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Your future is with us; Brawn tells Button to stay
(China Daily)
Updated: 2009-11-19 09:09 LONDON: Formula One team boss Ross Brawn has advised world champion Jenson Button he would do best to stay with him next season rather than jumping to rivals McLaren. "Negotiations (with Button) are continuing and the reports that he has already agreed to terms with McLaren are not helpful," he told the Independent newspaper. "I would be amazed if that was the case." "His best future is with our team, where he has a good group around him and there's a lot to be said for that."
The paper said Brawn last spoke to the 29-year-old Briton at the weekend, after he had toured the McLaren factory with his manager. The driver, who is out of contract with Brawn and wants a significant pay rise, has since had further discussions with McLaren who are said to have offered him a three-year deal worth at least six million pounds a year. Although the Guardian newspaper reported on Tuesday Button had agreed terms with McLaren, the team would not confirm that. If Button were to join McLaren, he would almost double his current salary and partner compatriot Lewis Hamilton in all-British line-up of world champions. However, he would also be stepping into a team the 24-year-old Hamilton has made his own, having been nurtured by McLaren for more than a decade. Hamilton has already seen off one world champion teammate, Spain's Fernando Alonso, and would be a tough partner for Button even if the team assured them equal status. "In the past they (McLaren) have had a history of really being able to only fully support one driver," former McLaren racer Martin Brundle told BBC radio. "It's Lewis Hamilton's patch, it's his territory and he's made it his own. He knows everybody and knows where all the green buttons are to press. "Whereas at Brawn, he (Button) is the king of the castle and they will all be fully behind him. But we don't know all the details, we don't know why Jenson would absolutely want to leave Brawn," he said. "You wouldn't turn a McLaren drive down, would you? And I think Mercedes moving out of McLaren will be disruptive for both teams in some respects. I think generally the feeling of many is that Jenson ought to stick with what he knows." Reuters
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