Tag: Mercedes

  • The team has done a good job, we win and we lose together; I will come back to win the next one: Hamilton

    Monaco, 24 May 2015: Nico Rosberg of Mercedes, who took a surprise win, along with Sebastian Vettel of Ferrari (second) and Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes) at the FIA Press Conference of the Monaco Grand Prix on Sunday. The transcript:

    PODIUM INTERVIEWS (Conducted by Martin Brundle)

    Nico Rosberg (centre) flanked by Vettel (left) and teammate Hamilton at the FIA Sunday press conference after winning the Monaco GP. An FIA image
    Nico Rosberg (centre) flanked by Vettel (left) and teammate Hamilton at the FIA Sunday press conference after winning the Monaco GP. An FIA image

    Nico, congratulations, the first time in your career you’ve won two races on the bounce but more importantly three consecutive races here in Monaco. The last man to do that was the great Ayrton Senna. That was quite a race.

    Nico ROSBERG: Yeah, for sure, very, very happy of course. But I know also that it was just a lot of luck today. Lewis drove brilliantly and he would have also deserved the win for sure. But that’s the way it is in racing and definitely I’m extremely happy and going to make the most of it.

    Yeah, you spent most of your time looking in your rear view mirrors because Sebastian was coming at you and Lewis was down the road. Can you explain to us why your car wasn’t brought in for a pit stop and Lewis’ was under the safety car?

    NR: I have no idea, sorry. As always, we’re in the car and it’s very difficult to judge what decisions are being made and things like that. Of course it was extremely difficult to do the restart with those hard tyres and them being very cold but it worked out and I’m ecstatic.

    Sebastian, well, suddenly you were looking for and fighting for a victory when you had been struggling with Nico for the whole race. You must be pretty satisfied; it was a strong race for you.

    Sebastian VETTEL: Yeah, obviously a bit of a turnaround in the end, which was a bit of a surprise, but we were there in the moment when it mattered obviously we were able just to pip Lewis when we he came out of the pits. I think it was pretty close but I was pretty confident I was ahead. Yeah, I think we tried all race to put pressure on Nico but I think, first of all, he had the speed to respond and second, when we decided to pit we were probably a little bit too far back and the undercut didn’t really work. Nevertheless, P2 is a great result for the team, thanks for the hard work. It’s good to be always there and I think we were a lot closer in the race than in qualifying so hopefully we can keep up this trend.

    And you were saying on the radio ‘look, this is like swimming with weights on my legs and feet’. You were expecting a lot of trouble on the restart with cold tyres?

    SV: It was, it was. The thing is these tyres are not made for cooling down and then going again. I think Nico and myself we both kind of saved the tyre; we knew that it was difficult to catch Lewis and difficult to really attack each other. So I think we didn’t get it all out of the tyre before, which helped at the restart but it was incredibly difficult to warm the tyres up and obviously Lewis behind with a fresh set of supersoft was in much better shape. But I think for all of us it was, you know, like being handicapped for two or three laps. After it was starting to be OK, but Nico drove very well after the restart. No chance for me to stay close, so I had to make sure that I keep the guys behind.

    And the man you had to keep behind was Lewis Hamilton. I’m sure I speak for millions of people when I say I’m sorry for you Lewis, that didn’t work out today.

    Lewis HAMILTON: Yeah, it was not the easiest of races. But, you know, the team has done amazing all year long and we win and we lose together, so I’m just grateful for the job that I did and congratulations to Nico and Sebastian.

    Can you tell us why your car was brought in? You had quite a big gap didn’t you and then the safety car picked you up. Your car was pitted and your team-mate’s wasn’t.

    LH: I’m sure we’ll sit down afterwards and try and think of ways we can improve.

    How bad is it? How bad do you feel now? You’ve lost the Monaco Grand Prix, it has been taken away from you. What’s going through your mind?

    LH: Come back to win the next one.

    Some positive thoughts there from Lewis Hamilton. Finally, back to the man who won the race. You must love safety cars now and that’s helped you in the world championship and very much game on.

    NR: Yeah, but at the same time, you know, I know that I got lucky today. I’ll just enjoy the moment now but I need to work hard because Lewis was a little bit stronger this weekend, so I need to work hard for the next race for sure.

    PRESS CONFERENCE

    Q: Nico, many congratulations, your third consecutive Monaco Grand Prix victory, a feat equalled before by Prost, Senna and Graham Hill, so you join a very elite group in having done that. I guess you take them how they come – but did you discuss a late pitstop behind the Virtual Safety Car that became then, obviously, a Safety Car? And how do you feel for Lewis now?

    NR: For sure that’s the best words to describe it: take it as it comes, y’know? So, just very, very happy to have won the race. On the other side though, of course, Lewis was stronger this weekend. He deserved it for sure and I got lucky in the end there. I don’t even know what happened. But, yeah, ecstatic about that anyways. No, we didn’t discuss pitting in the end. It was quite treacherous out there with those hard tyres because they were really stone cold. They were telling me the temperatures, we’ve never ever had those temperatures before I think in those tyres – but did the best I could and managed to bring them back up and push, so that worked out well in the end.

    Q: Sebastian, a couple of talking points for you really. Obviously you tried the undercut on Nico, it didn’t quite work out. Maybe you could tell us a bit about that. And also, behind the Safety Car you were on the radio saying that, exactly what Nico’s just said, that you were really concerned about how low the tyre temperatures were getting.

    SV: First of all, for the undercut, it was a shame. I had to lap a Manor, I think, and I lost about one second, otherwise I think we would have been closer to Nico. Whether it would have been enough, I don’t know. Probably not. Obviously we were trying everything to jump him but they reacted straight away. My approach to the pitbox, as well, was not spot on, so I lost a bit of time there as well. So, not perfect in terms of lining everything up. And then at the end there, it was quite clear on the radio it was… I mean the rules are the rules but it was ridiculous how slow we were going. Trying to let the lapped cars go. In the end they are, I don’t know, racing nowhere when we restart because they’re just 30 seconds down the road but nowhere near the back of the field. So, I don’t know what’s the point. And then obviously we go so slow the tyres cool down a lot. And for Nico, myself, we were on the harder compound. Extremely difficult to get them up to temperature and it’s just… yeah, you need to understand the tyres are not made for that. That’s why its extremely slippery and obviously I was under huge pressure at the restart. I think Nico was a bit more comfortable with the warm-up but for us it took two, three laps just to bring them up again. It was very much on the limit I would say.

