Wolff: F1 race 'close but far away'

08 May 2015 01:02

Susie Wolff insists she is fully confident in her ability to compete in Formula One - even if her dream is still firmly out of grasp.

The 32-year-old Scot drove in free practice one ahead of the Spanish Grand Prix, the third time she has run in that session since last year, and clocked up the 14th-fastest time, over eight-tenths of a second adrift of the sister Williams of Felipe Massa.

Wolff is a development driver with the British marque and her participation here came 40 years after Lella Lombardi became the last woman to score a point in F1.

The former DTM racer recently said she feels a permanent F1 drive is "very far away", but put faith in her own talents after the session.

"I wouldn't be doing this if I didn't feel I was good enough," she said.

"I'm ambitious but I'm also realistic and if I didn't think I was good enough or I didn't think I was capable of racing at this level I would have been the first to take myself out of the game.

"But I feel like I'm very close (to being good enough), I feel like I have something to bring to the table, and I 100 per cent feel that a woman can compete at this level.

"That's why it's so important for me, every time I'm in the car, to perform, because I know what I'm capable of and I always want to show that to the best that it can be. Because I do believe that it's manageable."

Having driven in Silverstone and Hockenheim last year, Wolff felt more suitably prepared for the outing at the Circuit de Catalunya even if she had to drive within her limits.

"It's great. Every time you go out you learn so much," she said.

"I'm frustrated that I missed out on my quickest lap, had a moment on turn three and that ultimately cost me two tenths (of a second). Overall it was positive.

"But the car has to come back in one piece, you can't take any unnecessary risk out there. I would love nothing more now than to do FP2 because of what I have learnt in FP1 I could do it again and do it quicker.

"But that is not going to happen so for me it is about analysing what I did right and what I can do next time.

"The next time I'm in the car is at a test day so I will get more time and then have another FP1 so I can feel a pretty good progression.

"As a driver I felt so much more prepared on the track today than I did at Silverstone last year. You gain so much experience every time you're in the car it means you can push more and be more prepared.

"It is difficult, I'm not the reserve driver for the team so that means I'm far away from a race day but I'm driving the car four times a year and not many people can say that. Close but far away."

Wolff will be behind the wheel of the Williams for a post-race test in Austria before competing in the first practice session at the British Grand Prix.

She is still without the super license that would allow her to race in a complete grand prix weekend but admits she is not in a position to get hold of one.

"I can't apply for a super licence if I'm not going to do a race," she added.

"If a race was close to happening (I would apply), but right now it is not, so I'm not going to jump a step ahead of myself. I can't go and ask for one because they would ask what I need it for.

"I would do absolutely everything in my power if I had the opportunity to race.

"That is the only thing that would stop me at this stage when I have time in an F1 car, I do a lot of simulator work so that cannot be the reason to stop me doing a race. If that opportunity came the super licence would not be the thing to stop me."

Source: PA