Hamilton wins borefest Hungary GP

It was an easy win for Hamilton in the superior Aldo Costa chassis
It was an easy win for Hamilton in the superior Aldo Costa chassis

When Mercedes locked out the front row at the Hungaroring on Saturday in the rain, the race was over.

The Aldo Costa Mercedes chassis is superior in the corners and there was no way Ferrari was going to get past even with DRS.

Lewis Hamilton took the lead from pole and led all the way except for his one pitstop to win the Hungary GP for the 6th time and increase his point lead over Vettel to 24. It was Hamilton's 67th F1 win.

Valtteri Bottas disturbed Sebastian Vettel's air all race while Hamilton drove off to an insurmountable lead. Vettel had to take a risky move to get past Bottas to get 2nd.

It had looked set to be a Mercedes one-two with six laps left to go. But Vettel used DRS to sweep past Valtteri Bottas, into Turn 1. When the Finn tried to fight back into Turn 2, he locked up and clipped Vettel. The German continued, pulling teammate Kimi Raikkonen through with him, as Bottas dropped to fourth with a damaged front wing.

Three laps later, Bottas hit Daniel Ricciardo’s Red Bull as the Australian tried to make a move into Turn 1 to mark a messy end of the race for the Finn, who provisionally ended up in fifth – albeit with the stewards set to examine the Ricciardo incident after the race. Ricciardo, on the other hand, will have been delighted to finish fourth, having started the race down in P12.

Pierre Gasly drove a great race to finish in sixth for Toro Rosso, comfortably leading home Kevin Magnussen in the Haas, while Fernando Alonso gave McLaren something to smile about, coming home P8. The Renault of Carlos Sainz and the Haas of Romain Grosjean rounded out the top 10.

How the race unfolded

[adinserter name="GOOGLE AD"]Having finished qualifying in the pouring rain, polesitter Hamilton found himself on the grid on Sunday under a blazing sky. The Mercedes had looked to not enjoy the hot track temperatures in Hungary during practice, and many were predicting that if the two Ferraris starting in P3 and P4 could just get ahead of the silver cars off the line, it would be job done.

The opportunity never presented itself, however, with all four drivers making almost identical getaways to initially maintain position. Sainz in the Renault had a lightning start from fifth on the grid and tried to challenge Raikkonen – who saw Vettel sweep around the outside of him at Turn 2 – for P4. But as Max Verstappen lunged down the inside of Sainz at Turn 1, the Dutchman snatched P5 away, while the Spaniard’s loss of momentum from the move saw him drop behind the Red Bull and then down to P8.

Behind, Magnussen jumped up from ninth to seventh, while Ricciardo, caught at the back of the midfield, was rudely bumped by the locked-up Sauber of Marcus Ericsson. The impact seemed to be largely superficial, with Ricciardo dropping to P16 but surviving to begin what would be an exciting afternoon for the Australian.

The race was over before Turn 1
The race was decided before Turn 1

As Ricciardo set about picking through the field, making his way up to fifth by lap 27, Hamilton led from Bottas and Vettel. On lap six, Verstappen pulled the sister Red Bull off to the side of the track, his power unit having appeared to fail. Bottas was the first Mercedes to pit on lap 16, releasing Vettel, who had started on the soft tires, while both Mercedes had opted to start on ultrasofts before switching to softs.

Hamilton pitted 10 laps after his team mate, and with Vettel leading the race and almost exactly a pit stop ahead of Bottas on track, it looked as if Ferrari was working the overcut perfectly on Mercedes. The idea was to pit Vettel after a long stint on the softs, bring him out in P2 on a fresh set of ultrasofts and let him get after Hamilton on his newer, faster rubber. That was the theory, anyway.

However, between lap 36 and lap 39, it all went wrong for Vettel. The German found himself snarled up in traffic, especially hurt by the Renault of Sainz. As Bottas pumped in quick laps behind, Vettel finally pitted on lap 39, but a slow change on the front-left kept him stationary for 4.2 seconds. As he exited the pits, Bottas was just ahead and now able to act as rear-gunner for leader Hamilton eight seconds up the road. Advantage Mercedes.

