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Lewis Hamilton penalty hands Russian Grand Prix win to Valtteri Bottas


Bottas
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Lewis Hamilton’s quest for the all-time record of Formula 1 wins was put on hold when he was hit with penalties at the Russian Grand Prix.

Hamilton’s Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas dominated after the world champion was given a 10-second penalty for doing two illegal practice starts.

Hamilton was initially given two penalty points to put him two away from an automatic one-race ban.

But these were later rescinded on the basis the team were at fault.

Bottas’ victory meant he cut Hamilton’s championship lead to 44 points.

Hamilton and the Mercedes team made the victory easy for Bottas with their collective failure to know the rules on practice starts before the race.

Bottas was on the better strategy – starting on the medium tyres while Hamilton was on softs after a chaotic qualifying session for the Briton – and was tracking Hamilton in the early laps waiting for the race to play out.

Had the race played out, Hamilton would have made his pit stop first and been leading in the closing stages but with a grip deficit on older tyres trying to hold off Bottas and Verstappen.

But two five-second penalties, each for practice starts in the wrong place on the reconnaissance laps before the cars go to the grid, took Hamilton out of the equation.

Bottas celebrates winning the Russian Grand Prix
“It’s nice to get a win. It’s been a while,” Bottas said after taking his first win since the opening race in Austria

What mistake did Mercedes make?

Hamilton asked his engineer Peter Bonnington as he left the pits before the race if he could practise his start from further down the pit lane than the designated area immediately at the exit.

Bonnington confirmed that he could, and Hamilton drove down to the end of the pit lane, just before it rejoins the track.

When told of the penalty, Hamilton complained: “Where is that in the rules?”

But his actions contravened the requirements to do practice starts in the designated place, not to stop in the fast lane of the pit lane, and not to use constant throttle and speed in the pit exit at this part of the pre-race procedure.

It was the second time in three races that Mercedes have fallen foul of race instructions – after he pitted when the pit lane was closed at the Italian Grand Prix, costing him victory.

An easy win for Bottas

Valtteri Bottas sprays champagne on the podium
The Russian Grand Prix is Bottas’ ninth career victory

The mistakes by Mercedes opened the door for one of Bottas’ easiest wins, and one of the season’s most soporific races.

Bottas challenged Hamilton at the start, just failing to overtake his team-mate around the outside of the first corner after drafting him down the straight.

He said he had a “massive bee” on his visor on the run to Turn Two, which made it hard for him to pick his braking point, and he ran a little too deep, allowing Hamilton to hold him off.

After that, Mercedes had such a pace advantage that Bottas was able to edge well clear of Verstappen and then hold the Red Bull at whatever comfortable distance he chose for the entire race. He then secured fastest lap at the end too.

Having served his penalty, Hamilton was in third place once the other drivers had pitted and he was in an equally comfortable third place – his older tyres meant he could not challenge Verstappen for second, having stopped nine laps earlier.

Behind the top three, Racing Point’s Sergio Perez and Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo had equally lonely races, the Australian having sufficient pace to overcome a five-second penalty for failing to comply with rules regarding how to rejoin the track when a car runs wide at Turn Two.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc made excellent use of a long first stint on the medium tyres to vault up from 11th on the grid to finish sixth, ahead of the second Renault of Esteban Ocon, the Alpha Tauris of Daniil Kvyat and Pierre Gasly and Alexander Albon’s Red Bull.

It was a bad day for McLaren – Carlos Sainz crashed on the first lap when he misjudged the run-off area at Turn Two at the start and smashed into the wall when attempting to rejoin the track, while Lando Norris had car problems from the first lap and could manage only 15th place.

Driver of the day

Max Verstappen
Tough one this, after such a dreary race, with tyre management at the forefront of drivers’ attentions. Perez deserves a mention, for his strong pace in the Racing Point, as does Leclerc for another excellent tyre-management race, akin to his strong drives at Silverstone. I’m going to withhold judgement. The fans gave it to Max Verstappen.

What happens next?

The Eifel Grand Prix on 11 October as the Nurburgring returns to the F1 calendar for the first time since 2013. The 24-hour touring car race there this weekend has been hit with miserable wet and wintery conditions in the Eifel mountains. Will F1 face the same?

What they said

Valtteri Bottas: “Once I was in clean air I felt that the pace was pretty awesome and that I could control everything. Never give up. It’s a good day. It’s nice to get another win as it’s been a while and I now need to keep the momentum going.”

Max Verstappen: “After the restart we were a little slower on the medium, I was having problems with the balance. Once we were on the hard tyre we were a bit more competitive. I was just trying to do my own race today. I think we managed it well. I am very happy with second especially after two DNFs.”

Lewis Hamilton: “First I want to say a big thank you to the fans that came this weekend, it’s not been a great day but it is what it is. It doesn’t matter, it’s done now so I’ll take the points and move on but congratulations go to Valtteri.”

Carlos Saniz's car is towed away
Carlos Saniz tweeted that he “misjudged the speed through the bollards” after running over the sausage kerb to avoid a penalty
Fans watch the Russian Grand Prix
It wasn’t a classic race for the 30,000 fans watching on inside the Sochi Autodrom





Article courtesy of BBC Sport
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