British GP 2011 – Race summary and analysis

After Qualifying very close to the Red Bull’s Alonso scored a marvelous win to end Ferrari’s 2011 drought.

Fernando Alonso was always the dangerman for Red Bull after qualifying so close to them, and on Sunday afternoon he put Ferrari back in Victory Lane with a beautifully-judged performance that owed a little to a delay during Sebastian Vettel’s second pit stop.

Vettel appeared to settle for second place once it became clear that he could not catch the red car, having lost crucial time in the pits when there was a problem with a rear wheel. He was 16.5s adrift of the Spaniard by the flag, but had team mate Mark Webber on his tail and threatening to pass until team boss Christian Horner instructed them to “maintain the gap,” as they struggled with their tyres in the closing laps.

Behind them, Ferrari’s Felipe Massa and McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton had a real dust-up for fourth place. The Englishman had driven beautifully from 10th on the grid, making up places hand over fist in the early stages when lunchtime rain obliged everyone to opt for Pirelli’s intermediate rain tyres. The rash of stops to change them began on Lap Nine, and meant that nobody thereafter had to use the hard slicks but could run as many softs as they had available.

Hamilton overtook Alonso on the 15th lap and ran third behind Vettel and Webber, but a better stop for Alonso on the 27th lap put the Ferrari ahead of the McLaren again. After Vettel’s delay that lap, the Spaniard moved into a lead he never thereafter surrendered.

Vettel fell to third behind Hamilton because of his problem, but the Red Bull driver pushed ahead after their final stops. Vettel got very close to Hamilton on Lap 35 exiting Woodcote but couldn’t make it stick, and opted instead to stop for tyres again on Lap 36. Hamilton did likewise on Lap 37, but the German moved ahead in the stops, and then Hamilton was instructed shortly afterwards to back off in order to conserve fuel. He could do nothing about Webber, who overtook on the 46th lap, and that set up his fight with Massa.

Down into Vale on the last lap, Massa pushed ahead but Hamilton refused to give up and pushed down the inside of the left-hander. They made brief contact which damaged the McLaren’s front wing, but as Hamilton dived back for the inside line exiting the first part of Club Massa stayed to the outside but ran wide and then into the run-off area. They crossed the line officially split by 0.024s, with Hamilton dramatically maintaining fourth.

What at one stage looked hugely promising for McLaren turned into a major disappointment when Jenson Button had to retire at the end of the pit lane on the 39th lap, while running second during the rash of final stops and fighting for a top four position; his car was released from the pits too soon, and the nut had not been fitted to the right front wheel.

Further back, Mercedes’s Nico Rosberg kept his cool despite massive race-long pressure from Sergio Perez’s Sauber, with Nick Heidfeld taking ninth for Renault after fending off Michael Schumacher. The Mercedes driver had earlier damaged his nose and earned a 10-second stop/go penalty for spinning Kamui Kobayashi as they fought over seventh place ahead of Rosberg and Perez; Schumacher recovered but later the Japanese driver retired.

Jaime Alguersuari took the final point after a determined chase of Schumacher ultimately proved fruitless, and just held off Force India’s Adrian Sutil and Renault’s Vitaly Petrov by the flag.

Earlier there had been a mix-up in the Force India pit when Paul di Resta, running a superb seventh early on, was accidentally given Sutil’s tyres and lost a lap while this was rectified. The bitterly disappointed Scot was only 15th.

There was also a close finish between the Williamses. Their hopes of points evaporated very early on, and Rubens Barrichello and Pastor Maldonado rarely featured after the opening laps and finished in that order, 13th and 14th, 0.8s apart.

Behind Di Resta, Timo Glock and Jerome D’Ambrosio were 16th and 17th for Virgin, as Tonio Liuzzi drove hard in his HRT to keep the Belgian honest and finished a lap ahead of rookie team mate Daniel Ricciardo.

Neither Team Lotus driver made it home, Heikki Kovalainen dropping out early with gearbox problems and Jarno Trulli likewise hitting mechanical trouble with an engine oil leak. Sebastien Buemi joined the other five retirees after slicing his left rear tyre in a racing incident with Di Resta, and had to stop when the rubber flew off the rim of his Toro Rosso.

