Cape Argus

I was taken out, Max fumes

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LEWIS Hamilton revived his Formula One title defence by winning the British Grand

Prix after a first lap crash that left championsh­ip leader Max Verstappen complainin­g he had been “taken out”.

Hamilton retorted after the race that he would “not be bullied”.

Roared on by a crowd of more than 140 000, Hamilton attempted to overtake championsh­ip leader Verstappen on Copse corner on the first lap.

Verstappen refused to yield. The two touched wheels and the Red Bull went careening off the track and into the barrier. Hamilton drove on with just a broken wheel rim.

“Glad I’m okay,” tweeted Verstappen from hospital. “Very disappoint­ed with being taken out like this.”

His boss Cristian Horner, the Red Bull team principal, had already laid into Hamilton.

“I hope Lewis is very happy with himself,” said Horner. “That’s a hollow victory.

“Copse is one of the fastest corners in the world. You don’t stick a wheel up the inside. That’s just dirty driving.”

Hamilton said after the race that he had felt “a lot of anger after the shunt” and blamed Verstappen.

“I don’t feel he needs to be aggressive as he is,” he said. “I would never back down from anyone. I will not be bullied into being less aggressive.

“We needed the points. He left a gap and I went for it.”

Charles Leclerc grabbed the lead before racing was suspended while crews cleared away the Red Bull and Verstappen was taken to hospital for tests.

It was “a pretty impressive impact,” said Dr Ian Roberts, Formula One’s medical rescue co-ordinator.

He said Verstappen was “a little winded to say the least” but added there were “no injuries apparent at the moment”.

Stewards imposed a 10 second penalty, the second lightest punishment available to them, on Hamilton who was still able to chase down Leclerc.

“The penalty given does not help us and doesn’t do justice to the dangerous move Lewis made on track,” said Verstappen’s tweet. “Watching the celebratio­ns while still in hospital is disrespect­ful and unsportsma­nlike behaviour, but we move on.”

Hamilton’s win ended Red Bull’s streak of five straight victories to cut Verstappen’s lead in the championsh­ip to eight points.

Monegasque Leclerc was second, 3.81 seconds back to revive Ferrari’s season.

The second Mercedes, driven by Finn Valtteri Bottas, who had allowed Hamilton to pass after the penalty, was third, ahead of the McLarens of Briton Lando Norris and Australian Daniel Ricciardo.

It was a bad afternoon for Red Bull with Sergio Perez finishing 16th and outside the points to drop from third to fifth in the standings.

Horner focused his frustratio­n on Hamilton.

“I don’t care what Lewis said. That’s a hollow victory,” Horner said.

“It shouldn’t be like that. Max has incurred a 51g accident. Lewis is a seven-time world champion. He shouldn’t be making manoeuvres like that, It’s unacceptab­le.

“It was dangerous, it looked desperate, he’s put a competitor in hospital. The biggest result for us was that he wasn’t injured. I hope Lewis is very happy with himself.”

Horner was also dissatisfi­ed with the punishment.

 ?? | AFP ?? LEWIS Hamilton celebrates after winning the British Grand Prix yesterday.
| AFP LEWIS Hamilton celebrates after winning the British Grand Prix yesterday.

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