F1 The Korean Grand Prix - October 24th 2010


Alonso wins, takes lead in Korea

Fernando Alonso, Ferrari, Korean GPFerrari's Fernando Alonso stormed into the world championship lead by winning a wet and delayed Korean Grand Prix, on a disastrous day for Red Bull that saw Mark Webber crash out of second and Sebastian Vettel have an engine failure while leading.

Lewis Hamilton boosted his title prospects with second for McLaren, but a lowly 12th all but ended his team-mate Jenson Button's hopes.

Racing would not actually start until nearly one hour and three quarters after the scheduled time. The rain forced first a short delay, then four laps behind the safety car, then a pause of nearly an hour, and then a further 13 laps of following the pace car before conditions were deemed satisfactory - to the delight of Hamilton, who had been adamant over the radio, unlike most of his peers, that the track was dry enough for racing.

Vettel immediately pulled out a 2.8-second gap over Webber on the first lap of racing. Then it all went hideously wrong for the pre-race championship leader next time around, as he ran slightly wide at the right-hander heading into the 'city' section, and spun into the opposite wall, before rebounding back and collecting the passing Nico Rosberg's Mercedes, which had overtaken Hamilton for third at Turn 3 a lap earlier.

With two wrecked cars to collect from a narrow section of the course, the safety car returned for a few more laps before racing finally got underway in earnest. Vettel made a break once again, establishing a three-second cushion over Alonso before the next safety car interruption on lap 30, when Toro Rosso's Sebastien Buemi - who had already tipped Heikki Kovalainen's Lotus into a spin - speared into Timo Glock's Virgin at the end of the long straight.

Buemi was among those who had already taken on intermediates, and everyone still on full wets followed suit during the caution. Vettel and Alonso had passed the pits when the yellow came out so had to do another lap, but Vettel retained his lead. A problem with the right-front wheel change on Alonso's car let Hamilton into second - but not for long, as the McLaren ran wide at Turn 1 at the restart and handed the place straight back.

Vettel could not escape to the same extent in the next stint, with Alonso and Hamilton lurking within a few seconds of him, but still seemed to have the race under control until his Red Bull's Renault engine erupted at the start of lap 46.

Alonso then edged away from Hamilton in the gloom to clinch his first win of the year and open up an 11-point lead over Webber, with Hamilton's second place putting him up to third in the standings, 10 points further adrift.

Felipe Massa completed the podium in the second Ferrari after a consistent race, while Michael Schumacher produced his best performance of the year by taking fourth, the Mercedes driver flying in the very wet opening laps.

Renault's Robert Kubica slipped through to fifth, passing both Williams as their tyres faded in the closing stages. Tonio Liuzzi followed him through to take sixth for Force India, as Williams's potential fifth and sixth became seventh (Rubens Barrichello) and 10th (Nico Hulkenberg, after a pitstop). Sauber got both cars in the points again, Kamui Kobayashi in eighth ahead of Nick Heidfeld.

Button was running sixth when he made a relatively early stop for intermediates, which dropped him to the tail of the midfield pack in 16th, behind various cars which had made even earlier stops. He then lost more ground as all those able to pit under the safety car got ahead of him, and when he bounced off the road while battling with Adrian Sutil's Force India. Struggling with the McLaren's handling and tyre wear, Button had a late spin and finished only 12th.

Other drivers to slip up included Vitaly Petrov, who had a massive crash at the final corner when seventh on lap 40, Sutil, who had a series of wheel-banging incidents and excursions while battling with Saubers until finally breaking his suspension against Kobayashi's car, and Lucas di Grassi, who spun his Virgin into the wall while trying to pass Sakon Yamamoto's Hispania.

Heikki Kovalainen was top new team driver for Lotus, despite a pitlane speeding penalty, while his team-mate Jarno Trulli had a spin, a clash with Bruno Senna's Hispania and eventually a race-ended hydraulic problem.

By Matt Beer
http://www.autosport.com

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Alonso Ferrari 2h48:20.810
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 14.999
3. Massa Ferrari + 30.868
4. Schumacher Mercedes + 39.688
5. Kubica Renault + 47.734
6. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes + 53.571
7. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1:09.257
8. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1:17.889
9. Heidfeld Sauber-Ferrari + 1:20.107
10. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth + 1:20.851
11. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1:24.146
12. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 1:29.939
13. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth + 1 lap
14. Senna HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
15. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps

Fastest lap: Alonso, 1:50.257

Rally Spain 22 - 24 Oct 10


Loeb cruising towards Spain win

Sebastien Loeb, Citroen, Catalunya 2010Sebastien Loeb is still on course for another Rally of Spain win with two stages to go, while behind him Dani Sordo's chase of Petter Solberg is building towards a final-stage showdown.

