McLaren’s Button wins thrilling opener

McLaren’s Button wins thrilling opener

MELBOURNE - Reuters
McLaren’s Button wins thrilling opener

McLaren’s 32-year-old driver Jenson Button of Britain celebrates after winning the Australian Grand Prix at Albert Park in Melbourne, yesterday. AP photo

Jenson Button ignored an incident-packed race behind him and calmly steered his McLaren to victory at the season-opening Australian Grand Prix ahead of world champion Sebastian Vettel yesterday.

It was the Briton’s third victory in four years at Albert Park, the 13th win of his career overall and he is the first driver other than Vettel to lead the championship since the German won the first of his two titles for Red Bull at the end of 2010.

Button’s compatriot and teammate Lewis Hamilton, who started on pole, finished third to round out the podium while Vettel’s teammate Mark Webber was fourth, his best ever finish in his 11th attempt to win his home race.

“Oh fantastic, what a great way to start the year, guys! Seriously, fantastic!” former world champion Button said on the team radio. “The car is beautiful and she’s quick. Thanks guys.”

Fernando Alonso drove a spirited race to finish fifth for Ferrari ahead of the Sauber of Kamui Kobayashi after Williams driver Pastor Maldonado crashed out spectacularly on the final lap while running sixth.
Finland’s Kimi Raikkonen, one of six former world champions in the field, impressed on his return from two years out of the sport to finish seventh for Lotus. Mexican Sergio Perez had started right from the back after changing his gearbox overnight but finished eighth - the same place he claimed on his Formula One debut here last year before he and Kobayashi were disqualified for technical infringements.

Australian Daniel Ricciardo finished ninth on his home race debut for Toro Rosso despite an accident at the start, while the last point was won by Force India’s Paul Di Resta in 10th.

Button, who was second in the title race last year and on the grid yesterday, eased in front of Hamilton from the start but both will have been happy to avoid the usual crush behind them at the first corner.
Webber and Ricciardo were not so fortunate, the former sandwiched between two rivals as he dropped from fifth to ninth and the latter’s car spinning, taking out the Williams of Bruno Senna in the process. Vettel, who was sixth on the grid, made the most of Webber’s misfortune and by the end of lap two had passed Nico Rosberg with a superb move into fourth place behind the other Mercedes of Michael Schumacher.

When seven-time champion Schumacher went off the track onto the grass on lap 10 to effectively end his race, Vettel swept through into third place and started trying to eat into the 10-second gap to the McLarens.

An opportune safety car when Vitaly Petrov’s Caterham ground to a halt on the start-finish straight 20 laps from the end allowed the German to leap-frog Hamilton.

But when the track was finally cleared at the end of lap 41, Button simply eased away from the world champion and took the chequered flag after one hour 34.09 minutes, 2.1 seconds in front of the German. “I think Jenson was unbeatable today,” said Vettel. “They are the ones to beat at the moment and we’ll see what happens next week.”

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