Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Its back to back win for Alonso


Fuji (Japan): Twotimes world champion Fernando Alonso claiming his second successive victory by winning an incidentpacked Japanese Grand Prix.
As the main championship protagonists licked their wounds on a day of errors, collisions and penalties, the Spaniard steered his Renault home just two weeks after winning in Singapore for his 21st career triumph.
Alonso took full advantage of a bad day for title rivals Lewis Hamilton and Felipe Massa as he came home 5.2 seconds clear of second placed Pole Robert Kubica of BMW Sauber.
Defending drivers world champion Kimi Raikkonen finished third for Ferrari.
Alonso, the champion in 2005 and 2006 for Renault before departing for an inglorious season with McLaren last year, has yet to agree a deal for next season, but is likely to stay with the French team.
Brazil’s Nelson Piquet Jr was fourth in the second Renault ahead of Italian Jarno Trulli of Toyota and the Toro Rosso of Germany’s Sebastian Vettel.
Frenchman Sebastien Bourdais was hit with a 25 second penalty after the race for running Massa off the track, relegating him to tenth from sixth. It was good news for Massa who was bumped up to seventh from eighth.
Championship leader Hamilton failed to score a point for McLaren after a poor start from pole position and some impetuous moves which cost him dearly.
These saw him overrun the first corner and go off the track together with Raikkonen, who outpaced him off the grid at the start, and later hit by Massa’s Ferrari as he attempted to pass him.
Hamilton was given a drivethrough penalty for his part in the first corner melee and Massa was given the same punishment for ramming Hamilton into a spin in the second incident.

Massa also struggled through a day of collisions, errors and penalties on his way to finishing seventh to claim two points.
This reduced Hamilton’s championship lead to five points with two races left in China and Brazil. Hamilton has 84 points and Massa 79.
In the constructors’ championship, Ferrari jumped back in front with a seven points lead over McLaren. Ferrari have 142 and McLaren 135.
Hamilton’s McLaren teammate, Finn Heikki Kovalainen, retired with a blown engine in the early stages when he was running well.

Force India

Sutil was steaming along in 10th place after six laps, thanks to the way the first corner incident reshuffled the pack. But after eight laps his right rear tyre burst, probably as a result of damage inflicted by debris. Fisichella also made a strong start, but dropped out early with gearbox problems.

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