The Cairns Post

Verstappen turns on Miami heat

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WORLD champion Max Verstappen roared to an authoritat­ive victory for Red Bull on Sunday when he beat Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in sweltering conditions at a celebrity-packed inaugural Miami Grand Prix.

The 24-year-old Dutchman took the lead from the pole-sitting Monegasque driver on the opening lap and remained in control throughout a procession­al contest.

He came home 3.78 seconds ahead of Leclerc for his third grand prix win this year and the 23rd of his career.

Carlos Sainz finished third in the second Ferrari after holding off a late charge from Sergio Perez, on fresh tyres in the second Red Bull. George Russell finished fifth ahead of his Mercedes teammate seven-time champion, Lewis Hamilton.

“What a race,” said Verstappen, who had missed most of Friday’s practice sessions when he had a gearbox replaced after an early brush with the barriers.

“It was nice, but it was a tough one. The team did an outstandin­g job – a good recovery we can be proud of.”

On a hot day in southern Florida, the track temperatur­e was 48C and the air 32C as a pre-race grid dotted with celebritie­s was cleared before the lights went out.

Valtteri Bottas finished seventh for Alfa Romeo ahead of Esteban Ocon and his Alpine teammate Fernando Alonso, with Alex Albon taking 10th for Williams.

Leclerc made a good start to lead from his third pole position of the year, but behind him Sainz struggled to resist Verstappen, who forced his way past on the outside of turn one to split the Ferraris.

Hamilton locked up at turn one, dropping to eighth after a wheel-banging clash with Alonso, but regained a place when he passed the Spaniard on lap three.

It remained close and tense through the opening laps, with Hamilton passing Gasly for sixth before Verstappen passed Leclerc with ease to lead into turn one at the start of lap nine.

The Ferraris were struggling with early tyre wear and Leclerc fell 2.7 seconds adrift of the Dutchman on lap 13.

Yuki Tsunoda was the first man to pit, switching to hard tyres on lap 11, soon followed by Magnussen and Schumacher as the heat took its toll on the unforgivin­g surface.

Verstappen built his lead to more than three seconds by lap 18 with teammate Perez fourth, behind the two Ferraris, ahead of Bottas and his erstwhile Mercedes teammate Hamilton.

At the end of lap 22, Hamilton pitted for hard tyres and rejoined seventh, Russell taking sixth. Bottas, still fifth, was 20 seconds ahead.

Russell, still on his original medium tyres, remained fifth, aware that a safety car might give him a “free” pit stop.

“Why don’t we just keep going?” he asked the team as rain clouds loomed, promising rain to enliven a largely procession­al affair.

His question was answered with an explosion of drama on lap 41 when Norris collided with Gasly, his McLaren clipping the Alpha Tauri’s rear right wheel and spinning into the barriers.

Russell pitted as a virtual safety car was deployed before the actual safety car intervened.

The final 10 laps produced much welcome action with Russell passing Hamilton for fifth and Perez, pushing hard, trying to overtake Sainz.

Australian Daniel Ricciardo finished in 13th place in his McLaren.

 ?? Picture: AFP) ?? Max Verstappen drives his Red Bull car during the Miami Grand Prix at the Miami Internatio­nal Autodrome in Miami, Florida and (inset) holds aloft a Miami Dolphins helmet post-race.
Picture: AFP) Max Verstappen drives his Red Bull car during the Miami Grand Prix at the Miami Internatio­nal Autodrome in Miami, Florida and (inset) holds aloft a Miami Dolphins helmet post-race.
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