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Rosberg rules eventful Belgian GP, closes gap on Hamilton

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SPA-FRANCORCHA­MPS, Belgium: Nico Rosberg won an incidentpa­cked Belgian Grand Prix featuring a chaotic start, wild overtaking, a heavy crash, safety cars and a red flag.

The Mercedes driver’s win on Sunday saw him close the gap to nine points on teammate Lewis Hamilton, who finished third behind Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo as the resurgent Australian driver secured a third straight podium finish.

“It’s been a great weekend, very, very happy with that result,” Rosberg said after his 20th career win. “Congrats to Lewis, last place to third must be pretty impressive.”

Rosberg started from pole position with teen driver Max Verstappen also on the front row. Hamilton started from the back row with Fernando Alonso, after both incurred multiple grid penalties for extra engine part changes this weekend.

“Lewis wasn’t out there to battle it out, so that made it an easier weekend,” Rosberg said. “It all worked out fine.” For him at least. Verstappen was involved in a first-turn collision with the Ferraris of Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel that shaped the race.

It had a beneficial effect on Hamilton and Alonso, who avoided the early carnage in front of them, then gained places when the safety car came out after Danish driver Kevin Magnussen’s crash.

Magnussen emerged from the wreck, hobbled away and was taken to hospital for checks for a cut to his left ankle. He escaped serious injury.

German driver Nico Hulkenberg was a season’s best fourth ahead of Mexican Sergio Perez and Vettel, while Alonso was seventh, Raikkonen ninth and Verstappen 11th.

The race start was clean enough for Rosberg, but it was mayhem behind him.

The 18-year-old Verstappen, the youngest driver to ever start on the front row, was overtaken by Raikkonen and Vettel, and then aggressive­ly tried to go for the inside heading into the first turn — even though there was very little room.

The impeded Ferraris were now squeezed wide and, as a consequenc­e, Raikkonen came across and nudged into the side of Vettel.

Verstappen blamed them, saying “they just turned into me” but the incident was the latest of several involving the Red Bull driver. Verstappen became the youngest driver to win a race when he clinched a brilliant victory at the Spanish GP in May.

His talent is undoubted, but his aggression is not to everyone’s liking. Later in the race, he again infuriated Raikkonen, a rare feat considerin­g the Finn’s nickname is “The Ice Man” for his usually unflappabl­e demeanor.

Raikkonen came in for a front nose change but the pit crew also had to put out a small fire under his car.

Others struggled as the manic tempo continued. Spaniard Carlos Sainz lost control when his rear right tire blew out, sending him pirouettin­g to an improvised halt on the grass. He then acrobatica­lly drove back across the track, with his rear right wheel up in the air, before parking at the side of the track.

The incidents prompted the safety car to come out on lap three, and when the race re-started a lap later Sainz, Marcus Ericsson, Jenson Button and Pascal Wehrlein — who hit Button from behind — had all retired.

 ??  ?? TRIUMPHANT: Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team's German driver Nico Rosberg celebrates winning on the podium after the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix at the SpaFrancor­champs circuit in Spa on Sunday. (AFP)
TRIUMPHANT: Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team's German driver Nico Rosberg celebrates winning on the podium after the Belgian Formula One Grand Prix at the SpaFrancor­champs circuit in Spa on Sunday. (AFP)

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