Even with Vettel’s fresher rubber, he wasn’t able to find a way past Bottas, and appeared to be struggling with overheating as he consistently ran out of the Mercedes’ slipstream down the main straight. Bottas’ pace allowed Raikkonen to close up to his team mate as well, and it briefly looked as though Ferrari might emulate Mercedes’ driver inversion at Hungary 12 months ago to see if Raikkonen could get after his fellow Finn.

However, having upped his pace, Vettel finally made it past Bottas at Turn 1 on lap 65 of 70. Bottas switched to the inside for Turn 2 but locked up, clumsily clipping the side of Vettel’s Ferrari. They build them strong in Maranello, though, and Vettel and Raikkonen pulled away from Bottas, whose failed move had dropped him into the clutches of fourth-placed Ricciardo.

As the old Formula Renault adversaries darted around one another down the main straight with two laps to go, Ricciardo attempted a move around the outside, with Bottas – lacking downforce with his injured front wing – again locking up and sending the Red Bull darting onto the run-off, with damage to its right flank.

Ricciardo once again survived, however, crossing the line in fourth, while Bottas ended up fifth after following Mercedes' instruction to let the Red Bull back past. Vettel had to be content to follow title rival Hamilton home in second, left to consider how different it might have been if he’d pitted three laps earlier – or had his stop not been so slow.

Vettel and Bottas touch
Vettel and Bottas touch

While Ricciardo earned Driver of the Day, another man who could have laid claim to that accolade was Pierre Gasly. Having started P6 in the Toro Rosso with faster drivers behind him, many would have forgiven the Frenchman if he’d dropped away in the race. But he managed his first stint brilliantly on the ultrasofts, making them last until lap 33, and his second sixth place of the season was his well-deserved reward.

McLaren also merited praise. Both Fernando Alonso and Stoffel Vandoorne long-stinted their soft tires before switching onto mediums. Given the importance of track position in Hungary, that saw them in P8 and P9 once the pit stops were all accounted for. Had Vandoorne not had to retire from that ninth place after a gearbox failure, it would have been a well-earned double-points finish, as the team appeared to find the form that they’d enjoyed earlier in the season.

Vandoorne and Verstappen aside, the only other DNF was Charles Leclerc, whose Sauber sustained damage after contact at the start when he found himself the filling in a Force India sandwich.

Up at the front though, it was Hamilton who claimed his sixth Hungarian Grand Prix victory, which puts the Hungaroring joint with Montreal’s Circuit Gilles-Villeneuve as the British driver’s top hunting ground on the F1 calendar. However, Ferrari will have been relieved to stem the damage to Mercedes, on a day when the Silver Arrows looked like they could well have had their second one-two in as many races.

Quotes

Mercedes

Hamilton led from the start and controlled the race from the front, managing his tires perfectly to win for the fifth time this year and extend his lead in the Drivers' Championship. But behind it was all drama – Bottas on much older tires was desperately trying to keep a fresher shod Ferrari duo at bay. Vettel passed the obdurate Finn, before cutting back in a racing incident which removed much of Bottas's front wing. Lacking downforce, he lost a position to Raikkonen and then steered into Ricciardo as the Australian tried to pass a couple of laps later. He came home a damaged but dogged fifth with a time penalty for his collision with the Red Bull.

