Singapore Grand Prix highlights
Singapore GP: McLaren's Lewis Hamilton will not give up on title
McLaren's Lewis Hamilton says he will not give up on his title hopes despite a damaging retirement from the lead of the Singapore Grand Prix.
Hamilton suffered a gearbox failure to fall 52 points behind championship leader Fernando Alonso of Ferrari.
"I won't give up," Hamilton said. "I'll keep pushing to the end. Of course, it makes it that bit harder."
Hamilton is now fourth overall, behind Alonso, Singapore winner Sebastian Vettel and Lotus's Kimi Raikkonen.
Singapore GP: Lewis Hamilton 'gutted' after retirement
The Englishman is 23 points behind Red Bull's Vettel and seven adrift of Raikkonen, who finished sixth.
There is a maximum of 150 points available in the remaining six races.
Hamilton controlled the race from the start after converting his pole position into a lead at the first corner, but retired on lap 23, handing the lead and eventual victory to Vettel.
"It was gutting when the car stopped; I was cruising," Hamilton said. "I was managing the gap and could have pushed more, I had the pace. I think today would have been an easy win.
"Nonetheless, that's not the case. The Red Bulls did a good job, Jenson too. We've got six races left and I need to keep pushing. I need to win the rest of them.
"It's just heart-crushing when you know you have 25 points easily if you don't have any problems, and then the problem came."
McLaren's Lewis Hamilton retires from lead
McLaren team prinicpal Martin Whitmarsh said there had been no indication before the race that there was anything wrong with McLaren's gearbox and said he did not think an incident in qualifying in which Hamilton brushed the wall would have caused enough damage to contribute to it.
"It was a very light tap," Whitmarsh said. "This morning we saw the wheel had some paint rubbed off and some paint from the wall, but a very small section, the rim wasn't damaged, the tyre wasn't damaged.
"In fact I was nagging the engineers to check track and camber and they did but it was such a light touch they don't think it was [too damaging]."
Vettel's victory, his second of the year, puts him in an apparently strong position in a faster car than the Ferrari.
"It looks better than before," Vettel said. "Fernando finished third. I am not a genius but I think it is looking 10 points better than before.
Fernando Alonso“Of the four of five contenders, we lost points with one, with the other three we increased our advantage”
"There's a lot of races left and it's a bit difficult to predict what's going to happen. We have to make sure we finish the races first of all.
"I think the pace is there, even if we are not quick enough to win then it is good enough to collect a lot of points, and we have to make sure we do that.
"It is a tough championship so far but we're still in it. We're looking forward to the next couple of races and obviously the target at the moment is to beat Fernando."
Alonso said: "In Monza [at the last race], it was Lewis winning the race and Sebastian retired. Here it is Sebastian winning and Lewis retiring. So for me it is OK if they keep doing it like this.
"I think it's a very positive weekend. A very good weekend. Of the four of five contenders, we lost points with one, with the other three we increased our advantage.
"So when we are not quick enough, to win more points against three of our opponents, I think it's positive."
Singapore Grand Prix 2012, day three
- Sunday, 23 September: Highlights on BBC Three at 19:00 BST.
Comments
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Comment number 88.
kaMelo26th September 2012 - 0:37
Some people just can't take the truth. Reading some comments on here is laughable, sabotage and conspiracy at McLaren. Utter nonsense. Hurting Hamilton also hurts themselves with reduced points and so reduced revenue when the money is handed out. Take off the blinkers and see the bigger picture,
Unlucky today for Hamilton. Strangely enough he could be Alonso's biggest ally. Who'd have thought it
Link to this (Comment number 88)
Comment number 87.
TaffEvans25th September 2012 - 15:50
And if McL did change the box, this forum would be full of people claiming they didn't have to change it, nothing wrong with it,then blaming McL for a stupid call or making other allegations. The box was only in it's 2nd race and the problem only showed up a few laps before it failed. The impact in Q3 was so slight that it didn't derange the suspension. Grosjean hit the wall & Lotus raced that box
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Comment number 86.
SalsaMan12325th September 2012 - 15:29
Hard place always better than Rock. Let's face it. Maldonado retired, Button no issue, and the others fair fight. So gearbox change was order of day.
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Comment number 85.
TaffEvans25th September 2012 - 14:58
The radio message refered to the fact that Lewis put the car on pole on Saturday. McLaren checked the gearbox and found no signs of damage. The only other option they had was change the box which meant a 5 grid slot penalty. Rock and a hard place, me thinks!
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Comment number 84.
SalsaMan12325th September 2012 - 14:43
I think the final nail in the coffin of the LH McL relationship was this gearbox. Over the radio the engineer said "we did all we could YESTERDAY" so there was an issue and so once again with McL clarity of thought try and run it with no hope in hell of getting to the end on a track that demands so many gear changes. Button Whitmarsh and Michael, deserve each other. LH to Merc up up and away!!
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Comments 5 of 88