2010 Belgian Grand Prix

The 2010 Belgian Grand Prix (officially the 2010 Formula 1 Belgian Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, near Spa, Ardennes, on 29 August. It was the 13th round of the 2010 Formula One World Championship and the 55th Belgian Grand Prix held as part of the Formula One World Championship. McLaren's Lewis Hamilton won the 44-lap race after starting from second position. Red Bull's Mark Webber was second ahead of Robert Kubica's third-placed Renault. It was Hamilton's first victory at Spa-Francorchamps, his third of the season and the 14th of his career.

2010 Belgian Grand Prix
Race 13 of 19 in the 2010 Formula One World Championship
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Race details[1][2]
Date 29 August 2010
Official name 2010 Formula 1 Belgian Grand Prix[3]
Location Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Spa, Belgium
Course Permanent racing facility
Course length 7.004 km (4.352 mi)
Distance 44 laps, 308.052 km (191.415 mi)
Weather Intermittent rain
Pole position
Driver Red Bull-Renault
Time 1:45.778
Fastest lap
Driver Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes
Time 1:49.069 on lap 32
Podium
First McLaren-Mercedes
Second Red Bull-Renault
Third Renault

Webber achieved the sixth pole position of his career by setting the fastest lap in qualifying but immediately lost the lead to Hamilton as a result of a slow start. The Grand Prix was slowed by two safety car deployments due to a collision between the Williams car of Rubens Barrichello and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso on the first lap and Alonso's 38th lap accident. Hamilton led throughout in variable weather despite running into a gravel trap on lap 35 and finished 112 seconds ahead of Webber in second. Kubica took third after overshooting the entry to his pit lane box late in the race.

The result returned Hamilton atop the World Drivers' Championship with 182 points, three ahead of the previous leader Webber in second. Webber's teammate Sebastian Vettel remained in third despite coming 15th after colliding with Jenson Button and sustaining a left-rear puncture from contact with Vitantonio Liuzzi's Force India car. McLaren lowered Red Bull's World Constructors' Championship lead to one point with Ferrari third with six races left in the season.

Background

The Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps (pictured in 2018), where the race was held

The 2010 Belgian Grand Prix was the 13th of the 19 events in the 2010 Formula One World Championship,[1] and the 55th edition of the race as part of the Formula One World Championship.[4] It was held at the 19-turn 7.004 km (4.352 mi) Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, near Spa, Ardennes, on 29 August.[4] Tyre supplier Bridgestone brought the soft green-banded and medium dry compounds and the intermediate and full-wet green-line central groove banded wet-weather compounds tyres to the race.[5] After the 2009 event, the tarmac run-off area at Les Combes chicane was expanded with three bumps similar to those on the chicanes at the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza, the Circuit de Catalunya and the Valencia Street Circuit added to stop drivers sustaining damage to their cars if they ventured off the circuit. La Source turn had a larger area of artificial grass and a 50 mm (2.0 in) kerb installed at the corner to deter competitors from transgressing track limits.[6][7]

After winning the preceding Hungarian Grand Prix,[8] Red Bull's Mark Webber led the World Drivers' Championship with 161 points, ahead of Lewis Hamilton of McLaren with 157 points and Webber's teammate Sebastian Vettel with 151 points. Hamilton's teammate Jenson Button was fourth with 147 points and Ferrari's Fernando Alonso was fifth with 141 points.[9] With 312 points, Red Bull led the World Constructors' Championship followed by McLaren in second with 304 points and the third-placed Ferrari with 238 points. Mercedes were fourth with 132 points and Renault were fifth with 106 points.[9]

The race was the first after a four-week gap between races that includes a mandatory two-week shut-down for all teams. The interval had proved to be unpopular with some teams, particularly those perceived to be struggling.[10][11] Although he had reclaimed the World Drivers' Championship lead from Hamilton in Hungary, Webber said consistently finishing and reliability was an important factor in the final seven races, "You have to be mindful of the fact that you might not get anything out of it so you need to realise that four points is better than none and gambling."[8] His teammate Vettel, the bookmakers' favourite for victory,[12] said his title challenge would commence in Belgium following reliability issues and incidents losing him points in past events, "We have to focus on each and every race. With 20 races or 15 races there is probably more room for mistakes – but with seven to go every single races is probably more important."[13] Hamilton said he was confident of better pace for the rest of the season and wanted to win at Spa-Francorchamps. His teammate Button believed the next two events would be consequential for the championship but said they would better suit his McLaren.[14]

Sakon Yamamoto was retained by the Hispania Racing team for the race.

