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Tag: Mercedes
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Sending Formula One into Hybrid-Drive!
The technical revolution of 2014 can be expressed in one simple phrase: the engine is no more, long live the Power Unit! This change in terminology reflects the fact that the new powertrain is far more than simply an Internal Combustion Engine. Where the previous V8 format utilised a KERS hybrid system which was effectively ‘bolted on’ to a pre-existing engine configuration, the Mercedes-Benz PU106A Hybrid has been designed from the outset with Hybrid systems integral to its operation.
In recognition of the importance of this new philosophy to both Formula One and Mercedes-Benz, from the 2014 Spanish Grand Prix onwards the team’s F1 W05 racing car will be rechristened as the “F1 W05 Hybrid” and will carry the Hybrid branding featured on series production Mercedes-Benz cars prominently on the engine cover.
“Mercedes-Benz has been at the forefront of automotive innovation since the invention of the first automobile by Gottlieb Daimler,” said Toto Wolff, Head of Mercedes-Benz Motorsport. “This pedigree includes over a century of motorsport involvement, which has provided a testing ground for some of the brand’s most significant breakthroughs.
“What we are seeing in Formula One today is the next generation of innovations that will eventually find their way from the race track to the road. Mercedes-Benz is leading the way in promoting the positive new direction the sport has taken.”
Of course, while the Hybrid systems introduced for 2014 are altogether more far-reaching, the idea of the engine as a standalone source of propulsion in Formula One was consigned to history several years ago through the introduction of KERS Hybrid power in 2009 and from 2011 through 2013.
For Mercedes-Benz, the association between hybrid technology and motorsport stretches back beyond even that: over a century, in fact.
The early experiments of Daimler chief engineer Wilhelm Maybach focused on combining the gasoline engine with alternative drive technologies in the early 1900s, but the company’s first true hybrid was the Mercedes Mixte, employing a serial hybrid drive incorporating a gasoline engine and a dynamo that converted the energy of the engine into electric energy: subsequently supplying power to two wheel hub motors on the rear axle.
To demonstrate its performance, a Mixte race car was developed before the end of 1907, with a 30 / 55 hp engine powering the generator and wheel hub motors that transferred the electric energy to the road. 102 years later, the Mercedes-Benz KERS Hybrid system powered Lewis Hamilton to the first ever Hybrid Formula One victory at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix.
During the early development phases of KERS in 2007, the system weighed in at over 100 kg and worked at a thermal efficiency level of 39%. By the end of the 2012 season the units weighed just 24 kg and were capable of 80% thermal efficiency levels. In other words, Formula One development enabled a twelve-fold increase in power density from KERS systems: the impact of which has filtered down into Hybrid systems used by the everyday motorist.
The perfect example lies in the Mercedes-Benz SLS AMG Coupé Electric Drive: with lessons learned during development of the high-power-density F1 KERS Hybrid flowing directly into the technology at the heart of this ground-breaking vehicle. The battery solution for the all-electric supercar was developed with Mercedes AMG High Performance Powertrains (HPP) in Brixworth, delivered 740 hp, an incredible 1,000 Nm of torque and set a new benchmark for energy density. All of which added up to a 7:56 record lap of the Nürburgring Nordschleife!
This rate of development has historically come as something of a by-product to the ultimate goal of faster lap time. For 2014, however, this has fundamentally changed. “Formula One is the pinnacle of automotive innovation. As such, it has a responsibility to push the boundaries of technology,” explains Toto. “The new regulations not only encourage this innovation but also align the sport with the direction in which the automotive industry is heading. As a works manufacturer team, we are perfectly placed to reap the rewards of aligning our racing activities with the future technology path for series production. Formula One always has been about pure racing – and it still is today. At the same time, we’re now back at the cutting edge of technology and pioneering new solutions. That’s a huge positive step for the sport.”
eom/Mercedes F1 team

Mercedes gets Hybrid branding for F1 car ahead of Spanish GP! A Mercedes AMGA Petronas image release
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The fans have been incredible this week: Lewis Hamilton after his hat-trick

Hamilton with the cup after winning the Chinese GP. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image DRIVERS
1 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
2 – Nico ROSBERG (Mercedes)
3 – Fernando ALONSO (Ferrari)
PODIUM INTERVIEWS
(Conducted by Martin Brundle)
Three consecutive for Lewis Hamilton – how about that? Great stuff, Lewis. That looked, from where we were sitting, incredibly easy. How was it for you?
Lewis HAMILTON: Ni hao. The fans have been incredible this week, so I really felt a lot of energy but I really couldn’t do this without all the hard work from the team, it’s incredible. Honestly, I just can’t believe how amazing the car is, and how hard everyone has worked. The results we’re getting is a real true showing of all the hard work.
Absolutely incredible. You were radioing in and saying ‘my tyres feel good’ and everybody else was screaming to come into the pits. The first stint was just beautiful for you.
LH: Yeah. Surprisingly, again, as I said, after P2 I had to make a lot of changes in anticipation of today, even though yesterday was wet, but it worked perfectly and I was able to look after the tyres. After that I was just really racing myself. I did lose a lot of time after the first stop but still it was great. I am really happy that Nico is up here with us, it’s great points for the team and they really deserve it.
You had one little trip off the circuit, obviously when the front tyres were finally going away. A little fright there for you?
LH: No, no, fortunately there’s lots of run-off area. Basically the left front is the one that’s graining and wearing and I’d gone quite a lot longer than I’d planned and eventually the tyre was dead so I locked it, but it was OK and I recovered.
Nico, you still lead the Formula One World Championship so some consolation in that respect?
Nico ROSBERG: Yeah, definitely. That’s there. I’m not going to use the word still because I plan to keep it that way. Definitely in the lead and that’s good. Especially considering that the whole weekend was really, really bad for me. It went completely wrong in so many different respects. Also, in the race we had no telemetry so there was no communication between the car and the pits, so they had no idea what was going on on track and that’s why the start was also so bad and a lot of things came together. So I’m pleased with second and I just look forward to a normal weekend again in Barcelona, full attack again.
Yeah it was a bad start. Take us through that first corner when you had contact with Valtteri Bottas in the Williams.
NR: It was just very close, there were cars all over the place. Just had a bit of contract there and it was great that my car held on.
Then you had to make your way back through the field. You had a little bit of fun coming through?
NR: It’s really a pleasure to drive this car at the moment. It’s incredible the car that the team has built – fantastic. So thanks to the whole team. And Mercedes. This thing is so quick. It really increases the enjoyment level even further.
Let’s talk to Fernando Alonso, third for Ferrari. I know there are a lot of Ferrari fans out there and of course Fernando Alonso fans. Fernando, you beat the Red Bulls and you’re third only behind the Mercedes Benz cars. You must be really satisfied with that.
