Vettel wins in Japan; closes in on championship

style="float: right; margin-bottom: 10px; font-weight: 600;"Tue 6th Nov, 2012

After starting the season below par following two previous world titles, Sebastian Vettel proved that with only five races to go in the Formula One World Championship, he  could become the first driver to win two races in a row this season. The German won the Japanese Grand Prix Sunday at Suzuka easily, by over 20 seconds ahead of Felipe Massa. Kamui Kobyaschi narrowly took third in front of his home crowd over Jenson Button. The win now puts Vettel within four points of Fernando Alonso in the championship.
Much of the excitement in the race took place at the first turn when Alonso was struck in the rear left tire by Kimi Raikkonen's front wing. The impact flattened the Ferrari driver's tyre and spun the car into the dirt, stalling the engine. Up the road, Romain Grosjean struck the back left tyre of Mark Webber, and spun the Australian around, although Webber's tyres were not affected. The incident gave Grosjean a stop and go penalty later on from which the Frenchman would never recover. With one lap to go, Grosjean retired his Lotus from the race. During this melee, Bruno Senna and Nico Rosberg also were involved in the accident, with Rosberg being forced to retirie from the race and Senna being penalised with a drive through infraction.

The incident caused the saftey car to bebrought out for two laps. When the race resumed, Vettel hit the throttle, taking the lead and increasing his time to over 11 seconds on lap 18 over Massa and moving further ahead by 15 seconds on lap 33. Vettel even endured his final pit stop with a time of 2.6 seconds to remain in the lead for the rest of the race.
"It's been a fantastic weekend." Commented Vettel. "Yesterday's qualifying was perfect and today again, the balance of the car was amazing. We didn't change too much at the stops; it just seemed to work fantastically well. I'm very happy, the guys have been pushing very hard and even though we didn't have major upgrades here, it still seemed to come together and the balance was there - and that's what made the difference today. It's a shame for Alonso, it's not something you hope for and it could happen to us at the next race. We've seen this year there are a lot of up and downs and things change quickly - we have to keep our heads down and take it step by step."

Grand Prix of Japan- Suzuka, Japan- Top 10 final standings

1 Sebastian Vettel (GER) Red Bull Racing
2 Felipe Massa (BRA) Ferrari
3 Kamui Kobyaschi (JPN) Sauber
4 Jenson Button (GBR) McLaren Mercedes
5 Lewis Hamilton (GBR) McLaren Mercedes
6 Kimi Raikkonen (FIN) Lotus Renault
7 Nico Hulkenberg (GER) Force India
8 Pastor Maldanado (VEN) Williams
9 Mark Webber (AUS) Red Bull Racing
10 Daniel Riccardo (AUS) Toro Rosso
World Championship Standings- 1. Alonso- 194 points; 2. Vettel-190; 3. Raikkonen- 157; 4. Hamilton-152; 5. Webber-134; 6. Button-131; 7. Nico Rosberg-93; 8. Grosjean-82; 9. Massa-69; 10. Perez-66.


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