Lewis Hamilton, 1st

"We've definitely had ups and downs in this Championship, it's such a rollercoaster ride – but the team has just remained strong. We're in a great position right now, but what's important is that we don't drop the ball. The last two weekends have been such a blessing with the rain, I'm so grateful. The guys have worked so hard this year, they really deserve a good result. There's still a lot of work to do because Ferrari are still slightly ahead of us, they had the pace this weekend, especially on this circuit. Today I had them covered, but had they been on pole, we would have struggled. So we've got some improvements to make in our overall package to try and close the gap to them, but I'm really happy with the job everyone's done so far, we just have to keep going. The goal is now to really pull together and become even stronger for the second half. That will be key to add to what we've built in this first half of the season. I'm excited about the summer break; I will do different stuff over these two weeks, but I will be training through the whole period of time, trying to improve my physique. Physicality-wise, I'm not struggling out there at all, but there are always areas where you can be better, and I want to make sure I come back with more energy so we can turn up the heat in the second half of the season."

Valtteri Bottas, 5th

"It's a shame that I ended up in P5; we wanted more today and it would have been great to go into the summer break with a 1-2 finish. I was trying everything I could but the stint on the Soft tires was just too long. In theory, a one-stop strategy should have worked but we had to stop earlier than we had planned to cover Kimi who pitted in the lap before me. Until about 15 or 20 laps before the end our plan worked out well, we controlled the pace and there was no threat to my position. But then the rear tires started to die. Towards the end of the race, I had an incident with Sebastian going into Turn 2 – he was on the outside, I still had my nose inside. He turned in early, there was nowhere to go for me, so we touched and I had damage to my front wing. For me it was a racing incident – and so was the incident with Daniel. Again, I was on the inside, he was on the outside. Half of my front wing was missing at that time, I was locking up, and we touched. Now I'm looking forward to the next weeks, a bit of a break will be good, and then I want to come back stronger."

Toto Wolff, Head of Mercedes-Benz Motorsport

"We came to Hungary with damage limitation as our motto, so it's pretty good to be leaving after out-scoring our rivals, even if by just a few small points. Lewis drove a faultless race: he made a perfect start, then started building the gap on the UltraSoft tire. He took that first set longer than we had planned before pitting, then managed the Soft extremely well to the finish. It's a simple race to summarize but that doesn't take anything away from the skill it took to deliver such a polished performance. In the other car, Valtteri drove what I think was his best race in his time so far at Mercedes. He held position at the start and then did a perfect job after pitting early until he started to run out of tires in the final laps. I saw the contacts with Sebastian and Daniel as racing incidents: he was on the dirty inside line in each case and was defending with everything he had left; the trouble was that he didn't have a lot left at that stage. He raced hard and fifth place is not much of a reward after that drive. Lewis' win is the perfect way to finish the first part of the season but we know that this one is going down to the wire. The momentum swings one way then the next from weekend to weekend. We need to keep on taking it one race at a time if we want to come out on top."

James Allison, Technical Director

"It is tempting to reach for the clichés about a bittersweet afternoon but actually this just feels sweet. After a tough Friday at a track where we have not always prospered in recent years, today's result is the cherry on yesterday's cake. We made brilliant starts thanks to great work by the team and both drivers, held position and then began running our race exactly to plan. Both cars performed strongly just when they needed to: Lewis was in control throughout, managing his pace and tire temperatures with consummate skill; Valtteri did an exceptional job, stopping very early to cover Kimi, and it was hugely disappointing for him that he was not able to bring home the P2 finish that his performance so richly deserved. Notwithstanding that, it was a fantastic win for Lewis and the team, which sends us into the summer break with a lovely feel-good factor."

Ferrari

Vettel overtook Raikkonen on the opening lap, and nearly jumped Bottas in the pits before a slow stop cost him the place. On fresher tires he pressurized the Finn for the latter stages before finally making it past – although the two did make contact. Raikkonen, on a two-stop strategy, had closed in on that battle and capitalized as Bottas ran wide with a damaged front wing to ensure a double podium for the Scuderia.

