Motor racing-Same champions, new winners in strangest F1 season
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[December 16, 2020]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Formula One's
pandemic-hit season was packed with novelty and surprises, even if
Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes retained their titles in record style
and by massive margins once racing returned.
The strangest of campaigns crammed 17 races, instead of the record
22 originally envisaged, into little more than five months from July
with four triple-headers.
Races were held behind closed doors for the first time, with teams
operating in 'bubbles' to protect against COVID-19, but the season
delivered more than might have been expected when the planned
Australian opener was cancelled in March.
Races in places not visited before, two first-time winners and
Romain Grosjean's 'miracle' escape from a fiery crash in Bahrain
that split his car in two provided sensational storylines.
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Three drivers caught the novel coronavirus, including Hamilton after
he had won his record-equalling seventh title, but the show stayed
on the road.
Some 80,000 PCR tests were carried out but fewer than 100 were
positive.
The sport showed it was quick to adapt in other ways too, teams
turning their hands to designing and producing thousands of hospital
ventilators in otherwise shuttered factories during the early months
of the year.
Italy hosted three races -- a first for the sport -- and there were
new formats and untested layouts with several circuits hosting two
rounds.
Glamour showcase races in Monaco and Singapore were binned, as well
as what would have been the first Vietnamese Grand Prix, as Formula
One kept it simple and stayed in Europe and the Middle East.
RECORDS BROKEN
Records were broken all over the place, Hamilton breezing past
Michael Schumacher's benchmark 91 wins -- ending the year on 95 --
and matching the Ferrari ace's seven titles.
The Briton, now the most successful driver of all time, won 11 races
and used his platform to highlight injustice -- taking a knee before
each race in a Black Lives Matter shirt and campaigning for greater
diversity.
The Silverstone pit straight was renamed after Hamilton as the
35-year-old ended the year with more points than the second-placed
Red Bull team's drivers combined and with 124 more than
second-placed Finnish team mate Valtteri Bottas.
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![](../images/121620pics/racing%20hamilton%20story_small.jpg)
Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton
celebrates after winning the race and the world championship Pool
via REUTERS/Clive Mason/Pool/File Photo
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2016/Mar/14/images/ads/current/tires250x300.gif)
Mercedes, who secured both championships for an unprecedented
seventh year in a row, won 13 races and took pole position in all
but two.
Mexican Sergio Perez contracted COVID-19 -- replaced by super-sub
Nico Hulkenberg for two races -- but ended the longest wait for a
win with victory in his 190th start, going from last to first around
the Bahrain circuit's outer loop.
Ferrari, the sport's most successful team, joined the others in
signing a new commercial 'Concorde Agreement' and celebrated their
1,000th race in the first held at Mugello.
They also suffered their worst season since 1980, without a win and
sixth overall, and said goodbye to four times champion Sebastian
Vettel who moves to what was Racing Point and will be Aston Martin.
Going the other way, McLaren -- with new U.S.-based investors and
Australian Daniel Ricciardo joining next year -- returned to the top
three behind Mercedes and Red Bull.
The latter won twice with Max Verstappen, including the Abu Dhabi
season-ender that raised hopes for a more competitive 2021.
Italy-based AlphaTauri also shone, with Frenchman Pierre Gasly
taking an emotional first win at Monza.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2020/Dec/16/images/ads/current/charrons_bch041713.png)
Former champions Williams, the founding family departing after
selling to U.S.-based Dorilton Capital, failed to score for the
first time since the 1970s.
Their driver George Russell still starred, the youngster joining
Mercedes for the Sakhir Grand Prix and nearly winning as stand-in
for Hamilton who was sidelined by COVID-19.
The 22-year-old Briton's hopes were dashed by Mercedes making a rare
pitstop error before a late puncture but he emerged with his name
even more firmly on the list of ones to watch.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Ken Ferris)
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