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Kimi Raikkonen leads the way in Malaysia practice

 

Ian Parkes
Friday 22 March 2013 10:16 GMT
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Kimi Raikkonen on his way to winning the Australian Formula One Grand Prix at the Albert Park Circuit
Kimi Raikkonen on his way to winning the Australian Formula One Grand Prix at the Albert Park Circuit (Getty Images)

Kimi Raikkonen posted his intent to start the new Formula One season with back-to-back wins after finishing quickest in practice ahead of Sunday's Malaysian Grand Prix.

Just five days after chalking up his 20th career victory by taking the chequered flag in Australia, Raikkonen proved the win was not a flash in the pan as Lotus appear to be strong title contenders.

After ending FP1 in a Red Bull sandwich as Raikkonen split pacesetter Mark Webber and triple world champion Sebastian Vettel, the Finn went one better in the second 90-minute session as his form from Melbourne spilled over into Malaysia.

Raikkonen's time of one minute 35.569secs was four tenths of a second ahead of Webber's best earlier in the day, and quicker than anything from across all three sessions of last year.

The prime reason was the switch to the faster medium compound Pirelli tyre for his run, as opposed to the hard rubber also available.

The 33-year-old edged Vettel into second place by 0.019secs, with the German followed closely by Felipe Massa in his Ferrari, the Brazilian 0.092secs adrift.

Massa was comfortably clear of team-mate Fernando Alonso, runner up in Melbourne, with Webber fifth fastest and Romain Grosjean sixth on the timesheet for Lotus.

Nico Rosberg again had the edge on Mercedes team-mate Lewis Hamilton, with the duo seventh and ninth and the latter a full second adrift of Raikkonen, either side of Force India's Paul Di Resta.

Hamilton, in particular, has been suffering with high degradation to his rear tyres on a circuit where he has yet to win, with his highest finish second in his debut year of 2007.

Adrian Sutil rounded out the top 10, but sat out most of the session with a technical problem to his Force India that restricted him to 10 laps.

For McLaren, it is apparent Jenson Button and Sergio Perez again face an uphill struggle in their bid to get into the top 10 as the duo finished 12th and 11th respectively, 1.2secs down.

At present on this track there appears a clear gulf between the top six teams and the bottom five of Sauber, Williams, Toro Rosso, Caterham and Marussia.

Sauber's Nico Hulkenberg was two tenths of a second behind Button, with a gulf then to his rookie team-mate Esteban Gutierrez who was two seconds off the pace in 14th.

As in FP1, Marussia's Max Chilton brought up the rear, almost five seconds down on Raikkonen, but more alarmingly 0.7secs behind Giedo van der Garde in the Caterham and a place ahead of the Briton, and two seconds behind team-mate Jules Bianchi.

At one stage rain threatened to bring an end to proceedings 35 minutes from the finish, but unlike the torrential downpours that often strike in mid-afternoon given the searing heat and high humidity, it instead only delayed matters.

All drivers bar an out-of-commission Sutil opted for a run on the intermediate wet weather tyres, and given the track quickly dried, it allowed for a late blast on the faster medium tyres but with no improvement in times.

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