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Barrichello wins F1's European Grand Prix

August 26 - September 1, 2009
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Brawn GP's Rubens Barrichello won the European Grand Prix on Sunday to claim his first Formula One victory in five years.

The 37-year-old Brazilian took advantage of a costly pit-stop error by Lewis Hamilton's McLaren team to record a 10th career win - his first since the 2004 Chinese GP - and boost his championship hopes.

Hamilton finished second ahead of Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen after having started the Valencia street race from pole position.

Jenson Button finished seventh to have his championship lead cut to 18 points over teammate Barrichello. Red Bull's Mark Webber finished ninth and is 20.5 points behind Button.

Luca Badoer, who is filling in for injured Ferrari driver Felipe Massa, finished 17th after starting last.

Hamilton, who also finished second at last year's race, looked to be cruising for a second straight win after having taken the Hungarian GP.

But McLaren's mechanics fumbled when removing tyre warmers during his final pit stop that lasted 13.4 seconds, and the chance was gone.

Barrichello moved clear in front after his second stop and held on to win by 2.3 seconds.

McLaren's Heikki Kovalainen finished fourth after starting second, while Nico Rosberg of Williams rounded out the top five ahead of Renault's Fernando Alonso.

Red Bull's championship hopes took a hit after both Sebastian Vettel and Webber finished out of the points.

Vettel withdrew for the second straight race, pulling out due to an engine failure near the halfway mark. Drivers are only allowed to use eight engines per season and the German is believed to have used seven already, further complicating his title hopes.

Webber led Button for most of the race but surrendered seventh spot after the second round of stops to finish behind BMW Sauber's Robert Kubica.

Button, who won six of the first seven races but has finished no better than fifth in the past four, leads the overall standings with 72 points. Barrichello has 54, Webber 51.5 and Vettel 47.

Only Brazilians have won at the harbour-side track, with Massa winning from pole last year. The Ferrari driver was unable to race this time as he recovers from life-saving

skull surgery following a crash at Budapest.

Hamilton got out of the start unscathed, with Raikkonen the only mover after using his KERS overtaking system to pass Vettel and Button and move into fourth place behind Barrichello.

Button dropped into eighth spot before being overtaken by Webber after five laps. Button, who later set a new record with a lap time of 1:38.874, stayed on the Australian's

tail and eventually moved ahead.

Badoer's return to F1 for the first time in 10 years was forgettable.

The 38-year-old Italian spun out on the opening lap and was passed after leaving the pit lane by Renault's Romain Grosjean, who finished 15th in his debut race.

Badoer, who stretched his record pointless streak to 49 races, had to perform a drive-through penalty for crossing over the pit-lane line and was eventually lapped by the leaders.







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