Vettel overshadows the opposition with superior victory at Singapore
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Sebastian Vettel completely overshadowed the opposition on his way to a dominant victory at the Singapore Grand Prix, taking the checkered flag over 30 seconds ahead of the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso. The German was joined on the podium by the Lotus of Kimi Raikkonen, who braved a bad back and rose from 13th on the grid to 3rd.
At the start Sebastian Vettel momentarily lost the lead to the Mercedes of Nico Rosberg, however the German was unable to make the move stick as he ran wide on the exit of Turn 1. This allowed Sebastian Vettel to regain the lead of the race through Turn 2, which ultimately set the tone for what was a superior display of pace from the reigning Champion. Lewis Hamilton was also unable to hit the apex of the opening corner, as the Briton ran wide during the melee at the start.
As the field jostled for position through Turn 7 Lewis Hamilton continued to endure a tough start to the race, as the 2008 World Champion ran wide at Turn 7 yet managed to overtake the Ferrari of Felipe Massa. This in turn saw the race stewards instruct the Briton to hand the position back, which ultimately left him down in 7th after the opening few laps. After the opening lap of the race Sebastian Vettel managed to open up a competitive +4.1 second lead to Nico Rosberg in 2nd, a gap which only increased as the opening laps ticked away to +7.2 by Lap 10.
Whilst Sebastian Vettel simply cruised into the distance at the front, Kimi Raikkonen began clawing his way through the field after overtaking both Paul di Resta and Esteban Gutierrez to 11th. The Finn soon became the first driver to make a scheduled pit-stop on Lap 10, as Fernando Alonso managed to produce the fastest lap of the race. Kimi Raikkonen was soon followed by Esteban Gutierrez and Jean-Eric Vergne in the pit-lane, as the first of the suspected three-stoppers began pitting. Throughout the next few laps both Felipe Massa, Mark Webber, Nico Hulkenberg and Jenson Button also dove into the pit-lane, as the gap at the front only increased between Nico Rosberg and Sebastian Vettel.
On Lap 14 Fernando Alonso and Sergio Perez elected to pit, before the Mercedes duo of Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg were called in for an impressive double-stop a lap later. Whilst the opening pit-stops of the race ensued up and down the order, Sergio Perez, Nico Hulkenberg and Pastor Maldonado became locked in a grueling battle for 12th, 13th and 14th position. The trio were engaged in extremely close racing, and amazingly avoided any major collision. Nico Hulkenberg managed to overtake Sergio Perez, however the stewards deemed his pass illegal for leaving the track and gaining an advantage, which therefore forced the German to hand the position back.
After a stunning opening stint for the race leader, Sebastian Vettel finally elected to pit on Lap 17. The Red Bull mechanics once again carried out a flawless stop for the German, who unsurprisingly managed to rejoin the action with a comfortable lead over the Mercedes of Nico Rosberg. Despite qualifying way down in 17th position, Paul di Resta managed to silently rise through the order to 3rd during the opening pit-stops. The Scotsman continued to circulate behind the race leaders for several laps before pitting, holding up Fernando Alonso and Mark Webber in the process.
Daniel Ricciardo created the first and only safety car period of the race on Lap 25, after the Australian driver simply ran into the retaining barriers at Turn 18. The front-right suspension of the Toro Rosso was utterly destroyed, as the marshals began clearing the stricken machine. Only moments after the safety car was deployed, many drivers including Fernando Alonso, Romain Grosjean, Felipe Massa, Jenson Button, Kimi Raikkonen, Sergio Perez, Nico Hulkenberg and Esteban Gutierrez all pitted for fresh tyres. After five laps behind the safety car, the race was resumed on Lap 30 allowing Sebastian Vettel to once again open up a considerable lead at the front ahead of Nico Rosberg.
After a competitive performance during qualifying and a relatively decent start to the race, Romain Grosjean’s evening was destroyed on Lap 33 when the Frenchman was informed of an air consumption issue on his Lotus. This saw him return to the pits for a painstaking 40 seconds for a refill from a Renault mechanic. Although he managed to return to the action plum last, Romain Grosjean was eventually forced into a disappointing retirement several laps later,
As the race progressed, Sebastian Vettel began opening up a considerable lead once again. Further down the order Esteban Gutierrez was lucky to avoid a heavy impact with the barrier at Turns 22 and 23, after the Mexican driver ran extensively wide on the amounting marbles off of the racing line. Meanwhile Nico Rosberg was informed that he was loosing pace due to rubber lodged in his front-wing, accounting for Mark Webber who was beginning to close the gap to the German.
Several laps later more pit-stops began occurring up and down the field, as Mark Webber and Adrian Sutil pitted on Lap 40. Nico Rosberg did so a lap later, and was understandably frustrated to find Mark Webber ahead of him when he rejoined the action. Sebastian Vettel eventually pitted from the lead on Lap 44, switching back to the super-soft tyre compound and once again rejoining the action in the lead of the race.
Due largely the earlier safety car deployment, many drivers elected not to pit for a third time. This created an utterly thrilling conclusion to the Singapore Grand Prix, as the likes of Mark Webber, Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton were forced to battle their way around the likes of Esteban Gutierrez, Nico Hulkenberg, Jenson Button and Sergio Perez. Due to stopping during the safety car period, both Fernando Alonso and Kimi Raikkonen soon found themselves in 2nd and 3rd position respectively.