Fernando ALONSO: Hello everybody, first of all. It was a good weekend. We did improve the car a little bit compared to the first three races, so we felt more competitive and now in the race being here on the podium is some kind of surprise for us, a nice surprise finally. Happy with a podium finish today. I think I’m third in the Drivers’ Championship behind these two guys. So we didn’t have the start of the season that we would like but at the end of the day we’re still in the fight.
Just briefly you had a big contact with Felipe Massa going into the first corner. You were lucky [there] with no suspension damage.
FA: Yeah, it was a big contact. I asked on the radio ‘can you check the car’, because it felt OK but I don’t know how it looks from the outside, but it was OK and we managed very lucky to finish the race and hopefully next one it will be a clean start.
Lewis, we’re back to tracks you know well, obviously Barcelona, you’ve got some testing coming up. Surely you can’t keep improving this car?
LH: Well, this team is a on a roll that’s for sure. The team have done a great job, as I said. We’re going to keep pushing; we’re going to keep moving forwards. That’s what Mercedes Benz want to do. They want to keep moving forward, developing, hopefully improving the engine, also the car. But as I said, I’m going to be working hard, we’re going to keep working hard because obviously the others are pushing to catch us up. So I hope it continues.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Q: Lewis, congratulations, a three-time winner here. How does that feel?
LH: It feels incredible. I just have to shout out a big thank you, thank you so much to the team, firstly for embracing me into the team last year and for all the hard work and for them continuously pushing forward. I really hope that the guys back at the factory are enjoying this and really have a great week. I’m so, so happy. I had such a great race, really enjoyed it, particularly the last few laps, y’know? Really trying to keep temperature in the tyres, pushing a little bit more, just to keep temperature up and the car was great.
Q: You spoke about the work being done in FP2 and then of course the car was good enough for pole in the wet and then good enough to win in the dry. How perfect was it?
LH: The car was really good. As I said, made lots of changes overnight on Friday night and obviously it was wet for qualifying. So I didn’t get to feel… I didn’t know what it was going to be like today. And really just that hard work sitting down with the engineers, really choosing… we didn’t guess, we really made those steps in anticipation for today and it worked perfectly. I couldn’t really have asked for more.
Q: The only really big surprise I guess was getting the chequered flag a lap early – which could have tripped you up.
LH: That was very strange! I was thinking ‘am I seeing things?’ I looked up, I was coming across the line expecting to do another lap and all of a sudden I looked for a split second and I saw the flag, I lifted for a second and I saw there was no-one on the wall, so then I just kept going. I did lose a second or so. I asked the team, they said no, so I just kept going. Very, very strange. It was good to do another lap.
Q: Nico, you said so many things went wrong. What was your set-up like from Friday FP2 though to the race itself?
NR: It was all OK. Set-up-wise it was a good team effort this weekend. Because it’s a very unique track here with the understeer being the main problem and the front-left tyre, so you really have to change everything, adapt to the needs of the track and we did well as a team. It wasn’t perfect in the race but it was definitely… pretty good.
Q: As you played catch-up from the start you could really see what your strengths were in comparison to other cars.
NR: Yeah, definitely. We have the best car, y’know, and that makes it more enjoyable then to do catch-up, even though of course don’t want to do any catch-up – but I was back there so then catching up was nice with this fast car. It’s a good weapon.
Q: Then we heard you not entirely happy giving a fuel report every lap.
NR: No! My telemetry failed, yeah? So I was completely on my own out there. The team then never… doesn’t see any information from the car, so they have nothing to do. Er… well not… they do have things to do! So I had to do all the things on my own out there and, for example, it was then telling the team what my fuel level is so that they could judge if I was using too much fuel or if I’m safe – and I had to do that in Turn One y’know and Turn One is a difficult corner anyways, so yeah, didn’t enjoy that point.
Q: Fernando, first of all, first podium this year for Ferrari, how satisfying is that?
FA: It is. Obviously we had a difficult start of the season with some lack of performance in the first races and, y’know it’s good to be on the podium here on the fourth race after a not-easy weekend with changeable weather conditions and a difficult race as well, as Nico touched on. I think with the tyres, being a unique track with the front graining that you need to take care, plus some actions because we were not alone on the race. We managed, I think, quite well to get this podium and this is hopefully some boost of the team and some extra motivation y’know, to keep improving and to do even better in the next couple of races.
Q: And again, the set-up from FP2 to the race, how good was that?
FA: I think we make very few changes to be honest, from FP1 to now in the race. We brought some new parts here, a small step that probably we are a little bit more competitive now and we concentrate on Friday testing those parts and not much set-up work to be honest. Yesterday on the wet conditions, now in these days it’s not much to do, wet to dry anyway, so, as I said, the setup, my feeling was quite OK from Friday to now.
Q: The podium here, what can you promise your home fans at the next grand prix at home?
FA: We need to see. We need to remain very calm. It has been a very unique race, we make a step forward. We were ninth and tenth fifteen days ago and that was hard, pain a little bit. So, yeah, we need to remain calm. We are happy, we need to enjoy the result today but still a long way to go and we cannot promise anything for Barcelona. We will give 100 per cent again and we will fight – but in terms of result we need to remain very calm and see how development is these three weeks if we can bring some extra new parts for Barcelona.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Michael Schmidt – Auto, Motor und Sport) Nico, when you said that you had to report your fuel consumption or fuel level to the pit lane every lap, why is that? Wouldn’t it be easier that you saw on the dashboard a plus or minus and then you could drive on your own rather than talking to your pits?
NR: Yeah, you’re right. Just that I didn’t have that function, probably because we don’t really need that normally. It’s fine like that, it’s just reporting once in a while to the paddock. It wasn’t every lap, you know, it was just once in a while so they can put a few dots and see where it’s going. That’s it. So that wasn’t a problem at all, it was just that I didn’t like where I had to do it because it was in turn one and that was not good.
Q: (Flavio Vanetti – Corriere della Sera) Fernando, you said several times that Ferrari needs a global improvement but is there a priority in this situation, to try to get closer to Mercedes?
FA: Well, of course it is a priority, we need to close, we need to catch them as soon as possible before the championship is over, so we need to keep scoring points, as many as we can now that we are not super-competitive, try not to lose too much ground on points in the championship, and if in one race we become as competitive as them, try to catch up in terms of points. At the moment, it seems very far away because they have a big advantage and we need to work really hard if we want to have that possibility. There is nothing really special we can do, just don’t give up; we’re in the fourth race in the championship, there ‘s still a long way go but being super-realistic, knowing that the gap is very very big it’s going to be very tough.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – Universo On Line) Fernando, how can you understand this race? In the last one, you finished a long way behind the Mercedes; this time you were seven seconds behind Nico. Is it the characteristics of the track or the new parts that you brought that has made the car so fast?
