Formula One world champion Sebastian Vettel stamped his authority on a
processional Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday to chalk up his fifth win in
11 races and stretch his overall lead to 46 points. Ferrari's Fernando
Alonso, now his closest rival, finished second — a distant 16.8 seconds
behind the Red Bull driver — after starting ninth.
Vettel seized the lead from Mercedes' pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton
on the Kemmel straight after Eau Rouge and never looked back while
threatened rain held off. The German now has 197 points to Alonso's 151.
"It was a fantastic race for us from start to finish really," he said
after his 31st career win. Britain's Lewis Hamilton, winner of the
previous race in Hungary and on pole for the fourth race in a row, took
third place for Mercedes ahead of team mate Nico Rosberg and moved up to
third overall on 139.
Kimi Raikkonen's run of 27 successive races in the points came to
an end with the first retirement since his comeback last year. The Finn
had started the day second in the championship but fell to fourth
overall with 134 points after pulling into the pits and stopping with
what looked like a brake problem. The race, on one of the fastest and
most challenging circuits on the calendar, was no thriller and the
outcome proved a disappointment for those fans who had hoped to see
Vettel slowed on his march to a fourth successive title.
"Today it was a little bit boring, we get second place but no
threat to Sebastian Vettel and had no threat from behind," said Alonso,
whose team's home Italian Grand Prix is next up. "It is an important
weekend for us and the team and we arrived fully motivated and in Monza
we would like to give some smiles to our fans."
No comments:
Post a Comment