Sunday, October 9, 2011

Sebastian Vettel takes crown despite Jenson Button win in Japan

     Sebastian Vettel Joins The 8 Other Drivers Who Have Won Back To Back World Championships.


Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel wrapped up the 2011 world title as Jenson Button saw his hopes end despite winning the Japanese Grand Prix.

Vettel and Button vied for the lead off the line but the Briton's McLaren went ahead at the second stop.
Ferrari's Fernando Alonso went on to finish second leaving Vettel, who had harried the Ferrari, in third place.
McLaren's Lewis Hamilton survived a puncture and another clash with Ferrari's Felipe Massa to finish fifth.
It was a fascinating race on Suzuka's figure-of-eight circuit but it was Vettel who wrote his name into the history books as the youngest double world champion in history aged 24 years and 98 days.
The German joins the list of champions, which includes Ayrton Senna, Alain Prost and Damon Hill, who have been crowned in Japan and becomes only the ninth driver to take back-to-back titles.
An emotional Vettel thanked his team afterwards, saying: "Thank you so much every single one. We took nothing for granted and we did it."
Vettel had wanted to wrap up the championship which he has dominated from the first race in Australia with a 10th win of the season in Japan, but circumstances conspired against him.
The German found himself under investigation at the start of the race after he cut off Button's attempt to pass him off the line.
"He's got to get a penalty for that hasn't he?" Button asked his team on the McLaren pit wall.
But the panel of stewards, which included 1980 world champion Alan Jones, said it was a fair move and took no further action.
VETTEL - RECORD BREAKER

Youngest world champion: 23 years 135 days

Youngest back-to-back, double champion: 24 years 99 days

Youngest winner of a GP: 21 years 74 days

Youngest pole position: 21 years 73 days
Youngest on the podium: 21 years 74 days
Youngest to score a point: 19 years 349 days
"It was pretty brutal there's no doubt about it," BBC F1 co-commentator Martin Brundle said of the move. "Harsh but not worth a penalty."
After the first round of stops, Button had been slowly eating into Vettel's lead and took his revenge at the second round of pit stops when he made up a second in time in the pit lane and emerged ahead of the Red Bull on track.
It was Button's turn to see his advantage disappear when the safety car slowed down the pack so debris could be cleared off the track.
But the 2009 champion burst clear at the restart and pumped in a series of fastest laps to build a two-second lead just after the halfway point of the race.
When Vettel made his third stop for the harder medium tyres he found himself emerging in ninth where he lost time among the midfield runners.
Button pitted two laps later and returned in third, resuming the lead with 12 laps to go - but the action didn't stop there for the Englishman.
The tenacious Alonso had the McLaren in his sights and had closed to within 1.2secs of Button with two laps to go.
But Button responded with a new fastest lap of the race to take his third win of the season and a first in Japan, which he has described as his second home.
A mistake in qualifying saw Hamilton start in third but he had taken advantage of Vettel's squeeze on Button off the line to sweep past his McLaren team-mate into second.
But a puncture to his right-rear tyre slowed down his progress and he was passed on track by both Button and Alonso before coming into the pits on lap eight.
Hamilton had arrived in Japan determined to put his clash with Felipe Massa's Ferrari behind him - instead the pair tangled again, touching through the 190mph 130R corner.
Ferrari asked race director Charlie Whiting to investigate the incident but this time Hamilton escaped punishment.
The 2008 champion made a clean pass on Massa later in the race and finished sixth, which means he now heads to next week's race in South Korea looking for his first podium since the German Grand Prix.

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