Business Day

Hamilton can smell fourth title

• Mercedes driver wins Japanese Grand Prix ahead of Verstappen to move 59 points clear at top of standings

- Agency Staff Suzuka

Lewis Hamilton was within reach of his fourth Formula One title on Sunday after winning the Japanese Grand Prix for Mercedes, while Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel suffered engine problems and failed to finish.

Lewis Hamilton was within reach of his fourth Formula One title on Sunday after winning the Japanese Grand Prix for Mercedes, while Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel suffered engine problems and failed to finish.

The Briton, who started from pole position, crossed the line 1.2sec ahead of Red Bull’s Max Verstappen (with Daniel Ricciardo third) to move 59 points clear at the top of the overall standings.

Vettel made it no further than the fourth lap before retiring. Already 34 points behind Hamilton before the start, the setback was the third in as many races for the German, whose hopes now rest on Hamilton suffering similar misfortune to that of Vettel in the past four Grands Prix.

“I could only have dreamed of having this kind of gap,” said Hamilton, interviewe­d by Indianapol­is 500 winner Takuma Sato. “I wouldn’t say that I have one hand on it [the title]. There’s still 100 points available so I’m still going to keep the pedal to the metal.”

Sunday’s win was the 61st of Hamilton’s career and third at the Suzuka circuit. It came a day after he smashed the track record to seize pole at the 5.8km track in dominant style. With the gap he now holds over Vettel, he could clinch the title as soon as the next race in Austin, Texas, on October 22.

Vettel had lined up alongside the Briton, raising the prospect of the two title rivals racing side by side to the first corner, but the Ferrari had already run into trouble before the start.

Vettel’s mechanics changed his car’s spark plug on the grid and seemed to have resolved the problem. But while he made a clean start, Hamilton chopped across to keep the lead at the first corner. Lacking power, Vettel fell back through the field before getting the call from his race engineer to retire the car.

“Of course it hurts and we’re all disappoint­ed,” said the four times world champion, who hugged his mechanics and gave the crowd a quick wave after returning to the pits. “For sure now you don’t look at the positives because it’s not the day to look at positives.”

With Vettel sidelined and Mercedes back up to speed after two lacklustre weekends, Hamilton’s afternoon should have consisted of a straightfo­rward drive to victory, but late tyre vibrations allowed Verstappen to reel him in.

For a moment it looked like the Dutchman could cause a late upset and snatch a second consecutiv­e win to add to his triumph in Malaysia.

But with back markers between him and the chasing Red Bull, Hamilton hung on.

“The first half of the race was very well under control and the second part was a lot harder,” said Hamilton. “I had massive understeer. I’m really grateful the car stuck in and I didn’t make any mistakes.”

Valtteri Bottas, who started sixth due to a grid penalty for an unschedule­d gearbox change, fought through to finish fourth for Mercedes. Fellow Finn Kimi Raikkonen, also struck by a gearbox-related grid penalty, finished in fifth place.

Force India’s Esteban Ocon was sixth ahead of Mexican teammate Sergio Perez, as the Silverston­e-based team came away with another strong haul of points. Kevin Magnussen was eighth ahead of Haas teammate Romain Grosjean. Brazilian Felipe Massa rounded out the top 10 for Williams.

Britain’s Jolyon Palmer completed his last race for Renault in 12th place.

 ?? /AFP ?? Riding high: Lewis Hamilton throws his winner’s trophy as secondplac­ed Max Verstappen, left, and third-place Daniel Ricciardo share the podium on Sunday.
/AFP Riding high: Lewis Hamilton throws his winner’s trophy as secondplac­ed Max Verstappen, left, and third-place Daniel Ricciardo share the podium on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa