By Simon Wright
The British
summer of sporting success continued this afternoon at the Hungarian Grand
Prix, as Lewis Hamilton reminded everyone of his class to win his first race of
the 2013 season.
The 2008
world champion has taken time to adjust to his new surroundings at Mercedes GP,
but he showed his hunger on a circuit where track temperatures nudged 50
degrees. The excessive heat though didn’t
provide any issues on his tyres as he charged to a fourth victory in Budapest.
Hamilton overcame personal issues to win in Hungary once again |
Hamilton (pictured) finished 12 seconds clear of the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen, with defending world
champion Sebastian Vettel having to settle for third, but once again increasing
his championship lead as the sport heads for its official summer break. Jenson Button had an action-packed drive to
seventh place, but it was a tough day for several teams including Ferrari who
simply couldn’t live with the ultimate pace at the tight and twisty
Hungaroring.
This event
was the first since Pirelli went back to a new construction of tyre following
the constant failures in the first half of the season, and it has to be said
that they passed the test with flying colours, especially with air temperatures hitting 35 degrees Celsius on raceday, only comparable with races in Dallas in
the 1980s and the 2005 Bahrain Grand Prix.
A sterling
lap from Hamilton in qualifying once again meant he took his third successive
pole position, and that was the first ingredient of a perfect weekend for the
Stevenage-born driver. He made a great
start too and comfortably led into the first corner. Fellow front row starter Vettel had a tardy
getaway, but just managed to hold off the Lotus of Romain Grosjean, giving the
Frenchman very minimal space to work with.
Further back, the sister Mercedes of Nico Rosberg went backwards. After being squeezed out in the first corner
shuffle, he had contact with Felipe Massa at turn five on the opening circuit
and went off-track, leaving him stuck in the midfield in 12th place
at the end of the lap.
The option tyre
lasted longer than many expected, with Hamilton not peeling in for his first
stop until lap 10. His lead was only
slender over Vettel and Grosjean, but it was at this point that won him the
race. Rejoining behind former team-mate
Button, he quickly utilised the strong straight-line speed on his Mercedes to
pass Button a lap later into the first corner.
When Vettel and Grosjean rejoined, they got stuck behind the former
double winner of the Hungarian event.
Vettel spent
12 frustrating laps behind the McLaren, and ended up conceding a costly 13
seconds to Hamilton, who was able to build up a gap and maintain decent levels
of cooling and tyre temperature in the process.
During the battle, there was contact between Vettel and Button at one
point, leaving the German with minor front wing damage.
Team principal
Christian Horner admitted afterwards that this element of the race was what
denied his driver a chance at a first victory in Budapest. As quoted by Planet F1 afterwards, he said: “I think the
most damage to us was emerging from the pits behind Jenson and not being able
to pass him, then damaging the front wing.
Romain Grosjean and Jenson Button both had lively races |
Vettel
eventually found a way through on lap 25 as Button’s tyres lost their
edge. Two corners later, Grosjean (pictured with Button) tried to
follow through but a clumsy misjudgement of spacial awareness once again led to
contact between the two drivers.
The Lotus man
admitted he was at fault afterwards. He
told Sky Sports F1: “With Jenson I was a bit
too much on the left. The track goes
narrow uphill and I was wider than that so I want to apologise.
“We were fortunate that none of us got
anything (damage), so that was good.”
However, he
did get a harsh drive-through penalty soon afterwards. After an early second stop, he rejoined
behind Massa’s sluggish Ferrari and pulled off what looked like one of the best
overtaking passes of the season around the outside of turn four.
Television
replays later showed Grosjean had put all four wheels off the track by a couple
of centimetres, but that was only to avoid contact with his rival. The stewards disagreed and handed him a
penalty which ruined his chances of fighting for the victory. He ultimately finished sixth.
With a safe
13-second lead, Hamilton looked strong and he made some bold passing when he
needed to, including two decisive overtakes on Mark Webber who was running a
different strategy after a qualifying session beset with KERS and electrical
issues.
During the
race, Hamilton was asked to change some settings on the differential, and the
response on team radio was: “Hey man, I’m
trying to drive here. I’m happy with the
way the car is.”
Hamilton was
unfazed though, and reeled off the remaining few laps with supreme control and
confidence to take his first Grand Prix victory outside of his happy spell with
McLaren. It is his first triumph since
last November’s United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.
It has been a
tough few weeks for Hamilton away from the circuit. He has been left devastated by the end of his
five-year relationship with X-Factor judge and pop superstar Nicole
Scherzinger, and he has been fairly open about the pain of the split on his
Twitter account. This was even more in
evidence in an interview with Sky Sports F1 anchor Simon Lazenby after the team
celebration photograph when he had to stop himself from breaking down after
mentioning the continued support he had been getting from his family.
When a bit
more composed, he said:
“It’s an incredible feeling. My team did an incredible job. We studied things a lot last night and were
hoping the tyres would last. We had no
idea it would go that well.
“I was hungry for it today, I was
going all out. Usually I get stuck in
traffic, but today I was going for every move I could.
“For the last 20 laps it was then
about managing the tyres, but this is one of the most important wins of my
career.”
As Hamilton
controlled proceedings at the front of the field, the battle for second spot
between Raikkonen and Vettel intensified.
Raikkonen aimed at a two-stop strategy and had to do a final stint on
the medium compound tyre of 33 laps.
He had to
hold off a quicker Red Bull and he managed to do this, despite one close call
in the final three laps. On the podium, Raikkonen
admitted: “I knew it was going to be
pretty tight so I saved the tyres with 10 laps to go a bit.
“I didn’t have any doubts I could keep
him behind, I had good speed in the last sector.”
