Michael Schumacher won the US Grand Prix on Sunday in a Ferrari
one-two that slammed the brakes on Formula One world champion
Fernando Alonso's run of success.
Schumacher's 87th career win, from pole position and ahead of
Brazilian team mate Felipe Massa, trimmed Spaniard Alonso's overall
championship lead to 19 points after 10 of the season's 18 races.
Alonso now has 88 points to Schumacher's 69.
The Renault driver, ending a run of four wins and 15 podium
finishes in a row, finished fifth in a field depleted by a first
lap pile-up.
His Italian team mate Giancarlo Fisichella was third with
Toyota's Jarno Trulli, starting from the pit lane after suspension
problems on Saturday, fourth.
It was the Spaniard's worst result since he finished 11th in
Hungary last July but his first finish in five visits to the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
Ferrari's first one-two finish of the season meant seven times
world champion Schumacher has now won five of the seven races held
at Indianapolis since Formula One returned to America in 2000.
The German also led a Ferrari one-two at Indianapolis last
season but that was a hollow victory, with just six cars starting
after the Michelin-equipped teams withdrew for tyre safety
reasons.
Sunday's race had the full line-up of 22 cars but returning fans
might have had a sense of deja vu with the first lap wipe-out
decimating the field within seconds of the start lights going
out.
Just nine cars finished the race, with Germany's Nico Rosberg
the only one left without a point on a sweltering afternoon at the
Brickyard.
Honda's Brazilian Rubens Barrichello finished sixth with Briton
David Coulthard seventh for Red Bull and Italian Vitantonio Liuzzi
collecting Toro Rosso's first point of their debut season in eighth
place.
Seven drivers were sidelined by the opening mayhem, including
both the McLarens with Colombian Juan Pablo Montoya shunting the
rear of team mate Kimi Raikkonen and triggering a
chain-reaction.
BMW Sauber's Nick Heidfeld barrel-rolled out, without injury to
the German, while Briton Jenson Button nursed his Honda back to the
pits and retired as the safety car was deployed.
Midland's Portuguese driver Tiago Monteiro and Super Aguri's
Japanese Takuma Sato then collided moments after the safety car
came in with just seven laps run.
Massa, celebrating his best result in Formula One, led from the
start but handed over at the front to Schumacher after the first
pitstops.
(Reuters via China Daily July 3, 2006)