2011 Formula One season

2011 FIA Formula One World Championship season
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Index: Races by country | Races by season

The 2011 Formula One season was the 62nd FIA Formula One season. The original calendar consisted of twenty rounds,[1] including the inaugural running of the Indian Grand Prix[2] before the cancellation of the Bahrain Grand Prix. Pirelli returned to the sport as tyre supplier for all teams, taking over from Bridgestone.[3] Red Bull Racing were the reigning Constructor's Champions. Red Bull Racing's Sebastian Vettel was the defending Drivers' Champion, one of five World Champions appearing on the grid. Vettel won his second World Championship at the 2011 Japanese Grand Prix, becoming the youngest driver – at 24 years and 98 days – to do so.

Contents

Pre-season

The pre-season testing season began immediately after the 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix with a three-day 'Young Driver Test' (for drivers with fewer than three Formula One race starts to their name) at the Yas Marina Circuit. Formula Renault 3.5 runner-up Daniel Ricciardo consistently set the fastest times over the three days, driving for new champions Red Bull Racing.

The Young Driver Tests were followed by another testing session – also held at Yas Marina – for the teams to test the tyres developed by new tyre supplier Pirelli. Ferrari's Felipe Massa was the fastest during the tests, with many drivers declaring their satisfaction with the new tyres, particularly given Pirelli's short development window. Sebastian Vettel experienced an explosive puncture on the final day, though an investigation by Pirelli attributed the incident to debris on the circuit rather than a critical error with the build of the tyre.

The final test of the season was originally scheduled to be held in Bahrain, but was cancelled by the Bahraini Crown Prince due to a political uprising in the island nation. It was instead rescheduled to the Circuit de Catalunya in Barcelona from 8–12 March.[4]

Report

Defending World Champion Sebastian Vettel won the opening race of the season in Melbourne after qualifying on pole position by eight tenths of a second.[5] Lewis Hamilton finished in second place, and Russian driver Vitaly Petrov attained his maiden podium in third, with Renault hailing his dramatic off-season turn-around after a difficult debut season in 2010.[6] At the opposite end of the grid, the Hispania F111 cars driven by Narain Karthikeyan and Vitantonio Liuzzi both failed to qualify as their qualifying times were both outside 107% of Vettel's fastest time in the first qualifying session.[7] The Saubers of Sergio Pérez and Kamui Kobayashi were disqualified for a technical infringement when their cars failed a post-race scruitineering inspection.[8]

Vettel continued his title defence in Malaysia, taking pole from Hamilton in the dying moments of the session by just one tenth of a second. Vettel went on to win the race by three seconds from Jenson Button, who also claimed second place in the points standings; with two wins, Vettel left Malaysia with twice as many points as the McLaren driver. Nick Heidfeld took Renault's second successive podium and Fernando Alonso made a mistake, making contact with Lewis Hamilton and forcing him to pit for a new front wing, and costing him a potential podium. Hamilton himself slipped down the order after changing to the harder prime tyres and struggling with grip.

Vettel once again took pole in China, whilst team-mate Webber made a poor tyre choice and was eliminated from the first qualifying period of the first time in two years. Vettel made a poor start in the race and was quickly overcome by the McLarens of Button and Hamilton. Button and Vettel pitted together, but Button made a bizarre mistake, mistakenly pulling up in the Red Bull pits, and allowing Vettel to get back out onto the circuit in front of him. The lead changed several times as the race progressed before Vettel settled into position, but on deteriorating tyres, he was caught and passed by Hamilton four laps from the end. Having started in eighteenth position, Mark Webber recovered to achieve the third podium place.

Sebastian Vettel earned his fourth pole of the season in Turkey, becoming the first person to start the first four races on pole since Mika Häkkinen in 1999. Vettel lead the race from the lights to the flag, ahead of Mark Webber and Fernando Alonso, who gained Ferrari's first podium finish of the year. McLaren struggled with a series of slow pit stops, whilst the promise shown by Mercedes GP in qualifying was lost in the race when their cars were fuel-heavy and running on the harder prime tyre compound.

Mark Webber ended Vettel's run of consecutive pole positions in Spain, but fourth-starting Fernando Alonso led the field into the first corner and through much of the early phase of the race. He was eventually overtaken in the pits by Vettel, and slipped down the order to finish a lap behind as Ferrari struggled with Pirelli's brand-new "extra hard" compound, which was specifically designed for endurance, but was two seconds per lap slower than the softer compounds used. Vettel went on to win the race, but Red Bull's one-second advantage in qualifying was gone by the race as Lewis Hamilton spent most of the final stint within one second of the lead. After making a poor start and slipping down to tenth place, Jenson Button used a three-stop strategy to recover to third place.

