Alonso holds off Vettel in Singapore


SINGAPORE, (Reuters)
– Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso  held off Sebastian Vettel’s hard-charging Red Bull to win an  incident-packed Singapore Grand Prix yesterday and boost his  chances of a third Formula One crown.

Championship leader Mark Webber finished third in the second  Red Bull to increase his lead from five to 11 points in the  standings with four races remaining.

The Australian again rode his luck, emerging unscathed from a collision with McLaren’s Lewis Hamilton that forced his title rival to retire.

Webber has 202 points. Alonso moved up to second overall on 191 after successive wins in Monza and Singapore, and Hamilton lies a further nine points adrift in third place.

Vettel sits one point further back and world champion Jenson Button, who finished fourth, rounds out the top five on 177 points. A mere 25 points, the amount awarded for a victory, separates the top five.
“It really was tough. With the safety car problems and the people we were lapping, especially at the end, it was  difficult,” Alonso told reporters.

“We know how difficult it is to overtake here so I was just not taking any risks.”
Alonso won the scandal-tainted inaugural Singapore race for Renault in 2008 after his Brazilian team mate Nelson Piquet  crashed deliberately to bring out the safety car and help the  Spaniard win.

The safety car was again deployed this time but Alonso,  starting aggressively from pole position, drove a brilliant race  to hold off Vettel for 61 laps around the floodlit Marina Bay  circuit.

After a gruelling, two-hour street fight and an almighty  last-lap tussle, the double champion crossed the line 0.2  seconds ahead of the German who had started alongside him on the  front row.

Webber, starting the race in fifth place, was the biggest  winner of the day after gambling on an early pit stop during the  first safety car period after three laps and working his way  through the field for a well-earned podium.

“I got caught up a bit, Lewis got a big run on me. There was  contact and it’s not something you want to do all the time,”  Webber said of his collision with Hamilton.

“I am very happy with third place here today…the toughest  weekend of the year for me.”
Hamilton was the biggest loser, enduring his third  retirement in four races.

The Briton thought he had passed Webber on turn seven  following the second safety car period but was broadsided by the  Australian going into the straight.

“I’m not really sure what happened,” he said. “He was in my  blind spot so I didn’t even know he was still there.

“All I know is I went in, I didn’t see anyone alongside me  and the next thing I know is my tyre has blown and that’s it.”
The race ended in bizarre fashion with Heikki Kovalainen,  already lapped, steering his flaming Lotus to the side of the  finishing straight after he swerved out of the pitlane once he  realised his car was on fire.

With smoke and flames billowing out behind him, the Finn  jumped out and grabbed an extinguisher handed through the wire  mesh to put out the fire himself as cars raced past.