By Simon Wright
Fernando Alonso flies the Ferrari flag aloft after victory in China |
Fernando
Alonso put in a flawless drive to record victory at the Chinese Grand Prix
on Sunday. The Spaniard (pictured) showed supreme pace all day on a three-stop strategy,
managing his Pirelli tyres superbly.
Melbourne
race winner Kimi Raikkonen was second, but a distant 10 seconds adrift of a
dominant Alonso, who had control of the race from the moment he passed
pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton at the start of the fifth lap.
Hamilton
resisted a late attack from world champion Sebastian Vettel in a gripping
finale to register his second successive podium for his new team Mercedes. Both Jenson Button and Paul di Resta claimed
strong points finishes, but last year’s winner Nico Rosberg and an unhappy Mark
Webber were among those out of luck in China as they failed to finish.
Once again,
the talk of the paddock was tyres, especially as Pirelli’s softer tyre showed
absolutely no signs of durability throughout the weekend. Six laps was the most
any driver could achieve on this rubber on raceday, and although it led to some
complex strategies down the grid, it made Saturday’s qualifying session fairly
tedious with every team desperate to save fresh sets for the main event.
Red Bull’s
lack of single lap pace meant they tried a conservative approach and Vettel
didn’t attempt to set a serious lap time in Q3, meaning he started from
ninth. Hamilton became the first British
driver since Sir Stirling Moss in the 1950s to take a pole position for Mercedes
on Saturday, ahead of Raikkonen, Alonso and Rosberg.
The 2008
world champion converted pole into the lead off the start, but Raikkonen was
left wanting, and got easily overwhelmed by the fast-starting Ferraris of
Alonso and Felipe Massa.
Hamilton
though couldn’t build up a useful lead to protect himself from the DRS effect,
and on lap five, he was a sitting target as both Alonso and Massa cruised past
on the entry to turn one.
Both Mercedes
cars had severe tyre wear problems from the beginning, and they pitted a lap
later. Contact from Daniel Ricciardo
early on hobbled the balance on Rosberg’s car, although his retirement on lap
21 in the pits was caused by a suspension issue that was more likely linked to
a hydraulics problem on Saturday morning rather than this incident with the
Toro Rosso.
The other
Toro Rosso of Jean-Eric Vergne got up close and personal with Webber, who had a
miserable weekend from the outset.
Sporting an
appalling new haircut didn’t seem to bring any good luck to the Aussie, and he
ran out of fuel in qualifying, leaving him a dismal 14th on the
grid. Failing to provide the required
one litre FIA fuel sample after the session saw his times deleted and forced a
pitlane start.
Although he
made good progress after ditching the soft tyres at the end of the opening
circuit, he clashed with Vergne on lap 14 entering turn five. The incident
damaged his front wing, and spun the Frenchman around. After an unsafe release
from the unscheduled stop, an issue with the rear of the car forced him to
crawl around back to the pits.
The departure of a wheel finished off Webber's appalling weekend |
The rear
issue became evident exiting the hairpin on lap 15, when Webber’s left-rear
wheel (pictured) made a bid for freedom, rolling dangerously across the road and was only
narrowly missed by his team-mate Vettel and the Sauber of Nico Hulkenberg. Retirement was inevitable.
To cap off
his Shanghai shocker, the team were fined for the unsafe pit release, while
Webber received a harsh three-place grid penalty for the race in Bahrain next
Sunday, as the stewards deemed him guilty to have caused an avoidable collision
with Vergne. With speculation mounting over the Red Bull number two having
signed an agreement to drive for Porsche in the World Endurance Championship
next season, he will want to forget China 2013 in a hurry.
Webber wasn’t
the only one in hot water with the race stewards. Eight drivers were hauled
before them and drivers’ representative Mark Blundell after the event for use
of the DRS system under yellow flags. No
further action was taken due to an FIA telemetry issue, and Esteban Gutierrez
was given a five-place grid demotion for Bahrain after his clumsy accident with
Adrian Sutil on lap four, taking the pair out of the race.
Having done
well to fight past the two-stopping traffic of Vergne, di Resta, Button and
Hulkenberg, Alonso inherited the lead again from Vettel with one of his more
easier overtakes on the reigning champion just after half-distance. With the Spaniard in complete command,
attention switched to the fight for second place.
Despite a
run-in with Sergio Perez, which damaged the nose of his car, Raikkonen showed
his championship might and continued without losing too much time. He used the final round of stops to pit
earlier and undercut Hamilton to claim second spot.
Vettel’s
different strategy had him in the hunt, and he eventually made the move onto
the unfancied soft tyres on lap 51.
Urged to go for it with fresher rubber, and tyres that would at least
give him phenomenal grip for three laps, Sebastian ate into the 12-second
deficit to Raikkonen and Hamilton.
He set the
fastest lap in the process, but going slightly off-line to lap the Caterham of
Charles Pic on the last circuit led to the German not getting the desired exit
out of turn 12 onto the backstraight.
With that, Hamilton just held on by less than half a second to claim the
final podium spot.
Hamilton
admitted he was slightly disappointed with the lack of race pace from
Mercedes. He said to BBC: “We just don’t have the pace of the
Ferraris and the Lotuses in the race conditions.
“I’m not sure where we’re losing
out. There are definitely a couple of
areas that we can focus on the car, but we’ve got to bring some more updates.”
