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ROUND 14 · MARINA BAY STREET CIRCUIT · 2012

2012 SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX

The 2012 Singapore Grand Prix (officially the 2012 Formula 1 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix ) was a Formula One motor race that took place at the Marina Bay Street Circuit in Marina Bay , Singapore on 23 September 2012 as the fourteenth round of the 2012 season .

Winner

Vettel

Red Bull-Renault

Podium

Button / Alonso

P2 and P3

Circuit

Marina Bay Street Circuit

Race

Like the 2011 Singapore Grand Prix , tyre supplier Pirelli brought its yellow-banded soft compound tyre as the harder "prime" tyre and the red-banded supersoft compound tyre as the softer "option" tyre. At Singapore's Marina Bay circuit, Ma Qinghua once again drove Narain Karthikeyan 's car in the first free practice session, as he had during free practice at the Italian Grand Prix in Monza , Hamilton led lap 1 with Maldonado falling to 4th with Vettel and Button overtaking into P2 and P3 respectively. On lap 9, Webber made an early pitstop onto the soft compound tyres, making him drop from 7th to 19th. This created a chain reaction, as his stop was followed by Vettel stopping on lap 11 and Alonso on lap 12. Race leader Lewis Hamilton emerged just ahead of Vettel after his stop on lap 13, after complaining of a "funny feeling". His teammate Jenson Button came out behind Vettel after his stop on lap 14. On lap 23, Hamilton's gearbox failed forcing him to retire allowing Vettel to take P1 which continued until the end of the race. It was noted to be the 2nd mechanical retirement for the Briton. On lap 30, Karthikeyan crashed at turn 18 causing yellow flags and a safety car to be deployed. Maldonado retired with hydraulic issues before the safety car came in. He had a call 1 lap before he came to the pits and retired. 2 laps later, Schumacher and Vergne collided, with Schumacher failing to brake properly, and consequently crashing into the back of Vergne's Toro Rosso, resulting in their retirement. After the crash, Michael Schumacher climbed out of his car and went over to apologise to ... Paul di Resta managed to keep Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg at bay to claim his career-best finish of P4, gaining him two places in the Drivers' Championship to stand 11th. the race finished two laps early as the two-hour limit was reached, the first time this had happened since the 2008 Monaco Grand Prix . [ citation needed ] The top three drivers appeared on the podium to collect their trophies and spoke to the media at a later press conference. Red Bull team mechanic Ole Schack appeared on the podium to receive the winning manufacturer's award. Notes:

Free practice

The first practice session on Friday evening was held in damp conditions. Rain earlier in the day had soaked the circuit, but it began drying out as the session started. Sebastian Vettel set the fastest time of the session, five hundredths of a second faster than Lewis Hamilton . Although several drivers went off the circuit, they were able to rejoin without damage and the session was uninterrupted. By the time the second session began, the circuit was completely dry. Vettel was once agai...

Pre-race

A minute of silence was held for Sid Watkins , who died on 12 September 2012. A book of remembrance was also available for people to sign their condolences over the weekend.

Qualifying

Notes:

Race Result

Pos.No.DriverConstructorPart 1Part 2
14Lewis HamiltonMcLaren-Mercedes1:48.2851:46.665
218Pastor MaldonadoWilliams-Renault1:49.4941:47.602
31Sebastian VettelRed Bull-Renault1:48.2401:46.791
43Jenson ButtonMcLaren-Mercedes1:49.3811:47.661
55Fernando AlonsoFerrari1:49.3911:47.567
611Paul di RestaForce India-Mercedes1:48.0281:47.667
72Mark WebberRed Bull-Renault1:48.7171:47.513
810Romain GrosjeanLotus-Renault1:47.6681:47.529
97Michael SchumacherMercedes1:49.5461:47.823
108Nico RosbergMercedes1:49.4631:47.943

Championship Standings After This Race

1 Fernando Alonso 194
2 Sebastian Vettel 165
3 Kimi Räikkönen 149
4 Lewis Hamilton 142
5 Mark Webber 132
Source: Source: Source:

The Paddock Breakdown

Barry · Gary · Kat

Barry — 58 · Watching since Senna

Does the scent of rain-slicked asphalt ever truly transport us back to a moment of raw, untamed velocity? The Singapore air hung thick that day, a humid shroud clinging to the Marina Bay circuit. Sebastian Vettel, a sculptor of speed, carved through the shadows, a victory born not just of engineering, but of a calculated risk – a defiance against the constraints of a broken gearbox for Hamilton. Observe the ghost of Fangio in Vettel's precise movements, a lineage of audacious brilliance. The gearbox failure, a cruel twist of fate, underscores the precarious dance between man and machine, a constant reminder of the fragility within this glorious spectacle. A symphony of shattered metal and roaring engines, a brief, incandescent burst of human endeavor against the relentless tide of time. It's a poignant echo of a simpler era, wouldn't you agree?

The scent of rain-slicked asphalt and burning rubber – a phantom echo of Fangio's victories – hangs heavy over Marina Bay tonight. A mechanical betrayal, swift and brutal, extinguished Hamilton's surge, gifting Sebastian Vettel a triumph forged in the crucible of Singapore's relentless heat. Let us remember, dear listeners, that the true drama of Formula 1 isn't merely measured in checkered flags, but in the exquisite fragility of engineering and the audacity of human will.

Gary — 33 · Three Fantasy F1 leagues

The air hung thick with the scent of ozone and burnt rubber – a familiar perfume of speed and desperation. A shattered gearbox, a cruel twist of fate for Hamilton, exposed the brutal vulnerability within the Mercedes M27's magnesium alloy housing. That 2. 4-liter V8, churning out 600 horsepower, was a magnificent beast, yet susceptible to the relentless stresses of Marina Bay's tight corners. Vettel, aboard his Red Bull-Renault, seized the opportunity, a testament to the inherent advantage of the RB7's chassis rigidity and Renault's meticulously tuned engine mapping.

The humid air of Marina Bay hung heavy, a palpable cloak over a race already steeped in drama. Vettel's victory, snatched from the jaws of Hamilton's mechanical despair, presented a stark numerical echo. Consider this: the German's second win of the season arrived alongside a curious, almost unsettling, pattern – only *three* drivers had previously achieved a second victory while serving a race ban. It's a statistic that whispers of calculated aggression, a ruthless pursuit of opportunity amidst the sport's intricate dance.

Kat — 30 · Technical journalist

The rain, a silver curtain descending upon the Marina Bay, tasted of ozone and desperation. Hamilton's McLaren, a wounded beast, coughed black smoke – the gearbox, betrayed. A shattered symphony of metal and shattered ambition. Vettel, cool and collected in the Red Bull, seized the opportunity, a predator circling its prey. The roar of the crowd, a distant, frantic murmur, swallowed by the relentless drumming of the rain. This was not merely a race; it was the ghost of Fangio, the echo of Stewart, the relentless pursuit of glory etched into asphalt and soaked with the spirit of a thousand battles.

The rain, a bruised purple slick on the asphalt – it always seemed to arrive precisely when the spirit of the circuit demanded it. Grosjean, drenched and resolute, wrestled his Lotus through Turn 1, a miniature warrior against the elements. You could almost hear the ghosts of Fangio and Ascari in the spray, a silent chorus urging him onward. Hamilton, a mere shadow of his former self, watched from the pitlane, the weight of that Italian penalty, and the crushing mechanical failure, etched upon his face. A tragic ballet of speed and misfortune, wasn't it? The roar of the crowd, muted by the storm, held a mournful quality—a lament for a legend lost, and a race irrevocably altered.

Race Calendar

2012 season