Alonso ends Mercedes run, tops opening practice

19 September 2014 12:31

Fernando Alonso ended Mercedes domination of opening practice on Friday when he topped the times for Ferrari in the first free session ahad of this weekend's Singapore Grand Prix.

It was the first time in seven races that any car other than a Mercedes had lapped quickest in the first action of the day, the Spaniard lapping one-tenth of a second quicker than both Briton Lewis Hamilton and German Nico Rosberg, who leads his Mercedes team-mate by 22 points with six races remaining.

They were second and third separated by only a wafer of time - 0.027 seconds - ahead of fourth placed defending world champion German Sebastian Vettel, who pulled up his Red Bull car in the final seconds after an engine failure.

Vettel, hunting his fourth consecutive victory under floodlights on the streets of Singapore, climbed from his car and said: "OK, I think I have an engine failure."

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner said: "It's a Friday engine, not the one he has planned to race with, but there's a lot of work to do - it's going to be tough. The biggest loss is the track time and the long run."

For Vettel it may also mean he is forced to exceed the limit of five engines in a season, by taking a sixth Renault power unit and with it a 10-place grid penalty, though the team may choose to do that at another race.

Australian Daniel Ricciardo was fifth in the second Red Bull ahead of Frenchman Jean-Eric Vergne of Toro Rosso, Finn Kimi Raikkonen in the second Ferrari and Briton Jenson Button in the leading McLaren.

Russian Daniil Kvyat was ninth for Toro Rosso ahead of Mexican Sergio Perez of Force India, with Dane Kevin Magnussen 11th in the second McLaren.

On the first day of the modified ban on radio communications between teams and drivers, there were several amusing moments as drivers either stopped their engineers from talking or sought information that was banned.

In one, Hamilton asked his race engineer: "What sector times are other people doing? Are they doing any extra laps?"

The engineer, aware that such information is not allowed to be broadcast, replied: "OK Lewis, we'll just continue with our programme -- and discuss this when we get back in the garage."

Source: AFP