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Australia
Race report

Raikkonen-Alonso-Vettel podium in Abu Dhabi thriller

Podium: race winner Kimi Raikkonen, Lotus F1 Team, second place Fernando Alonso, Scuderia Ferrari, third place Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing, Eric Boullier, team manager Lotus F1 Team

Photo by: XPB Images

Kimi Raikkonen took a surprising first win of his 2012 comeback in the chaotic FIA Formula One Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, capitalizing on mechanical heartbreak for early leader Lewis Hamilton and fending off a championship-motivated Fernando Alonso.

Sebastian Vettel combined an incredible drive with opportune tire strategy to attain third after starting from the pitlane for a qualifying infringement Saturday.

Lewis Hamilton, McLaren leads at the start of the race
Lewis Hamilton, McLaren leads at the start of the race

Photo by: xpb.cc

Jenson Button finished fourth, but the day was an overwhelming disappointment for the McLaren team who lead the race by several seconds until an engine problem forced Hamilton to a halt as the sun set in Abu Dhabi.

"I’m gutted," he said. "It was very sudden, I was just entering a corner and the car just died on me."

Raikkonen then set off into the night with the lead, and won the Lotus-Renault team’s first race by .6 seconds, becoming the eighth driver this season to stand atop the podium.

"I am very happy for the team and myself," the quiet Finn reluctantly told podium interviewer David Coulthard. "I hope this can turn around the tables and give us many more good races and some more next year."

Pastor Maldonado, having started third, dropped only two spots throughout the action-packed race, and Kamui Kobayashi ended behind him in sixth.

Retirements abounded, with Grosjean, Webber, Hamilton, and Rosberg among the big names at the bottom of the timing charts.

A crash at the start of the race involving Nico Hulkenberg, Sahara Force India F1 and Bruno Senna, Williams
A crash at the start of the race involving Nico Hulkenberg, Sahara Force India F1 and Bruno Senna, Williams

Photo by: xpb.cc

The race began in daylight with Hamilton shooting out to an early lead and Raikkonen capitalizing on Mark Webber’s terrible start. Further down the grid, a four-wide entry into Turn 1 by Nico Hulkenberg, Paul di Resta, Bruno Senna, and Sergio Perez lead to the inevitable contact that sent them all off, though with little damage between them and no safety car. Not then, at least.

Just a few laps into the race, as Narain Karthikeyan began to fall prey to the lapping frontrunners, a steering problem slowed his HRT car without warning to the fast-approaching Nico Rosberg. Without the space to react, Rosberg attached his front left tire to Karthikeyan’s back right, launching the Mercedes into the air and across the track runoff into a barrier.

Both emerged unscathed, and the first safety car provided a unique opportunity for Sebastian Vettel on his charge from the pitlane at the green flag. Having sustained some minor damage in the opening laps, Vettel was brought in under yellow in for a new wing, new tires, and foam removal from the radiators (the result of hitting a brake-marker in the safety car queue). Rejoining in the back, he set upon a run that took him as high as second later in the race.

But shortly after the second green, the attention was quickly turned to Hamilton, stationary in the grass with an ominous “N” showing on the steering wheel. It was the same gear his McLaren showed in Singapore where he last retired from the lead.

Race winner Kimi Raikkonen, Lotus F1 celebrates at the end of the race
Race winner Kimi Raikkonen, Lotus F1 celebrates at the end of the race

Photo by: xpb.cc

Raikkonen, informed of this by the Lotus crew, instructed them to “Leave me alone, I know what to do.” Indeed he did, drawing out a significant lead that allowed him to stay in first after a single stop for hard tires.

A dice between Maldonado and Webber that spun the latter was only the first bit of contact for the Australian. Shortly thereafter he grappled tires with Massa, then fell victim to a bad overtake by Perez on di Resta that took the Sauber, Romain Grosjean, and Webber out of contention.

Di Resta escaped the carnage to finish ninth behind Bruno Senna, impressive for both of them following their Turn 1 offs, but largely due to the high rate of attrition. Daniel Ricciardo scored the final point for Toro Rosso.

Up front in the dying laps Vettel, relegated to fourth by a second stop, squeezed by Button for a spot on the podium deemed unfathomable at the race's start. As Button said, the final position gained was Vettel's all along:

"At the end, I couldn’t have kept Sebastian back - he was on newer options, so it was impossible to get the same amount of traction from my older Primes as he was getting from his newer options."

But it was Kimi Raikkonen's evening, resisting late pressure by Alonso and relishing the spray of the Abu Dhabi's preferred bubbly fruit-water on the podium. Alonso cannot have expected his main title rival to join him there, and Vettel duly retains his championship lead, now by ten points with two races to go.

Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing overtake Jenson Button, McLaren Mercedes for third place
Sebastian Vettel, Red Bull Racing overtake Jenson Button, McLaren Mercedes for third place

Photo by: xpb.cc

As the new Circuit of The Americas track in Austin, USA is next, the driver who adapts better to the unknown Texas heat and curves will have the advantage going into Sao Paulo, Brazil. Of course, similar form by Vettel there as here in Abu Dhabi could clinch him the title early.

With plus-25 in the points, Raikkonen has third place fairly secure over Webber and the disappointed Hamilton, but is mathematically eliminated from the championship, 57 points behind Vettel. Not bad for a comeback season.

Red Bull had the opportunity to secure the constructors' title this round, but Grosjean's careening Lotus put paid to Webber's points gain and those hopes. It will take a complete implosion of the Red Bull team to give that championship win up to Ferrari, behind by 92.

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Edition

Australia