    Q: Lewis, coming to you, obviously we all understand how difficult this must be for you. The crowd clearly sympathised with you, you got a huge cheer when you collected your trophy. Can you just tell us what part, if any, you played in the decision to make that late pitstop and how that unfolded.

    LH: To be honest it happened so fast I don’t really remember but it was a good race up until then and, still, we got good points there.

    Q: Did you think you had it won, obviously, at that point? Did you come into the pits full of confidence that you were doing the right thing at that time?

    LH: As I said, we will probably analyse and try to figure out what we did wrong – but we’ll collectively – together as a team – try to rectify it in the future.

    QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR

    Q: (Ian Parkes – Autosport) Question for Lewis. First of all, can you gives us just some idea as to how you’re feeling right now. Obviously we see you’re very low, very down but just express in your own words how you’re feeling. And, secondly, when that Safety Car situation unfolded, did you not at all question whether to come in or not? Bearing in mind, regardless of the situation with the tyres, track position is ultimately king in Monaco.

    LH: I can’t really express the way I feel at the moment. So I won’t even attempt to. You rely on the team. I saw a screen, it looked like the team was out and I thought that Nico had pitted. Obviously I couldn’t see the guys behind so I thought the guys behind were pitting. The team said to stay out, I said “these tyres are going to drop in temperature,” and what I was assuming was that these guys would be on Options and I was on the harder tyre. So, they said to pit. Without thinking I came in with full confidence that the others had done the same.

    Q: (Barna Zsoldos – Nemzeti Sport) Lewis, after what happened today, will you have 100 per cent confidence in the team’s strategy decisions in the future?

    LH: Yes.

    Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto, Motor und Sport) Lewis, can you imagine that maybe the strange situation of first having a virtual safety car and then all of a sudden a safety car could have added or contributed to the confusion?

    LH: I’ve no idea. I was just driving.

    Q: (Dan Knutson – Auto Action and Speedsport Magazines) Nico and Seb, this has probably happened to you in your past careers as well. Can you remember a time when you had the race won and it all went bad?

    NR: Not now, immediately, no but for sure it is an awful feeling, definitely, but that’s for sure, yeah.

    SV: Well, I think it’s normal that you have ups and downs. Probably the lowest low was in 2010 in Korea when I was in the lead and the engine blew up. Fernando, at the time, the biggest rival, three races to the end of the championship, won the race. That was pretty bad. We didn’t finish at all. I would have been happy at that time to finish third but I think today the circumstances for Lewis were totally different.

    Q: (Livio Oricchio – Globosport.com) Lewis, did you know the gap between you and Nico at that moment?

    LH: Before the safety car came out I knew the gap. It didn’t worry me when we got behind the safety car. I didn’t know once we got behind the safety car.

    Q: (Livio Oricchio – Globosport.com) Sebastian, what did you think when you were climbing up to the Casino and you had Lewis side-by-side with you?

    SV: Well, it was very close. I had something very similar back in 2008 here also, coming out of the pits with Jarno Trulli at the time. I was pretty confident that I was just ahead  – thanks for the design office for the long nose, it helped today. And obviously…  you’re quite emotional, I gestured to Lewis straight away to say I was ahead, you go back, but that’s the heat of the moment. I think we both waited for confirmation who ultimately was ahead. I think at the time we probably both thought we were in front.

    Q: Lewis, do you want to share your side of that story, coming out of the pits side-by-side with Seb after the pit stop?

    LH: I was behind.

    Q: (Ottavio Daviddi – Tuttosport) Sebastian, your race pace today was good, I think. Do you think that the Barcelona problem has been solved or it was due to the particularities of the track here in Monte Carlo?

    SV: Well, I think it’s natural that the gaps are smaller on this track. It’s a shorter track so that’s normal. I think in the race we were a lot closer than yesterday. Obviously there’s a lot of things that we still need to learn and understand. Taking the restart is similar more or less to what caught us out yesterday, so that’s something we need to work on quickly to try and understand, but in the race itself I think for the majority of the race we were on a very good pace. Obviously I knew that it was pointless really to put Nico under pressure too much, because I would just burn my tyres. You don’t know what might be coming at the end, a safety car etc, and at the end there was a safety car. There was a point when I was driving around thinking ‘we can’t be at Monaco without a safety car’ and then I think four or five laps later there was a safety car. Yuh, you obviously have to prepare a bit for the unknown, but I think the pace was good today. I was happy.

    Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto, Motor und Sport) Sebastian, did you discuss with your engineers to go on supersoft for the last few laps when the safety car was out?

    SV: Not for the safety car. Obviously depending on the gaps behind to the car behind, we spoke about some things, some options, should the safety car come at various times but at that time it was clear that we stay out.

    Q: (Ian Parkes – Autosport) Lewis, you’ve suffered loads before, I can think of Monaco and Belgium last year, obviously, to name but two. When you’re involved in situations like this, when you walk away at the end of the Grand Prix, do you still think ‘well, I’ve got a ten point lead, I’ve still got the best car in the field?’ Are they the kind of positives that you have to cling to?

    LH: Sure, yeah. At the moment I can’t really think of anything else at the moment. Yeah, this is a race that has been very special… close to my heart for many years and so it was very important, it was a great feeling leading the race. I had so much pace as I have for many many years, including last year. I could have easily had that gap last year as well. Today, I didn’t really have to push too much, I could have doubled the lead if I needed it so on the one hand it’s a good thing that I had that pace and I’m grateful for that. You live to fight another day.

    Q: (Heikki Kulta- Turun Sanomat) Nico, how does it feel to win two races in a row for the first time in your career?

    NR: It’s not something I think about at all. I’m just thinking about today. I told you the emotions from today and that’s it, sorry, so I don’t think about two races in a row or three times here in Monaco. It’s not something that’s at the top of my mind.

    Q: (Luigi Perna – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Seb, there is a big difference in the performance of the car between qualifying and race; have you had some problems with tyre temperatures and the performance of the tyres in qualifying? In your opinion, is that due to the particular nature of your car or do you just have to adjust something in your set-up to try to improve in the next races?