Some teams modified their cars for better efficiency on the track's straights.[15] Ferrari introduced a new rear wing with less downforce featuring revised endplates and a small flap lacking a slot on the main profile on Felipe Massa's F10 car for qualifying and the race.[16] The team also added a modified diffuser and floor to maximise the F10's performance within compliance of FIA regulations restricting the size of the car's lower surface to reduce the downforce generated.[2] Red Bull altered the RB6's brake discs for extra ballast around the car and improved performance and McLaren installed a new front wing on Button's MP4-27 vehicle to improve airflow and downforce.[2] Renault introduced a version of McLaren's F-duct tool to their R30 car activated by the driver's left hand and directed air to the main section of the rear wing instead of the flap.[17] The team was impressed at the F-duct's performance during practice and retained the tool for the rest of the meeting.[2][18] Williams introduced new front and rear wings for their FW32 cars and Force India added a new floor to their vehicles.[15]

Having driven one of its cars since the British Grand Prix three races earlier, Hispania Racing opted to retain Sakon Yamamoto in lieu of Karun Chandhok,[19] whom the press anticipated would return to drive for the squad following the mid-season interval.[20] Paul di Resta, Force India's reserve and test driver, did not enter the first practice session because the team wanted its race drivers Vitantonio Liuzzi and Adrian Sutil to become acclimatised with a revised aerodynamic bodywork.[21]

Practice

There were three practice sessions held in accordance with the 2010 regulations, two 90-minute sessions on Friday morning and afternoon and one 60-minute session on Saturday morning.[22] Heavy rain fell on the circuit at about midnight before the first session. Although the track was wet, a decent level of grip was reported as some drivers aquaplaned when the rain briefly increased in intensity and lightening came on approximately 50 minutes before abating with 20 minutes left.[23] Alonso lapped fastest at 2 minutes, 1.223 seconds at mid-point before improving to a 2 minutes, 0.797 seconds late on. Hamilton, Renault's Robert Kubica, Vettel, Sutil, Button, Webber, Kamui Kobayashi of Sauber, Williams' Rubens Barrichello, and Mercedes' Michael Schumacher made up positions two through ten.[24]

Timo Glock crashed during the second practice session

The second session commenced on a damp circuit which gradually dried up bar a small rain shower early on.[25] Drivers used wet-weather tyres before switching to the dry compounds.[26] Alonso led with the day's fastest lap, a 1-minute, 49.032 seconds, ahead of Sutil, Hamilton, Kubica, Massa, Vettel, Button, Pedro de la Rosa for Sauber, Barrichello and de la Rosa's teammate Kamui Kobayashi in positions two to ten.[25] Due to the damp conditions, some drivers ventured off the track during the session. Liuzzi drove onto a white line braking for Rivage chicane but was able to reverse and enter the pit lane for a new front wing. Virgin's Timo Glock lost control of his car on a white line and crashed sideways into the barrier at Liège corner.[25][27] The session was stopped for ten minutes by the stewards for a safety hazard limiting dry track running. Children were reportedly climbing the catch fence on track grounds, forcing FIA race director Charlie Whiting to drive the safety car and do an inspection. While the session restarted with four minutes left, a malfunctioning red light delayed on-track action, requiring marshals to wave a green flag to resume proceedings.[27]

More overnight rain showers made the track damp by the start of the final session but slick tyres were used after 20 minutes.[28] Conditions remained dry enough for drivers to go faster until a downpour fell on the circuit with 20 minutes remaining and caught out some participants.[29][30] With a 1-minute, 46.106 seconds lap being almost three seconds quicker than Friday's best time,[30] Webber led from Hamilton, Vettel, Button, Kubica, Alonso, Massa, Sutil, Williams' Nico Hülkenberg and Kobayashi.[28][29] Vettel stopped his car at the pit lane entry with his car stuck in gear due to a air box fault prompting his team to instruct him to switch off the engine as a precaution. A group of stewards moved Vettel's car into the pit lane for retrieval by his team.[28][30]

