F1 - The Chinese Grand Prix - 17.04.11


Hamilton wins thrilling Chinese GP

Lewis Hamilton ended Sebastian Vettel's run of wins with an incredible charge to victory in the Chinese Grand Prix.

The McLaren driver's three-stop strategy proved a better bet than Vettel's two stops, allowing Hamilton to hunt down and pass the tyre-hampered Red Bull in the final laps.

Mark Webber drove an outstanding race to come from 18th on the grid to third in the second Red Bull, ahead of McLaren's Jenson Button and Mercedes' Nico Rosberg - both of whom led for long spells in an utterly absorbing race.

Vettel's afternoon began to get complicated with a poor start that allowed both McLarens to get past him into Turn 1 and gave him a few headaches resisting Rosberg through the opening corners.

The top three then ran in a queue covered by 2s through the first stint, with Rosberg a few seconds behind, fending off the Ferraris, which were led by Felipe Massa.

Mercedes then pulled a masterstroke by bringing Rosberg in on lap 12. The German emerged in clear air and made the most of his fresh tyres, but was also helped by a chaotic few laps for the top three.

As Hamilton's tyre performance faded, Vettel surged past him using the DRS wing on the back straight. Button and Vettel then immediately pitted nose to tail, but bizarrely Button pulled into the Red Bull pit stall rather than McLaren's, and was frantically waved on to the correct pit, slightly slowing both stops, although Red Bull reacted fast and still got Vettel out ahead.

With Hamilton losing pace dramatically on his in-lap and being caught and passed by Massa, Rosberg's new-tyre pace and uncomplicated out-laps really paid dividends. As the second stint started, Rosberg led Vettel by 5s, with Button, Massa and Hamilton giving chase.

But while Rosberg and the McLarens were committed to three-stop strategies, Vettel and Massa had decided to go for just two. The latter looked like the best plan once everyone had made their second stops just after half-distance, for though that put Vettel and Massa fourth and fifth behind Rosberg and the McLarens, they were matching the leaders' pace and not allowing the top three to pull out a sufficient margin to stay ahead when they made their additional stops.

Hamilton was now on a charge though, slicing down the inside of Button to take second on lap 35, and then quickly catching Rosberg after their third stops and diving past him into Turn 6.

He then hunted down the two-stopping Massa and passed the Ferrari with ease on the pits straight with 12 laps to go.

Next in his sights was Vettel and by lap 50 Hamilton was right with the Red Bull and attacking with the DRS wing on the back straight, though the championship leader doggedly hugged the inside line at the hairpin every time the McLaren drew alongside.

Hamilton had to try something different, and on lap 52 he got much better traction out of Turn 6 and swept through on the inside into the fast Turn 7, before quickly scampering away to take a breakthrough victory in a race that proved Formula 1's 2011 rules package is achieving everything the rule-makers could have hoped for. It was also an incredible result considering a problem with the McLaren's fuel system almost forced him to start from the pitlane - the car only just making it out of the garage in time.

Rosberg fell behind Button when he ran wide trying to pass Massa. With his tyres just too old to resist the three-stoppers, Massa was swiftly overtaken by Button, Rosberg and even Webber - who also became a factor in the podium battle in the enthralling final stages.

The Australian had made little impression in his first stint on hard tyres, but like Sepang a week ago, stopping three times gave him plenty of opportunity to gain ground in clear air - and saving the much quicker softs for the final stint when everyone else was on hards gave him a huge pace advantage, as he proved by grabbing fourth from Rosberg with a Turn 6 dive three laps from the end. Lapping 2s quicker than anyone else, Webber then caught Button at the end of the penultimate lap and grabbed a sensational podium finish.

Massa had to settle for sixth, but could take satisfaction from outpacing team-mate Fernando Alonso, who both lacked Massa's speed and lost ground emerging into traffic after pitstops. He just beat Michael Schumacher to seventh, the Mercedes having got clear of the midfield by making a very early first of three stops.

Renault's podium run ended with Vitaly Petrov only able to take ninth place ahead of Kamui Kobayashi's Sauber. Paul di Resta was looking good for more points until fading in the final few laps, leaving him 11th ahead of Nick Heidfeld's Renault, with which he clashed in the closing moments. Adrian Sutil's race in the second Force India was spoiled by contact with Sergio Perez, for which the Sauber driver was penalised.

Toro Rosso's great qualifying effort turned to nothing, with both drivers soon falling down the order - Sebastien Buemi finishing only 14th behind Rubens Barrichello's Williams, and Jaime Alguersuari retiring when a wheel fell off after his pitstop. Behind Sutil, Heikki Kovalainen gave Lotus plenty to cheer by beating Perez and Pastor Maldonado's Williams to 16th.

The Chinese Grand Prix
Shanghai International Circuit, China;
56 laps; 305.066km;
Weather: Sunny.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1h36:58.226
2. Vettel Red Bull-Renault + 5.198
3. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 7.555
4. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 10.000
5. Rosberg Mercedes + 13.448
6. Massa Ferrari + 15.840
7. Alonso Ferrari + 30.622
8. Schumacher Mercedes + 31.206
9. Petrov Renault + 57.404
10. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1:03.273
11. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes + 1:08.757
12. Heidfeld Renault + 1:12.739
13. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1:30.189
14. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1:30.671
15. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
16. Kovalainen Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
17. Perez Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap
18. Maldonado Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
19. Trulli Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
20. D'Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
21. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
22. Karthikeyan HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
23. Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps

Fastest lap: Webber, 1:38.993

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 12


World Championship standings, round 3:

Drivers: Constructors:
1. Vettel 68 1. Red Bull-Renault 105
2. Hamilton 47 2. McLaren-Mercedes 85
3. Button 38 3. Ferrari 50
4. Webber 37 4. Renault 32
5. Alonso 26 5. Mercedes 16
6. Massa 24 6. Sauber-Ferrari 7
7. Petrov 17 7. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 4
8. Heidfeld 15 8. Force India-Mercedes 4
9. Rosberg 10
10. Kobayashi 7
11. Schumacher 6
12. Buemi 4
13. Di Resta 2
14. Sutil 2

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

Rally Jordan - 14 - 16 Apr 11


Ogier wins in Jordan by just 0.2s

Sebastien Ogier defeated Jari-Matti Latvala to win the Jordan Rally by just 0.2 seconds in the World Rally Championship's closest ever finish.

Citroen and Ford's rising stars went into the deciding Baptism Site power stage just half a second apart, with Latvala having taken the lead with one stage to go.

But Ogier set the fastest time through the finale stage and managed to edge back ahead of his rival to claim his second consecutive victory - and become the WRC's first double winner of 2011.

"Incredible, incredible day," said Ogier. "I had to push like hell today because Jari-Matti was so fast."

Ogier had taken the lead early on Friday - when the rally got underway a day later than planned due to the litany of logistical problems that forced the cancellation of all of Thursday's stages.

While his main rivals backed off at the end of yesterday's second loop to avoid any chance of running first on the road today, Ogier kept his foot down and charged into a 31s lead.

As he maintained a cushion over the chasing pack this morning it looked like his tactic would pay off. But then Latvala found more speed on the final loop, and charged past Ogier to take the lead on the penultimate stage - only for the Frenchman to fight back and take an astounding win.

Ogier's SS20 time was also sufficient to win the power stage, giving him three extra bonus points.

His Citroen team-mate Sebastien Loeb was fighting for the win until handling issues on the final few stages convinced him to settle for third place. Petter Solberg was also in the hunt for a podium at least in the Solberg Citroen, but crashed out this morning.

A nightmare Friday of running first on the road and later struggling with power steering issues consigned Mikko Hirvonen to a lonely fourth in the other Ford, though he was buoyed by the pace he showed on a trouble-free final day.

A puncture from a brush with a rock on penultimate stage Mahes cost Kimi Raikkonen a likely fifth place, allowing Stobart Ford's Matthew Wilson to get ahead of the Ice 1 Citroen. Raikkonen still felt that this had been one of his strongest World Rally Championship outings yet.

Wilson was the only Stobart driver in the top 10, as his team-mates Henning Solberg and Mads Ostberg had to use superally after an impact with a rock and a gearbox failure respectively.

In the S2000 class, Nasser Al-Attiyah dominated until an engine problem this morning, which allowed Bernardo Sousa to take the category win and 10th overall despite suspension issues in the closing stages.

Leading finishers after SS20:

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Ogier Citroen 2h48m28.2s
2. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 0.2s
3. Sebastien Loeb Citroen + 27.7s
4. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 2m44.7s
5. Matthew Wilson Stobart Ford + 5m44.9s
6. Kimi Raikkonen Ice 1 Citroen + 6m14.9s
7. Federico Villagra Munchi's Ford + 9m18.7s
8. Khalid Al Qassimi Abu Dhabi Ford + 9m43.7s
9. Dennis Kuipers Ferm Ford + 14m27.5s
10. Bernardo Sousa Quinta Ford + 15m05.5s

Other WRC finishers:

13. Mads Ostberg Stobart Ford + 17m35.7s
14. Henning Solberg Stobart Ford + 22m01.7s

WRC retirements:

Petter Solberg Solberg Citroen SS17
Peter van Merksteijn Van Merksteijn Citroen SS15


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

F1 - The Malaysian Grand Prix - 10.04.11



Vettel eases to Malaysian GP victory

Sebastian Vettel remains unbeaten in the 2011 Formula 1 season after taking another Malaysian Grand Prix victory, despite running without KERS on his Red Bull for much of the race.

The world champion was not able to dominate, but had enough speed to stay clear of his rivals in a very competitive race at a dry Sepang.

Jenson Button took second for McLaren, with his team-mate Lewis Hamilton only seventh after tyre troubles.

Nick Heidfeld gave Renault its second podium in as many races as he held off Mark Webber for third after a complicated afternoon for the second Red Bull. The Ferraris of Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso were fifth and sixth after the latter damaged his front wing clipping Hamilton's car.

