Otago Daily Times

Verstappen extends lead with home GP win

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ZANDVOORT, Netherland­s: Red Bull’s Max Verstappen won his home Dutch Grand Prix from pole position for the second year in a row yesterday to send the fans wild and his Formula One world championsh­ip lead into triple figures.

He added a bonus point for the fastest lap as George Russell finished second for Mercedes and Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc completed the podium at Zandvoort.

‘‘They threw everything at us but we made the right calls,’’ Verstappen said over the radio as he celebrated his fourth win in a row, and 10th in 15 races, to surge 109 points clear at the top.

‘‘It’s always special to win your home grand prix. This year I had to work for it even more,’’ he added as the grandstand­s full of orangeshir­ted fans — most of the 105,000 attendance — went into party overdrive.

Leclerc and Verstappen’s Mexican teammate, Sergio Perez, are tied on points in second place overall, the Ferrari driver ahead on wins with seven rounds remaining, but Verstappen’s second title looks a formality.

In the constructo­rs’ standings, Red Bull has 511 points to Ferrari’s 376.

Mercedes’ seventime world champion, Lewis Hamilton, was fourth, the Briton fuming at his team after leading a race he might have won but for the timing of safety cars and a tyre strategy that left him on slower tyres than rivals.

‘‘I can’t believe you guys,’’ he said over the radio, with expletives filling the airwaves.

The Mercedes drivers had run onetwo for the first time this season, after rivals made their first pit stops, the pair on an initial onestop strategy while Verstappen planned for two.

A virtual safety car period triggered by AlphaTauri’s Yuki Tsunoda changed that, however. Verstappen took a a cheap pit stop and Hamilton complained his hopes of winning had been ‘‘stuffed’’.

Tsunoda had stopped by the side of the track on the 44th of 72 laps, complainin­g a wheel had not been fitted properly.

Told it was safe, he got going again and returned to the pits for a tyre change and seatbelt check before being sent back out — and stopping.

The full safety car was deployed on lap 55 when Alfa Romeo’s Valtteri Bottas stopped just before the last corner, Verstappen pitting for soft tyres and Russell calling for the same but Hamilton staying out on the mediums.

Verstappen seized the lead again at the restart and did not look back. Russell and Leclerc powered past soon after triggering a heavily bleeped radio exchange.

‘‘We timed it really well out of that last corner into the banking. You could see the draft was quite strong and we got ahead. It’s incredible to win again,’’ Verstappen said.

Perez finished fifth with Fernando Alonso sixth for Alpine and Lando Norris, who had forced his way past Russell at the start, seventh for McLaren.

Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz ended up eighth after starting third and finishing fifth on the road, relegated due to a 5sec penalty for an unsafe release in the pitlane. The Spaniard had already been dropped from third to sixth by a pitstop bungle.

Alpine’s Esteban Ocon was ninth, strengthen­ing the Renaultown­ed team’s grip on fourth overall, and Lance Stroll took the final point for Aston Martin.

 ?? ?? Dutch treat . . . Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, of the Netherland­s, celebrates on the podium with the trophy after winning the Dutch Grand Prix in Zandvoort yesterday. Right: A sea of orange supports Verstappen.
Dutch treat . . . Red Bull driver Max Verstappen, of the Netherland­s, celebrates on the podium with the trophy after winning the Dutch Grand Prix in Zandvoort yesterday. Right: A sea of orange supports Verstappen.
 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ??
PHOTO: REUTERS

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