    SV: Well, first of all, you are making a good point. If I had the answer than I would go down straight away and tell everyone what to do, so obviously it’s something we need to try and understand, whether there is something we can change with the approach we are taking with the set-up or there’s something we need to change with the approach of how the car is made. As I said, obviously there’s a key to understanding it, because some part of the race is decided on Saturday and if we struggle in cooler conditions it can happen once, twice but we need to make sure we get on top of it, so if it keeps happening it’s not an excuse, it’s a mistake and it’s bad for us so we need to work hard and make sure we fix it.

    eom/FIA transcript of the Press Conference

  • Hamilton sets the quickest lap of Free Practice 1: Monaco GP

    Hamilton tops FP1 at Monaco on Thursday. An FIA image
    Hamilton tops FP1 at Monaco on Thursday. An FIA image

    Monaco, 21 May 2015: Lewis Hamilton set the quickest lap of first practice in Monaco as rookie teenager Max Verstappen claimed a surprise second place with the time just under 1500ths of a second off the Mercedes: driver’s time. Third place in the opening session went to Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo.

    Hamilton was the busiest man on track, getting through 49 laps for a best time of 1:18.750, set relatively early in the session, as the initially damp track began to improve. It was Verstappen who most caught the eye though. Despite having no experience of the Monaco circuit the Dutch teenager go to grips with its demands in double quick time and he quickly rose through the order as his confidence grew. A late flying lap of 1:18.899 eventually netted him P2 on the time sheet, just 0.149 adrift of Hamilton’s benchmark.

    The Toro Rosso driver’s late lap put him ahead of Daniel Ricciardo. The Australian driver has targeted Monaco as Red Bull’s best chance of a podium finish this season and as if to prove his credentials Ricciardo set the fastest first sector during the session. In the end his best time was 0.336 down on Hamilton’s.

    Sebastian Vettel was fourth for Ferrari, ending up 0.384s slower than Hamilton, while Carlos Sainz completed a good morning for Toro Rosso by setting the session’s fifth fastest time.

    Pastor Maldonado finished sixth for Lotus, though the Venezuelan’s session wasn’t without incident. He was among a number of drivers forced to use the escape road at Sainte Devote, Maldonado twice overcooking it into turn one. Williams: Valtteri Bottas also made two trips off circuit at the corner.

    Seventh place went to Daniil Kvyat in the second Red Bull, while Kimi Räikkönen was eighth in the second Ferrari.

    Nico Rosberg might have been expected to join Mercedes team-mate Hamilton at the top of the order but the German, who claimed pole and victory in 2013 and last year, hit the barriers at Tabac early in the session and though there appeared to minimal damage he ended the session in ninth place and over a second behind Hamilton.

    Felipe Massa rounded out the top ten for Williams ahead of the McLaren pair of Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button.

    2015 Monaco Grand Prix – Free Practice 1
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:18.750 49
    2 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1:18.899 0.149 42
    3 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull 1:19.086 0.336 27
    4 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:19.134 0.384 31
    5 Carlos Sainz Toro Rosso 1:19.245 0.495 40
    6 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:19.454 0.704 35
    7 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull 1:19.520 0.770 33
    8 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1:19.679 0.929 31
    9 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:19.762 1.012 47
    10 Felipe Massa Williams 1:19.766 1.016 32
    11 Fernando Alonso McLaren 1:19.791 1.041 28
    12 Jenson Button McLaren 1:20.202 1.452 15
    13 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:20.274 1.524 34
    14 Sergio Perez Force India 1:20.619 1.869 35
    15 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:20.784 2.034 34
    16 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1:20.857 2.107 24
    17 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:20.917 2.167 36
    18 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:21.219 2.469 25
    19 Will Stevens Manor 1:23.234 4.484 28
    20 Roberto Merhi Manor 1:23.404 4.654 31

    eom

  • Hamilton claims fourth straight pole; Vettel beats Rosberg to take P2

    Sakhir, 18 April 2015: Lewis Hamilton claimed his fourth straight pole position of the season and his first ever Bahrain Grand Prix pole with a blistering final qualifying laps of the Sakhir Circuit, that saw him beat Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel by 0.411s and more than half a second in front of his Mercedes team-mate Nico RHami p1 Bahrain top3 pic FIA picosberg.

    Q1 got underway in slightly calmer conditions than blustery FP3 and Raikkonen was the first to take to the track, with Bottas joining the fray soon after. The Williams driver quickly took P1 but was then eclipsed by Rosberg, who set a time of 1: 35.657 on the medium tyres.

    The Mercedes man was soon joined in the top five by soft-tyre runners Nico Hulkenberg and Felipe Nasr. However, immediately prior to their runs, the session had its first retirement when Jenson Button pulled over at the side of the track for the third time in four sessions this weekend in Sakhir.

    In the closing stages of the session those in the danger zone were Max Verstappen, Pastor Maldonado and Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi.

    Verstappen found the required pace and scraped into Q2 with a time of 1:35.611. Maldonado, however, failed to make it through, his best lap of 1:35.677 only being good enough for P16.

    Verstappen’s leap to safety also pushed out Daniil Kvyat, with the Russian putting in a disappointing final lap that netted him P17 behind the Lotus driver. Hulkenberg was the last man through to Q2, the Force India driver’s 1:35.653 seeing him safely through with just two hundredths of a second in hand over Maldonado, who was told over team radio that something had “gone wrong with the engine and power delivery.” In FP3 Maldonado had taken a useful seventh with his quali sim, a repeat of the position he filled in the second practice session.

    At the top of the order, Hamilton was quickest, finishing a tenth in front of Bottas. Rosberg was third, though he finished the session close on half a second down on his team-mate.

    Felipe Massa was fourth for Williams, ahead of Raikkonen, Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo and Sebastian Vettel, who completed just three laps in the opening session. All drivers set their best times on the soft tyre.

    In the second session, Rosberg initially set the pace but Hamilton quickly worked his way back to the top of the order, his first run netting a time of 1:32.669. Rosberg was also again eclipsed by Massa who set a time three tenths of a second quicker than Rosberg’s.