FA: I think it was a combination. As I said, we brought new parts that feel a little more competitive – the car feels a little bit faster – we also tested in Bahrain, they felt OK and we confirmed that here. On the other hand, I personally have had an extremely good weekend, probably at the level of 2012 in terms of driving and feeling comfortable with the car, qualifying, Friday, today. In Bahrain, we were one minute behind the leaders, ninth and tenth and today we are on the podium, seven seconds behind Nico as I said, but Kimi’s one minute behind the leaders. I think it’s a combination. Hopefully I can keep going like this. I felt more comfortable with the car and we will not give up.
Q: (Alexander Aucott – China Radio International) Lewis, you mentioned the support of the Chinese fans on the podium. Have you seen an increase in support over the years here and is it something that makes them unique here at Shanghai?
LH: Every year I come here, I feel that the fan base – at least my fan base – feels like it’s growing every year here. Growing up in Stevenage, I never ever thought that I would fly halfway round the world and have so many people who chose to wear my cap, to wear my top, to have my flag and really support me. It’s absolutely phenomenal, and here it’s maybe my second year, I think, that from the moment I’m at the airport – I don’t know how they know I’m there but they know I’m there – it’s almost like they radio to the guys at the hotel
and when I get to the hotel – I don’t know how they know I’m at that hotel – but they’re there every morning, every evening, day and night and that’s why I always say we win and we lose together. This morning and on the way, one of my fans she gave me like a digital photo frame and on it, they did a special video for me from all the fan base here and for me, it’s touched my heart so much so I want to say a big thank you to all of them.Q: (Luis Fernando Ramos – Racing Magazine) Nico, all the other teams have set their sights on the Barcelona race as their best chance to improve their performance with the novelties on their cars, so how confident is Mercedes that the things you’re going to bring to Barcelona will keep the gap or maybe even extend the gap you have to the other teams?
NR: Hopefully, more than all the other teams; we want to go to Barcelona with the biggest step, that’s our ambition. Barcelona is a chance for us to extend the advantage that we have and that’s the approach that we have going to Barcelona, 100 percen
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Hamilton masters wet qualifying for third pole position of the season
Shanghai, 19 April 2014: Lewis Hamilton marched to a dominant Chinese

Hamilton tops wet qualifying for his third pole this year. A Mercedes AMG Petronas image Grand Prix pole position at a rain-soaked the Shanghai International Circuit, finishing six tenths clear of Daniel Ricciardo of Red Bull Racing, who in turn beat third-placed team-mate Sebastian Vettel by half a second.
“It was so slippery out there, trying to find the grip, obviously not making mistakes on your lap, and really putting it together, especially when you have these guys [Red Bull] pushing you,” he said of third pole position of the season so far. “It was a tough session. I really enjoyed it. The car was feeling great. It’s a good position for the race and I hope we can follow through tomorrow.”
Ricciardo edged closest to the Briton in the final moments of the session but the Australian admitted afterwards that he had not got the best out of the session.
“To be honest, I struggled a bit throughout the session, at least personally I didn’t feel like I was getting on top of the conditions,” he said. “But then the last set of inters, right at the end of Q3, we managed to get a bit more out of it and I put a good lap together, so pretty pleased to be on the front row. A good day.”
Vettel, meanwhile, finished just under five tenths behind Ricciardo and admitted that the Australian’s better record in qualifying so far was far from pleasing.
“Daniel is doing a very good job, he has not just had one good weekend, he had good weekends and so far he seems to be able to get the maximum out of the car,” said the defending champion. “On my side, maybe I’m struggling a little bit more, but at the end of the day we have the same car – there’s nothing between cars, so if he manages to beat me, then he beats me on the circuit, fair and square. Of course, that’s not to my liking but equally, I know that I have to do a little bit better.”
Steady rain at the start of the first made wet Pirellis the tyre of choice but as the 18-minute segment reached its final minutes a number of drivers gambled on a switch to intermediate rubber and as the Sauber drivers began to put in good sector times it looked the right move for those who might otherwise be bounced out in Q1.
Toro Rosso’s Jean-Eric Vergne made himself safe by jumping to ninth place (which was eventually good enough for 11th) but Sauber’s Esteban Gutierrez was the man caught out, the Mexican failing to improve enough. He was pushed to 17th and out of the session by Lotus’ Romain Grosjean. Behind Gutierrez, the Caterhams of Kamui Kobayashi (P18) and Marcus Ericsson (P20) and the Marussias of Jules Bianchi (P19) and Max Chilton (P21) were also eliminated. Pastor Maldonado, meanwhile, had already bowed out, Lotus unable to ready his car following the problems that caused him to stop on track during the morning’s final practice session.
Intermediates remained the tyre of choice in Q2 too, with all 16 remaining drivers opting for the green-banded Pirellis. The top of the table took on a familiar look as the Mercedes cars of Hamilton and Rosberg occupied first and third places respectively with the Red Bull of Sebastian Vettel and Daniel Ricciardo second and fourth. Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso also looked solid, the Spaniard eventually taking fifth spot. Behind that quintet the battle for the remaining top 10 places was a fluid affair, largely dependent on the shifting conditions. Late in the segment, Vergne jumped to seventh spot with a good lap but he was the last driver to make a significant improvement and as the rain briefly intensified in the final minute, other failed to make a similar leap.
It meant that Nico Hulkenberg’s earlier lap of 1:58.847 was good enough to see him through in 10th spot, ahead of Felipe Massa, Vergne and the impressive looking Grosjean. However, out went the second Ferrari of Kimi Raikonen (P11), the McLarens of Jenson Button (P12) and Kevin Magnussen (P15), the Toros Rosso of Daniil Kvyat in 13th place and, suprisingly perhaps, the Force Indias of Adrian Sutil (P14) and Sergio Perez (P16).
The left the battle for pole and once again Hamilton was untouchable. The Mercedes driver posted a lap of 1:54.348 with his first run to take provisional pole, with Rosberg slotting into second spot ahead of the Red Bulls. Rosberg then attempted to put pressure on his team-mate but a brief lock-up put paid to that ambition. Ricciardo jumped into P2 with the first lap of his final run but Hamilton’s time of 1:53.864 was untouchable and the Briton claimed his third pole of the season.
