F1 - Japanese Grand Prix - Sunday, September 27th 2015




Lewis Hamilton beats Nico Rosberg after first-lap dice

By Ian Parkes
http://www.autosport.com

Lewis Hamilton took another significant stride towards his third Formula 1 world title with a comfortable Japanese Grand Prix victory after a close first-lap moment with Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg.

Following the anomaly of Mercedes' struggle for pace in Singapore, around Suzuka normal service was resumed as Hamilton led home Rosberg by 18.9 seconds, their eighth one-two of the year.

The win was Hamilton's 41st, equalling the haul of hero Ayrton Senna, and from his 162nd start, one more than the late three-time champion.

Hamilton is now 48 points clear of Rosberg with 125 available from the remaining five races, with Sebastian Vettel falling 59 points adrift after the Ferrari driver could only manage third.

The key moment came in the opening seconds, as Rosberg and Hamilton ran side by side through the first corners.

With the preferable inside line at Turn 2, Hamilton was able to edge Rosberg aside, leading to the latter running marginally off track, allowing Vettel and Williams's Valtteri Bottas to sweep by into second and third.

Aside from one complaint shortly before his second pitstop after 31 laps about "vibrations so big" that left him "struggling", Hamilton was never troubled through to the chequered flag.

Rosberg limited the damage to Hamilton by passing Bottas on lap 17 before the undercut worked on Vettel 13 laps later come the second round of stops.

Behind Vettel was team-mate Kimi Raikkonen as Ferrari made its own undercut work on Bottas who, from third on the grid at the start, had to settle for fifth.

Team-mate Felipe Massa's race was ruined inside the opening few hundred metres as the passing Daniel Ricciardo's left-rear tyre collided with his own front right.

Both men suffered punctures, with Massa also requiring a new front-wing due to damage sustained on the slow crawl back to the pits.

The Brazilian finished 17th and two laps down, with only Manor duo Alexander Rossi and Will Stevens and late retiree Felipe Nasr behind him.

Sergio Perez was also pitched off the road as the pack avoided the damaged Williams and Red Bull, but recovered to 12th after a pitstop for repairs.

Ricciardo was 15th and a lap adrift, a week after finishing second in Singapore.

Red Bull team-mate Daniil Kvyat - whose car was completely rebuilt following his heavy crash in qualifying, requiring a new chassis, power unit and gearbox - endured a frustrating race and multiple issues as he could only manage 13th.

From 13th on the grid, after serving a three-place penalty for causing a collision with Massa in Singapore, Nico Hulkenberg was a fine sixth in his Force India, gaining ground at the start and then jumping both Lotus drivers at the first stops.

Despite Lotus's ongoing financial woes, Romain Grosjean and Pastor Maldonado were seventh and eighth, with Toro Rosso pair Max Verstappen and Carlos Sainz Jr rounding out the points scorers.
Verstappen had started 17th after serving his own three-place penalty for stopping in a potentially dangerous place in qualifying when his car suffered an electrical failure.

Sainz had his own moment in the race, hitting a bollard on the entry to the pitlane, forcing his pit crew into an unexpected front-wing change. He then lost out in a late battle with Verstappen.

As for McLaren, on Honda's home track, Fernando Alonso could have done no more to suggest he wants either a swift exit from his three-year contract or a dramatic rapid improvement.

Early on Alonso bemoaned his lack of pace, saying "it's embarrassing, very embarrassing", before later labelling Honda's V6 engine as "GP2" standard, followed by an exasperated cry of frustration.
Alonso eventually finished 11th, with Jenson Button 16th.

RESULTS - 53 LAPS:
PosDriverCarGap
1Lewis HamiltonMercedes1h28m06.508s
2Nico RosbergMercedes18.964s
3Sebastian VettelFerrari20.850s
4Kimi RaikkonenFerrari33.768s
5Valtteri BottasWilliams/Mercedes36.746s
6Nico HulkenbergForce India/Mercedes55.559s
7Romain GrosjeanLotus/Mercedes1m12.298s
8Pastor MaldonadoLotus/Mercedes1m13.575s
9Max VerstappenToro Rosso/Renault1m35.315s
10Carlos SainzToro Rosso/Renault1 Lap
11Fernando AlonsoMcLaren/Honda1 Lap
12Sergio PerezForce India/Mercedes1 Lap
13Daniil KvyatRed Bull/Renault1 Lap
14Marcus EricssonSauber/Ferrari1 Lap
15Daniel RicciardoRed Bull/Renault1 Lap
16Jenson ButtonMcLaren/Honda1 Lap
17Felipe MassaWilliams/Mercedes2 Laps
18Alexander RossiMarussia/Ferrari2 Laps
19Will StevensMarussia/Ferrari3 Laps
20Felipe NasrSauber/FerrariNot running

