When the lights went out at the start of the race Vettel made a good getaway to take the lead ahead of Ricciardo. Räikkönen too held his starting position to sit in third ahead of Red Bull’s Daniil Kvyat, while Hamilton and Rosberg kept their starting positions of fifth and sixth position, ahead of Williams’ Valtteri Bottas.
There was trouble for Max Verstappen though. The Toro Rosso driver, who was starting eighth, stalled on the grid and the rest of the field swarmed past him as the grand prix got underway. Verstappen was wheeled back to the pit lane where his car was restarted and he re-joined a lap down.
Vettel meanwhile was flying. By the end of lap two the Ferrari driver was a 4.4s ahead of Ricciardo and after four laps he’d stretched the advantage to 5.2 seconds. After six laps, though the lap times began to stabilise, with Ricciardo’s race engineer Simon Rennie telling the Red Bull driver that “Vettel has calmed down a bit”. Ricciardo began to chip away at the gap and took a second out the German over the next handful of laps.
Lotus’ Romain Grosjean was the first to shed his opening supersoft tyres – the Frenchman switching to soft tyres on lap 10. On the next lap he was followed to the pit lane by McLaren’s Fernando Alonso, Toro Rosso’s Carlos Sainz, Sauber’s Marcus Ericsson and Lotus driver Pastor Maldonado. Sainz lost time in the stop though as he was held in his pit box as Ericsson and Maldonado made their way along the pit lane.
On lap 13, however, the Virtual Safety Car was deployed as Williams’ Felipe Massa and Force India Nico Hulkenberg made contact. Massa was re-joining after his pit stop and Hulkenberg gave the Brazilian nowhere to go as they went into the following corner. They collided and Hulkenberg was pitched into the wall and out of the race. The Singapore Grand Prix’s 100% safety car record was maintained when the physical safety car was then briefly deployed as marshals cleared the debris from the crash.
Hulkenberg was later penalised with a three-place grid drop at next weekend’s Japanese Grand Prix for causing the collision. The period under the SC meant that all cars pitted, though some with more success than other. Jenson Button’s stop in front of the McLaren garage went horribly wrong as a problem with his front right wheel delayed him for some time and he rejoined in P16.
The order at the top under the SC saw Vettel leading from Ricciardo and Räikkönen, with the top three having taking more supersofts in their stops. Hamilton was fourth on soft tyres as was fifth-placed team-mate Rosberg. Kvyat, also on supersofts, lost out under the VSC and had dropped to P6 ahead of Bottas, Force India’s Sergio Perez, Sauber’s Felipe Nasr, who has climbed to P9 from 16th on the grid and Lotus’ Romain Grosjean.
Verstappen, meanwhile, had the chance re-join the lead lap during the safety car period.
When the action resumed Ricciardo kept pace with Vettel and on lap 22 the Australian was 0.8s behind the lead, with Vettel appearing to hold back a bit. Räikkönen was another 0.9s back but Hamilton was beginning to lose touch with the podium positions, slipping to over 2.0s down on the leaders.
On lap 27 Hamilton began complaining of a loss of power and the Briton was swiftly passed by Rosberg and Kvyat. The team told Hamilton that his throttle was failing to open completely but that there was no electrical problem. Hamilton responded that he could no feel a pedal issue and as the investigation went on Hamilton to P11 by lap 30.
It was then Felipe Massa’s turn to encounter problems as he radioed his team to say that his car had suddenly jumped into neutral. He made a detour through the pit lane without stopping and then was told to retire the car.
Hamilton’s frustrations finally came to an end on lap 33. The championship leader had been complaining that the issue was worsening and then informed his team that the brakes were becoming too cold to continue in comfort. The team told him to box and he too retired.