The Monaco Grand Prix was marred by a string of accidents throughout the weekend that saw two drivers hospitalised; Sergio Pérez crashed heavily at the Nouvelle Chicane in the final qualifying period and suffered a concussion, while Vitaly Petrov was briefly knocked unconscious in a five-car pile-up late in the race that saw the red flags waved and the race stopped for the first time since the 2010 Korean Grand Prix. Sebastian Vettel achieved both pole position and the race win ahead of Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button, who had been rapidly catching the race leaders at the time of the race stoppage.

Vettel took his sixth pole of the season in Montreal, with the race severely affected by rain. The early stages of the race saw Jenson Button and Lewis Hamilton collide on the pit straight, and Button earning a drive-through penalty for speeding behind the safety car after it was deployed to retrieve the stricken McLaren of Hamilton. On lap twenty-five, the race was stopped for two hours in the face of a torrential downpour that made the circuit undriveable. When the race was finally resumed, a narrow dry line began to appear around the circuit, and Button began to work his way through the field, having run as low as twenty-first and last place after his penalty. With four laps to go, Button had passed Mark Webber and Michael Schumacher for second place and was catching Vettel at a rate that meant he would only catch the championship leader on the final lap. Vettel ran wide and off the dry line of the final lap of the race, handing Button the race win. Schumacher matched his best race result since returning to the sport, with a fourth place. At Sauber, Sergio Pérez elected not to compete after reporting that he felt unwell during the first practice session, and he was replaced by Pedro de la Rosa.

Pirelli's medium-compound tyre made its race debut in Valencia, which once again saw Vettel on pole. There was much speculation about the potential for the field to be shaken up by the introduction of engine mapping bans, but the reigning champion led for most of the race, only ceding the lead when called in to pit. He comfortably gained his sixth victory of the season when the leaders moved onto the medium compound tyres, with Fernando Alonso demonstrating that the Ferrari 150° Italia was unable to use the medium tyres as efficiently as the Red Bull RB7. With all twenty-four cars finishing the race, Hispania Racing's Narain Karthikeyan became the first man in the sport's history to finish a Grand Prix in twenty-fourth position as the race broke the record for the most classified finishers; the 2011 Chinese Grand Prix had previously seen twenty-three classified finishers.

Uncertainty over rule changes and exemptions concerning the use of off-throttle blown diffusers dominated off-track discussion at the British Grand Prix, though consensus within the media was that the issue did not directly affect the racing.[9] Mark Webber started from pole position in the race; however, Sebastian Vettel took the lead on the first lap. A mistake from Red Bull in the pits allowed Fernando Alonso to take control of the race, which he went on to win by sixteen seconds, his first victory since the 2010 Korean Grand Prix. Webber caught Vettel in the dying stages of the race, but was given a late team order to maintain his position, and the Australian finished third behind his team-mate. Felipe Massa was similarly catching Lewis Hamilton, whose progress had been hampered by an order to conserve fuel, for fourth position and the two made contact in the penultimate corner, forcing Massa to run wide over the finish line. Jenson Button fell from second to fifth place in the championship when a wheel nut was improperly attached to his car during his final stop, forcing his retirement from the race.

Webber achieved his second successive pole position in Germany, while Hamilton denied Red Bull a front-row lock-out by qualifying second. Vettel was third, the first time he had qualified outside the front row since the 2010 Italian Grand Prix almost one year previously. Hamilton took the lead going into the first corner of the race, and the early stages of the Grand Prix were marked by the drivers attempting to find grip on an unusually cold circuit. As Hamilton, Alonso and Webber pulled away, Vettel struggled to match their pace following a spin at turn ten. Michael Schumacher had an identical episode at the same corner a few laps later, whilst Sébastien Buemi and Nick Heidfeld collided at the chicane, ending Heidfeld's race. There were multiple lead changes between Hamilton, Webber and Alonso, with Hamilton capitalising on a slow in-lap by Alonso and a strategy error from Red Bull to secure victory. Alonso placed second, with Webber third, while Sebastian Vettel stole fourth away from Felipe Massa when the two drivers pitted on the final lap.

