Hamilton takes eighth British win, Verstappen taken to hospital
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[July 19, 2021]
By Alan Baldwin
SILVERSTONE, England (Reuters) -Lewis Hamilton celebrated a record
eighth British Grand Prix victory on Sunday after fighting back from
a 10-second penalty for a first-lap collision that halted the race
and sent title rival Max Verstappen to hospital.
The Mercedes driver, now only eight points behind Red Bull's
Verstappen after 10 races, passed Ferrari's Charles Leclerc with two
laps to go as a capacity 140,000 crowd rose to cheer on their home
hero.
Hamilton's team mate Valtteri Bottas finished third after being told
to let Hamilton through to chase Leclerc, who had led from the
re-start and was voted driver of the day.
The win was the 99th of seven-times world champion Hamilton's
Formula One career, fourth of the current campaign and one of the
more controversial in his long list of achievements.
It was also the worst possible result for Verstappen, who had
started on pole position with a 33-point lead but failed to complete
a lap after suffering the biggest accident of his career when he
crashed out at Copse corner.
Hamilton went down the inside, Verstappen moved across and they
tangled wheels -- the Red Bull's rear right touching the front left
of the Mercedes.
The stewards deemed Hamilton was to blame.
Red Bull team principal Christian Horner criticised Hamilton for a
mistake he deemed amateur, dangerous and desperate but Mercedes boss
Toto Wolff said it "takes two to tango".
Verstappen was flown by helicopter to hospital in Coventry after
initial checks at the circuit and released at 2200 local time
without any major injuries, the team said.
A day that was almost a return to pre-pandemic normality, with
crowds cheering in the sunshine from packed grandstands, ended with
a British winner, a thrilling late chase for victory - and plenty to
argue about.
It also lit a fire under the title battle, after previous
pleasantries between the two rivals, with the gloves now decidedly
off and Red Bull's momentum abruptly halted after five wins in a
row.
From being 44 points clear in the constructors' championship, Red
Bull are now only four ahead of Mercedes.
The front-running pair are now at daggers drawn with Red Bull
accusing Hamilton of dangerous driving and the Briton highlighting
Verstappen's aggressive approach.
DREAM WIN
None of that was stopping Hamilton from celebrating with his army of
fans.
"This is a dream for me today, to do
it in front of you all," Hamilton told the biggest sporting crowd in
Britain since COVID-19 made its presence felt. Last year's race was
held without spectators.
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Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton celebrates on
the podium after winning the race REUTERS/Peter Cziborra
"I always try to be measured in how I approach, particularly with
battling with Max, he's very aggressive. And then today I was fully
alongside him and he didn't leave space.
"Regardless of whether I agree with the penalty, I take it on the
chin and I just kept working.
"I was like 'I'm not going to let anything get in the way of the
crowd's enjoyment of the weekend and the national anthem and the
British flag'."
Leclerc also kept his head up after missing out on Ferrari's first
win since 2019.
"I gave not 100% but I gave 200%. I gave all of me but it was just
not enough in the last two laps," said the Monegasque.
"Congratulations to Lewis, he did an incredible job."
There was no point awarded for fastest lap, with Red Bull's Mexican
Sergio Perez setting it and then retiring with no prospect of the
top 10 finish that would have triggered the bonus.
The main aim at that point, however, was to keep it out of
Hamilton's hands.
McLaren's Lando Norris gave the fans more to cheer about with fourth
place, a result that lifted him to third in the standings, ahead of
Australian team mate Daniel Ricciardo.
Ferrari's Carlos Sainz was sixth, his hopes hit by a stuck wheel in
a slow pitstop but the points helping Ferrari narrow the gap to
McLaren.
Behind them, double world champion Fernando Alonso was seventh for
Renault-owned Alpine with Canadian Lance Stroll eighth for Aston
Martin.
French driver Esteban Ocon made a return to the points with ninth
for Alpine and AlphaTauri's Japanese rookie Yuki Tsunoda took the
final point.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin; Editing by Toby Davis, Pritha Sarkar and
Hugh Lawson)
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