Qualifying

Saturday afternoon's qualifying session was split into three parts. The first session ran for 20 minutes, eliminating cars that finished 18th or lower. The second session was 15 minutes long, eliminating cars that finished 11th to 17th. The final ten-minute session determined pole position to tenth. Cars in the final session were not allowed to change tyres, using the set with which they set their quickest lap times.[22] Qualifying commenced in clear weather before rain showers fell on parts of the circuit making the surface uneven and catching some drivers out. The rain soon abated and the circuit quickly dried up before light rain fell again at the third session's end.[31][32][33]

Mark Webber qualified on pole position for the Grand Prix

Webber positioned himself for space and driving on the circuit at its driest,[2] for his first pole position since the Turkish Grand Prix, his fifth of the season and the sixth of his career with a 1-minute, 45.778 seconds lap set late in the third session.[34] It was the 12th time in 13 races Red Bull had pole position.[34] Webber was joined on the grid's front row by Hamilton whose first timed lap was on old soft tyres with his second on a new set of tyres before the rain fell.[2] Kubica in third did not set a second timed lap in the final session because a fuel feed fault cut out his car entering the pit lane and requiring mechanics to push his car into the garage for the rest of qualifying. Errors on each of his third session laps left Vettel fourth.[35] Button took fifth by saving a set of soft tyres despite losing time through an error at La Source turn and being circumspect at Fagnes corner. Massa, sixth, altered his rear wing for better straightline speed but had less grip in the turns halfway through the lap.[2] Barrichello qualified seventh for his 300th Grand Prix on the hard compound tyre having depleted his soft tyre allocation in the first two sessions.[lower-alpha 1] Sutil, eighth, had one timed lap on one set of soft compound tyres and Hülkenberg in ninth was on worn soft tyres.[2]

A crash by Vitaly Petrov in the first qualifying session caused a six-minute stoppage.

Alonso, 10th, lost a plethora of time running wide on the damp La Source corner; he used less front wing angle and an old rear wing.[2][31] Schumacher was the fastest driver not to progress to the final session in 11th.[31] His teammate Rosberg in 12th lacked grip on a wet-weather set-up and had to slow when he came across the Toro Rosso car of Sébastien Buemi.[2][35] Toro Rosso's Jaime Alguersuari slowed on the slippery turns 13 and 14 on his final timed lap and was 13th ahead of Liuzzi in 14th. Alguersari's teammate Buemi was 15th. Heikki Kovalainen advanced to the second session for the second time in 2010 since the Malaysian Grand Prix and qualified his Lotus 16th. Glock made no errors for 17th.[35] Lotus' Jarno Trulli, 18th, made contact with the right-rear of Lucas di Grassi's out of control Virgin Racing vehicle at Stavelot turn.[36] A tyre strategy error and going wide into the gravel on the wet track left Kobayashi 19th. Hispania Racing driver Bruno Senna 20th and his teammate Yamamoto 21st following a tyre strategy error and him being impeded by a slower car.[35] De La Rosa in 22nd lost control of the rear of his car at Rivage turn and struck the wall. Di Grassi, 23rd, set no lap time after his collision with Trulli.[31][35] Vitaly Petrov lost control of his Renault on dry tyres on a damp kerb exiting Rivage corner and spun into the inside barrier backwards.[5][31][37] The session was stopped for six minutes to allow marshals to move his car off the track.[37]

Post-qualifying

Michael Schumacher took a ten-place grid penalty for dangerous driving at the previous Grand Prix.

A total of five drivers received grid penalties post-qualifying.[5] Schumacher was demoted ten places for forcing Barrichello close to the concrete wall at the Hungarian Grand Prix.[38] His teammate Rosberg lost five places for changing his car's gearbox to an older specification unused for four races pre-qualifying.[39] Buemi was demoted three positions because he was deemed by the race stewards to have transgressed the sporting regulations by blocking Rosberg in the second session.[40] The stewards penalised Glock five positions for illegally blocking Yamamoto in the first session.[41] De La Rosa incurred the loss of ten places for changing his car's engine between qualifying and the race for the ninth time in the season passing the eight maximum engine switches.[42]

At the pre-race drivers' briefing, Whiting and stewards' advisor Nigel Mansell told drivers if they gained positions on the first lap by using the run-off area at La Source corner as was the case with Kimi Räikkönen at the 2009 event, then they would risk receiving a penalty or they would be told off if deemed to have been forced onto it by another competitor.[43]

Qualifying classification

The fastest lap in each of the three sessions is denoted in bold.

