Germany's Sebastian Vettel finished third for Ferrari, behind
Rosberg, with Williams driver Felipe Massa bumped off the podium
after leading for the first 20 laps following a blistering start.
On a tricky afternoon of safety cars, sunshine and showers Hamilton
timed his tire strategy to perfection to chalk up his 38th career
win and fifth of the season -- and get his hands on a 'proper' gold
trophy.
The victory in front of an estimated 140,000 fans -- a timely
reminder of the sport's enduring appeal despite doom-laden headlines
-- made Hamilton only the third Briton, after Jim Clark and Nigel
Mansell, to win three times at home.
"I really wanted to do it for you guys," he told the crowd from the
podium. "I am so thankful for all the support. I could see all the
fans on every lap in the corner of my eye and it spurred me on.
The Briton, who had complained about poor grip on his way to the
grid, made a sluggish start from pole position as Massa roared
through from the second row to lead into the first corner.
"I am so elated you cannot imagine," he said after a day that could
so easily have gone badly wrong.
Rosberg, who was fourth at the end of the first lap, said his team
mate had timed it exactly right in pitting for intermediates just as
the rain began to come down hard.
The German stayed out for another slippery lap before also pitting.
"I was pushing hard to try and catch Lewis under difficult
conditions but he made the better call and that is where I lost it.
Fair play to him," said the German, who now has 177 points to
Hamilton's 194.
Mercedes, with their sixth one-two of the season, took another
massive step towards retaining the constructors' title and have 371
points to Ferrari's 211.
TROUBLED SEASON
The safety car was deployed for two laps after Lotus drivers Pastor
Maldonado and Romain Grosjean collided on lap one, with McLaren's
Fernando Alonso also spearing into his team mate Jenson Button.
Button retired but Spaniard Alonso stayed in the race and finished
lapped but 10th for his first point of a troubled season.
Bottas passed Hamilton for second at the re-start when the safety
car came in and the unexpected possibility of a first Williams
one-two since 2003 turned the race into a rare thriller.
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While the pit wall told Bottas initially to hold position to help
the Williams duo pull away together, the Finn was determined to
race.
"I'm going to overtake," he said. "I can do it on the back
straight."
Massa still held him off until the first stop, with Mercedes trying
in vain to fool their rivals into pitting early by deploying their
own mechanics in a dummy run that came to nothing.
When the Brazilian did come in, it was with Rosberg in tow and the
pair left side by side with Massa just squeezing in front at the
last moment.
"This is a straight fight to the end, we are racing all cars around
us," Massa was told, but in the end it came down to the weather and
tire choice with Rosberg passing for second place on lap 41.
Only 13 cars finished, with Sauber's Brazilian Felipe Nasr retiring
before the start when his car was stuck in sixth gear on the track
as he headed for the grid.
A virtual safety car also came into play on lap 34 when the Toro
Rosso of Spaniard Carlos Sainz stopped on the runoff and had to be
removed with a tractor.
Bottas finished fifth, ahead of Red Bull's Russian Daniil Kvyat,
while Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen was eighth and sandwiched between the
Force Indias of Nico Hulkenberg and Sergio Perez in seventh and
ninth.
(Editing by Mark Meadows)
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