Bottas wins in Turkey as Verstappen reclaims title lead from Hamilton

Bottas wins in Turkey as Verstappen reclaims title lead from Hamilton

Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas claimed his first chequered flag of the season to win the Turkish Grand Prix on Sunday as Max Verstappen reclaimed the lead in the title race.


ValtteriBottas_AFP
AFP

The Red Bull driver finished second to take a six-point lead in the championship ahead of Lewis Hamilton who finished fifth voicing frustration with his Mercedes' team strategy.


"From my side, probably one of the best races I've ever had," said Bottas after his 11th career win.


Sergio Perez, in the other Red Bull, took third with Ferrari's Charles Leclerc in fourth. 


"It wasn't easy today," said Verstappen.


"The track was very greasy, we had to manage the tyres the whole race so couldn't really push.


"Just seemed Valtteri had a bit more pace, could look after the tyres all race. Happy to finish second in these conditions, it's easy to get it wrong so you drop back."


Hamilton was quickest in qualifying but had to start the race in 11th because of a grid penalty incurred for changing his engine. 


The seven-time champion gained two places on the opening lap before picking his way up to fifth where he was held up by Perez, the two of them dicing at the end of lap 35 in some classic wheel-to-wheel racing.


As the other cars came in to change their tyres Hamilton stayed out, moving up to third and looking good for the podium.


Hamilton declined the initial call to come in for fresh tyres but finally acceded to the Mercedes team instructions, boxing eight laps from the end. 


It cost Hamilton two places as Perez and Leclerc flew on ahead and the Englishman did not hide his frustration over the radio. 


- 'Shouldnt have come in' -

"We shouldn't have come in. Massive graining man. I told you," an angry Hamilton said to his team as he struggled to hold off Pierre Gasly in the AlphaTauri.  


A disgruntled Hamilton later pointed out Alpine's Esteban Ocon made it round with one set of tyres, intimating that he could have stayed out. 


"When you come in with eight laps to go you don't have time to go through the graining of that medium tyre on a drying track. So I went through this sliding phase where I nearly lost almost lost more positions." 


Although the rain eased by the start of the race, the wet conditions prevailed throughout, making the tactics around tyres and the timing of pit stops all the more important. 


Bottas began from pole, avoiding a tangle between Pierre Gasly and Fernando Alonso on the opening lap, and led until pitting on the 38th lap of the 58-lap race.


That gave Leclerc the lead but as his tyres faded so did his pace and the Finn soon reclaimed the lead, going on to take his 11th Grand Prix victory and his first win since Russia over a year ago. 


"It's been a while. Feels good," said Bottas who is leaving Mercedes at the end of the season to join Alfa Romeo.


"It is not easy to choose the strategy here with these conditions and when to stop and which tyre but I'm glad everything went smooth for once for me. 


"When only one drying line, it doesn't need much to go off. I definitely needed to focus all through the race. A difficult one, but feels like a well-earned victory."


Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, who has recruited George Russell to replace Bottas next season, was thrilled with the performance of his current number two.


"Absolute dominant drive from him from the get go," he said. "He had it absolutely under control. Ten out of ten for me."


Verstappen, who began the race two points behind Hamilton in the title race, made no attempt to challenge Bottas and focussed on a damage limitation exercise, content to ease home second knowing that Hamilton was three places further back. 


There are six races left in the season with the United States Grand Prix in Texas on October 24 next on the schedule.

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