Sunday, March 16, 2014

Rosberg wins, Vettel & Hamilton retire in Aussie Grand prix opener

Reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel, and Melbourne pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton, failed to finish Sunday's 2014 season opener.
Both men struck trouble right from the start at Albert Park, after a winter of technical struggles up and down the paddock.
"It's a long season," said German Vettel, whose run of victories dating all the way back to last August finally ended, "and there are positives."
The bright side is that Red Bull's 'crisis' appears to be rapidly ending, as teammate Daniel Ricciardo delighted the partisan crowd by finishing second.
Vettel's problems started before qualifying, when his car's fuel flow sensor reportedly alerted the FIA that the Renault engine was using more than the allowed 100kg of fuel per hour.
"The (Renault) software was changed so this no longer occurred," reported Germany's Auto Motor und Sport. "Ricciardo's worked, Vettel's did not."
Ricciardo was delighted.
"Just two or three weeks ago, I would have bet everything I've got that we would not be standing up here," he told 1980 world champion Alan Jones on the podium.
"Full credit to the team for an unbelievable turnaround," the Australian added.
Hamilton, meanwhile, was as glum as Vettel as his otherwise dominant Mercedes struck trouble with an engine misfire.
But "the important thing," the Briton said behind the pit buildings, "is that the car is quick.
"It's early stages and there's a long way to go. There's massive positives to take from the weekend."
Indeed, Hamilton was cheered by the performance of his winning teammate Nico Rosberg, who won easily by almost half a minute.
"What a car you have given me," German Rosberg told his Mercedes crew on the radio, "what a car."
More surprising than Rosberg's victory was the fact that doomsday predictions of cars failing left, right and centre did not materialise, as 14 cars saw the chequered flag.
"The teams are learning so much so quickly," said former F1 driver David Coulthard on British television BBC.
"The ones who have managed the new technology best were Mercedes," he added.
Rosberg, however, warned that the arms race is definitely now on.
"We can improve and we must improve," he said. "The other teams will not go to sleep so we have to make sure we are ready for Malaysia."










 2014 Australian Grand Prix result
Pos
Driver
Team
Time/Retired
Pts
1
Nico Rosberg
Mercedes
1:32:58.710
25
2
Daniel Ricciardo
Red Bull Racing-Renault
+24.5 secs
18
3
Kevin Magnussen
McLaren-Mercedes
+26.7 secs
15
4
Jenson Button
McLaren-Mercedes
+30.0 secs
12
5
Fernando Alonso
Ferrari
+35.2 secs
10
6
Valtteri Bottas
Williams-Mercedes
+47.6 secs
8
7
Nico Hulkenberg
Force India-Mercedes
+50.7 secs
6
8
Kimi Räikkönen
Ferrari
+57.6 secs
4
9
Jean-Eric Vergne
STR-Renault
+60.4 secs
2
10
Daniil Kvyat
STR-Renault
+63.5 secs
1
11
Sergio Perez
Force India-Mercedes
+85.9 secs

12
Adrian Sutil
Sauber-Ferrari
+1 Lap

13
Esteban Gutierrez
Sauber-Ferrari
+1 Lap

14
Max Chilton
Marussia-Ferrari
+2 Laps

Ret
Jules Bianchi
Marussia-Ferrari
+8 Laps

Ret
Romain Grosjean
Lotus-Renault
+14 Laps

Ret
Pastor Maldonado
Lotus-Renault
+28 Laps

Ret
Marcus Ericsson
Caterham-Renault
+30 Laps

Ret
Sebastian Vettel
Red Bull Racing-Renault
+54 Laps

Ret
Lewis Hamilton
Mercedes
Engine

Ret
Felipe Massa
Williams-Mercedes
Accident

Ret
Kamui Kobayashi
Caterham-Renault
Accident

No comments :

Post a Comment

Leave a comment: