Lewis Hamilton wins Chinese GP, Webber immense in third

By Tristan Rayner / Editor

A frenetic Chinese Grand Prix saw tyres take centre stage as Lewis Hamilton won the race for McLaren Mercedes. Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel finished a dejected second after running out of grip too, while his team-mate Mark Webber was an outstanding third after starting 18th.

Drama before the first lap saw Lewis Hamilton suffer a leaking fuel line into his airbox. McLaren worked quickly to get Hamilton onto the grid, and he left the garage to get onto the starting grid with just thirty seconds to spare.

Despite the nerve-wracking start, Hamilton kept his cool and drove a strong race with a number of important overtakes executed cleanly.

Hamilton was delighted, exclaiming over his radio: “Thank you for the great pit stop! I love you guys!”.

The race start saw Sebastian Vettel struggle with a slow start, letting McLaren’s Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton get past him into the inside, as the German slipped to third.

Mark Webber started in 18th position and could only make up one place as he tip-toed his way behind the field. Webber’s distaste for the harder Pirelli tyre was obvious as he failed to make any real impression on his set of option tyres. Webber made up a few places briefly, before surrendering positions as his tyres went off.

His pit stop to put on on a set of soft Pirelli’s immediately lit up his car, Webber on his way to setting a series of fastest laps for the race.

At the front of the pack, Button, Hamilton and Vettel were within a second of each other with the McLaren’s looking slow ahead of the pit-stops.

Both Button and Vettel pitted at the same time, but Button unfortunately mistook the Red Bull mechanics for his, briefly stopping in Vettel’s pitbox before realising.

The mistake cost Button crucial seconds and allowed Sebastian Vettel to get the jump on him in the stops.

However, both were jumped in the pit stops by Nico Rosberg, as the Mercedes driver pitted ahead of the pack on a three stop strategy. Rosberg had a smooth stop and was able to set fast enough laps to get ahead.

Mark Webber’s fresh set of soft tyres allowed him to cut his way to 11th, before being stuck behind Sauber’s Kamui Kobayashi with his faulty KERS unit unable to give him a boost. He stopped for another set of soft tyres and was able to continue to climb.

Button pitted early along with Hamilton to move to a three-stop strategy in response to Rosberg’s three stop strategy. Vettel stayed on his two stop strategy to set up an intriguing (and often difficult to follow) strategic battle.

Battles emerged all over the track, with Webber fighting with Michael Schumacher and Vitaly Petrov. Webber made a hash of a move past Petrov but survived to move past him.

Next, the two McLaren’s diced for second position as Hamilton closed on Button down the pit-straight and overtook him into turn one to grab second.

Webber then took Schumacher down the long back straight in a clean move, dummying left before taking him on the right in a move akin to Webber’s days at the Canberra Raiders as a junior.

Further pit stops saw Nico Rosberg drop to third, as his Mercedes team radioed the German to let him know his predicted fuel levels were critical.

Webber hit the pits for the final time, strapping on a set of fresh rubber, and continued to set fastest laps, taking Fernando Alonso for sixth, and catching the leaders at two seconds per lap.

Meanwhile, on lap 44, Hamilton passed Massa for second, chasing down Vettel for first place with newer tyres.

During the final laps, Hamilton and Vettel scrapped for two laps before Hamilton made a clean move on the defenceless Vettel.

The world championship leader was clearly struggling on his tyres and also appeared to have problems with his KERS boost system.

Webber continued to chase down the leaders, passing Massa, and tackling Rosberg for fourth place with three laps to go, passing his former Williams team-mate for fourth.

Webber charged on to chase Jenson Button for an unlikely and sensational podium position on the second last lap of the race.

Ironically, Webber’s three stop strategy from eighteenth from the grid saw him finish just 2.3 seconds behind his team-mate who two stopped from pole.

An incredible race that saw the Pirelli tyres throw a joker into the pack.