With Loeb having been alone out front since Sebastien Ogier crashed on Saturday morning, the focus on the final day is on the works Citroen team's bid to get a one-two as home favourite Dani Sordo closes in on privateer Petter Solberg.

Sordo started the day 16.9 seconds down on Solberg, and trimmed 4.9s from that by winning the opening 42-kilometre El Priorat stage, where Solberg felt he had been too cautious in the mid-section as he tried to avoid his tyres fading later. With Sordo 1.2s quicker on the following La Serra d'Almos too, the gap is now 10.8s.

Jari-Matti Latvala (Ford) made a final bid to stay in the battle for second on El Priorat but soon realised from the split times that the Citroens ahead were uncatchable, so has now settled for fourth.

Hungarian privateer Frigyes Turan's impressive run ended when he crashed out of seventh on SS13, which means that position now features an unusual battle between Khalid Al Qassimi's works WRC Ford Focus, and Henning Solberg's Ford Fiesta S2000 - the Norwegian determined to upstage a few of the 'big' cars as he revels in the new machine.

Turan's retirement put Ogier (Citroen Junior) back on course to salvage a point as he rapidly gained on 10th-placed Dennis Kuipers - but Ogier had a scare when he damaged his suspension on SS14 and had to conduct roadside repairs to get back to service.

In the Junior title battle, Hans Weijs Jr now leads the class after Yeray Lemes had a puncture. If Weijs stays in front, he will be the category's final champion regardless of where pre-rally points leader Aaron Burkart - currently fifth under superally after his crash yesterday - finishes.

By Matt Beer
http://www.autosport.com

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h06m28.9s
2. Petter Solberg Citroen + 44.6s
3. Dani Sordo Citroen + 55.4s
4. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 1m24.6s
5. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 6m22.7s
6. Matthew Wilson Ford + 7m27.1s
7. Khalid Al Qassimi Ford + 11m37.1s
8. Henning Solberg Ford + 11m42.1s
9. Ken Block Ford + 14m38.9s
10. Dennis Kuipers Ford + 16m33.0s

F1 The Japanese Grand Prix - October 10th 2010


Vettel leads commanding Red Bull 1-2

Sebastian Vettel finally returned to the top spot of the podium by taking a flawless victory in the Japanese Grand Prix for a second straight year.

His Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber was a close second, and extended his championship lead to 14 points over third-place finisher Fernando Alonso and Vettel, now up to joint second thanks to his first win since Valencia.

McLaren's title hopes took another blow as Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton, the latter hobbled by the loss of third gear, finished fourth and fifth.

Most of the incident in the race was compacted into the opening minutes - although the destruction began even before the start, when Virgin's Lucas di Grassi had a massive, and bizarre, crash at the 130R on his way to the dummy grid.

Then when the race got underway, the fast-starting Vitaly Petrov (Renault) clipped Nico Hulkenberg's Williams and slammed into the barriers on the pits straight, moments before Ferrari's Felipe Massa took to the grass going into the first corner and speared into Tonio Liuzzi's Force India.

The safety car was immediately brought out, and one of the race's most intriguing possibilities was removed during the yellow. Robert Kubica had split the Red Bulls off the line, but the second-placed Renault pulled off on lap three after shedding its right rear wheel while cruising around behind the pace car.

Red Bull therefore resumed one-two formation at the restart, with Vettel and Webber easily pulling away from Alonso (Ferrari) at around a second per lap initially.

The only time they were headed was when Button's alternative strategy allowed him to lead from laps 25 to 38, as the world champion ran long on his hard tyres before changing to softs and mounting a late charge.

His targets were Hamilton and Alonso. A battle between the two had seemed to be brewing until Hamilton reported the loss of third gear in the final stages. He tumbled away from the Ferrari and let Button pass him with ease at the hairpin on lap 44. Hamilton was able to hang on to fifth, while the gap to Alonso was too great for Button to close in the time remaining.

Michael Schumacher returned to the top six after one of his strongest races of the year. He looked set to finish behind Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg, who had pitted under the safety car at the start, until the younger German lost a wheel and had a big crash at the S curves with five laps to go. Rosberg had earlier escaped a near-miss with Sebastien Buemi when an attempt to pass the Toro Rosso on the outside at the 130R went awry.

Late entertainment was again provided by Sauber's Kamui Kobayashi. Running an identical strategy to Button, he dived past Jaime Alguersuari (Toro Rosso) and Adrian Sutil (Force India) at the hairpin in his first stint, but fell behind both after finally pitting.