Sebastian Vettel, 2nd

"Today we were fast in the first stint, but at the end I was a little bit disappointed because I had lost 3 or 4 seconds in the traffic. The pit stop we did was not ideal either, as we lost some time there. Then it was very hard, when I was running close to Valtteri and trying to overtake him. However, at the end I knew I could be faster than him thanks to my tires, which were fresher. However, we tried everything we could and I think second position is the best result we could get today. I think there’s a lot of things we did well and some others not that much, but that’s part of the game. It has been a very hard week for all of us, so I think that having both cars on the podium is a very good result. I am happy to see that the car is fast, it has worked well on every track so far, so I think this is the most important thing. Our car has a big potential, so I feel relaxed, going on holiday, for the races to come."

Kimi Raikkonen, 3rd

"The start was ok, I got a tow and I was deciding which side I should go; but then Bottas moved the same side, trying to block me, so I braked earlier and lost the position to Sebastian. After that it was all about trying to get some free air and use the speed I had, giving myself a hard time in trying to put pressure on the others and not being able to save the tires. The race went by pretty quick, we were pushing through the whole race with decent tires all the time because of the two-strategy stops we had. The fact of not having my drink bottle available was obviously not ideal, but not so much of an issue either. Today we had the speed, but we know that this is a tricky circuit for overtaking. The race was decided yesterday in qualifying, but in the end we managed to get back one place each. Second and third is the maximum we could hope for today; it’s quite an ok result, but it’s not what we want. On the second half of the season we’ll try to turn it around and do a bit better. I know it’s still a long way to go, anything can happen and things can change quickly. We keep pushing, trying to improve on the small details and be consistent, and I’m sure we can get higher podium positions."

Maurizio Arrivabene, Team Principal

"At a track where overtaking in the race is always difficult, we managed to finish higher up the order than we started, thanks to the efforts of the entire team and a great performance from both drivers. Now we still have one week at work before the summer break, which will allow us to reflect calmly on the races yet to come. There is still a long way to go this season and the important thing is for the team to work in a calm and determined fashion, giving its all during the second half of the season."

Red Bull

Verstappen made up places from the start and looked to be running well before retiring early on with an apparent PU issue. It was left to Ricciardo to provide the fireworks which he duly did – after dropping to P16 on the opening lap due to a start collision with Ericsson, he pulled off a series of late-braking overtakes. The Australian worked his way up to P5 and there he looked set to stay before sighting a wounded Bottas ahead and making a move. The two collided, with Bottas deemed at fault and moving over to cede the place to the Red Bull man.

Daniel Ricciardo, 4th

“We had a pretty good car and I was able to make it to fourth having been at P16 at one point on the first lap, so in the end it was a good result for us. The start was pretty chaotic and I took a hit on my front left tire which caused some vibrations and we lost a few positions there. Ocon then went really deep in Turn 6, cut the chicane and stayed in front of me for two laps. That was frustrating, especially at the beginning when everyone is so close, you lose a lot of ground. After this with the pace advantage we had we were able to get on and do some overtakes, and I had some fun with that and could get up the field. Before the incident at the end with Valtteri in Turn 1, I knew he had some damage, so I knew it should be relatively easy to pass him, but he obviously just went too deep into that turn. I couldn’t see his car in my blind spot so I left room, and then I got the hit but fortunately I didn’t spin. I thought it was likely he would get a penalty but I really wanted to pass him on track, which fortunately I could do on the last lap. I was happy today, happy to finish and get some points and have a race I feel I maximized."

Max Verstappen, DNF

“Today didn’t go the way we planned. I felt good with the car and had a strong start but the race was then over within six laps. It is really frustrating after putting all the effort in and being in a promising position, but then having to stop due to reliability. As I was happy with the car I think we could have had a good battle with the front group, it’s a shame to have missed out on that and some valuable points. It’s such a shame for not just myself and the team but also the fans that travel all the way here supporting me. It’s not fun to watch me complete a few laps and then retire. I’m not sure if this will mean engine penalties for Spa, we will look into it as a team and discuss the best way to come back strong after the summer break. I don’t really feel like going away on holiday now as this isn’t the way I wanted to finish the first part of the season. I would like to get back in the car to race again and finish on a strong result, unfortunately I can’t."