    The last to set an opening time were the Ferraris of Raikkonen and Vettel, though both rapidly staked a claim on a Q3 berth with the Finn in P2 and the German in P4.

    Most of the front runners opted to rely on their first run to see them through and in the closing stages those in the drop zone were Hulkenberg, Force India team-mate Sergio Perez, Nasr, Sauber team-mate Ericsson and McLaren’s Fernando Alonso.

    Hulkenberg was the man to make the big move, claiming ninth place in Q2 with a time of 1:34.613. Behind him Toro Rosso’s Carlos Sainz scraped through in P10, six hundredths of a second clear of 11th-placed Sergio Perez. The Mexican was followed by Nasr and Ericsson. Alonso claimed P14, while 15th place went to the unfortunate Verstappen, who early in the session had reported that he was down on power.

    The first runs in Q3 saw Hamilton in charge again, with the champion setting a time of 1:33.552 on used softs to take P1 three tenths of a second ahead of Red Bull’s Ricciardo, who prior to Hamilton’s lap had claimed the fastest S3 time of the session using new soft tyres.

    Rosberg, also on used softs, was third, four thousandths of a second down on the Australian’s time. Hulkenberg, with just one new set of softs at his disposal, opted to sit out the first run.

    In the final runs, Vettel was the first of the likely front-row men across the line and with purple times in S1 and S2, the German set a provisional pole time of 1:32.982. It was a superb lap but Hamilton was already running faster, stealing the S1 purple time from the German.

    Ahead of the champion on track, Rosberg had similarly taken the best S2 time but he could not find more pace and when he crossed the line he slotted into third, four hundredths of a second behind Vettel.

    With Raikkonen already fourth and the Williams cars of Bottas and Massa in fifth and sixth the pole was Hamilton’s to take, and he did so in imperious style, blasting across the line 0.4s ahead of Vettel and, perhaps most significantly more than half a second clear of Rosberg.

    Behind the Williams pair, Ricciardo was seventh for Red Bull ahead of the excellent Hulkenberg. Sainz was similarly effective for Toro Rosso in claiming ninth, while Romain Grosjean took the final top 10 place for Lotus.

    Bahrain Grand Prix – Qualifying
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:33.928 1:32.669 1:32.571 16
    2 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:34.919 1:33.623 1:32.982 12
    3 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:34.398 1:33.878 1:33.129 16
    4 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1:34.568 1:33.540 1:33.227 15
    5 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:34.161 1:33.897 1:33.381 16
    6 Felipe Massa Williams 1:34.488 1:33.551 1:33.744 16
    7 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 1:34.691 1:34.403 1:33.832 15
    8 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:35.653 1:34.613 1:34.450 15
    9 Carlos Sainz Toro Rosso 1:35.371 1:34.641 1:34.462 18
    10 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:35.007 1:34.123 1:34.484 20
    11 Sergio Perez Force India 1:35.451 1:34.704   12
    12 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1:35.310 1:34.737   9
    13 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:35.438 1:35.034   9
    14 Fernando Alonso McLaren 1:35.205 1:35.039   10
    15 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1:35.611 1:35.103   14
    16 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:35.677     7
    17 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull Racing 1:35.800     6
    18 Will Stevens Marussia 1:38.713     6
    19 Roberto Merhi Marussia 1:39.722     6
    – 22 Jenson Button McLaren No time     1

    eom/FIA press release

  • Hami fastest in FP2 despite engine problem; Kimi second in both sessions

    Hamilton of Mercedem AMG Petronas tops FP2 on Friday at Sepang. An FIA image
    Hamilton of Mercedem AMG Petronas tops FP2 on Friday at Sepang. An FIA image

    Lewis Hamilton shrugged off the engine issues that saw him grind to a halt after just four laps in first practice to go quickest in the afternoon session, finishing just under four tenths ahead of Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen, repeated his second place from the morning session.

    After his morning woes Mercedes gout Hamilton back on track 40 minutes into the second session. He jumped to sixth fastest with his first flying lap but more problems struck when he lost telemetry a – problem that had also affected his first outing in the morning session.

    He rejoined the action with 20 minutes left on the clock and soon went fastest with a time of 1:39,790 set on medium tyres.

    That put him ahead of Raikkonen and also Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg, who after leading the morning session dropped back in the afternoon on the medium tyres runs after running quickest early in FP2 on the hard tyres. He finished the session 0.428s behind his team-mate.

    Daniil Kvyat, who had spent the first part of the session garage-bound, impressed with the afternoon’s fourth fastest run but the good feeling at Red Bull resulting from his quali sim was short-lived as the Russian encountered engine problems.

    It was a similarly difficult afternoon for team-mate Daniel Ricciardo who complained of problems with his car and then spent a lengthy period in the garage. He finished the session in 10th place.

    Behind Kvyat came the Williams cars of Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa, with Sebastian Vettel seventh. The Ferrari man was one a number of drivers to be caught out by lack of grip in the extremely hot conditions and he spun on his qualifying simulation. He then chose not to complete another run on the medium tyre and for the rest of the session focused on longer runs.

    Eighth place went Toro Rosso’s Max Verstappen, the Dutch teenager finishing 1.4s behind Hamilton but over a second faster than team-mate Carlos Sainz, who had eclipsed the youngster in the morning session. Ninth ahead of Ricciardo in FP2 was Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson.

    Lotus’ Romain Grosjean reported a power loss during the session and eventually was sidelined 30 minutes before the end of the day’s running. He completed just seven laps.

    Malaysian Grand Prix Free Practice Two
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m39.790s 16
    2 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1m40.163s 0.373s 29
    3 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1m40.218s 0.428s 26
    4 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull 1m40.346s 0.556s 17
    5 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1m40.450s 0.660s 31
    6 Felipe Massa Williams1m40.560s 0.770s 27
    7 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1m40.652s 0.862s 29
    8 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1m41.220s 1.430s 30
    9 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1m41.261s 1.471s 30
    10 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull 1m41.799s 2.009s 8
    11 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1m41.877s 2.087s 15
    12 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1m41.988s 2.198s 30
    13 Sergio Perez Force India 1m42.242s 2.452s 24
    14 Carlos Sainz Toro Rosso 1m42.291s 2.501s 31
    15 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1m42.330s 2.540s 28
    16 Fernando Alonso McLaren 1m42.506s 2.716s 25
    17 Jenson Button McLaren 1m42.637s 2.847s 24
    18 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1m42.948s 3.158s 7
    19 Will Stevens Marussia 1m45.704s 5.914s 12
    20 Roberto Merhi Marussia 1m47.229s 7.4

    eom/FIA press release

     

  • Hamilton takes dominant Melbourne win; Rosberg, Vettel complete podium

    Lewis Hamilton put in a controlled drive to win the opening round of the 2015 Formula One World Championship, finishing just over a second ahead of team-mate Nico Rosberg, who handed Mercedes a dominant first one-two finish of the season.

