Sebastian Vettel displayed all the guts and determination of a world champion to haul himself back into the Formula One title race with a Singapore victory that sets up a mouth-watering finale to the season.
Vettel kept his focus to win a ‘killer’ race that ran for a full two hours on a balmy Sunday night, enabling the German to cut championship leader Fernando Alonso’s advantage to 29 points with six rounds remaining as he seeks a hat-trick of crowns.
To say the title showdown has come down to a duel between Vettel’s Red Bull and Alonso’s Ferrari could be premature given the topsy-turvy nature of this season but while both men have bemoaned a lack of pace, they make up for it in consistency.
Alonso has spent all season claiming his car is not competitive, yet he has forged ahead by picking up big points from average positions on the grid, a feat he repeated in Singapore by finishing third after starting fifth.
“On track, we manage to make the most of what we have, making few or no mistakes, thanks to great work from the team,” Alonso said after chasing home Vettel and McLaren’s Jenson Button.
“For that alone we deserve to be where we are in the classification. Today, we pulled out an advantage over three of our four main competitors, which is positive.”
Vettel cut a forlorn figure after an erratic race in Monza two weeks ago ended prematurely with an alternator failure, leaving many observers to doubt whether the German had the desire or the vehicle to mount a serious title challenge.
His demeanour had changed by Sunday after a polished drive backed up his domination in practice as both he and Alonso benefitted from another failure for Lewis Hamilton, who has offset three wins with three retirements in the last eight races.
All season long, McLaren’s rivals have claimed the British car was the most competitive yet Hamilton’s challenge took a body blow on Sunday when he surrendered the lead on the 23rd lap with a gearbox failure and is now 52 points behind Alonso.
“It’s heart-breaking not to have finished the race today,” Hamilton said. “We definitely had the pace to win. In fact, before I retired, I was cruising; just managing the gap back to Seb (Vettel).
“Then I started to experience difficulty with the gearshift, then I lost third gear, and then the ’box kept dropping into neutral.
“Obviously, I was disappointed, but the good thing we can take away from this weekend is that we have extremely good pace. As a result, I think we can really attack in the next few races.
“It’s going to be hard to close the gap on guys like Fernando and Sebastian, especially when they keep finishing race after race, but I’ll never give up.
“There are six more races, and I need to go and win all six. I’ll fight until the end.”
Red Bull believe the momentum is now in its camp. “It was a tremendous result for Sebastian and the team to win in Singapore. It’s a timely win for both championships,” Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said. “It was unfortunate for Lewis to retire from the lead, we know how that feels and it’s never a good feeling.
“Nonetheless, Sebastian had tremendous pace all weekend and it’s a shame in some respects, as I’m sure they’d have had a great race over the remainder of the grand prix.”
Kimi Raikkonen also lost ground in Singapore as his Lotus proved unresponsive on the tight street circuit with his sixth-place finish dropping him 45 points off the pace as he still searches for a first victory in his comeback season.
The teams now head to Suzuka for the Japanese Grand Prix on October 7 and while the circuit is a sweeping tribute to near-perfect track design, the title contenders have only one thing on their minds – to finish in the points.
“(The championship situation) looks better than before,” Vettel said after collecting his 23rd career victory. “Fernando finished third and is 10 points better than before. There are a lot of races left, and it’s difficult to predict what is going to happen but we have to make sure we finish the races.
“The pace is there and even if we are not quick enough to win – we have to make sure we do that. It is a tough championship so far but we are still in it.”
Ferrari team principal Stefano Domenicali expects the team to make incremental improvements to the car over the final races of the season but ruled out making drastic changes.
Button remains an outside bet for glory but remains buoyant. The McLaren ace said: “I still have a slim chance of winning the drivers’ world championship, but I’m just enjoying my racing at the moment.”
RED BULL (Sebastian Vettel 1, Mark Webber 11) Vettel moved into second place overall, 29 points behind Alonso, with his second victory of the season and second in a row in Singapore. His first win since Bahrain in April takes the champion’s career tally to 23. He had a nervous wait after the race when stewards investigated his behaviour behind the safety car when Button almost ran into the back of him. Webber finished 10th but was given a 20-second retroactive time penalty for gaining an advantage by leaving the track.
MCLAREN (Jenson Button 2, Lewis Hamilton retired) Hamilton started on pole, McLaren’s fourth in a row, and was leading when he was stopped by a gearbox failure on lap 23. The 2008 champion dropped from second overall to fourth, 52 points behind Alonso. Button, who also finished second in Singapore last year, is sixth in the standings.
FERRARI (Fernando Alonso 3, Felipe Massa 8) Alonso’s 81st career podium, one more than Ayrton Senna, and eighth of the season. The Spaniard had said before the race that getting on the podium was the most he could hope for. Massa went from 13th on the grid to last place after having a puncture on the opening lap and then fought back impressively including a 26-lap stint on his final set of tyres.
LOTUS (Kimi Raikkonen 6, Romain Grosjean 7) Raikkonen stayed third overall but lost ground on Alonso. Grosjean returned from his one-race ban and let his team mate through under orders from the pit wall.
MERCEDES (Nico Rosberg 5, Michael Schumacher retired) Rosberg made up five places on his starting position on a two-stop strategy. Schumacher retired on lap 38 when he slammed into the back of Vergne’s Toro Rosso at turn 14. He collected a 10-place grid penalty for Japan as a result.