As the race entered its closing stages the trio of Mark Webber, Nico Rosberg and Lewis Hamilton gradually began carving their way through the likes of Esteban Gutierrez and Nico Hulkenberg. In the process, Felipe Massa began joining them in what was a frenetic final few laps around the Marina Bay Street Circuit. Whilst many jostled for the final points-paying position, Paul di Resta ran straight on at Turn 7 and into a highly embarrassing retirement. Luckily the stricken Force India machine was cleared under double-waved yellow flags, as the Mercedes duo became locked in a ferociously tight battle for 7th.
Whilst one Red Bull cruised around to secure his 33rd victory, the other in the form of Mark Webber endured a frustrating conclusion as he was first instructed to short-shift all of his gears before then being instructed to maintain low revs due to a mechanical issue. The saw the Australian driver plummet through the order, eventually retiring with flames flicking out of the rear of his car at Turn 7 on the final lap. Meanwhile Sebastian Vettel stormed to a commanding victory over Fernando Alonso in the Ferrari, with Kimi Raikkonen securing an impressive 3rd despite serious back issues.
As the Formula 1 paddock prepares to pack up and head to Korea in several weeks time, Sebastian Vettel now sits a proud 60 points ahead of Fernando Alonso in the Drivers’ Championship on 247 points. With the German notorious for stepping up a gear during the latter half of the season, it would be a very uneducated gamble to bet against Sebastian Vettel on securing his fourth successive Drivers’ Crown.
PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTS The Singapore Grand Prix Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore; 61 laps; 309.316km; Weather: Dry. Classified: Pos Driver Team Time 1. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 2. Alonso Ferrari 3. Raikkonen Lotus-Renault 4. Rosberg Mercedes 5. Hamilton Mercedes 6. Massa Ferrari 7. Button McLaren-Mercedes 8. Perez McLaren-Mercedes 9. Hulkenberg Sauber-Ferrari 10. Sutil Force India-Mercedes 11. Maldonado Williams-Renault 12. Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 13. Bottas Williams-Renault 14. Vergne Toro Rosso-Ferrari 15. Webber Red Bull-Renault 16. van der Garde Caterham-Renault 17. Chilton Marussia-Cosworth 18. Bianchi Marussia-Cosworth 19. Pic Caterham-Renault DNF Di Resta Force India-Mercedes DNF Grosjean Lotus-Renault DNF Ricciardo Toro Rosso-Ferrari
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Sam Bird cruises to dominant sprint race victory at Singapore
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Sam Bird has cruised to his fifth victory of the season after a dominant display during the GP2 sprint race around the Marina Bay Street Circuit, keeping his Championship chances alive with only one race weekend remaining. The Briton finished ahead of Marcus Ericsson and fellow Championship rival Fabio Leimer.
Once again the GP2 fraternity negotiated the opening few corners relatively incident-free, as Sam Bird scampered into the lead ahead of Marcus Ericsson. Fabio Leimer rose from 4th to 3rd into Turn 1, as Tom Dillmann struggled off of the line with his super-soft Pirelli tyres. As the field jostled for position Stefano Coletti ran straight into the side of Mitch Evans at Turn 8, resulting in a momentary car-park as the likes of Simon Trummer, Alexander Rossi and Julian Leal all became involved in the incident. Luckily a safety car delay was not required, as all of the drivers managed to continue circulating.
After the opening lap Alexander Rossi was forced to return to the pits for a new front-wing after the earlier collision, as Stefano Coletti was struck with a drive-thru penalty for causing the initial incident. Further shenanigans ensued throughout the next lap, as Sergio Canamasas literally ran out of road on the exit of Turn 8 and tapped the retaining wall. This saw the Spaniard’s suspension crumble upon impact, as he became the first retirement of the race. Amazingly a safety car delay was still not required, as the efficient marshals managed to clear the stricken Caterham machine under double-waved yellow flags.
Unfortunately for Daniel Abt he failed to adhere to the many yellow flags being waved during the recovery of Canamasas’ Caterham, resulting in the German driver being struck with a drive-thru penalty. As his ART Grand Prix mechanics awaited his imminent arrival in the pit-lane, both Tom Dillmann and Felipe Nasr began to plummet through the order after starting the race on the super-soft tyre compound. Meanwhile Stefano Coletti’s sprint race failed to improve after his opening lap incident, as the Monegasque driver’s front-wing was seen flailing around after his collision with Mitch Evans. The marshals immediately displayed the black and orange flag to the Rapax driver, forcing him to return to the pits for a new one.
As the race progressed Sam Bird maintained his lead at the front ahead of Marcus Ericsson, whereas further down the order Felipe Nasr elected to pit for a fresh set of super-soft tyres after continuing to plummet through the pack. Whilst the Brazilian ace rejoined the action with gearbox woes beginning to materialise on his Carlin machine, Daniel Abt finally pitted to serve his drive-thru penalty. However, the German had exceeded the three lap requirement to serve his penalty and was therefore disqualified from proceedings.
On Lap 10 Tom Dillmann also elected to pit for a fresh set of super-soft tyres, before Jolyon Palmer did likewise as a frenetic battle between 9th and 17th ensued between the likes of Dani Clos, Simon Trummer, Julian Leal and Mitch Evans. Amazingly the majority of the racing was clean, as tyre wear began to effect many drivers up and down the order. As the race entered its closing stages, Marcus Ericsson began to gradually reel in race leader Sam Bird, however the Briton soon responded with several blistering lap times to further extend his lead at the front. Meanwhile the battle within the incredibly competitive midfield raged on, with the final points-paying positions changing each lap.
