Lucky
Lewis ends win drought in Azerbaijan
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[April 30, 2018]
By Alan Baldwin
BAKU (Reuters) - Lewis Hamilton
celebrated one of the luckiest wins of his career on Sunday after a
crash-strewn and chaotic Azerbaijan Grand Prix that catapulted him
into the lead of the Formula One world championship.
The surprise victory, after team mate Valtteri Bottas suffered a
puncture with three laps left while leading, ended a six race
drought for the four times champion dating back to last October.
It was the first victory of the season for champions Mercedes.
In a race where the safety car again played a major part, with a
series of crashes and smashes, Kimi Raikkonen finished second for
Ferrari while Mexican Sergio Perez was third for Force India.
Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel, who had led the championship before Baku
and looked to be on course for a 50th career win and third out of
four this season, started on pole position but finished fourth.
Hamilton now has 70 points to Vettel's 66.
Red Bull's Australian Daniel Ricciardo, last year's winner in Baku
and also in China two weekends ago, smashed into the back of team
mate Max Verstappen in a lap 40 collision that ended the race for
both of them.
"It was quite an emotional race. Valtteri did an exceptional job and
deserved to win, Sebastian also did a great job so it feels a bit
odd to be up here," commented Hamilton on the podium.
"Definitely an untidy race for me."
The Briton had started on the front row for the first time since he
took pole in the Australian season-opener but never looked like
winning until Lady Luck removed both Vettel and Bottas from the
equation.
"It was such a crazy race, such an exciting race...to come out with
a win, I feel incredibly grateful," said Hamilton, who went to
commiserate with Bottas afterwards.
ON A CLOUD
Spaniard Carlos Sainz was fifth for Renault with Monegasque rookie
Charles Leclerc sixth for Sauber, his first points in Formula One.
"It felt like a win, I'm on a cloud now, it has been an amazing
race," said Leclerc.
New Zealander Brendon Hartley was also celebrating his first point
after taking 10th for Toro Rosso.
McLaren, who had their worst qualifying of the season on Saturday,
ended up with a double points finish -- Fernando Alonso seventh and
Stoffel Vandoorne ninth.
Canadian teenager Lance Stroll, third in Baku last year, finished
eighth to give struggling former champions Williams their first
points of the year. Only 13 cars finished the race.
While Vettel made a clean getaway, there was immediate carnage
behind and the safety car was swiftly deployed.
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Lewis Hamilton celebrates on the podium after winning the race as
Force India's Sergio Perez and Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen look on
REUTERS/David Mdzinarishvili
Raikkonen and Force India's Esteban Ocon collided, ending the
Frenchman's race and sending a shower of debris across the track.
Williams's Russian rookie Sergey Sirotkin ran into the back of
Perez, who nudged Renault's Nico Hulkenberg into Alonso -- the
Spaniard limping back to the pits on two tyres and rims.
Hulkenberg then hit the wall on lap 11 while in fifth place,
retiring, after he and Sainz had battled the Red Bulls.
RAGING BULLS
Ricciardo and Verstappen could have collided several times before
they eventually did, Ricciardo running into Verstappen while trying
to pass at the first corner.
Retired triple world champion Niki Lauda told reporters the blame
lay 70 percent with Verstappen, whose season has been full of
collisions, but Red Bull principal Christian Horner said they shared
it equally.
"They are both in the doghouse. They will apologise to all of the
staff before Barcelona," he said. Stewards later reprimanded both
drivers.
The ensuing safety car played into Bottas's hands as the Finn had
yet to pit. While it was out, with marshals cleaning up debris,
Romain Grosjean crashed his Haas while warming his tyres.
That kept the safety car out for even longer and when racing resumed
Vettel passed Bottas but then ran wide as Hamilton and Raikkonen
swept through.
As Bottas headed for victory, he ran over a piece of debris that had
been left behind and the race took yet another unexpected twist.
"I'm absolutely heartbroken. It hurts a lot. But this is racing;
some days are good, some days are bad -- and some days are very bad.
A small piece of debris destroyed my entire weekend," he said.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Toby Davis)
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