
Fernando Alonso was a close second for Ferrari, with Jenson Button completing the podium despite KERS issues on his McLaren.
Vettel
had surged into a clear lead from pole at the first corner, but just
one bend later his Red Bull was slewing into a wild spin as its right
rear tyre deflated.
The champion tried to nurse his car back to the
pits, but the flailing rubber had already done too much damage, so
Vettel posted his first retirement since last year's Korean GP.
That
put Hamilton into the lead, with Alonso in second having passed Mark
Webber (Red Bull) at the start and then gone around the outside of
Button at the end of the back straight to secure second.
There
was little to choose between the McLaren and Ferrari for most of the
rest of the race - with the gap sometimes barely more than a second.
Ferrari tried to gain an advantage by running longer before Alonso's
second stop, but to no avail, and in the final stint Hamilton's lead
grew to more comfortable levels as he headed towards his third win of an
often-troubled 2011 season.
After
losing time with a stubborn wheel at his first stop, Webber tried to
regain ground with a three-stop strategy that saw him only change to the
harder Pirellis on the very last lap. That did not allow him to beat
Button - with whom he had battled fiercely for much of the race - but he
did take fourth, helped by Felipe Massa's challenge fading when the
Ferrari had a quick spin with six laps to go. The Brazilian quickly
rejoined to take fifth.
Mercedes
duo Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher had a spectacular early battle,
won by the younger German, who went on to take sixth. Schumacher
narrowly beat Force India's Adrian Sutil to seventh. Sutil's team-mate
Paul di Resta and Sauber's Kamui Kobayashi completed the points scorers,
the former pulling off a one-stop strategy.
Just
outside the top 10, Rubens Barrichello ended Williams's awful weekend
on a slightly brighter note by charging from the back of the grid to
12th, right on 11th-placed Sauber driver Sergio Perez's tail.
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