Despite the ever-changing positions within the midfield, the top three remained the same as Sam Bird stormed across the line to secure his fifth victory of the season ahead of Marcus Ericsson and Fabio Leimer. After the race a bizarre scenario ensued, as Alexander Rossi suddenly changed direction to enter a side-road on the cool-down lap, only to get T-boned by the Racing Engineering of Fabio Leimer. Sam Bird now sits only seven points behind Championship leader Fabio Leimer, with one race weekend remaining in early November around the Yas Marina Circuit in Abu Dhabi. The season has been one of pure unpredictability, and the trend will surely create a mouth-watering finale in several months time when the new GP2 Champion is eventually crowned.
Results - 20 laps: Pos Driver Team Time/Gap 1. Sam Bird Russian Time 40m36.444s 2. Marcus Ericsson DAMS +5.787s 3. Fabio Leimer Racing Engineering +7.745s 4. Stephane Richelmi DAMS +9.311s 5. Jon Lancaster Hilmer +17.885s 6. Johnny Cecotto Jr Arden +34.140s 7. Daniel de Jong MP +56.282s 8. Adrian Quaife-Hobbs Hilmer +57.159s 9. Rene Binder Lazarus +1m07.397s 10. Nathanael Berthon Trident +1m07.997s 11. Rio Haryanto Addax +1m08.302s 12. Julian Leal Racing Engineering +1m09.052s 13. Simon Trummer Rapax +1m09.248s 14. Tom Dillmann Russian Time +1m11.366s 15. Mitch Evans Arden +1m15.458s 16. Felipe Nasr Carlin +1m15.990s 17. Jolyon Palmer Carlin +1m16.415s 18. Jake Rosenzweig Addax +1m22.004s 19. James Calado ART +1m28.898s 20. Vittorio Ghirelli Lazarus +1m37.714s 21. Dani Clos MP +1m49.482s 22. Gianmarco Raimondo Trident +2m02.960s 23. Alexander Rossi Caterham +1 lap 24. Stefano Coletti Rapax +1 lap Retirements: Daniel Abt ART 9 laps Sergio Canamasas Caterham 2 laps
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Sebastian Vettel reigns supreme after final practice at Singapore
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Sebastian Vettel has ended the third and final practice session of the Singapore Grand Prix fastest overall, continuing his dominance at the front of the grid. The German sensation was closely followed by the Frenchman of Romain Grosjean, with the Mercedes of Nico Rosberg 3rd fastest for the German marque.
After an intriguing opening day to the Singapore Grand Prix weekend, the teams and drivers returned to the Marina Bay Street Circuit late in the afternoon for the third and final practice session to begin finalising their preparations for the weekend ahead. With the sun beginning to set over the glorious street circuit, Esteban Gutierrez, Kimi Raikkonen and Daniel Ricciardo eventually became the first three drivers to take to the track once the session got underway.
The trio were quickly followed by the entire field, who once again completed installation laps to begin with. Charles Pic soon became the first driver to produce a timed lap during the early stages of the session, with the Frenchman setting a 01:52.954 as the initial benchmark. The other Caterham of Giedo van der Garde quickly thwarted his team-mate with a 01:52.134, before the Force India of Adrian Sutil stormed to the top with an even quicker 01:51.402. Charles Pic managed to match the German’s pace with an identical lap time, before Giedo van der Garde continued to lower the benchmark with a 01:50.792.
After their initial installation laps more drivers began returning to the Marina Bay Street Circuit, as the Force India duo of Adrian Sutil and then Paul di Resta ended Caterham’s reign with the latter producing a 01:49.572. The Scotsman managed to secure his best result of his career around the illuminated streets last season, with 4th behind Sebastian Vettel, Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso. The times continued to tumble as the session continued, as both Valtteri Bottas, Pastor Maldonado and Daniel Ricciardo all rose to the top with the latter producing a 01:48.001 despite suffering from brake issues earlier in the session.
Whilst preparations for the all-important qualifying hour ensued up and down the paddock, Paul di Resta was lucky to avoid contact with the barrier after a minor spin. Mexican rookie Esteban Gutierrez was also seen struggling as the session progressed, with the Sauber driver extensively locking-up his brakes during the final sector. Meanwhile Nico Rosberg and then Romain Grosjean managed to rise to the top, with the Frenchman producing a 01:46.883 for Lotus. Although the 27-year-old managed to improve, Lewis Hamilton soon asserted his authority over proceedings with a competitive 01:46.514.
Mark Webber soon brought Lewis Hamilton’s reign to an end, with the Australian ace rising to the top after producing a 01:46.220 behind the wheel of his Renault-powered Red Bull. After Mark Webber’s rise to the top the track gradually began to fall silent, as many of the drivers returned to the pits before opting for Pirelli’s super-soft tyre compound. Eventually it was Romain Grosjean who became the first driver to elect for the softer rubber, and was almost instantly joined by the remainder of the field as the qualifying simulations got into full swing.
As the entire field returned to the track sporting Pirelli’s super-soft tyre compound, Romain Grosjean unsurprisingly became the first driver to improve with the Frenchman producing a 01:44.364. However, the 27-year-old’s pace was soon obliterated by reigning World Champion Sebastian Vettel, who set a 01:44.173 to reassert his authority over proceedings at the top for Red Bull. The German ace remained fastest as the session drew to a conclusion, only just ahead of Romain Grosjean who will be striving to repeat his impressive pace in qualifying later in the evening.
Sebastian Vettel has won the last two Singapore Grands Prix, and will unquestionably be aiming to secure his 41st pole position when the paddock reconvenes for the all-important qualifying hour later in the evening around the illuminated Marina Bay Street Circuit.
