ESPN Network: ESPN | NBA.com | WNBA.com | NHL.com | ABC | Radio | EXPN | Page 2 | INSIDER | Shop |
NASCAR
Standings
Results/Schedule
NASCARStore.com
Formula One
Standings
Results/Schedule
CART
Standings
Results/Schedule
Indy
Standings
Results/Schedule
NHRA
Standings
Results/Schedule
 Sport Sections
MLB
Scores
NFL
Scores
Col. Football
Scores
NBA
Scores
Golf
Scores
Golf
Scores
Motorsports
Soccer
Boxing
NHL
M Col. BB
W Col. BB
WNBA
Horse Racing
Recruiting
Sports Business
College Sports
Olympic Sports
Action Sports
ESPNdeportes
ProRodeo
 Broadcast
ESPN Radio
TV Listings
Video Highlights
Audio Highlights
 Community
Sign-in/Home
Chat
Message Boards
Arcade Games
 ESPN Inc.
The Magazine
ESPN Radio
ESPNEWS
ESPN Wireless
TV Listings
This is SportsCenter
ESPN National Golf Challenge
The ESPYs
Ask ESPN
ESPN Zone
SPECIAL SECTIONS
Fantasy Games
Contests
ESPN Classic
SportsFigures
Training Room
 Sunday, June 4
Hakkinen fights back to make his point
 
 Reuters

MONTE CARLO -- A single point was world champion Mika Hakkinen's reward for determination in the face of adversity at the Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday.

The Finn had started the race with his McLaren in an unusually low fifth position after a tough time in Saturday's qualifying session. That left him with the task of trying to get past four cars on the notoriously narrow and winding Monaco circuit, where overtaking is next to impossible.

Then, halfway through the race and still in fifth place, Hakkinen suffered a setback that almost left him out of the running altogether.

"Let's just say I'm glad it's over," the two-time world champion said while his teammate David Coulthard, who lapped the Finn, was celebrating his first Monaco win. "It could have been worse in the circumstances. I was running all right in fifth, quite comfortable with that and just looking for the right moment to overtake.

"Then I went into a corner and the brake didn't work."

He made a pit stop that took him out for 53.2 seconds and rejoined the race well down the field. But he was 12th after 41 laps and showed his mettle by setting the fastest time of the race at that stage.

A gearbox problem then slowed him again on the 74th lap when he had made it back into the points and he had to settle for sixth behind compatriot and big rival Mika Salo, who steered his Sauber to fifth place.

Coulthard had started from third on the grid and took the lead after Ferrari's Michael Schumacher limped back to the pits with his suspension broken after 55 laps. It was McLaren's 11th victory on the streets of Monte Carlo, reinforcing their dominant record in the streets of the Mediterranean principality.

The result meant that Coulthard overtook Hakkinen in the drivers championship with 34 points to the Finn's 29, still trailing Schumacher on 46. Ferrari stayed ahead in the constructors' competition, with Rubens Barichello's second place taking their score to 68 ahead of McLaren on 63.

McLaren chief Ron Dennis said he was reasonably happy with the result however.

"It edges us closer to having a crack at the world championship. It closes the gap on Michael and it closes the gap on the constructors. And with 10 races to go anything can happen," he said.

Dennis said he was disappointed with the mechanical problems that plagued Hakkinen during the race.

"At least we got a point," Dennis said. "Of course we try to have 100 percent reliability but he certainly didn't with his car. We were lucky to get him out again at all."
 


ALSO SEE
Coulthard captures Monaco GP with Schumacher out




  
ESPN.com: Help | PR Media Kit |Sales Media Kit | Contact Us | Tools | Jobs at ESPN | Supplier Information | Copyright ©2007 ESPN Internet Ventures. Terms of Use and Privacy Policy and Safety Information/Your California Privacy Rights are applicable to this site.