F1 - The Monace Grand Prix - 29.05.11


Vettel wins interrupted Monaco GP
Sebastian Vettel further increased his World Championship advantage by claiming a gutsy victory in a chaotic Monaco Grand Prix that was restarted with only six laps to go following a red flag for a crash involving Vitaly Petrov at the Swimming Pool.

The Red Bull driver had opted against pitting during a mid-race safety car period, and ran a 56-lap stint on super soft rubber against all expectations, gaining track position over previous leader Jenson Button.

That left him ahead when the race was red-flagged, at which point he, second placed Fernando Alonso and Button, who had dropped to third after pitting just before a mid-race safety car, were all allowed to fit new tyres.

His eventual winning margin was 1.1 seconds ahead of Alonso, who was a similar distance clear of Button.

The race boiled down to a six-lap sprint following a red flag for a crash involving Petrov, Jaime Alguersuari and Lewis Hamilton, that was triggered by Pastor Maldonado passing Adrian Sutil for sixth place at Tabac.

The one-stopping Sutil, who had ran fourth for a long time but was dropping back on old tyres, smacked the wall exiting the corner and punctured his right-rear tyre. While trying to avoid the slowing Force India, Petrov ran into the back of Alguersuari's Toro Rosso, which in turn hit the rear of Hamilton's McLaren.

Alguersuari and Petrov hit the wall hard, forcing the race to be stopped with six laps to go and necessitating Petrov's extrication from the car by medical staff.

Prior to the red flag, the street circuit was staging the best race of the year. Having lost the lead to Button thanks to a sluggish opening pitstop on lap 16, Vettel opted against pitting when Felipe Massa's mid-race crash brought out the safety car.

Button, who had already stopped twice by this point, was clearly the faster driver on his fresher rubber, but had also lost track position to Alonso during the safety car period.

Button made a third stop on lap 48 after becoming stuck behind Vettel, but reduced an 18-second deficit to less than a second with eight laps to go. His problem, however, was that Alonso's Ferrari was in between them.

Button's hopes of victory rested with Vettel's and Alonso's tyres going off before his, as both switched their strategies and opted against making further stops. The stoppage and subsequent tyre changes put paid to that, however.

Mark Webber finished fourth, having dropped as low as 14th early on due to a 15-second stop as Red Bull pitted him on the same lap as Vettel. His two-stop strategy left him with fresher rubber than many of the cars around him during the second half of the race, allowing him to pass Kamui Kobayashi's Sauber, Sutil, Petrov and Maldonado within the final 15 laps.

Kobayashi ceded fourth to Webber after missing the chicane with two laps to go, but still collected the best result of his career. Maldonado kept up his status as a Monaco expert and looked like finishing sixth, but he crashed out of the race at Ste. Devote with five laps to go after contact with Lewis Hamilton.

Hamilton's rear wing was damaged in the Petrov/Alguersuari accident, and took seventh after the McLaren mechanics fixed the right support during the stoppage.

The Briton's race was a frustrating one. Passed by Michael Schumacher's slow-starting Mercedes at the Loews hairpin on the opening lap, he lost a significant amount of time when the German's rear tyres dropped off at an alarming rate within the first 10 laps.

Even after passing the seven-time world champion at Ste. Devote, his pace was compromised as he became bogged down in a seven-car battle for fourth place behind Sutil.

He, Webber and Felipe Massa all came together at Loews on lap 34 - an incident that Hamilton was deemed to have caused and received a drive-through penalty for - but by that time Massa was out, the Ferrari driver having hit the wall in the tunnel as Hamilton passed seconds later.

Hamilton eventually finished sixth, ahead of the lapped Sutil, Nick Heidfeld's Renault, Rubens Barrichello (Williams) and Sebastien Buemi (Toro Rosso).

Paul di Resta finished 12th after receiving a drive-through penalty for the same reason as Hamilton . colliding with another car at Loews, but the Force India driver also damaged his car in the incident with Alguersuari and was force to pit for a new nose.

Schumacher did not make the finish, his Mercedes grinding to a halt just ahead of Alonso as the safety car came out for the Massa crash. Timo Glock was the only other retiree, the Virgin driver's right-rear suspension failing just before half distance.