Vettel returned to pole position in Hungary; however, Lewis Hamilton qualified second and was able to save an extra set of softer option tyres for the race. After mixed conditions wreaked havoc in the support races, the Grand Prix started with a wet surface. Vettel established an early lead, but was soon passed by Hamilton and Jenson Button as a dry line appeared. The positions remained constant through the halfway point of the race while Team Lotus experienced their second double-retirement in three races and Nick Heidfeld's Renault exploded after a prolonged pit stop. A mid-race shower on the fortieth lap led to Hamilton spinning, forcing Force India's Paul di Resta off the circuit and allowing Button to close the gap. The two McLaren drivers traded places several times in the greasy conditions, with Hamilton leading long enough to give him the first strategy call within the team. He opted to swap to the intermediate tyres, but the track started to dry out and he was given a drive-through penalty for forcing di Resta off the circuit, taking him out of contention for a podium finish. Jenson Button went on to win the race, his 200th Grand Prix start and the scene of his maiden victory ahead of Vettel in second and Fernando Alonso. Hamilton recovered from his penalty to take fourth position from Mark Webber, whilst Felipe Massa – who had out-qualified Alonso for the first time since the 2010 Belgian Grand Prix – was the final car classified on the lead lap in sixth place.

The Belgian Grand Prix marked twenty years since Michael Schumacher's Formula One debut, but Schumacher had a difficult start to the weekend when he lost a wheel on his out-lap in qualifying, sending him to the back of the grid. Bruno Senna replaced Nick Heidfeld at Renault, qualifying seventh in variable conditions on his return to Formula One. However, his success was short-lived when he crashed into Jaime Alguersuari on the first lap, ending Alguersuari's race and earning himself a penalty. Nico Rosberg led the early stages of the race, but was powerless to defend against Sebastian Vettel once the DRS was activated. The lead changed several times in the first half of the race, but Vettel eventually established a comfortable lead and would remain unchallenged. With Vettel winning the race and Webber finishing second, Red Bull secured their first one-two victory since Istanbul. Despite leading the race at one point, Fernando Alonso struggled with his tyres, and slipped down the running order, being passed by Mark Webber and Jenson Button, who had recovered from thireteenth on the grid. Michael Schumacher also recovered; having started twenty-fourth on the grid, he was fifth at the end of the race, behind Alonso and ahead of Rosberg. Lewis Hamilton crashed out of the race early on, making contact with Kamui Kobayashi at Les Combes. Both Senna[10] and Hamilton[11] admitted responsibility for their respective incidents.

At the Italian Grand Prix, Vettel took once again pole position, beating Hamilton by half a second, but it was the fourth-starting Fernando Alonso who led the race going into the first corner. Vitantonio Liuzzi made contact with Kovalainen and lost control, sliding off the grass and crashing heavily into Rosberg and Petrov and triggering the safety car. Vettel took the lead from Alonso one lap after the restart, while Schumacher overtook Hamilton. Mark Webber attempted to pass Felipe Massa, but the two made contact, pitching Massa into a spin. Webber continued with a broken front wing, crashing at Parabolica as he attempted to return to pit. Further down the order, Schumacher received several carefully-worded instructions from team principal Ross Brawn, reminding him not to cut across the track to defend against Hamilton. Schumacher's duel with Hamilton slowed them down enough for Jenson Button to catch up; where Hamilton took thirty laps to pass Schumacher, Button passed him on his first attempt and started catching the second-placed Alonso. Vettel went on to win the race, extending his lead enough that he would need just one more win to win his second World Championship. Webber's failure to finish meant that he fell to fourth in the drivers' standings, behind Alonso and Button, while Hamilton's fourth place meant he fell further behind in the championship.

Sebastian Vettel obtained his eleventh pole of the season in Singapore, and spent most of the race unchallenged. Jenson Button attempted a late push, but was held up by traffic in the final laps of the race and fell behind. Button's podium meant that the championship would remain unresolved for the time being, but with his ninth victory of the season, Sebastian Vettel closed to within one point of securing his second World Drivers' Championship and becoming the sport's youngest-ever double World Champion. Mark Webber completed the podium in third, while Fernando Alonso finished fourth, over a minute behind Vettel. An early collision with Felipe Massa meant Lewis Hamilton was handed a drive-through penalty – his sixth of the season – and slipped out of the points, but a mid-race safety car for a collision involving Michael Schumacher and Sergio Perez helped Hamilton recover to fifth. However, the end result meant that Webber, Alonso and Hamilton were all eliminated from the championship fight.

