F1 German GP - Race 20/07/08




Hamilton wins from Piquet

The first half of the 67-lap German Grand Prix was a walk in the park for pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton as he quickly established a comfortable lead over Felipe Massa. However, the deployment of the safety car on lap 36, combined with some strange decision making, made Hamilton’s eighth career win rather more dramatic than McLaren would have thought. With Nelson Piquet finishing second in the Renault, it is a day to remember at Hockenheimring.

Hamilton made a solid start from the pole position and was able to pull a ten second advantage in the first 15 laps from Massa who was unable to put together consistent laps in his Ferrari. The first round of pitstops came and went and nothing really changed with Hamilton backing off by a second a lap at the front to keep the gap to Massa consistent.

Timo Glock had made best use of a long first stint before pitting and ran in eighth position when the right rear suspension failed on his TF108 exiting the fast final turn. The Toyota spun and made very heavy contact with the inside retaining wall on the pit straight before rebounding across the circuit and coming to rest on the grass. As ever, Glock seems to have little luck, but thankfully he seems not to have sustained any serious injury.

With the safety car deployed and the pit lane opened on lap 38, nearly everyone headed to the pits for a second round of pit stops.
Hamilton however did not pit and at the restart, had a clear aim of extending his advantage over Massa to more than 20 seconds, the time needed for his second and final stop.

The McLaren driver pushed hard but could however only get the gap out to 15 seconds before pitting and exited the pits behind team-mate Heikki Kovalainen, Massa and Piquet.

Kovalainen did not make much of an issue letting Hamilton ahead and soon Hamilton was right on the back of Massa’s Ferrari. Heading to the hairpin on lap 57, Massa did not protect the inside line and Hamilton was through. The procedure was repeated just three laps later on Piquet and the race victory was there for Hamilton.

The McLaren Mercedes, in the hands of Hamilton, was the class of the field today in Germany and even an error on strategy did not stop Hamilton from taking his eighth career victory.

Piquet has been under pressure to perform at Renault this year and after qualifying 17th and then running 18th in the early stages, it seemed that there would be little he could do from that position. However, using a one stop strategy compared to the two of every other runner - plus the timing of the safety car - gave him a chance to shine.

Piquet grabbed the opportunity with both hands and ran at the front of the field for the first time in his short Formula One career. The Brazilian may not have had an answer to the pace of Hamilton, but his excellent second position is a very timely boost for Renault and his own career prospects.

It was a disappointing race from Massa who never had the pace to stay with Hamilton. I was however a surprise to see him making it so comparatively simple for Hamilton to take the position from him ten laps from home. Third position however adds to his championship tally and he now trails Hamilton by four points.

A typical canny race from Nick Heidfeld saw him make best of the situation to finish in fourth position in his BMW Sauber ahead of Kovalainen in the McLaren and Kimi Raikkonen in the Ferrari. Neither Kovalainen nor Raikkonen looked particularly racy and the former really is now out of realistic championship contention as he trails his team-mate by 30 points.

Robert Kubica finished in seventh position in the second BMW Sauber in what was a difficult race for him while a spin in the final laps from Jarno Trulli promoted Sebastian Vettel to eighth position and into the final points scoring position at his first German Grand Prix.

Toyota will be disappointed to see Trulli out of the points in ninth position after starting from an impressive fourth position. The team will need to look at the reasons for Glock’s dramatic exit from the race with the suspension issue on his TF108.

Nico Rosberg picked up tenth position in the leading Williams Toyota, gaining the position from Fernando Alonso late in the race following a spin from the former champion. With Piquet finishing a sensational second, it was a less stellar performance from Renault team-mate Alonso who slipped back through the field. Renault now move ahead of Williams in the constructors' championship and are just one point behind Red Bull Renault.

Sebastien Bourdais finished 12th position in the second Toro Rosso, less than half a second behind Alonso while David Coulthard lost ground early on and would finish 13th in the Red Bull Renault after some rather unnecessary contact with Rubens Barrichello late in the race.

Giancarlo Fisichella took 14th position in the Force India Ferrari ahead of Kazuki Nakajima in the second Williams and Adrian Sutil in the second Force India. Jenson Button was the final classified runner in 17th position in the Honda. The second RA108 of Barrichello was unable to continue after contact with Coulthard at turn four while Mark Webber’s Red Bull Renault suffered an engine failure mid-race.

Hamilton now has 58 points, with Massa on 54 and Raikkonen on 51. It was quite a race at the front and next up is Hungary and that has in recent times been a McLaren track....

