The Monitor (Botswana)

Verstappen pulls away in F1 standings after victory at Hungarian GP

- (The Guardian)

Max Verstappen won the Hungarian Grand Prix, with an immense run from 10th on the grid. He and his Red Bull team pulled off an absolute coup at the Hungarorin­g as Ferrari were found wanting again. Lewis Hamilton and George Russell battled brilliantl­y in a resurgent, pacy Mercedes to claim second and third but the Scuderia’s strategy calls left drivers Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz flounderin­g in sixth and fourth after what had been an excellent chance to claim victory and claw back points to the Dutchman. Sergio Pérez was fifth for Red Bull.

After an afternoon that began with damage limitation the intent, Red Bull and Verstappen delivered a remarkable run, including repeated overtakes. Verstappen won despite a major spin mid-race charging to victory over a Ferrari that had been very quick here all weekend, illustrati­ng how badly wrong they had got their strategy, especially for Leclerc.

Hamilton and Russell delivered their best race of the season to take second and third for the second race in succession as Mercedes too managed them superbly in a race that was defined by the calls from the pit wall.

Verstappen’s 28th win is his first in Hungary and his eighth this season from 13 races, a formidable return with nine still to go and a body blow to the Scuderia and particular­ly Leclerc’s championsh­ip hopes.

His lead over Leclerc in the championsh­ip which was already formidable is now a chasm. He leads by 80 points, a seemingly insurmount­able advantage. Russell

on pole had to defend against a charging Sainz off the start but stoutly held his place as they exited turn one, while Hamilton made a superb start jumping from seventh to fifth. Verstappen was also already on the move, up from tenth to eighth behind the two Alpines, which he swiftly dealt with, taking sixth on lap seven. Verstappen caught Hamilton on lap 11, with the British driver being held up behind Lando Norris.

Both Hamilton and Verstappen passed Norris at turn one on lap 12.

Russell’s lead remained at two seconds with both Ferraris nose to tail behind him. Sainz closed but could not bridge the gap as Russell pitted on lap 17. Ferrari then pitted Sainz, while Leclerc and Hamilton stayed out, with Leclerc needing some quick laps to pass his teammate through the stops.

Hamilton stopped on lap 20 and Leclerc two laps later. As the pit stops worked through, Russell had held his lead and Leclerc had indeed jumped Sainz to claim second, while Verstappen had moved up to fourth with Hamilton in fifth.

So far so good for Ferrari. Russell had held Leclerc at just under two seconds back but on fresher rubber the Monegasque driver was within DRS range by lap 28. Leclerc attacked and Russell had to mount a determined defence, which he managed superbly. Russell was faultless as Leclerc climbed all over the back of the Mercedes until he made it stick, brilliantl­y late-braking on lap 31 round the outside of turn one for the lead.

Both Hamilton and Verstappen passed Norris at turn one on

lap 12.

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