Pos No Driver Constructor Q1 Q2 Q3 Grid[5]
1 6 Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 1:57.352 1:47.253 1:45.778 1
2 2 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 1:56.706 1:46.211 1:45.863 2
3 11 Robert Kubica Renault 1:56.041 1:47.320 1:46.100 3
4 5 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 1:58.487 1:47.245 1:46.127 4
5 1 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 1:57.981 1:46.790 1:46.206 5
6 7 Felipe Massa Ferrari 1:58.323 1:47.322 1:46.314 6
7 9 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 1:55.757 1:47.797 1:46.602 7
8 14 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 1:58.730 1:47.292 1:46.659 8
9 10 Nico Hülkenberg Williams-Cosworth 1:55.442 1:47.821 1:47.053 9
10 8 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 1:57.023 1:47.544 1:47.441 10
11 3 Michael Schumacher Mercedes 1:56.313 1:47.874 211
12 4 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 1:54.826 1:47.885 142
13 17 Jaime Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 1:58.944 1:48.267 11
14 15 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 2:01.102 1:48.680 12
15 16 Sébastien Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 2:00.386 1:49.209 163
16 19 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 2:01.343 1:50.980 13
17 24 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 2:01.316 1:52.049 204
18 18 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 2:01.491 15
19 23 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 2:02.284 17
20 21 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 2:03.612 18
21 20 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 2:03.941 19
22 22 Pedro de la Rosa BMW Sauber-Ferrari 2:05.294 245
23 25 Lucas di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 2:18.754 22
24 12 Vitaly Petrov Renault no time6 23
Source:[3]

Notes:

Race

The start of the race under overcast conditions

The 44-lap race occurred from 14:00 local time.[4] A 60 per cent chance of rain showers between 14:00 and 15:00 local time were forecast,[44] and at the start, weather conditions were overcast, although some rain had fallen during the support races and there was a large build-up of rain showers to the west of Spa-Francorchamps.[45] The air temperature was between 14 to 16 °C (57 to 61 °F) and the track temperature from 17 to 21 °C (63 to 70 °F).[5][46] The rain showers observed in the morning's support events altered the level of grip,[45] and tyre strategy had the potential to effect the final finishing order according to Sarah Holt of BBC Sport.[47] Cars were allowed to be changed slightly following the FIA's declaration of a change in climatic conditions post-qualifying.[45] Every driver bar Barrichello, Rosberg and Schumacher began on the soft compound tyre.[2] Before the start, Massa was observed by amateur video footage posted on the internet to have transgressed sporting regulation by being slightly out of position on the grid. He was not punished since neither the marshals, teams or the automatic jump start system relayed the fact to Whiting for him to impose a jump start penalty on Massa.[48]

From pole position on the outside of the grid's front row, Hamilton took the lead from a slow-starting Webber into La Source hairpin with Kubica second and Button third.[49][50] Webber allowed the engine revolutions to fall too low, causing his car to go into anti-stall mode and falling to sixth.[2] Hamilton held off Kubica on the outside in the braking zone of Les Combes turn and stopped Button passing Kubica. Sutil clung onto Webber's slipstream and overtook him on the straight for sixth before losing the place by running wide into Les Combes corner.[2] A rain shower began to fell towards the conclusion of the first lap.[49][51] The rain shower made the back of the track damp through Blanicmont corner and the conditions caused several drivers to run wide at the Bus Stop chicane due to a loss of grip braking for the turn.[2][49][50] Button attempted to pass Kubica on the outside but sustained left front wing damage affecting its aerodynamic balance as it became apparent several drivers could not turn into the chicane and drove onto the run-off tarmac.[2]

Rubens Barrichello retired from his 300th Grand Prix due to a first lap collision with Fernando Alonso.

