Rally Bulgaria 9 - 11/7/10


Loeb leads Citroen rout in Bulgaria

Sebastien Loeb and Citroen clinched an utterly dominant victory in the World Rally Championship's first visit to Bulgaria, with the champion leading a top four sweep for his manufacturer.

Bulgaria was the first asphalt round of this year's WRC - but with three of the remaining six rounds on sealed surfaces, the result is ominous for Ford, which could only manage fifth and sixth as Dani Sordo, Petter Solberg and Sebastien Ogier filled second through fourth places in their works, Solberg and Junior Citroens respectively.

No one looked capable of stopping Loeb from the moment the rally began. He blitzed his rivals on Friday's stages, building a half-minute cushion that he could nurse through the rest of the event, driving conservatively this morning to ensure his fourth win of the season.

"It's been perfect - a very good first day, then the second day had difficult conditions, it was important to just keep the rhythm and not make any mistakes, not take any risks," Loeb said.

Sordo fended off Solberg for second after a tough rally-long battle. At half-distance the Spaniard seemed to have wrapped up the position, but a Saturday afternoon surge from Solberg meant they were just five seconds apart this morning. Solberg trimmed more time from his rival on today's first stage, before Sordo responded with a run of stage wins that allowed him to claim second by 6.8s.

Ogier was in the fight with Sordo until a misheard pace note saw him spent a minute off-course on Friday afternoon and fall from second to seventh. He was soon back up to fourth, but with the top three out of reach by then, he too cruised to the finish.

Ford had lost touch with Citroen even before an incorrect tyre choice saw Mikko Hirvonen and Jari-Matti Latvala struggling on inappropriate hard tyres on Saturday morning's damp stages, costing them huge amounts of time. Latvala was slowed further by power steering issues and finished a minute adrift of his team-mate in sixth.

It looked initially like Ford might not even get in the top five, as Kimi Raikkonen delivered his best WRC performance yet to run fifth for Citroen Junior on Friday. But the Finn's great run ended with a crash on the final leg one stage, although he returned under superally to finish 11th - a final-stage off meaning he could not catch 10th-placed Henning Solberg, who was delighted with his first taste of the new S2000 Ford.

Solberg's move to S2000 gave P-G Andersson a chance at Stobart Ford, and he delivered a solid seventh on his return to WRC machinery, ahead of Hungarian driver Frigyes Turan, who had a good rally in an ageing Peugeot 307, and Andersson's struggling Stobart team-mate Matthew Wilson.

Thierry Neuville followed up his Ypres Rally podium with a dominant maiden Junior class win. He had battled with Mathieu Arzeno until the Frenchman was delayed by first a puncture, then a crash.

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h02m39.2s
2. Dani Sordo Citroen + 29.5s
3. Petter Solberg Citroen + 36.3s
4. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 1m55.0s
5. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 3m17.8s
6. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 4m28.5s
7. P-G Andersson Ford + 5m25.2s
8. Frigyes Turan Peugeot + 7m04.0s
9. Matthew Wilson Ford + 9m28.6s
10. Henning Solberg Ford + 13m06.0s

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

F1 The European GP - Updated results and standings:

Nine drivers given five-second penalties

The FIA has handed five-second penalties to nine Formula 1 drivers for a safety car rules breach during the European Grand Prix.

Jenson Button, Rubens Barrichello, Nico Hulkenberg, Robert Kubica, Vitaly Petrov, Adrian Sutil, Sebastien Buemi, Pedro de la Rosa and Vitantonio Liuzzi have been penalised for "failing to stay above the minimum time set by the FIA ECU when the Safety Car was deployed."

The penalties mean Fernando Alonso is elevated from ninth to eighth, as he overtakes Buemi, and Nico Rosberg gets the final point from de la Rosa, 10th in the race.

The rest of the point-scoring positions remain unchanged.

The stewards also announced a 20-second penalty for Virgin's Timo Glock for ignoring blue flags.

Updated results and standings:

Classified:

Pos Driver Team
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes
3. Button McLaren-Mercedes
4. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth
5. Kubica Renault
6. Sutil Force India-Mercedes
7. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari
8. Alonso Ferrari
9. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari
10. Rosberg Mercedes
11. Massa Ferrari
12. De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari
13. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari
14. Petrov Renault
15. Schumacher Mercedes
16. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes
17. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth
18. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth
19. Glock Virgin-Cosworth
20. Senna HRT-Cosworth
21. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth

By Pablo Elizalde
http://www.autosport.com

F1 The European GP - June 27th 2010


Vettel wins controversial European GP

Sebastian Vettel ended his victory drought with a comfortable win in the European Grand Prix in Valencia - while his Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber was fortunate to emerge uninjured from a massive accident that saw him vault Heikki Kovalainen's Lotus.

Lewis Hamilton took second despite a drive-through penalty, with Jenson Button making it two McLarens on the podium. Ferrari's day was ruined by the safety car for Webber's crash, leaving Fernando Alonso only ninth and Felipe Massa 15th.

Rubens Barrichello gave Williams its best result of the year in fourth, but he and Button are among nine drivers who may yet be penalised for driving too fast during the safety car period.

Webber's bad day began when he lost out severely during an unruly opening lap, which saw wheel-banging and run-off visits throughout the field.

The Red Bull was immediately passed by Hamilton and then pounced on by the two Ferraris while out wide. His free-fall continued and by the end of lap one Webber had been elbowed all the way back to ninth.

Hamilton's run off the line was so good he was able to get partially alongside Vettel into Turn 1, where firm contact was made, sending the Red Bull slightly sideways and taking a chunk from the McLaren's front wing, though both continued ahead of Alonso, Felipe Massa, Robert Kubica, Button, the Williams and Webber.

Unable to get through the traffic on-track, Webber made an early pitstop at the end of lap seven, where he lost a few more seconds as his left front wheel proved stubborn.

That put him back out behind Kovalainen, and as he tried to pass the Lotus three laps later he went flying over the back of it on the fast approach to the Turn 17 hairpin.

The Red Bull wiped out an advertising board hanging over the track before landing upside down, rolling back onto its wheels and ploughing into the tyre barriers - though remarkably Webber climbed out unscathed.

With the safety car called, most drivers from fifth-placed Button back immediately dived into the pits, while the top four had to complete a further lap. Vettel was already past the pit exit by the time the safety car emerged, but Hamilton was right alongside it. After a moment's hesitation, he accelerated past - but having passed the relevant line across the track, that meant he would later be penalised for overtaking the safety car.

Vettel and Hamilton were therefore able to rejoin first and second, while the Ferraris were caught behind the safety car and fell to 10th and 17th - leaving the team furious.

Fortunately for Hamilton, Sauber decided not to pit Kamui Kobayashi under yellow and he jumped up to third. So while the top two charged clear at the restart - which saw Vettel hold the line despite outbraking himself and sliding luridly through the final corner - the Sauber bottled up the rest of the pack. By the time race control awarded Hamilton his penalty, he had enough of a gap over Kobayashi to take the drive-through without losing a place.

Hamilton started carving into Vettel's lead, reducing it from 14 to second seconds despite a slight delay behind the battling Timo Glock (Virgin) and Bruno Senna (Hispania), who collided shortly afterwards. But Vettel had pace in hand and was able to answer Hamilton with a new fastest lap five laps from home, putting his second victory of 2010 beyond doubt.

Kobayashi kept Button and the rest of the frontrunners at bay until finally pitting on lap 53, which handed McLaren its second podium spot, ahead of Barrichello, Renault's Robert Kubica and Force India's Adrian Sutil.

The frustrated Alonso spent the final laps all over Sebastien Buemi's Toro Rosso but ended up losing eighth to Kobayashi as the Sauber rejoined on its fresh tyres and dived past the Ferrari with a lap to go. Kobayashi then chased down Buemi too and grabbed seventh at the very last corner.

But these positions may yet be subject to change, with the stewards set to investigate whether Button, the Williams, the Renaults, the Force Indias, Buemi and Pedro de la Rosa exceeded the permitted speed on their way back to the pits under yellow.

For now at least, de la Rosa has his first point of the year, gaining 10th when Nico Hulkenberg's Williams retired late on.

Mercedes' weekend got even worse in the race, with Nico Rosberg losing ground on the first lap and finishing 12th, and Michael Schumacher wrong-footed during the safety car and ending up 16th after multiple pitstops.

