The Herald (South Africa)

F1 goes back to Baku, hoping for another thriller

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THE Azerbaijan Grand Prix has a lot to live up to this weekend and Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton has plenty to think about as well.

Baku dished up a crazy thriller of a race last season, with Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo winning after Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel famously succumbed to road rage and clashed with Mercedes’s Hamilton.

The Force India pair collided, Canadian Lance Stroll made it to the podium for Williams but was pipped at the line for second by Mercedes’s Valtteri Bottas, who also had a clash with Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen.

The most exciting race of last year, with the safety car driver kept busy, had been the most boring on its debut a season earlier.

Fans, Formula One’s owners, struggling Williams and the ever-smiling Ricciardo in particular will be hoping that the 2017 sort of lightning strikes twice, even if Ferrari and Mercedes would rather it did not.

Hamilton, on pole position last year when the race was held in the much hotter month of June, is still chasing his first win of a campaign that is well on the way to becoming a classic.

Nine points adrift of championsh­ip leader Vettel, he complained in China two weekends ago of being in noman’s land. The ultra-long Baku straight could favour Ferrari, with Vettel aiming to make up for the disappoint­ment of finishing eighth in Shanghai after winning the first two races in Australia and Bahrain.

Mercedes, without a win in three races for the first time since the V6 turbo hybrid era started in 2014, will need to get their tyres working properly and can take nothing for granted.

“We know that we have a massive challenge on our hands,” team boss Toto Wolff said.

“Last year, we were in a tough fight with Ferrari, however, it was nothing compared with the intensity of this year’s battle. Last year’s race threw up a podium that nobody could have predicted and, as is the way with street courses, we can once again expect the unexpected.”

Ricciardo, winner in China, is on a high and Baku rewards the brave overtaking moves he is known for.

“Baku is different to other street circuits, because there are places where you can pass. Actually, lots of places where you can pass,” he said.

Force India were heading for the podium last year when Sergio Perez and Esteban Ocon collided, and the two now have a clear understand­ing of what is expected. – Reuters

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