Alonso has no illusions about title chances

Alonso has no illusions about title chances

Fernando Alonso says he has "no illusions" about his prospects in the   championship despite ending a 12-race drought with an authoritative victory at the Chinese Grand Prix.

The dozen races without a win was the Ferrari driver's longest barren period since his winless 2009 season, and represented a sharp change of fortunes after a Did-Not-Finish result at the previous race in Malaysia.

"It couldn't have gone better than this today," Alonso said after Sunday's race. "This has a special feeling because it was a tricky race full of action.

"Along with the second place I got in Australia, this result shows that the car is competitive and that we are working in the right direction to always be in the fight for the podium."

The Spanish driver said he had "pace in his pocket" which he kept in reserve, yet still drove away to a comfortable 10-second victory margin over Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen. Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton clung for third, just two tenths of a second ahead of the fast-finishing Sebastian Vettel of Red Bull.

The comfortable nature of the win raised Ferrari's hopes of taking its first drivers' championship since 2007, particularly with the next race coming this weekend in Bahrain, giving rival teams no chance to introduce any significant aerodynamic upgrades in the meantime.

However, the 2013 season is already shaping as in which fortunes will change from venue to venue depending the layout of tracks, surfaces and the various team strategies revolving around tires. The Red Bulls were dominant in Malaysia, yet absent from the podium in Shanghai.

"With no dominating the championship, it makes it extremely interesting, even if we are aware this is only the third race," Alonso said. "We are under no illusions and we must continue to concentrate and do all we can to improve still further."

Vettel still leads the drivers' standings, with his advantage sliced to three points over the consistent Raikkonen. The Finn's second place Sunday was his 20th consecutive points finish in  , joining Alonso (23) and Michael Schumacher (24) as the only men to achieve that feat.

That string of points finishes appeared to be in serious jeopardy when he ran heavily into the back of Sergio Perez's McLaren early in the race, but remarkably his Lotus lost little pace and the team opted to keep the damaged front wing and nose the car.

If not for that accident, and a slow start that saw the Finn immediately shuffled down from his second place the grid to fourth, Raikkonen would have posed a much stronger challenge to Alonso.

"It was quite difficult out there," Raikkonen said of driving with a rearranged front assembly. "The car is not designed like that otherwise we would use it all the time, but I was surprised how good it was. Of course there were some handling issues, which was not ideal, but we just had to try to live with it and we still had pretty okay speed."

Lotus' trackside operations manager Alan Permane calculated that the damage cost Raikkonen about one-quarter of a second per lap. Given it happened with 40 laps to go, that was 10 seconds in all — precisely the margin behind the race winner.

"Without the poor start and without the incident for Kimi then we definitely would have fought for a win today," team principal Eric Boullier said. "Kimi showed once more why he's of the very best drivers in the world by being of the fastest track despite sustaining damage to his car."

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