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Ferrari back on top in Germany

Fernando Alonso also won in Bahrain
Fernando Alonso also won in Bahrain

Fernando Alonso led Ferrari to a one-two finish in the German Grand Prix on Sunday after denying Brazilian team mate Felipe Massa an emotional victory one year on from a near-fatal crash.

While Alonso celebrated his second triumph of the season, and 23rd of his career, it was accompanied by a whiff of controversy with Massa sent what sounded like a veiled message to allow the Spaniard to overtake on lap 49.

Germany's Sebastian Vettel was third for Red Bull after starting on pole position. McLaren's Lewis Hamilton was fourth to extend his overall championship lead to 14 points.

Sebastian Vettel completed the podium, coming within a second of Massa towards the end, albeit he was never in a position to make a move for second place.

The McLarens of Hamilton and team-mate Jenson Button were never in the hunt, finishing over 20 seconds behind Vettel.

Hamilton, though, has again managed to extend his lead over Button to 14 points, but the pace of the chasing pack means they are now closing in with Vettel and Webber - who was sixth - closing in.

It was an abysmal start from Vettel that cost him the win as he faced a two-pronged assault from the Ferraris and found himself skewered from both sides.

Clearly fearing the greater threat would be Alonso, Vettel moved to his right in a vain attempt to squeeze out the Spaniard.

But not only did the 23-year-old fail with that manoeuvre, he also left the door wide open for Massa to comfortably make his move to his left.

It was a case of 'thank you very much' from the Brazilian who, in the space of just a few hundred yards on the run down to the first corner, had moved from third on the grid to grab the lead.

With the two red machines out front, there followed a fascinating tussle between Massa and Alonso, most notably in the few laps after their switch to the harder tyres from the softer compound.

Massa clearly struggled to get his rubber up to temperature, which allowed a frustrated Alonso to crawl over the back of the 29-year-old.

The most notable was on lap 21 as backmarkers started to make their presence felt, at one point allowing Alonso to get his nose ahead on the straight heading into the hairpin.

Massa, though, had the line through the sharp right-hander, only to come under attack again through the stadium complex, but again just managed to hold sway.

A fuming Alonso expressed his anger over the radio when he said: ‘This is ridiculous’, prompting intense discussions on the Ferrari pit wall.

Credit then to Massa as he soon responded, posting a number of fastest laps to increase his lead to 3.5secs.

That was arguably as Alonso was cooling himself down inside the cockpit of his car because he then launched another assault from the midway point of the race.

But on lap 47 Massa then received a message from engineer Rob Smedley who said: ‘Okay, so, Fernando is faster than you.’

The inference of a team order, as Alonso was 31 points clear going into this race and in with a greater shot of the championship, was apparent.

Two laps later Alonso finally made his move stick, getting close enough to a very slow Massa coming out of the hairpin to then pass his team-mate down the short straight that immediately followed.

Smedley then radioed in again to Massa to say: ‘Good lad. Sorry.’

Alonso then sailed off into the distance to win by 4.1secs, with Vettel just 0.9secs back, and as for the rest, they were nowhere.

After stepping out of their cars in parc ferme, Massa gave Alonso the cold shoulder as he attempted to embrace his team-mate, the sign clear that he was not happy.

Webber, who was forced to give up his chase of Button for fifth due to an oil problem, came home sixth and 14 seconds adrift of the Briton.

Such was the pace of the Ferrari, everybody else was lapped, with Renault's Robert Kubica and Vitaly Petrov seventh and 10th, sandwiching the Mercedes of Nico Rosberg and Michael Schumacher.

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