Lewis Hamilton extended his narrow Formula 1 world championship lead by defeating Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg to victory in a Japanese Grand Prix shortened by an accident for Jules Bianchi.
Having lost out to Rosberg in an all-silver battle for pole in the dry on Saturday, Hamilton turned the tables in the wet Suzuka weather of Sunday with a brilliant round-the-outside passing move on his bitter F1 title rival.
Rosberg led for the first 28 laps of a race that began behind the safety car, thanks to appalling conditions.
When the race got going properly after nine laps behind the safety car – interrupted by a red flag following the first two because of rain – the German held a small advantage over his British team-mate as the two Mercedes streaked clear in the spray.
Rosberg looked comfortable on extreme wet weather tyres, but complained of oversteer after switching to intermediate tyres when circuit conditions improved.
He held Hamilton off until lap 29 when, having suffered a twitch accelerating onto the start-finish straight at the end of the previous lap, he lost enough momentum to allow Hamilton to attack.
Rosberg went defensive, but Hamilton (assisted by extra speed from the Drag Reduction System) swept around the outside of his team-mate to take the lead through Turn 1.
Once released from following Rosberg’s gearbox, Hamilton pulled away to take his third consecutive grand prix victory in a race that was red-flagged for a second time under the safety car, after Jules Bianchi’s Marussia went off at Turn 7 where marshals were craning away Adrian Sutil’s Sauber following an earlier crash.
Bianchi was taken to the circuit medical centre. His Marussia reportedly struck the crane at the crash site.
Red Bull deliberately compromised its dry qualifying pace by setting the RB10 up for the wet, and its drivers used this to good effect to finish third and fourth.
Ferrari-bound reigning world champion Sebastian Vettel completed the podium, despite a trip through the gravel at the Esses, while team-mate Daniel Ricciardo overcame Jenson Button’s McLaren to finish fourth.
Button held third spot for most of the first half of the race, after being the first driver to pit for inters, but he lost time to a steering wheel change at his second stop, which dropped him behind Vettel, before Ricciardo further demoted the Brit with a firm pass on the inside of the hairpin on lap 43 – a lap before the result was taken.
Williams pair Valtteri Bottas and Felipe Massa started third and fourth, but both struggled badly in wet conditions and trailed home sixth and seventh.
Nico Hulkenberg’s Force India stopped at the end of the pitlane as the race was red-flagged for the final time, but he finished eighth on countback, while Toro Rosso’s Jean-Eric Vergne charged from the back of the grid to claim two points for ninth.
Hulkenberg’s Force India team-mate Sergio Perez rounded out the points scorers in 10th.
Ferrari took zero points from the race. Kimi Raikkonen finished 12th, while Fernando Alonso retired with a mechanical problem under the safety car before the race began properly.
RESULTS – 44 LAPS (RED FLAG):
Pos | Driver | Car | Time | Gap |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lewis Hamilton | Mercedes | 1h51m43.021s | – |
2 | Nico Rosberg | Mercedes | 1h51m52.201s | 9.180s |
3 | Sebastian Vettel | Red Bull/Renault | 1h52m12.143s | 29.122s |
4 | Daniel Ricciardo | Red Bull/Renault | 1h52m21.839s | 38.818s |
5 | Jenson Button | McLaren/Mercedes | 1h52m50.571s | 1m07.550s |
6 | Valtteri Bottas | Williams/Mercedes | 1h53m36.794s | 1m53.773s |
7 | Felipe Massa | Williams/Mercedes | 1h53m38.147s | 1m55.126s |
8 | Nico Hulkenberg | Force India/Mercedes | 1h53m38.969s | 1m55.948s |
9 | Jean-Eric Vergne | Toro Rosso/Renault | 1h53m50.659s | 2m07.638s |
10 | Sergio Perez | Force India/Mercedes | – | 1 Lap |
11 | Daniil Kvyat | Toro Rosso/Renault | – | 1 Lap |
12 | Kimi Raikkonen | Ferrari | – | 1 Lap |
13 | Esteban Gutierrez | Sauber/Ferrari | – | 1 Lap |
14 | Kevin Magnussen | McLaren/Mercedes | – | 1 Lap |
15 | Romain Grosjean | Lotus/Renault | – | 1 Lap |
16 | Pastor Maldonado | Lotus/Renault | – | 1 Lap |
17 | Marcus Ericsson | Caterham/Renault | – | 1 Lap |
18 | Max Chilton | Marussia/Ferrari | – | 1 Lap |
19 | Kamui Kobayashi | Caterham/Renault | – | 1 Lap |
20 | Jules Bianchi | Marussia/Ferrari | – | Spun off |
21 | Adrian Sutil | Sauber/Ferrari | – | Spun off |
– | Fernando Alonso | Ferrari | – | Retirement |
DRIVERS’ CHAMPIONSHIP:
Pos | Driver | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Lewis Hamilton | 266 |
2 | Nico Rosberg | 256 |
3 | Daniel Ricciardo | 193 |
4 | Sebastian Vettel | 139 |
5 | Fernando Alonso | 133 |
6 | Valtteri Bottas | 130 |
7 | Jenson Button | 82 |
8 | Nico Hulkenberg | 76 |
9 | Felipe Massa | 71 |
10 | Sergio Perez | 46 |
11 | Kimi Raikkonen | 45 |
12 | Kevin Magnussen | 39 |
13 | Jean-Eric Vergne | 21 |
14 | Romain Grosjean | 8 |
15 | Daniil Kvyat | 8 |
16 | Jules Bianchi | 2 |
17 | Adrian Sutil | 0 |
18 | Marcus Ericsson | 0 |
19 | Pastor Maldonado | 0 |
20 | Esteban Gutierrez | 0 |
21 | Max Chilton | 0 |
22 | Kamui Kobayashi | 0 |
TEAMS’ CHAMPIONSHIP:
Pos | Constructor | Points |
---|---|---|
1 | Mercedes | 522 |
2 | Red Bull/Renault | 332 |
3 | Williams/Mercedes | 201 |
4 | Ferrari | 178 |
5 | Force India/Mercedes | 122 |
6 | McLaren/Mercedes | 121 |
7 | Toro Rosso/Renault | 29 |
8 | Lotus/Renault | 8 |
9 | Marussia/Ferrari | 2 |
10 | Sauber/Ferrari | 0 |
11 | Caterham/Renault | 0 |