honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Updated at 9:25 a.m., Sunday, November 2, 2008

Auto racing: Hamilton wins F1 title in thrilling finish

Associated Press

SAO PAULO, Brazil — Lewis Hamilton of McLaren became Formula One's youngest champion on Sunday, making a pass on the final turn of the last lap to finish fifth in the Brazilian Grand Prix and win the title by one point over Felipe Massa.

Ferrari's Massa won the race in front of his home crowd, but it wasn't enough to erase the seven-point lead Hamilton held entering the season-ending race.

Just one year after Hamilton lost the title by one point after entering the final race with a seven-point lead, the 23-year-old Briton passed Toyota's Timo Glock on the last lap to win the championship. Fernando Alonso was 24 when he won the title in 2005 for Renault.

Hamilton fell to sixth place after being overtaken by Toro Rosso's Sebastian Vettel with two laps to go. After Vettel passed Glock, Hamilton also moved up one spot and finished the season with 98 points.

Alonso was second for Renault at the 2.6-mile Interlagos track, and defending champion Kimi Raikkonen of Ferrari took third. Vettel was fourth.

Hamilton, the first British F1 champion since Damon Hill in 1996, was sixth until the final turn, but Glock's car was still on dry tires. That forced him to slow in the pouring rain, allowing Hamilton to make his move.

For a few moments, it wasn't clear whether Hamilton or Massa had won the championship with both pit teams celebrating.

Massa, who started from the pole position and was trying to become the first Brazilian champion to win the F1 title since Ayrton Senna in 1991, wept profusely on the podium.

Cautious from the start, Hamilton avoided the problems that cost him the title in Brazil last year, putting together a consistent run that kept him in the top five during most of the race.

He fell to seventh at one point, but quickly recovered, at least until the rain began to fall with five laps to go, forcing most of the leading cars to change into wet tires.

Hamilton's pace slowed considerably, as other drivers were able to keep pushing.

For the second year in a row, Hamilton arrived at the Brazilian GP with a commanding lead in the drivers' standings. In 2007, he had a four-point lead over Alonso and a seven-point advantage over Raikkonen.

But he missed a chance to become F1's first rookie champion after a mistake trying to pass in the first lap and a gear box problem to finish seventh in the race and second in the standings.

No McLaren driver had won the title since Mika Hakkinen in 1999. The team still remains without a win at Interlagos since Juan Pablo Montoya's victory in 2005.

Despite the drivers' title, McLaren finished second to Ferrari in the constructors' championship. The British team hasn't won the constructors' title since 1998.

McLaren trailed Ferrari by 11 points coming into the race. Ferrari secured its second consecutive championship — and eighth in the past 10 years. Renault won consecutive titles in 2005 and '06.