San Francisco Chronicle

Verstappen wins Formula One title on last lap

- By Jenna Fryer Jenna Fryer is an Associated Press writer.

ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates — The most dramatic Formula One season in years should have ended with Max Verstappen’s championsh­ipdeciding pass of Lewis Hamilton on the final lap of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

The conclusion instead came nearly five hours after Verstappen became the first Dutch champion in F1 history, when the FIA denied two protests lodged by Mercedes over the dramatic finish of Sunday’s race.

The messy affair still isn’t over: Mercedes filed for reconsider­ation to the Internatio­nal Court of Appeal, turning in the paperwork as Hamilton left Yas Marina Circuit without commenting.

“Not much really to say about that. I think it also sums up a little bit the season,” Verstappen said hours earlier as the FIA heard Mercedes’ two protests.

Hamilton had a record eighth championsh­ip ripped away with five laps remaining when a crash by Nicholas Latifi triggered the safety car and gave race director Michael Masi a decision. The season-ending race and championsh­ip could be decided under yellow, or, the track could be cleaned for one final lap of racing.

Hamilton had been on cruise control and dominated Sunday after surging past Verstappen, the pole-sitter, at the start. He led 51 of the 58 laps and was minutes away from breaking a tie with Michael Schumacher for an eighth title.

The decision by Masi to go green with a lap to go allowed Verstappen to pass Hamilton in turn five — Hamilton got a good look at the lead in turn nine but couldn’t complete the move — in a stunning conclusion to a title fight that will go down as one of the best ever.

Verstappen and Hamilton arrived in Abu Dhabi tied in the standings after 21 races across four continents, the first time since 1974 the contenders were level ahead of the finale. The rivals went wheel-to-wheel all season, crashing three times, with Verstappen sent to the hospital after a collision at Silverston­e.

It made for a bitter feud between Mercedes and Red Bull that intensifie­d this high-stakes and sometimes chaotic title fight. It was compelling action every week, on-and-off track drama likened to the epic championsh­ip duels of James Hunt and Niki Lauda in 1976, Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost in 1990.

Hamilton, winner of three straight races coming into the finale to even the fight, had this one in hand and knew it until the Latifi crash.

Masi settled to resume racing with one final lap — the only chance for Red Bull, which lobbied to go back to green. Verstappen chased Hamilton through the first four turns, made his pass in five and achieved his childhood dream.

Verstappen and Red Bull celebrated in a Champagne soak, he received hugs from his fellow competitor­s — including Hamilton and Hamilton’s father — and made his way to the D J stand to jump to the music.

“My goal when I was little was to become a Formula One driver and to go for wins, to be on the podium,” Verstappen said. “When they play the national anthem, you want it to be yours, and when you stand here and they tell you that you are the world champion, it’s something incredible and special.”

And that was how this gripping season ended, with the more dominant team atop the final podium.

Verstappen’s 10 victories this year equaled his wins over his first six seasons in F1, and he led an F1-high 652 of the 1,211 laps while scoring 18 podium finishes.

 ?? Bryn Lennon / Getty Images ?? Formula One champ and race winner Max Verstappen gets a lift from his Red Bull Racing team.
Bryn Lennon / Getty Images Formula One champ and race winner Max Verstappen gets a lift from his Red Bull Racing team.

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