Lewis Hamilton took a superbly dominant victory under the
lights of the Marina Bay circuit in Singapore which looked closer than it ever
really was. He got a perfect start from pole position and took a comfortable
lead for the early part of the race.
The tyre degradation all the teams faced amid the humid
temperatures meant most went for a three stop strategy which was thrown out of
the window when the safety car came out on lap 31 for debris strewn across the
track after Sergio Perez’s Force India lost its front wing underneath the car following
contact with the Sauber of Adrian Sutil.
Hamilton had only stopped for the second time for his third
set of super softs five laps previously and stayed out on track. All his
immediate competitors had pitted either just before or during the safety car
period for the more durable soft tyres and were now trying to make it to
the end without a third stop.
Even if Hamilton could have made the super softs last he
would have had to stop again to take on the soft tyres as he hadn’t used them
yet. After a race in which the action had been relatively sedate compared to
recent Grand Prix, the chase was now on. When the safety car came in at the
start of lap 38 of 61 Lewis had to make a gap of 28 seconds to come out still in the
lead.
Behind him Sebastian Vettel, Daniel Ricciardo and Fernando Alonso
circled closely together on the slower soft tyre but could, just perhaps, be in
front of the Mercedes driver once he pitted. As is so often said on the team
radio, it was ‘Hammertime’ and the #44 Merc flawed it while at the same time
trying to stretch his super-softs as far as they could go.
Despite several reassurances from his team Lewis kept on
doubting he’d be able to make it as far as they wanted him to go, but keep on
going he did and at such a pace he was often over three seconds a lap faster
than his pursuers. By lap 52 with his tyres near to breaking point he was still
going faster than his rivals but no longer by enough. He pitted for the final
time and exited behind Vettel but crucially ahead of Ricciardo and Alonso.
In truth even if he had come out behind them he was on such
fresher rubber that he’d have cruised ahead with not much trouble but it would
have eked out the tension just that
little bit more. As it was he was nearing two seconds behind Vettel when he
came out of the pits but by turn 6 on the very next lap he shot through a
tightening gap in the DRS zone and from there the race was his.
He maximised his opportunity today and was never really
troubled at all. Significantly Lewis also for just the second time of the year headed the
championship table with a three point gap to his team mate Nico Rosberg. The
race could have been so much different if it hadn’t been for a technical problem
that robbed Rosberg of the ability to even pull away from the line on the
formation lap.
He did manage to get going from the pit lane but despite
having had a steering wheel change, could not engage first gear at the start,
the gear changes would go up two at a time, his DRS couldn’t be enabled and it
hurt his energy recovery systems. He failed to make much progress, stuck behind
Marcus Ericsson for some time before pitting. His problem meant he had no pit
lane speed limiter so practically crept into his pit box, but could not re-engage
first gear and that was that for the day.
After such a close qualifying when he’d failed to get pole
by just 0.007 this was expected to be quite the showdown, but if anyone
believes in karma then Nico is certainly getting his back on him since Spa. A
29 point lead after Belgium is now a three point deficit. There are still 150 points left to
play for including the stupid double points race in Abu Dhabi, but the momentum
is with Lewis now and after the race Nico certainly looked crestfallen as he
faces the prospect of having to chase down the fastest man in the sport.
Has the tide now swung definitively in Lewis’ favour? That
can’t be judged yet but despite the mental strength that Nico has shown this
year, he now trails Lewis in points and by four wins to seven. Another defeat
in Japan and could it all be game over? Not mathematically, the Mercedes performance
advantage is still strong over the rest of the field, this will go to the last but mentally it could be the finishing move.
The only thing both have to worry about is reliability and that could still be a
crucial deciding factor.
As for Lewis he looked supremely confident after the race,
he looked like a man who knew he’d made a statement of intent. Presuming no
mechanical issues then it’s going to be very tough for him to get knocked off
the points lead for a second time.
Vettel suffered a troubled weekend again but still came away
with second. He lost a lot of time in practice, had issues in qualifying that
left him over driving the car and throwing away a possible tilt at pole
position. He lined up fourth behind Ricciardo but after Rosberg’s issue he had
an open gap to attack down to the first corner.
He made sure he was the first Red Bull there and once Alonso
gave up his second place after over shooting the first turn from fifth on the
grid he managed to maintain a strong second place right through to the second
stops.
Alonso undercut Vettel at the second time of asking
resulting in Vettel being the first to put on the soft tyres on lap 25 with the
aim of a long stint followed by the super softs to potentially attack Hamilton
who appeared to still be in range. However, when the safety car came out
the Ferrari came back in to put softs on as well, exiting behind Vettel and
Ricciardo who was suffering some sort of intermittent problem.
They ran second, third and fourth to the flag with Vettel only moving into the lead for a single lap, amazingly the first time he's been out in front all year. They held their
tyres together, but none more impressive than Vettel who made them last for 35
laps. One more lap and he may have been in trouble but luckily the last lap was
dropped as the race timed out at two hours thanks to the safety car problem.
Everyone in qualifying looked closer to the Mercedes cars, especially the Ferrari’s
and particularly Kimi Raikkonen who looked like he could have had an attack at a top three spot if it hadn’t been for an engine problem in Q3. Kimi has no luck
other than bad in 2014 and while he sometimes looked fast during the race,
lucked out in the pit stops to end up only eighth.
Alonso kept the good pace up during the race so there were
things to be happy about at last but still no match for the Mercedes. Behind
this trio, Felipe Massa ran the same strategy but didn’t have the pace in fifth
while his Williams team mate Valtteri Bottas was running sixth but just ran out
of grip on the last lap when everyone came by. He came home only 11th.
The Force India’s came charging through with Perez having had a nose change
coming back to finish seventh, once again ahead of Nico Hulkenberg in ninth.
Kevin Magnussen produced a heroic drive while being cooked
in the cockpit of his McLaren. While Jenson Button retired towards the end with
a technical problem after a solid opening lap charge, Magnussen suffered burns which he had to have checked out
after the race. So hot was it in the cockpit he even claimed his drinks bottle
was burning his mouth. A point was the least he deserved.
Esteban Gutierrez retired for Sauber but felt he could have
had a point and Marcus Ericsson had his best race of the year as he beat the
Marussia’s for the first time. The Lotuses also looked potential point scorers
but ran out of grip while Daniil Kvyat had probably his least convincing
performance to date as he suffered dehydration due to his drinks bottle packing
up on the formation lap. A skinny lad, it showed just how on the edge a lot of
drivers are on weight due to the heavier energy recovery technology requiring
drivers to have the minimum of fat on them. Thankfully the weight limit of the
cars is to rise next year.
The last five laps were the boiling point of the race and
Jean-Eric Vergne was the hero as he fought his way into the points. After
suffering a five second penalty for exceeding track limits he received another
to be added to his race time. He took full advantage of his fresher rubber, one
of the few to remain on a three stopper.
With the Bottas train circulating slowly, he cruised up to
the back of them before taking in quick succession Hulkenberg, Perez, and then an absolutely beautiful opportunistic move on Kimi into the first turn and then in a rush, he easily got
ahead of Bottas. He pushed on so his five second penalty wouldn’t drop
him back and pulled out the gap within two laps to secure his best finish of
the year and remind people what a racer he can be. It was a result he needed
and for once firmly put Kvyat in the shade at Toro Rosso.
So onwards to Japan and the wonderful Suzuka track in two
weeks time. The title battle has swung in Lewis’ favour but he and Rosberg know
it can swing back just as easily.
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