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Chinese Grand Prix 2011

April 20, 2011 By vack

Felipe Massa

By Erik Nielsen
Photos courtesy and copyright Ferrari Media

Eric and Hamilton are back with a vengeance…

Lewis Hamilton was making the rounds late Saturday suggesting that rumors of McLaren’s demise this season where vastly exaggerated.

While it may be true that the Brit did have an outstanding race and the car seems strong, we haven’t even dropped a flag in Europe and it’s way too early for anyone to make Jeremy Clarkson like claims (or babbles, depending on your point of view). What was obvious is that 2011 is turning out to be a wee bit closer in competitiveness than RedBull was hoping for. Sebastian Vettel wasn’t able to add to his win streak and had to settle for second after trying to fend off the silver arrow. Mark Webber rounded out the podium, but the real story there was his drive from 18th after a flubbed qualifying round.

Jenson Button was the best of the rest, but only 10 seconds back at the end, putting numbers up for McLaren that should help out their constructors championship hopes, but with both Red Bulls on the podium, the Woking based team needs to be perfect if they expect to be on top come the end of the season. Nico Rosberg wasn’t that far behind Button in fifth place, but he finished in front of Schumacher, (ja ja, weider) adding further embarrassment to the elder driver only won here in 2006 and finished in eighth this weekend. Let’s just hope for his own records that he’s not shooting for any of those entries in the books that have Louis Chiron’s name on them.

The Ferraris finished in sixth and seventh with Massa ahead of Alonso and the Italian press is up in arms because the season is likely going to be a write off. Montezemolo went on the defensive making claims that the team will start working harder in a shorter timeframe. It wouldn’t look good if the highlights in the yearbook for 2011 show even more coverage on the FF that has received at best a cool response from most owners. It’s not too late to recover, but the Scuderia has dug a pretty deep hole for themselves.

Vitaly Petrov drove his Renault to ninth place, but was more or less a back marker more than half a lap back. Kobayashi-san drove the Sauber to tenth place to round out the points paying positions.

I must make an apology to fans of this column for missing the Malaysian GP (although I’m sure some prefer Pete’s less colorful commentary), but I was in Augusta for the final round of the Masters instead of watching the race. Besides watching Rory McIlroy do is impersonation of my normal golfing strategy of completely falling apart on the back nine, there were two things that really stuck out about how that event is different than F1. First, it is the classic Deep South and the people are genuinely friendly. Even the security guards wished everyone a nice day as they walked by, such a change from the goons that you see wandering around the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve that cause you to wonder if you are visiting an F1 race or seeing a relative on death row. The club wanted to make sure that you were having a good time and it seemed real. The second point was that there wasn’t this ridiculous markup on either the food or the souvenirs that you get at an F1 race. Pimento cheese sandwiches were $1.50. Beer was $3.00 ($3.75 if you wanted an import). F1 still has a lot to learn on keeping the fans happy, and the fraying at the edges of the curtains is becoming obvious, so long as the camera men don’t keep tight shots and you actually get to see that the stands aren’t filled to capacity…

Fernando Alonso

Ferrari 150° Italia

Fernando Alonso

Team photo

Race Results

1 HAMILTON McLaren-Mercedes 1h36m58.226s
2 VETTEL RBR-Renault + 5.1s
3 WEBBER RBR-Renault + 7.5s
4 BUTTON McLaren-Mercedes + 10.0s
5 ROSBERG Mercedes + 13.4s
6 MASSA Ferrari + 15.8s
7 ALONSO Ferrari + 30.6s
8 SCHUMACHER Mercedes + 31.0s
9 PETROV Renault + 57.4s
10 KOBAYASHI Sauber-Ferrari + 63.2s
11 DI RESTA Force India-Mercedes + 68.7s
12 HEIDFELD Renault + 72.7s
13 BARRICHELLO Williams-Cosworth + 90.1s
14 BUEMI STR-Ferrari + 90.6s
15 SUTIL Force India-Mercedes + 1 lap
16 KOVALAINEN Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
17 PEREZ Sauber-Ferrari + 1 lap
18 MALDONADO Williams-Cosworth + 1 lap
19 TRULLI Lotus-Renault + 1 lap
20 D’AMBROSIO Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
21 GLOCK Virgin-Cosworth + 2 laps
22 LIUZZI HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
23 KARTHIKEYAN HRT-Cosworth + 2 laps
24 ALGUERSUARI STR-Ferrari + 45 laps, wheel
Fastest
Lap
WEBBER RBR-Renault 1m38.993s

Driver’s Championship Standings

1 VETTEL RBR-Renault 68 Points
2 HAMILTON McLaren-Mercedes 47 Points
3 BUTTON McLaren-Mercedes 38 Points
4 WEBBER RBR-Renault 37 Points
5 ALONSO Ferrari 26 Points
6 MASSA Ferrari 24 Points
7 PETROV Renault 17 Points
8 HEIDFELD Renault 15 Points
9 ROSBERG Mercedes 10 Points
10 KOBAYASHI Sauber-Ferrari 7 Points
11 SCHUMACHER Mercedes 6 Points
12 BUEMI STR-Ferrari 4 Points
13 SUTIL Force India-Mercedes 2 Points
14 DI RESTA Force India-Mercedes 2 Points

Constructor’s Championship Standings

1 RBR-RENAULT 105 Points
2 McLAREN-MERCEDES 85 Points
3 FERRARI 50 Points
4 RENAULT 32 Points
5 MERCEDES 16 Points
6 SAUBER-FERRARI 7 Points
7 STR-FERRARI 4 Points
8 FORCE INDIA-MERCEDES 4 Points

Tagged With: Chinese grand prix, f1 china, f1 reports, f1 reports china, ferrari f1, formula 1, lewis hamiltion, mclaren f1, vettel

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Gerard Dwyer says

    April 20, 2011 at 6:42 pm

    You didnt mention that both Vettel and Webber ended up in their respective positions due to Red Bull team errors! Webber’s qualifying was an unabashed disaster that should see somebody sacked while Vettel faded due to poor strategy, again beyond the drivers control. Wake up Christian Horner! Webber’s drive was beyond outstanding and proves he has class and maturity way beyond Vettel, who is largely where he is due to team prefernce rather than talent.

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