The Monaco Grand Prix
Monte Carlo, Monaco, Monaco;
78 laps; 260.520km;
Weather: Sunny.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 2h09:38.373
2. Alonso Ferrari + 1.138
3. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 2.378
4. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 23.100
5. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 26.900
6. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 27.200
7. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
8. Heidfeld Renault + 1 lap
9. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
10. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
11. Rosberg Mercedes + 1 lap
12. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes + 2 laps
13. Trulli Lotus-Renault + 2 laps
14. Kovalainen Lotus-Renault + 2 laps
15. D'Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
16. Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth + 3 laps
17. Karthikeyan HRT-Cosworth + 3 laps
18. Maldonado Williams-Cosworth + 5 laps

Fastest lap: Webber, 1:16.234

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Petrov Renault 68
Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 68
Massa Ferrari 33
Schumacher Mercedes 33
Glock Virgin-Cosworth 31
Perez Sauber-Ferrari DNS


World Championship standings, round 6:

Drivers: Constructors:
1. Vettel 143 1. Red Bull-Renault 222
2. Hamilton 85 2. McLaren-Mercedes 161
3. Webber 79 3. Ferrari 93
4. Button 76 4. Renault 50
5. Alonso 69 5. Mercedes 40
6. Heidfeld 29 6. Sauber-Ferrari 21
7. Rosberg 26 7. Force India-Mercedes 10
8. Massa 24 8. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 7
9. Petrov 21 9. Williams-Cosworth 2
10. Kobayashi 19
11. Schumacher 14
12. Sutil 8
13. Buemi 7
14. Perez 2
15. Barrichello 2
16. Di Resta 2

By Jamie O'Leary
http://www.autosport.com

Rally Argentina - 26 - 29 May 11


Loeb snatches sixth Argentina win

Sebastien Loeb came back from a Friday penalty to snatch an unlikely sixth Rally Argentina victory from his Citroen team-mate Sebastien Ogier.

As Ogier limped through the final stages with a damaged car having rolled while carrying a comfortable lead this morning, Loeb and Ford's Mikko Hirvonen were able to close in, finally demoting Ogier from first to third on the very last stage.

Loeb's third win of 2011 meant he has not been beaten in Argentina since 2004, and was achieved despite picking up a one-minute penalty on Friday.

"For sure I didn't believe that I could be fighting for the victory at the end of the rally, but I'm really happy with how it's gone today and yesterday," said Loeb.

Ogier had looked assured of victory going into the final day, as he enjoyed a 47s advantage over Hirvonen and Loeb once nearest rival Petter Solberg (Solberg Citroen) had been delayed by power steering failure and long-time leader Jari-Matti Latvala broke part of his Ford's suspension.

But in the final miles of the long Ascochinga stage this morning, Ogier turned in to a corner too early and rolled his Citroen.

Although he was able to continue in his battered car, the incident cost him half his lead - and left him without power steering for the rest of the rally.

With only a regroup rather than a full service today, Ogier had to nurse his car through the three short stages to the finish, steadily losing more and more time to his fast-closing team-mate and Hirvonen.

As they headed into the deciding Cabalango power stage, Ogier was only 3s ahead of Loeb and 5s ahead of Hirvonen, and that was insufficient and he fell behind both to finish in third.

"I tried to do what I could, but it was just impossible to drive the car now," said Ogier. "It was stupid for sure."

The result completed a remarkable comeback for Loeb, who had been 1m30s off the lead on Saturday after he was penalised for accidentally entering a time control early during Friday's midday service. His recovery drive owed a lot to the searing pace he set through the second half of the rally, but also to the issues that delayed Ogier, Latvala and Solberg.

Hirvonen never quite had the pace to fight for victory, yet still came away with second, just 2.4s behind Loeb.

"It's been a strange weekend," said the Finn. "We've been really struggling with the speed. Now we're here on the podium so it's good in the end, but it's been difficult. We need to win more rallies."

Solberg was comfortably ahead of Loeb and Hirvonen prior to his power steering issue yet had to settle for fourth. He took some consolation from picking up the bonus points for winning the televised power stage.

Mads Ostberg had a quiet run to a distant fifth for Stobart Ford, ahead of local hero Federico Villagra (Munchi's Ford). Ostberg's team-mate Matthew Wilson had been close to the Norwegian until first a puncture delayed him then a watersplash upset his Ford's engine this morning, leaving him eighth.

Latvala had to settle for seventh in a rally he had dominated for nearly two days, until breaking a compression strut on his Ford in a Saturday afternoon incident that left him baffled.

Hayden Paddon took another Production class win in ninth overall, emerging from day one with a massive lead after issues for his early rivals Patrik Flodin and Michal Kosciuszko.

