What a Fantastic Race at Spa for 2012!
Jenson
Button has won at Spa for the first time, confirming that McLaren is
the first team to celebrate four victories in 2012. Sebastian Vettel
collected a crucial second place, with Kimi Räikkönen on the podium
for the third consecutive event. Both championship leader Fernando
Alonso and Lewis Hamilton were taken out in a frightening incident at
the first corner, triggered by Romain Grosjean.
The
legendary track set deep in the Ardennes forest has delivery a truly
memorable weekend to re-launch the F1 campaign after the summer
break. Following the washout of Friday, which significantly limited
dry running time, spectators were treated to a warm day and blue
skies this afternoon. There was pre-race drama for Michael
Schumacher; not only did Mercedes need to change his engine, but also
dealt in rapid fashion with a KERS issue.
Nobody
could have predicted the drama of the start. As Pastor Maldonado
made a jump-start before the lights went out, the Williams shot towards
the front. Romain Grosjean then moved over on Hamilton, forcing the
McLaren onto the grass and out of control; the resultant accident saw
both cars, and the Ferrari of Alonso, thrown high into the air. Both
Saubers, which had qualified in excellent second and fourth places,
plus Maldonado were also affected as debris was strewn all over the
circuit. Fortunately, nobody involved was injured despite the Lotus
of Grosjean missing Alonso’s head by mere millimeters.
At
the Lap 5 restart, Button proceeded to pull away from the pack and
was never headed during the race. Only he and Vettel made one stop at
the front, but the Englishman – who had yet to win since the
season-opener in Melbourne – was far enough ahead never to lose his
position.
Vettel’s own drive was impressive, fighting back through
the field after intelligently avoiding the errant car parts at La
Source on the opening lap. His recovery included a strong move on
team-mate Mark Webber and an entertaining battle with Schumacher,
whose 300th race required two pit-stops and ended in seventh place
after running as high as second.
The
carnage of the day allowed several underdogs to pick up the pieces.
Force India finished fourth and tenth with Nico Hülkenberg and Paul
di Resta, unbelievably out-scoring Sauber by 13 points on a day when
the Swiss team had threatened to take victory. Felipe Massa beat
Webber to a top five result as Toro Rosso celebrated a double points
finish, with Jean-Éric Vergne and Daniel Ricciardo – often running
in tandem – coming home eighth and ninth.
It
was also a dramatic day for F1’s three newestteams. Marussia saw
their two drivers in an entertaining battle for 15th position in the
closing stages, whereas the HRT of Narain Karthikeyan spun out at
Stavelot. Heikki Kovalainen spun twice during the race, but it is his
pit lane release into Karthikeyan which is more than likely to result
in a hefty fine. A similar moment for Webber and Red Bull is also
being investigated by the stewards, as are the first-corner crash,
the jump start for Maldonado – who retired in a crash at Les Combes
– and pit entry for Schumacher, who had unintentionally moved in
front of Vettel during a dramatic duel.
Jenson
Button’s 14th career victory confirms that McLaren is the first
team to win four races and two consecutive Grands Prix in 2012. With
Vettel jumping to second in the title race and eating into Alonso’s
lead by a mammoth 18 points, Räikkönen - who pulled a stunning Eau
Rouge overtake on Schumacher - is now fourth overall and ahead of
Hamilton. This marks the 75th victory for the
McLaren-Mercedes partnership, which celebrated its first with David
Coulthard in Australia 15 years ago.
Race Results
Pos. | Driver | Team | Time |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Jenson Button | McLaren | 1:29:08.530 |
2. | Sebastian Vettel | Red Bull | +13.624 |
3. | Kimi Räikkönen | Lotus | +25.334 |
4. | Nico Hülkenberg | Force India | +27.843 |
5. | Felipe Massa | Ferrari | +29.845 |
6. | Mark Webber | Red Bull | +31.244 |
7. | Michael Schumacher | Mercedes | +53.374 |
8. | Jean-Eric Vergne | Toro Rosso | +58.865 |
9. | Daniel Ricciardo | Toro Rosso | +1:02.982 |
10. | Paul di Resta | Force India | +1:03.783 |
11. | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | +1:05.111 |
12. | Bruno Senna | Williams | +1:11.529 |
13. | Kamui Kobayashi | Sauber | +1:56.119 |
14. | Vitaly Petrov | Caterham | +1 Lap |
15. | Timo Glock | Marussia | +1 Lap |
16. | Charles Pic | Marussia | +1 Lap |
17. | Heikki Kovalainen | Caterham | +1 Lap |
18. | Pedro de la Rosa | HRT | +1 Lap |
Did not finish | |||
19. | Narain Karthikeyan | HRT | +15 Laps |
20. | Pastor Maldonado | Williams | +40 Laps |
21. | Sergio Perez | Sauber | +44 Laps |
22. | Fernando Alonso | Ferrari | +44 Laps |
23. | Lewis Hamilton | McLaren | +44 Laps |
24. | Romain Grosjean | Lotus | +44 Laps |
The Next race is at Monza next weekend the 7th - 9th September.
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