The championship came to a head in Japan, with Sebastian Vettel out-qualifying championship rival Jenson Button by just nine thousandths of a second. Vettel forced Button wide at the start, but the McLaren driver was able to recover, under-cutting Vettel in the pits during the second round of stops. Button went on to win the race, his third victory of the season, while Fernando Alonso finished second. Vettel completed the podium, securing his second World Drivers' Championship. Mark Webber finished the race fourth, with Lewis Hamilton fifth and Michael Schumacher defending from Felipe Massa to finish sixth. Nico Rosberg secured the final World Championship point in by finishing tenth, having started twenty-third on the grid.

Lewis Hamilton and McLaren ended Red Bull's monopoly on pole position at the Korean Grand Prix, with Hamilton edging out Champion-elect Vettel by two tenths of a second. Vettel seized the lead early in the race, and remained unthreatened for the rest of the race. Hamilton engaged in a race-long duel with Mark Webber, with the Australian following an unusual strategy choice. He was unable to pass Hamilton, who collected his first podium position since his victory in the German Grand Prix. Jenson Button finished the race fourth ahead of Fernando Alonso. In finishing first and third, Red Bull secured their second consecutive World Constructors' Championship.

Vettel claimed his first "Grand Chelem" at the inaugural Indian Grand Prix, claiming pole position, the fastest lap and leading every lap of the race. The race saw several incidents on the first lap, with contact between several drivers at the first corner, and again at Turn 3. Jenson Button tightened his grasp on second place in the championship, finishing eight seconds behind Vettel, whilst Fernando Alonso completed the podium ahead of Mark Webber. Lewis Hamilton fell further behind after making contact with Felipe Massa at the halfway point, the third time the two had come together in four races. Narain Karthikeyan became the first Indian driver to compete in the Indian Grand Prix, finishing seventeenth ahead of Hispania team-mate Daniel Ricciardo and Jarno Trulli, a victim of the first-lap contact.

Sebastian Vettel equalled Nigel Mansell's record of fourteen pole positions in a season when he was fastest in qualifying at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. Vettel however – despite mantaining the lead into the first corner – spun off at Turn 2 with a right rear puncture. He pitted at the end of the lap and had to retire with suspension damage. Hamilton lead the whole race, except the pit stop phases, and won the race ahead of Fernando Alonso and teammate Jenson Button. This meant that Red Bull's podium streak came to an end, despite Webber finishing fourth.

At the final race of the season in Brazil, Vettel broke Mansell's record, taking his fifteenth pole position. Webber emerged victorious, scoring his first race win since the 2010 Hungarian Grand Prix. Hamilton retired on lap 48 with a gearbox problem, joining Pastor Maldonado, Timo Glock, and later Vitantonio Liuzzi on the list of race retirements. Felipe Massa, finishing fifth in his home race, became the first Ferrari driver since Ivan Capelli in 1992 who failed to finish on the podium all season.

Teams and drivers

After a dispute between the Formula One Teams Association (FOTA) and the FIA in the first half of 2009, a new Concorde Agreement was signed on 1 August 2009 by the then FIA president Max Mosley and all of the existing teams at the time. The new agreement provides for a continuation of the terms of the 1998 agreement, and runs until 31 December 2012.[12] The FIA published a provisional entry list on 30 November 2010, which was revised on 2 December 2010.[13]

