Vettel wins in Bahrain, Kimi heads leads Lotus double podium

Vettel wins in Bahrain, Kimi heads leads Lotus double podium

Without doubt the most gripping race of 2013 so far saw Sebastian Vettel cruise to a trouble-free win in Bahrain while behind him a battle-royal raged. In a repeat of the 2012 podium Kimi Rikknen and Romain Grosjean took second and third for Lotus, with Grosjean passing Force Indias Paul di Resta with five laps to go.

Di Resta took fourth place and like Rikknen stopped only twice while the other front-runners visited the pits three times. Practice analysis had suggested there was little to choose between the two strategies and in the race it proved accurate, with traffic and tyre temperature rather than wear ultimately being the deciding factors for many teams adapting their strategies on the fly.

Behind Di Resta there was a mele going on among a series of three-stopping cars. When the hostilities finally ended Lewis Hamilton was fifth for Mercedes, Sergio Prez sixth for McLaren, Mark Webber came home seventh in the second Red Bull and Fernando Alonso was eighth for Ferrari, having struggled all afternoon with a non-functional DRS.

Pole position man Nico Rosberg dropped to ninth in the second Mercedes and Jenson Button took the final point for McLaren. The latter pair made four stops, and after the race Rosberg revealed that he had struggled with his rear tyre temperatures all afternoon.

The battle for the minor points paying positions were fluid right to the last lap, with the DRS advantage outweighing any genuine pace differential and prompting changes of position every lap, as cars passed and re-passed each other at any of several good overtaking spots.

There were shades of a 1970s-style drafting grand prix with wheel-to-wheel action all the way to the flag with Hamilton and and Prez both passing a fading Webber on the last lap, the last in a series of tense encounters.

So intense was the battle behind, Vettel taking the chequered flag was a minor diversion. He took the lead from Rosberg on lap three, after initially having fallen to third behind Alonso. After assuming the lead, however, he never looked back, only once losing the place during the pit stop window.

He confessed that he had not expected such an easy afternoon. I was pretty dominant today which certainly was not the expectation. In the beginning [there was] quite tight, wheel-to-wheel racing. I knew it would be crucial to get in the lead because then you have a little bit of an advantage, looking after your tyres and managing the race from there. I could feel that I was able to pull away.

1.  Vettel         Red Bull-Renault      1h36:26.945s2.  Raikkonen      Lotus-Renault              +  9.1s3.  Grosjean       Lotus-Renault             +  19.5s4.  Di Resta       Force India-Mercedes      +  21.7s5.  Hamilton       Mercedes                  +  35.2s6.  Perez          McLaren-Mercedes          +  35.9s7.  Webber         Red Bull-Renault          +  37.2s8.  Alonso         Ferrari                   +  37.5s9.  Rosberg        Mercedes                  +  41.1s1.  Button         McLaren-Mercedes          +  46.6s11  Maldonado      Williams-Renault        +  1m06.4s12  Hulkenberg     Sauber-Ferrari          +  1m12.9s13  Sutil          Force India-Mercedes    +  1m16.7s14  Bottas         Williams-Renault        +  1m21.5s15  Massa          Ferrari                 +  1m26.3s16  Ricciardo      Toro Rosso-Ferrari        +  1 lap17  Pic            Caterham-Renault          +  1 lap18  Gutierrez      Sauber-Ferrari            +  1 lap19  Bianchi        Marussia-Cosworth         +  1 lap20  Chilton        Marussia-Cosworth         +  1 lap21  van der Garde  Caterham-Renault         +  2 laps

DNFVergne/Toro Rosso-Ferrari 

Drivers World Championship standings, round 4:               

1.  Vettel         77       2.  Raikkonen      67        3.  Hamilton       50        4.  Alonso         47        5.  Webber         32        6.  Massa          30        7.  Grosjean       26        8.  Di Resta       20        9.  Rosberg        14       10  Button         13       11  Perez          10       12  Ricciardo       6       13  Sutil           6       14  Hulkenberg      5       15  Vergne          1 

Constructors World Championship standings, round 4:

1.  Red Bull-Renault          1092.  Lotus-Renault              933.  Ferrari                    774.  Mercedes                   645.  Force India-Mercedes       266.  McLaren-Mercedes           237.  Toro Rosso-Ferrari          78.  Sauber-Ferrari              5    

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