2014 Chinese Grand Prix – Qualifying Result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:53.860 21
2 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing-Renault 1:54.455 23
3 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing-Renault 1:54.960 23
4 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:55.143 22
5 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:55.637 21
6 Felipe Massa Williams-Mercedes 1:56.147 24
7 Valtteri Bottas Williams-Mercedes 1:56.282 24
8 Nico Hulkenberg Force India-Mercedes 1:56.366 23
9 Jean-Eric Vergne STR-Renault 1:56.773 23
10 Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 1:57.079 2211 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 1:56.860 17
12 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:56.963 17
13 Daniil Kvyat STR-Renault 1:57.289 18
14 Adrian Sutil Sauber-Ferrari 1:57.393 17
15 Kevin Magnussen McLaren-Mercedes 1:57.675 17
16 Sergio Perez Force India-Mercedes 1:58.264 1717 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 1:58.988 10
18 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham-Renault 1:59.260 10
19 Jules Bianchi Marussia-Ferrari 1:59.326 10
20 Marcus Ericsson Caterham-Renault 2:00.646 10
21 Max Chilton Marussia-Ferrari 2:00.865 10
DNQ Pastor Maldonado Lotus-Renault No time 0eom/FIA release
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Hamilton overcomes morning issues to top afternoon timesheet
Shanghai, 18 April 2014: Mercedes driver overcomes morning issues to top afternoon timesheet ahead of Fernando Alonso in the Free Practice 2 at here on Good Friday.

Hamilton tops timesheet in FP2 at Shanghai on Friday. An Mercedes AMG Petronas image Lewis Hamilton set the fastest time of Friday’s second practice session ahead of the Chinese Grand Prix, finishing a tenth ahead of Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, despite the Briton complaining at the end of the session that “something’s not right with this car”.
In the morning session Hamilton had been hampered by rear suspension problems and work to fix the issues restricted the Mercedes driver to his garage for the first half hour of the afternoon spell. Once on track, however, Hamilton, using the soft tyres, eclipsed Fernando Alonso with a first run lap of 1:38.315 to claim top spot.
“It was quite a difficult day today as we missed some of this morning’s session which put us on the back foot slightly, but we were glad to get some laps in the second session at least,” said Hamilton. “We’re not too happy with the balance of the car at the moment, so we need to go and work on that. This circuit is particularly hard on tyres, as it has been every year, so we need to be prepared for that. A few of the other teams look to have improved in terms of pace, which is great as it means we will have a fight.”
Whether the fight will come from Ferrari remains to be seen. Alonso’s times were certainly impressive given where the team was a fortnight ago, but they carried with them a hint of showboating, with the team’s new boss Marco Mattiacci present for the sessions. Alonso, though, professed himself happy with his day’s work.
“We have brought some small updates here, which we already tried at the Bahrain test,” he said. “Everything worked well and that’s good news. Leaving aside the performance of the others, I am happy with what we have done today. At every race, all the teams bring something new and we must try and make an additional step forward if we want to be competitive.
“This track is particularly tough on tyres, with the Softs especially suffering from graining over a long run, so it will be important to work out the tyre plan for Sunday,” he added. “If it rains tomorrow, we will definitely have less information for the race and we will have to rely on guesswork. Let’s hope we make the right choices.”
Nico Rosberg was third for Mercedes with a time of 1:38.726, four tenths of a second behind his team-mate, while Daniel Ricciardo took third spot ahead of team-mate Sebastian Vettel, the Australian finishing two tenths clear of the world champion.
Behind the Red Bulls, Felipe Massa was sixth for Willams, with the second Ferrari of Kimi Raikkonen seventh. McLaren’s Jenson Button was eighth, ahead of Romain Grosjean in a much-improved looking Lotus. Tenth place went to Toro Rosso rookie Daniil Kvyat who finished a tenth ahead of 13th-placed team-mate Jean-Eric Vergne.
2014 Chinese Grand Prix – Free Practice 2 Times
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:38.315 25
2 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:38.456 0.141 28
3 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:38.726 0.411 30
4 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 1:38.811 0.496 30
5 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 1:39.015 0.700 31
6 Felipe Massa Williams 1:39.118 0.803 25
7 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 1:39.283 0.968 25
8 Jenson Button McLaren 1:39.491 1.176 29
9 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:39.537 1.222 36
10 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:39.648 1.333 26
11 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:39.736 1.421 30
12 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 1:39.744 1.429 29
13 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 1:39.759 1.444 28
14 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:39.830 1.515 25
15 Sergio Perez Force India 1:40.124 1.809 32
16 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 1:40.359 2.044 32
17 Adrian Sutil Sauber 1:40.395 2.080 30
18 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:40.455 2.140 12
19 Jules Bianchi Marussia 1:42.327 4.012 27
20 Max Chilton Marussia 1:43.473 5.158 30
21 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 1:43.530 5.215 32
22 Marcus Ericsson Caterham 1:43.679 5.364 32eom/FIA release
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Hamilton sets fastest time on new Pirelli experimental tyre
Sakhir, 9 April 2014:Pirelli has completed the first in-season test using the current 2014 cars: an innovation for this year designed to help the Italian tyre-maker develop suitable tyres for the latest-generation Formula One cars.
A total of eight new constructions and six new compounds were tested during the two days: split between Caterham on Tuesday then Mercedes and Williams on Wednesday.

Hamilton fastest on Second Day of testing in Bahrain on 9 April 2014. A Pirelli image Only one variable was tested at a time, so if a new compound was being tested, then the construction would be the current one (and vice versa). The teams alternated prototype runs with baseline runs on the existing tyres, for comparison purposes.
The 250 experimental tyres brought to Bahrain, distinguished by being free from any colour stripes on the sidewall, were exclusively designed with 2015 in mind. Over the course of the two days, Pirelli completed a total of 110 laps and around 595 kilometres with experimental tyres, in ambient and track temperatures that were a lot hotter than those of the grand prix weekend.
Pirelli’s motorsport director Paul Hembery said: “The opportunity to test with the current cars is something that we have always wished for and it was vital to have this written into the regulations this year. We made useful progress throughout both days of the prototype tyre test, trying out a number of solutions with 2015 in mind, in demanding conditions. Having accumulated this valuable data over two days, we will now analyse it carefully to assess the best development direction for the next in-season test in Barcelona, where we expect to see further evolutions in car performance.”
Testing facts:
The maximum temperature reached was 35 degrees ambient and 44 degrees on track at 2pm on Wednesday.
The fastest time set throughout the two days of the test was a 1m34.136s benchmark from Hamilton on Wednesday morning, on an experimental tyre.
As well as the running on experimental tyres, the teams that were not testing specifically for Pirelli ran with the current tyres. Teams are allowed an overall maximum total of 135 sets of tyres for testing this year, including the in-season tests.
Caterham ran a total of 64 laps with Robin Frijns on Tuesday before a hydraulic problem curtailed running in the afternoon. Frijns tested one new construction and two new compounds.
On Wednesday Mercedes ran a total of 120 laps with Lewis Hamilton, testing three new constructions and three new compounds. Williams ran a total of 64 laps with Felipe Nasr, testing two new constructions and one new compound. The team stopped in the afternoon with a technical issue.
The next in-season test will take place after the Spanish Grand Prix. Sauber and Toro Rosso will test for Pirelli on the opening day, followed by Force India and McLaren on day two. The final tyre test will be held at Silverstone, after the British Grand Prix. Ferrari and Lotus will drive on the opening day, followed by Red Bull and Marussia on day two.