On lap 37 the Safety Car was deployed again, though this time it was because of a spectator invading the track. It was the cue for all of the field to make another pit stop and when the order sorted itself out under the SC Vettel still led from Ricciardo and Räikkönen but Rosberg was now fourth ahead of Bottas with Kvyat sixth. Perez was now seventh in the sole remaining Force India, with Grosjean eighth ahead of team-mate Pastor Maldonado. Button, in the sole remaining McLaren following an earlier retirement for Fernando Alonso, was in the final points position, though he too would soon exit the race with a gearbox issue.
When the action resumed, Vettel this time powered away, with the German rapidly building a two-second gap to Ricciardo. Further back Button tangled with Maldonado as they battled for P9 and the Briton clipped the back of the Lotus, losing his front wing in the prices. He pitted for a new wing and re-joined in P14.
Toro Rosso’s drivers, meanwhile, were on a march, with Verstappen passing Maldonado for P9 and with Sainz repeating the moved almost immeditaley afterwards. Verstappen then set the fastest lap of the race so far on lap 43 of the 61 scheduled. The Dutch teenager then passed Grosjean for P8 on lap 47 with an excellent move into Turn 16. Sainz followed but his move was riskier and both drivers went over the kerbs on the exit, with Grosjean complaining that he had been forced wide and had “no place to go”. The move stood, however, and Sainz held ninth.
Verstappen’s next target was Perez in seventh but he could find no way past the Mexican. His race ended in somewhat controversial circumstances when his engineer told him to swap places with Sainz in the closing laps. Verstappen refused and held station to claim eighth ahead of his team-mate.
At the front the order also remained unchanged, with Vettel taking his 42 career win just 1.4s ahead of Ricciardo, with Räikkönen third. Rosberg closed the gap to title rival Hamilton by 12 points by claiming fourth with Bottas fifth ahead of Kvyat and Perez. With the Toro Rosso pair eighth and ninth, the final points position when to Sauber’s Felipe Nasr.
SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX, MARINA BAY STREET CIRCUIT
61 laps, 308.965km., Weather: Hot/Night.
CLASSIFIED:
P. DRIVER TEAM TIME/GAP
1. Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 2h01:22.118
2. Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull + 1.478
3. Kimi Räikkönen Ferrari + 17.154
4. Nico Rosberg Mercedes AMG + 24.720
5. Valtteri Bottas Williams + 34.204
6. Daniil Kvyat Red Bull + 35.508
7. Sergio Perez Force India + 50.836
8. Max Verstappen Toro Rosso + 51.450
9. Carlos Sainz Jr. Toro Rosso + 52.860
10. Felipe Nasr Sauber + 1:30.045
11. Marcus Ericsson Sauber + 1:37.507
12. Pastor Maldonado Lotus + 1:37.718
13. Romain Grosjean Lotus + 2 laps
14. Alexander Rossi Manor + 2 laps
15. Will Stevens Manor + 2 laps
2014: Lewis Hamilton - Mercedes AMG - 2h00:04.795
FASTEST LAP: Daniel Ricciardo - 1:50.041
NOT CLASSIFIED:
Jenson Button McLaren Gearbox
Fernando Alonso McLaren Gearbox
Lewis Hamilton Mercedes AMG Power Unit
Felipe Massa Williams Power Unit
Nico Hulkenberg Force India Collision
After 14 races(1 canceled):
Drivers: Constructors:
1. Lewis Hamilton 252 1. Mercedes AMG 463
2. Nico Rosberg 211 2. Ferrari 310
3. Sebastian Vettel 203 3. Williams 198
4. Kimi Räikkönen 107 4. Red Bull 139
5. Valtteri Bottas 101 5. Force India 69
6. Felipe Massa 97 6. Lotus 50
7. Daniel Ricciardo 73 7. Toro Rosso 41
8. Daniil Kvyat 66 8. Sauber 26
9. Sergio Perez 39 9. McLaren 17
10. Romain Grosjean 38
11. Max Verstappen 30
12. Nico Hulkenberg 30
13. Felipe Nasr 17
14. Pastor Maldonado 12
15. Fernando Alonso 11
16. Carlos Sainz Jr. 11
17. Marcus Ericsson 9
18. Jenson Button 6
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