Pos Driver Team Time Gap Laps 1. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1m44.173s 15 2. Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 1m44.364s + 0.191s 16 3. Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1m44.741s + 0.568s 18 4. Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1m44.906s + 0.733s 14 5. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m44.921s + 0.748s 14 6. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1m44.257s + 0.084s 13 7. Sergio Perez McLaren-Mercedes 1m45.500s + 1.327s 12 8. Nico Hulkenberg Sauber-Ferrari 1m45.876s + 1.703s 19 9. Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1m45.890s + 1.717s 13 10. Felipe Massa Ferrari 1m45.935s + 1.762s 13 11. Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m46.084s + 1.911s 15 12. Kimi Raikkonen Lotus-Renault 1m46.147s + 1.974s 13 13. Pastor Maldonado Williams-Renault 1m46.338s + 2.165s 17 14. Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m46.358s + 2.185s 16 15. Valtteri Bottas Williams-Renault 1m46.660s + 2.487s 17 16. Paul di Resta Force India-Mercedes 1m46.879s + 2.706s 16 17. Esteban Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 1m46.893s + 2.720s 13 18. Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1m47.249s + 3.076s 19 19. Giedo van der Garde Caterham-Renault 1m48.931s + 4.758s 17 20. Charles Pic Caterham-Renault 1m49.037s + 4.864s 18 21. Jules Bianchi Marussia-Cosworth 1m49.182s + 5.009s 21 22. Max Chilton Marussia-Cosworth 1m49.982s + 5.809s 20
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Palmer heads a Carlin 1-2 after thrilling GP2 feature race at Singapore
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Jolyon Palmer has continued his dominance around the streets of Singapore, after storming to a sensational victory during the GP2 feature race ahead of team-mate Felipe Nasr, despite enduring a torrid start off of the line. The Carlin duo were followed by the ART Grand Prix of James Calado, who just managed to remain ahead of Stephane Richelmi.
At the start poleman Jolyon Palmer endured a slow getaway off of the line, as team-mate Felipe Nasr and Championship leader Fabio Leimer stormed around the Briton on the run down to Turns 1 and 2. Despite the tight and twisty confines of the Marina Bay Street Circuit the 26-car field negotiated the opening lap without major incident, as various drivers jostled for position. After his poor start Palmer found himself down in 4th, however the Carlin driver soon managed to begin his resurgence with a passing maneuver around James Calado for 3rd.
Whilst Fabio Leimer set his sights on race leader Felipe Nasr, fellow Championship rival Sam Bird found himself way down in 13th position after starting only 10th. After the opening lap of the race, Felipe Nasr managed to open up a strong lead ahead of Fabio Leimer and team-mate Jolyon Palmer which consisted of a continuous string of fastest laps at the front. Despite the Brazilian ace’s strong pace at the front, Jolyon Palmer was soon up to 2nd position after overtaking Fabio Leimer, with his sights firmly set on catching his Carlin team-mate.
As the 22-year-old Briton began producing fastest laps of the race, fellow countryman and Championship contender Sam Bird gradually started his rise through the order after an overtaking maneuver on the Caterham of Sergio Canamasas and then Stefano Coletti soon afterwards at Turn 7. As soon as the pit-stop window opened on Lap 6, many drivers immediately stormed into the pits to switch from the super-soft to the soft tyre compound, including Stefano Coletti, Sergio Canamasas, Julian Leal, Adrian Quaife-Hobbs, Rio Haryanto and Nathaniel Berthon.
A lap later further drivers elected to pit, including Fabio Leimer and Stephane Richelmi. Marcus Ericsson, Dani Clos and Sam Bird pitted on Lap 8, with the latter struggling with a slow rear-right tyre change which only added to his miserable feature race. Julian Leal and Nathaniel Berthon became the first retirements of the race on Lap 8, as the duo collided on the run down to Turn 13. Berthon failed to offer the Columbian sufficient room on the inside of the hairpin, which resulted in their race-ending collision.
Whilst the Singapore marshals immediately began clearing away the stricken Racing Engineering and Trident Racing machines, race leader Felipe Nasr pitted for Carlin along with James Calado and Alexander Rossi. This allowed Jolyon Palmer to assume the lead of the race, as Nasr endured a frustratingly slow stop due to a delay on the rear-left tyre. As Jolyon Palmer opened up a considerable lead at the front, Vittorio Ghirelli became the next retirement after returning to the pits. On Lap 11 Jolyon Palmer finally pitted from the lead of the race, changing only his rear tyres in a slick pit-stop from the Carlin mechanics as Tom Dillmann took the lead of the race for Russian Time. The Frenchman had yet to pit for fresh tyres, and was therefore an easy target for Felipe Nasr who quickly retook the lead at Turn 7.
As Felipe Nasr strove to open up yet another gap at the front, Tom Dillmann eventually made his mandatory pit-stop on Lap 15 and therefore released the now hard-charging Jolyon Palmer into 2nd position. Further down the order Johnny Cecotto was once again at the centre of attention, with the Venezuelan driver proving a to be a tricky target to overtake. Eventually James Calado managed to do so, however his German team-mate Daniel Abt struggled and lost part of his front-wing during the nail-biting process. Eventually both Daniel Abt and Fabio Leimer managed to muscle their way around Johnny Cecotto, although the Championship leader in particular had already lost valuable time to James Calado in 3rd.
After enduring a tough start to the race, Jolyon Palmer’s true pace became apparent as the Briton began reeling in team-mate and race leader Felipe Nasr at a phenomenal rate, over a second faster than the Brazilian. Under the pressure of his charging team-mate, Felipe Nasr began making several errors under braking around the circuit, only allowing Jolyon Palmer the luxury of closing the gap even more. Whilst the Carlin duo became locked in a grueling battle for the lead of the race, Alexander Rossi’s feature race drew to a miserable conclusion as the American star ran straight on at Turn 18. Although the Caterham driver was able to continue circulating he soon returned to the pits, and eventually into retirement.
