By PABLO GORONDI
Associated Press Writer
BUDAPEST, Hungary(AP) -- Felipe Massa has no intention of letting
Ferrari teammate Fernando Alonso pass him if the two are
fighting for the win at the Hungarian Grand Prix this weekend.
"I will win," Massa said Thursday when asked what he would do if
the situation that occurred last weekend at the German GP
happens again Sunday.
Ferrari was fined $100,000 after stewards determined that the
Italian team had sent Massa radio messages instructing him to
let Alonso take the lead from him on the 49th lap of the race at
Hockenheim. Massa seemed to comply and finished second while
Alonso went on to win the race.
"The time they say I am the No. 2 driver I will not race
anymore, so I am not (No. 2)," Massa said ahead of Sunday's 25th
edition of the Hungarian GP.
The Brazilian said he had learned from the Hockenheim
experience.
"I'm very strong and I'm looking for the victory," said Massa,
who is back at the Hungaroring circuit for the first time since
he was seriously injured in a season-ending crash during
qualifying at last year's race.
Two-time world champion Alonso, who has two wins this year,
brushed off questions about the controversy, insisting that he
was focused on the upcoming race.
"Hungary is our main target right now," the Spaniard said. "(We
are) completely concentrated on this race."
While Alonso insisted that Ferrari's interests were the
priority, he avoided saying whether he would let Massa pass him
if that was preferable from a team standpoint.
"Every race is different, with different circumstances and
possibilities, and we will decide what is best," Alonso said.
"We are privileged to drive for Ferrari and we know what we have
to do."
Alonso picked up 25 points for winning at Hockenheim, while
Massa collected 18 for second place. The extra points for the
Spanish driver could prove critical in what is shaping up to be
a tight drivers' championship.
McLaren's Lewis Hamilton leads the standings on 157 points, with
teammate Jenson Button second on 143 points. The two Red Bull
drivers, Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, each have 136 and
Alonso is fifth with 123.
Alonso dismissed criticism that he would be a "dirty" champion
because of the manner of his victory in Germany.
"I don't think anything has changed. I'm still the same and I
will fight always ... for the team and the sport," Alonso said.
"Naturally, I have not been affected at all. If we lost even 1
percent of our concentration because of what's been said, we'd
be finished."
Williams driver Rubens Barrichello was supportive of fellow
Brazilian Massa.
"I was very sorry to see what he had to go through. It was such
a bad thing ... and I wished he didn't go through that," said
Barrichello, who will start his 299th Formula One race on
Sunday.
In 2002, Barrichello was involved in a similar situation when he
was forced by Ferrari to let teammate Michael Schumacher pass
him for the win on the final straight at the Austrian GP.
Barrichello was also ordered to concede second place to
Schumacher at the same track the year before.
Schumacher won the 2002 championship with twice as many points
as second-place Barrichello but since 2003 teams have been
banned from giving drivers orders that determine race results.
"You should be allowed to race," Barrichello said, although he
added that teams still had ways of letting their drivers know if
they were expected to back off or let a teammate pass them."
Massa met Thursday with members of the rescue team who lifted
him out of the cockpit after his crash last year but said that
the accident would not affect his performance Sunday.
"I don't remember a single thing from the accident," he said.
"When you close the visor ... you just think about doing your
best."
Barrichello, whose car lost the spring that hit Massa on the
helmet and caused the crash, said Massa had moved on from the
accident, and had even used it to his advantage while the two
were playing poker earlier this year.
"He put the helmet in which he had the accident on the table and
it completely destroyed my night," Barrichello said. "I started
losing money and he just had fun with it. I think he's going to
drive flat-out."
Massa was hospitalized for nine days in Hungary after suffering
multiple skull fractures. He was placed in an induced coma and
later had plastic surgery in Brazil.