Christian Horner, Team Principal

“A fantastic recovery by Daniel who actually completed the first lap down in P16. He made his way through the field with some decisive overtaking and had rapidly moved up to P5 by the halfway stage of the race. We then changed on to the Ultrasoft tire for the final 26 laps and he started to catch the group consisting of Bottas and the two Ferraris ahead of him. After Valtteri and Sebastian had had contact ahead, the wounded Mercedes then hit Daniel when he was attempting to pass him at Turn 1 causing significant damage. However Daniel was able to keep going and then pass him for good on the last lap taking P4 at the flag. Max had a hugely frustrating day with an engine failure with only five laps gone. He had made a great start and we knew we had a competitive race car here and would have been in a fight for a podium having seen the pace that Daniel had today. It’s enormously frustrating and we just hope not to incur penalties at his home Grand Prix in Spa in a few weeks’ time."

Haas

Grosjean lost positions at the start and was always going to struggle to get back in the reckoning. Fortunately, running a longer opening stint with regards his rivals made all the difference and returned him to the points in P10. Magnussen, by contrast, made up two positions at the start and thus was better placed to capitalize and come home seventh in another solid display.

Romain Grosjean, 10th

“Both of us in the top 10 is really good. The race was frustrating. We need to understand how to get the tires better in these circumstances. I spent 50 laps behind (Carlos) Sainz, being half-a-second to one second faster. As soon as you get close to the car in front of you, it just goes and there’s nothing you can do. That was a bit of a shame but, overall, I think we really did a great job. We jumped (Nico) Hulkenberg and (Brendon) Hartley, showing that we had an amazing pace. Generally, I think we had a great pace, so it’s good to have two cars in the top 10. We’ve had a really good weekend. The race pace was so much better than P10."

Kevin Magnussen, 7th

“I was quite happy today. Had a good first lap, gained some positions, and took it home from there. Not a very eventful race, except for the first lap, but that’s fine for us. We scored a double-points finish for the team and that’s a good way to go on holiday."

Guenther Steiner, Team Principal

“Two cars in the points – good end to the first half of the season and for everyone to go into the summer break. Closing in on our opponents and moving away from the others is fantastic. Everyone can relax a little bit, come back stronger and try to get more points after the summer break."

McLaren

Both McLarens started on the soft tires, ran long opening stints and in the fresher air were able to build a gap to leapfrog those behind. It was a strategy masterclass and looked like the team were heading for their first double points haul since Baku but for a late gearbox issue forcing Vandoorne to retire. Alonso did at least see the checkered flag on his birthday, keeping alive his record of scoring points in every race he has finished this season.

Fernando Alonso, 8th

“It was definitely a good Sunday for us and it was down to the pit-wall, as they executed the perfect strategy. They decided to extend the first stint as much as we could, doing something around 15 laps more than the others, and that meant Stoffel and myself recovered three or four positions.

“We really deserved eighth and ninth places today, but unfortunately the gearbox problem prevented Stoffel from taking any points, otherwise it would’ve been a perfect Sunday for us.

“I’m happy we’ve delivered the result and have scored another four points for the team. Sunday is where it finally counts!

“Now it’s time to relax, before jumping in a car again mid-August."

Stoffel Vandoorne, DNF

“A really disappointing race for me. We had a superb start, after we started a bit further down the grid than we wanted after yesterday, and gained a few places on the opening lap. We had really good tire management in the opening stint and strong pace when it counted, a good pit-stop and we managed to jump a lot of cars during the pit window. It was a great strategy from the team to come out in the points with both cars and we were feeling comfortable, so it was just about bringing the car home.

“Unfortunately, we had a technical problem and I had to stop the car. It shows it’s a mechanical sport. It’s disappointing to finish like that but I think as a team we did everything right today. We got ourselves as high as we could and it’s a shame not to finish the first part of the season with a few more points.

