LEWIS Hamilton has reduced the deficit to rival Sebastian Vettel in the Formula One championship after a flawless lights-to-flag victory in yesterday’s Canadian Grand Prix.
On the 10th anniversary of his very first victory in the sport here, Hamilton romped to his sixth win at Montreal’s Circuit Gilles Villeneuve to move to within 12 points of Vettel in the title race.
Vettel’s afternoon was scuppered by a first-corner incident with Max Verstappen which forced him to stop for a new front wing, and with it, fall to the back of the field.
The Ferrari driver recovered to finish fourth, while Hamilton’s team-mate Valtteri Bottas crossed the line in second to complete Mercedes’ first one-two finish of the season. Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo claimed the final spot on the podium.
It was the perfect retort from Hamilton after he managed only seventh at the Monaco Grand Prix a fortnight ago. Indeed fresh from sealing the 65th pole position of his career, to draw him level with the tally of his boyhood hero Ayrton Senna, the 32-year-old Briton led every lap in a masterful display at a track which has been so kind to him over the years.
Hamilton’s afternoon stroll was made all that much easier when Vettel, who started alongside the Mercedes man on the front row, was left fighting for fourth on the short dash to turn one.
Vettel was not particularly slow out of the blocks, but as Bottas dived underneath the German, and Verstappen raced around the outside, the driver who had finished either first or second at every round of the season so far, was suddenly on the back foot.
Matters got worse at the end of lap five when Vettel was hauled into the pits for repairs to his front wing. TV replays showed that the fast-starting Verstappen had nicked the nose of the Ferrari at turn one, but the stewards took no action.
The incident capped a manic first lap in which Romain Grosjean’s tangle with Carlos Sainz sent the Spaniard into an uncontrollable and high-speed spin, which resulted in him swiping out Felipe Massa. Sainz thudded into the wall at turn three, while Massa was also ruled out of the race. Grosjean limped on.
The safety car was deployed to deal with Sainz’s stricken Toro Rosso, with Hamilton leading from Verstappen and Bottas.
Verstappen, who had started from fifth, was at least doing his part to keep Hamilton honest when the pack was released on lap five. But the Dutchman was soon out of the race when his car ground to a halt at the exit of turn two. The pain was evident, both in the Red Bull cockpit – as Verstappen angrily gesticulated with both hands – and the Red Bull pit wall with boss Christian Horner grimacing and Helmut Marko shaking his head.
Verstappen’s pain was Hamilton’s gain as it made his task all that much easier.
The same could not be said for his rival Vettel. Plum last in the pack, the championship leader began picking off his opponents and by lap 22 he was up to eighth after passing Lance Stroll – the first Canadian racing in these parts since 1997 world champion Jacques Villeneuve 11 years ago – and then Kevin Magnussen.
Fernando Alonso would be the next victim for Vettel to leave the German in seventh place.
The four-time champion pitted for fresh rubber at the end of lap 49, and with 20 laps remaining, began to hunt down Ferrari team-mate Raikkonen in sixth, who in turn was chasing the trio of Ricciardo and the impressive Force India pair of Sergio Perez and Esteban Ocon.
A technical glitch for Raikkonen promoted Vettel to sixth before he took fifth position after Ocon ran off the road at turn one with four laps remaining. Vettel then passed Perez on the penultimate lap to take fourth.
Hamilton crossed the line 20 seconds clear of Bottas on an utterly dominant afternoon.
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