Alonso wins F1 Chinese Grand Prix

AFP
Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso relaxes before F1 Chinese Grand Prix practice session in Shanghai on April 13, 2013

SHANGHAI (AFP) –

Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso relaxes before the third practice session for the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai on April 13, 2013. Alonso won an incident-packed race, well ahead of the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen and MercedesLewis Hamilton.

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso emerged unscathed to take victory on Sunday in a drama-packed Chinese Grand Prix, with the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton holding on for second and third.

A charging Sebastian Vettel came fourth, just 0.2 seconds behind Hamilton, after adopting a different tyre strategy from most of his rivals, while his Red Bull team-mate Mark Webber failed to finish on a dreadful weekend for him.

Jenson Button, of McLaren, was fifth, and Alonso’s team-mate Felipe Massa sixth.

Daniel Ricciardo, of Toro Rosso, Force India’s Paul di Resta, Romain Grosjean of Lotus and Nico Hulkenberg, of Sauber, rounded out the top 10.

Going into the Bahrain Grand Prix next weekend, reigning three-time world champion Vettel leads the drivers’ standings on 52 points, followed by Raikkonen (49), Alonso (43), Hamilton (40) and Massa (30).

Fernando Alonso (centre) on the podium with Kimi Raikkonen (left) and Lewis Hamilton in Shanghai, April 14, 2013

Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain (centre) celebrates on the podium after winning the Formula One Chinese Grand Prixm with second-placed Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen of Finland (left) and third-placed Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain in Shanghai on April 14, 2013.

Alonso said that he was delighted to get his season back on track after retiring early in Malaysia last month. The two-time world champion was second, behind the rejuvenated Raikkonen, in the season-opening race in Melbourne.

“It feels good, it is a long time from my victory here eight years ago,” said the Spaniard, who narrowly lost out to Vettel for the world title last season.

“It was not easy to understand this race sometimes, not an easy race. The risk is there when you overtake.

“This is a good reward for the team after the disappointment in Malaysia. Let’s hope this is now the start of the championship and we need to keep going like that.”

Hamilton, whose lead from pole position lasted only into lap five, when Alonso activated his DRS on the home straight, just held off the rampaging Vettel at the line to earn a second podium place for his new team.

“I’m really happy with today’s result and very happy for the team. We didn’t quite have the pace of these two (Alonso and Raikkonen) but we’re very pleased to get on the podium.”

In warm and dry conditions, and in front of a packed grandstand — not always the case at the Chinese Grand Prix — the race got off to a clean start.

Drivers take the second corner on the first lap of the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai on April 14, 2013

Drivers take the second corner on the first lap of the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai on April 14, 2013. Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso emerged unscathed to take victory in a drama-packed race, with the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen and Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton holding on for second and third.

Hamilton streaked to the corner with Alonso, third on the grid, in hot pursuit. Raikkonen, who was starting in second, was slow out the blocks.

But there was soon drama, as Sauber’s Esteban Gutierrez slammed into the back of Adrian Sutil, of Force India. Flames licked from the right side of Sutil’s machine as engineers battled to save his race. But both cars were out.

Vettel, under the spotlight over his deteriorating relationship with Webber, started ninth on the grid in a calculated gamble with his tyres. But he was soon moving ominously up the field.

Likewise Webber, who started the race from the pits after a disastrous qualifying session. That run to the front was curtailed though on lap 16 when he had a collision with Jean-Eric Vergne, of Toro Rosso.

Webber suffered damage to the front of his car and was called into the pits. But shortly afterwards the Australian inexplicably lost a right-rear tyre. Several cars had to swerve as the tyre rolled across the track.

Webber’s bad weekend got even worse soon after when race stewards blamed him for the Vergne incident. He will drop three grid places in Bahrain as punishment.

Raikkonen too was in the thick of it, suffering slight damage when Sergio Perez, of McLaren, attempted to snuff out the Finn’s overtaking manoeuvre. “What the hell’s he doing?!” exclaimed the straight-talking Raikkonen over the team radio.

“I was surprised there was not more damage,” the Finn, a big favourite with the Shanghai crowd, said later.

“I hit him quite hard, and was also surprised I didn’t have more problems. It was a good fight for second place and quite a good result in the end.”

Hamilton’s team-mate Nico Rosberg, winner in Shanghai last season, was the next to retire, as Button, Alonso and Vettel all had turns in the lead.

Twenty laps to go and Raikkonen and Hamilton were also still in the hunt.

Alonso surrendered his lead — nearly 20 seconds by then — to Vettel when he went in for a change of tyres. But the Spaniard snatched it back again on lap 43 of 56, darting inside the Red Bull.

Alonso was in full flow now, clocking the fastest lap time of the race, as Vettel — whose tyre strategy meant a late pit stop — Raikkonen and Hamilton scrapped it out for the other two podium places.

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