Button and Brawn celebrate title double

SAO PAULO, (Reuters) – Jenson Button and his Brawn GP  team were crowned Formula One champions with a race to spare in  an action-packed Brazilian Grand Prix won by Red Bull’s  Australian Mark Webber yesterday.

Button finished fifth to become Britain’s 10th world  champion, with closest rival and team mate Rubens Barrichello  suffering the heartbreak of a late puncture and crossing the  line eighth after starting his home race on pole position.

While Barrichello’s own title hopes were fading anyway  before that, nothing could stop Brawn — the former Honda team  saved from the scrapheap in March — from becoming the first  team to take the constructors’ crown in their first full season.

Button, who belted out an off-tune “We Are The Champions, My  Friends,” over the team radio on his slowing down lap, was  ecstatic after a rain-hit qualifying session had left him  starting 14th.

“I am the world champion, baby, and I’m not going to stop  saying it,” he yelled.

“This race for me was the best race I’ve driven in my life,  probably,” added the 29-year-old. “I know it’s because of the  emotion involved with it but also because I knew I had to make  it happen.”

Webber celebrated the second win of his career, with  Brazil’s injured Ferrari driver Felipe Massa waving the  chequered flag.

“I think he (Button) can sleep better now because he’s been  absolutely bricking it after the last few races,” Webber said  with a smile, his victory completely eclipsed by the Brawn  celebrations. “He can enjoy (the last race in) Abu Dhabi.”

Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel, the 22-year-old German who had  needed to finish in the top two to have a chance of staying in  contention for the title, took fourth place on a hot and humid  afternoon at Interlagos.

Button, winner of six of the first seven races, now has 89  points to Vettel’s 74 and Barrichello’s 72.

“I think there is a guy at Brawn who is happier than me  today,” said Vettel. “At one point I was praying for rain, there  was the smell of rain, but it didn’t come.”

THIRD PLACE
Poland’s Robert Kubica was second for BMW-Sauber with  McLaren’s outgoing world champion Lewis Hamilton taking third  place from 17th on the grid at the circuit where he clinched the  title in a 2008 thriller.

It was the first time in 40 years that Britain had  back-to-back champions. Bizarrely, it was also the second time  in a row that an Englishman driving car 22, with a Mercedes  engine, had finished fifth to win the title in Brazil.

The safety car was deployed for four laps after chaos on the  opening one when Force India’s Adrian Sutil, Toyota’s Jarno  Trulli and Renault’s Fernando Alonso crashed out.

Trulli and Sutil, who had been third on the grid, almost  came to blows on the runoff after they stepped out of their  shattered cars.

Race stewards fined Trulli $10,000 for his actions.

McLaren were dealt a $50,000 fine for the unsafe release of  Heikki Kovalainen from the pits. The car pulled out with the  hose still attached, spraying fuel over Kimi Raikkonen’s  Ferrari.

The fuel then ignited, causing a flash fire. Raikkonen  continued to finish sixth, ahead of Toro Rosso’s Swiss rookie  Sebastien Buemi and Barrichello.

In 17 years in Formula One, the Brazilian had started on  pole three times in Brazil and has still never won at his home  circuit.

“It was that Brazilian curse again, wasn’t it,” said team  boss Ross Brawn. “I think he got nipped by Lewis as he went past  and punctured the right rear. It’s a shame because he drove  exceptionally well this weekend.”

Button, who had prayed for dry conditions after the deluge  on Saturday, was by then on a charge and putting it all on the  line, overtaking Renault’s Romain Grosjean, Williams’s Kazuki  Nakajima and Toyota’s Kamui Kobayashi.