Testing times:
Day 1
Rosberg Mercedes 1m35.697s Soft Hulkenberg Force India 1m36.064s Soft Alonso Ferrari 1m36.626s Medium Magnussen McLaren 1m36.634s Soft Bottas Williams 1m37.305s Soft Chilton Marussia 1m37.678s Supersoft Ricciardo Red Bull 1m38.326s Soft Sirotkin Sauber 1m39.023s Soft Frijns Caterham 1m40.027s Experimental Maldonado Lotus 1m40.183s Soft Kvyat Toro Rosso 1m40.452s Soft Day 2
Hamilton Mercedes 1m34.136s Experimental Vergne Toro Rosso 1m35.557s Supersoft Magnussen McLaren 1m36.203s Soft Perez Force India 1m36.586s Soft Ricciardo Red Bull 1m37.310s Soft Bianchi Marussia 1m37.316s Supersoft Van der Garde Sauber 1m37.623s Soft Alonso Ferrari 1m37.912s Medium Ericsson Caterham 1m39.263s Soft Nasr Williams 1m39.879s Experimental Grosjean Lotus 1m43.732s Soft -
Hamilton, Rosberg finish 1-2 again; Perez on podium for Force India
Bahrain, 6 April 2014: Mercedes AMG Petronas team once again won the first two positions, with Lewis Hamilton taking a thrilling Bahrain Grand Prix victory, the Briton finishing just one second ahead of team-mate Nico Rosberg at the end of a race-long battle.
Sahara Force India’s Sergio Perez, meanwhile, scored his first podium finish since the Italian Grand Prix of 2012 ahead of Daniel Ricciardo, who delivered an impressive, aggressive drive for Red Bull Racing after starting 13th. Perez’s third place was Force India’s first podium finish since Giancarlo Fisichella’s second place at the 2009 Belgian Grand
Prix.The battle for the podium places was mirrored right the way down the field, with epic duels occurring throughout the points-scoring positions, with Nico Hulkenberg seeing off the challenge of Sebastian Vettel to take fifth place, a defence that then left the champion, who was without DRS and down on power to fend off a final charge from the Williams cars of Felipe Massa and Valtteri Bottas.
At the race start, Hamilton made the better getaway and passed Rosberg into turn one, the first salvo in a conflict that would develop into a titanic struggle in the closing stages.
Behind them, Bottas made a poor start from third, slipping back to fifth. It was a different story for team-mate Felipe Massa, however. The Brazilian made an excellent start and was soon up to third, ahead of Sergio Perez and Jenson Button.
Kimi Raikkonen, meanwhile, was in trouble. The Finn, who started fifth but lost out to team-mate Fernando Alonso at the start, also tangled with Kevin Magnussen on lap one with the result that both dropped back – Magnussen to 12th and Raikkonen to ninth, just ahead of Sebastian Vettel.
Rosberg’s first attempt to wrestle back control came on laps 17-18 when the German twice went past his team-mate only for Hamilton to find a fight his way back.
The race then ebbed and flowed as the teams’ race strategies unfolded through the opening two stints. Up and down the order positions changed hands with staggering regularity as those on three stops dived for the pits and those on two remained on track. Among them all differing choices of tyres compound for different stints also defined whether drivers were powering through the order or defending stoutly.
And it was a difference of compound that defined the final huge battle between Hamilton and Rosberg.
On lap 41, Sauber’s Esteban Gutierrez was making his way through Turn One when Pastor Maldonado straight-lined the corner and smashed into the Mexican.
Gutierrez’s car was flipped over and off track and the safety car emerged. Both Hamilton and Rosberg arrowed towards the pit lane and took on fresh tyres. The Briton, though, had to take on the prime medium tyres for his final laps while Rosberg, having used the prime in his second stint, had the option of the quicker soft tyre.
With any time advantage Hamilton had built up all but erased, the race was now a contest between Hamilton’s ability to defend and Rosberg’s ability to find a chink in his team-mate’s armour.
Behind them the two-stopping Force Indias of Perez and Hulkenberg were third and fourth respectively, ahead of Button, and the twin Red Bulls of Vettel and Ricciardo. Three-stopping Massa and Bottas were eighth and ninth, ahead of Alonso, who had also opted for a three-stop race.
The Safety Car came in at the end of lap 46 and the battle between the leading Mercedes duo began in earnest, as did the tussle between the Force Indias, with Perez robustly fending off a move by Hulkenberg into turn one. Ahead, Hamilton retained his lead.
Further back the Red Bulls both passed Button, who dropped to seventh. He was soon dumped to eighth as Massa too swept past.
A battle then developed between Ricciardo and Vettel with the Australian eventually muscling past the champion on lap 50 after they had swapped position several times. Ricciardo then set off after Hulkenberg and eventually reeled in and passed the German on lap 54, claiming fourth place.
At the front the leaders were tussling again, with Rosberg continually probing, prodding and looking to seize on the slightest error from Hamilton. The Briton was inch perfect, however, and Rosberg could find nothing to exploit as he attempted to take the lead.
And that was how the order remained over the closing laps, with Hamilton successfully fending off Rosberg to take his second win of the year. Behind them Perez took his first podium finish since the Italian Grand Prix of 2012.
Ricciardo delivered a superb drive to covert a 13th-place start into fourth position for Red Bull, while Hulkenberg was fifth in the second Force India.
Champion Sebastian Vettel, claiming to be down on power, defended well to take sixth ahead of the Williams cars of Massa and Bottas. The final two points positions were taken by the Ferraris of Fernando Alonso and Kimi Raikkonen.
2014 Bahrain Grand Prix – Race Result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 57 Winner 2 25
2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 57 +1.0 secs 1 18
3 Sergio Perez Force India-Mercedes 57 +24.0 secs 4 15
4 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing-Renault 57 +24.4 secs 13 12
5 Nico Hulkenberg Force India-Mercedes 57 +28.6 secs 11 10
6 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing-Renault 57 +29.8 secs 10 8
7 Felipe Massa Williams-Mercedes 57 +31.2 secs 7 6
8 Valtteri Bottas Williams-Mercedes 57 +31.8 secs 3 4
9 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 57 +32.5 secs 9 2
10 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 57 +33.4 secs 5 1
11 Daniil Kvyat STR-Renault 57 +41.3 secs 12
12 Romain Grosjean Lotus-Renault 57 +43.1 secs 16
13 Max Chilton Marussia-Ferrari 57 +59.9 secs 21
14 Pastor Maldonado Lotus-Renault 57 +62.8 secs 17
15 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham-Renault 57 +87.9 secs 18
16 Jules Bianchi Marussia-Ferrari 56 +1 Lap 19
17 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 55 +2 Laps 6
Ret Kevin Magnussen McLaren-Mercedes 40 +17 Laps 8
Ret Esteban Gutierrez Sauber-Ferrari 39 Accident 15
Ret Marcus Ericsson Caterham-Renault 33 +24 Laps 20
Ret Jean-Eric Vergne STR-Renault 18 +39 Laps 14
Ret Adrian Sutil Sauber-Ferrari 17 +40 Laps 22eom
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It is great to start from pole: Nico Roseberg
DRIVERS
1 – Nico ROSBERG (Mercedes)
2 – Lewis HAMILTON (Mercedes)
3 – Daniel RICCIARDO (Red Bull Racing)
TV UNILATERAL
Nico, Lewis was ahead of you going into the crucial parts of qualifying but you managed to turn it around. How did you do it?