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

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1h40:29.571
2. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 5.042
3. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 7.658
4. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 20.627
5. Kubica Renault + 22.122
6. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 25.168
7. Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari + 30.965
8. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 31.299
9. Alonso Ferrari + 32.809
10. De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari + 42.414
11. Petrov Renault + 43.287
12. Rosberg Mercedes + 44.382
13. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes + 45.890
14. Massa Ferrari + 46.621
15. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 48.239
16. Schumacher Mercedes + 48.826
17. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth + 1 lap
18. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
19. Glock Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
20. Senna HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
21. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth + 4 laps

Fastest lap: Button, 1:38.766

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 50
Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 9
Webber Red Bull-Renault 9

F1 The Canadian Grand Prix - June 13th 2010


Hamilton heads McLaren 1-2 in Canada

McLaren took its second successive one-two finish as Lewis Hamilton led home Jenson Button in an action-packed Canadian Grand Prix in which high tyre wear played a pivotal role.

Ferrari's Fernando Alonso finished third, but would rue a potential lost victory, as he had been passed by both McLarens at different moments when wrong-footed by others cars.

Red Bull had to settle for fourth and fifth - Sebastian Vettel nursing a car problem for much of the distance, and Mark Webber losing the lead when his strategy of leaving the super soft tyres until the final laps failed to pay off.

It was immediately clear that the softer tyres were going to be very fragile, for while Hamilton held the lead off the start, within a few laps Vettel - on the harder rubber - was all over the back of him. Alonso ran just behind them, with fourth-placed Button fending off an equally menacing Webber until the Red Bull dived past into Turn 8 on lap five, just before Button pitted.

Webber then swiftly caught the Hamilton, Vettel, Alonso train at the front, lining up a move on the Ferrari just as it came in for harder tyres on lap seven. Hamilton pitted from the lead at the same moment, falling behind Alonso in the stop and coming off second best as they charged down the exit road side by side.

That moved Red Bull into one-two formation, but it was clear that even the medium compound tyre was not faring too well, as Alonso, Hamilton and Button started catching the lead duo at up to one second per lap on their fresh rubber.

The Red Bulls came in on laps 12 and 13 and split their strategies - Vettel taking the super soft tyres for his next stint while Webber postponed that task and stuck with mediums.

Fellow medium runner Sebastien Buemi, who had advanced up the order as those ahead stopped, then found himself leading for Toro Rosso for a lap, with the battling Alonso and Hamilton on his tail.

On that lap, Alonso's failed attempt to pass Buemi down the outside into the hairpin gave Hamilton a chance to draft the Ferrari on the next straight - moving the McLaren from third to first in the space of a few yards as Buemi immediately pitted.

Alonso stayed with Hamilton though, and as their next set of tyres started to wilt, he became ever more threatening. The Ferrari was just lining up a move for the lead on lap 26 when Hamilton decided to stop again, diving straight in to get another set of hard tyres. Alonso, Vettel and Button followed suit in quick succession, while Webber stayed out, assumed the lead and trying to keep his medium tyres intact as long as possible to shorten his stint on the fragile super softs.

At first the plan worked well, Webber pulling out a 10s lead over Hamilton, Alonso, Button and Vettel as they ran in fairly close company in second to fifth positions.

But by lap 39 Webber's tyres were going off too, and heavy traffic made life even tougher for him. Before long Hamilton was right back on his tail, taking the lead on lap 49 and encouraging Webber to pit next time around to finally take on super softs, dropping him to fifth.

Vettel was unable to keep pace with the McLarens and Alonso, the team speaking over the radio of a 'problem being managed', so it became a three-way battle for the lead going into the closing stages as the track rubbered in at last and the tyres gained durability.

Button made it a McLaren one-two with 15 laps to go when Alonso was trapped behind Karun Chandhok's Hispania and lost momentum. The champion set off after Hamilton and started to chip away at the leader's advantage, though a new fastest lap by Hamilton nine laps from the end sent a clear message to his team-mate. The top three then spread out, with McLaren cruising to another one-two and Alonso at least getting back on the podium after two tough races.

Nico Rosberg recovered from being pushed back into the midfield during a messy first lap to take sixth for Mercedes, ahead of Renault's Robert Kubica, who had a wheel-banging battle with Michael Schumacher in the early stages that saw both take to the grass.

Schumacher's tyre troubles were worse than most - the Mercedes pitting three times and still lapping 4s off the pace in the final stint. Buemi passed him for seventh, and he was then caught by Felipe Massa. The Brazilian and Tonio Liuzzi managed to tangle twice during the first two corners of the race, damaging both cars. After pitting for repairs, they charged back towards the points, only for Massa to lose his front wing when Schumacher sternly defended his position with six laps to go.

Liuzzi then took up the challenge of trying to overtake Schumacher, who slid over the final chicane and banged wheels with the Italian more than once as he fought mightily to at least hang on to ninth. He could not though, with a bruising last lap seeing the seven-time champion tumble to 11th behind both Liuzzi and his Force India team-mate Adrian Sutil.

Other drivers hitting trouble on the first lap were both Saubers and Vitaly Petrov. The Renault took to the grass on the run towards the first corner and ended up spinning into Pedro de la Rosa, damaging both cars, with Petrov also receiving a jump-start penalty. The second Sauber was soon heading for the pits too - Kamui Kobayashi sliding into the wall at the final chicane as he jousted with Nico Hulkenberg's Williams.

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

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1h33:53.456
2. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 2.254
3. Alonso Ferrari + 9.214
4. Vettel Red Bull-Renault + 37.817
5. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 39.291
6. Rosberg Mercedes + 56.084
7. Kubica Renault + 57.300
8. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
9. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
10. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
11. Schumacher Mercedes + 1 lap
12. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1 lap
13. Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
14. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
15. Massa Ferrari + 1 lap
16. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth + 2 laps
17. Petrov Renault + 2 laps
18. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth + 4 laps
19. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth + 5 laps

Fastest lap: Kubica, 1:16.972

Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Glock Virgin-Cosworth 50
Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 43
De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 31
Senna HRT-Cosworth 14
Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 2

Rally de Portugal - 28 - 30/5/10


Ogier seals maiden WRC victory

By Steven English
Sebastien OgierSebastien Ogier clinched his maiden World Rally Championship victory in Portugal on Sunday.

The Frenchman secured the win by keeping fellow Citroen driver Sebastien Loeb at bay during the day's earlier stages and sealed the achievement on the final two-kilometre superspecial asphalt stage in the Algarve stadium.

Ogier went head-to-head with Loeb for the finale in the stadium and beat the reigning world champion by 0.2s, giving him an overall winning margin of just 7.9s.

"It's just perfect," said Ogier. "It was an amazing weekend, I pushed from the first day until now - all weekend it was a big battle and very hard to keep Seb [Loeb] behind me.

"To win my first rally like this, after a big battle with Seb, is just perfect. In New Zealand I lost it but I said that when I did win, it would be even more happy - and I am very happy today."

Loeb conceded that he was simply unable to beat Ogier over the weekend and congratulated his countryman on his maiden win.

"He has done very, very well here - he was unbeatable," said Loeb. "I lost too much time on the first day. Then we couldn't make up the gap in the two next days.

"He was very, very fast. He is a real contender now. He showed that he was a lot faster than anyone else in Portugal. For me, second place is not so bad for the championship. It was important to score points."

The final stage was won by Federico Villagra, setting a time 0.7s quicker than second-placed Matt Wilson, with Kimi Raikkonen third. Ogier and Loeb were two seconds slower than Villagra in sixth and seventh.

Dani Sordo cemented his third place, well over a minute behind the two leading Citroens, while Mikko Hirvonen nicked fourth place thanks to Petter Solberg crashing in the superspecial.

The Norwegian was exiting a left-hander when he got out of shape and ended up with two wheels on top of the water-filled bollards. He escaped a big accident but had to stop and restart, and dropped 14 seconds to Hirvonen - losing out overall by just 3.7s.

Despite finishing in third place on the final stage, Raikkonen was disappointed to end the event in 10th place after suffering tyre problems and falling two places on the final day.

"This afternoon there was one right-hander with something on the inside and I went on two wheels, broke the front right tyre and I lost two places," said Raikkonen. "That's life, but at least I finished and learned the rally."

By Steven English
http://www.autosport.com

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Ogier Citroen 3h51.16.1s
2. Sebastien Loeb Citroen +7.9s
3. Dani Sordo Citroen +1m17.6s
4. Mikko Hirvonen Ford +1m32.0s
5. Petter Solberg Citroen +1m35.7s
6. Matthew Wilson Ford +7m10.1s
7. Mads Ostberg Subaru +7m28.3s
8. Federico Villagra Ford +10m36.1s
9. Khalid Al Qassimi Ford +10m55.8s
10. Kimi Raikkonen Citroen +11m34.3s

F1 The Turkish Grand Prix - May 30th 2010


Hamilton wins hectic Turkish Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton claimed his first victory of 2010 in Turkey as the Red Bulls collided while battling for the lead and handed McLaren a clear one-two.