Vettel, of course, continues the lead the title chase, with 204 points, from Webber on 124, as Alonso jumps the McLaren drivers with 112 to their 109 apiece. Red Bull extend their constructors’ lead, with 328 points to McLaren’s 218 and Ferrari’s 164.

F1.com

Race Results:

Pos No Driver Team Laps Time/Retired Grid Pts
1 5 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 52 1:28:41.196 3 25
2 1 Sebastian Vettel RBR-Renault 52 +16.5 secs 2 18
3 2 Mark Webber RBR-Renault 52 +16.9 secs 1 15
4 3 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 52 +28.9 secs 10 12
5 6 Felipe Massa Ferrari 52 +29.0 secs 4 10
6 8 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 52 +60.6 secs 9 8
7 17 Sergio Perez Sauber-Ferrari 52 +65.5 secs 12 6
8 9 Nick Heidfeld Renault 52 +75.5 secs 16 4
9 7 Michael Schumacher Mercedes 52 +77.9 secs 13 2
10 19 Jaime Alguersuari STR-Ferrari 52 +79.1 secs 18 1
11 14 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 52 +79.7 secs 11
12 10 Vitaly Petrov Renault 52 +80.6 secs 14
13 11 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 51 +1 Lap 15
14 12 Pastor Maldonado Williams-Cosworth 51 +1 Lap 7
15 15 Paul di Resta Force India-Mercedes 51 +1 Lap 6
16 24 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 50 +2 Laps 20
17 25 Jerome d’Ambrosio Virgin-Cosworth 50 +2 Laps 22
18 23 Vitantonio Liuzzi HRT-Cosworth 50 +2 Laps 23
19 22 Daniel Ricciardo HRT-Cosworth 49 +3 Laps 24
Ret 4 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 39 Wheel nut 5
Ret 18 Sebastien Buemi STR-Ferrari 25 Accident damage 19
Ret 16 Kamui Kobayashi Sauber-Ferrari 23 Oil leak 8
Ret 21 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Renault 10 Oil leak 21
Ret 20 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Renault 2 Gearbox 17

Drivers’ Standings:

Pos Driver Nationality Team Points
1 Sebastian Vettel German RBR-Renault 204
2 Mark Webber Australian RBR-Renault 124
3 Fernando Alonso Spanish Ferrari 112
4 Lewis Hamilton British McLaren-Mercedes 109
5 Jenson Button British McLaren-Mercedes 109
6 Felipe Massa Brazilian Ferrari 52
7 Nico Rosberg German Mercedes 40
8 Nick Heidfeld German Renault 34
9 Vitaly Petrov Russian Renault 31
10 Michael Schumacher German Mercedes 28
11 Kamui Kobayashi Japanese Sauber-Ferrari 25
12 Adrian Sutil German Force India-Mercedes 10
13 Jaime Alguersuari Spanish STR-Ferrari 9
14 Sergio Perez Mexican Sauber-Ferrari 8
15 Sebastien Buemi Swiss STR-Ferrari 8
16 Rubens Barrichello Brazilian Williams-Cosworth 4
17 Paul di Resta British Force India-Mercedes 2
18 Pedro de la Rosa Spanish Sauber-Ferrari 0
19 Jarno Trulli Italian Lotus-Renault 0
20 Vitantonio Liuzzi Italian HRT-Cosworth 0
21 Jerome d’Ambrosio Belgian Virgin-Cosworth 0
22 Heikki Kovalainen Finnish Lotus-Renault 0
23 Pastor Maldonado Venezuelan Williams-Cosworth 0
24 Timo Glock German Virgin-Cosworth 0
25 Narain Karthikeyan Indian HRT-Cosworth 0
26 Daniel Ricciardo Australian HRT-Cosworth 0

Constructors’ Standings:

Pos Team Points
1 RBR-Renault 328
2 McLaren-Mercedes 218
3 Ferrari 164
4 Mercedes 68
5 Renault 65
6 Sauber-Ferrari 33
7 STR-Ferrari 17
8 Force India-Mercedes 12
9 Williams-Cosworth 4
10 Lotus-Renault 0
11 HRT-Cosworth 0
12 Virgin-Cosworth 0