“On a personal note, I felt good this weekend. I think we’ve shown today that the pace was back to where it had been before, with a more ‘normal’ feeling, and I can be happy with my performance. I’m looking forward to the summer break, to relax a bit, clear my head and turn up in Spa for my home race."

Gil de Ferran, Sporting Director

“Today was a very positive day for us. We had good pace on both cars and came very close to a double-points finish.

“Obviously we’re very disappointed for Stoffel, who was driving very well and had to retire due to a gearbox failure.

“Fernando had his typical perfect drive, with the right blend of aggression and pace and tire management. Although we’re supposed to give him a present on his birthday, he gave us yet another one in the form of points!

“I want to congratulate our strategy team and pit-crew for executing the race to perfection, and thank everyone for the extremely hard work they’ve put in over this long and busy stretch of races.

“I wish everyone a nice break and I can’t wait for the season to restart when we can hopefully keep stepping forward."

Force India

Starting so far back, it was always going to prove to be a tough race for the team in pink, and so it proved. They tried alternate strategies, Perez starting on ultrasofts and Ocon the softs, but to no avail with both coming home well outside the points after battling each other for much of the race. Still, they kept those battles clean which was something of a bonus all things considered.

Sergio Perez, 14th

“It hasn’t been an ideal day for us, but we knew it was going to be a tough Sunday all along. We started from the back and chose to go with an aggressive strategy, but in the end we just didn’t have the pace to make it work. I had a good start but lost some places after touching with Leclerc and after that it was always going to be difficult to recover on a circuit where overtaking is very difficult. I am glad we have the summer break now. The last few months have been tough mentally but I’m still here and I’m in the top ten of the drivers’ championship. We will come back stronger after the holidays – all the off-track issues will have been settled down and we can come to Spa with the right approach and a stable environment around us."

Esteban Ocon, 13th

“A difficult race for us and we knew it was going to be a big challenge to score points today. The start of the race was strong and we made up a few positions, but we didn’t have enough pace to recover from the back of the grid and fight for points. I enjoyed some good battles with the Renaults, but the problems in qualifying yesterday really determined our result today. We have a few weeks off now and there is still a long way to go in the second half of the season. Everybody deserves a rest so that we can come back stronger in Spa."

Otmar Szafnauer, Chief Operating Officer

“Today’s result was largely compromised by the issues we encountered in qualifying yesterday. Starting from the back, both drivers had eventful races, with battles keeping them busy from start to finish. We tried two different strategies, with Esteban starting on soft tires and Sergio on ultrasofts, but in the end this made little difference and they finished within ten seconds of each other. The summer break gives us a chance to regroup, deal with the issues that are taking place away from the track and come back for the second part of the season in a much stronger position. We are confident in the work we are doing back at the factory and we are still in the thick of the action when it comes to the midfield battle, so we can look forward to recharging the batteries once this week’s test is over."

Renault

Renault opted to put both drivers on medium tires at the pit stops, which worked for Sainz who managed to finish inside the points. Hulkenberg was struggling for pace and made a late gamble to switch to a two-stop strategy and fit a set of ultrasoft tires, but he was too far back to make inroads in the leader board.

Nico Hulkenberg, 12th

“We didn’t have the pace in the car today, and the balance felt poor. Ultimately, we weren’t fast enough. We had a good one last weekend and it wasn’t so good this weekend, but that’s racing. When you don’t have the pace, everything gets difficult and I was in traffic most of the time, which makes things hard. We thought this track layout would suit us, so we need to understand what’s gone on this weekend and why the car was difficult to drive. We look forward, though, testing this week before a bit of time off. The team, the engineers and the mechanics deserve the break."

Carlos Sainz, 9th

“It was a frustrating race. It was a tough first lap with the Soft, but I got off the line well until I was pushed out at turn one and lost some positions. As the race settled, I started to pick up the pace and put in some fast laps when we boxed. Traffic then didn’t help and it cost us time against both McLarens, who came out in front after their first stop. We need to see what happened there but for sure we could have done things better today."

