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			Hamilton wins in Brazil as Mercedes take fifth F1 title 
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			[November 12, 2018] 
			By Marcelo Teixeira
 SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A lucky Lewis 
			Hamilton won a tense Brazilian Grand Prix on Sunday as his Mercedes 
			team clinched the constructors' title for the fifth year in a row 
			and Max Verstappen raged at a lost opportunity.
 
 The win was the 72nd of Hamilton's stellar career and 10th of a 
			season that has already seen the 33-year-old Briton clinch his fifth 
			championship, delivering Mercedes their fifth successive double.
 
 Hamilton had started on pole position but could not hold off Red 
			Bull's Verstappen, who led until a collision with Force India 
			backmarker Esteban Ocon on the 44th of 71 laps sent the Dutchman 
			into a spin and put the Mercedes driver back in front.
 
 A seething and swearing Verstappen battled back but could not close 
			the gap, finishing runner-up 1.469 seconds adrift of Hamilton, who 
			had never previously won in a season where he has taken the title 
			with races to spare.
 
 Verstappen then took matters into his own hands in an angry 
			post-race confrontation with Ocon that led to both being summoned by 
			stewards.
 
 Ferrari's veteran Kimi Raikkonen held off Red Bull's Daniel 
			Ricciardo to complete the podium on his 150th start for the Italian 
			team.
 
 Ferrari had to score 13 points more than Mercedes to keep their 
			hopes alive until Abu Dhabi at the end of the month but failed, with 
			Sebastian Vettel finishing only sixth and behind Mercedes' Valtteri 
			Bottas in fifth.
 
 Mercedes now have 620 points with Ferrari on 553 and 43 still to be 
			won.
 
 "That's it. That's the double, mate. MercedesAMG are the world 
			champs," Hamilton was told as he took the chequered flag at 
			Interlagos after a race fraught with concerns about his tyres and 
			engine.
 
 "It's been an incredible journey with them. This is what everyone 
			worked for, for the whole year," said the ecstatic champion as the 
			celebrations started with one race to go.
 
 "I've always told you how much of an honour it is to drive for them. 
			Today was the best style that we could do it because we were 
			struggling, we had problems to the end. We were a sitting duck at 
			one stage."
 
 Only the sport's oldest and most succesful team Ferrari have 
			previously managed to win five championships in a row, taking six in 
			succession during their golden Michael Schumacher era from 1999 to 
			2004.
 
 "It was a very difficult season, we had up and downs. Ferrari came 
			back very strong and Red Bull at the end but that makes the 
			championship victory even more enjoyable," said team boss Toto 
			Wolff.
 
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			Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton celebrates after winning the race 
			REUTERS/Paulo Whitaker 
            
			 
            Verstappen, winner in Mexico two weeks ago, joined Hamilton on the 
			podium but the Dutchman knew he should have been on the top step.
 PUSHING AND SHOVING
 
 The collision was the talking point of the day, with arguments on 
			both sides.
 
 Ocon was handed a 10-second stop-and-go penalty for causing it but 
			that came as no consolation for Verstappen, whose colourful language 
			over the radio was largely bleeped out for television viewers.
 
 When the Dutchman found Ocon, at the post-race scales, matters 
			became more physical with the Red Bull driver caught on television 
			confronting the young Frenchman and giving him a shove.
 
 "You do everything well, you go through the field, we had a great 
			car and then by such an idiot you get taken out while he's being 
			lapped. I have no words," said Verstappen.
 
 "You can easily say afterwards that I have much more to lose than 
			him but I'm just trying to do my race. Suddenly, a backmarker is 
			trying to race you and taking a stupid risk to dive inside. What can 
			I do about it?
 
 "The penalty for me is that I lost the victory but hopefully in 15 
			years' time we can laugh about it."
 
 Sauber's Ferrari-bound rookie Charles Leclerc was 'best of the 
			rest', the Monegasque finishing seventh after running as high as 
			fourth during the pitstops.
 
 Haas savoured a double points finish to close on fourth-placed 
			Renault, with Romain Grosjean eighth and Danish team mate Kevin 
			Magnussen ninth.
 
 Ocon's Mexican team mate Sergio Perez took the final point for a 
			team that had hoped for much more.
 
 (Writing by Alan Baldwin in London, editing by Pritha Sarkar and Ian 
			Chadband)
 
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