Barrichello was unable to stop his car in time in the greasy conditions despite his braking early and struck the side of Alonso's eighth-placed car.[45][49][52] Alonso was able to make a pit stop for intermediate tyres as well as other drivers but Barrichello retired with car damage. Button followed the chicane's contours and fell behind Vettel but held off Massa by braking very late for the La Source hairpin. He thus drew to the inside of Vettel and overtook him for third.[2] In the second lap,[47] Hamilton experienced a minor loss of control of his car through Eau Rouge turn but retained the lead. Kubica used his F-duct system but ran wide onto the outside run-off area, promoting Button to second. Vettel was forced wide by the rejoining Kubica and protested over the radio.[2] Webber passed Massa on the inside for fifth before the safety car was dispatched at lap two's conclusion,[44][50] as a consequence of the first lap accident between Alonso and Barrichello as Barrichello's car was being removed from the circuit.[2][51] The leaders remained on the track as three drivers lower down the order made pit stops for intermediate tyres.[45] The rain abated on lap three as a blue sky began to appear through the clouds.[45][47]

The safety car was withdrawn at the conclusion of lap three and racing resumed with Hamilton leading his teammate Button.[45][50] Hamilton ran wide at the La Source hairpin and blocked his teammate Button from passing him for the lead,[47][51] while Vettel used the restart to pass Kubica for third at the same hairpin.[2][50] Sutil's higher straightline speed moved him past Hülkenberg for seventh to nullify an earlier illegal pass by the latter on the former at the Bus Stop chicane.[2] Button's handling difficulties caused by front wing damage allowed his teammate Hamilton to pull away from the rest of the field to be 4.8 seconds ahead by lap seven.[47][49] On lap six,[45] Senna drove slowly into the pit lane to retire with rear-left suspension failure that caused him to spin.[2][52] Vettel drew close to Button as he went faster uphill through Eau Rouge but him hitting his rev limiter on the Kemmel straight into the braking area for Les Combes corner and the effectiveness of the McLaren's F-duct system allowing for a longer gear ratio and a tailwind kept Button ahead.[2][49] During lap 11, Petrov overtook Rosberg on the outside for ninth into Les Combes turn and put the latter wide.[47][50] Exiting Les Combes, Schumacher passed Rosberg on the outside for tenth,[45] with Schumacher's rear wheel and Rosberg's front wing endplate colliding.[50]

Jenson Button retired from the race as a result of a collision with Sebastian Vettel.

Light rain began to fall on lap 16.[47] That same lap, a frustrated Vettel got a run on the conservatively breaking Button on the inside into the Bus Stop chicane. Vettel suddenly switched to the outside line and lost control of his car by hitting a bump on the damp circuit as he was unable to correct an opposite lock at high speed.[2][49] He struck the sidepod of Button's car,[51] exposing its radiator and causing Button's retirement.[2][52] Vettel entered the pit lane for a replacement front wing and fell to 12th position.[50] The incident promoted Kubica to second and Webber to third.[44] The stewards informed the Red Bull team the collision would be investigated and decided to impose a drive-through penalty on Vettel on the 20th lap.[44][49] Vettel was informed of the penalty by his race engineer,[45] and took it on the next lap.[49] He rejoined in 14th place.[44] Sutil was the first of the leaders to make a scheduled pit stop for the medium compound tyres on lap 22. Red Bull responded by calling Webber into the pit lane on the next lap, followed in turn by Kubica and Massa on lap 24.[2][44] Kubica rejoined ahead of Webber and held off the latter into Les Combes turn.[49]

Robert Kubica finished third for the Renault team

On lap 25, Hamilton made his first pit stop and retained the lead.[44] Sutil overtook Schumacher uphill into Les Combes turn for fifth on the lap. On lap 26, Vettel overtook Liuzzi at the Bus Stop chicane but Liuzzi's right-front wing endplate punctured Vettel's left-rear tyre.[47][51] Vettel was unable to enter the pit lane and had to do a full lap before stopping for the soft compound tyres and fell to 20th; Liuzzi immediately made a pit stop for a front wing replacement.[45][49] On lap 31, Hamilton led Kubica by 11.2 seconds, who in turn, was 2.3 seconds ahead of Webber in third.[50] As Alonso challenged Kobayashi for eighth,[44] light rain again began to fall on lap 34.[50] At first, the track was slightly wet and made drivers unsure when to make pit stops for wet-weather tyres.[2] Drivers began to make pit stops for wet-weather tyres on lap 35.[44][50] On that lap, Hamilton was unable to slow enough in the slippery conditions and slid into the gravel trap at Rivage corner. Hamilton made light contact with the wall but had enough traction to get himself out of the gravel and return to the track in the lead.[49]