Team Constructor Chassis Engine Tyre No. Race Drivers Rounds Test/Reserve Driver(s)
Red Bull Racing Red Bull RB7 Renault RS27-2011 P 1 Sebastian Vettel[14] All Daniel Ricciardo[15]
2 Mark Webber[16] All
Vodafone McLaren Mercedes McLaren MP4-26 Mercedes FO 108Y P 3 Lewis Hamilton[17] All Pedro de la Rosa[18]
Gary Paffett[19]
4 Jenson Button[20] All
Scuderia Ferrari Marlboro
Scuderia Ferrari[21]
Ferrari 150° Italia[22] Ferrari 056 P 5 Fernando Alonso[23] All Giancarlo Fisichella[24]
Jules Bianchi[25]
Marc Gené[24]
6 Felipe Massa[26] All
Mercedes GP Petronas F1 Team Mercedes MGP W02 Mercedes FO 108Y P 7 Michael Schumacher[27] All Anthony Davidson[28]
8 Nico Rosberg[29] All
Lotus Renault GP[30][31] Renault[32] R31 Renault RS27-2011 P 9 Nick Heidfeld[33] 1–11 Bruno Senna[34]
Romain Grosjean[35]
Fairuz Fauzy[36]
Ho-Pin Tung[34]
Jan Charouz[34]
Bruno Senna[37] 12–19
10 Vitaly Petrov[38] All
AT&T Williams Williams FW33 Cosworth CA2011 P 11 Rubens Barrichello[39] All Valtteri Bottas[40]
12 Pastor Maldonado[41] All
Force India F1 Team Force India VJM04 Mercedes FO 108Y P 14 Adrian Sutil[42] All Nico Hülkenberg[42]
15 Paul di Resta[42] All
Sauber F1 Team[43] Sauber C30 Ferrari 056 P 16 Kamui Kobayashi[44] All Esteban Gutiérrez[45]
Pedro de la Rosa[46]
17 Sergio Pérez[47] 1–6, 8–19
Pedro de la Rosa[48] 7
Scuderia Toro Rosso Toro Rosso STR6 Ferrari 056 P 18 Sébastien Buemi[49] All Daniel Ricciardo[50]
Jean-Éric Vergne[51]
19 Jaime Alguersuari[49] All
Team Lotus[52] Lotus T128 Renault RS27-2011[53] P 20 Heikki Kovalainen[54] All Karun Chandhok[55]
Luiz Razia[56]
Davide Valsecchi[56]
Ricardo Teixeira[56]
21 Jarno Trulli[54] 1–9, 11–19
Karun Chandhok[57] 10
Hispania Racing F1 Team
HRT Formula One Team
HRT F111 Cosworth CA2011 P 22 Narain Karthikeyan[58] 1–8, 17 Narain Karthikeyan[59]
Jan Charouz[60]
Daniel Ricciardo[59] 9–16, 18–19
23 Vitantonio Liuzzi[61] 1–16, 18–19
Daniel Ricciardo[62] 17
Marussia Virgin Racing[63][64] Virgin MVR-02 Cosworth CA2011 P 24 Timo Glock[65] All Sakon Yamamoto[66]
Robert Wickens[67]
Adrian Quaife-Hobbs[67]
25 Jérôme d'Ambrosio[68] All

New entries process

Following USF1's inability to make the grid in 2010, the FIA opened a new selection process to find an additional team to occupy the empty slot, as well as possible reserve entrants for the event of other withdrawals.[69] Fifteen entry bids were reported to have been received,[70] including ART Grand Prix, winners of several championships in feeder series;[71] previous 2010 applicants Stefan Grand Prix and World Series by Renault team Epsilon Euskadi;[72][73] and a joint effort by 1997 World Champion Jacques Villeneuve with Durango, the former Italian GP2 team that had encountered financial difficulties.[74] However, the number of applicants declined, as ART Grand Prix and Cypher, the renamed USF1 operation, withdrew their entries,[75][76] and the FIA decided ahead of the 2010 Italian Grand Prix that none of the prospective entrants met the minimum funding or engineering requirements, leaving the grid slot vacant.[77]

Following the confirmation that there would be no new additions to the grid for 2011, Joan Villadelprat of Epsilon Euskadi and Jacques Villeneuve of the combined Villeneuve-Durango teams both announced that they would still attempt to join the grid for 2011,[78][79] exploring the possibilities of taking over an existing team. Villeneuve later admitted to considering possibilities outside of Formula One, including extending his NASCAR Nationwide Series campaign, or moving to Australia to pursue opportunities in the V8 Supercar Series.[80]

Team changes

Driver changes

Mid-season changes

2011 Calendar

On 16 April 2010, Bernie Ecclestone confirmed that there would be twenty races in 2011; all the races from the 2010 season and the addition of the Indian Grand Prix.[2] A provisional calendar was announced on 8 September 2010,[111] which was confirmed on 3 November 2010.[112] This was later revised to nineteen races with the postponement and later cancellation of the Bahrain Grand Prix.