Nico ROSBERG: Yeah just worked well through the weekend, just planning my way and progressing, getting around some issues, understanding what set-up to go for and things like that. The challenge this weekend you know is that the free practice sessions were in such hot conditions mainly, also the one before qualifying and it’s just very difficult and you have to guess sort of what the set-up is and what the car is going to be like in the colder conditions in the evening. It worked out well, I was feeling comfortable, I got my laps together. I’m very happy and it’s great to start from pole.
And for the second year in a row in this place. What is it about this

Roseberg flanked by Hamilton on left and Ricciardo after taking Bahrain pole on Saturday. A Mercedes AMG Petronas photo track and you?
NR: I have very good memories from this track – in GP2 here, the championship, and also my first race in F1. I’ve always liked it, I enjoy coming here and again today, yeah it suited me.
Lewis, a little disappointed perhaps? At the end there what happened?
Lewis HAMILTON: No to be honest I’m not. You can’t always get it right. Congratulations to Nico. He’s done a great job this weekend and he’s been improving and picking up his pace and he had a really good at the end there for us. Obviously I made a mistake on my last lap, locked up and went straight on but generally I’m happy. I’m really proud of the team for us to continue to keep moving forward and progressing as we are.
Obviously it’s going to be difficult for everyone on fuel consumption tomorrow. Can you talk a little bit about the management of that through the race?
LH: Yeah it’s no worse than it’s ever been in the past I don’t think really. There’s a lot of emphasis put on it but I think it should be fine tomorrow.
Thanks for that. Come to you Daniel, up in the top three again but this time you’ve got to move back 10 places. Your feelings on the performance and on that penalty?
Daniel RICCIARDO: Yeah really pleased with the performance. At the moment it’s the best anyone else can do besides the two guys alongside me. We’ve still got some ground to make on them tonight. As Nico touched on it’s been really tricky. You know, the temperature drops a lot for these evening sessions and as you probably saw in P3 we were a long way off the pace but it turned around this evening and it was nice to close to gap. As I say there’s still more. Tomorrow, yeah, unfortunately I don’t stay at the front here but it’ll give me a bit of a work to do and I’ll move forward from there.
Talk about the race situation tomorrow. Is there much you can do on strategy to get yourself back on terms?
DR: I hope so. We’ve got some good guys in the office back there and I’m sure they’ll do what they can to get me as far up the front as possible. I think at the moment it’s pretty close between two and three stop and maybe there’s a bit of room for us to try something there.
Back to you Nico. The race tomorrow between you and Lewis,. The pendulum keeps swinging between you, which way will go tomorrow?
NR: Well, starting from pole is obviously a great thing but it’s a whole different story, a whole different challenge awaiting us in the race, with tyre degradation the main problem, the main difficulty. But I’m confident. I had some good runs yesterday on the high fuel, so I’m confident that I can stay ahead tomorrow in the race.
PRESS CONFERENCE
Nico, in Q1 neither of you needed to use a set of Softs to get through. Just talk a little bit about that margin there that you’ve got and the psychological advantage of having that in your pocket.
NR: Yeah, it’s definitely an advantage because we’re quick at the moment, especially on this track because it just suits the engine power that we have, y’know? That makes it a bit more easy to get though qualifying – but still, even the Red Bulls, even on a track like here, they’ve really picked up the pace and we need to keep pushing, definitely, because they’re pushing fast.
Lewis, Nico just mentioned the power is definitely part of it – but it’s not just that is it? The advantage that Mercedes have on this circuit? It seems to really suit your car.
LH: Yeah, I think the guys have done a fantastic job with setup simulation this weekend. The car has done a lot of testing here, obviously and so it’s as good as we can get the car here.
Daniel, I wonder whether driving under lights for the first time in a place like this… obviously it’s not the first time in Formula One or for you, but is it a bit like re-learning a circuit? Seeing it in a different complexion?
DR: It’s probably not that extreme but it’s nice, it’s something different. I’ve always enjoyed driving around under the lights, even when I was young, racing go-karts in the summer back home, we had a lot of night races.It’s even cool following some cars, seeing the sparks come off. It creates a little bit more excitement. I think they’ve done a really job here with the lighting. There’s plenty of it. And, yeah, it’s going to be a good race.
QUESTIONS FROM THE FLOOR
Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Daniel, the other day you said ‘I have to qualify first to start eleventh’ so you were close, considering the two of them. What do you think you can do in the race? You have the pace to come back and perhaps think of a podium or are you too far behind?
DR: I would love to charge through and have a podium after the 57 or so laps. I think realistically we just have to get some points to start with. My season has been going well but I don’t have any points to show for it so far, so I think that’s the first target. But in saying that, I don’t think we need to be conservative. We need to push, we are obviously out of position, starting 13th , so I will do what I can and obviously if there’s an opportunity to move forward then I will take it and hopefully walk away tomorrow with some points on the board.
Q: (Vincent Marre – Sport Zeitung) To the two Mercedes drivers: how would you rate Daniel Ricciardo today, and Sebastian Vettel? Would you rate Ricciardo in front of Vettel?
NR: I don’t really want to rate them. Sebastian is clearly a fantastic driver, one of the best out there and Daniel is doing a great job and definitely deserves the seat that he’s got at Red Bull. It will be an interesting battle between the two.
LH: Same.
Q: (Paolo Ianieri – La Gazzetta dello Sport) Lewis, are you disappointed that you didn’t grab pole after being dominant in the first free sessions and Nico, are you surprised that you got pole?
LH: Not particularly. The weekend’s gone pretty well. Generally it didn’t really go the right way in my car, I think. I wasn’t really too comfortable at the end, much more comfortable through practice but Nico did a great job today. Naturally I’m happy that my teammate’s there and no one else.
NR: For me, Lewis is tough to beat always. In qualifying, everything needs to go right to be ahead and today it worked out but my mind is on pole when I go into qualifying so that’s what I’m going for. So not surprised.
Q: (Livio Oricchio – O Estado de Sao Paulo) Question to Nico and Lewis: it’s clear both of you have the fastest car on the grid. Is there any agreement between you and Lewis, is there any orientation from the team concerning the start of the race?
