Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Hamilton gains overall F1 lead by 6

- By Pablo Gorondi

BUDAPEST, Hungary — Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton won the Hungarian Grand Prix for a record fifth time Sunday to take the Formula One championsh­ip lead from teammate Nico Rosberg, who finished second.

Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo was third, followed by Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel and Max Verstappen of Red Bull.

Hamilton has five F1 victories this season for 192 points, with Rosberg at 186 and Ricciardo third with 115, one point clear of Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen.

Hamilton completed the 70 laps of the Hungarian circuit in 1 hour, 40 minutes and 30.115 seconds, at an average speed of 113.7 mph. He beat Rosberg by 1.977 seconds.

Ricciardo was a further 27 seconds behind, less than a second ahead of Vettel.

Rosberg won the first four races this year, while Hamilton has won five of the past six. Verstappen is the only non-Mercedes driver to win a race in 2016.

Hamilton started second on the grid, with Rosberg in pole position, but was able to pass the German on the first turn.

“The start was everything,” said Hamilton, who before this victory was tied with Michael Schumacher for most wins at the Hungarorin­g, with four. “I got a good start. I had one of the Red Bulls on the inside so I was pressured quite a lot into turn one. What a day!”

“Once I’ve gone into the lead, I just manage my tires, my car and manage the gap and react only when I needed to,” said Hamilton, a two-time defending champion.

Ricciardo also briefly passed Rosberg at the start but while the Mercedes driver was able to pull back ahead in that duel he was never able to pass Hamilton.

“I was happy to take Daniel in Turn 2 and from then I was trying to put all the pressure possible on Lewis,” Rosberg said. “I lost the win there.”

Despite losing the championsh­ip lead midway through the season, Rosberg, who Friday signed a contract extension with Mercedes through 2018, was confident about the remaining races.

“It’s very close. Up till now it was a good battle with Lewis. It’s still a long, long way to go,” Rosberg said. “Now I move my focus to Hockenheim because it’s my home race and I really look forward to racing there. I love the track.”

Hamilton’s lead over Rosberg was rarely more than two seconds, while Rosberg’s lead over Ricciardo grew to 8.1 seconds by the end of lap 18. The Australian, however, was able to close that gap to 2.8 seconds by lap 30.

Mercedes noticed the shrinking lead and told Hamilton to “push,” or they would have Rosberg change tires ahead of him. Hamilton answered that he was “driving as best as I can” but seemed to respond to the request and Ricciardo never really challenged again.

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