Mark Webber, who had led until Sebastian Vettel's lap 40 passing move ended in disaster for Red Bull Racing, recovered to take third, while Jenson Button spectacularly attacked Hamilton for the lead but ultimately had to follow his team-mate home.

Red Bull had briefly moved into one-two formation at the start as both McLarens lost a place off the line - Hamilton falling to third behind Vettel and Button being eased out of fourth by a determined Michael Schumacher (Mercedes).

Neither stayed there long, with Hamilton getting back alongside Vettel on acceleration through Turn 2 and retaking second into the downhill complex at Turns 3 and 4. Button then drafted Schumacher down the back straight and went around the outside of the Mercedes into Turn 12.

The top four left the rest of the field trailing, while tied together in a tense quartet. Hamilton was soon on Webber's rear wing, and kept pondering moves into Turn 12 without ever quite getting alongside.

It looked like the pitstops would be McLaren's only chance, but when both Webber and Hamilton came in on lap 15, a very slightly slower wheel change at McLaren not only saw Webber exit first, but Vettel - who had pitted a lap earlier - get between them again. Hamilton immediately tried to re-pass him on the outside into Turn 12, only to run wide. Button ran two laps further to no avail, rejoining fourth again.

After that the Red Bulls and McLarens settled into close formation again, little more than two seconds covering all four.

The deadlock held until lap 40, when after edging ever closer to Webber, Vettel drafted alongside out of the Turn 11 kink and drew level down the inside approaching the final complex. The pair suddenly made high-speed contact, sending Vettel spinning wildly into retirement with rear end damage, and Webber slewing over the run-off area. The gap back to Schumacher was such that Webber was able to make a precautionary pitstop for a new front wing and tyres, and still rejoin in third.

The McLaren duo then began some close racing of their own. As light drizzle started, Button got a run on Hamilton towards Turn 12 with nine laps to go. With Hamilton defending the inside, Button went right around the outside - giving him the racing line and the lead at Turn 13.

But Button's lead lasted only the length of the pits straight, with Hamilton diving back to the inside into the first corner and through a narrowing gap to take the lead. With McLaren frantically urging its drivers to conserve fuel thereafter as it kept an eye on some consumption issues, that was the end of the battle.

Schumacher held on to fourth, with his team-mate Nico Rosberg, Renault's Robert Kubica, Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso chasing the seven-time champion home.

A slightly early tyre stop and quick laps thereafter allowed Alonso to at least gain some ground following his disastrous qualifying. He then spent most of the race trying to get around Vitaly Petrov's Renault, finally succeeding around the outside at Turn 3 in the closing laps - with a brush between giving Petrov a right front puncture. He rejoined to grab fastest lap at the end.

A late pass by Adrian Sutil (Force India) on Kamui Kobayashi (Sauber) resolved a race-long battle for what eventually became ninth, and left Kobayashi to fend off his team-mate Pedro de la Rosa.

Toro Rosso's Sebastien Buemi and Williams's Nico Hulkenberg were both delayed by first lap damage, while a poor start dropped Rubens Barrichello down among the new teams in the second Williams.

Lotus was comfortably clear of the other new squads until both Jarno Trulli and Heikki Kovalainen suffered hydraulic failures within moments of each other, allowing Virgin's Timo Glock to take unofficial class honours.

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

F1 Monaco Grand Prix - May 16th 2010


Webber cruises to Monaco GP victory

Mark Webber moved into the championship lead by dominating the Monaco Grand Prix from pole position and scoring his second victory in a week.

The Australian led home team-mate Sebastian Vettel in a Red Bull one-two that put the duo equal at the head of the standings, but with Webber's back to back wins edging him ahead on countback. Front row starter Robert Kubica (Renault) had to settle for third.

Pre-race championship leader Jenson Button was an early retirement, but Fernando Alonso kept himself in contention by coming through from last to seventh.

The Red Bulls moved into formation off the line as Vettel immediately accelerated past front row starter Kubica into second. But any thoughts Vettel had of challenging his team-mate for the lead were shortlived, as Webber started churning out fastest laps and established a 10s lead by the time of their pitstops on laps 22 and 23.

Although the race was interrupted by no fewer than four safety car periods - the last of them covering the final three laps of the race - Webber was always able to rebuild his lead and pull away from Vettel, who was shadowed by Kubica all afternoon.

Felipe Massa (Ferrari) and Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) had quiet runs to finish where they had qualified in fourth and fifth, but it was a dreadful day for Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button, who fell to 11th at the start and then retired in a cloud of smoke while running behind the safety car. The team had accidentally left a blanking plate across the car's sidepod on the way to the grid, which Button suspected had caused overheating.

The early safety car was the lucky break Alonso needed after the practice crash that left him starting last. It was prompted when Williams's Nico Hulkenberg - who had already dropped to the back with a clutch problem - slammed into the wall in the tunnel on the opening lap, and while everyone else formed up behind the safety car, Alonso took advantage of a 'free' pitstop and came in to switch to medium tyres for the rest of the race.

He then carved through the new team pack, despite determined resistance from Virgin's Lucas di Grassi in particular, and stayed close enough to the rest of the field to vault to sixth when all those ahead pitted.

Alonso looked set to finish there until the final yards of the race, when he got sideways out of Rascasse as the safety car came in to allow a final sprint to the line, and accidentally let Michael Schumacher slip through.

Schumacher got in front of Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg at the start, although the fast-starting Rubens Barrichello was able to slip his Williams ahead of both as they battled. Despite Rosberg staying out until lap 28 on soft tyres and setting several fastest laps, he was unable to get back ahead in the stops.

Stopping later worked for Adrian Sutil as he jumped past Force India team-mate Tonio Liuzzi to take ninth as the duo gave the team its first double points finish. Barrichello lost ground in the pits and was running 10th until a problem at the left rear of his car caused him to crash at Massenet on lap 31, prompting the second caution. The third followed 12 laps later while a suspected loose drain cover at the same location was swiftly checked.

All the new teams' cars retired, the last of them when Lotus's Jarno Trulli, who had been delayed by a slow pitstop, vaulted over Hispania's Karun Chandhok at Rascasse near the finish. The crash, which happened right in front of leader Webber, prompted the final safety car.

Heikki Kovalainen had comfortably led the group of new cars until gearbox problems on his Lotus.

Both Saubers dropped out early too, in Kamui Kobayashi's case while running fifth having stayed out on medium tyres and moved up as others pitted.

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

F1 Spanish Grand Prix - May 9th 2010


Webber charges to Spanish GP victory

Mark Webber took a dominant victory in the Spanish Grand Prix, while problems for his team-mate Sebastian Vettel prevented a Red Bull 1-2.

The Australian was never troubled at the head of the field, while behind him Fernando Alonso capitalised on Vettel's troubles and a late-race crash for Lewis Hamilton to take second.

Webber's only challenge had come at the start, where he made up for his mistake in Malaysia and fiercely defended from Vettel on the run to the first corner.

After that he was able to gradually ease away from the field, while Vettel could not shake off the attentions of Hamilton.

The McLaren driver then got ahead of the German at the pit stops, where Vettel was delayed. Hamilton, who pitted a lap later, rejoined as the Red Bull arrived at Turn 1, but Vettel was forced off the track as he tried to retain his position around the outside.

Hamilton briefly set about getting after Webber, but a relentless set of laps from the race leader extended his lead to more than 16 seconds by lap 49, after which he started to back off.

Hamilton kept up the pursuit as Webber eased his pace, but the 2008 world champion crashed at Turn 3 as he suffered a front left puncture on the penultimate lap.

That handed second to Alonso and moved Vettel back onto the podium, after the second Red Bull endured a torrid final third of the race.

Vettel had been unable to do anything about Hamilton ahead of him, and he hit trouble on lap 53 when he went through the gravel at Turn 7 and pitted with an apparent loose wheel.

When he rejoined he was then instructed to look after his brakes, with his team fearing that they were on the brink of failing as the race came to an end.

The German was able to coast to the finish because of the huge gap between the leaders and the rest of the field, which was led home by Michael Schumacher's Mercedes.

While the seven-time world champion had enjoyed his most impressive weekend in comparison to team-mate Nico Rosberg, he was still a long way adrift of frontrunning pace.

However, he eventually came home fourth after jumping Jenson Button during the pitstops, and then frantically defending from the reigning world champion for several laps before the Briton dropped back slightly.

