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Cool Finn sets stage for hot finale
2007-10-08 02:24:13 Shanghai Daily


Ferrari driver Kimi Raikkonen (right) sprays champagne on himself alongside McLaren's Fernando Alonso on the podium after winning the Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai yesterday. Alonso finished second.

SHANGHAI, Ovt. 8 -- FERRARI'S Kimi Raikkonen turned the Formula One title battle into a three-way fight down to the wire with victory at the Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai yesterday after Mc-Laren's championship leader Lewis Hamilton skidded out.

Hamilton's double world champion teammate and closest title rival Fernando Alonso finished second with Ferrari's Brazilian Felipe Massa third.

On an afternoon of delight for Ferrari and heartbreak for Hamilton, who had hoped to become Formula One's first rookie champion with one race to spare, the Briton's overall lead was trimmed to four points.

Hamilton has 107 points, Spaniard Alonso 103 and Finland's Raikkonen 100 after taking the 200th win of Ferrari's GP history.

"I'm disappointed for the team, the battle goes on to Brazil," said Hamilton, besieged by reporters on his return to the paddock. "I can still do it."

The 22-year-old started the race with one hand on the crown, needing only to win or finish ahead of Alonso and Raikkonen to become the youngest of champions.

Instead, at the worst of moments, he suffered the first retirement of an extraordinary season in which he has set a string of records.

Raikkonen, whose cause had looked desperate only a day before, has emerged as a renewed threat to McLaren's hopes of a first title since Mika Hakkinen in 1999.

The final race of the season at Sao Paulo's Interlagos circuit on October 21 will see three drivers still in contention for the first time since 1986.

"We're back in the championship and it'll be interesting in the last race," said Raikkonen, who finished the 56 laps around the 5.5-kilometer Shanghai International Circuit in 1 hour, 37 minutes, 58.395 seconds. Alon-so timed 1:38:08.201 with Mas-sa a further three seconds back.

"Anything can happen, we just have to try to win the last race and then see."

It was the fifth win of the season for Raikkonen, who took his career tally of victories to 14. Alonso and Hamilton have four each. If there is a tie, the number of victories will break the tie. After that, the number of seconds will be counted.

Alonso, who had said after crashing out in Japan last weekend that he needed a miracle to retain his title, allowed himself a smile but was still pessimistic about his chances.

"It was maybe not a miracle, but something similar," he said of Hamilton's misfortune.

"It will still be very difficult for the championship," added the Spaniard. "I know that it will not be easy to take the four points off Lewis.

"I still need something really dramatic if I want to win."

Hamilton had led Raikkonen from pole position while Alonso lagged in fourth place after trying and failing to pass Massa for third at the start.

Neither of the leaders changed their wet tires at the first pitstops, despite the tread being almost worn smooth, and Hamilton was already struggling to control his car before the second stop was due.

Raikkonen had overtaken him and Alonso was closing the gap in third place when he tried to pit and slid off the pit lane approach and into the gravel after lap 31.

For several seconds he remained in his car trying to get some bite from his tires or a push from the race marshals, while McLaren team chief Ron Dennis waved his arms in frustration at the pit wall.

Toro Rosso's German Sebastian Vettel finished fourth, his team's best performance by far and also its first points of the season, with Briton Jenson Button a surprisingly strong fifth for struggling Honda.

Italian Vitantonio Liuzzi was sixth for Toro Rosso, with Nick Heidfeld seventh for BMW Sauber and David Coulthard taking the final point for Red Bull.

In 1986, drivers Alain Prost, Nelson Piquet and Nigel Mansell went into the final race of the season in Adelaide, Australia, capable of winning the title. Mansell held a seven-point buffer going into the race, but retired after a spectacular tire failure, allowing Prost to win the drivers' crown.

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