I've never really been too fussed about the kind of teammate I have.
“I've never really been too fussed about the kind of teammate I have.”
The World Motivation
I've never really been too fussed about the kind of teammate I have.
“I've never really been too fussed about the kind of teammate I have.”
I've never really been too fussed about the kind of teammate I have.
When you're young, the temptation is maybe to think, 'More is more.' But a lot of the time less is more.
I know what I want, and the performance side is more important than ticking the money box.
I don't really cook much to be honest.
Pretty much all the drivers I get on with, at least to say 'Hi' and have a conversation. But when the helmet's on, you don't care who it is. You have no sympathy: someone blows an engine in front of you, if it means you gain a position, then you're smiling.
It's easy to be the greatest teammate when you're winning. How about when you're losing? How about when you're down 20?
At the end of the day, I want to be the best teammate I can be.
In some crazy sort of way, if I died helping a teammate or a friend or someone that I love, I think I could live with it. My family probably couldn't, but I think I could.
I get a feeling about where a teammate is going to be. A lot of times, I can turn and pass without even looking.
Danieal Manning is a friend of mine, he was a teammate for five or six years, and that's the way it is.