NR: For sure, we as Mercedes AMG Petronas, the Silver Arrows in F1,we’re here to race, we’re here to put on a great show and so I think you could see some action tomorrow between us, hopefully not. It’s very possible and we owe that to the fans, to everybody, to put on a fantastic show and that’s what we will do.
LH: Yeah, as he said.
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Hamilton fastest in FP 1: Bahrain GP
Bahrain, 4 April 2014: Mercedes continued to dominate free practice for the Bahrain Grand Prix as Lewis Hamilton topped the evening timesheet, three tenths of a second ahead of team-mate Nico Rosberg. As in the day’s first session, Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso was third fastest.
Alonso’s best time was just over a second adrift of Hamilton’s benchmark, pointing to the continued superiority Mercedes have over their rivals.
“It’s been a pretty decent day for us,” said Hamilton afterwards. “The car felt good from the outset, which allowed us to spend time getting to grips with the tyres. The softs in particular seem to be working well and we saw a fair difference in lap time between them and the mediums.
“The focus today was on the second

Hamilton on Friday in Bahrain. A Mercedes AMG Petronas photo session as the timing and conditions reflects that of the rest of the weekend and the difference in temperature between the sessions was quite large,” he added. “The key was to not react too much to that change in terms of our approach to set-up and we seemed to manage that well. It was great driving under the spotlights here: the circuit looks even better at night and you don’t really notice a difference in terms of visibility. It’s actually quite nice to be driving in cooler conditions too. As always there are still some tweaks we can make to improve the car, but overall I’m feeling good.”
Red Bull Racing’s Daniel Ricciardo was fourth fastest, more than two tenths ahead of team-mate Sebastian Vettel, who finished seventh in the floodlit session. Fifth place went to Williams’s Felipe Massa, with Jenson Button sixth for McLaren.
The top 10 order was rounded out by Toro Rosso’s increasingly impressive Daniil Kvyat in eighth place, fellow rookie Kevin Magnussen of McLaren in ninth and Force India’s Sergip Perez in tenth.
While the session was headlined by Mercedes’ seemingly unassailable pace, it was marked for others by incidents and technical issues.
Lotus’ Pastor Maldonado hit trouble when he clipped a kerb in Turn Four and briefly became airborne. Team-mate Romain Grosjean’s problems were of a less nervy kind, though equally frustrating, as he complained of a engine misfire.
The Frenchman managed to post 23 laps, however, considerably more than fellow Renault-powered runner Marcus Ericcson of Caterham, who completed just 10 laps in the session and late on was forced to pull over as his CT05 suffered another problem.
Sauber’s Adrian Sutil has earlier also exited the session, the German pulling over in Turn Six and clambering out of his stricken car. Elsewhere, Max Chilton’s session ended early when a problem with his Marussia’s rear end pitched the Briton into a spin and he skidded out in Turn Four.
2014 Bahrain Grand Prix – Free Practice 2 Result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 1:34.325 28
2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:34.690 0.365 31
3 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:35.360 1.035 28
4 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 1:35.433 1.108 28
5 Felipe Massa Williams 1:35.442 1.117 13
6 Jenson Button McLaren 1:35.528 1.203 21
7 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 1:35.606 1.281 30
8 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 1:35.640 1.315 31
9 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 1:35.662 1.337 22
10 Sergio Perez Force India 1:35.802 1.477 40
11 Valtteri Bottas Williams 1:35.920 1.595 9
12 Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso 1:35.972 1.647 33
13 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 1:35.998 1.673 18
14 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 1:36.366 2.041 33
15 Adrian Sutil Sauber 1:36.962 2.637 13
16 Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 1:36.975 2.650 35
17 Pastor Maldonado Lotus 1:37.259 2.934 25
18 Romain Grosjean Lotus 1:37.599 3.274 23
19 Jules Bianchi Marussia 1:37.800 3.475 15
20 Max Chilton Marussia 1:38.247 3.922 10
21 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 1:38.257 3.932 33
22 Marcus Ericsson Caterham 1:39.136 4.811 30eom
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Teams approach changes as they race under lights: Bahrain GP preview
Bahrain, 2 April 2014: The F1 bandwagon moves on to a race under floodlights in Bahrain, just a few days after the Malaysian Grand Prix, where Mercedes stormed to its first one-two finish since the 1955 Italian Grand Prix, Formula One arrives in Bahrain for round three of the 2014 FIA Formula One World Championship.
Mercedes AMG Petronas clearly showed that it is the best outfit at the moment and if Nico Rosberg opened the tally with a near-perfect win in the Australian GP, teammate Lewis Hamilton led all but a fraction of a lap at Sepang even as Rosberg finished second for a creditable 1-2 for Mercedes. Vettel showcased the power of a Red Bull Racing team as made quick recovery after poor testing days and gained some valuable points though the other car had different problems at the Petronas Malaysian GP. Nico Hulkenberg, who led, for about half a lap, and was in fourth place for sometime, could not stop Alonso in a Ferrari, but finished a wonderful 5th, being on a two-lap strategy. Teammate Sergio Perez failed to finish the race.
And as the Bahrain International Circuit celebrates the tenth anniversary and joins, Singapore and Abu Dhabi, in staging a race which would be staged fully or partially at night and the 6pm start, it will change how the teams approach the race.
For instance, the cooler temperatures of the evening will lead to changes in balance and grip levels. Teams do, however, have some data on these conditions with the two pre-season tests held at this circuit running into the cooler early evening hours on a number of occasions. The bonus, too, is that the lower temperatures will place less stress on the cooling capabilities of the new power units, a particular issue for some in the run-up to the start of this season.
Elsewhere, the Bahrain track features a mix of slow-speed corners at the end of straights which means that the BIC is one of the most severe on brakes all season. However, while this also means that tyres take some punishment, especially in terms of longitudinal energy going into the tyres, Pirelli is bringing its medium and soft compound tyres this weekend.
This race always presents an intriguing set of challenges but this year a whole new set of variables has been thrown into the mix via the sport’s new regulations and the first F1 night-race in Bahrain’s history. Mercedes have dominated so far this season, but under the BIC floodlights anything could happen.

Hamilton bounces back in Malaysia. Can he win another World Championship. A file photo from Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 team. eom
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Hamilton leads Mercedes’n 1-2 in 59 years; Vettel third
Sepang, 30 March

Hamilton (right) and Rosberg take 1-2 places in the Malaysian GP on Sunday as they pose with their engineer (centre). A Mercedes photo 2014: Lewis Hamilton took his first victory of 2014, with Nico Rosberg finishing second to hand Mercedes its first one-two finish since the 1955 Italian Grand Prix. Sebastian Vettel finished third for Red Bull Racing.
After starting from pole Hamilton dominated the race, eventually claiming his 23rd career win some 17 seconds ahead of his team-mate.