    Sebastian Vettel finished third, 33 seconds behind the Mercedes drivers, to hand Ferrari its first podium finish since Hungary last year and claimed his first appearance on the podium since Japan 2014.

    Race day began in eventful style, as just an hour before the race Valtteri Bottas was ruled out, the Finn being deemed unfit to race due to a back injury sustained in qualifying. Williams reported that Bottas had suffered has a very small tear in the annular part of a disc in his lower back and FIA official ruled that he should not start.

    The incidents mounted in the build up to the start when the McLaren of Kevin Magnussen and the Red Bull of Daniil Kvyat expired on the way to the grid.

    When the lights went out at the start Hamilton got away best, comfortably holding the lead from Rosberg. Behind them Felipe Massa kept his starting place of third but fourth-on-the-grid Sebastian Vettel tangled with team-mate Kimi Raikkonen resulting in the Finn having to back off. That lift resulted in the Ferrari man being tapped by the hard-charging Felipe Nasr and the Brazilian then connected with the Lotus of Pastor Maldonado. The Venezuelan driver was pitched into the wall and out of the race.

    Maldonado’s team-mate Romain Grosjean soon joined him the garage, the Frenchman pulling into the pits to retire his E23 as the Safety Car led the field around Albert Park. Just 13 cars would resume action.

    When the Safety Car returned to the pits Hamilton again maintained control, quickly building a 2.6s lead over Rosberg. Massa held third ahead of Vettel, while Sauber rookie Felipe Nasr has gained the most following the start, the Brazilian rising from tenth on the grid to fifth. The sole Red Bull of Daniel Ricciardo was sixth ahead of Carlos Sainz, who was in his starting position of seventh. Raikkonen remained in eighth after his bruising start and the final two points positions were filled by Toro Rosso teen Max Verstappen and Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg.

    Raikkonen soon passed Sainz and began to chase down Ricciardo, but the status quo remained until the Finn was the first to make his way to the pit lane for a change of tyres. Raikkonen opted for more soft tyres but a problem with the rear left delayed him significantly. He rejoined in P11.

    Massa was the next to pit, from fourth on lap 21. Unlike Raikkonen, the Williams driver took on medium compound Pirellis. At the front Hamilton was still in control, the Briton now 3.5s ahead of Rosberg, with Vettel still third, a distant 13.5s adrift of his compatriot.

    Daniel Ricciardo pitted from sixth place on lap 23. He too took on medium tyres, as did Vettel when he pitted a lap later. The German’s in-lap and stop were good and Vettel was able to jump past Massa to claim third place.

    Sainz was the next in but his race was severely compromised by a disastrously slow stop owing to a long delay in replacing his left rear tyre. He dropped to 12th place.

    Hamilton finally made his first pit stop on lap 25, taking on medium tyres in a clean visit to the pit lane. Rosberg followed a lap later and he also took the harder compound tyres.

    Verstappen was the last man to visit the pit lane, the Dutch driver taking on soft tyres on lap 32.

    The order at the top after the first round of stops was Hamilton 2.2s ahead of Rosberg, with Vettel third, 13.9s behind the second Mercedes. Massa was third but being hotly pursued by the flying Raikkonen who was running almost seventh tenths of a second quicker than the Williams ahead.

    Nasr, meanwhile, had dropped to sixth, with Ricciardo seventh, ahead of Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg. Verstappen rejoined in ninth place but was soon out of the race, an engine failure almost immediately after his pit stop ending his debut race. His car’s demise put Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson into ninth and Perez into the points.

    Raikkonen made his second stop on lap 40, taking on a final set of medium tyres after his two soft-tyre stints but the Finn was quickly out of the race after a second error with the rear left that meant he had to pull over and retire from the race.

    The Finn’s retirement meant that Hamilton now led by 2.3s from Rosberg, with Vettel third, 2.9s ahead of Massa. Nasr was fifth ahead of Ricciardo, with Hulkenberg now seventh. The final points positions were taken by Sainz, Ericsson and Perez.

    And at the front that was how the order stayed. Rosberg kept Hamilton honest, pushing to the last to finish just over a second behind the world champion, who took his 34th career win.

    With Vettel third, Massa took fourth ahead of compatriot Nasr, while Ricciardo salvaged some pride for Red Bull Racing with sixth place ahead of Hulkenberg.

    Sainz tried to cling on to eighth place but his tyres were deteriorating quickly and on lap 56 he was passed by Ericsson. Perez took the final point on offer, while Jenson Button, the last finisher, completed a race distance for Honda-powered McLaren in 11th place.

    Hamilton on top to greet fans after winning season opener in Melbourne on Sunday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image
    Hamilton on top to greet fans after winning season opener in Melbourne on Sunday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image
  • Lewis Hamilton claims pole as season opens in Melbourne

    Hamilton took pole in the season opener at Melbourne on Saturday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image
    Hamilton took pole in the season opener at Melbourne on Saturday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image

    Melbourne, 14 March 2015: Lewis Hamilton claimed his first pole position of the 2015 season with a blistering lap of Melbourne’s Albert Park that put him more than half a second clear of closest rival, team-mate Nico Rosberg. Third place went to Williams’ Felipe Massa.

    The first period of qualifying saw Hamilton finish at the top of the pile with a lap of 1:28.586, three tenths clear of Rosberg, both having only used the medium tyre.

    Third spot in Q1 went to Massa who claimed the place late in the session with a lap on the soft tyre. Behind him, Max Verstappen was an impressive fourth for Toro Rosso, with Sebastian Vettel fifth. Both he and 10th-placed Ferrari team-mate Kimi Raikkonen had opted for the soft tyre from the start of the session.