Cyril Abiteboul, Team Principal

“It was a frustrating day for us and we know we are capable of better. We had a good start from both cars, but then Carlos lost positions on the first lap and neither driver was able to make any headway thereafter. We were too conservative in terms of start tires, strategy and the balance of the car was not good. We have two days of testing ahead of us here at the Hungaroring to work on these specific areas in addition to completing a busy program for development items for the second half of the season and directions for next year.

“Aside from today’s race, we can reflect on the first half of the season as being in line with our target, but we cannot satisfy ourselves just with our championship position. We need to accelerate in every area of the team so that we not only reach our goal this year but to make sure we carry on our progression towards our long-term plan to be competing at a higher level in subsequent years."

Williams

Stroll gambled by starting on the medium compound, since he was starting from the pit lane he had little to lose. Lacking pace, he dropped down the field when others running fresher rubber came through and he limped home last. Sirotkin started on the softs, but he too struggled to get involved, spending much of the race making way as a lapped driver. Hopefully better things are to come for Williams in the second half of the season.

Sergey Sirotkin, 16th

"I think we can say we have finished the first half of the year on a high. Obviously, it’s not that visible in the results but, being realistic from where we started, the strategy we had and dealing with blue flags we can be happy with how we performed. There’s still some room for improvement, which we will analyze and correct throughout the summer break, but we can take quite a lot of positives from this race and all of us can take a deserved rest."

Lance Stroll, 17th

"Yesterday it was nice to get into Q2, but obviously Q2 didn't go the way we wanted it to and today, we had to start from the pitlane. We put the old front wing on, which we haven't had for a couple of races now. I definitely felt the loss in performance, and the car felt like it wasn't cooperating as well as it has been since we got the new front wing. We went on a different strategy to Sergey and tried to pick up the pace at the end of the race with the qualifying tires, but there just weren't enough laps left. It was one of those races."

Paddy Lowe, Chief Technical Officer

"It was a very long, hot afternoon in Budapest with all our attention unfortunately on the blunt end of the race, rather than the sharp end. We ran a split strategy across the two cars with Sergey starting on the option and Lance on the prime, hoping to take advantage of incidents as they may arise with two one-stop strategies. Unfortunately, Lance had to start from the pitlane because we had no spares of the front wing specification he’d been using in qualifying. Sergey gained some positions at the start on the two Saubers, although one of them Leclerc retired very early. The rest of our afternoon was a fight between our two drivers and the other Sauber of Ericsson, who took an early pitstop at the first VSC, which gave him an extremely long stint. We hoped it wouldn’t work for Ericsson but unfortunately it did, so that meant we finished the race in 16th and 17th. Ultimately our pace was only good enough to compete with each other today, but the team did a good job, executed good pitstops and it was a well-controlled race, so we know our pace is where we need to focus. We’re ready for a rest after this first half of the season and next week’s test, so we’ll come back refreshed and ready for the next push in Belgium."

Sauber

A poor race from the team that seemed to be on the up. Ericsson collided with Ricciardo's Red Bull at the start, and although he was able to continue that compromised his race. Leclerc fared worse – caught in a Force India sandwich with nowhere to go, he sustained enough damage to be forced to immediately retire the car at the end of the first lap.

Marcus Ericsson, 15th

“It was a difficult race. I lost positions after the collision on the first lap and fell to the back of the grid. From there on, it was a difficult race. I tried to overtake the cars ahead, but it is quite tricky on a track like this. When the safety car came out early on during the race, we decided to box and change to medium tires. It was a good move, and we managed to gain a few positions back. Unfortunately, not much more was possible. Overall, it was not a great race for us, but we will analyze it and come back stronger. I have a day of testing ahead this week and will head into the summer break after that. I look forward to having some time to review the season so far, and to come back even stronger."