Leading finishers:

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 4h03m56.9s
2. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 2.4s
3. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 7.3s
4. Petter Solberg Solberg Citroen + 32.6s
5. Mads Ostberg Stobart Ford + 5m16.8s
6. Federico Villagra Munchi's Ford + 6m48.5s
7. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 11m34.5s
8. Matthew Wilson Stobart Ford + 13m32.7s
9. Hayden Paddon Symtech Subaru + 25m43.8s
10. Patrik Flodin Uspenskiy Subaru + 33m34.1s

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

F1 - The Spanish Grand Prix - 22.05.11


Vettel fends off Hamilton for Spain win

Sebastian Vettel resisted huge pressure from Lewis Hamilton to take his fourth victory of the year in the Spanish Grand Prix.

Jenson Button bucked the four-stop trend and made a three-stop strategy work to take third, while polesitter Mark Webber ended up back in fourth and Fernando Alonso slumped to a lapped fifth after gloriously leading the first two stints of the race.

Webber's pole advantage only lasted a few yards as Vettel was immediately all over him off the line. As the two Red Bulls battled, the fast-starting Alonso (Ferrari) picked up sliced down the inside of both of them and sent the crowd ecstatic by taking the lead of his home grand prix.

That was where he would stay for the first two stints of the race, as though Vettel, Webber and Hamilton were right behind him, with the DRS not proving as dramatically effective in Spain as it had in Turkey, and with Ferrari enjoying good performance out of the final corner and on the straight, Alonso was able to keep his pursuers at bay.

Vettel tried to jump ahead by pitting one lap sooner for his first tyre change - but he emerged into traffic. Despite diving past Button (who had fallen to 10th with a slow start), Massa and Rosberg in the space of one dynamic out-lap, Vettel still found himself back behind Alonso when the Ferrari rejoined.

But at the second stops on laps 17 and 18, Red Bull's tactics worked out perfectly, and an extra lap on new tyres was sufficient to give Vettel a clear lead.

While Webber pitted at the same time as Alonso and stayed behind the Ferrari, McLaren tried something different and kept Hamilton out until lap 22, which jumped him past Alonso and Webber from fourth to second.

Vettel and Hamilton then pulled away in unison, as Alonso dropped ever further behind and kept Webber tucked up behind him. Both were then passed by Button in quick succession mid-race as the McLaren's three-stop strategy meant it was on soft tyres while Alonso and Webber were grappling with the hards.

Webber finally got past Alonso at the final stops, when the Red Bull stayed out a full eight laps longer and had no trouble getting ahead of the fading Ferrari, which began to lap 3s off the pace late on as it struggled badly with the hard tyres and was eventually lapped.

While Webber proved unable to catch Button for third, Hamilton got ever closer to Vettel in the closing laps, with the Red Bull radio traffic suggesting that again the car's KERS was only working intermittently.

There were some very tense and close moments, but there would be no repeats of China's late position change, as Vettel hung on to win by just 0.6s.

Among the lapped multitudes, Mercedes team-mates Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg had a tough race-long battle for sixth, with the elder German staying ahead.

Nick Heidfeld was all over the back of them at the end, making excellent use of a clever strategy and abundant fresh tyres to fly through from the back of the grid in the Renault.

The two Saubers completed the scorers, Sergio Perez taking his first Formula 1 points in ninth and Kamui Kobayashi doing well to recover from a first-lap puncture to take 10th.

Felipe Massa struggled all afternoon, and after a mid-race spin and a slide towards the foot of the top 10, he finally dumped his Ferrari in the gravel with six laps to go.

Paul di Resta got as high as fifth with a very strong opening stint on hard tyres, but did not have the pace later on to turn that into points, ending up 12th, behind Vitaly Petrov - another man to lose speed and places as the race progressed after leading the Mercedes at first.

Lotus showed its best race pace yet and had both cars in the top 10 for a while thanks to long first stints on soft tyres, but later faded, with Jarno Trulli only 18th and Heikki Kovalainen crashing out at Turn 4.

There would be no joy for Williams - Pastor Maldonado lacked race pace and slumped to 15th and Rubens Barrichello's charge from the back never materialised, not helped by a slow first pitstop he finished only 17th.

