Sebastian Vettel retain Indian GP Title

The 25-year-old German led from extremity to the chequered flag to come home ahead of adjacent championship rival Fernando Alonso of Ferrari. Vettel's Red Bull colleague Mark Webber completed third, the Australian fending off a strong late confront from Lewis Hamilton of McLaren who completed fourth ahead of his colleague and fellow Briton Jenson Button. 

Felipe Massa came home sixth in the second Ferrari in front of Kimi Raikkonen of Lotus, Nico Hulkenberg of Force India, Romain Grosjean in the next Lotus and 10th located Bruno Senna of Williams. It was Vettel's 26th succeed and he revelled in his common trick of adding the greatest lap of the race in the final lap and then position atop of his car to milk the ovation from the multitude. 

After a jubilant celebration on the conquest platform, in front of many of the 65,000 crowd, he added: "It has been unbelievable. To come here both years, get the pole and win the race is unbelievable. It is a very particular Grand Prix and I really like this circuit." 

Alonso said: "It is not easy to brawl Red Bull but we will never provide up. Well complete Red Bull and Sebastian but we want to be contented in Brazil, not only here. I am sure we will do it." On one more dry, hot day, attend by heavy smog, at the Buddh International track, with the air temperature pitiful 30 degrees Celsius and the track warmth nudging 39 degrees, Vettel looked the coolest man on the lattice at the start and, when the lights went out, he established his total concentration with a great getaway from his 35th pole place. 

Webber followed him and as the two Red Bulls took an instant grip on the race at the front of the pasture there was a fierce encounter for third after them on the opening lap. The two McLaren men fragment from the start and were approved on the straight by Alonso, but re-passed him in a theatrical fragment.

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