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Alex Kalinauckas

F1 British GP: Sainz takes maiden win in dramatic race as title challengers struggle

Lewis Hamilton finished third, with Max Verstappen picking up damage that dropped out of the lead fight early in the restarted race, which was stopped after just a few corners due to the Turn 1 incident.

At the start of the race, Verstappen used the grip advantage of soft tyres against the mediums on pole-sitting Sainz’s Ferrari to get alongside off the line and steal ahead into Abbey to immediately wrestle the lead from second on the grid, while Hamilton rocketed past Sergio Perez and Leclerc to take third from fifth.

As Leclerc was making an attempt to get back ahead of the Mercedes through Village and the Loop a couple of corners later, the race was red flagged due to the multi-car pile-up behind the leaders at Abbey.

On the approach to the rapid right first corner, contact between Pierre Gasly and George Russell to immediate the right of Zhou Guanyu speared the Mercedes into the side of the Alfa Romeo, which flipped it over.

Zhou slid at high speed into the gravel upside down and in horrifying scenes bounced over the tyre barrier beyond, with the Chinese driver’s wrecked car coming to rest between the catch fence protecting the grandstand just behind and the back of the barrier.

It took several minutes to get Zhou out, but fortunately he was conscious and taken to the track medical centre.

Williams driver Alex Albon was also transported there as he was the first driver to be caught up in a secondary incident after Zhou and Russell were eliminated (Gasly was able to carry on relatively unscathed).

As the following Valtteri Bottas slowed, his car being showered with debris, Albon braked hard too and was rear-ended by Sebastian Vettel’s Aston Martin, which spun the Williams into the wall and he then hit the front-front of Alpine driver Esteban Ocon and then as a result of that third impact struck Yuki Tsunoda in the other AlphaTauri.

All of those drivers bar Albon was able to recover to the pits for repairs, with the race suspended for 53 minutes, during which it was confirmed that several protestors had invaded the track shortly down the Wellington straight at the same time as the original start before quickly being removed.

When it did resume, the order – other the three cars that did not take the restart – was the same as the initial grid.

The race gets under way and a huge crash unfolds involving George Russell, Mercedes W13, Zhou Guanyu, Alfa Romeo C42, Alex Albon, Williams FW44, Esteban Ocon, Alpine A522, Yuki Tsunoda, AlphaTauri AT03 (Photo by: Mark Sutton / Motorsport Images)

This was because the pack had not passed the second safety car line at the end of lengthy pit lane exit by the time the race was stopped and in such circumstances the FIA must take the order from last point it can determine the order, which is back to what it was before the lights had gone out.

This time, with Verstappen now matching the Ferrari cars on the medium tyres, the Red Bull again made a better getaway and was quickly alongside Sainz, who squeezed the Dutchman close to the pitwall.

But with Verstappen not backing down, Sainz was forced to hang on around the outside of Abbey but did so to thrillingly retain the lead, with Leclerc again making a slow getaway behind the two leaders – this time with Perez getting by off the line.

But Leclerc sent a bold move to Perez’s inside at Turn 4 – the Loop – and was able to force his way back to third, with the Monegasque driver then getting such good drive onto the Wellington straight he was able to attack Verstappen at Brooklands.

There, with Leclerc obliged by Verstappen to take the outside line, the pair clashed lightly and the Ferrari had to take to the runoff before his right-front wing endplate, which was damaged in the earlier contact with Perez, flying off on the run to Copse and hitting the second Red Bull’s front wing right-side and causing similar harm.

That would soon mean Perez had to pit for a new wing, which released the battling Hamilton and Lando Norris, while up front Sainz had established a lead over a second by the time the DRS was activated on lap five of 52.

It took Verstappen a few laps before he was able to edge his way back into the critical one-second window, after which he was able to put Sainz under considerable pressure.

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari F1-75, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB18 (Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images)

On lap 10, Sainz had to catch a massive oversteer snap through Becketts and was snapped off track briefly, which allowed Verstappen to sweep ahead down the Hangar straight.

Verstappen quickly shot to a lead above one second, but his lead only lasted two laps as he was then slow through Maggotts and Becketts with what he suspected was a puncture picked up after running over the kerbs at Copse on lap 12, but which Red Bull later explained was damage to a small winglet at the rear of his car.

Verstappen immediately pitted for another set of mediums, Sainz having already moved back to the lead and Leclerc threatening, with Hamilton not far behind after he had despatched Norris into Brooklands on the lap after Perez stopped early on.

That put Verstappen out of contention, with Sainz soon coming under pressure from Leclerc despite the second Ferrari’s damaged front wing, the gap down to 0.9s by lap 14.

Leclerc was so close Sainz decided to move down the Hangar straight, with the chasing Ferrari soon insisting he was quicker and urging Ferrari to do something about the situation.

With Ferrari opting to leave things alone, Hamilton was soon homing in on the pair and was just under four seconds behind when Sainz was called in to ease Ferrari’s quandary at the end of lap 20 to take the hards.

Leclerc therefore led for the next five laps before he pitted, having been shipping a few tenths each time to the charging Hamilton behind.

Mercedes did not immediately move to bring its remaining car in, opting to build a tyre off-set while Leclerc, having passed the difficult tyre warm-up phase on the white-walled rubber that Sainz had already got through, again closed in on his team-mate.

