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Monday 22 April 2013

Bahrain GP 2013 In Picture

The Bahrain podium
The Bahrain podium

Romain Grosjean celebrates with the team
Romain Grosjean celebrates with the team

Sebastian Vettel: Celebrates victory in Bahrain
Sebastian Vettel: Celebrates victory in Bahrain

Race winner Sebastian Vettel
Race winner Sebastian Vettel

Red Bull welcome Vettel across the line
Red Bull welcome Vettel across the line

Fernando Alonso: Suffered DRS problems
Fernando Alonso: Suffered DRS problems

Sebastian Vettel: Race winner
Sebastian Vettel: Race winner

Romain Grosjean celebrates third
Romain Grosjean celebrates third

Sebastian Vettel and Christian Horner show off their trophies
Sebastian Vettel and Christian Horner show off their trophies

Mark Webber's 200th race cake
Mark Webber's 200th race cake

Red Bull celebrate their win
Red Bull celebrate their win

What a difference in emotion - Alonso clambers out of his Ferrari as Vettel celebrates
What a difference in emotion - Alonso clambers out of his Ferrari as Vettel celebrates

Mark Webber celebrates his 200th Grand Prix start
Mark Webber celebrates his 200th Grand Prix start

The drivers in parc ferme after the race
The drivers in parc ferme after the race

Fernando Alonso made a good start, but it went downhill from there
Fernando Alonso made a good start, but it went downhill from there

Sunday 21 April 2013

Sebastian Vettel beats Kimi Raikkonen to Bahrain GP win

World champion Sebastian Vettel took his first victory of 2012 in a close battle with Lotus's Kimi Raikkonen at the Bahrain Grand Prix.

Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel

The Red Bull driver built an early lead from pole but was caught by the Finn, who started 11th, after half distance. 

Vettel then pulled away after the final pit stops, despite Raikkonen's attempts to close him down.
Lotus's Romain Grosjean was third, with McLaren's Lewis Hamilton finishing eighth and Jenson Button retiring.
Force India's Paul di Resta, doing a two-stop strategy in contrast to the three employed by the rest of the main contenders, drove an excellent, studied race to take sixth place.
The Scot was running fifth going into the final 10 laps but was helpless to defend from Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg, who was on fresher tyres in the closing laps.
Di Resta seemed poised to lose a further place to Button, but the Briton's McLaren suffered a puncture with three laps to go and dropped out of the points, before retiring on the penultimate lap with a broken exhaust.
The Scot also just managed to hold off a challenge from Ferrari's Fernando Alonso in the closing laps.
Rosberg was investigated for possible dangerous driving in defending from both Hamilton and Alonso earlier in the race, but was cleared of any wrongdoing by the stewards.

Jake Humphrey, David Coulthard and Sebastian Vettel
 Vettel on Bahrain victory
Ferrari's Felipe Massa produced his strongest race of the season to take ninth, ahead of Mercedes driver Michael Schumacher, who battled up from 22nd on the grid.
The result means Vettel takes the championship lead, after starting the race in fifth place, while Hamilton has slipped down to second, ahead of Vettel's team-mate Mark Webber - who finished fourth in Bahrain - Button and Alonso.
Bahrain's Sakhir circuit is notorious for producing uninteresting races, but this was an exception, with a tense battle for the lead and several wheel-to-wheel scraps down the field.
Vettel stormed into the lead from pole, building a five-second lead after eight laps in the sort of performance that won him 11 races on his way to the title last year.
"It was an incredible race," said the German. "We had a very good start, which was crucial. I was able to pull away from the pack which turned out to be a good advantage because we always had to go on used tyres.
"Kimi was quick, and so was Romain. It was a difficult race. Once he was close, I thought he would have more than one shot, but in the end I was able to pull out of a gap."

Raikkonen was judging his rise from 11th place on the grid to perfection, his low qualifying position a tactical ploy to ensure he had more sets of new tyres to use in a race that all teams expected to be dominated by tyre management in the high temperatures.
After 10 laps, Raikkonen was up to third place behind Vettel and Grosjean and he continued to close on the leading pair after they had all made their first pit stops.
He passed Grosjean on lap 24, and then began to close on Vettel, who he caught by lap 33.
But the Finn could not pass the Red Bull and after they stopped together for the final time on lap 39, Vettel eased away and Raikkonen could not hold him.
"It's always easy to say if afterwards, but in the end we were not fast enough," he said. "I had one chance to pass Sebastian but I chose the wrong side. I didn't get another chance. We gave ourselves a chance, but we didn't do it."
 The race provided a fascinating spectacle throughout, but it did little to distract from the main focus of the weekend - the wisdom or otherwise of deciding to hold the race in Bahrain in the midst of ongoing civil unrest.

