The Hamilton Spectator

Hamilton’s late charge falls short in Bahrain

- JEROME PUGMIRE

Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel held off a tremendous late charge from Mercedes rival Lewis Hamilton to win the Bahrain Grand Prix on Sunday and take the overall lead in the Formula One title race.

Hamilton was catching the German on every lap but ultimately ran out of time and finished almost seven seconds behind.

“The car was really amazing to drive,” Vettel said. “Lewis was a threat towards the end and with the traffic you never know.”

Vettel and Hamilton were level with a win each heading into this race, but Vettel’s second victory of the season and 44th of his career puts him in command.

Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas finished third after starting from pole position for the first time in his career.

It was his 11th podium. Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen was fourth.

Bottas made a clean start but Hamilton was beaten for pace by Vettel, who overtook him heading into the first corner.

Hamilton’s hopes were also hit when the British driver was given a five-second time penalty early into the race for driving too slowly in the pit lane and holding up Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo, who was fifth.

“The pit lane was really my fault so apologies to my team for losing time there,” Hamilton said. “Ferrari did a great job today.”

There is strong mutual respect between three-time F1 champion Hamilton and fourtime champion Vettel, and Hamilton gave him a warm handshake after the race.

Bottas got away cleanly but crucially Hamilton was beaten for pace by Vettel, while Max Verstappen rocketed up from sixth to fourth after passing Raikkonen and Ricciardo.

With Bottas losing power in his rear tires, Vettel sensed it was the right time to pit for new tires on lap 11.

Verstappen asked his team to match that strategy and he came in on the next lap.

But moments later, the Dutchman’s brakes failed and he drifted across the track and into the wall, his race over.

The 19-year-old Verstappen, who had driven so well from 16th place on the grid to finish third in China last weekend, climbed out and kicked the barriers in frustratio­n.

The incidents were coming fast, with 18year-old Lance Stroll from Montreal hit from the side on lap 13 by Carlos Sainz Jr. and this forced the safety car to come out.

Both Mercedes drivers used the safety car incident to pit for new tires, but Hamilton made the mistake of holding up Ricciardo.

When the race began in earnest again on lap 17, Hamilton burst straight past Ricciardo into third while Vettel brilliantl­y defended the corner twice to fend off Bottas.

By the halfway point, Vettel’s lead was six seconds over Hamilton, who had just passed Bottas, who pitted soon after.

With Hamilton gaining fast, Vettel came in for his second tire change on lap 34 and came out in fourth place behind Raikkonen.

Hamilton was the new race leader, but with more than 20 laps to go, a time penalty still to take, and with Vettel on new tires, it was a precarious lead.

Hamilton’s strategy was to make his tires last as long as possible but he came in with 15 laps left — and took his time penalty.

This put Bottas in second place, but he then backed off to let the quicker Hamilton through to chase Vettel down.

 ?? ANDREJ ISAKOVIC, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany crosses the finish line to win the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday.
ANDREJ ISAKOVIC, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel of Germany crosses the finish line to win the Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix on Sunday.

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