Their battle enabled Felipe Massa to close up, although the Brazilian's charge nearly came to an early conclusion when he tagged the back of Karun Chandhok's HRT car as the Indian was being lapped.

Adrian Sutil took an impressive seventh for Force India ahead of Robert Kubica - who was unable to make up for a poor first lap and had to settle for eighth behind him.

Rubens Barrichello made up most of his ground on at the start to eventually sneak into the points in ninth, while Jamie Alguersuari was promoted into the top 10 by Hamilton's crash.

Outside of the points, it was a disappointing race for Rosberg and the two Sauber drivers in particular.

The Mercedes driver, who came into this race second in the championship, was forced onto the grass at the start and dropped back, and then suffered a problem at his pitstop which cost him even more time.

Both Saubers had incidents on the opening lap which dropped Kamui Kobayashi and Pedro de la Rosa out of contention straight away. While the Spaniard retired early on with a damaged car, his Japanese team-mate eventually recovered to 12th.

By Glenn Freeman
http://www.autosport.com

Rally New Zealand - 7 - 9/5/10


Latvala snatches incredible NZ victory
Jari-Matti Latvala denied Sebastien Ogier a maiden World Rally Championship victory in an incredible final stage showdown in New Zealand.

The two rising stars went into the deciding Whaanga Coast stage just 6.2 seconds apart, but with Ogier at the disadvantage of running first on the dusty road.

Although Ogier looked to have cost himself the win with a half-spin early on the stage, he pulled out enough time to go clear of Latvala again, only to drop a few more costly seconds when he spun almost within sight of the finish, allowing Latvala to win by just 2.4s.

"It was so, so close," rued Ogier, whose Citroen Junior team only made a last minute decision to contest the event at all. "I did a spin three corners before the end. It's a big shame."

Latvala was thrilled to snatch victory in such dramatic circumstances. His win takes Ford ahead of Lancia to become the most successful manufacturer in WRC history.

"This is maybe the best victory," he said. "Towards the end I was almost off the road myself. I thought it was not enough. He made a little mistake and we were maybe a little bit lucky, but it feels good. I haven't done any fastest stage times on this rally, but consistency counts."

Sebastien Loeb's wild rally ended with third place, the world champion having another spin on the final stage while making one last bid to catch Ogier and Latvala.

Petter Solberg was also in contention for a podium at least, starting Whaanga Cost third and within 16s of Ogier, only to crash out on the stage. Initial reports suggest that the Solberg Citroen had a heavy impact with a telegraph pole, but that Solberg and co-driver Phil Mills escaped unhurt.

The rally had been an epic contest from the outset, with event debutant Ogier and Loeb playing starring roles throughout.

Day one saw Ogier, Solberg, Latvala and Dani Sordo swapping the lead repeatedly in an ultra-close fight, while Loeb tumbled out of this pack when he slid into a bridge on SS4, damaging his Citroen's door and costing him 1m40s, which left the world champion eighth.

Ogier broke free on Saturday and left his rivals trailing with a series of strong stage times. But his performance was utterly overshadowed by Loeb, whose astonishing speed saw him carve into the gap to the frontrunners and end the day back up to second and just 5s down on Ogier.

It looked like Loeb would swiftly move into the lead today, and sure enough he was first after the opening stage - but only because Ogier had spun while producing better split times than his pursuer.

Still the drama continued, as having finally regained the lead, Loeb made his second big error of the rally and went off and clipped a tree on Whaanga Coast, falling from first to fourth - albeit only 21s behind Ogier, who struggled for speed on the long stage as conditions dried up and running first on the road became a severe disadvantage.

That allowed Latvala and Solberg to get back within 5s and 16s of Ogier respectively going into the last loop, but Ogier managed to pull away slightly on the penultimate stage, setting up the astounding finale on Whaanga Coast.

Slightly off the pace all weekend, Mikko Hirvonen eventually had to settle for fourth in the second Ford, just ahead of Citroen number two Sordo, who faded in the second half of the rally.

Stobart Ford's Matthew Wilson set some excellent times on Friday before dropping back to what became sixth. His seventh-placed team-mate Henning Solberg struggled for speed all weekend, as did Munchi's Ford driver Federico Villagra, who only moved clear of the S2000 cars this morning - and then fell back behind S2000 winner Jari Ketomaa when his brakes faded near the end.

While Ketomaa pulled away from championship leader Xevi Pons to win S2000, local favourite Hayden Paddon utterly dominated the Production class and beat compatriot Emma Gilmour by three minutes in the end.

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford 4h04m09.8s
2. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 2.4s
3. Sebastien Loeb Citroen + 15.2s
4. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 21.3s
5. Dani Sordo Citroen + 25.8s
6. Matthew Wilson Ford + 3m26.0s
7. Henning Solberg Ford + 6m15.3s
8. Jari Ketomaa Ford + 10m19.3s
9. Federico Villagra Ford + 10m49.8s
10. Xevi Pons Ford + 11m13.4s

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

F1 The Chinese Grand Prix - April 18th 2010


Button wins chaotic Chinese Grand Prix

Jenson Button took his second victory of the year by controlling a hectic, wet Chinese Grand Prix.

The reigning world champion once again benefited from an early tyre call - this time staying out on slicks in the rain while most pitted for intermediates – and showed his class again from the front.

Even when a safety car period eradicated the lead his tyre gamble had earned him, he kept his head in tricky conditions and even stretched away from McLaren team-mate Lewis Hamilton in the closing stages when it came down to who had looked after their tyres the best.

But far from being a race of nursing the cars home, for close to 90 minutes it was frantic stuff as the weather once again played havoc with Formula 1.

The drama started early when Vitantonio Liuzzi lost control of his Force India under braking, spun and collected the Toro Rosso of Sebastien Buemi and Kamui Kobayashi's Sauber.

Adrian Sutil, Jaime Alguersuari and Rubens Barrichello were also involved and headed for repairs in the pits, while Nico Hulkenberg did well to pick his way through unscathed.

But the safety car was still required, prompting both Red Bulls, both Ferraris, Hamilton and Michael Schumacher to gamble on changing to intermediate tyres.

Initially, it looked like the right call as Fernando Alonso charged past cars still on slicks. But Nico Rosberg and Button, up front having stayed out on slicks, were lapping faster just one tour later as the inters cooked quickly with the circuit not quite wet enough for them.

Within a couple of laps all those to take them were back in the pits for slicks, leaving Rosberg, Button, Robert Kubica and Vitaly Petrov well ahead of the rest.

The stops included Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel racing each other into the pitlane and leaving side-by-side too, an incident that will be investigated later.

No sooner had the likes of Hamilton and Vettel fought their way back up the order that the rain started again, heavier this time. Leader Rosberg was caught out and a brief off-track excursion allowed Button a run at him to take the lead, and soon after everyone was in the pits to get inters back on.

The rain gifted Button, Rosberg and the Renaults a free pitstop, so the leaders 50-second advantage remained. But the safety car was back out after Alguersuari clipped the back of an HRT car and left front wing debris scattered on the track.

Button bunched the pack right up for the restart and, with the new rule about overtaking from the pitlane line, rather than the start/finish line, Vettel tried to take advantage to mug Hamilton into the last corner. But it backfired for his Red Bull team as he only succeeded in forcing Hamilton wide and shoving Webber off the track on the outside, costing the Aussie several places.

Hamilton once again had to make his way back to the front and his journey included a great battle with Schumacher. The old hand defended brilliantly for the first few advances, despite struggling for traction in his Mercedes. But eventually Hamilton made it stick with an opportunistic dive between Turns 8 and 9 – something that became his staple move of the day.

He then caught and passed Rosberg for second, just before the field descended on the pitlane once more for a final fresh set of intermediate tyres.

Things eventually settled down for the last 20 laps, as Button kept Hamilton at a safe distance. There was just a brief scare four laps from home when he overshot the final hairpin. But Hamilton was also struggling to keep his car on the road with fast-balding inters.

Rosberg couldn't quite challenge for the victory but had no trouble keeping Fernando Alonso at bay for third – the Spaniard getting in reach of the podium despite five pitstops, including a drive-through for jumping the start.

Kubica continued Renault's good form, capitalising on his early decision to stay on slicks to hold onto fifth. Vettel looked like homing in on Kubica in the closing stages but never threatened.

Webber had another day of missed opportunities and couldn't make his way forward at the same rate as Hamilton or Vettel, but he also had his share of misfortune. Already down the order he gambled on an earlier final stop, but it just left him in more tyre trouble than most come the end of the race and he was mugged for seventh by Petrov two laps from the end.

