Hamilton in a spin as lead cut in Japan
massa moves to within five points of briton as lewis attempts to sift some positives from fuji debris
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Lewis Hamilton extracted the positives from a dramatic Japanese Grand Prix before setting his sights on victories in the remaining two races in his bid to secure the world championship.
Drivers’ championship leader Hamilton had his lead cut to five points as big rival Felipe Massa picked up two.
McLaren driver Hamilton was on pole but made a bad start as he forced Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen off the circuit at turn one when attempting to pass the Finn.
That manoeuvre meant he dropped down the field and was also hit with a drive-through penalty.
It got worse for the Briton in the next lap when he spun after a collision with Massa and the rest of the field streaked past. Hamilton never recovered and consequently finished outside the points in 12th place while Fernando Alonso continued his rich vein of form with a second successive victory.
“Obviously, I am disappointed,” said Hamilton. “I am not happy after a result like this but I’m already getting over it and tomorrow will be another day. Disappointingly, I didn’t make a great start but I slipstreamed Kimi and went up the inside. I braked a bit late – but so did everybody. A lot of cars went wide at turn one and I just went a bit wider.
“On lap two, Felipe went wide and I went up the inside, giving him room, but he tapped me quite hard into a spin.”
Ferrari’s Massa closed the gap in the driver standings to five points, having first finished eighth before profiting from a penalty handed to Sebastien Bourdais to be promoted to seventh.
The championship is destined for a nervy finish with just two races remaining, but Hamilton remained confident of his chances of becoming Formula One’s youngest world champion.
“There are positives,” added the 23-year-old. “I’ve only lost two points to Felipe in the drivers’ championship, so it is definitely not over.
“Now I will forget today ever happened and move forward. We have got two more races to go and my target is still to win both of them.” Massa, meanwhile, insists the clash between himself and Hamilton on the Fuji Speedway circuit has done nothing to sour the relationship between the two. Both drivers felt the other was in the wrong during the incident that caused Hamilton to spin but Massa insists the respect between the two remains as the battle for the champion-ship heats up.
Hamilton came under fire from Robert Kubica recently after the Pole claimed some of his manoeuvres on the circuit are too dangerous, but Massa said: “I have a good relationship with Lewis and I will not do anything to destroy something on purpose.
“We are colleagues. We have a good relationship and I admire him as a driver and a person and I am sure he admires me as well.”
Alonso is too far behind to win the championship but he capitalised on the mistakes by the frontrunners to take the race lead and follow up his Singapore success.
It has been a pleasing few weeks for Renault after a frustrating start to the season and the Spaniard hailed his win as a team success.
“I am very happy and proud of my team to have the key to improve all the problems we had,” said Alonso.
“It is a great job from everybody in the factory and this is the result.”
BMW Sauber’s Kubica claimed second place to keep alive his own world championship aspirations, while Raikkonen finished third.












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