Nobody was
taking anything away from Alonso, who stormed to his second success in the
Chinese Grand Prix, the last one coming back in his Renault days in 2005. The win was also the 31st of his
career, taking him equal fourth with Nigel Mansell in the all-time winners
list, and it was his first victory since the German Grand Prix at Hockenheim
last July.
Raikkonen was
second, followed by the battling Hamilton and Vettel. Button’s two-stop strategy saw McLaren
achieve their maximum result with fifth place, whilst major tyre graining
ruined Massa’s afternoon and left him in a frustrated sixth place – some 40
seconds behind his race winning team-mate.
Ricciardo
recovered from an early stop to change a front wing to finish a fabulous seventh
for Toro Rosso, achieving the best result of his career.
The Aussie
spoke afterwards, saying: “I am really
pleased to score my first points of the season and to confirm the qualifying
performance. After yesterday afternoon I
kept calm, knowing the real work would begin today.
“Of course, the early pitstop to
change the nose affected our plans and towards the end, Massa’s Ferrari was
looking bigger and bigger ahead of me!
So yes, maybe I could have done even better, but for now I’ll settle for
this seventh place.”
Di Resta was
eighth, with Romain Grosjean blaming traffic for a rather underwhelming
performance on his way to ninth.
Hulkenberg battled hard for the final point, after two sluggish
pitstops, ahead of a disappointing Perez and Vergne. Max Chilton once again made it to the finish, this time a lap adrift in 17th spot.
Fernando
Alonso has laid down a positive statement of intent in China, and was the man
to beat here. However, with three
winners in three races from three different teams, it doesn’t look like one
driver will run away with this championship, and the next chapter will be told
in just seven days time, with the Bahrain Grand Prix completing the first Asian
leg of this 2013 championship.
2013 UBS CHINESE GRAND PRIX RESULT
|
|||||
Pos
|
Driver
|
Team
|
Laps
|
Time/Reason
|
Grid
|
1
|
Fernando
Alonso
|
Ferrari
|
56
|
1hr
36min 26secs
|
3
|
2
|
Kimi
Raikkonen
|
Lotus
Renault
|
56
|
+10.1secs
|
2
|
3
|
Lewis
Hamilton
|
Mercedes
GP
|
56
|
+12.3secs
|
1
|
4
|
Sebastian
Vettel
|
Red
Bull Racing Renault
|
56
|
+12.5secs
|
9
|
5
|
Jenson
Button
|
McLaren
Mercedes
|
56
|
+35.2secs
|
8
|
6
|
Felipe
Massa
|
Ferrari
|
56
|
+40.8secs
|
5
|
7
|
Daniel
Ricciardo
|
Scuderia
Toro Rosso Ferrari
|
56
|
+42.6secs
|
7
|
8
|
Paul
di Resta
|
Force
India Mercedes
|
56
|
+51.0secs
|
11
|
9
|
Romain
Grosjean
|
Lotus
Renault
|
56
|
+53.4secs
|
6
|
10
|
Nico
Hulkenberg
|
Sauber
Ferrari
|
56
|
+56.5secs
|
10
|
11
|
Sergio
Perez
|
McLaren
Mercedes
|
56
|
+1min
03.8secs
|
12
|
12
|
Jean-Eric
Vergne
|
Scuderia
Toro Rosso Ferrari
|
56
|
+1min
12.6secs
|
15
|
13
|
Valtteri
Bottas
|
Williams
Renault
|
56
|
+1min
33.8secs
|
16
|
14
|
Pastor
Maldonado
|
Williams
Renault
|
56
|
+1min
35.4secs
|
14
|
15
|
Jules
Bianchi
|
Marussia
Cosworth
|
55
|
1
Lap
|
18
|
16
|
Charles
Pic
|
Caterham
Renault
|
55
|
1
Lap
|
20
|
17
|
Max
Chilton
|
Marussia
Cosworth
|
55
|
1
Lap
|
19
|
18
|
Giedo
van der Garde
|
Caterham
Renault
|
55
|
1
Lap
|
21
|
R
|
Nico
Rosberg
|
Mercedes
GP
|
21
|
Suspension/Vibration
|
4
|
R
|
Mark
Webber
|
Red
Bull Racing Renault
|
15
|
Lost
Wheel
|
22
|
R
|
Adrian
Sutil
|
Force
India Mercedes
|
5
|
Collision
with Gutierrez
|
13
|
R
|
Esteban
Gutierrez
|
Sauber
Ferrari
|
4
|
Collision
with Sutil
|
17
|
Drivers’ Championship after 3 rounds:
1. Sebastian Vettel 52,
2. Kimi Raikkonen 49, 3. Fernando Alonso 43, 4. Lewis Hamilton 40, 5. Felipe Massa 30, 6. Mark Webber 26, 7. Nico Rosberg 12, 8. Jenson
Button 12, 9. Romain Grosjean 11, 10. Paul di Resta 8, 11. Daniel Ricciardo 6, 12. Adrian Sutil 6, 13. Nico Hulkenberg 5, 14. Sergio Perez 2, 15. Jean-Eric Vergne 1
Constructors’ Championship after 3
rounds: 1. Red Bull Racing 78, 2. Ferrari 73, 3. Lotus 60, 4. Mercedes
GP 52, 5. McLaren 14, 6. Force India 14, 7. Scuderia Toro Rosso 7, 8.
Sauber 5
0 comments:
Post a Comment