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Mark Webber gave Melbourne a taste of the Formula One season as he drove the Red Bull F1 car across the city's iconic Bolte Bridge.
Hundreds of spectators gathered to watch home-town hero Webber just one week before the opening Grand Prix of the season at the Albert Park circuit in Melbourne.
Webber finished third in the drivers' championship in 2010 behind Red Bull team-mate Sebastian Vettel and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.
"We've done a huge amount of testing in Europe as you can imagine and that's gone pretty well," Webber said.
"We feel we are well organised and we've got a plan next weekend to come here and try and execute a clean weekend as a team."
"As you say, it's a long, long season and Melbourne is the first part of it because of what happened in Bahrain."
"We're happy to be here, all the teams are wrapped to be here. It's a completely sell out at Melbourne which is phenomenal and really good. "
The 2011 Formula One season begins with the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne on Sunday, March 27.
Webber also commented on his future with F1 and of winning world championship.
Webber revealed that he was already considering extending his career beyond this year.
''I went on a training camp before the season started in late January and I was out riding my bike and I thought: 'I feel good. I feel sensational,''' Webber said. ''In terms of not just that day, but I thought: 'I could see myself doing this a bit longer.' I was really hungry for it again. It's great.
''It's not like I'd been struggling for motivation, don't get me wrong, but it was a long year last year.''
And with a brand-new car, identical to Red Bull teammate and 2010 champion Sebastian Vettel, Webber is adamant he is in a position as good as any of the top-five drivers to deliver not just in 2011, but hopefully to build for future seasons.
''If I can be hungry and have the desire, still want to compete, and turn up and take these guys on week in, week out - yeah,'' Webber said.
''There's no backing off from these guys. I'm not getting any younger. But there are a hell of a lot of guys who have won races in their mid-30s. It just so happens that 'Seb' was a young world champion.
''So if I've got all that in there and I want to do it, and the results are there, then I need to work out how long that can be sustained for. And that's the tricky question.''
It's obvious, however, that Webber's trademark competitive spirit is still running thickly through his blood. ''I'm getting goosebumps right now, mate, just thinking about racing,'' said Webber, one of Australia's great sporting exports. ''When that monitor comes down on the dash and I've got my time up there and I've just been caned or I've been caning them … that's a great emotional ride.
''I also think, and it did happen a little bit a long time ago in the middle part of my F1 career, when you get beat and you're not really that worried, that's not a good sign. That's a bad sign, when you're not prepared to put that little bit extra in.
''But when you have the chance I've had the past couple of years … if you had the [other] mentality you'd be eaten alive. It's all over. [Fernando] Alonso and these boys will destroy you every weekend.
''I could perform at a good level until I'm 40. I could. But it remains unknown if I'll do that.''
First things first, Webber will have to overcome a gruelling first three rounds, starting in Melbourne next Sunday, if he is to challenge for the title this season and extend his F1 career beyond a decade.
''Of course I want to win it [Melbourne],'' he said. ''We're digging the foundations out here for the rest of the season. So [Melbourne's] very important now. It's very important. It's not make or break as I proved last year, because I came right back into it after four rounds with a rough start to the season. It's a marathon. No one had a big lead. Vettel led the championship for one race, the last one. But that's the way the cookie crumbles. Get over it.''
And from the looks and sounds of it, Webber is over it and heavily focused on claiming his first win in front of his home fans - hundreds of whom turned out to welcome the star at Docklands yesterday.
Webber acknowledged that for most drivers their new cars were still unknown quantities. ''It's hard to get across to different sports the difference [with] new tyres and wings … but I'm feeling OK with [the change] and the proof will be in the pudding.''
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