Earl ALEXANDER
© CAPSIS International

F1 British GP - Race 06/07/200




Lewis Hamilton takes the home win!

Lewis Hamilton won an incident filled and rain hit British Grand Prix after a dominant display in tricky conditions. Nick Heidfeld also put in a great performance to finish in second position while Rubens Barrichello seized the opportunity with both hands to take a memorable third position in the Honda.

Starting fourth, Hamilton made an excellent start and powered his way to second into the first corner behind pole-sitter and team-mate Heikki Kovalainen. There was the slightest of contact as the duo battled for position and five laps later Hamilton got a good tow down the Hanger Straight and made a clean pass for the lead.

Kimi Raikkonen was on the move as well after a slow start and soon found his way into second position and shadowed the race leader until the first round of pitstops. With the circuit beginning to dry a little and more rain forecast, this is where Ferrari made the crucial mistake that took Raikkonen out of contention for the race win.

Hamilton and Raikkonen both pitted together with McLaren fitting a new set of intermediate tyres while Raikkonen received just fuel. As the rain started to fall a few laps later Raikkonen found himself out of grip and his lap times fell away dramatically. In the space of ten laps Hamilton had extended his lead from almost nothing to over 40 seconds. Ferrari did not react to the situation and it was only in the later stages of the race that Raikkonen could make any kind of recovery.


Nick Heidfeld steered clear of trouble – made some great passes - and took advantage of errors from his rivals to take the chequered flag in second position 70 seconds behind the dominant Hamilton. Another driver to make best of the conditions was Rubens Barrichello who along with the Honda team made the best calls of the day in terms of tyre strategy.

Running in the lower points-paying positions mid-race, a heavy rain shower saw Barrichello take full wet tyres. The results were immediate with the Brazilian veteran lapping between ten and 14 seconds a lap faster than anyone else. This promoted Barrichello to a stunning second position but a late race change back to the intermediate tyres and fuel top-up, dropped him back behind Heidfeld. It was an excellent drive from a man known to shine in such tricky conditions.

Kimi Raikkonen battled back to finish in fourth position in the leading Ferrari, but it was very much a case of damage limitation following the earlier error by the team. Team-mate Felipe Massa, the championship leader heading into the 60-lap race, endured what was probably his least competitive showing of his entire career and finished flat last a lap behind the next highest placed finisher. It was certainly not his day.

With Hamilton taking the win, Raikkonen scrambling home in fourth and Massa not scoring, the trio all have 48 championship points heading to Hockenheim in two weeks time...

Heikki Kovalainen could not match the pace of Hamilton or Raikkonen early in the race and a spin late in the race at Club saw him lose position to Raikkonen and Fernando Alonso. He would get one of those positions back as he took the chequered flag in a disappointing fifth position.

Fernando Alonso found himself in defence mode in the closing stages of the race and could not resist the pace of Raikkonen and Kovalainen but did hold on to finish in sixth position. Renault team-mate Nelson Piquet ran well until the heavy rains fell and lost control of his R28 and spun out of the race.

Jarno Trulli finished in seventh position in the leading Toyota, taking the position on the very final lap from Kazuki Nakajima in the Williams. Nakajima looked to have the pace to pass Alonso but went defensive in the final moment of the race and lost out to the Italian veteran. Still it was a good race from the rookie Williams Toyota driver.

Nico Rosberg finished in ninth position having started the race from the pit lane. It was not a trouble-free race for the highly-rated driver as a collision with Timo Glock – the second of the season - saw him forced to fit for a new front wing and the error cost him a chance of points.

Starting second on the grid, Mark Webber had high hopes of a good haul of points this afternoon but a spin exiting Chapel on lap one saw those hopes dashed. Facing the wrong way as the field passed by, Webber can count his lucky stars that he was just far enough off line not to be hit. The Australian racer finished in tenths position while team-mate David Coulthard ran into Sebastian Vettel at the start of the race eliminating both on the spot.

Sebastien Bourdais soldiered on in the surviving Toro Rosso and finished 11th ahead of Timo Glock who suffered several spins in the later stages of the race in his Toyota. With half a dozen spins of his own, Massa was Classified 13th and last.

Robert Kubica was caught out in the heavy rain and spun off and into retirement as was Jenson Button and the Force India duo of Giancarlo Fisichella and Adrian Sutil.

It couldn’t be closer at the mid-point of the season...

Earl ALEXANDER
© CAPSIS International