Huddersfield Daily Examiner

Singapore win gives Hamilton title boost

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LONGWOOD Harriers held an annual Senior Track 10K race at the Leeds Road track – and Rob Lihou proved unbeatable again.

He won last year’s event and defended it this time. His winning time was just six seconds over 37 minutes and he was well clear of second placed Robert Unwin.

Results: Rob Lihou 1st in

On the short dash to the lefthanded opening bend, Hamilton retained his lead with a peerless start.

Behind him, Vettel, who was involved in a three-way start-line collision in Singapore last season, drew alongside Verstappen, only for the Red Bull driver to hold position.

As the front-runners navigated their way through the opening corners, there was drama further down the order as Esteban Ocon crashed into the wall at the third turn after colliding with his Force India teammate Sergio Perez.

Ocon’s car was written off, and the Frenchamn appeared to point the finger at his team-mate for leaving him little room. For his part, Perez merely held the racing line, and following an investigat­ion, the stewards tellingly took no action against him.

Back at the front, and Vettel was taking his second bite at Verstappen. 37.06mins; Robert Unwin 2nd in 40.21; Helen Roby 3rd in 41.03 (1st Women); Donald Kennedy 4th in 42.55; Ryan Thompson 5th in 43.01; Mathew Ellis (Guest) 6th in 44.09; Craig Mitchell 7th in 44.47; Ian Mitchell 8th in 47.02; Lindsay Roberts 9th in 47.30; Heather Mitchell 10th in 49.39; Karen Mitchell 11th in 52.51. This time he expertly made the move stick. In a flurry of sparks, the German drew alongside the Red Bull through turn six before taking the position at the ensuing corner.

He did so in the nick of time, with the safety car deployed to deal with Ocon’s stricken Force India.

They were back racing again on lap five with Hamilton holding off Vettel and Verstappen.

Vettel was then the first of the leaders to pit as he stopped for fresh tyres on lap 14. He emerged, however, behind the Force India of Perez, and was losing crucial time.

Hamilton made his one and only stop on the next lap, and rejoined the track comfortabl­y ahead of his Ferrari rival.

Vettel finally passed Perez on lap 17, but had fallen further behind Hamilton and Verstappen, too, who had yet to stop. When the Dutchman did come in on lap 18, he had pulled out enough of a gap to leap-frog Vettel for second. It was a costly error from Vettel’s Ferrari team.

Hamilton led comfortabl­y at the front with his only drama on lap 34 as he was held up by backmarker­s. Verstappen closed in on the back of Hamilton’s Mercedes, but the Brit did not panic and made his way past Sergey Sirotkin and Romain Grosjean before holding off Verstappen.

“These guys are crazy,” Hamilton said. Grosjean was later handed a five-second timed penalty for ignoring blue flags.

In a race of little drama, Perez was given a drive-through penalty after he needlessly banged wheels with Sirotkin’s Williams as they squabbled for the minor places.

Valtteri Bottas finished fourth for Mercedes ahead of Kimi Raikkonen in the Ferrari. Daniel Ricciardo was sixth for Red Bull with Fernando Alonso seventh.

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