Once I pulled up, my full focus was on the start. In the formation laps, I knew the car wasn’t perfect: turn one way it understeered, the other way it would oversteer. It was quite a handful. But knowing Macau, I knew that if I could overtake the pole car on the start, I could possibly hang on to the lead because it’s difficult to overtake in the top sections. On the higher speed sections, the car seemed to improve because the aerodynamics were good and it seemed to overcome some of the mechanical issues. Thankfully, I had the perfect start. I changed my strategy and it worked. In fact, it was such a good start, the pole position driver protested after the race that I jumped the start – but, of course, the officials checked afterwards and I hadn’t [laughs]. From there, it was all about defending through the hills and maximum attack through the bottom section to keep them behind. When I crossed the finish line, I’ve never had such an emotional win. I guess because of the support of everybody and also the teamwork - they just didn't give up. It's important to note that we actually had a skeleton crew (only three mechanics) because of the pandemic, which makes the rebuild all the more remarkable. They had tears on the grid before we’d even won the race. They basically didn’t stop for 28 hours.
![Well done for getting the car to the grid. How did the race go?](https://d23zpyj32c5wn3.cloudfront.net/images/masonry_bricks/pictures/66124/big/mmexport1637479929180.jpg?1639065962)