Fernando Alonso stated that he was “100 per cent confident” that he would clinch the F1 world championship with a podium finish in the season-ending Abu Dhabi grand prix.
But the Ferrari ace’s prediction is now slipping into the GP history books as a classic example of not counting one’s chickens prematurely. Sebastian Vettel finished the season as the sport’s youngest ever world champion and it would be hard to argue that he didn’t deserve it.
See Autocar's picture review of the 2010 F1 season
And yet the dynamic young German Red Bull driver only took the lead of the championship battle in the final race of the season into which he had gone holding third place behind Alonso and his team mate Mark Webber.
Alonso was at this stage unquestionably the favourite having already won five races and was poised in many people’s minds to cruise to his third title crown. Yet the impressive Maranello challenge turned into a strategic disaster and the Spaniard could only limp home seventh ahead of the similarly luckless Webber.
Red Bull Racing’s technical chief Adrian Newey presided over a brilliant design team which delivered the sensational RB6 challenger which, at most circuits, produced a performance cushion of around half a second a lap over its key opposition.
And yet the RB6 only managed nine victories out of the 19 races in the series, proving worryingly brittle on several occasions, but it was still the class of the field and should have added another four wins to its tally had it not been for these unwelcome setbacks.
The rivalry between Vettel and Webber also spilled over in a manner reminiscent of the Prost/Senna confrontations of the 1980s when they collided while battling for the lead at Istanbul.
For Webber, failing to win the title was a bitter disappointment after a year during which he led the points table for much of the summer. The Australian had been impressive enough in 2009, but now he came of age with a succession of blisteringly quick and confident performances which garnered him impressive victories in two of the most prestigious races on the calendar: Monaco and Britain.
But when he crashed out of the rain-soaked inaugural Korean GP it looked as though the slip would prove fatal for his chances. And so it turned out to be.
See Autocar's picture review of the 2010 F1 season
In the end Vettel sealed his championship after a masterly drive in the final race of the season, rounding off a campaign of dramatically fluctuating fortunes with McLaren, Ferrari and Red Bull monopolising the action centre stage with 2009 world champion Jenson Button making a surprise switch to McLaren to join the brilliant Lewis Hamilton.
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Re: F1 2010 - season review & pics
"Autocar wrote the following post at Sun, Dec 26 2010"
Surely we are interested in 2011, as per the front page headline??
Sub editors forever!!
John.
Re: F1 2010 - season review & pics
This will be regarded as a vintage season with so many realistic challengers until the end and Vettel coming through with a rush of points at the end to sneak it, excellent.
Re: F1 2010 - full preview
Isn't it good to see Autocar keeping their GP reports up to date on this thread, after all the Chinese GP was 3 weeks ago and Spain yesterday, but nothing on either race. Might I as what Alan henry gets paid for?