He flew on fresh tyres, though, surging past Alguersuari again - with the Toro Rosso breaking its front wing trying to retaliate - gaining a place when Sutil's engine blew (and sent him spinning scarily at the 130R), then passing Rubens Barrichello's Williams and his Sauber team-mate Nick Heidfeld to delight the home crowd with a hard-earned seventh.

Heidfeld scored his first points back with Sauber in eighth, while Barrichello was only ninth having been passed by Schumacher on-track and Heidfeld in the pits even before falling victim to Kobayashi. Buemi completed the top 10.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1h30:27.323
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 0.905
3. Alonso Ferrari + 2.721
4. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 13.522
5. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 39.595
6. Schumacher Mercedes + 59.933
7. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1:04:038
8. Heidfeld Sauber-Ferrari + 1:09.648
9. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1:10.846
10. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1:12.806
11. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
12. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth + 1 lap
13. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth + 2 laps
14. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
15. Senna HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
16. Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth + 3 laps
17. Rosberg Mercedes + 5 laps

Fastest lap: Webber, 1:33.474

By Matt Beer
http://www.autosport.com

Rally France 01 - 03 Oct 10


Loeb secures seventh title with win

Sebastien Loeb clinched a record-extending seventh consecutive World Rally Championship title with another consummate victory - the 60th of his career and his sixth of the season - in his home rally in France.

Any result other than a Loeb win this weekend would have been the shock of the decade given his and Citroen's unstoppable form on asphalt in recent years.

Sure enough, he established a 40-second lead in the first half of the rally and then eased his pace and drove carefully to protect his advantage and ensure a straightforward victory. The event's new location meant he secured the title in his home town of Haguenau in front of a vast and ecstatic local crowd.

"For sure it makes it really special - it's incredible for me to win the seventh title here in Haguenau," said Loeb, whose win also clinched the manufacturers' title for Citroen. "I couldn't expect so many people here. To win the title here is the best thing that could happen this year."

Dani Sordo made it a one-two for the factory Citroen team, ultimately by a comfortable margin - though he had been part of a close four-way battle for second earlier in the weekend.

Sebastien Ogier (Citroen Junior), the only man who could still mathematically deprive Loeb of the crown, broke his suspension and had to stop when third on Saturday afternoon, while small errors and delays dropped Petter Solberg (Solberg Citroen) and Jari-Matti Latvala (Ford) back in third and fourth. Nevertheless, a sixth podium of 2010 delighted Solberg, and Latvala made a real breakthrough with his asphalt speed this weekend, taking several stage wins.

Latvala's Ford team-mate Mikko Hirvonen struggled throughout, though. Severely lacking in confidence in his car, he finished a distant fifth.

The top cars pulled so far away from the rest of the field that Ogier was able to take sixth via superally when he returned for leg three.

Munchi's Ford's Federico Villagra beat Matthew Wilson - the only Stobart WRC class entry this weekend - to seventh by 11s after a rally-long battle. Kimi Raikkonen (Citroen Junior) had held that position on day one, before two accidents on Saturday brought his rally to an end.

Hydraulic problems and some errors confined Ken Block to 12th place, but the Monster Ford driver did complete a full rally distance for the first time in his fledgling WRC career.

World Touring Car Championship leader Yvan Muller enjoyed his WRC outing in a Solberg-run Citroen Xsara, despite a fuel system issue forcing him to retire mid-way through leg one. He rejoined via superally and finished 43rd.

Although the unregistered Henning Solberg was the top S2000 car in ninth overall, the official SWRC class win went to Patrik Sandell after a thrilling contest with Eyvind Brynildsen, which finally ended when Brynildsen - who had thrown caution to the wind after a puncture dropped him to second - rolled this morning.

Thierry Neuville was dominating the Junior category until he hit a rock and picked up the first of two punctures. With the same happening to subsequent leader Hans Weijs Jr, it was wildcard entrant Jeremi Ancian who took a shock win.

There were no such surprises in the Production class, which Armindo Araujo controlled throughout.

This weekend marked the first time that the Rally of France had been held in the Alsace area rather than its traditional Corsican base. An enormous number of spectators turned out to see Loeb's coronation, but various crowd issues meant much of the itinerary was delayed by between 30 minutes and an hour - although the only stage to be cancelled was the penultimate test today, which was sacrificed to ensure the final stage, televised live in France, went ahead on schedule.

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h05m49.3s
2. Dani Sordo Citroen + 35.7s
3. Petter Solberg Citroen + 1m16.8s
4. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 1m29.3s
5. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 3m43.8s
6. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 11m55.9s
7. Federico Villagra Ford + 14m15.4s
8. Matthew Wilson Ford + 14m26.9s
9. Henning Solberg Ford + 16m48.9s
10. Patrik Sandell Skoda + 17m12.3s

By Matt Beer
http://www.autosport.com/