DRIVERS' CHAMPIONSHIP:
PosDriverPoints
1Lewis Hamilton277
2Nico Rosberg229
3Sebastian Vettel218
4Kimi Raikkonen119
5Valtteri Bottas111
6Felipe Massa97
7Daniel Ricciardo73
8Daniil Kvyat66
9Romain Grosjean44
10Sergio Perez39
11Nico Hulkenberg38
12Max Verstappen32
13Felipe Nasr17
14Pastor Maldonado16
15Carlos Sainz12
16Fernando Alonso11
17Marcus Ericsson9
18Jenson Button6
19Roberto Merhi0
20Will Stevens0
21Alexander Rossi0

CONSTRUCTORS' CHAMPIONSHIP:
PosConstructorPoints
1Mercedes506
2Ferrari337
3Williams/Mercedes208
4Red Bull/Renault139
5Force India/Mercedes77
6Lotus/Mercedes60
7Toro Rosso/Renault44
8Sauber/Ferrari26
9McLaren/Honda17
10Marussia/Ferrari0





F1 - Singapore GP - Sunday, September 20th 2015

Sebastian Vettel wins Singapore GP as Lewis Hamilton retires

Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel won the Singapore Grand Prix from pole position as Formula 1 championship leader Lewis Hamilton retired with an engine problem.

Vettel led away from the start and negotiated one virtual safety car period and two full safety car deployments to secure his third win of the season and fourth in Singapore.

Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo finished second with the other Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen completing the podium.

The second safety car reacted to a fan getting on the track, walking on the straight after the Anderson Bridge before climbing over the barriers.

Hamilton was running fourth when he reported a loss of power and though his Mercedes team spent several laps trying to find a solution, it decided to retire the car after the Briton dropped to 16th
.
It was Hamilton's first retirement in 20 races, and Mercedes' second engine problem in as many races following Nico Rosberg's fault at Monza.

Rosberg finished fourth, 14.2s adrift of Vettel, to cut Hamilton's lead to 41 points, with Vettel now just eight points further back in third place.

After a quiet opening stint of the race, and with Ricciardo starting to close on Vettel as the leader's pace dropped away, the virtual safety car was called into action when Felipe Massa and Nico Hulkenberg collided at Turn 3.

Massa had just pitted and was rejoining the track when he met with Hulkenberg at the apex, with the German spearing into the barriers.

The stewards deemed Hulkenberg was at fault and handed him a three-place grid drop for next weekend's Japanese GP.

Massa continued, but had to pit because of a puncture to his front-right tyre before he later retired having reported gearbox issues.

His Williams team-mate Valtteri Bottas survived a gearbox glitch in the closing stages to finish fifth, ahead of Red Bull's Daniil Kvyat who pitted before the virtual safety car and dropped out of contention for a podium as a result.

Force India's Sergio Perez was seventh, holding off Max Verstappen, who fought back after failing to get away from the grid.

Toro Rosso got him going again and though he was a lap down, he was hauled back into contention for points when he was able to unlap himself when the safety car was deployed.

Following the second round of stops, Verstappen found himself ninth and fought his way past Romain Grosjean to finish eighth.

His team-mate Carlos Sainz Jr lost several places when his car dropped into neutral, something that affected Massa and McLaren's Fernando Alonso too, but Sainz rescued points with ninth after also passing Grosjean.

Verstappen was told by his team to swap positions with Sainz on the final lap but did not do so.
Felipe Nasr scored the final point in the heavily-updated Sauber after a late pass on Grosjean with team-mate Marcus Ericsson 11th.

Pastor Maldonado's survived contact with Jenson Button to finish 12th with the other Lotus of Grosjean stopping before the end but classified as 13th.

It was a miserable day for McLaren, with Button and Alonso failing to finish.

The Manors were the last of the finishers with Alexander Rossi beating his team-mate Will Stevens to finish 14th on his Formula 1 debut.

SINGAPORE GP RESULT

PosDriverCarLapsGap
1Sebastian VettelFerrari612h01m22.118s
2Daniel RicciardoRed Bull/Renault611.478s
3Kimi RaikkonenFerrari6117.154s
4Nico RosbergMercedes6124.720s
5Valtteri BottasWilliams/Mercedes6134.204s
6Daniil KvyatRed Bull/Renault6135.508s
7Sergio PerezForce India/Mercedes6150.836s
8Max VerstappenToro Rosso/Renault6151.450s
9Carlos SainzToro Rosso/Renault6152.860s
10Felipe NasrSauber/Ferrari611m30.045s
11Marcus EricssonSauber/Ferrari611m37.507s
12Pastor MaldonadoLotus/Mercedes611m37.718s
13Romain GrosjeanLotus/Mercedes59Not running
14Alexander RossiMarussia/Ferrari592 Laps
15Will StevensMarussia/Ferrari592 Laps
-Jenson ButtonMcLaren/Honda52Gearbox
-Fernando AlonsoMcLaren/Honda33Retirement
-Lewis HamiltonMercedes32Power Unit
-Felipe MassaWilliams/Mercedes30Power Unit
-Nico HulkenbergForce India/Mercedes12Collision

F1 - Italian Grandprix - Sunday, September 6th 2015

Lewis Hamilton wins the 2015 Italian Grand Prix

By Lawrence Barretto
http://www.autosport.com

Lewis Hamilton secured his 40th career Formula 1 victory in the Italian Grand Prix despite late drama, as his team-mate and title rival Nico Rosberg retired in the closing stages.

