Webber’s wheel hits cameraman at German GP; Bianchi’s car catches fire
World champion Sebastian Vettel was pushed all the way but finally
tasted Formula One victory on home soil on Sunday in a German Grand Prix
that sent him 34 points clear of Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.
Championship rival Kimi Raikkonen was second for Lotus, only a second
adrift, after a late tyre change left him hunting down the Red Bull in a
thrilling final few laps while team mate Romain Grosjean was third.
Alonso, who started eighth on an adventurous tyre strategy, finished
fourth. The Spaniard now has 123 points to Vettel's 157 after nine of 19
races. Raikkonen has 116.
There were none of the explosive tyre failures that raised safety fears
at last weekend's race in Britain, with the subsequent threat of a
driver boycott, but there were still moments of concern on a hot
afternoon at the Nurburgring.
A stray wheel from Mark Webber's Red Bull
injured a cameraman in the pit-lane while, on track, Jules Bianchi's car
momentarily caught fire and then rolled towards oncoming traffic after
the Frenchman had scrambled out. That incident brought out the safety
car but Vettel hung on for his 30th grand Prix win.
The triple champion had never won in Germany or in July but, days after
his 26th birthday and a week after mechanical failure forced an
agonising retirement at Silverstone, ripped up the statistics to the
delight of thousands of flag-waving fans.
Fernando Alonso, who like Raikkonen had quicker tyres than Vettel in the
closing stages after starting on mediums, chased Grosjean home.
The main drama happened in the first 25 laps of the race.
Both Red Bulls jumped pole-sitter Lewis Hamilton's Mercedes at the
start, coming close at the first corner but avoiding contact, and Vettel
took command from Australian Mark Webber. Ferrari's Felipe Massa also
got past Toro Rosso's Daniel Ricciardo into sixth place but spun at the
same tricky turn one at the start of the third lap and, with the engine
cutting out, had to retire.
Force India's Paul Di Resta and Jean-Eric Vergne's Toro Rosso then
almost collided in the pits with Force India releasing the Briton as the
Frenchman was coming in. The incident was being probed by stewards.
Hamilton came into the pits for his first tyre change on lap seven,
earlier than the other contenders, and Vettel followed him after the
next trip round.
Vettel's team mate Webber then entered the pits on lap nine but the rear
right wheel was not attached properly and came away as he accelerated,
hitting the cameraman and knocking him over.
An FIA statement said the man was conscious and had been taken to
hospital by helicopter and was under observation. Webber's wheel was put
back on and he returned well down the field. The Australianended up
seventh on the track where he first won a grand prix in 2009.
While fans at the rural west German track — famous for the old
Nordschleife loop no longer used in Formula One — were coming to terms
with the Webber incident, Bianchi's Marussia came to a halt and flames
flared out of the back.
The Frenchman quickly jumped out but before a tractor could remove the
car, the Marussia rolled back onto the track into the path of drivers.
Fellow French driver Grosjean, who started fifth, enjoyed a superb race
and came out second behind Vettel after his first pit stop with his pace
surprising almost everyone.