“I’m incredibly happy,” said Hamilton afterwards. “It’s my eighth year here and I finally got that win. I really just owe it all to the team. They did a fantastic job, the guys back at the factory have been pushing non-stop to get the car to where it is. To get a one-two… it’s quite special when you get a one-two. I’ve not had many in my career and so that makes it even more special. A great day.”
Hamilton, starting from pole position, comfortably held his lead away from the lights, but Vettel, who had started second, was surprised by the hard-charging Rosberg. The Red Bull Racing driver attempted to close the door by forcing Rosberg towards the track limits but the Mercedes driver to sneak past and took second.
Daniel Ricciardo also profited at the start. From fifth on the grid he first muscled past Fernando Alonso to claim fourth and then found a way by Vettel as the German tussled with Rosberg who made a mistake in turn three.
Behind them, Alonso was down to fifth and being harried by Force India’s Nico Hulkenberg, a battle that would be reversed later in the race.
It was Alonso’s Ferrari team-mate Kimi Raikkonen who was in the bigger trouble however. The Finn had a right rear puncture, caused in a coming together with Kevin Magnussen’s McLaren. Raikkonen limped back to the pits for a replacement but Magnussen, with front wing damage, stayed out and was soon stable in eighth place behind team-mate Jenson Button.
Vettel, meanwhile, was soon making his way back up the order, comfortably passing Ricciardo for third position.
At the front, though, Hamilton was carving out an impressive lead. With just nine laps on the board, the Mercedes driver had a 5.4-second advantage over team-mate Rosberg, who in turn had 3.8 seconds in hand over Vettel.
Magnussen headed to the pits at the end of the same lap for new tyres and a new nosecone but almost as soon as the Dane rejoined the race he was hit with a five-second stop/go penalty for causing the collision with Raikkonen at the start.
Kvyat was the next man into the pit lane, the Toro Rosso driver making his first stop at the end of lap 10. That triggered the first round of visits to the pit lane for new rubber. Alonso pitted on lap 11 for medium tyres and he was followed a lap later by Ricciardo and Williams’ Felipe Massa.
Ricciardo emerged into the path of Alonso and the two battled hard through the next few corners before the Red Bull Racing driver gained the upper hand. Vettel pitted from third place on lap 13, again for mediums, and came out just ahead of his team-mate, who immediately tucked in behind the champion.
At the front, Hamilton pitted at the end of lap 15 and when Nico Hulkenberg pitted on lap 16, the order had become Hamilton, followed 9.4 seconds later by Rosberg and then Vettel a further 1.9s back. Ricciardo was comfortable in fourth ahead of Alonso, with Hulkenberg sixth. Almost 10 seconds further back was Button, with Massa eighth, ahead of Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat and the second Williams of Valtteri Bottas.
Following the second round of stops, again triggered by Kvat on lap 22, Vettel closed right up on second-placed Rosberg. On lap 35 the gap between the two dropped to half a second and Vettel surely thought he’d have a chance of reclaiming second. The Mercedes driver responded, however, and within two laps he’d opened up his advantage to 1.2s.
“At some stage it looked like we were pretty evenly matched but then it was like he found another gear, he was just pulling away,” said Vettel. “In the end I was just trying to get the car home.”
Behind the pair Alonso, in fifth. was beginning to reel in Ricciardo, his deficit to the Red Bull Racing car dropping to 1.5s by lap 38. Pace wasn’t what promoted the Ferrari driver past the Australian, however.
On lap 40 Ricciardo headed to pit lane for his final stop but his crew failed to correctly attach his front left wheel. The Australian halted in the pit lane and called for the crew to bring him back. They did so, but in the confusion Ricciardo’s front wing was damaged by a jack and soon after he rejoined the race his wing broke and began to cut through his front right tyre.
He returned to the pit lane again for repairs but his woes didn’t end there. He went out again but was soon handed a 10-second stop/go penalty for an unsafe release. After serving the penalty with his fifth visit of the afternoon to the pit lane he was dropped to 16th place. He eventually retired from the race on lap 50.
Following the race the stewards also hit Ricciardo with a 10-place grid penalty at next weekend’s Bahrain GP.
His misfortune meant that Alonso jumped ahead of the Red Bull driver, but not into fourth place. That was now occupied by Hulkenberg, who was gambling on a two-stop race.
Alonso was over 10 seconds adrift of the Force India driver but with the German’s tyres degrading, Alonso swiftly began to close in and with seven laps to go the gap was halved.
Ahead, the front runners were all holding out on medium tyres in the hope that the rain that had been forecast for the end of the race would come. On lap 49 Red Bull Racing blinked and Vettel was called in for the prime hard tyres. Rosberg responded and a lap later he too pitted for the orange banded Pirelli. Race leader Hamilton followed on lap 51.
Alonso, meanwhile, was now hounding Hulkenberg for fourth place and on lap 53, the Spaniard muscled his way past out of turn two. There was a big battle taking place for seventh place between Williams team-mates Massa and Bottas,
The Brazilian was told that the Finn was faster and should be let through but Massa chose not to heed the request and battled hard to keep hold of his six points.
At the front though the Mercedes drivers were cruising. Hamilton was setting fastest laps, 15 seconds ahead of Rosberg, while the German was a comfortable 10 seconds ahead of Vettel and it was in that order that the trio took the flag.
Alonso duly claimed fourth, agead of Hulkenberg, with Jenson Button sixth for McLaren. With Massa finishing ahead of Bottas, the final two points-scoring places were claimed by Magnussen and Kvyat.
2014 Malaysian Grand Prix – Race result
1 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 56 1:40:25.974 25
2 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 56 +17.3 secs 18
3 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull Racing 56 +24.5 secs 15
4 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 56 +35.9 secs 12
5 Nico Hulkenberg Force India 56 +47.1 secs 10
6 Jenson Button McLaren 56 +83.6 secs 8
7 Felipe Massa Williams 56 +85.0 secs 6
8 Valtteri Bottas Williams 56 +85.5 secs 4
9 Kevin Magnussen McLaren 55 +1 Lap 2
10 Daniil Kvyat Toro Rosso 55 +1 Lap 1
11 Romain Grosjean Lotus 55 +1 Lap
12 Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari 55 +1 Lap
13 Kamui Kobayashi Caterham 55 +1 Lap
14 Marcus Ericsson Caterham 54 +2 Lap
15 Max Chilton Marussia 54 +2 Lap
Ret Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 49 +7 Lap
Ret Esteban Gutierrez Sauber 35 +21 Laps
Ret Adrian Sutil Sauber 32 +24 Laps
Ret Jean-Eric Vergne Toro Rosso18 +38 Laps
Ret Jules Bianchi Marussia 8 +48 Laps
Ret Pastor Maldonado Lotus 7 +49 Laps
DNS Sergio Perez Force India 0 +56 Lapseom









