes a monthly column on cinema in the Japanese press. They started going out in December, and he is clearly besotted with her. When he's not on the phone to her (she is poorly, and he's applying long-distance TLC in great dollops), he can't stop talking about her. "I love all things Japanese - especially my girlfriend." We're driving past Casino Square and more Porsches and Ferraris ("Nice place to park, mate. Really good! Really good!!") and he's thinking of the future. He definitely wants children. "I need kids. I need to tell my kids I won races in formula one. Who else am I going to tell?" Would he encourage them to go into racing? "Definitely not. Too stressful."After nine years of struggle, has it sunk in just what he's achieved in three short months? Well, he says, he has to win the world championship before he can regard it as an achievement, but yes. "Winning is a lot more sweet when it's been difficult before, that's for sure. When I get into that car, I smile every time I close my helmet."• Jenson Button is racing in the Turkish grand prix tomorrow.Jenson ButtonBrawnFormula oneMotor sportguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds
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