Hamilton wins 1,000th race in Mercedes 1-2

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Second-placed Mercedes’ Finnish driver Valtteri Bottas (left), winner Mercedes’ British driver Lewis Hamilton (second right) and third-placed Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel (right) celebrate with a team member on the podium after the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai yesterday. Photo: AFP

SHANGHAI: Lewis Hamilton won the 1,000th Formula One Grand Prix yesterday after grabbing the lead from Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas at the first corner and powering to victory in blustery Shanghai.

Hamilton, who started from second on the grid, took the world championship lead after romping home to win the Chinese Grand Prix by more than 6.5 seconds from Bottas, with Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel third.

Max Verstappen of Red Bull was fourth and Charles Leclerc in the second Ferrari was fifth.

Second-placed Mercedes’ Finnish driver Valtteri Bottas (left), winner Mercedes’ British driver Lewis Hamilton (second right) and third-placed Ferrari’s German driver Sebastian Vettel (right) celebrate with a team member on the podium after the Formula One Chinese Grand Prix in Shanghai yesterday. Photo: AFP

This was world champion Hamilton’s sixth victory at the Chinese Grand Prix and second in a row this season.

“To have a one-two (for Mercedes) is really special in the 1,000th grand prix but the start was where it made the difference and the rest is history,” said the Briton.

Hamilton was pipped for pole position by Bottas by just 0.023 seconds in qualifying and had said that he was “struggling with the car”.

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But the Finn laboured out of the blocks, allowing Hamilton to nip in and grab the lead at the first corner.

“I lost it on the start, honestly, shame about the start, I got some wheel spin on the start line,” said Bottas, who also relinquished his hold on the standings after three races.

Talented 21-year-old Leclerc meanwhile pulled off the same trick at the start at the expense of his team-mate Vettel, darting into third. There was more early drama when Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat tangled with both McLarens of Lando Norris and Carlos Sainz, earning the Russian a drive-through penalty.

On lap 11, four-time world champion Vettel leapfrogged back in front of Monaco’s Leclerc into third following radio orders from Ferrari telling the youngster to let him pass.

“We do our job, stay focused,” Leclerc — agonisingly denied victory last time out in Bahrain after his Ferrari lost power late on — was informed on team radio after he briefly protested.

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Back at the front, the 34-year-old Hamilton began pulling away, establishing a more than five-second gap on Bottas with a third of the race gone.

With five-time world champion Hamilton — winner in Bahrain two weeks ago — serene up top, the real battles unfolded behind him. – AFP

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