    Romain Grosjean made it through to Q2 in eighth place, ahead of Carlos Sainz Jr, Valtteri Bottas and Nico Hulkenberg.

    Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo was comfortably 11th on the soft tyre, with his time set well before the end of the session, but team-mate Daniil Kvyat left it late, the Russian only getting a single timed run in the session after being restricted to the garage for the bulk of the session for repairs to an exhaust fire in FP3. It was enough though to see him through, in 14th place, behind Sergio Perez and Pastor Maldonado.

    With Felipe Nasr scraping through in 15th place, the drivers eliminated were his Sauber team-mate Marcus Ericsson, the twin Honda-powered McLarens of Jenson Button and Kevin Magnussen and the Manor Marussia pairing of Will Stevens and Roberto Merhi, who did not take to the track during the session.

    In Q2 Hamilton led at the end of the first runs, the champion lapping two tenths quicker than Rosberg, with Vettel now third, just over six tenths of a second down on the Mercedes and two tenths clear of team-mate Raikkonen. In danger, from 11th to 14th, were Kvyat, Nasr, Hulenberg, Perez and Maldonado.

    Mercedes opted not to make a second run with their drivers comfortably retaining the top two spots. Vettel held on to third with his lap of 1:28.742, while Bottas slotted into fourth behind the Ferrari driver. Raikkonen made it through in fifth place ahead of Massa and Grosjean. Sainz delivered an impressive lap to claim eighth place, while Daniel Ricciardo could only manage ninth place. The final Q3 place was claimed by Maldonado.

    Out went Sauber’s Nasr and Toro Rosso’s Verstappen. The 17-year-old was set to progress but a big moment in Turn Five spoiled his lap and dropped him to 12th. Also eliminated were Red Bull Racing’s Kvyat, and the Force Indias of Hulkenberg and Perez.

    After the first runs in Q3 Hamilton still held sway with a lap of 1:26.419, ahead of Vettel whose lap of 1:27.757 put him ahead of Felipe Mass and Raikkonen. Rosberg was forced to abandon his lap after he went briefly off track in the final corner. Bottas too abandoned his lap, complaining of a problematic bite point with his brakes.

    But when Rosberg did string together a final run it was no match for that of his imperious team-mate. The German’s only timed run netted a time of 1:26.921, almost four tenths slower than Hamilton’s opening Q3 run, and when the Briton crossed the line moments later the gap widened to almost six tenths.

    Third place went to Massa, who finished almost 1.4s adrift of Hamilton. Sebastian Vettel was fourth, just over three hundredths of a second clear of Raikkonen. They were followed by Bottas, Ricciardo, Sainz, Grosjean and Maldonado.

    Australian Grand Prix Qualifying
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:26.327s –
    2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:26.921s 0.594s
    3 Felipe Massa Williams 1:27.718s 1.391s
    4 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1:27.757s 1.430s
    5 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 1:27.790s 1.463s
    6 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:28.087s 1.760s
    7 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull 1:2;8.329s 2.002s
    8 Carlos Sainz Jr. Toro Rosso 1:28.510s 2.183s
    9 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:28.560s 2.233s
    10 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:29.480s 3.153s
    11 Felipe NasrSauber 1:28.800s –
    12 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1:28.868s –
    13 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull 1:29.070s –
    14 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:29.208s –
    15 Sergio Perez Force India 1:29.209s –
    16 Marcus Ericsson Sauber 1:31.376s –
    17 Jenson Button McLaren 1:31.422s –
    18 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 1:32.037s –

    eom/FIA press release

  • Vettel keeps Ferrari on top on day two in Jerez

    German sets the pace ahead of Sauber’s Felipe Nasr as McLaren and Red Bull Racing struggle.

    Hamilton on Day 2 of Jerez test on Feb 2, Vettel (not in pic) set the fastest time on the day. 2015. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image
    Hamilton on Day 2 of Jerez test on Feb 2, Vettel (not in pic) set the fastest time on the day. 2015. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image

    Jerez (Spain), 2 Feb 2015: Sebastian Vettel kept Ferrari at the top of the timesheets in Jerez today, lowering his day one benchmark by almost two seconds and logging more than 80 laps as Ferrari continued to look strong on day of pre-season testing ahead of the 2015 Formula One campaign.

    Vettel was fast out of the blocks, setting a test best time of 1:21.926 an hour into the session to climb to the top of the top of the timesheet. And there he stayed. The German continued to improve and soon after posted a lap of 1:20.984, which would remain the day’s fastest time.

    Second place on the timesheet went to another Ferrari-powered maching, with new Sauber signing Felipe Nasr getting to within nine tenths of Vettel’s benchmark. The Brazilian driver also competed 88 laps for the Swiss outfit.

    After a slow start to the first morning of testing yesterday Williams were on track early on day two and after posting 73 laps on Sunday afternoon Valtteri Bottas added another 61 to his tally on day two, ending the day with the third fastest time, a lap of 1:22.319.

    On day one of the test Mercedes’ Nico Rosberg reminded rivals of just why Mercedes are still the team to beat by delivering 157 trouble free laps of the Curcuit de Jerez. Lewis Hamilton didn’t get near that total as an afternoon water leak on his car cut short his running, but his 91 laps still represented the day’s largest total. He finished the session in fourth spot with a time of 1:22.490, 1.5s adrift of Vettel’s best time.

    At Toro Rosso, 17-year-old Max Verstappen took from Carlos Sainz Jr at the wheel of the STR10 and Formula One’s youngest driver logged a decent total of 73 laps to finish fifth on the timesheet.

    After missing the first day due to the late arrival of its new car, Lotus completed the build of the E23 overnight and after a cautious start Pastor Maldonado was able to complete 41 laps, the Venezuelan running progressively faster throughout the day. A drive-train issue in the afternoon ending his outing, however.

    He was followed on the timesheet by McLaren’s Jenson Button who matched team-mate Fernando Alonso’s day one total of six laps. With the team still exploring the functionality of its Honda power unit, Button only managed one tikmed lap, some 33 seconds off the pace.

