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Hamilton Steals Show in Malaysia Practice

Lewis Hamilton hogged the limelight Friday as he topped both practice sessions at the Malaysian Grand Prix, making up in small part for his bitter disappointment in Melbourne.

McLaren's 2008 world champion, who is yet to win at Sepang, scorched to 1min 38.021sec in the morning drive and he again led the way on a stifling afternoon with a time of 1:38.172.

Seven-time world champion Michael Schumacher, whose Mercedes has drawn attention for its innovative "W-duct" rear wing, was 0.361 adrift in the second session with McLaren's Jenson Button, the season's early points leader, third.

Schumacher's teammate Nico Rosberg placed fourth with Toro Rosso's Daniel Ricciardo fifth. Ferrari's double world champion Fernando Alonso was sixth ahead of Red Bull driver Mark Webber.

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel, who swept to his second straight world title last year, had a quiet afternoon and wound up 10th, 1.23sec off Hamilton's pace.

Hamilton qualified quickest at last week's season-opener in Australia but he eventually had to settle for third behind Button and Vettel, frustrating his bid to seize early control of the championship.

On a typically hot, overcast afternoon with temperatures of 31 degrees Celsius (88 Fahrenheit), Hamilton was quickly at the top of the field with a time of 1:38.921 inside the first 20 minutes.

Ricciardo turned heads as he bettered Hamilton's time by seven hundredths of a second, while Webber and Caterham's Heikki Kovalainen narrowly avoided touching wheels as they dueled on a tight right-hander.

Hamilton ran wide on his ninth lap but he came storming back to go fastest and he then lowered the time again to 1:38.617, despite locking a front wheel late in the lap.

Schumacher briefly headed the field around the hour-mark before Hamilton cut his mark by two-hundredths and then lopped it again to 1:38.172, a time that endured the last 20 minutes of the second practice.

Force India's Paul di Resta finished 13th after a braking problem forced him wide early in the session, and then a sideways slide which left him bumping across a wide expanse of grass beside the track.

And there was more woe for HRT's Narain Karthikeyan, who was too slow in qualifying to even start last week's Australian Grand Prix, when he span late in the session and lay second last.

Despite concerns from rival teams, officials have raised no objections to Mercedes' rear wing, which channels air-flow to cut resistance on the nose when the Drag Reduction System (DRS) overtaking aid is engaged.

Source: Agence France Presse


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