Some wise calls and excellent race craft kept Schumacher in the hunt in spite of his lack of pace. But when the race finally settled down he had no answer and was jumped late by Petrov, and then by his former Ferrari team-mate Felipe Massa on the final lap – the latter once again failing to impress in a chaotic wet race.

By Steven English
autosport.com

Rally of Turkey - 16 - 18/4/10


Loeb secures Rally of Turkey win

Sebastien Loeb stretched his winning run to a third straight rally victory as he took an ultimately-comfortable first place in Turkey.

The world champion hit the front when Citroen Junior driver Sebastien Ogier fell back with a tyre problem on Saturday afternoon, and then escaped from the pack today.

Petter Solberg and Mikko Hirvonen both hoped they could keep the pressure on Loeb this morning, but were left short of time to do so when two stages were cancelled due to poor road conditions after overnight downpours - and then cost themselves time with mistakes.

There was no repeat of the controversial tactics employed in Jordan, with the leaders preferring to push and try to win from the front rather than slowing to force rivals to run first on the dusty roads.

Loeb was pleased he had been able to win in this manner - although he said the likelihood of rain this morning made the decision easier.

"We decided to stay first on the road and it was a good choice," said Loeb. "We maybe expected rain, and I knew if I lifted off [on Saturday] and it rained, I was finished. I knew if it didn't rain, maybe I could keep my lead."

After a scare when he went off and brushed a tree on the first stage out of service this afternoon while trying to chase down Loeb, Solberg eased off and made sure of second place.

"It looked good for a while, but they cancelled a lot of stages today," he said. "I tried this morning but was very calm this afternoon. After I hit the tree, I thought 'okay, forget this.'"

Hirvonen also had a fright today, hitting a rock this morning and picking up a puncture. That dropped him to fourth behind Dani Sordo, but he regained a podium place when the Citroen stopped with two stages to go.

"I started this morning hoping we could fight for second or even the win," Hirvonen said. "We gave it everything, it went wrong and I lost my position, but now we're here [in third] again, so it's okay.

"But Sebastien is getting away again in the championship. I have to push harder in the next one."

Ogier had been the star of the first half of the weekend, emerging in the lead after early exchanges with Solberg and Hirvonen, then inching away from the huge battle between the works Fords, works Citroens and Solberg and holding first place.

Although he was always unlikely to be allowed to beat Loeb to a win, he was looking comfortable up front until a tyre blew on Saturday afternoon, relegating him to fourth in the end.

"It was a quite perfect weekend apart from one puncture, but that's part of rallying," said Ogier.

His Citroen Junior team-mate Kimi Raikkonen had his best World Rally Championship outing so far, winning an early battle with Federico Villagra (Munchi's Ford) and Matthew Wilson (Stobart Ford) to take fifth.

"It has been a good weekend for us - no big mistakes and no problems with the car," said Raikkonen. "Okay, we got two places because other guys went off, but that's part of it and I think we improved."

Ford number two Jari-Matti Latvala was in the top five fight until rolling on Saturday morning and losing a lot of time. Attrition ahead allowed him to salvage a distant eighth.

Other WRC runners in trouble were Henning Solberg (Stobart) and Ken Block (Monster Ford), who both damaged their cars on the very first stage of the weekend, then suffered various other problems when they returned for Saturday.

Aaron Burkart took a dominant Junior WRC win - and an outright point for 10th - after initial class rivals Kevin Abbring and Theirry Neuville had mechanical problems.

By Matt Beer
autosport.com

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h01m38.7s
2. Petter Solberg Citroen + 54.5s
3. Mikko Hirvonen Ford + 1m43.4s
4. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 3m46.0s
5. Kimi Raikkonen Citroen + 6m44.3s
6. Federico Villagra Ford + 7m56.7s
7. Matthew Wilson Ford + 8m29.8s
8. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 19m44.2s
9. Dennis Kuipers Ford + 23m22.2s
10. Aaron Burkart Suzuki + 27m04.7s

F1 The Malaysian Grand Prix - April 4th 2010



Vettel leads dominant Red Bull one-two

Red Bull finally delivered the kind of crushing performance it had threatened to all season as Sebastian Vettel led Mark Webber home in a one-two demonstration run at Sepang.

Nico Rosberg gave the new Mercedes works team its first podium in third, although his team-mate Michael Schumacher was an early retirement, while the McLarens and Ferraris all recovered into the top ten following their qualifying miscues, although Fernando Alonso suffered a last gasp engine failure.

The potential for downpours and chaos had dominated conversation in the build-up, but ironically the race was dry throughout. Vettel got a great start from third, instantly passing Rosberg and slipping down the inside of Webber into the first corner to take the lead.

The two Red Bulls then pulled away from the Mercedes in formation, remaining a second or so apart until their pitstops on laps 23 and 24, where any chance of Webber threatening Vettel was removed when an airgun problem on his right front wheel meant his tyre change took a crucial 1.4s longer. That briefly put Webber behind the yet-to-stop Lewis Hamilton, and gave Vettel a clean break. He duly cruised clear to clinch his and Red Bull's first win of 2010.

Rosberg was a safe third throughout, but the second Mercedes of Schumacher dropped out on lap eight when its left rear wheel came loose.

Robert Kubica continued Renault's strong form with fourth, never quite close enough to scare Rosberg, and safe from attack from behind as fifth-placed Adrian Sutil (Force India) had his hands full resisting Hamilton by the end.

Hamilton made the most assertive progress of the displaced frontrunners, getting into the top ten within seven laps, despite being warned for excessive weaving during a spectacular battle with Renault rookie Vitaly Petrov, and ultimately rising as high as second as he left his pitstop until lap 30.

He emerged right alongside team-mate Jenson Button, who had pitted as early as lap 10, but it was Hamilton's strategy that proved best, as the younger Briton fended off his team-mate and then quickly pulled away - leaving Button at the mercy of the charging Ferraris. Felipe Massa had run until lap 28 before pitting, while Fernando Alonso, who had struggled with a downshift problem all race and been low-key in the early stages, stayed on hards until lap 36, and then set a string of fastest laps as he charged into contention.

Massa eventually got past Button and then closed on Sutil and Hamilton, while Alonso remained stuck behind Button until he dived past with two laps to go - only for his Ferrari's engine to immediately fail as he completed the move. Alonso's retirement means Massa edges into the championship lead.

Jaime Alguersuari earned his first Formula 1 points with the finest drive of his career to date, as he determinedly battled past Nico Hulkenberg and Petrov to ultimately take ninth.

Williams could not capitalise on its brilliant qualifying result, with Rubens Barrichello tumbling to last at the start thanks to an overheating clutch, and Hulkenberg losing a few positions on lap one then dropping further back as his early tyre stop strategy failed to pay off. He at least picked up 10th thanks to Alonso's late failure.

The battle between the new teams turned physical in Malaysia. Virgin's Timo Glock retired on lap three when a bid to overtake Jarno Trulli saw him spin into the Lotus, while Heikki Kovalainen's attempted pass on Virgin driver Lucas di Grassi seven laps later caused more contact - the Lotus slicing a rear tyre on the Virgin's front wing as it slid past sideways.

It was di Grassi who ultimately emerged on top, giving Virgin its first race finish as he nursed its inadequate fuel level to the flag and finished ahead of the two Hispanias. Trulli made the flag despite backing right off with hydraulic problems at the end - with similar issues forcing Kovalainen to lose several laps in the pits.

Also hitting mechanical trouble were Petrov, Force India's Tonio Liuzzi, and both Saubers - Pedro de la Rosa striking engine problems on his way from the garage to the grid.

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


Pos Driver Team Gap
1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault
2. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 4.8s
3. Rosberg Mercedes + 13.5s
4. Kubica Renault + 18.5s
5. Sutil Force India-Mercedes + 21.0s
6. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 23.4s
7. Massa Ferrari + 27.0s
8. Button McLaren-Mercedes + 37.9s
9. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1m10.6s
10. Hulkenberg Williams + 1m13.3s
11. Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1m18.9s
12. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
13. Alonso Ferrari + 2 laps
14. Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth + 3 laps
15. Chandhok Hispania-Cosworth + 3 laps
16. Senna Hispania-Cosworth + 4 laps
17. Trulli Lotus-Cosworth + 5 laps

Not classified/retirements:

Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 46 laps
Petrov Renault 32 laps
Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 12 laps
Schumacher Mercedes 9 laps
Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 8 laps
Glock Virgin-Cosworth 2 laps
De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari 0 laps

Fastest lap: Webber 1m37.054s

Jordan Rally - 1 - 3/4/10

Loeb wins controversial Jordan Rally

Sebastien Loeb extended his World Rally Championship lead with a comfortable win in the Jordan Rally - an event that will be remembered for the extreme tactics that Citroen and Ford adopted to try and ensure their top drivers had the best possible road conditions on the dusty stages.

