De la Rosa sent to the back of the grid

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Pedro de la Rosa will start the race from last place on the grid after becoming the fifth driver to take a grid penalty.

He was handed a five-place penalty after changing to his ninth engine of the season. He is the first driver to exceed his allocation of eight engines.

Here is the revised grid:

Row 1 1. Mark Webber 1’45.778
Red Bull-Renault
2. Lewis Hamilton 1’45.863
McLaren-Mercedes
Row 2 3. Robert Kubica 1’46.100
Renault
4. Sebastian Vettel 1’46.127
Red Bull-Renault
Row 3 5. Jenson Button 1’46.206
McLaren-Mercedes
6. Felipe Massa 1’46.314
Ferrari
Row 4 7. Rubens Barrichello 1’46.602
Williams-Cosworth
8. Adrian Sutil 1’46.659
Force India-Mercedes
Row 5 9. Nico Hulkenberg 1’47.053
Williams-Cosworth
10. Fernando Alonso 1’47.441
Ferrari
Row 6 11. Jaime Alguersuari 1’48.267
Toro Rosso-Ferrari
12. Vitantonio Liuzzi 1’48.680
Force India-Mercedes
Row 7 13. Heikki Kovalainen 1’50.980
Lotus-Cosworth
14. Nico Rosberg 1’47.885
Mercedes
Row 8 15. Jarno Trulli 2’01.491
Lotus-Cosworth
16. Sebastien Buemi 1’49.209
Toro Rosso-Ferrari
Row 9 17. Kamui Kobayashi 2’02.284
Sauber-Ferrari
18. Bruno Senna 2’03.612
HRT-Cosworth
Row 10 19. Sakon Yamamoto 2’03.941
HRT-Cosworth
20. Timo Glock 1’52.049
Virgin-Cosworth
Row 11 21. Michael Schumacher 1’47.874
Mercedes
22. Lucas di Grassi 2’18.154
Virgin-Cosworth
Row 12 23. Vitaly Petrov
Renault
24. Pedro de la Rosa 2’05.294
Sauber-Ferrari

2010 Belgian Grand Prix

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    Keith Collantine
    Lifelong motor sport fan Keith set up RaceFans in 2005 - when it was originally called F1 Fanatic. Having previously worked as a motoring...

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    8 comments on “De la Rosa sent to the back of the grid”

    1. keith it’s a 10 place grid drop, not 5.

    2. Unless Ferrari can prove that their engines are not the problem, they should provide any additional engines free of charge. That’s the least they can do.

      1. Ferrari and Toro Rosso haven’t had as many failures, but I can see where you’re coming from, since it would be a good gesture towards the customer (IMO) more likely to make progress and become competitive.

    3. 9th engine already? Those Ferrari engines seem to have problems with reliability this season!

    4. The swap from BMW to Ferrari engines seemed to give Sauber a lot of problems at the start of the season. I’m wondering if they did this because he was at the back of the grid anyway though, and they actually have a couple of engines spare?

      It’s still not impossible for the Saubers to get in the points from there, their car seemed pretty fast in practice and if it rains who knows what could happen.

    5. I’d be Very annoyed with Ferrari if I was boss of Sauner given that the factory works team have only had one engine blow up (alonso @malasia), but Peter Saunber never gets angry with anyone!

      1. He did probably get angry yesterday after seeing both drivers loose it within 5 minutes, leaving them both stranded in Q1. And I wouldn’t be surprised if he did privately complain to Ferrari, maybe asking for a reduction in the price of the engines. Although this wasn’t really their fault, the crash probably had more to do with it.

        1. Peter Sauber already complained loud and clear in the world press before.
          I am pretty certain he will make Ferrari pay for that. Or just go with Cosworth for next year, a bit cheaper and looks like it’s more reliable as well.

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