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Massa bemoans spare parts struggle in Hungary

A car with a floor that is taking a few tenths away from Felipe Massa did not let him compete in qualifying.

Felipe Massa, Williams F1 in a big crash

Felipe Massa, Williams F1 in a big crash

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Felipe Massa, Williams
Felipe Massa, Williams F1 Team
Felipe Massa , Williams F1 Team
Felipe Massa, Williams FW36
Felipe Massa, Williams F1 Team
Felipe Massa, Williams F1 Team
Felipe Massa, Williams F1 in a big crash
Felipe Massa, Williams FW36 crashes at the start of the race

Jul.27 (GMM) Felipe Massa insists he was beaten in Hungary only because his car was not up to par with his on-form Williams teammate Valtteri Bottas.

Right now, the big rising star of Formula One is undoubtedly Finn Bottas, who is on a run of podium finishes and in Hungary is once again in the top three in qualifying.

On paper it costs us two tenths

Felipe Massa

Teammate Massa, once the long-time Ferrari star, is the best part of a full second behind around the Hungaroring.

But the Brazilian insists a comparison in Budapest is unfair, after a spate of incidents including his first-corner rollover crash just a week ago in Germany.

Massa is quoted by Auto Motor und Sport as saying the crashes have meant that, on the eve of the mid-season summer break, Williams has run low on spare parts.

In Hungary, for instance, he is using a pre-Monaco Grand Prix floor.

"On paper it costs us two tenths," said Massa. "The rear is very unstable and as a result I am lacking confidence."

At the same time, however, Williams is happy that upgrades brought to Hungary are keeping the FW36 competitive even at the tight and twisty Hungaroring, where the ultra-quick Mercedes engine is less dominant.

Bottas, a potential great

Bottas played down the likelihood of a debut race win any time soon, but Williams' technical boss Pat Symonds senses potential greatness in the 24-year-old.

"In many ways Valtteri reminds me of (Fernando) Alonso," he told Germany's Auto Motor und Sport.

"You notice that he is very mature for his age, and that he has the makings of a great racer," said Symonds, who worked closely with Spaniard Alonso at Renault a decade ago.

"He (Bottas) is fast, hardly makes any mistakes, is incredibly clever.

"If he was able to win a Grand Prix this season, it would be a result with an eerie parallel to Fernando," he added, referring to the fact that Alonso made his victory breakthrough in his second F1 season back in 2003 -- in Hungary.

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