Alonso now trails Vettel by 10 points with two races of the season remaining.
“[Vettel] must be the luckiest person in Formula One,” observed McLaren’s
Lewis Hamilton.
If it was a slightly uncharitable assessment – Vettel was no luckier than
Jenson Button was when he came through from the back of the field to win in
Canada last year – the sentiment was understandable.
Hamilton’s own wretched luck this year continued when his car ground to a halt
20 laps into a race he had once again been controlling with ease. That is
now two times in five races, following his retirement from the lead in
Singapore in September, in which Hamilton has seen almost certain victory
slip through his fingers.
Besides, Hamilton was right about one thing: someone is smiling down on
Vettel. Red Bull’s double world champion seemed intent on throwing caution
to the wind, and certainly rode his luck at times. But his positive mindset
should be commended. His team principal Christian Horner revealed afterwards
that his driver’s final words to him pre-race were “See you on the podium”.
He was true to his word.
After a manic opening lap, in which Alonso gained two places, passing first
Jenson Button and then Red Bull’s Mark Webber with a heart-in-the-mouth move
around the outside of turn nine, the race briefly settle into a rhythm, with
Hamilton pulling away from Raikkonen in second place and Williams’ Pastor
Maldonado in third.
Then came an horrific crash involving Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg and HRT’s Narain
Karthikeyan; the Indian losing his steering and stepping on the brakes,
leaving the German to shear through the back of his car before rising up and
over his cockpit. The incident bore a striking resemblance to the one in Spa
a few months ago when Lotus’ Romain Grosjean went within a whisker of taking
Alonso’s head off and is sure to add further fuel to the cockpit canopy
debate.
The resulting safety car did, however, benefit Vettel, although not in the way
one might have expected. Misjudging the gap to Toro Rosso’s Daniel
Ricciardo, who was trying to keep his tyres warm behind the safety car,
Vettel swerved to avoid the Australian but only succeeded in colliding with
a trackside marker board, damaging his front wing and forcing him to pit and
switch to soft tyres.
These he used to great effect, surging through the field, benefiting from a
number of other lurid collisions along the way, and rising as high as
second.
By then Hamilton had retired with a fuel pump failure and Raikkonen had
assumed the lead. The Iceman may not have won a race in a few years – having
taken two years off to compete in the World Rally Championship – but he did
not take kindly to his race engineer prattling on in his ear.
“Leave me alone. I know what I’m doing,” Raikkonen snapped at one point. He
wasn’t lying. Despite Alonso closing to within a second of him by the end,
the Finn did not put a wheel out of place, earning his first victory since
Spa 2009 when he was with Ferrari. It was Lotus’ first win of the season. “A
big relief,” said team principal Eric Boullier.
Raikkonen celebrated in his usual way, with a straight face. Asked if he would
be going out to drink Abu Dhabi dry – he has a legendary fondness for
alcohol – he mumbled that as long as he made it to Austin next week his team
would probably be happy.
Vettel finished third, having pitted a second time, profited from a second
safety car, and then hunted down Button, eventually passing the McLaren with
a gutsy move around the outside of Turn 11. “It was very brave of him,”
Button conceded. “I didn’t expect that. If I’d locked up and run wide,
we would’ve crashed.” Luck favours the brave. Vettel was certainly that
yesterday.
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, results:
Leading Positions after Race (55 Laps): 1 Kimi Raikkonen (Fin) Lotus F1 Team
1hr 45min 58.667secs, 2 Fernando Alonso (Spa) Ferrari 1:45:59.519, 3
Sebastian Vettel (Ger) Red Bull 1:46:02.830, 4 Jenson Button (Gbr) McLaren
1:46:06.454, 5 Pastor Maldonado (Ven) Williams 1:46:11.674, 6 Kamui
Kobayashi (Jpn) Sauber-Ferrari 1:46:18.743, 7 Felipe Massa (Bra) Ferrari
1:46:21.563, 8 Bruno Senna (Bra) Williams 1:46:22.209, 9 Paul di Resta (Gbr)
Force India 1:46:22.827, 10 Daniel Ricciardo (Aus) Scuderia Toro Rosso
1:46:26.130, 11 Michael Schumacher (Ger) Mercedes GP 1:46:26.742, 12
Jean-Eric Vergne (Fra) Scuderia Toro Rosso 1:46:33.573, 13 Heikki Kovalainen
(Fin) Caterham 1:46:46.431, 14 Timo Glock (Ger) Marussia 1:46:55.140, 15
Sergio Perez (Mex) Sauber-Ferrari 1:46:55.435, 16 Vitaly Petrov (Rus)
Caterham 1:47:03.262, 17 Pedro de la Rosa (Spa) HRT-F1 1:47:10.445
Not Classified: 18 Charles Pic (Fra) Marussia 41 Laps completed, 19
Romain Grosjean (Fra) Lotus F1 Team 37 Laps completed, 20 Mark Webber (Aus)
Red Bull 37 Laps completed, 21 Lewis Hamilton (Gbr) McLaren 19 Laps
completed, 22 Narain Karthikeyan (Ind) HRT-F1 7 Laps completed, 23 Nico
Rosberg (Ger) Mercedes GP 7 Laps completed, 24 Nico Hulkenberg (Ger) Force
India 0 Laps completed