Ford's Jari-Matti Latvala had battled for the lead with Citroen's Dani Sordo and Solberg Citroen's Petter Solberg on Thursday, as all three ran further down the starting order, while title rivals Loeb (Citroen) and Mikko Hirvonen (Ford) struggled to keep pace as they swept the dusty stages clear for those behind.

Sordo and Solberg both slowed on the final Thursday stage to try and get better positions for day two, leaving Latvala half a minute ahead of Citroen Junior's Sebastien Ogier and Loeb.

Hirvonen was unable to benefit from his improved running order spot on Friday as he crashed out on the day's opening stage - but Loeb made the most of it and surged into a 27s lead by the end of the leg.

Citroen accidentally let Ogier get ahead of Latvala for second on the final stage, which would have given the Finn a good chance to chase Loeb down today, when the champion ran first on the road.

But Ogier was penalised for leaving today's first service late due to an electrical problem, while Ford asked Hirvonen - back under superally - to check in early so he would vault up the running order and could run ahead of Latvala. Ogier was then instructed to check in at the first stage even earlier - giving him eight minutes of penalties but ensuring he could sweep the road clean for Loeb.

With the running order now reading Ogier-Loeb-Hirvonen-Latvala, that meant Loeb avoided the worst of the stage conditions, and then made sure of victory with a superb performance this morning, taking a series of stage wins even though he was still second on the road.

Loeb's pace swiftly ended any hope Latvala had of challenging for the win, and the champion duly clinched victory by 35.8 seconds, extending his championship margin to 25 points over Latvala and 31 over Hirvonen, who was eventually classified 19th under superally - 46 minutes behind the leaders after his penalties.

Slowing on Thursday did not pay off for Solberg and Sordo, who thereafter had quiet runs to what became third and fourth, a long way clear of Stobart Ford's Matthew Wilson in fifth place.

Ogier's penalties this morning dropped him from second to eighth, but he fought back to sixth ahead of Federico Villagra (Munchi's Ford) and Kimi Raikkonen (Citroen Junior), as the latter enjoyed a virtually trouble-free rally and got some invaluable mileage. Henning Solberg was only ninth in the second Stobart car after a Friday puncture.

Xevi Pons won S2000 by a vast margin - the ex-Citroen WRC driver effectively the last man standing after a series of crashes and failures for every other frontrunner. PG Andersson and Nasser Al-Attiyah had led early on before their incidents, while Bernardo Sousa became Pons' main challenge until he too crashed. Eyvind Brynildsen - another man to hit trouble on Thursday - used superally to take second ahead of Andersson.

Patrik Flodin was victorious in the Production class again, hanging on ahead of Armindo Araujo despite damaging his Subaru's suspension on the penultimate stage.

Pos Driver Car Time/Gap
1. Sebastien Loeb Citroen 3h51m35.9s
2. Jari-Matti Latvala Ford + 35.8s
3. Petter Solberg Citroen + 1m11.8s
4. Dani Sordo Citroen + 1m49.3s
5. Matthew Wilson Ford + 8m24.3s
6. Sebastien Ogier Citroen + 10m26.4s
7. Federico Villagra Ford + 11m28.0s
8. Kimi Raikkonen Citroen + 12m31.0s
9. Henning Solberg Ford + 14m08.6s
10. Xevi Pons Ford + 18m33.9s

By Matt Beer

F1 The Australian Grand Prix - March 28th 2010


Button takes first win with McLaren

Jenson Button claimed his first victory for McLaren with a brilliant drive and a perfect tyre strategy in a thrilling Australian Grand Prix.

The reigning world champion's bold early switch to dry tyres in a race that began damp put him in position to inherit the lead when a brake failure pitched Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull) into the gravel and out of a race he had hitherto controlled.

Robert Kubica claimed a superb second for Renault, fending off Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso's Ferraris, and Nico Rosberg's Mercedes in a tense finale as the top four finishers nursed their tyres to the end while their pursuers took on fresh rubber at half-distance. Lewis Hamilton (McLaren) and Mark Webber (Red Bull) had been in the thick of this fight too until a late tangle.

In contrast to the lacklustre Sakhir race, Melbourne delivered thrills and spills from the outside, with the race commencing on a damp track.

As the field slithered through Turn 1 for the first time, contact between the slow-starting Alonso and Button sent the Ferrari spinning into Michael Schumacher's Mercedes, breaking its front wing, with Hamilton jinking over the grass in avoidance.

Sauber's Kamui Kobayashi then arrived at the kink before Turn 6 already missing his front wing from a previous incident, and speared into the inside wall before sledging back across the track and violently collecting both Sebastien Buemi's Toro Rosso and Nico Hulkenberg's Williams mid-corner. That inevitably prompted a safety car.

The Red Bulls had been split into the first corner by Ferrari's Felipe Massa, who made a superb start from fifth on the grid. But Red Bull formation was resumed two laps after the restart, as Webber slipped past the Brazilian into Turn 6 and left him to try and fend off Kubica and Rosberg.

The McLarens had ended up sixth and seventh once the first corner mess unfolded, with Button in front until Hamilton dived past him into Turn 3 on lap six. Button then decided the track was ready for slicks and pitted.

This looked like an over-bold move when he skittered over the gravel at Turn 3 on his out-lap - but fastest sector times around the rest of the lap proved Button's gamble was wise.

Soon the whole field was following Button's example, although the two Red Bulls stayed out longer than most as the team expected more rain. Ultimately only light drizzle came, and the leaders belatedly went for slicks as well.

That tactic still succeeded for Vettel, who rejoined from his stop just ahead of the flying Button, who had vaulted to second thanks to his brave early tyre switch, but Webber stayed out until lap 10, losing out to Kubica and Rosberg - and then Massa too as he went over the grass at Turn 1 as he rejoined.

Vettel soon started edging away from Button, with Kubica and Rosberg dropping back from the two leaders. Behind them, some epic racing was underway, mostly involving drivers trying to get around Massa.

Webber surged down the inside of the Ferrari into Turn 1 on lap 15, with Hamilton immediately following him through and then attacking the Red Bull into Turn 3 - where both went wide, with Webber going right over the gravel. That allowed Massa back ahead of Hamilton, while by the time Webber regained the asphalt the charging Alonso had also gone through, the Bahrain winner having rapidly hacked through the midfield following his first lap spin.

Six laps later Hamilton successfully passed Massa for fifth into Turn 1, despite the Ferrari's best defensive efforts, with Alonso trying to do likewise into Turn 3, only to get hung out on the still-damp extremes of the track and lose a place to Webber again.

Once free of Massa, Hamilton charged straight onto Rosberg's tail and took fourth from the Mercedes with an incredible move around the outside into the sixth gear Turn 11. That cost the McLaren momentum onto the next straight and Rosberg looked set to repass into Turn 13 - but had to back off for yellow flags as moments earlier race leader Vettel had slid into the gravel as his Red Bull suffered a brake failure.

That denied Vettel a near-certain victory, and while the disconsolate German trudged back to the pits, Button found himself in the lead by 6s over Kubica, who soon had Hamilton all over the back of him, while behind them Webber made it past Massa with an outside line move at Turn 3. Alonso, however, would not get past his team-mate so easily, remaining trapped behind Massa for lap after lap.

By half-distance many drivers were struggling with wear on the soft tyres they had taken once the track dried, and after an initial slew of midfield pitstops, Hamilton, Rosberg and Webber all decided they needed fresh rubber too.

Webber was the first of the leaders to pit on lap 31, and managed to get around Rosberg through Turns 2 and 3 as the Mercedes rejoined after its stop a lap later. Hamilton waited two laps longer and stayed ahead of the now-flying Webber, despite a scare at Turn 13 when he took to the grass but was able to muscle back in front of the Red Bull at Turn 14 as it too slid wide.

Button had no concerns about tyre wear and continued to pull away from Kubica, who now had both Ferraris hounding him, while half a minute behind Button, Hamilton, Webber and Rosberg made the most of their fresher tyres to start taking 1-2s per lap out of the leaders.

With eight laps to go, Kubica, Massa, Alonso, Hamilton and Webber were nose to tail in second to sixth places, with Rosberg gaining on the queue as well. Hamilton's tyres went off again in the Ferraris' dirty air, but he still got alongside Alonso into Turn 13 two laps from the end. As Alonso kept Hamilton to the outside, Webber hit the back of the McLaren under braking, smashing the Red Bull's front wing and spinning Hamilton through the gravel. The latter rejoined in sixth, with Webber falling to ninth.