The Spanish Grand Prix
Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain;
66 laps; 307.104km;
Weather: Sunny.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1h39:03.301
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 0.630
3. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 35.697
4. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 47.966
5. Alonso Ferrari + 1 lap
6. Schumacher Mercedes + 1 lap
7. Rosberg Mercedes + 1 lap
8. Heidfeld Renault + 1 lap
9. Perez Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap
10. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap
11. Petrov Renault + 1 lap
12. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
13. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
14. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
15. Maldonado Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
16. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 2 laps
17. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 2 laps
18. Trulli Lotus-Renault + 2 laps
19. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 3 laps
20. D'Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth + 3 laps
21. Karthikeyan HRT-Cosworth + 4 laps

Fastest lap: Alonso, 1:26.727

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Massa Ferrari 60
Kovalainen Lotus-Renault 49
Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth 29


World Championship standings, round 5:

Drivers: Constructors:
1. Vettel 118 1. Red Bull-Renault 185
2. Hamilton 77 2. McLaren-Mercedes 138
3. Webber 67 3. Ferrari 75
4. Button 61 4. Renault 46
5. Alonso 51 5. Mercedes 40
6. Rosberg 26 6. Sauber-Ferrari 11
7. Heidfeld 25 7. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 6
8. Massa 24 8. Force India-Mercedes 4
9. Petrov 21
10. Schumacher 14
11. Kobayashi 9
12. Buemi 6
13. Sutil 2
14. Di Resta 2
15. Perez 2

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

F1 - The Turkey Grand Prix - 08.05.11


Vettel takes commanding win in Turkey

Sebastian Vettel left the excitement in his wake as he took an untroubled third victory from four races in the Turkish Grand Prix.

Mark Webber eventually won a tough battle with Fernando Alonso to complete a Red Bull one-two, though Alonso at least got Ferrari back on the podium after its tough start to 2011.

The McLarens and Nico Rosberg were left to battle for the remaining top six places, producing some spectacular racing as Lewis Hamilton came through to fourth ahead of Rosberg and Jenson Button.

Vettel got a clean break immediately as Webber was jumped by Rosberg's Mercedes off the line. Hamilton tried to get around the outside of the Red Bull too at Turn 3, but ran wide and fell to sixth behind Alonso and Button.

It only took Webber five laps to cruise past Rosberg on the back straight using his DRS, but by that time Vettel was 4.4 seconds ahead and had enough pace to edge slightly further away even after that.

Alonso was past Rosberg as well two laps later, as the Mercedes found itself falling victim to a string of DRS passes in the opening stint. Webber could not shake the Ferrari off, and just after half-distance, Alonso used the trick wing to shoot down the outside of the Red Bull into the final complex to claim second.

He then pulled away for a while, but after their fourth and last stops, Webber was able to take a new set of hard tyres into the closing laps whereas Alonso's rubber was more tired. With seven laps to go, Webber repeated Alonso's earlier DRS move on the Ferrari to reclaim second, and though the Spaniard tried his utmost to re-pass on the outside both at Turn 1 and Turn 3, Red Bull's first one-two of the year was secure - though so was Ferrari's first podium of 2011.

Vettel was able to run much further on his tyres than his nearest rivals and looked like he might manage the distance on three stops rather than more popular four. But in the end he played it safe and mirrored his peers' strategy, maintaining an 8s cushion over Webber until they backed off on the final lap.

The most spectacular racing involved the McLarens, Mercedes, Felipe Massa and the Renaults. Button was the highest placed three-stopper, a strategy that allowed him to briefly lead and run fourth going into the final laps.

But Hamilton - recovering well after a delay at his second pitstop - and Rosberg were able to hunt down and pass Button using their fresher tyres late on, taking them to fourth and fifth as the 2009 champion had to settle for sixth.

Toro Rosso's Sebastien Buemi drove a superb race to come through from 16th on the grid to seventh on the same strategy as Button, but he too found it impossible to hold off the four-stoppers at the end, and fell to ninth behind the Renaults of Nick Heidfeld and Vitaly Petrov.

Kamui Kobayashi made a three-stop plan work well to surge from 23rd on the grid to 10th, while Massa failed to score for Ferrari. He lost crucial ground when he ran very wide at Turn 8 after his third stop and fell deep into a crowd of yet-to-stop midfielders, and then was further delayed with a right rear wheel issue at his last stop.

The Ferrari got back up to 11th with a tough late move on Michael Schumacher, who had earlier broken his front wing when he turned in on Petrov as the Renault passed him into the final complex.

