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Regular-article-logo Wednesday, 06 November 2024

Even puncture can’t stop Lewis Hamilton from winning the British Grand Prix

Red Bull’s Max Verstappen finishes second, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc earns himself the last place on the podium

Reuters Silverstone Published 03.08.20, 04:00 AM
Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton (left) sprays champagne with third placed Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc on Sunday

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton (left) sprays champagne with third placed Ferrari driver Charles Leclerc on Sunday AP

A lucky Lewis Hamilton limped to a record-extending seventh home British Grand Prix victory after his Mercedes suffered a dramatic last-lap puncture on Sunday.

In an astonishing end to a race he had dominated from pole position, the Briton hung on to stretch his Formula One world championship lead to 30 points despite the tyre nearly falling off the wheel rim.

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Red Bull’s Max Verstappen finished second, but would have won had he not pitted for fresh tyres in a successful late bid to score an extra point for the fastest lap, assuming victory was out of reach.

Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc was third.

Hamilton’s teammate and closest rival Valtteri Bottas failed to score after also suffering a late puncture and finishing 11th, despite a one-two finish for the pair having looked a nailed-on certainty until late in the race.

“I have definitely never experienced anything like that on the last lap,” said Hamilton after inspecting his deflated front tyre.

“Up until that last lap everything was relatively smooth sailing,” added the six-time world champion. “The tyres felt great.

”I heard that his (Bottas’s) tyre went and I was just looking at mine and everything seemed fine. The car was still turning no problem... Those last few laps I started to back off and then just down the straight it just deflated.

“That was definitely a heart in the mouth kind of feeling...I was just praying to get around and not be too slow. I nearly didn’t get around the last few corners. Thank God we did.”

The victory was the 87th of Hamilton’s F1 career -- leaving him four short of Ferrari great Michael Schumacher’s all-time record of 91 -- and probably the luckiest.

Formula One returnee Nico Hulkenberg’s British Grand Prix ended before the race had started with Racing Point unable to fire up his car in the garage.

The experienced German was standing in for Sergio Perez after the Mexican driver tested positive for Covid-19 and went into quarantine.

“Gutted. Absolutely gutted,” the team said on Twitter.

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