On Lap 24 Jolyon Palmer finally mastered an overtaking maneuver on Felipe Nasr for the lead of the feature race at Turn 7, as the 21-year-old Brazilian suffered a massive lock-up in his desperate attempt at keeping his team-mate at bay. As the last laps ticked away, Felipe Nasr’s front-right tyre continued to prove troublesome, as Jolyon Palmer simply scampered into the distance. Further down the order Sam Bird managed to produce an important overtaking maneuver on Dani Clos for 8th and the reverse grid pole for Sunday’s sprint race, as James Calado, Fabio Leimer and Stephane Richelmi all battled for the final podium position.
Eventually it was ART Grand Prix’s James Calado who joined the Carlin duo on the podium as the checkered flag was unfurled, with Jolyon Palmer victorious 13 seconds ahead of Felipe Nasr. Despite only finishing 4th, Fabio Leimer has managed to extend his lead in the Drivers’ Championship, with only three races remaining in what has become a highly unpredictable GP2 season.
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Nico Rosberg Romps To A Dominant Monaco GP Victory
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Nico Rosberg has romped to a dominant victory around the streets of Monte-Carlo, after a thrilling and incident-filled 78-lap race which featured everything from safety car periods to a red flag delay. The Mercedes ace was followed home by fellow countryman Sebastian Vettel, with Mark Webber just holding off Lewis Hamilton for 3rd.
After the damp and dreary weather conditions which plagued qualifying, the Monte-Carlo street circuit was once again bathed in glorious sunshine for the legendary race. As the field began the traditional formation lap, the Marussia of Jules Bianchi stalled on the grid and was subsequently forced to start the race from the pit-lane. At the start Nico Rosberg stormed into a commanding lead, as Lewis Hamilton defended heavily from the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel.
As the field negotiated the opening lap of the race, Giedo van der Garde collided with the Williams of Pastor Maldonado at Turn 6 and lost his front-wing. The duo were forced to return to the pits after the opening lap for repairs, loosing them valuable track time. Throughout the opening laps, Nico Rosberg continued to open up a considerable gap to his team-mate, as Charles Pic became the first retirement of the race after his gearbox suffered a seizure and caused a fire on his Caterham.
Luckily the ever-efficient Monegasque marshals were able to clear the stricken Caterham and quickly extinguish the flames without the need of a safety car intervention. The order remained relatively unchanged for the first part of the race, until Mark Webber became the first front-runner to pit on Lap 25. With a one-stop strategy the plan for the majority of the front-runners, the likes of Kimi Raikkonen, Felipe Massa, Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso all pitted within the next two laps.
The race was thrown into utter confusion on Lap 29, when Felipe Massa once again slammed into the retaining barriers at Turn 1 in similar fashion to his incident during practice three. The Brazilian driver violently embedded his Ferrari into the barriers at Turn 1, causing the first of many safety car periods. As soon as the safety car was deployed, Sebastian Vettel and the two Mercedes’ immediately pitted. With Lewis Hamilton being forced to complete a slow in-lap due to the German marque stacking their drivers in the pits, the Briton lost track position to the Red Bull duo whereas Nico Rosberg managed to retain the lead.
After several laps behind the safety car, the race was resumed with Nico Rosberg once again opening up a comfortable lead at the front. Lewis Hamilton was visibly frustrated behind the Red Bull of Mark Webber, and tried an overtaking maneuver at Turn 18. However, the former Monaco Grand Prix winner managed to defend his position heavily through Turn 19. During the early stages of the race the McLaren duo fought perilously close, and continued to do so as the race progressed.
Jenson Button tried an overtaking maneuver on Fernando Alonso at Turn 6, but failed to complete the move and lightly tapped the rear of the Spaniard’s Ferrari. This enabled Sergio Perez to close right up on his team-mate, and master an overtaking maneuver into Turn 10. The race was momentarily red flagged on Lap 45, when Pastor Maldonado and Max Chilton came together at the high-speed at Turn 12.
After running wide following a battle with the Sauber of Esteban Gutierrez, Max Chilton slowed on the run down to Turn 12 allowing Pastor Maldonado to catch the Briton. Just before the corner, the duo touched which launched Maldonado momentarily into the air and then into the retaining barrier. Upon impact, the barrier absorbed Maldonado’s Williams and then flung it back out onto the track. The barrier itself became dislodged from its placing and was also spat out onto the track. This caused a red flag delay, forcing the field to line up at the grid.
Eventually after a delay of several minutes, the race was resumed behind the safety car. After only one lap of safety car control, the race returned to green flag conditions with Nico Rosberg scampering away at the front as Lewis Hamilton continued to try and find a way around Mark Webber’s Red Bull. Max Chilton was subsequently issued with a drive-thru penalty for causing the incident with Pastor Maldonado, which the Briton served immediately.
As the majority of the field continued to follow each other, Adrian Sutil threw caution to the wind and stormed up the inside of firstly Jenson Button and then Fernando Alonso several laps later at Turn 6. Jules Bianchi became the next retirement of Lap 60, as the Frenchman lost control of his Marussia and spun into the retaining tyre barrier at Turn 1. The third and final safety car delay of the day was caused when Romain Grosjean’s incident-filled weekend continued when he slammed into the rear of Daniel Ricciardo at Turn 10, ruining both of their races.