Round Race Title Grand Prix Circuit Date Time
Local UTC
1 Qantas Australian Grand Prix[113] Australian GP Albert Park, Melbourne 27 March 17:00 06:00
2 Petronas Malaysia Grand Prix[114] Malaysia GP Sepang International Circuit, Kuala Lumpur 10 April 16:00 08:00
3 UBS Chinese Grand Prix Chinese GP Shanghai International Circuit, Shanghai 17 April 15:00 07:00
4 DHL Turkish Grand Prix[115] Turkish GP Istanbul Park, Istanbul 8 May 15:00 12:00
5 Gran Premio de España Santander Spanish GP Circuit de Catalunya, Barcelona 22 May 14:00 12:00
6 Grand Prix de Monaco Monaco GP Circuit de Monaco, Monte Carlo 29 May 14:00 12:00
7 Grand Prix du Canada Canadian GP Circuit Gilles Villeneuve, Montreal 12 June 13:00 17:00
8 Grand Prix of Europe European GP Valencia Street Circuit, Valencia 26 June 14:00 12:00
9 Santander British Grand Prix British GP Silverstone Circuit, Silverstone 10 July 13:00 12:00
10 Großer Preis Santander von Deutschland German GP Nürburgring, Nürburg 24 July 14:00 12:00
11 Eni Magyar Nagydíj Hungarian GP Hungaroring, Budapest 31 July 14:00 12:00
12 Shell Belgian Grand Prix[116] Belgian GP Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Spa 28 August 14:00 12:00
13 Gran Premio Santander d'Italia Italian GP Autodromo Nazionale Monza, Monza 11 September 14:00 12:00
14 SingTel Singapore Grand Prix[117] Singapore GP Marina Bay Street Circuit, Marina Bay 25 September 20:00 12:00
15 Japanese Grand Prix Japanese GP Suzuka Circuit, Suzuka 9 October 15:00 06:00
16 Korean Grand Prix Korean GP Korean International Circuit, Yeongam 16 October 15:00 06:00
17 Airtel Grand Prix of India[118] Indian GP Buddh International Circuit, Greater Noida 30 October 15:00 09:30
18 Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Abu Dhabi GP Yas Marina Circuit, Abu Dhabi 13 November 17:00 13:00
19 Grande Prêmio Petrobras do Brasil Brazilian GP Autódromo José Carlos Pace, São Paulo 27 November 14:00 16:00

Changes

Rule changes

  • The Belgian Grand Prix saw a small controversy when several teams discovered their tyres had blistered during qualifying, but were not permitted to change their tyres ahead of the race because the damage was the result of the car set-up rather than an accident.[137][138] Pirelli pointed to Red Bull Racing's practice of running camber settings that were outside their recommended parameters as the cause of the blistering,[139] and said they would be more cautious with their recommendations for Monza to prevent the problem from arising again.[140] Pirelli stated that they were willing to turn to the FIA to enforce camber limits if there was any evidence of blistering after the Free Practice sessions in Italy.[141] The FIA later announced that Pirelli's camber limits were mandatory and that any team who failed to observe them would be reported to the stewards under Article 2.3 of the sport's technical regulations for dangerous construction and would risk exclusion from the race.[142]
  • At the Korean Grand Prix, the FIA announced plans to introduce a stricter version of the "one move" defensive driver rule,[166] in light of a protracted on-track battle between Michael Schumacher and Lewis Hamilton at the Italian Grand Prix. Under the original set of rules, a defending driver would be entitled to make one move across the circuit to select their racing line into an approaching corner; under the regulations introduced for the Korean Grand Prix, a defending driver would be obligated to leave enough space – defined as "one car's width" – on the outside of a corner for an attacking driver to occupy, preventing the defending driver from forcing his rival off the circuit.
  • Further rule amendments granted greater powers to the race stewards. This was reported as a response to a series of on-track incidents involving Lewis Hamilton that culminated in several drive-through penalties;[166] Hamilton received six driver penalties over the course of the 2011 season, setting a new record for the most penalties in a season. From the Korean Grand Prix on, the stewards will have the power to issue reprimands alongside penalties, with a grid penalty being awarded after three reprimands.

Results and standings

Grands Prix

Rd. Grand Prix Pole position Fastest lap Winning driver Winning constructor Report
1 Australian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Felipe Massa Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
2 Malaysian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
3 Chinese Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes Report
4 Turkish Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
5 Spanish Grand Prix Mark Webber Lewis Hamilton Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
6 Monaco Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
7 Canadian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Jenson Button Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes Report
8 European Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Sebastian Vettel Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
9 British Grand Prix Mark Webber Fernando Alonso Fernando Alonso Ferrari Report
10 German Grand Prix Mark Webber Lewis Hamilton Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes Report
11 Hungarian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Felipe Massa Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes Report
12 Belgian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
13 Italian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Lewis Hamilton Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
14 Singapore Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Jenson Button Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
15 Japanese Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Jenson Button Jenson Button McLaren-Mercedes Report
16 Korean Grand Prix Lewis Hamilton Sebastian Vettel Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
17 Indian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Sebastian Vettel Sebastian Vettel Red Bull-Renault Report
18 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Lewis Hamilton McLaren-Mercedes Report
19 Brazilian Grand Prix Sebastian Vettel Mark Webber Mark Webber Red Bull-Renault Report

Drivers standings

Points are awarded to the top 10 classified finishers.