F1 Gulf Air Bahrain Grand Prix 2013 Results: The Race

Race Grid Q3 Q2 Q1 P3 P2 P1

Pos Driver Team Grid Total Pts
1 Vettel Red Bull 2
25
2 Raikkonen Lotus 8 +9.100 18
3 Grosjean Lotus 11 +19.500 15
4 di Resta Force India 5 +21.700 12
5 Hamilton Mercedes 9 +35.200 10
6 Perez McLaren 12 +35.900 8
7 Webber Red Bull 7 +37.200 6
8 Alonso Ferrari 3 +37.500 4
9 Rosberg Mercedes 1 +41.100 2
10 Button McLaren 10 +46.600 1
11 Maldonado Williams 17 +66.400
12 Hulkenberg Sauber 14 +72.900
13 Sutil Force India 6 +76.700
14 Bottas Williams 15 +81.500
15 Massa Ferrari 4 +86.300
16 Ricciardo Toro Rosso 13 +1 lap
17 Pic Caterham 18 +1 lap
18 Gutierrez Sauber 22 +1 lap
19 Bianchi Marussia 19 +1 lap
20 Chilton Marussia 21 +1 lap
21 van der Garde Caterham 20 +2 laps
RET Vergne Toro Rosso 16

F1 2013 Bahrain GP Qualifying: Nico Rosberg claims surprise pole for Mercedes

Vettel second as Hamilton demoted five places for gearbox change

Nico Rosberg: Claimed a shock second career pole
Nico Rosberg: Claimed a shock second career pole
Nico Rosberg confounded pre-qualifying expectations with a brilliant Q3 performance in Bahrain to give Mercedes back-to-back pole positions and escape from the shadow of new team-mate Lewis Hamilton for the first time

Most observers had predicted the battle for the fourth pole of the season at the desert venue would be an exclusive three-way affair between practice pacesetters Ferrari, Red Bull and Lotus with Mercedes' W04 appearing be slightly off for pace for just about the first time this season just seven days on from Hamilton's first pole for the team in China.

However, with Hamilton's chances of repeating last week's result already scuppered by a five-place grid penalty for a gearbox change following a suspension failure triggered by a tyre delamination in P3, Rosberg seized the opportunity to be the team's lead runner with sensational out-of-the-blue laps in both Q2 and Q3 to claim just the second pole of his career.
Rosberg's advantage over the pole favourites, led by World Championship leader Sebastian Vettel - back on the frontrow after perhaps unwisely sacrificing grid position in Shanghai - was in excess of two tenths of a second while Hamilton was nearly half a second back in the sister car in fourth. That will translate to an even-less palatable ninth on Sunday's grid once his penalty is taken into account.
Rosberg's weekend has taken on an entirely new complexion, although the 27-year-old himself admitted pole had come as something of a surprise to him too.

"A little bit [of a surprise], yes. It wasn't really clear before who was the quickest car over one lap. I was a little bit closer this morning already so I was a bit happier than yesterday for sure," he said.
"We worked really well as a team overnight to improve the car because yesterday we were really struggling, so that's gone well. That's fantastic result and great for tomorrow.
"But tomorrow's going to be a tough race for sure with rear-tyre degradation, so a lot can still happen."
Vettel is certainly well positioned to increase his early-season points advantage from the front row but Fernando Alonso will strongly fancy his own chances of translating third on the grid into his the win for the second weekend on the spin, the Spaniard heading up row two despite abandoning his final lap following a handful of mistakes.

Hamilton and the second Red Bull of Mark Webber took fourth and fifth respectively on the timesheet but both will drop down the order owing to respective five- and three-place penalties, meaning Felipe Massa steps up to form an ominous-looking all-Ferrari row two.
The Brazilian, having struggled to match Alonso throughout Saturday, rolled the strategy dice in Q3 by taking to the slightly more durable hard tyres and could bring himself right into play on Sunday with a longer first stint than the three cars ahead.
But arguably qualifying's biggest winners were Force India as they took the impressive scalps of both Lotus and McLaren before benefiting from the two penalties ahead to snare row three with Paul di Resta to start from a career-high fifth and Adrian Sutil alongside. Webber drops behind them to seventh.

Lotus's lack of single-lap pace certainly proved the biggest mystery of all as Kimi Raikkonen produced one of his more scruffy Saturday afternoons to lap the best part of a second off the pace in Q3, although he too picks up a place courtesy of Hamilton's demotion.
The Enstone team had already earlier lost Romain Grosjean in Q2, the Frenchman's somewhat anonymous start to the season only gaining some brief attention when mistakes on his final lap were highlighted.
McLaren's qualifying struggles have become more of a running theme but, in what they hope is their final struggle to reach Q3 before major updates are brought to their car for Spain, Jenson Button completed his fourth straight defeat of under-pressure team-mate Sergio Perez to sneak into the top ten.
Another man under early-season scrutiny is the Mexican's Sauber replacement Esteban Gutierrez who again found Q1 progression beyond him for the third time in four attempts, ensuring he will start from the very back of Sunday's grid owing to his five-place grid penalty for ploughing into Sutil in China.

Saturday 20 April 2013

F1 Results Bahrain GP 2013 Grid

Race Grid Q3 Q2 Q1 P3 P2 P1

Pos Driver Team Time
1 Rosberg Mercedes
2 Vettel Red Bull -
3 Alonso Ferrari -
4 Massa Ferrari -
5 di Resta Force India -
6 Sutil Force India -
7 Webber Red Bull -
8 Raikkonen Lotus -
9 Hamilton Mercedes -
10 Button McLaren -
11 Grosjean Lotus -
12 Perez McLaren -
13 Ricciardo Toro Rosso -
14 Hulkenberg Sauber -
15 Bottas Williams -
16 Vergne Toro Rosso -
17 Maldonado Williams -
18 Pic Caterham -
19 Bianchi Marussia -
20 van der Garde Caterham -
21 Chilton Marussia -
22 Gutierrez Sauber -