Sports/Olympics / Motor Racing

Button wins at last, Alonso stays ahead
(Reuters)
Updated: 2006-08-07 16:41

BUDAPEST, Aug 6 - Briton Jenson Button raced through the rain to seize an emotional first Formula One victory in a Hungarian Grand Prix thriller on Sunday.

"Over the last 10 laps, I just didn't want the race to end," said the Honda driver, a winner at last after one of the longest waits in the sport's history. "I wanted it to go on forever, I was loving it.

"What a day. It's been amazing. Coming through from 14th place, I couldn't have done it a better way."

While the 26-year-old celebrated success at the 113th attempt, taking full advantage of others' misfortune to get a monkey off his back on a chaotic afternoon, Renault's world champion Fernando Alonso crashed out while leading.

Alonso's smile returned when Ferrari's Michael Schumacher retired three laps from the end with broken steering after banging wheels with Nick Heidfeld's BMW Sauber.

That would have left the Spaniard still 11 points clear in the championship with five races remaining but the later disqualification of Poland's Robert Kubica lifted Schumacher to eighth place and a vital point.

Alonso has 100 with Schumacher on 90. In the constructors' standings, Renault are just seven ahead of Ferrari.

Spaniard Pedro de la Rosa was second for McLaren, his first podium finish, after pole sitting team mate Kimi Raikkonen crashed out. Heidfeld was third.

Alonso's car slewed and skidded into the tyre barriers with 18 laps to go while in the lead after a breathtaking charge from 15th place on the grid in wet conditions that caught out plenty of others.

Initial reports suggested a drive shaft failure.

"What an incredible race," said Alonso, who showed his mettle by overtaking Schumacher round the outside of turn five in lap four despite starting with a heavy fuel load.

DRAMATIC DAY

Button's win, from 14th on the grid after a 10-place penalty for an engine change on Saturday, was Honda's first as a constructor since 1967.

The first British winner of a grand prix since David Coulthard for McLaren in Australia in 2003, Button finished 30.8 seconds clear of de la Rosa.

By coincidence, the last race winner for Honda was also a Briton -- former champion John Surtees in the Italian Grand Prix at Monza.
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