Vettel seemed to be handed an easy afternoon at the start, for while he clearly held the lead through a busy first corner, the Renaults of Heidfeld and Vitaly Petrov surged down the outside to move from sixth and eighth on the grid to second and fifth, either side of Hamilton and Button's McLarens, and ahead of Massa and Alonso's Ferraris.

It was worse still for Webber - his KERS already seemingly not working, the Australian plunged to ninth and was passed by a combative Kamui Kobayashi further around the lap.

Heidfeld did not lose too much time to Vettel, though, the Renault staying within seven seconds of the leading Red Bull through the first stint. When Heidfeld then lost ground in the first stops, that released the McLarens and the rapidly-recovering Alonso to start gaining on Vettel.

While Hamilton got Vettel's lead down to under four seconds, Alonso passed Button for third into the first corner early in the second stint and started closing in as well.

Vettel then looked even more vulnerable after the second of the leaders' three pitstops when his team informed him that he could no longer use his KERS. But his pursuers' hopes of taking advantage of this were quickly dashed - even without the energy boosting system Vettel managed to pull clear during this stint, stretching his lead over Hamilton back up to eight seconds.

It was Button who started making progress in the second half of the race, taking third back from Alonso in the second pitstops, and setting some strong times thereafter, then getting second from Hamilton at the next pit sequence when a left-front issue slowed the latter slightly.

As Button then started inching up towards Vettel, Hamilton struggled badly for pace in the final hard-tyre stint. Alonso was soon all over the back of him, but with his DRS not working, the Ferrari had to be creative to try and pass. On lap 45 Alonso got too close through Turn 3, clipping the rear of the McLaren and damaging his front wing, forcing an extra stop.

Hamilton was then caught by first Heidfeld, who slipped past into Turn 1 using the DRS with four laps to go, then the recovering Webber - who despite being on a four-stop strategy and still without KERS, managed to get back up with the leaders. He grabbed fourth when Hamilton slid off the road briefly, and the McLaren gave up and pitted for a fourth time immediately afterwards.

Vettel kept Button at arm's length and came home to win by 3.2s, with Heidfeld resisting everything Webber threw at him over the final laps to claim third.

Alonso charged back onto Massa's tail but had to settle for sixth behind his team-mate, with Hamilton only seventh after his additional stop.

Petrov was set for seventh until a wild moment on lap 53, when he ran wide and tried to rejoin flat-out over the grass, until to hit a deep and send his Renault high into the air, breaking its steering.

Kobayashi managed to make a two-stop strategy work to take eighth, after several spectacular battles with Michael Schumacher, who was ninth on a tough afternoon for Mercedes. His team-mate Nico Rosberg fell into the midfield on lap one and never recovered, finishing 12th behind the two Force Indias, as Paul di Resta grabbed another point with a mature drive in his second grand prix.

Further back, Lotus got closer to the established midfield pace than ever before as Heikki Kovalainen finished 15th behind the Toro Rossos. Both Williams retired, as did Melbourne hero Sergio Perez after the Sauber sustained damage from running over debris.

The Malaysian Grand Prix
Sepang, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia;
56 laps; 310.408km;
Weather: Dry.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1h37:39.832
2. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 3.261
3. Heidfeld Renault + 25.075
4. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 26.384
5. Massa Ferrari + 36.958
6. Alonso Ferrari + 37.248
7. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 49.957
8. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1:07.239
9. Schumacher Mercedes + 1:24.896
10. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes + 1:31.563
11. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1:45.000
12. Rosberg Mercedes + 1 lap
13. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
14. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
15. Kovalainen Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
16. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
17. Petrov Renault + 4 laps

Fastest lap: Webber, 1:40.571

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth 47
D'Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth 43
Trulli Lotus-Renault 32
Perez Sauber-Ferrari 24
Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 23
Karthikeyan HRT-Cosworth 15
Maldonado Williams-Cosworth 9


World Championship standings, round 2:

Drivers: Constructors:
1. Vettel 50 1. Red Bull-Renault 72
2. Button 26 2. McLaren-Mercedes 50
3. Hamilton 24 3. Ferrari 32
4. Webber 22 4. Renault 30
5. Alonso 20 5. Sauber-Ferrari 14
6. Petrov 15 6. Mercedes 2
7. Heidfeld 15 7. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1
8. Massa 12 8. Force India-Mercedes 1
9. Kobayashi 8
10. Perez 6
11. Schumacher 2
12. Buemi 1
13. Di Resta 1

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


Alonso, Hamilton hit with penalties

By Pablo Elizalde Sunday, April 10th 2011, 12:09 GMT

Alonso, Hamilton hit with penaltiesLewis Hamilton and Fernando Alonso were handed 20-second penalties following the Malaysian Grand Prix at Sepang.

The McLaren driver, who endured a difficult race and finished in seventh position, was handed the penalty for making more than one move to defend his position when fighting with Alonso.

Ferrari driver Alonso was given the penalty after he made contact with Hamilton during their fight, the Spaniard damaging his front wing and having to pit to replace it.

Both were given post-race drive-troughs, meaning 20 seconds added to their final times.

The penalty has dropped Hamilton to eighth, with Sauber's Kamui Kobayashi taking seventh.

Alonso keeps sixth place.