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1h30:17.558
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 8.807
3. Alonso Ferrari + 10.075
4. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 40.232
5. Rosberg Mercedes + 47.539
6. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 59.431
7. Heidfeld Renault + 1:00.857
8. Petrov Renault + 1:08.168
9. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1:09.300
10. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 1:18.000
11. Massa Ferrari + 1:19.800
12. Schumacher Mercedes + 1:25.400
13. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
14. Perez Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap
15. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
16. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
17. Maldonado Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
18. Trulli Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
19. Kovalainen Lotus-Renault + 2 laps
20. D'Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
21. Karthikeyan HRT-Cosworth + 3 laps
22. Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth + 5 laps

Fastest lap: Webber, 1:29.703

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Di Resta Force India-Mercedes 45
Glock Virgin-Cosworth 1


World Championship standings, round 4:

Drivers: Constructors:
1. Vettel 93 1. Red Bull-Renault 148
2. Hamilton 59 2. McLaren-Mercedes 105
3. Webber 55 3. Ferrari 65
4. Button 46 4. Renault 42
5. Alonso 41 5. Mercedes 26
6. Massa 24 6. Sauber-Ferrari 8
7. Petrov 21 7. Toro Rosso-Ferrari 6
8. Heidfeld 21 8. Force India-Mercedes 4
9. Rosberg 20
10. Kobayashi 8
11. Buemi 6
12. Schumacher 6
13. Sutil 2
14. Di Resta 2

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

Rally Italy - 05 - 08 May 11

Loeb clinches Sardinia victory

Sebastien Loeb made his World Rally Championship points lead slightly more comfortable by taking his second win of 2011 in the Rally d'Italia.

Despite spending the entire weekend running first on often dusty roads, Loeb (Citroen) led the event from Friday lunchtime onwards.

The result was a tribute both to Loeb's performance in maintaining good pace even when stage conditions were much worse for him than those following, and an indication of the number of problems his potential challengers had.

Mikko Hirvonen led for a while early on and was in a close battle with Loeb on Friday when a puncture cost him just under a minute. The Ford driver mounted a determined fightback to finish just 11.2 seconds behind Loeb in second place, and also grabbed the three bonus points for winning the power stage.

Petter Solberg also had a shot at victory, but after winning the rally's opening stage, a turbo issue cost him 40s on SS2. The Solberg Citroen driver also recovered well, though he could not deny Hirvonen second in the end.

After his back to back wins in Portugal and Jordan, Citroen's Sebastien Ogier seemed out of sorts in Italy. He was still in the fight for second until breaking his suspension on the penultimate stage, leaving him fourth.

Jari-Matti Latvala (Ford) showed he had the pace to challenge for victory by winning nine of the rally's 18 stages. But it was to no avail as he was running under superally following a crash on Friday morning.

Mini made a very encouraging debut, with Dani Sordo having an almost trouble-free run to sixth, and Kris Meeke holding fourth after two stages before a throttle problem sent him off the road.

Stobart Ford's Mads Ostberg, PG Andersson and Evgeny Novikov had all battled for top three positions at times during day one, but in the end the team's only top-10 finisher was Ostberg in fifth. Andersson lost 16 minutes fixing a broken steering arm and Novikov crashed and had to return under superally.

Markko Martin's protege Ott Tanak defeated Intercontinental Rally Challenge champion Juho Hanninen to not only win the S2000 class, but take a brilliant seventh overall, ahead of plenty of WRC midfielders.

Tanak's fellow Estonian Egon Kaur remains unbeaten in the new WRC Academy, recovering from a Friday accident to win a highly eventful contest in the feeder class.

Final results after SS18:

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h45m40.9s
2. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 11.2s
3. Petter Solberg Solberg Citroen + 23.8s
4. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 1m31.5s
5. Mads Ostberg Stobart Ford + 2m42.6s
6. Dani Sordo Mini + 3m27.6s
7. Ott Tanak MM Ford + 7m10.9s
8. Juho Hanninen Red Bull Skoda + 7m37.6s
9. Matthew Wilson Stobart Ford + 8m00.4s
10. Nasser Al-Attiyah Barwa Ford + 12m33.8s

Other WRC finishers:

11. Armindo Araujo Italia Mini + 13m09.7s
13. Evgeny Novikov Stobart Ford + 14m12.2s
15. PG Andersson Stobart Ford + 18m46.0s
17. Federico Villagra Munchi's Ford + 28m19.6s
18. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 33m46.9s
29. Daniel Oliveira Brazil Mini + 1h13m23.1s

WRC retirements:

Dennis Kuipers FERM Ford SS17
Kris Meeke Mini SS14
Peter van Merksteijn Van Merksteijn Citroen SS11
Henning Solberg Stobart Ford SS8
Peter van Merksteijn Sr Van Merksteijn Citroen SS8

Power stage results:

Pos Driver Team/Car Time/Gap
1. Mikko Hirvonen Ford 6m15.2s
2. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 1.4s
3. Sebastien Loeb Citroen + 2.8s
4. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 3.1s
5. Petter Solberg Solberg Citroen + 6.8s



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