Vettel wins Abu Dhabi season-ender

ABU DHABI,  (Reuters) – Germany’s Sebastian Vettel led  Red Bull to a one-two finish at Abu Dhabi’s stunning new circuit yesterday to bring down the chequered flag on a Formula One  season like no other.

The 22-year-old German beat Australian team mate Mark Webber  by 17.8 seconds under the Yas Marina floodlights to become the  first winner in the oil-rich emirate and cement second place in  the championship.

“The priority was to secure second place and we succeeded,”  said Vettel, still sweating with exertion after the sport’s  first day-to-night race. “To do it with a win is the best.”

While Vettel chalked up his fourth victory of the season,  Red Bull completed a hat-trick — having won the previous two  races in Japan and Brazil — and their fourth one-two after  starting the year without ever having stood on top of the  podium.

Britain’s Jenson Button, who clinched the title in the  previous Brazilian Grand Prix for his championship-winning Brawn  GP team, rounded off his season with third place after hunting  down Webber and chasing him nose-to-tail in the closing laps.

A mere 0.6 of a second separated the two cars at the  chequered flag.

“It was a great race, I really enjoyed it,” said Button.  “This race was a bonus for me. I came here to enjoy myself,  which is exactly what I did.”

HAMILTON

RETIRES
It was Button’s first appearance on the podium since Italy  last month after a season that started with him winning six of  the first seven races for a team that emerged at the 11th hour  from the remains of departing Honda.

The Briton ended the season with 95 points to Vettel’s 84,  an unthinkable outcome at the end of last year when he ended the  campaign with just three points after McLaren and Ferrari  battled for supremacy.

McLaren’s outgoing world champion Lewis Hamilton had led  from pole position but the Briton’s hopes of becoming the first  winner in Abu Dhabi vanished after 20 laps when he retired with  a brake problem.

“There was a problem with the brakes, I couldn’t stop the  car,” Hamilton told the BBC. “I was locking and locking and  locking and it was harder than ever to drive the car.

“It’s a shame as the car felt so good these last couple of  days but we haven’t had many brake problems this year so there  you go.”

Brazilian Rubens Barrichello, likely to move from Brawn to  Williams for next year, finished fourth with Germany’s Nick  Heidfeld fifth in BMW-Sauber’s last race before the German  manufacturer leaves the sport.

Japanese stand-in Kamui Kobayashi, replacing the injured  German Timo Glock, scored his first points in Formula One with  sixth place for Toyota ahead of veteran Italian team mate Jarno  Trulli in seventh.

After just two races, Kobayashi could also claim to be his  country’s top driver with Williams’ Toyota-backed driver Kazuki  Nakajima ending the season with a dismal tally of no points from  17 starts.

Swiss rookie Sebastien Buemi, a Bahrain resident for much of  the year, took the final point for Toro Rosso in eighth place.

McLaren secured third place overall in the constructors’  standings, one point ahead of Ferrari but well behind champions  Brawn and Red Bull. Toyota were fifth while BMW-Sauber  leapfrogged Williams for sixth place.

The race, against the stunning backdrop of the most lavish  circuit in Formula One, was low on thrills or incidents other  than Button’s determined chase of Webber and Hamilton’s  unexpected retirement after threatening to run away with  victory.

Toro Rosso’s Jaime Alguersuari was the only other  retirement, doing so in some embarrassment after pulling up at  the Red Bull garage instead of his own at his first pitstop and  leaving without refuelling.