Motor racing-Verstappen wins at Imola as Hamilton fights back
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[April 19, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
(Reuters) - Red Bull's Max Verstappen
won a chaotic and crash-halted Emilia Romagna Grand Prix at Imola on
Sunday with Lewis Hamilton second for Mercedes and staying ahead in
the championship by a single point.
The win, by a commanding 22 seconds at the chequered flag of the
season's second race, was the 11th of the Dutch youngster's career.
"It was very challenging out there, especially in the beginning to
stay on track to be honest, it was very slippery," Verstappen said
of an afternoon that started with most drivers on intermediate tyres
but some on full wets.
Hamilton, winner of the Bahrain season-opener, took a crucial bonus
point for fastest lap on a rollercoaster afternoon for the
seven-times world champion, whose race was almost wrecked by a rare
mistake.
The Briton started on pole, his 99th, but dropped from second to
ninth after skidding into the gravel and nudging the barriers at
Tosa with his car at a standstill and a retirement looming.
He kept the engine running, reversed back out and returned to the
pits, a lap behind, for a new front wing.
A huge collision between team mate Valtteri Bottas and
Mercedes-contracted Williams driver George Russell on lap 32 of the
63 threw him a lifeline by bringing out red flags with debris strewn
across the track.
The drivers blamed each other, with Russell asking the Finn whether
he had wanted to kill them both.
With the field closed up again, Hamilton fought his way back to the
podium with a stirring recovery drive and passed McLaren's
third-placed Lando Norris with two laps to go.
"On my side it was not the greatest days, it's the first time I've
made a mistake in a long time," said Hamilton.
GREAT START
Norris's podium completed an excellent day's work for a driver whose
deleted best lap in qualifying would have seen him start third
rather than seventh.
Hamilton now has 44 points to Verstappen's 43, with Norris on 27.
Mercedes stayed top of the constructors' standings with 60 points to
Red Bull's 53.
Verstappen seized the lead into turn two on the opening lap, forcing
his way through with a great start from third on the grid but making
contact with the Mercedes as he went.
"I don't know if I've got damage, he pushed me right wide in turn
one," exclaimed Hamilton.
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Red Bull's Max Verstappen
celebrates first place on the podium with the trophy
REUTERS/Jennifer Lorenzini
There had been drama already before the start, with Sebastian Vettel
starting from the pitlane after his Aston Martin's brakes overheated
on the way to the grid and Alpine's Fernando Alonso spinning off.
There was more mayhem to come, with Canadian Nicholas Latifi
smashing his Williams into the barriers on the opening lap after
contact with Nikita Mazepin's Haas, bringing out the safety car.
Mick Schumacher, son of Ferrari great Michael, hit the wall at the
pit lane exit and had to continue lapping without a front wing on
his Haas due to the pit lane being closed to clear debris.
Verstappen's Mexican team mate Sergio Perez, who started on the
front row for the first time, failed to score after a torrid
afternoon.
He collected a 10-second time penalty for overtaking while the
safety car was deployed after he skidded off and then retook the
positions lost, but was up to fourth at the time of the stoppage.
The prospect of a podium then disappeared with another error,
dropping him from fourth to 14th before he finally finished 12th.
Ferrari's Charles Leclerc did take fourth at the Italian team's home
circuit and Spanish team mate Carlos Sainz was fifth, with McLaren's
Daniel Ricciardo sixth after earlier letting Norris through.
Canadian Lance Stroll finished seventh for Aston Martin, but was
then demoted to eighth post-race for leaving the track and gaining
an advantage, with AlphaTauri's Pierre Gasly moving up a place.
Kimi Raikkonen, ninth at the flag for Alfa Romeo, was demoted out of
the points after being handed a 30-second penalty for a rolling
start infringement.
That lifted Frenchman Esteban Ocon up to ninth for Alpine with team
mate Fernando Alonso 10th for the first point of his comeback after
two years away.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Kevin Liffey, Ed Osmond and
Pritha Sarkar)
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