Webber had led after coming out of his final pit stop with 13 laps to go in Sepang, but Vettel claimed victory after defying team orders to overtake while the Australian was following instructions to conserve his car. |
Webber had been poised
for the 10th victory of his career and first since July as he led
comfortably after the team's final pit stops, and was told to hold back
to maintain his car until the finish at the Sepang circuit.
Vettel, however, took the
opportunity to edge past the veteran Australian and claim his 27th race
win, having started from pole position for the second time in two
events this season.
"I want to say sorry to
Mark," the German told reporters, having been rebuked by his team boss
Christian Horner on the radio as they dueled on the track. "This is
silly Seb, come on," Horner warned.
"He was trying to save
the car and tires, but I took a lot of risk in passing him when he was
trying," the 25-year-old Vettel added.
"I didn't ignore that, but I shouldn't have done it."
He later said on the Red
Bull website: " I put myself above a team decision, which was wrong. I
didn't mean to and I apologize. I'm not happy I've won, I made a mistake
and if I could undo it I would. It's not easy right now and I owe
apologies to Mark and the team."
Webber, who has often
complained that triple world champion Vettel has favored status within
the Austrian-owned team, made his displeasure known at the postrace
press conference.
"The first part of GP
went very well," the 36-year-old said. "In the end we got the right
strategy, and it was about controlling the race, getting everything in
the race right, but the team told me to turn the engine down.
"But I want to race as well. Seb made his own decisions and he will have protection as usual and that's the way it goes."
He also added a statement on the team website.
"There's a bit of history to this as well; my mind in the last 15 laps was thinking about a lot of things," Webber said.
"Of course I'm not
satisfied with the result. This puts heat on a few people and
unfortunately there's no rewind button. I know people want raw emotion
from us after these situations and it's there, but we need to remain
cool. There's three weeks until the next race, so time for us to work on
things."
Horner said the incident was "frustrating."
"Formula One is both a
team and an individual sport and sometimes there is a conflict between a
driver's desire and a team's interest," he said. "What happened today
is something that shouldn't have happened.
"Our position after that
final pit stop was all about managing the race until the end and
conserving our tires, getting the cars to the finish and achieving
maximum points."
Team orders have long
been a controversial part of F1, and were banned in 2002. However, that
rule was dropped in 2011 after it became apparent that teams were
finding ways around it.
On Sunday, Lewis
Hamilton benefited from team orders as he claimed his first podium
finish for Mercedes after colleague Nico Rosberg was told not to attack
him as both drivers were seeking to maintain their cars.
Team boss Ross Brawn
said on the radio: "Negative Nico, negative. Lewis' pace is what we are
asking him to do. He can go a lot faster as well, so please be in
control as well."
"If I'm honest he should
be standing here, he's a great teammate and did a fantastic job,"
Hamilton said of Rosberg, who outperformed seven-time world champion
Michael Schumacher at Mercedes the past three seasons.
"We brought the car home and I'm glad to get a result for them, but it's not the best feeling being up here."
The 2008 world champion
almost made an embarrassing error when he tried to pit in the garage of
his former team McLaren -- bringing back memories of when Jenson Button
did similar soon after his move to the British marque.
"I did a Jenson as he did that a couple of years ago," the English driver said.
"I've had so many years making pit stops with McLaren, but I got it wrong, so a big apology to my teammate."
Button's disappointing
season continued when he failed to finish in the points after being sent
out from his final pit stop with a loose front wheel, having been fifth
at one stage.
His new teammate Sergio Perez scored his first points for McLaren as he came home ninth ahead of Toro Rosso's Jean-Eric Vergne.
Felipe Massa claimed
fifth place but his Ferrari teammate Fernando Alonso -- the race winner
in Sepang last year and overall runnerup -- paid for an early mistake
that broke his front wing and ended his 200th career grand prix as he
stayed out on the track too long without getting it repaired.
"Today we had a good car, and I don't think we were too far from the Red Bull pace, especially in the race," the Spaniard said.
"Looking now after the
incident for sure it is the wrong decision (to stay on the track). If
this unlucky combination had not happened, and in lap three we stop, we
change the tire and the nose and we win the race here, the team are
heroes."
Romain Grosjean was sixth for Lotus ahead of teammate Kimi Raikkonen, who won the opening race in Melbourne last Sunday but this time started from 10th after being given a three-place penalty for blocking Rosberg during Saturday's qualifying.
The Finn was fastest in Friday's practice, but downplayed his hopes in the race.
Nico Hulkenberg was eighth to earn Sauber's first points this season.
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