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Hamilton sets the pace in Chinese GP practice

April 18, 2014 08:04 pm | Updated November 16, 2021 07:21 pm IST - Shanghai

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, winner of the past two F1 races, was quickest around the Shanghai International Circuit in the afternoon session after a suspension problem limited him to only nine laps in the morning session.

Mercedes set the fastest practice times again at the Chinese Grand Prix on Friday, though rivals Ferrari and Red Bull may have closed the gap somewhat on Formula One’s runaway leader.

Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton, winner of the past two F1 races, was quickest around the Shanghai International Circuit in the afternoon session after a suspension problem limited him to only nine laps in the morning session.

Ferrari’s Fernando Alonso, however, was just 0.141 seconds behind Hamilton under the watch of new team principal Marco Mattiacci, who arrived in Shanghai to take charge following Stefano Domenicali’s resignation this week.

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Alonso also set the quickest time during the morning practice.

“It’s great to be still up front even though we have those issues,” he said. “But, still, you want to get the car ready, you want to get the long runs feeling a little better, so there’s some work to do.”

Teammate Nico Rosberg had the third fastest practice time, about 0.4 seconds behind Hamilton. He said Mercedes still expects to win the race on Sunday, even if its rivals performed well in practice.

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“We’re still looking pretty decent at the moment,” he said. “The competitors are pushing today, Ferrari was very close.”

Mercedes has dominated the season, with Hamilton winning in Bahrain and Malaysia and Rosberg in Australia. Only an engine problem on Hamilton’s car in the opening race in Melbourne prevented three successive one—two finishes.

But Alonso, the defending Chinese GP champion, kept pace with them in the cool conditions of Shanghai, indicating his struggling team may just emerge as a challenger on Sunday.

Ferrari has lagged behind Mercedes following the series’ switch to V6 turbo hybrid engines, and new fuel—saving regulations. The slow start prompted Ferrari to part ways with Domenicali after six years, replacing him with Mattiacci, formerly president of Ferrari North America.

“Leaving aside the performance of the others, I am happy with what we have done today,” Alonso said. “At every race, all the teams bring something new and we must try and make an additional step forward if we want to be competitive.”

Red Bull also kept up the pace on Friday, with Daniel Ricciardo and Sebastian Vettel finishing fourth and fifth, respectively.

Ricciardo said, however, he believes Mercedes may have been holding back during practice.

“We have to see where they are tomorrow. The gap seems a bit too close for now,” he said. “I would like to say we’ve caught up but they’ve got a bit more in there.”

“We’re making small improvements,” Ricciardo said. “I mean, the gap is a big one so it’s not going to come over one race, but we’ve crept up a little bit more.”

Felipe Massa of Williams was sixth fastest in afternoon practice, followed by Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen, who missed the morning session due to a mechanical problem.

McLaren’s Jenson Button, Lotus’ Romain Grosjean and Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat rounded out the top 10.

Smog hampered visibility at the circuit on Thursday, but conditions were relatively clear for Friday’s practice. Rain and cool temperatures were forecast for Saturday’s qualifying session.

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