Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

‘Only human’ Hamilton glad to see back of Hockenheim

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A DE J ECT E D L e w i s Hamilton (right) said he was “only human” after crashing while leading yeste rday ’s t h r i l l i ng German Grand Prix.

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen took advantage of Hamilton’s costly slip-up to win a frenetic rain-hit race which involved four safety cars and several high-profile accidents.

One of those involved Hamilton, who had looked set to claim his eighth victory of a dominant season before he hit the wall on lap 29 of 64 enthrallin­g laps of drama at Hockenheim.

The Briton crossed the line 11th of the 13 classified runners, the first time he has completed a race and finished outside the points in more than six years.

However, late last night he was promoted to ninth – picking up two points after Alfa Romeo drivers’ Kimi Raikkonen and Antonio Giovinazzi were hit with 30-second penalties for torque irregulari­ties.

“I am only human,” said Hamilton. “It was a mistake. Mistakes happen. It has been a bad day, a bad weekend, and probably the worst day I have had for a long, long time. I am glad it’s over.”

The world champion was enjoying a 36-second lead when he was called in by Mercedes to change to slick tyres despite persistent light rain.

On his first lap out of the pits, he ran off the road at the final corner, which had just claimed its first victim, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc. Hamilton pulled in for immediate repairs but his Mercedes crew were caught offguard. What ensued was a pit stop bordering on the farcical.

Hamilton’s team, dressed in retro gear to celebrate 125 years of motorsport, ran around like headless chickens as they searched for spare parts. Hamilton was stationary for more than 50 seconds.

He emerged in fifth but then dropped way down the order, stopping a lap late after the safety car was deployed for a third time when the last bend claimed another scalp, Renault’s Nico Hulkenberg.

Hamilton asked over the radio: “How has it gone this bad?” It was to get even worse.

A second spin followed, this time at the first corner, to the deafening cheers of the German crowd. In the space of 25 incredible laps, Hamilton had fallen from first to last.

“The turning point was when we put on slicks when it was still wet,” said Hamilton, taking aim at his Mercedes team.

Despite Hamilton’s poor weekend he leaves Hockenheim with a 41-point championsh­ip lead, after team-mate Valtteri Bottas crashed out when he should have finished second.

Verstappen kept his cool to win from Sebastian Vettel, who stormed from 20th to second. Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat finished third, and later dedicated the podium position to his girlfriend Kelly Piquet, who gave birth to the couple’s first child, a daughter, on Saturday night.

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