Position  1st   2nd   3rd   4th   5th   6th   7th   8th   9th   10th 
Points 25 18 15 12 10 8 6 4 2 1
Pos Driver AUS
MAL
CHN
TUR
ESP
MON
CAN
EUR
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
SIN
JPN
KOR
IND
ABU
BRA
Points
1 Sebastian Vettel 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 4 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 Ret 2 392
2 Jenson Button 6 2 4 6 3 3 1 6 Ret Ret 1 3 2 2 1 4 2 3 3 270
3 Mark Webber 5 4 3 2 4 4 3 3 3 3 5 2 Ret 3 4 3 4 4 1 258
4 Fernando Alonso 4 6 7 3 5 2 Ret 2 1 2 3 4 3 4 2 5 3 2 4 257
5 Lewis Hamilton 2 8 1 4 2 6 Ret 4 4 1 4 Ret 4 5 5 2 7 1 Ret 227
6 Felipe Massa 7 5 6 11 Ret Ret 6 5 5 5 6 8 6 9 7 6 Ret 5 5 118
7 Nico Rosberg Ret 12 5 5 7 11 11 7 6 7 9 6 Ret 7 10 8 6 6 7 89
8 Michael Schumacher Ret 9 8 12 6 Ret 4 17 9 8 Ret 5 5 Ret 6 Ret 5 7 15 76
9 Adrian Sutil 9 11 15 13 13 7 Ret 9 11 6 14 7 Ret 8 11 11 9 8 6 42
10 Vitaly Petrov 3 17† 9 8 11 Ret 5 15 12 10 12 9 Ret 17 9 Ret 11 13 10 37
11 Nick Heidfeld 12 3 12 7 8 8 Ret 10 8 Ret Ret 34
12 Kamui Kobayashi DSQ 7 10 10 10 5 7 16 Ret 9 11 12 Ret 14 13 15 Ret 10 9 30
13 Paul di Resta 10 10 11 Ret 12 12 18† 14 15 13 7 11 8 6 12 10 13 9 8 27
14 Jaime Alguersuari 11 14 Ret 16 16 Ret 8 8 10 12 10 Ret 7 21† 15 7 8 15 11 26
15 Sébastien Buemi 8 13 14 9 14 10 10 13 Ret 15 8 Ret 10 12 Ret 9 Ret Ret 12 15
16 Sergio Pérez DSQ Ret 17 14 9 DNS PO 11 7 11 15 Ret Ret 10 8 16 10 11 13 14
17 Rubens Barrichello Ret Ret 13 15 17 9 9 12 13 Ret 13 16 12 13 17 12 15 12 14 4
18 Bruno Senna 13 9 15 16 13 12 16 17 2
19 Pastor Maldonado Ret Ret 18 17 15 18† Ret 18 14 14 16 10 11 11 14 Ret Ret 14 Ret 1
20 Pedro de la Rosa 12 0
21 Jarno Trulli 13 Ret 19 18 18 13 16 20 Ret Ret 14 14 Ret 19 17 19 18 18 0
22 Heikki Kovalainen Ret 15 16 19 Ret 14 Ret 19 Ret 16 Ret 15 13 16 18 14 14 17 16 0
23 Vitantonio Liuzzi DNQ Ret 22 22 Ret 16 13 23 18 Ret 20 19 Ret 20 23 21 20 Ret 0
24 Jérôme d'Ambrosio 14 Ret 20 20 20 15 14 22 17 18 19 17 Ret 18 21 20 16 Ret 19 0
25 Timo Glock NC 16 21 DNS 19 Ret 15 21 16 17 17 18 15 Ret 20 18 Ret 19 Ret 0
26 Narain Karthikeyan DNQ Ret 23 21 21 17 17 24 17 0
27 Daniel Ricciardo 19 19 18 Ret NC 19 22 19 18 Ret 20 0
28 Karun Chandhok 20 0
Pos Driver AUS
MAL
CHN
TUR
ESP
MON
CAN
EUR
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
SIN
JPN
KOR
IND
ABU
BRA
Points
Key
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Did not finish (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Light blue Practiced only (PO)
Friday test driver (TD)
(from 2003 onwards)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrew entry before the event (WD)

Bold - Pole position
Italics - Fastest lap

† Drivers did not finish the Grand Prix, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.