Button stayed comfortably clear of this mayhem, masterfully keeping his tyres in shape and cruising to victory with a 12s margin over Kubica.

Although Adrian Sutil was an early retirement, Tonio Liuzzi scored again for Force India in seventh, passing Sauber's Pedro de la Rosa mid-race and then gaining another place when Rubens Barrichello decided to pit for new tyres and dropped from eighth to 10th. He then inherited seventh thanks to the Hamilton/Webber tangle.

Barrichello fought back to reclaim ninth from de la Rosa and was elevated another place thanks to Webber's stop.

Schumacher never really recovered from his first lap delay, spending the majority of the afternoon trapped behind Jaime Alguersuari's Toro Rosso. Although he eventually overtook the young Spaniard, they would swap places again when both pitted for tyres and had to muscle back past the Toro Rosso in the closing stages. Both then passed the struggling de la Rosa, allowing Schumacher to at least salvage a point.

Heikki Kovalainen got to the finish for Lotus in 13th, with Karun Chandhok also going the distance for Hispania in 14th. The other new team cars all retired - Lotus's Jarno Trulli not even making the start due to hydraulic problems. Renault's Vitaly Petrov was the other retirement, spinning into the gravel on lap nine.

Autosport.com.
By Matt Beer

Classified:

Pos Driver Team Time
1. Button McLaren-Mercedes 1h33:36.531
2. Kubica Renault + 12.034
3. Massa Ferrari + 14.488
4. Alonso Ferrari + 16.304
5. Rosberg Mercedes + 16.683
6. Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes + 29.898
7. Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes + 59.847
8. Barrichello Williams-Cosworth + 1:00.536
9. Webber Red Bull-Renault + 1:07.319
10. Schumacher Mercedes + 1:09.391
11. Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari + 1:11.301
12. De la Rosa Sauber-Ferrari + 1:14.084
13. Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth + 2 laps
14. Chandhok HRT-Cosworth + 4 laps
Not classified/retirements:

Driver Team On lap
Glock Virgin-Cosworth 41
Vettel Red Bull-Renault 26
Di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 25
Sutil Force India-Mercedes 12
Petrov Renault 10
Senna HRT-Cosworth 5
Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1
Hulkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1
Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 1
Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 1

F1 Bahrain Grand Prix - March 14th 2010


Alonso takes victory on Ferrari debut

Fernando Alonso got his Ferrari career off to a glorious start by leading team-mate Felipe Massa to a comfortable one-two in the Bahrain Grand Prix - but only after Sebastian Vettel's Red Bull lost power while leading.

The German still managed to limp to the flag in fourth, with Lewis Hamilton benefiting from his problem to get on the podium for McLaren. The Mercedes of Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher completed the top six.

Vettel had looked comfortable in the lead for most of the race, pulling out a five second advantage prior to the leaders' sole pitstops on laps 17 to 19.

Alonso had taken second from Massa through the first corners at the start, and then closed a little on Vettel by taking fresh tyres one lap sooner. He continued to chip away at the gap in the second half of the race, getting to within 1.5s and bringing Massa along with him, but Vettel seemed to have enough in hand to keep the Ferraris at bay.

That suddenly changed at the start of lap 34 though, as Vettel abruptly slowed on the pits straight, reporting a loss of power that the team later diagnosed as an exhaust problem.

Alonso was soon all over the back of the hobbled Red Bull, blasting past and into the lead on the run into the final corner, with Massa followed him on the next straight to take second.

Just in case Massa had any thoughts of mounting a challenge for the lead, Alonso then fired off a string of new fastest race laps to build a 5s margin and set himself up to take his first victory since the 2008 Japanese GP. He continued to set fastest laps in the closing stages to keep himself amused, eventually extending his lead over Massa into double figures.

Hamilton ran behind Rosberg at first, but jumped the Mercedes in the first pitstops. He picked up third from the slowing Vettel with 11 laps to go.

After that Vettel managed to get a little more speed from his car and held on to fourth, finishing just ahead of Rosberg.

Schumacher ran a few seconds behind his team-mate throughout his comeback race, fending off world champion Jenson Button (McLaren) and Mark Webber (Red Bull), who swapped places when they pitted in unison on lap 19.

Webber had a trouble-free run despite his Red Bull emitting huge plumes of white smoke on the opening lap. Unsighted in this cloud, Renault's Robert Kubica and Force India's Adrian Sutil touched and spun, although they recovered to 11th and 12th.

An early pitstop allowed Kubica to set some rapid times and vault a few midfield cars, but in the end he could not get close enough to 10th placed Rubens Barrichello's Williams. Force India had the consolation of ninth position for Sutil's team-mate Tonio Liuzzi.

Rookies Vitaly Petrov and Nico Hulkenberg had tough races, with the Williams spinning in the fast downhill corners following the new loop early on, and Petrov having to park in the pits with a suspension problem - which he felt he may have caused by hitting a kerb too hard. Prior to that the Renault had run 11th thanks to a fast start.

Lotus managed to get both cars to the flag, with Heikki Kovalainen and Jarno Trulli within 3s of the pace at times on their way to 15th and 16th, although Trulli had to nurse a mechanical problem in the final laps.

The other two new teams did not last long. Karun Chandhok crashed his Hispania on lap two, and team-mate Bruno Senna had a suspected hydraulic problem 16 laps later. Virgin also posted two early retirements, with hydraulic issues stopping Lucas di Grassi after two laps and Timo Glock hitting gearbox trouble just after passing Kovalainen for the lead of the unofficial newcomers' class.

Sauber was the other team forced to retire both cars, as Pedro de la Rosa and Kamui Kobayashi suffered hydraulic gremlins mid-race.

Autosport.com.
By Matt Beer
Sunday, March 14th 2010, 13:49 GMT

Results
1 F. Alonso Ferrari 1:39:20.396
2 F. Massa Ferrari + 16.099
3 L. Hamilton McLaren + 23.182
4 S. Vettel Red Bull + 38.799
5 N. Rosberg Mercedes Grand Prix + 40.213
6 M. Schumacher Mercedes Grand Prix + 44.163
7 J. Button McLaren + 45.280
8 M. Webber Red Bull + 46.360
9 V. Liuzzi Force India F1 + 53.008
10 R. Barrichello Williams + 1:02.489
11 R. Kubica Renault + 1:09.093
12 A. Sutil Force India F1 + 1:22.958
13 J. Alguersuari Scuderia Toro Rosso + 1:32.656
14 N. Hulkenberg Williams + 1 lap(s)
15 H. Kovalainen Lotus F1 + 2 lap(s)
16 J. Trulli Lotus F1 + 3 lap(s
Did not finish
17 S. Buemi Scuderia Toro Rosso + 3 lap(s)
18 P. de la Rosa Sauber + 21 lap(s)
19 B. Senna HRT F1 Team + 32 lap(s)
20 T. Glock Virgin Racing + 33 lap(s)
21 V. Petrov Renault + 36 lap(s)
22 K. Kobayashi Sauber + 38 lap(s)
23 L. Di Grassi Virgin Racing + 46 lap(s)
24 K. Chandhok HRT F1 Team + 47 lap(s)

Corona Rally Mexico - 5 - 7/3/10


Sebastien Loeb wins Rally Mexico!

Citroen C4 WRC driver Sebastien Loeb sealed a crushing victory on Rally Mexico today, round two of the 2010 World Rally Championship, to leap into the lead of the FIA Drivers' standings.

Loeb, the defending and six-times World Champion built up a massive lead of almost a minute during Saturday's competition, and cruised through Sunday's three stages to finish 24.2sec ahead of Petter Solberg who claimed second place in another Citroen C4 WRC.

Today's win was the 55th at World Championship level for Loeb and co-driver Daniel Elena and was the pair's fourth consecutive success on Rally Mexico.

After finishing runner-up to his Ford rival Mikko Hirvonen on the series' opening round in Sweden, it springs the Frenchman six points clear at the top of the drivers' standings.

"I had a good lead today and was not going to take any risks with that when I started first on the road,” said Loeb. “I was just breezing through the last couple of stages trying to keep my concentration. It's a good victory; I'm back in the lead of the championship and the points we lost in Sweden we've won back - that's important.

"Okay, it's only the start of the championship but I'm really happy. We had a really good drive yesterday and a good feeling in the car. It’s looking good," he added.