The safety car period was short-lived, as Nico Rosberg managed to continue his lead at the front over reigning World Champion Sebastian Vettel. Further down the order saw Sergio Perez continue his feisty drive through the field, resulting in an altercation with the Finn of Kimi Raikkonen. This resulted in a puncture for the Lotus driver and saw Sergio Perez forced into retirement at Turn 19. Kimi Raikkonen therefore pitted for replace his delaminated tyre, dropping him right to the back of the field.
However, as Nico Rosberg stormed across the line to secure a memorable and historic victory, Kimi Raikkonen simply scythed through the field during the closing laps to finish 10th and secure himself another sensational points finish. Nico Rosberg, however, created history as the first son of a former Monaco Grand Prix winner to win the race himself, after his father Keke Rosberg’s victory in 1983.
Despite such a dominant race weekend for the Mercedes duo, Sebastian Vettel still managed to increase his lead at the top of the Drivers’ Championship with another strong result in 2nd position. The reigning World Champion will be striving to utilize Pirelli’s revised tyres next time out at the Canadian Grand Prix around Montreal’s Circuit du Gilles Villeneuve. However, the Mercedes’ duo will once again be out to upset the Red Bull party at the front.
PROVISIONAL RACE RESULTS The Monaco Grand Prix Monte Carlo, Monaco; 78 laps; 260.520km; Weather: . Classified: Pos Driver Team 1. Rosberg Mercedes 2. Vettel Red Bull-Renault 3. Webber Red Bull-Renault 4. Hamilton Mercedes 5. Sutil Force India-Mercedes 6. Button McLaren-Mercedes 7. Alonso Ferrari 8. Vergne Toro Rosso-Ferrari 9. Di Resta Force India-Mercedes 10. Raikkonen Lotus-Renault 11. Hulkenberg Sauber-Ferrari 12. Bottas Williams-Renault 13. Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 14. Chilton Marussia-Cosworth 15. van der Garde Caterham-Renault DNF. Perez McLaren-Mercedes DNF. Grosjean Lotus-Renault DNF. Ricciardo Toro Rosso-Ferrari DNF. Bianchi Marussia-Cosworth DNF. Maldonado Williams-Renault DNF. Massa Ferrari DNF. Pic Caterham-Renault
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Stefano Coletti Storms To Historic Home Victory At Monaco
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Stefano Coletti has stormed to a historic home victory after the GP2 sprint race around the streets of Monte-Carlo, becoming the first Monegasque driver to take victory around the Principality since Louis Chiron back in 1931. The 24-year-old was followed home by Adrian Quaife-Hobbs and Mitch Evans.
After causing the multi-car pile-up at the start of yesterday’s feature race, Arden International’s Johnny Cecotto jr. was excluded from the remainder of the weekend. This meant only 25 drivers took to the grid for the sprint race, with British driver Adrian Quaife-Hobbs on the reverse grid pole alongside Austrian driver Rene Binder. At the start the Briton stormed into the lead ahead of local hero Stefano Coletti, as Rene Binder suffered a frustratingly slow getaway off of the line.
Reigning GP3 Champion Mitch Evans enjoyed a tremendous start from 6th on the grid, working his way up to 3rd by Turn 5 after mastering an overtaking maneuver up the inside of James Calado. Despite starting from pole and initially taking the lead, Adrian Quaife-Hobbs was eventually overtaken by Stefano Coletti for the lead of the race on Lap 2, as the local hero stormed up the inside of the Briton at Turn 10.
As Stefano Coletti began to open up a considerable lead at the front, Daniel Abt and Simon Trummer were struck with drive-thru penalties for jumping the start. As the duo served their penalties, Tom Dillmann entered the pits with a suspected issue on his Russian Time machine. After several further pit-stops, the Frenchman found himself several laps off of the leaders way down in 25th position.
Despite Stefano Coletti’s commanding lead at the front of the order, many battles raged on throughout the order. After a superlative result in the feature race, Kevin Ceccon continued to impress after perfecting an overtaking maneuver on Sam Bird at Turn 10. To avoid a collision the Briton was forced to take avoiding action by cutting the chicane, eventually ceding 7th to the Italian driver. After taking a convincing victory in the feature race, Sam Bird failed to mount a resurgence in the latter stages of the race, as he began to plummet through the order.
As the race entered its closing stages, the battle within the midfield began to intensify as Jon Lancaster and Rio Haryanto collided at Turn 8. This caused a concertina-effect on the field, as Lancaster half spun his Hilmer Motorsport machine but managed to continue. Eventually Stefano Coletti stormed across the line to record a historic victory for Rapax, leading home Adrian Quaife-Hobbs in 2nd and Mitch Evans in 3rd. The Monegasque’s victory has enabled him to strengthen his lead in the Drivers’ Championship, as the Series enters a lengthy gap before reconvening around Silverstone for the British Grand Prix next month.
