Malta Independent

Pérez wins Azerbaijan GP after Verstappen crashes from lead

-

Max Verstappen was cruising toward an easy second consecutiv­e victory until an unexpected tire failure turned the Azerbaijan Grand Prix into a two-lap shootout and a shock victory for Sergio Pérez.

The finish Sunday just might have been an unintentio­nal preview of the changes Formula One plans to experiment with later this season in an effort to add excitement to the on-track product.

Championsh­ip leader Verstappen crashed out of the lead with four laps remaining to bring out a red flag that set up the unconventi­onal shootout from a standing start. Lewis Hamilton went off course trying to pass Pérez for the lead, marking the first time since 2016 that the top two in the championsh­ip standings failed to score point.

That made for an unfamiliar podium as Pérez, Sebastian Vettel and Pierre Gasly all finished in the top three for the first time this year.

Verstappen had no warning his tire was about to fail as he slammed into the wall. The Dutchman climbed from his car, inspected the tire and kicked it in anger before stomping off in disgust over the race-changing failure.

Red Bull was clearly concerned about the Pirelli tires after a similar accident ended Lance Stroll's race earlier and under red flag the team asked F1 that the cars be allowed to change tires before the two-lap sprint to the finish.

F1 had previously announced it would experiment with halfhour sprint races in places of qualifying later this season. Baku was an unexpected preview of an even shorter, more explosive format.

Liberty Media, an American company, is in its fifth season running F1 after buying the commercial rights in 2017. The U.S. ownership has brought a focus on a younger audience on social media and in a deal with Netflix.

Pérez was the leader on the restart but Hamilton shot past him in his attempt to win the race and reclaim the points lead from Verstappen. But he failed to brake in the first corner and his Mercedes slid off track. Hamilton dropped to 15th, snapping a streak of 54 consecutiv­e races of earning a points position finish.

Hamilton said he accidental­ly flicked a switch which "basically switches the brakes off and I just went straight."

Four-time champion Vettel took second to give Aston Martin its first ever F1 podium in an an impressive drive after qualifying 11th. It was Vettel's highest finish since 2019. Gasly was third for AlphaTauri.

The red-flag was the second of the season following a crash between Valtteri Bottas and George Russell at Imola in April, and the longest suspension since Romain Grosjean's fiery crash in Bahrain last November caused a stoppage of more than an hour.

It was the second career win for Pérez, who is in his first season with Red Bull. It somewhat salvaged the race for the team that had been headed toward a 1-2 finish before Verstappen's tire failed. Verstappen retained a four-point lead over Hamilton in the standings; Pérez climbed from fifth to third.

Pérez's second win ties him with Pedro Rodríguez for the most in F1 by a Mexican driver. He waited nine years from his 2011 debut to his first win and now has two in six months.

Pérez called for an investigat­ion into the tire failures, which should not happen on the straightaw­ay at Baku.

Charles Leclerc started on the pole for Ferrari but couldn't replicate his qualifying pace. He eventually finished fourth after losing a fight with Gasly for the last podium place. Lando Norris took fifth for McLaren, hours after the team announced longtime investor Mansour Ojjeh had died aged 68.

Fernando Alonso was sixth for Alpine and Gasly's teammate Yuki Tsunoda took a career-best seventh.

Carlos Sainz was eighth for Ferrari after recovering from going off the track and Daniel Ricciardo was ninth to give McLaren a double points day. Kimi Raikkonen's 10th place for Alfa Romeo was his first points finish since Nov. 1.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malta