Hamilton wins U.S. GP but made to wait for title
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[October 23, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
AUSTIN, Texas (Reuters) - Mercedes won
the Formula One constructors' title for the fourth year in a row on
Sunday but Lewis Hamilton was made to wait despite cruising to a
U.S. Grand Prix victory at one of his favorite circuits.
Hamilton, presented with the winner's trophy by former U.S.
president Bill Clinton, now looks sure to finish off the job and
become Britain's first four times world champion in Mexico next
weekend.
The Mercedes driver's fifth victory in six years at Austin's Circuit
of the Americas extended his lead over Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel,
who finished second, to 66 points.
There are a maximum of 75 points still to be won from the three
races remaining.
"I love this track, I think this track is now my favorite to be
honest," said Hamilton, interviewed by Usain Bolt on the podium and
joining the Olympic sprint champion's signature victory pose.
"A big congratulations to the team. They work so hard back at the
factory and here."
The victory was the 62nd of Hamilton's career and his ninth of the
season.
Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen took third, despite finishing fourth at the
flag, after Red Bull's Max Verstappen -- who had passed the Finn
with a great overtaking move -- was hit with a five second post-race
penalty that dropped him to fourth.
"It is an appalling decision. They have robbed all of the fans
here," raged Red Bull principal Christian Horner as Verstappen left
the pre-podium room.
"It was a great grand prix and they have screwed it up."
Hamilton had started on pole position, waved away for the formation
lap by Bolt after an extended pre-race presentation reflecting the
sport's new U.S. ownership and desire to jazz things up.
Celebrity boxing title fight announcer Michael Buffer gave his long
and resonant call of 'Let's get ready to rumble', after announcing
the drivers to the crowd one by one, and the battle was on.
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Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton (44) of Great Britain celebrates
winning the United States Grand Prix at Circuit of the Americas.
Mandatory Credit: Jerome Miron-USA TODAY Sports
But it was Vettel who struck the first blow from second place on the
grid, beating Hamilton into the first corner as the Briton moved
across and squeezed him as tight as he could without making contact.
Six laps later and Hamilton was back in front and this time he
stayed there.
"At the start it was looking good, we got past Lewis, but we had to
realize we couldn't go at his pace," said Vettel.
"We were then in no-man's land and were not quite sure. We decided
to pit again, with a fresh set of tyres, and it was a bit more
exciting but overall it was not the result we needed."
The German dropped down to fourth after his second stop but passed
Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas with five laps to go and team mate
Raikkonen obligingly let him pass.
Bottas finished fifth with French driver Esteban Ocon sixth for
Force India and Carlos Sainz, on his Renault debut after leaving
Toro Rosso, seventh.
Mexican Sergio Perez was eighth for Force India with Brazilian
Felipe Massa ninth in a Williams and Russian Daniil Kvyat taking a
point for Toro Rosso.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, Editing by Ken Ferris)
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