SAO PAULO — Formula One drivers are not worried about their safety heading into Sunday’s Brazilian Grand Prix despite Jenson Button’s confrontation with armed men a year ago outside the Interlagos track in South America’s biggest city.
The attack on Button has not prompted significant changes to increase their safety in Brazil this year, teams and drivers said Thursday. Even the British driver said he was not too concerned about returning to the South American country after the frightening experience he went through a year ago.
Button’s father, John, who was also in the car attacked by gunmen in 2010, said they were “not living in fear” because of what happened last year.
Button, his father and his physiotherapist had left the track after qualifying when a group of armed men attempted to attack their armored Mercedes. They escaped thanks to evasive maneuvers by the car’s driver, an undercover local police officer.
The McLaren driver said it was one of the scariest moments of his life and that it was frightening to have a gun pointed at him, but he wanted to leave the attack in the past and focus only on racing this year.
Speaking briefly outside the McLaren office in Interlagos, he said there were “no changes” at all to his routine this year.
His father said he never thought about not coming to Brazil to accompany his son because of last year’s attack.
“It didn’t even cross our minds,” he said. “We are not living in fear. There hasn’t been any problems at all.”
He said, however, there have been minor changes to the safety measures surrounding his son and other McLaren team members, including the addition of a local police car escorting them to the track.
“I think all the drivers have got a police car tracking them in,” John Button said. “I think they’ve got it all covered.”
Red Bull’s Mark Webber said nothing has changed for him, not even on his way to Interlagos using the same streets where the Buttons were attacked in 2010.
“I’m still driving to the track on my own,” he said. “No changes for me.”