The first three drivers entered the pit lane at the lap's end.[50] Kubica had a problematic pit stop: he overshot his pit box and glanced the legs of a team member because he was distracted with the switches on his steering wheel for car adjustments. Kubica's delay moved Webber to second as Hamilton retained the lead.[2] On lap 38,[47] the safety car was deployed for a second time because of an accident requiring marshal intervention.[51] Alonso ran wide on the paint marking the outside kerb exiting Les Combes turn and into Malmedy corner and lost control of his car.[47][50] He veered across the track to the inside and crashed into the tyre wall, fracturing his front-right suspension before stopping in the circuit's centre.[45][50] The crash forced Alonso to retire from the race.[51] The safety car was withdrawn at the conclusion of lap 40 for four laps of racing.[44][49] Hamilton led Webber in second and Kubica in third.[45] Into Les Combes turn, Rosberg overtook Kobayashi and then his teammate Schumacher on the outside for sixth by forcing him wide on the inside kerbs.[2][50] Alguersuari cut the Bus Stop chicane and passed Liuzzi for tenth on lap 42.[49]

At the front, Hamilton crossed the finish line first to achieve his first victory at Spa-Francorchamps, his third of his season and the 14th of his career,[lower-alpha 2][53] in a time of 1 hour, 29 minutes, 4.268 seconds at an average speed of 207.509 km/h (128.940 mph).[54] The win extended a winning streak of either the Ferrari and McLaren teams winning at Spa-Francorchamps each year since the 1999 edition.[53] Webber followed 1.571 seconds later in second and Kubica finished in third place. Massa secured fourth, holding off Sutil in fifth. The Mercedes pair of Rosberg and Schumacher finished sixth and seventh following the team's decision to keep their drivers on track for longer and were just more than a second ahead of eighth-placed Kobayashi.[2] Petrov was ninth and Algersuari provisionally tenth. Liuzzi came 11th with De La Rosa 12th after a late race error sent him into the gravel at Curve Paul Frere corner.[45] Buemi was 13th with Hülkenberg 14th due to electrical problems and Vettel 15th. Kovalainen, Di Grassi, Glock, Trulli and Yamamoto were the final classified finishers.[2]

Post-race

The top three drivers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media in a later press conference.[4][22] Hamilton described it as "a very, very tough race" for himself and said the victory "absolutely" made up for two years prior, adding: "At the end it was just about nursing the car home and bringing it back in one piece. Just trying to keep a small gap between myself and Mark and try to bag those points."[55] Webber said he was satisfied to finish second and agreed with the importance of scoring as many championship points as possible when race wins are not attainable: "These days it is very, very easy to come away with nothing with a small mistake from anybody, from the cockpit, pit wall or pit stops or whatever."[55] Kubica stated he did not believe others would think Renault would be competitive in Belgium and noted their results in each of the sessions, adding: "It was a very tricky race but we’ve seen very good pace. Started third, managed to finish third, of course thanks to some bad luck and good luck, but it was a good place."[55]

Sebastian Vettel, who finished 15th, apologised for the collision with Button

Vettel apologised for the collision with Button that eliminated the latter from the race. He said: "Obviously it was not my intention to destroy his race or mine. I was close, I was faster than him. The moment Robert [Kubica] got close behind I knew that he could pass us on the straight because we are not the fastest on the straight. I was very close a couple of times, unfortunately never really close enough."[56] Button described the crash as "a strange incident and so sad because I was fighting for second position", adding: "I defended my line about three inches on the inside and perhaps Sebastian got confused as to which direction to go... I'm guessing he [Vettel] thought I was going to pull from the left and he went on the inside. But he got a little rattled and didn't know which way to go."[57] Martin Whitmarsh, the McLaren team principal, commented on the collision: "It was not what you would expect to see in F1 – more reminiscent of junior formulae. A drive-through seemed a pretty light punishment to me. It was a bit of a strange mistake I have to say. I realise it was not intentional but it was a pretty strange one really."[58] Red Bull team principal Christian Horner argued Button braked early and that the accident was unintentional while motorsport advisor Helmut Marko said Vettel could not fellow Button for longer since the latter was slower.[59]