The Crowd Says:

2011-04-18T00:14:01+00:00

Mark Young

Roar Guru


Hiya Shane I'm pretty sure David means that even WHEN Mark wins more Grand Prixs, it will be difficult for him to drive any better then what he did yesterday. I also leapt up and started disagreeing until i reread the sentance and realised what (i think) he means.

2011-04-17T23:15:53+00:00

Mick Leyden

Guest


Great write up Tristan! Agree with everyone, that was a sensation race, one of the best I have ever watched. Shane - You are right, three sets of fresh soft tyres made all the difference, but Webber's best lap was 1.4 seconds faster than the next fastest (Hamilton), that is incredible race pace. Rhys - I would have given Webber driver of the day too, but Hamilton was so impressive his combination of speed and tyre control, attack and defence was awesome. I was beginning to doubt if he could adapt to the new conditions... it turns out he can! :-)

2011-04-17T21:58:13+00:00

Shane Moore

Roar Rookie


@David Lord "it’s doubtful he will ever win another GP and drive better than last night" Are you saying he'll never win another race, or will never drive better than yesterday? Or a combination of both? I don't quite follow... But anyway, yes it was certainly a great race, one of the best over the last season or two. I had to put myself back into Jaguar/Williams mode and just hope for a top ten result for Mark (those were the days!) but his drive to 3rd was mega. It was the first race for a while where I've yelled at the TV! :-) I hate to be the one to bring it up, but it has to be said... Of course Webber's drive was mega, but it had a lot to do with tyres. Anyone who thinks Mark could have made up those positions using the same tyres that Seb, Lewis and Jenson etc had are kidding themselves. Mark's quali mix-up meant that he had better tyres than virtually everyone else in front of him, and that's what allowed him to make such amazing progress in the second half of the race. But that said, it still takes great skill and determination to get past that many people without incident. As they say, catching people is the easy part, but getting past them is an entirely different matter. Fantastic race overall and a mega drive from Mark.

2011-04-17T18:58:18+00:00

David Lord

Guest


In total agreement with Rhys, and MY, great column Tristan, great race, and an incredible drive from Mark Webber, it's doubtful he will ever win another GP and drive better than last night - phenomenal from 18th to third. That made me wonder how many F1 drivers have won GPs from way back - the results are staggering - from 22nd on the grid - John Watson won the 1983 US (from 19th) Bill Vukovich, the 1954 Indianapolis (18th) Rubens Barrichello, the 1982 Detriot (17th) John Watson again, the 1982 Detriot, and Kimi Raikkonen, the 2005 Japanese (16th) Jackie Stewart, the 1973 South Africa, and Michael Schumacher, the 1995 Belgian (15th) Fernando Alonso, the 2008 Singapore - and 14th on the grid - Bob Sweikert, the 1955 Indianapolis; Alan Jones, the 1977 Austrian; Olivier Panis, the 1996 Monaco; Johnny Herbert, the 1999 European, and Jenson Button, the 2006 Hungarian.

2011-04-17T10:56:06+00:00

Mark Young

Roar Guru


Wonderful write up Tristan, really capturing the topsy turvey nature of the race. i have been watching F1 for twenty five years now (old bugger) and cannot remember another race, with so many position changes and movements that did not have the benefit of heavy rain or a really mixed up grid. Rhy is Right, they have struck upon a formula to put the racing back into F1. Magnificent race, and truly fantastic drive by Webber.

2011-04-17T09:25:42+00:00

Rhys

Guest


Great write up Tristan. What a scintillating Grand Prix!!! The FIA may finally have struck upon a formula to put the racing back into F1. With KERS, DRS, and the new Pirelli tyres, there are so many more variables to add spice to the mix. Things may be tempered somewhat as the teams come to grips with things, but for now it all bodes well for some exciting racing ahead. Coulthard awarded Hamilton his 'driver of the day', but as good as his effort was, surely Webber's storming performance deserved that honour. Hopefully it will prove the catalyst to re-ignite the Aussies challenge in the coming races. Nice to see Mercedes GP put up a good show, though it's well overdue. Bring on Instanbul!!!

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