    After a solid start yesterday, Red Bull Racing hit problems early on day two. New recruit Daniil Kvyat suffered a minor off right at the start of the team’s running and damaged the front wing of his RB11. With no replacement wing at the circuit the team was restricted to single-lap untimed runs as they worked through systems checks. Kvyat put in 18 slow laps all day and failed to set a time.

    A late rain shower disrupted the final half an hour of the session and only Verstappen, Vettel, Nasr and Button tested the wet conditions before the session ended.

    Formula One Testing, Jerez – Day Two
    1 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 1m20.984s 88
    2 Felipe Nasr Sauber 1m21.867s 0.883s 89
    3 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1m22.319s 1.335s 61
    4 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1m22.490s 1.506s 91
    5 Max Verstappen Toro Rosso 1m24.167s 3.183s 73
    6 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1m25.802s 4.818s 41
    7 Jenson Button McLaren 1m54.655s 33.671s 6
    8 Daniil Kvyat Red Bull No Time 18

  • New Williams Mercedes FW37 unveiled ahead of Jerez test

    2015 Williams FW37. A Williams Martini Racing image
    2015 Williams FW37. A Williams Martini Racing image

    Jerez (Spain), 1 Feb 2015: The new Williams Mercedes FW37 was unveiled today ahead of the first pre-season test in Jerez, Spain. The F1 grid will once again be adorned with the red and blue stripes that have grown to be so iconic in motorsport as WILLIAMS MARTINI RACING will be looking to build on their successful 2014 campaign where the team achieved nine podium finishes and finished third in the Constructors’ Championship.

    The team showed strong development throughout last season and aim to continue this as the regulations show minimal changes for the new season ahead. There are however a few differences between the FW37 and its predecessor.
    The new rules will see changes to the front nose box and bulkhead of the car, a move away from the rule that saw so many different variations of nose throughout the 2014 season.
    Commenting on the new FW37, Team Principal and Founder, Sir Frank Williams, said: “After such a strong season in 2014 we are looking to continue the move back towards the front of the grid. The move from ninth to third was a tough challenge, but ultimately every step up from now on will be even harder. I am confident that we have the appropriate personnel and talent in this team to make those steps.
    ‘We have an experienced driver line-up, with both drivers finishing on the podium throughout last year and hungry for more success in 2015, new commercial partners to add to the continued support from our already impressive roster, and have a technical team that is amongst the best on the grid.
    “I am looking forward to seeing the car in testing and assessing how other teams have fared over the winter in comparison to us. We should, once again, have a very exciting season ahead of us which will hopefully bring more success to Williams.”
    Felipe Massa added: “The momentum we carry from last year has been very encouraging, the team has changed so much from 12 months ago and it is clear to see everyone is heading in a good direction. The development rate of the FW36 was one of the most exciting elements to the car, the team worked exceptionally hard throughout the year to make sure that we had a faster car at each race, and I look forward to a similarly impressive car this year. I am excited to be continuing to work with Valtteri, a driver with so much talent who has so much to offer both the team and me as his teammate.”
    Valtteri Bottas: “Coming into a season after third position in the Constructors’ Championship carries the weight of a lot of expectation. Other teams and our fans are expecting a performance like last year, and all the personnel at Williams have been working tirelessly to make sure this is not only achievable but the benchmark for improvement. For much of last year we had the second fastest car, and this year we plan to take every opportunity to challenge at the front. After my first podium in 2014 I hope to continue developing as a driver as I aim for my first win. I look forward to working closely with Felipe again this year as we strengthen our relationship to extract the most from the car.”
    Claire Williams, Deputy Team Principal, concluded: “The team learnt and developed a lot in 2014 and this has made us a better team and well prepared for the challenges that face us as we head into a new season. We are all eager to see where we are in comparison to our rivals. We have worked hard over the past six months to get this car ready, but it is in no way the final product, we have a lot of work to do throughout the season as we push for constant improvements in performance. I am incredibly confident in the team around me and the line-up we have that 2015 can make it another successful and exciting year for Williams Martini Racing, and now can’t wait to get back on track.”
    The launch marks the start of the 2015 season for Williams Martini Racing as a four-day test in Jerez gets underway before moving to Barcelona for a further eight days of testing. The season officially gets under way at the first race in Melbourne, Australia, on 15 March.
    -ends-
  • Mercedes AMG Petronas completes first day of running 2015 F1 Wo6 hybrid car

    Silverstone,

    Mercedes AMG Petronas image of F1 W06 at Silverstone on Thursday 29Jan2015.
    Mercedes AMG Petronas image of F1 W06 at Silverstone on Thursday 29Jan2015.

    29 Jan 2015: MERCEDES AMG PETRONAS today completed a first day of running with its 2015 specification Formula One car during a Promotional Event at Silverstone. 

    The F1 W06 Hybrid, powered by the PU106B Hybrid Power Unit, first departed the garage at 13:13 this afternoon in icy conditions at the Northamptonshire circuit.

    Driven first by Nico Rosberg, then Lewis Hamilton, the car completed a total of 18 laps (47.2 km) before a blizzard brought filming to a halt.

    The team will now ready the F1 W06 Hybrid for its public track debut in Jerez on Sunday 1 February.

    eom/Mercedes AMG Petronas release

  • Hamilton wins in Abu Dhabi to take 2014 F1 World Drivers’ title

    Lewis Hamilton took his second Formula One world title with victory at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, as championship rival Nico Rosberg’s challenge was ended by technical problems that wrecked the German’s race.

    Hamilton made the better getaway at the start of the race to take the lead but across the opening stint Rosberg kept in touch with the title-leading Briton.

    However, on lap 25 Rosberg began to slow and reported that his car was down on power. Mercedes told the German it had suffered an ERS failure, and lascking horsepower and hampered by brake and throttle problems the German’s challenge fizzled out and he eventually limped home in 14th place.

    Hamilton, though, was imperious, fending off a late surge from Williams’ Felipe Massa, who took in a late set of supersoft tyres to close to within three seconds of the Englishman.

    Hamilton defended hard and crossed the line in front, to take his 11th victory of the year and his second championship title. Massa took second place ahead of team-mate Valtteri Bottas, with Daniel Ricciardo fourth after the Australian had started from the pit lane.