After reviewing video evidence and the change in the weather, the race stewards imposed no penalty or a caution for the first lap collision between Alonso and Barrichello, which they deemed "a racing incident".[60] Barrichello said he was sorry to have hit Alonso and called it downheartening for the Williams team: "We've had such a positive weekend that a good result would have been a nice conclusion."[52] Describing his race as the first of seven "finals", Alonso commented on his championship chances: "we will have to make up the ground lost today somewhere else ... It is very disappointing, because this is a bad result, but it does not mean I have given up on my chances of winning the title."[61] Schumacher gained 14 positions from 21st to 7th, commenting: "Honestly I lost the overview of where I was at certain moments. Because I wasn’t following the pit wall in terms of position, I was watching the weather all the time. And all the time I was quite busy with the steering wheel!"[62]

Jaime Alguersuari was penalised 20 seconds for cuttting the Bus Stop chicane to pass another driver.

The stewards added 20 seconds to Alguersuari's overall race time in lieu of a drive-through penalty after deeming him to have illegally cut the Bus Stop chicane to pass Liuzzi for tenth on lap 42. The penalty demoted Alguersuari to 13th and elevated Liuzzi to the final points-scoring place of 10th.[63] The FIA opened an investigation into how Massa began just ahead of his grid slot without the error being detected in time.[48] Massa said his short stature prevented him from observing the lines well: "I was a little bit outside, and that was it."[64] The result returned Hamilton atop World Drivers' Championship with 182 points. Webber fell to second with 179 points as his teammate Vettel remained third with 151 points. With a respective 147 and 141 points, Button and Alonso were fourth and fifth.[9] McLaren with 329 points lowered Red Bull's (330) World Constructors' Championship lead to one point. With 250 points, Ferrari were third with Mercedes with 146 points and Renault with 123 points fourth and fifth with six races left in the season.[9]

Race classification

Drivers who scored championship points are denoted in bold.

Pos No Driver Constructor Laps Time/Retired Grid Points
1 2 Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes 44 1:29:04.268 2 25
2 6 Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault 44 +1.571 1 18
3 11 Robert Kubica Renault 44 +3.493 3 15
4 7 Felipe Massa Ferrari 44 +8.264 6 12
5 14 Adrian Sutil Force India-Mercedes 44 +9.094 8 10
6 4 Nico Rosberg Mercedes 44 +12.359 14 8
7 3 Michael Schumacher Mercedes 44 +15.548 21 6
8 23 Kamui Kobayashi BMW Sauber-Ferrari 44 +16.678 17 4
9 12 Vitaly Petrov Renault 44 +23.851 23 2
10 15 Vitantonio Liuzzi Force India-Mercedes 44 +34.831 12 1
11 22 Pedro de la Rosa BMW Sauber-Ferrari 44 +36.019 24
12 16 Sébastien Buemi Toro Rosso-Ferrari 44 +39.895 16
13 17 Jaime Alguersuari Toro Rosso-Ferrari 44 +49.4577 11
14 10 Nico Hülkenberg Williams-Cosworth 43 +1 Lap 9
15 5 Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault 43 +1 Lap 4
16 19 Heikki Kovalainen Lotus-Cosworth 43 +1 Lap 13
17 25 Lucas di Grassi Virgin-Cosworth 43 +1 Lap 22
18 24 Timo Glock Virgin-Cosworth 43 +1 Lap 20
19 18 Jarno Trulli Lotus-Cosworth 43 +1 Lap 15
20 20 Sakon Yamamoto HRT-Cosworth 42 +2 Laps 19
Ret 8 Fernando Alonso Ferrari 37 Accident 10
Ret 1 Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes 15 Accident 5
Ret 21 Bruno Senna HRT-Cosworth 5 Suspension 18
Ret 9 Rubens Barrichello Williams-Cosworth 0 Accident 7
Source:[2][65]

Notes:

  • ^7   Jaime Alguersuari received a 20-second time penalty for being deemed to have illegally cut the Bus Stop chicane to pass another driver.[63]

Championship standings after the race

  • Note: Only the top five positions are included for both sets of standings.

See also

Notes

  1. Barrichello was actually starting his 297th race; he had failed to begin three previous races he had entered.[12]
  2. Hamilton finished first in the 2008 Belgian Grand Prix but was penalised for an illegal manoevure.[53]

References

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2010 Hungarian Grand Prix
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2010 Italian Grand Prix
Previous race:
2009 Belgian Grand Prix
Belgian Grand Prix Next race:
2011 Belgian Grand Prix
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