McLaren Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain, yellow helmet left, crashes with Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain, right, during the first lap of the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
McLaren Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain, yellow helmet left, crashes with Ferrari driver Fernando Alonso of Spain, right, during the first lap of the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. (AP Photo/Luca Bruno)
McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button of Britain reacts as he passes the finish line, after he won the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany came second and Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen of Finland was third. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button of Britain reacts on the podium after he won the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany came second and Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen of Finland was third. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
McLaren Mercedes driver Jenson Button of Britain kisses the trophy, after he won the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix in Spa-Francorchamps, Sunday, Sept. 2, 2012. Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany came second and Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen of Finland was third. (AP Photo/Yves Logghe)
SPA, Belgium (AP) ? Jenson Button coasted to his second victory of the season at the Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday, with Formula One championship leader Fernando Alonso and Lewis Hamilton forced out after a spectacular crash at the start.
It was Button's first victory at Spa and No. 14 for the British driver's career. He led from start to finish, oblivious to the mayhem behind him.
"This is such a special circuit, so to get a victory here from light to flag is very special," Button said. "It hasn't been an easy year for me. We're going to enjoy this for a little while longer before we head to Monza and hopefully do the same."
Button triumphantly zigzagged across the track as he approached the finish line and then clapped his hands together in celebration. He then stood on his McLaren and leaned his head back as he clenched both fists.
"The car felt very good to drive and I could control the degradation of the tires. It's always easier to do that when you're leading," said Button, who climbed to sixth place overall. "It's a massive long shot to win the title, but today proves that you can claw back 25 points very quickly. There's still 63 points to make up, but anything's possible."
Defending champion Sebastian Vettel benefited from the chaos to finish second and trim Alonso's lead to 24 points ? putting the two-time champion right back in contention.
"I was reasonably confident because I know anything can happen here and you can overtake," Vettel said.
Kimi Raikkonen was third, continuing the consistent form he's shown all season long with his third straight podium and sixth overall.
"My car was not the nicest to drive the whole race," Raikkonen said. "I was fighting to get the best out of it and we managed to get some key points, so that was the main thing."
The early wreck, which was triggered by Lotus driver Romain Grosjean, also took out Mexican driver Sergio Perez, and Grosjean himself.
Grosjean went for a small gap and clipped Hamilton's McLaren. That sent both cars spinning and led to Grosjean's Lotus flying over Alonso's Ferrari, which then took out Perez's Sauber. All four drivers escaped unhurt.
"I'm fine and 100 (percent) already thinking (about) Monza!" Alonso said on his Twitter page.
A visibly frustrated Hamilton briefly confronted Grosjean after the incident and tapped the side of his own helmet with his finger after getting out of his car.
Grosjean's actions may be investigated, since he took the dangerous option of changing direction moments after the start.
Following a miserable qualifying performance on Saturday, Vettel was relieved to get on the podium after starting from 10th on the grid.
"It was a crazy race, after the first corner where a few cars went off," the German driver said. "The car was quite good in the race and we were able to pick up some pace. It was a fantastic race, great to come second."
Germany's Nico Hulkenberg was fourth for Force India, ahead of Ferrari's Felipe Massa in fifth and Red Bull's Mark Webber, who had started from 12th because of a gearbox penalty.
Alonso, who had picked up points in every race this season, was lucky to escape serious injury as Grosjean's Lotus went over his car and narrowly missed the Spaniard's head.
Button was not affected by the crash and maintained his lead as the safety car went on the track and piles of smashed car parts were cleared away.
A veteran of 222 races, Button shrugged off the incident. He was seven seconds clear of Nico Hulkenberg after 12 laps.
Michael Schumacher, chasing his second podium position of the season in his 300th career GP, drove aggressively on the Spa circuit where he made his F1 debut 21 years ago. The 43-year-old stormed into second after 15 laps, with Vettel climbing to third as they pushed their soft tires to the limit.
Schumacher proved to be a bit too aggressive, however.
He almost careered into Vettel at the Bus Stop chicane as he cut across him going into the pits for a tire change. Schumacher faced a stewards' inquiry for the risky move.
Vettel said it was a moment of confusion and Schumacher should not be punished.
Button came in on lap 22 for his only stop, and still had a comfortable lead of 13 seconds on Vettel coming out.
McLaren sounded supremely confident that the one-stop strategy would carry Button all the way, saying "Plan A is good" over the race radio and that he was "pulling away" from Raikkonen.
Schumacher pitted for a second tire change with eight laps remaining.
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