Sunday's gripping tussle for second position eventually ended in Solberg’s favour. He and Citroen Junior Team driver Sebastien Ogier began the day separated by just 2.7sec and the contest was only decided to the Norwegian’s advantage on the final Super Special stage when he set the fastest time. It marked a fitting end to a terrific three-day battle.

"I'm delighted but absolutely exhausted," said an emotional Solberg, who scored his best WRC result since the 2008 Acropolis. "After what we've been through last year and this year it’s a hell of result. We analysed the time we might lose running first on the road and even though we knew it would be difficult it worked out perfectly. It’s a great feeling to be back on the podium!"

Finishing third, 1.1sec behind Solberg, Ogier was left pondering his decision to deliberately drop time to his rival on Saturday to ensure a better road position today.

"Of course it's disappointing but it's been a good weekend anyway," he said. "My team told me not to push too hard today, so this morning I didn't push to the maximum. Maybe it's there that I lost out, or maybe yesterday when I slowed at the end of the stage. I think maybe we could have been faster than Petter if we wanted this weekend, but here we are third and it's a good result."

One minute 22 seconds behind the winning trio of Citroens, BP Ford Abu Dhabi Team driver Hirvonen was fourth, in the first Ford Focus RS WRC. His team-mate Jari-Matti Latvala rounded off the top five positions.

The final stage marked the end of a disappointing event for Ford, who were beaten fair and square over the Mexican gravel by Citroen, although the BP Ford Abu Dhabi World Rally Team maintained a six-point lead over the Citroen Total World Rally Team in the FIA Manufacturers’ championship.

"It was a very difficult weekend for the whole team," acknowledged Hirvonen. "We never really had the speed and there were lots of small mistakes from my side too. I'm glad in the end we got the points we could. I just want to leave it behind now and move on to the next rally."

Jari-Matti Latvala said: "It’s been a frustrating weekend, but if you look at the positives we did get good points in the manufacturers' championship, which is very important. Also this is my second rally now finishing in a quite good position - and that boosts my confidence ahead of the next rallies."

Norwegian Henning Solberg confirmed sixth overall for the Stobart M-Sport Ford Rally Team after setting several impressive stage times on day two and Argentina’s Federico Villagra finished in seventh place and gave the Munchi’s Rally Team its first points of the season.

Rally Sweden - 12 - 14/2/10


Hirvonen wins in Sweden!

Ford Focus RS WRC driver Mikko Hirvonen got his quest for the 2010 World Rally Championship drivers' title off to the best possible start today by winning the opening round of the series, Rally Sweden.

Hirvonen, team-leader of the BP Ford Abu Dhabi Team, took the lead on Friday and successfully fought off a two-day attack from defending champion Sebastien Loeb, who finished second, 42.3sec behind in a Citroen C4 WRC.

Today's win was the 12th at World Championship level for the Finn, who lost the 2009 title fight by a single point to Loeb. Under the new WRC points system, Hirvonen opened his 2010 account with a maximum score of 25.

After a careful approach through the final snow-covered stage, Hirvonen and co-driver Jarmo Lehtinen leapt onto the roof of their car at he finish control to celebrate their win. "It's absolutely fantastic!" said Hirvonen. "And I'm really happy it's over after those last few stages; you can't imagine how nervous I was in there. It’s a perfect start to my year, I've never won the first round before, but after last season I've got one more year of experience. Now I plan to carry on like this. It’s a new game in Mexico and I can't wait to get started again."

Having lost out to Hirvonen in a tyre gamble on Saturday afternoon, Loeb began Sunday's competition trailing by 16.1sec. But after failing to make a big impression on today's opening two stages, the Frenchman took the uncharacteristic decision to give up on the victory challenge after SS18, settling for second, and 18 championship points instead.

"It’s been a tough weekend, and Mikko has done a perfect rally," said Loeb. "We made a little mistake yesterday, but even without it I don't know if I would have been able to beat him in the stages. He was strong and he deserves his victory. I did my best. There's nothing more to say."

Third in Sweden, 33.1sec behind Loeb, was Hirvonen's team-mate, Jari-Matti Latvala, who started his season with a 15 points haul - helping to put Ford in the lead of the manufacturers' contest. "It's not been an easy weekend," said the Finn. "We were struggling on Friday, but the speed started to come right on Saturday afternoon. I'm really pleased to finish in this position on the first round of the season."

Fourth went to Loeb's team-mate Dani Sordo. The Spaniard finished 1min 26.2sec behind Latvala, largely because of a silly mistake on Saturday when a blanking plate wasn't removed from the front of his car, causing its engine to overheat. But after an otherwise strong performance, Sordo put a brave face on the result.

"Fourth place is not bad, but of course third would have been better," he said. "The first day was okay, then we made a mistake, but that's rally sometimes. It’s okay though, we need to look to the future now. And fourth place will give me a good start position in Mexico, where the others will be cleaning the road."

Sebastien Ogier of the Citroen Junior team had a largely trouble-free event to finish fifth on his Rally Sweden debut, 4min 15.3sec adrift of Hirvonen's winning time. "It's a good result for all the team and I want to thank them for giving me a second season - it's a great opportunity. The rally was good for me on day one then got a bit more difficult when we had to conserve our place. So it was less fun that I expected! But the most important thing was to finish and get experience."

Sixth was Stobart Ford team driver Henning Solberg, tackling his first event with new co-driver Ilka Minor, and adjusting to a new English language pace-note system. "I wanted to catch Ogier, and I couldn't do any more, so we have to be happy," he said. "In the car it’s working well with Ilka. You'll see later; this is a winning team!"

Henning's British team-mate Matthew Wilson was seventh in his Ford Focus RS WRC, to collect six championship points. "I'm slightly disappointed by Friday's pace, but once we got the car sorted we improved on Saturday and today. I'm glad to get to the finish."

Norwegian Mads Ostberg was eighth after an up and down event in his 2007 spec Subaru Impreza WRC. The Norwegian had some encouraging stages but lost time in snowbanks and with a braking problem today. "A frustrating time," he acknowledged. "I hoped my bad luck would stop this year but it seems not. I've done some mistakes, and we've had some problems with the car. I guess it evens things out. I hope we'll get out again this season; we're working on some S2000 things."

Petter Solberg's first event in his 2009 specification Citroen C4 WRC turned out to be a disappointing one, with the former champion ending the rally ninth after failing to gel with his car. "This rally didn't go our way - whether that's down to me, or something else I don't know," he said. "Something hasn't been right, that's for sure. Things worked well before the rally, and the set-up should be the same as Sebastien Loeb's. What can I say?"

Swedish driver P-G Andersson brought his Super 2000 specification Skoda Fabia to tenth place, to take the class win and collect the final point in the WRC drivers' championship.

Further down the standings, largely as a result of an electrical problem on day two, former double World Champion Marcus Gronholm finished 21st in his Stobart team Ford Focus. The Finn achieved one of his pre-event objectives - winning his beloved Sagen stage on Saturday - but felt he could have done with more time in the car before the rally. "It was good to take the stage win, but the conditions here have been very tough on the tyres, and it's very difficult to drive these cars with no studs. Will I do more events? I don't know. We'll see. But if I do I'll need a lot of practice and more miles in the car."

Despite an off into a snowbank on Friday, F1 star Kimi Raikkonen completed his first ever World Rally Championship event, reaching the finish in 30th place, 37minutes behind the leaders, in his Citroen C4 WRC. "Of course I'm not happy about getting stuck on the first day but I maybe I've improved a lot since," he said. "This is definitely not an easy rally, but we've got a lot more experience of the car and the notes now. Mexico is next. I've never driven the car on gravel before but the grip should be consistent. I'm looking forward to it."

Arctic Rally 30/01/2010

Citroen driver Dani Sordo has won the 2010 Arctic Lapland Rally after dominating the Finnish event. Sordo's team-mate Kimi Raikkonen put in an impressive performance, despite crashing on the first day, with a string of second fastest times throughout the event.

This was Raikkonen's first time driving the Citroen C4 WRC in competitive conditions and without yesterday's crash, he would have finished 6 minutes behind Sordo.

Raikkonen's co-driver Kaj Lindstrom commented after SS9: "The difference to Dani is now 0.9 seconds per kilometre.

"We know where the difference comes from, therefore it's a relief. It would be different if you had to think to yourself that you are going damn fast but still be behind, that would be worrying.

"We are still setting the car up so Kimi doesn't yet have 100% confidence in how the car behaves. It affects the way we go into corners. There's some early braking when there are shady places because we don't want to do anything stupid. That's where the differences in time easily come from. The notes will also improve once we see how fast we can go with a car like this into certain places." Lindstrom added to MTV3.