Results - 30 laps: Pos Driver Team Time/Gap 1. Stefano Coletti Rapax 42m50.707s 2. Adrian Quaife-Hobbs MP + 1.869s 3. Mitch Evans Arden + 2.216s 4. Felipe Nasr Carlin + 2.536s 5. James Calado ART + 3.747s 6. Rene Binder Lazarus + 19.293s 7. Kevin Ceccon Trident + 20.015s 8. Stephane Richelmi DAMS + 20.576s 9. Daniel de Jong MP + 21.197s 10. Jake Rosenzweig Addax + 31.720s 11. Sergio Canamasas Caterham + 34.105s 12. Jolyon Palmer Carlin + 35.775s 13. Fabio Leimer Racing Engineering + 36.488s 14. Julian Leal Racing Engineering + 36.913s 15. Robin Frijns Hilmer + 42.125s 16. Rio Haryanto Addax + 43.235s 17. Jon Lancaster Hilmer + 1m03.893s 18. Marcus Ericsson DAMS + 1m04.258s 19. Alexander Rossi Caterham + 1m04.735s 20. Kevin Giovesi Lazarus + 1m05.044s 21. Nathanael Berthon Trident + 1m05.468s 22. Daniel Abt ART + 1m06.174s 23. Simon Trummer Rapax + 1m07.413s 24. Sam Bird Russian Time + 1 lap 25. Tom Dillmann Russian Time + 3 laps
Picture Copyright © Charles Coates/GP2 Series Media Service
Bird Is The Word In Monaco After Incident-Filled GP2 Feature Race
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Sam Bird has taken a memorable victory around the streets of Monte-Carlo after a frenetic incident-filled feature race, which included a lengthy delay after a monumental multi-car pile-up at Turn 1. The British sensation was followed home by Kevin Ceccon, with reigning GP3 Champion Mitch Evans 3rd after another wonderful drive.
The start of the feature was initially delayed by roughly 15 minutes, after a barrier was fixed following an incident during a previous qualifying session. Eventually the five red lights went out to unleash utter carnage at Turn 1, whereas Sergio Canamasas stalled on the grid. Heading into Turn 1, Mitch Evans stormed into the lead from 2nd on the grid, whereas his team-mate Johnny Cecotto jr. ran straight into the retaining tyre barrier with Fabio Leimer alongside.
This resulted in a monumental multi-car incident further behind, as the entire GP2 field simply had no space to avoid the ensuing melee. Marcus Ericsson was one of the many drivers involved in the incident, as Jolyon Palmer spun in his urge to avoid a collision, blocking the track and creating a rather expensive car park. In total Johnny Cecotto jr., Fabio Leimer, Jolyon Palmer, Robin Frijns, Marcus Ericsson, Alex Rossi, Nathaniel Berthon, Kevin Giovesi and Julian Leal were all eliminated from proceedings, as the race was unsurprisingly red flagged.
Many others were also caught up in the incident, however the likes of Rene Binder, Jake Rosenzweig and Daniel Abt were luckily able to restart their engines and return to the back of the grid for the restart. Eventually it was decided that the race was to be restarted behind the safety car in the order the field were in at Sector One, with the drivers who were involved in the incident at the back of the grid in the order of their qualifying result.
As the race was restarted from behind the safety car, Mitch Evans took the lead ahead of Sam Bird in the Russian Time machine. After only one lap behind the safety car, the race returned to green flag conditions with the Kiwi out in front. However, it quickly became apparent that Sam Bird was much quicker than Mitch Evans, however the frustratingly narrow characteristics of the Monte-Carlo street circuit prevented the Briton from perfecting an maneuver for the lead.
By Lap 7 the order began completing their first compulsory pit-stops, with local hero and Championship leader Stefano Coletti and Frenchman Tom Dillmann becoming the first to do so. Sergio Canamasas was one of the many drivers who pitted early, however the reason for his stop was due largely to his minor incident with Jake Rosenzweig at Turn 10 which damaged his front-wing. On Lap 11 Kevin Ceccon elected to carry out his pit-stop, with the Trident Racing mechanics perfecting a stellar stop to allow the Italian to eventually leapfrog Mitch Evans who stopped a lap later.
The Kiwi’s stop allowed Sam Bird to assume the lead of the race, a lead he would retain until the checkered flag. During the many pit-stops, Dutchman Daniel de Jong managed to rise to 2nd for MP Motorsport. However, his 2nd position was ceded to Rene Binder on Lap 15 when he also carried out his pit-stop. The Dutchman suffered a slow stop, and dipped a tyre over the yellow line at the pit exit which saw him struck with a drive-thru penalty.
Whilst Daniel de Jong suffered a frustrating pit-stop, race leader Sam Bird’s Russian Time mechanics managed to perfect a mesmerizing pit-stop to enable the Briton to retain his lead over Rene Binder, Kevin Ceccon and Mitch Evans. The race at the front managed to continue relatively incident-free, despite the earlier carnage. However, further down the order saw Daniel Abt sneak up the inside of Rio Haryanto at Turn 19 and barge the Indonesian ace into the retaining wall. This saw Abt also struck with a drive-thru penalty, as Haryanto was forced into retirement.
Eventually Rene Binder carried out his compulsory pit-stop on Lap 29, enabling Kevin Ceccon and Mitch Evans to rise through the order to 2nd and 3rd respectively. Despite a close battle for 2nd between Ceccon and Evans, the top three remained unchanged as Sam Bird glided across the line to secure his second victory of the season. British driver Adrian Quaife-Hobbs managed to secure the reverse grid pole for tomorrow’s sprint race, despite initially qualifying last on the grid. The MP Motorsport driver will start alongside Rene Binder on the reverse grid.