    At the start, Hamilton made a superb getaway to leave Rosberg standing. Behind them, Bottas had a bad getaway and by the end of the first lap had dropped from third to eighth.

    Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kyvat also has a bad start and dropped from fifth to seventh. Jenson Button took advantage of that and moved up from sixth to fourth behind Massa. Button was followed by the Ferraris of Kimi Raikkonen and Fernando Alonso.

    At the end of the first lap Hamilton was one second ahead of his title rival and by the time DRS use was permitted he had widened the gap beyond its use to 1.2s.

    Further back, Alonso and Kvyat passed Raikkonen and the Spaniard immediately got on the radio to inform is team he would pit to shed his starting supersofts. That triggered a round of stops as a number of option tyre starters, including Button, Kvyat and Raikkonen, headed for pit lane.

    Hamilton, though, stayed out until lap 10, taking on soft tyres, and he was told to enrich his fuel mixture to up his pace as Rosberg tried to push to close up during the title leader’s stop. Rosberg’s in-lap wasn’t good enough to make an impact and after a 2.6s stop he rejoined just behind the Briton.

    On lap 15 the first of the soft tyre starters began to pit, with Jean-Eric Vergne heading in after being passed for sixth place by Daniel Ricciardo, who had also started on softs and risen to the position after starting from pit lane, to where both Red Bull cars had been sent following exclusion from the qualifying result due to an illegal front wing.

    Kvyat became the first runner to retire, the Russian taking an escape road and stopping his Toro Rosso on lap 16.

    Still out on track on lap 18 on the soft tyres were Ricciardo – now in P4 behind Hamilton, Rosberg and Massa – McLaren’s Kevin Magnussen in P5 and Vettel in P6. They were followed by Button, Alonso and the top 10 order was rounded out by Raikkonen.

    Vettel and Magnussen made their first stops on lap 21, with the Dane taking on supersofts and Vettel opting for more softs. Vettel’s stop wasn’t a good one, however and his 4.3 seconds in front of the Red Bull garage saw him rejoin in P15 and now two seconds down on Magnussen. That left Ricciardo, in fourth, as the last man out on track not to have made a pit stop, with the Australian having completed 23 laps on his starting softs.

    But there was a limit to attempt to eke out life from his tyres, however, and on lap 24 he was passed by Bottas.

    Ahead, Nico Rosberg was suddenly in trouble, however. On lap 25 he reported that he was losing engine power. The Mercedes pit wall quickly informed him that his ERS system had failed and with the German massively down on horsepower and running slowly, the title battle was effectively ended.

    His lap 25 time was a 1:51.791 compared with Hamilton’s 1:47.963 and within a lap the German was under pressure from Massa. The Brazilian swept past the Mercedes man on lap 27.

    Ricciardo finally headed to the pit lane on lap 27 and he took on another set of softs. Meanwhile, Raikkonen was the first to make a second scheduled stop and he was followed by Button, from P5.

    At the front, Hamilton’s pace also began to drop and Massa closed to within nine seconds of the leader. It was straightforward race management, however, and the Briton was told that if he needed to turn the car back up again he was free to do so.

    The race leader made his second stop on lap 31 and when he rejoined he was marginally behind Rosberg. The severity of the troubles afflicting the German’s car was underlined when Hamilton swept past, with Rosberg still needing to make his second stop. It was further emphasised when Bottas eased past the wounded Mercedes on lap 33 to demote Rosberg to fourth.

    Rosberg made his second stop a lap later and when he emerged he found himself embroiled in a battle for P6 with Nico Hulkenberg.

    Hamilton returned to lead of the race when Massa pitted on lap 44, taking on supersoft tyres. The stop left Massa 10.8s behind the champion elect and a lap later he closed by half a second. On the following lap the Williams man took a whole second out of Hamilton’s advantage and a race to the flag looked on.

    Behind them Ricciardo made his final stop, taking on the supersoft tyres he had not yet used. He rejoined in fourth place, behind Bottas who was racing on an older, final set of soft tyres. With the gap to the Finn at 20s, however, the task of reeling in the Williams in the final laps was impossible.

    The order on lap 50 of the 55-lap race was Hamilton, with Massa now just six seconds behind. Bottas was third ahead of Ricciardo, with Button fourth. Hulkenberg was sixth ahead of a forlorn Nico Rosberg.

    In the end Rosberg slipped back to 14th and was offered the chance to retire the car by his team. The German, though, bravely insisted that he would like race to end.

    Ahead, Massa’s bid to overhaul Hamilton almost worked, with the Brazilian getting to within three seconds of the Mercedes man. Hamilton, though, wouldn’t be denied and he crossed the line 2.5s ahead of the Williams to take his second title.

    Massa was a worthy second, with team-mate Bottas third. Ricciardo finished an excellent fourth place, after starting from the pit lane, with Button fifth. Hulkenberg ended his season with sixth place at the Yas Marina Circuit, finished ahead of team-mate Sergio Perez. Vettel was ninth in his final race for Red Bull Racing and the final points position was filled by Fernando Alonso.

    2014 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix – Race 
    1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 55 Winner 2 50
    2 Felipe Massa Williams 55 +2.5 secs 4 36
    3 Valtteri Bottas Williams 55 +28.8 secs 3 30
    4 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 55 +37.2 secs 20 24
    5 Jenson Button McLaren 55 +60.3 secs 6 20
    6 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 55 +62.1 secs 12 16
    7 Sergio Perez Force India 55 +71.0 secs 11 12
    8 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 55 +72.0 secs 19 8
    9 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 55 +85.8 secs 8 4
    10 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 55 +87.8 secs 7 2
    11 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 55 +90.3 secs 9
    12 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 55 +91.9 secs 10
    13 Romain Grosjean Lotus 54 +1 Lap 18
    14 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 54 +1 Lap 1
    15 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 54 +1 Lap 14
    16 Adrian Sutil Sauber 54 +1 Lap 13
    17 Will Stevens Caterham 54 +1 Lap 17
    Ret Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 42 +13 Laps 16
    Ret Pastor Maldonado Lotus 26 +29 Laps 15
    Ret Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 14 +41 Laps 5

    eom/FIA press release

    Hamilton 2014 World Drivers' champion. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image
    Hamilton 2014 World Drivers’ champion. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image