Alonso wins German F1 Grand Prix

By Gordon Howard / Roar Pro

Fernando Alonso extended his lead in this year’s Formula One drivers’ world championship on Sunday when he drove to a flawless victory for Ferrari in the German Grand Prix.

Driving with perfect judgement and great speed, the 30-year-old Spaniard started from pole position and dominated the 67-lap race in consummate style.

The Spaniard came home 3.7 seconds ahead of local hero, defending champion Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull, who was later handed a 20 second drive-through penalty for passing Jenson Button.

Vettel was handed the penalty for running off the track at a hairpin exit as he tried to pass McLaren’s Button on the penultimate lap and dropped back to fifth place, leaving Button second at 6.949sec.

Finland’s Kimi Raikkonen of Lotus completed the podium at 16.409sec.

Japan’s Kamui Kobayashi of Sauber was fourth at 21.925 with Vettel slotting back into fifth at 23.732.

It was Alonso’s third win this year after his triumphs in Malaysia and at the European Grand Prix, and it was also the 22nd consecutive race in which he had finished in the points for Ferrari.

He moves 34 points clear of Mark Webber, who finished in eighth position, in the title race with 154 points to the Australian’s 120.

“We’ll enjoy the win,” said Alonso. “Starting on pole was the key factor because it was difficult to overtake and we were not the fastest but we kept the position.”

Drawing a parallel with Europe’s troubled economic situation, Alonso added: “I don’t really know politics, but it is true that the situation is not great in Spain — but a Spanish driver in an Italian car, designed by a Greek man is good to win here.”

Button sidestepped the Vettel controversy and said: “I had a great race out there and it is nice to be fighting at the front again.”

Vettel, whose Red Bull team were cleared to take part in the race after stewards decided to take no further action against them for reported engine mapping irregularities, added: “The last thing you want to do is make contact. When we were side-by-side, I tried to give him enough room — but it’s difficult to see.

“I went wide. We were all struggling with tyres, Jenson in particular, which is why I was able to pass him.”

Seven-time champion and German hero Michael Schumacher, 43, finished seventh for Mercedes ahead of another German, Nico Hulkenberg, who was ninth for Force India.

Australia’s Daniel Ricciardo finished 13th.

Button’s McLaren teammate Lewis Hamilton, who had hoped to mark his 100th Formula One race with a race to remember, ended up with one to forget as he collected a puncture after two laps and eventually had to retire.

A crash on the opening corner involving the Ferrari of Felipe Massa, Frenchman Romain Grosjean of Lotus and Brazilian Bruno Senna of Williams marred the start of the race but, surprisingly, there was no red flag following the incident.

As a result, a lot of debris was left on the circuit and led to Hamilton’s puncture.

“I have no idea [how the car got damaged]. I saw the debris come up and it damaged it,” said the 2008 world champion.

“The car felt terrible after that, the rear floor is damaged. The only positive I can take from this weekend is Jenson’s result.”

The Crowd Says:

2012-07-24T01:15:35+00:00

Carnivean

Guest


The Lotus is one of the fastest cars, it just hasn't managed to get the win that it should have. Kimi has been regularly out-shone by Romain Grosjean, his team-mate.

2012-07-23T03:07:58+00:00

William

Guest


I can't believe they didn't have a Safety Car with all of that amount of body work from Felipe Massa's Scuderia Ferrari when he lost his front wing. When unexpectedly Lewis Hamilton 2008 World Champ passed one of the lead cars to try unlap himself. Sebastian Vettel said to Lewis Hamilton "stupidity" but the FIA Rules state when you receive the Blue Flag 1. Let the car go pass 2. Speed up to un-lap yourself if you are a faster car. At Lap 58 Lewis Hamilton retired because he couldn't continue with that amount of body work on the track that did to his car which he was the unlucky one. At Lap 65 Vettel passed Button when no part of the Car was on the white line and Button was fuming that Vettel passed him. Rule states you have to have 4 four wheels to passed the car. And Button's mechanic said to Button "Yes the FIA are aware". As a result Kimi Raikkonen came third followed by Kamui Kobayashi. Less than a week they head to Budapest for the Hungarian GP which Sebastian Vettel hasn't been on the Podium in July after he was stripped on having a Podium in Germany yesterday.

2012-07-23T02:19:26+00:00

Seano

Guest


The lotus is a pig, kimi is driving the wheels off it!!! -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

2012-07-23T01:51:54+00:00

DanMan

Guest


Haven't been able to watch this season as much as I want - missed nearly every race in fact. Is the Lotus really that good or is it just the supreme talent of Raikkonen that see's him consistantly in the top 5? Loved the Alonso / Raikkonen duels in the mid 2000's.

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