Ferrari gave Sainz the chance to lift his pace, but decided he could not run fast enough and so on lap 31 ordered the Spaniard to let his team-mate by.

After this, Leclerc edged clear to lead by just under a second, but was matching Hamilton’s times up front and so on lap 33 the Briton was called in to make his switch to the hards, but a getting his used left-front medium off took slightly longer than normal and so it ended up being a 4.3s stop that meant he came out behind the two red cars.

The Safety Car Charles Leclerc, Ferrari F1-75, Carlos Sainz, Ferrari F1-75 (Photo by: Zak Mauger / Motorsport Images)

Leclerc began pulling away from Sainz, who had been warned he need to save fuel, to his frustration, with the gap between the pair reaching 3.5s at the end of lap 38.

But on the next tour, Esteban Ocon – who had just overtaken Verstappen for eighth with the Red Bull having made a second stop to take hards, which he felt made his hobbled car worse – slowed down the national pits straight.

Ocon stopped before Copse and the safety car was therefore called out, with Ferrari leaving Leclerc out on his ageing hards despite appearing to have time to call him in, as it did for Sainz and Mercedes did for Hamilton.

The closed the pack up, with Perez, who had been displaying strong pace after his early first stop, therefore suddenly a factor again in fourth.

Ferrari urged Sainz, who like all the frontrunners bar Leclerc would see out the race on the softs, to drop back at the restart within the allowed 10 car lengths to give the lead “breathing space” – a call he swiftly rejected.

On the restart tour on lap 43, Leclerc lost momentum going wide out of Aintree and onto the Wellington straight, with Sainz blasting back to the lead after seeing off his team-mate’s attentions at Brooklands.

Sainz steamed clear, with Leclerc running ahead of Perez, who had dispatched the seemingly grip-less Hamilton as they ran through Aintree behind the battling Ferraris.

On lap 45, with Sainz clear ahead by 2.3s, Leclerc slid through Luffield and Perez was all over his rear – the Mexican staying close and then making a late, bold dive on the inside line at Stowe.

But Leclerc hung on and they went side-by-side through the first two parts of Club, with Perez appearing to go off track exiting the second apex and Hamilton therefore nipping ahead of both through the final part running onto the Hamilton straight opposite the pits.

Perez then forcefully re-passed the Mercedes at Village on the next lap and shot clear to chase Sainz, which ended up fruitless as the Ferrari driver held on to take his first F1 win by 3.7s.

The action was not over however, as on lap 47 Hamilton went around Leclerc’s outside all the way around Luffield to run third by the time they reached Woodcote.

But Leclerc did not give up and somehow took his much older hards to get a run on the outside of Copse, where he re-passed Hamilton in a stunning move.

Carlos Sainz, Ferrari F1-75, Charles Leclerc, Ferrari F1-75 (Photo by: Glenn Dunbar / Motorsport Images)

It was all for nothing as Hamilton blasted by with DRS on the subsequent run down the Hangar straight, with the home hero going on to finish 6.2s behind Sainz.

Leclerc was able to defy the closely-following Fernando Alonso and Norris, both of whom had stopped under the safety car as well, to the finish in fourth, fifth and six.

Verstappen came home seventh after likewise getting a safety car stop for softs and he saw off the close attentions of Mick Schumacher.

The Haas driver had a look to the inside of Stowe with a couple of laps remaining and then nearly hit Verstappen with a bold move at the first part of Club on the final tour before backing out of certain contact at the final corner just a few moments later.

That decision meant Schumacher scored his first F1 points in eighth ahead of mentor Vettel and team-mate Kevin Magnussen.

The other retirees were Gasly and Valtteri Bottas, who both stopped in the pits during the middle phase of the race, the former having early been spun around at Village when team-mate Tsunoda lost the rear of his car in a move to the inside, for which the Japanese driver was given a five-second time addition penalty.

Tsunoda finished last behind the other remaining runners Lance Stroll, Nicholas Latifi and Daniel Ricciardo.

The late passes between Perez and Leclerc and Perez and Hamilton were noted by the stewards but were deemed not worthy of investigating.

F1 British GP: Full race results

Cla Driver Laps Gap Points
1 Spain Carlos Sainz 52   25
2 Mexico Sergio Perez 52 3.779 18
3 United Kingdom Lewis Hamilton 52 6.225 16
4 Monaco Charles Leclerc 52 8.546 12
5 Spain Fernando Alonso 52 9.571 10
6 United Kingdom Lando Norris 52 11.943 8
7 Netherlands Max Verstappen 52 18.777 6
8 Germany Mick Schumacher 52 18.995 4
9 Germany Sebastian Vettel 52 22.356 2
10 Denmark Kevin Magnussen 52 24.590 1
11 Canada Lance Stroll 52 26.147  
12 Canada Nicholas Latifi 52 32.511  
13 Australia Daniel Ricciardo 52 32.817  
14 Japan Yuki Tsunoda 52 40.910  
  France Esteban Ocon 37    
  France Pierre Gasly 26    
  Finland Valtteri Bottas 20    
  United Kingdom George Russell 0    
  China Zhou Guanyu 0    
  Thailand Alex Albon 0    
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