Results - 42 laps: Pos Driver Team 1. Sam Bird Russian Time 2. Kevin Ceccon Trident + 22.0s 3. Mitch Evans Arden + 23.2s 4. Felipe Nasr Carlin + 23.4s 5. James Calado ART + 29.5s 6. Stefano Coletti Rapax + 1m00.5s 7. Rene Binder Lazarus + 1m02.4s 8. Adrian Quaife-Hobbs MP + 1m08.4s 9. Stephane Richelmi DAMS + 1m12.1s 10. Daniel de Jong MP + 1m22.4s 11. Tom Dillmann Russian Time + 1m29.3s 12. Jon Lancaster Hilmer + 1 lap 13. Simon Trummer Rapax + 1 lap 14. Jake Rosenzweig Addax + 1 lap 15. Sergio Canamasas Caterham + 1 lap Retirements: Daniel Abt ART 40 laps Rio Haryanto Addax 26 laps Johnny Cecotto Jr Arden 0 laps* Fabio Leimer Racing Engineering 0 laps* Jolyon Palmer Carlin 0 laps* Julian Leal Racing Engineering 0 laps* Robin Frijns Hilmer 0 laps* Marcus Ericsson DAMS 0 laps* Alexander Rossi Caterham 0 laps* Nathanael Berthon Trident 0 laps* Kevin Giovesi Lazarus 0 laps* * Did not take restart
Picture Copyright © Alastair Staley/GP2 Series Media Service
Nico Rosberg Continues To Assert His Authority At Monaco
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Nico Rosberg has continued to assert his authority over proceedings around the legendary Monte-Carlo street circuit, with the German leading a Mercedes 1-2 ahead of team-mate Lewis Hamilton. The duo were followed by the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso, after yet another intriguing practice session ahead of the race on Sunday.
Once again the Formula 1 teams and drivers were welcomed back to the Monte-Carlo street circuit by glorious sunshine blue skies over the legendary circuit. Unlike the slow start to proceedings during the opening practice session, the teams and drivers immediately elected to complete timed laps with the Sauber duo once again becoming the first to take to the circuit.
Esteban Gutierrez therefore once again became the first driver to set a timed lap for Sauber, with a 01:24.850. However, the Mexican’s early benchmark was unsurprisingly instantly bettered by Max Chilton, who produced a 01:22.121. Monaco expert Pastor Maldonado soon rose to the top for Williams with a 01:18.863, before team-mate Valtteri Bottas did likewise with a 01:18.360. The times naturally continued to tumble throughout the opening stages of the session, with Sergio Perez, Kimi Raikkonen and then Romain Grosjean rising to the top with the latter setting a 01:16.999 and continuing his competitiveness from the opening session.
Nico Rosberg momentarily rose to the top for Mercedes, before Romain Grosjean instantly returned to the top with a 01:16.096. However, the Frenchman’s reign was brought to a end when Nico Rosberg continued to improve for Mercedes with a 01:15.843. Fernando Alonso became the next driver to assert his authority over proceedings with a 01:15.519, as Sebastian Vettel finally took to the track after his mechanics carried out several major setup changes to his Red Bull machine.
Eventually Daniel Ricciardo, Jean-Eric Vergne and Kimi Raikkonen became the first drivers to opt for Pirelli’s super-soft tyre compound, as Nico Rosberg continued to improve at the top with a 01:14.759. After setting scintillating lap times throughout the opening session, Romain Grosjean came unstuck at Turn 1 as he slammed into the retaining tyre barrier and destroyed the front-left of his Lotus. This caused the Monaco marshals to expertly retrieve his stricken machine, with the session remaining green despite a local yellow.
The session was then momentarily red flagged, after a piece of kerb became damaged at Turn 13 forcing the marshals to carry out a quick fix. The delay was short-lived, as the kerb was almost instantly fixed allowing the session to resume with Nico Rosberg and Adrian Sutil becoming the first two drivers to return to the circuit.
As proceedings were resumed, the majority of the field elected to begin carrying out long-fuel race simulations in preparation for the race on Sunday. This resulted in very little action in relation to the timing screens, as Nico Rosberg remained at the top as the session progressed with team-mate Lewis Hamilton a close 2nd ahead of the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso. Whilst the drivers completed their race simulations, many missed the apex at Turn 10 including the likes of Adrian Sutil, Giedo van der Garde, Mark Webber, Valtteri Bottas and Max Chilton.
After a productive opening day of the Monaco Grand Prix weekend, Nico Rosberg and Mercedes managed to finish both sessions fastest. Lewis Hamilton followed his team-mate in 2nd position at the end of practice two, with the Ferrari of Fernando Alonso 3rd for the Scuderia. The teams and drivers will not return to the Monte-Carlo street circuit until Saturday morning for the third and final practice session.
Pos Driver Team Time Gap Laps 1. Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1m14.759s 45 2. Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m15.077s + 0.318s 50 3. Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1m15.196s + 0.437s 37 4. Felipe Massa Ferrari 1m15.278s + 0.519s 38 5. Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1m15.404s + 0.645s 41 6. Kimi Raikkonen Lotus-Renault 1m15.511s + 0.752s 38 7. Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 1m15.718s + 0.959s 10 8. Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1m15.959s + 1.200s 39 9. Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1m16.014s + 1.255s 32 10. Paul di Resta Force India-Mercedes 1m16.046s + 1.287s 42 11. Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1m16.349s + 1.590s 43 12. Sergio Perez McLaren-Mercedes 1m16.434s + 1.675s 40 13. Nico Hulkenberg Sauber-Ferrari 1m16.823s + 2.064s 42 14. Pastor Maldonado Williams-Renault 1m16.857s + 2.098s 40 15. Esteban Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 1m16.935s + 2.176s 44 16. Daniel Ricciardo Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m17.145s + 2.386s 37 17. Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1m17.184s + 2.425s 42 18. Valtteri Bottas Williams-Renault 1m17.264s + 2.505s 46 19. Jules Bianchi Marussia-Cosworth 1m17.892s + 3.133s 40 20. Charles Pic Caterham-Renault 1m18.212s + 3.453s 43 21. Max Chilton Marussia-Cosworth 1m18.784s + 4.025s 40 22. Giedo van der Garde Caterham-Renault 1m19.031s + 4.272s 30
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