Hamilton marks 200th race with victory in Belgium
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[August 28, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
SPA-FRANCORCHAMPS, Belgium (Reuters) -
Lewis Hamilton celebrated his 200th Formula One race in style on
Sunday with a pole-to-flag Belgian Grand Prix victory for Mercedes
that halved Sebastian Vettel's championship lead to seven points.
The Briton's fifth success in 12 races this season, and 58th of his
career, came a day after he equaled Michael Schumacher's all-time
record of 68 pole positions.
"Sebastian put a great fight on but this is what I said I was coming
to do so I did it," Hamilton told the crowd from the podium.
Vettel finished second for Ferrari, 2.3 seconds behind, after
pushing his rival all the way without being able to get close enough
to make a move stick in what amounted to a two-horse race of
relentless pressure.
"It was really intense because every lap I was waiting for Lewis to
do a mistake. He didn't," said Vettel, whose next race is Ferrari's
home Italian Grand Prix at Monza.
"He was probably waiting for me to make a mistake. I didn't," added
the German, who set a race lap record of one minute 46.577 seconds
in the closing stages.
With eight races remaining, four-times champion Vettel has 220
points and Hamilton 213.
Australian Daniel Ricciardo took third place for Red Bull after a
storming re-start following a late safety car period that had closed
the gap to the frontrunners and triggered a flurry of pitstops.
Ricciardo, on fresh ultra-soft tyres, passed Hamilton's team mate
Valtteri Bottas to surge into the top three, with the Finn also
losing out to the Ferrari of compatriot Kimi Raikkonen as he ran
wide.
Germany's Nico Hulkenberg finished sixth for Renault, Romain
Grosjean was seventh for Haas and Brazilian Felipe Massa took eighth
for Williams.
MAX RETIRES
"It's pretty much for all the Dutch here, so thanks for hanging
around," said Ricciardo, whose teenage team mate Max Verstappen
retired shaking his head in sheer frustration after eight laps.
It was his sixth retirement in 12 races.
"There are so many fans paying a lot for the tickets and you finish
like this. That cannot happen with a top team," said Verstappen,
whose orange-clad compatriots accounted for a majority of the crowd.
[to top of second column] |
Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton wins the 2017 Belgian Grand Prix
REUTERS/Francois Lenoir
While Hamilton and Vettel played out their own
private duel, there was plenty of action further down the field with
the Force India duo of Mexican Sergio Perez and Frenchman Esteban
Ocon playing a starring role.
The simmering pair clashed twice, the second time bringing out the
safety car when Ocon -- who finished ninth -- tried to get past on
the run down to Eau Rouge and was almost squeezed into the wall.
"I can accept the first one -- perhaps he couldn't see me but the
second one was ridiculous. He was risking our lives. He risked my
life," said a furious Ocon.
Debris from his car's broken front wing littered the track while
Perez's right rear tyre was punctured, leaving him limping back to
the pits on a rim.
"It looked like Sergio squeezed Esteban into the wall and came out
the loser of that scrap," the team's chief operating office Otmar
Szafnauer told Sky Sports television, warning that the team would
read the riot act.
"We’ve let them race up until now. If they can’t do it in a manner
which is good for the team, then they won’t be racing any more," he
said.
Spaniard Fernando Alonso was also an unhappy man in the McLaren, the
double world champion making a storming start but his Honda-powered
car's lack of speed leaving him with an impossible task and
increasingly frustrated before retiring.
"Embarrassing, embarrassing," he had said earlier.
(Editing by Clare Fallon) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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