The reigning world champion made a clean getaway to lead away from pole, while Rosberg slipped back to sixth, and front-row starter Kimi Raikkonen fell to the back of the field.

Hamilton dominated the race from there, but with a few laps remaining, he was told by his team that he needed to push without being given a reason for doing so.

Hamilton did as he was told and took the chequered flag with a 25-second lead over Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel.

After the race Mercedes was referred to the stewards because its tyres were measured below Pirelli's 19.5psi guideline on the grid just before the race.

Meanwhile, there was more drama for Mercedes as Rosberg's engine expired with a few laps to go when the German was running third and catching Vettel.

It was the first mechanical retirement for Mercedes this season and comes after Rosberg had to revert to an old engine, which had done six races, after an issue with his upgraded unit.

It means Hamilton, who secured his seventh win of the season, now leads Rosberg by 53 points in the championship with seven races remaining.

Williams' Felipe Massa inherited third, with team-mate Valtteri Bottas fourth and Raikkonen fifth after a strong recovery drive.

Force India's B-spec car continued to impress with Sergio Perez following up his fifth place finish at Spa with sixth at Monza, one place clear of team-mate Nico Hulkenberg.

It moved the Silverstone-based team back ahead of Lotus into fifth place in the constructors' championship, after Lotus's race lasted just a couple of laps.

Romain Grosjean and Pastor Maldonado both suffered contact at Turn 1, with Grosjean pulling off track and Maldonado recovering to the pits and parking the car in the garage.

Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo recovered from starting 19th after a 25-place grid penalty for changing engine elements to finish eighth with team-mate Daniil Kvyat 10th.

Sauber's Marcus Ericsson scored points for the third successive race with ninth.

Carlos Sainz Jr just missed out of points in 11th, one place head of Toro Rosso team-mate Max Verstappen, who started last and had to serve a drive-through penalty as punishment for his team releasing his car without its bodywork secure in qualifying, 12th.

Felipe Nasr was 13th for Sauber ahead of McLaren's Jenson Button, who made a blistering start to rise from 15th to ninth before dropping back.

The Manors of Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi brought up the rear with McLaren's Fernando Alonso retired with three laps to go.

ITALIAN GP RESULT - 53 LAPS:
PosDriverCarGap
1Lewis HamiltonMercedes1h18m00.688s
2Sebastian VettelFerrari25.042s
3Felipe MassaWilliams/Mercedes47.635s
4Valtteri BottasWilliams/Mercedes47.996s
5Kimi RaikkonenFerrari1m08.860s
6Sergio PerezForce India/Mercedes1m12.783s
7Nico HulkenbergForce India/Mercedes1 Lap
8Daniel RicciardoRed Bull/Renault1 Lap
9Marcus EricssonSauber/Ferrari1 Lap
10Daniil KvyatRed Bull/Renault1 Lap
11Carlos SainzToro Rosso/Renault1 Lap
12Max VerstappenToro Rosso/Renault1 Lap
13Felipe NasrSauber/Ferrari1 Lap
14Jenson ButtonMcLaren/Honda1 Lap
15Will StevensMarussia/Ferrari2 Laps
16Roberto MerhiMarussia/Ferrari2 Laps
17Nico RosbergMercedesEngine
18Fernando AlonsoMcLaren/HondaElectrical
-Romain GrosjeanLotus/MercedesCollision
-Pastor MaldonadoLotus/MercedesCollision  

DRIVERS' STANDINGS
PosDriverPoints
1Lewis Hamilton252
2Nico Rosberg199
3Sebastian Vettel178
4Felipe Massa97
5Kimi Raikkonen92
6Valtteri Bottas91
7Daniil Kvyat58
8Daniel Ricciardo55
9Romain Grosjean38
10Sergio Perez33
11Nico Hulkenberg30
12Max Verstappen26
13Felipe Nasr16
14Pastor Maldonado12
15Fernando Alonso11
16Carlos Sainz9
17Marcus Ericsson9
18Jenson Button6
19Roberto Merhi0
20Will Stevens0

CONSTRUCTORS' STANDINGS
PosConstructorPoints
1Mercedes451
2Ferrari270
3Williams/Mercedes188
4Red Bull/Renault113
5Force India/Mercedes63
6Lotus/Mercedes50
7Toro Rosso/Renault35
8Sauber/Ferrari25
9McLaren/Honda17
10Marussia/Ferrari0