Webber made
the most of his slightly different tyre strategy to finish an excellent
fourth. That was a notable result
considering he had to settle for 10th on the grid.
Ferrari had
another difficult day. Fernando Alonso
was hoping to give his country something to smile about after the tragic train
accident in the country that claimed the lives of over 70 people in
midweek. However a decade on from his
first Grand Prix victory, he was never in the fight for the win today.
Alonso
revealed his chassis was “too slow” on both types of tyre and could do no
better than fifth. Massa struggled to eighth. Ferrari are now
the fourth fastest car in Formula One, and this event was the final nail in
their coffin as far as a title challenge goes in 2013. Alonso will never give up, but the car is
lacking fundamental grip and the gap is looking too much, especially with
strong Red Bull events like Singapore and India to come. Focus at Maranello must now start shifting towards a more capable challenge in 2014.
It was
another double point’s finish for McLaren with Button beating Massa fair and
square for seventh. Despite a crash in
FP3, Sergio Perez did well to finish in ninth place, but did finish a full lap
behind the winner. Rosberg’s late
withdrawal from proceedings was like gold dust for Williams. It meant Pastor Maldonado crossed the line in
10th place, and meant they finally achieved their first point of the
campaign after the worst start to a season in their illustrious history.
Force India
had an event to forget. Neither car
finished, with both retiring thanks to hydraulics gremlins. Paul di Resta never got higher than 13th
following a disappointing Q1 elimination as the new specification of tyres
seems to have hurt them the most. There
was another finish for Max Chilton in 17th spot, but three laps down
as Marussia slip firmly behind Caterham in the battle to avoid being the main
backmarker in the sport.
We are now
officially halfway through the 2013 season, and while it hasn’t been the most
intriguing campaign thanks to political matters and controversial issues such
as team orders, tyre failures and illegal tests, there is a championship still
to win.
Vettel still has it all to lose,
but both Lotus and Mercedes still have chances to capitalise on any
mistakes. Lewis Hamilton will believe he
does have an opportunity to overturn his 48-point deficit to Vettel after this
win. The next event is in four weeks’
time at one of the championship’s most spectacular tracks, the daunting Spa-Francorchamps
in Belgium.
FORMULA 1 MAGYAR
NAGYDIJ 2013 RESULT
|
|||||
Pos
|
Driver
|
Team
|
Laps
|
Time/Reason
|
Grid
|
1
|
Lewis Hamilton
|
Mercedes GP
|
70
|
+1hr 42min 29secs
|
1
|
2
|
Kimi Raikkonen
|
Lotus Renault
|
70
|
+10.9secs
|
6
|
3
|
Sebastian Vettel
|
Red Bull Racing
Renault
|
70
|
+12.4secs
|
2
|
4
|
Mark Webber
|
Red Bull Racing
Renault
|
70
|
+18.0secs
|
10
|
5
|
Fernando Alonso
|
Ferrari
|
70
|
+31.4secs
|
5
|
6
|
Romain Grosjean
|
Lotus Renault
|
70
|
+52.2secs
|
3
|
7
|
Jenson Button
|
McLaren Mercedes
|
70
|
+53.8secs
|
13
|
8
|
Felipe Massa
|
Ferrari
|
70
|
+56.4secs
|
7
|
9
|
Sergio Perez
|
McLaren Mercedes
|
69
|
1 Lap
|
9
|
10
|
Pastor Maldonado
|
Williams Renault
|
69
|
1 Lap
|
15
|
11
|
Nico Hulkenberg
|
Sauber Ferrari
|
69
|
1 Lap
|
12
|
12
|
Jean-Eric Vergne
|
STR Ferrari
|
69
|
1 Lap
|
14
|
13
|
Daniel Ricciardo
|
STR Ferrari
|
69
|
1 Lap
|
8
|
14
|
Giedo van der Garde
|
Caterham Renault
|
68
|
2 Laps
|
20
|
15
|
Charles Pic
|
Caterham Renault
|
68
|
2 Laps
|
19
|
16
|
Jules Bianchi
|
Marussia Cosworth
|
67
|
3 Laps
|
21
|
17
|
Max Chilton
|
Marussia Cosworth
|
67
|
3 Laps
|
22
|
Retired
|
Paul di Resta
|
Force India Mercedes
|
66
|
Hydraulics
|
18
|
Retired
|
Nico Rosberg
|
Mercedes GP
|
64
|
Engine
|
4
|
Retired
|
Valtteri Bottas
|
Williams Renault
|
42
|
Hydraulics
|
16
|
Retired
|
Esteban Gutierrez
|
Sauber Ferrari
|
28
|
Gearbox
|
17
|
Retired
|
Adrian Sutil
|
Force India Mercedes
|
19
|
Hydraulics
|
11
|
GROSJEAN PENALISED 20-SECONDS FOR CAUSING AN AVOIDABLE COLLISION WITH BUTTON, BUT KEEPS HIS SIXTH PLACE
Drivers’ Championship after 10 rounds:
Sebastian Vettel 172,
Kimi Raikkonen 134, Fernando Alonso 133, Lewis Hamilton 124, Mark Webber 105,
Nico Rosberg 84, Felipe Massa 61, Romain Grosjean 49, Jenson Button 39, Paul di
Resta 36, Adrian Sutil 23, Sergio Perez 18, Jean-Eric Vergne 13, Daniel
Ricciardo 11, Nico Hulkenberg 7, Pastor Maldonado 1
Constructors’ Championship after 10
rounds: Red Bull
Racing 277, Mercedes GP 208, Ferrari 194, Lotus 183, Force India 59, McLaren
57, Scuderia Toro Rosso 24, Sauber 7, Williams 1