Q&A with Jenson Button
Would you have put money on finishing fourth on Saturday evening, after you'd qualified 14th?
"Heh, well I was pretty downbeat on Saturday night, just because you know that, in modern Formula 1, when you start 14th, you're only really likely to just scrape into the points and, even then, only if you're lucky.
"So I went into the race knowing that I had nothing to lose. I knew I was going to be aggressive at the start, and just see where it took me. As it happened, I got a decent getaway, pushed hard, managed to get past four cars, and was helped by Sebastian and Felipe's punctures to make up six places.
"After that, I knew I was in with a shot at some decent points. The retirement of Robert and Fernando's drive-through also helped. I think I could have even been in with a shot at the podium, but I was stuck behind Michael's car for much of my first stint, and I lost ground.
"I'm disappointed not to have been on the podium, because I'd have liked to have given the home fans something extra to cheer about, but I can't complain. I only lost six points to Lewis in the championship, and that on a weekend which, on Saturday evening, didn't look like being too kind to me. So no complaints.
A great result, then, but are you concerned of the growing pace of the cars around you?
"I am, yeah. We've seen since the start of the season that the Red Bull has been the car to beat. I've won a couple of races, and so has Lewis, and you could say that, for a few races at least, we perhaps had the quickest race pace, and we were able to make the most of that.
"But Valencia showed us that the opposition never stands still. And a number of teams showed up with some significant upgrades, and even if the results didn't necessarily show it, we became aware of their intent. We saw ourselves at Silverstone, that it's not easy to arrive at a track and simply switch on' a new package it require quite a bit of effort so I think over the next few races, we're going to see a lot of the top teams further fine-tuning their refinements. So we can't afford to stand still.
"And we're not. I think we've perhaps punched above our weight at the last two races – which is great for us but we're not standing still.
"At the moment, we're hopeful of taking the blown diffuser to Hockenheim to run it on Friday. We learnt quite a bit about it from the day's testing at Silverstone, and I hope we'll be in a position to get it working more effectively at the Santander German Grand Prix.
What was the issue with the blown floor on the Friday at Silverstone?
"It's one of those things where, perhaps, you go into it feeling optimistic that it will deliver the required performance step, but, in reality, it's more complicated than that. At Silverstone, we had the added complication of a new track configuration that we'd never driven on before. And it was also very, very bumpy, which didn't help us quickly fine-tune the set-up of the car.
"On Friday, we struggled to make the car feel nice – it was just unpredictable and difficult to feel comfortable in. That could have been a set-up issue, but Lewis was reporting exactly the same issues from the other side of the garage, so it quickly became apparent that it wasn't an individual problem, it was something affecting both cars.
"Was it the right decision to go back to the old floor? It was a tough decision, but you've got to look at the result we got on Sunday to say that we made the right call.
The Santander British Grand Prix is always a busy one for the drivers, but the weekend was a pretty hectic one for the team in the garage too, wasn't it?
"Lewis and I are working for the whole week leading up to the race. Which is hectic, yeah, but it's fun, and we meet some great people and do some really worthwhile things, like visiting Great Ormond Street children's hospital.
"But at Silverstone last weekend, I've never seen such an amazing team effort from all the guys. Not only did they work like crazy to get the upgrades onto the cars for Friday morning which is a massive effort, because you're changing pretty much the whole back-end. But then they had to do the opposite after Friday practice, and revert back to the original rear floor.
"And for Gary to step in at the last minute, head back to MTC and spend Friday night working on set-ups for Silverstone using the original floor configuration, well I think that shows how well we work as a team. And we scored 30 points on Sunday, which was amazing.