Constructors standings

Pos Constructor Car
No.
AUS
MAL
CHN
TUR
ESP
MON
CAN
EUR
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
SIN
JPN
KOR
IND
ABU
BRA
Points
1 Red Bull-Renault 1 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 1 2 4 2 1 1 1 3 1 1 Ret 2 650
2 5 4 3 2 4 4 3 3 3 3 5 2 Ret 3 4 3 4 4 1
2 McLaren-Mercedes 3 2 8 1 4 2 6 Ret 4 4 1 4 Ret 4 5 5 2 7 1 Ret 497
4 6 2 4 6 3 3 1 6 Ret Ret 1 3 2 2 1 4 2 3 3
3 Ferrari 5 4 6 7 3 5 2 Ret 2 1 2 3 4 3 4 2 5 3 2 4 375
6 7 5 6 11 Ret Ret 6 5 5 5 6 8 6 9 7 6 Ret 5 5
4 Mercedes 7 Ret 9 8 12 6 Ret 4 17 9 8 Ret 5 5 Ret 6 Ret 5 7 15 165
8 Ret 12 5 5 7 11 11 7 6 7 9 6 Ret 7 10 8 6 6 7
5 Renault 9 12 3 12 7 8 8 Ret 10 8 Ret Ret 13 9 15 16 13 12 16 17 73
10 3 17 9 8 11 Ret 5 15 12 10 12 9 Ret 17 9 Ret 11 13 10
6 Force India-Mercedes 14 9 11 15 13 13 7 Ret 9 11 6 14 7 Ret 8 11 11 9 8 6 69
15 10 10 11 Ret 12 12 18 14 15 13 7 11 8 6 12 10 13 9 8
7 Sauber-Ferrari 16 DSQ 7 10 10 10 5 7 16 Ret 9 11 12 Ret 14 13 15 Ret 10 9 44
17 DSQ Ret 17 14 9 DNS 12 11 7 11 15 Ret Ret 10 8 16 10 11 13
8 Toro Rosso-Ferrari 18 8 13 14 9 14 10 10 13 Ret 15 8 Ret 10 12 Ret 9 Ret Ret 12 41
19 11 14 Ret 16 16 Ret 8 8 10 12 10 Ret 7 21 15 7 8 15 11
9 Williams-Cosworth 11 Ret Ret 13 15 17 9 9 12 13 Ret 13 16 12 13 17 12 15 12 14 5
12 Ret Ret 18 17 15 18 Ret 18 14 14 16 10 11 11 14 Ret Ret 14 Ret
10 Lotus-Renault 20 Ret 15 16 19 Ret 14 Ret 19 Ret 16 Ret 15 13 16 18 14 14 17 16 0
21 13 Ret 19 18 18 13 16 20 Ret 20 Ret 14 14 Ret 19 17 19 18 18
11 HRT-Cosworth 22 DNQ Ret 23 21 21 17 17 24 19 19 18 Ret NC 19 22 19 17 Ret 20 0
23 DNQ Ret 22 22 Ret 16 13 23 18 Ret 20 19 Ret 20 23 21 18 20 Ret
12 Virgin-Cosworth 24 NC 16 21 DNS 19 Ret 15 21 16 17 17 18 15 Ret 20 18 Ret 19 Ret 0
25 14 Ret 20 20 20 15 14 22 17 18 19 17 Ret 18 21 20 16 Ret 19
Pos Constructor Car
No.
AUS
MAL
CHN
TUR
ESP
MON
CAN
EUR
GBR
GER
HUN
BEL
ITA
SIN
JPN
KOR
IND
ABU
BRA
Points
Key
Colour Result
Gold Winner
Silver 2nd place
Bronze 3rd place
Green Points finish
Blue Non-points finish
Non-classified finish (NC)
Purple Did not finish (Ret)
Red Did not qualify (DNQ)
Did not pre-qualify (DNPQ)
Black Disqualified (DSQ)
White Did not start (DNS)
Race cancelled (C)
Light blue Practiced only (PO)
Friday test driver (TD)
(from 2003 onwards)
Blank Did not practice (DNP)
Excluded (EX)
Did not arrive (DNA)
Withdrew entry before the event (WD)

Bold – Pole position
Italics – Fastest Lap

Cars did not finish the Grand Prix, but were classified as they completed over 90% of the race distance.

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