Charles Leclerc, DNF

“It is a bit unfortunate to finish the last race before the summer break like this. Shortly after the start, I got stuck between two other cars which caused damage to my car. I had to retire from the race as a consequence. On the other hand, the season has been positive so far. We have made more progress than expected, and I have learned a lot and have scored some points. I look forward to my summer break now, and will use the time to relax and train for the second half of the season."

Frederic Vasseur, Team Principal

“It was not a good day for us. Both of our drivers were involved in incidents in the opening lap which defined the outcome of their races. Charles was involved in a collision during the start and damaged the car. We had to instruct him to stop and retire from the race. Marcus was also involved in an incident on the first lap of the race, and lost all positions as a result. It was a tough job to fight his way back after that, and he finished the race in P15. All in all, the season has been positive so far. Both Marcus and Charles have brought points home, and we have made progress race after race as a team. We are confident that we will continue doing so after the summer break, and I look forward to the second half of the season."

Toro Rosso

A mixed bag at Toro Rosso. With both drivers running solidly in the points, the team opted to pit Hartley early to cover off Renault, but it proved the wrong call and dropped the Kiwi down the field from where he couldn't recover. Gasly by contrast ran a longer opening stint and found himself with the luxury of free air with a gap to the front runners and the midfield battle behind. He came home sixth for his best result since Bahrain.

Pierre Gasly, 6th

“It was an amazing day for us to finish sixth! Yesterday was already fantastic for the team, but this is even better! The car was mega, the strategy was fantastic, I just had to give everything I could which wasn’t easy in these conditions, in the end we managed to do it. After the past few races, which were quite difficult for us, it’s a great result for the team. When you’re fighting in the midfield you know there will be races where opportunities present themselves, and you just need to make sure you take them when they come. We did it in Bahrain, Monaco and again this weekend, so it’s great and it’s a nice way to end the first half of the season. I had a good start and managed to pass Sainz at the beginning, then I had free air to focus on my driving and make the tires last and it ended up being a great race. The main thing was not to make any mistakes; I was on the limit for 70 laps which was a challenge, but I did my best to have a clean race and push as hard as I could to take these fantastic 8 points home."

Brendon Hartley, 11th

“I’m disappointed not to score points after a strong qualifying. I had a great start but decided not to dive up the inside of Gasly which ultimately lost me a place to Magnussen. My race was then destroyed as I was stuck behind Sainz during the first half of the race when he was on a harder tire. We then reacted too early to Hulkenberg pitting behind and putting the Medium tire, which didn’t give me the best performance. I fully understand why the team split the strategies but today it didn’t work out for me. I made no mistakes, I had a good start but unfortunately no points to show for it. I’m happy for the team to score more points which is a nice reward for all the hard work over the last months."

Franz Tost, Team Principal

“The team showed a good performance from the beginning of the weekend, Pierre was always around the top 10 in the practice sessions, which showed we had the pace to make it into Q3 and to score points. Yesterday, the weather conditions helped us a little bit and the team and drivers did a really good job to get the most of out the session, resulting in us lining up in sixth and eighth position on the grid. Pierre made a very good start, while Brendon got caught in a battle between Sainz and Hulkenberg meaning he dropped to ninth after the first lap. Pierre had a fantastic race where he controlled the tires and the fuel consumption, and was able to increase the pace at will, which he highlighted towards the end of the race when Magnussen attempted to close the gap. Brendon was stuck behind Sainz and Grosjean, but was able to keep Hulkenberg behind him. I think with a better first lap he would have had the pace to finish in the points. Sixth position is a really good result and very important for the team as we didn’t score many points in the past few races. I’d like to thank the strategists, all the engineers and the mechanics for their incredibly fast pit stops. Now we have the summer break to look forward to, and with all of us recharged we will go to Spa and push for the second half of the season."

Toyoharu Tanabe, Honda F1 Technical Director

“Our car worked well all weekend and this sixth place and eight points for Pierre is a very good result. It was partly down to the way we managed yesterday’s complicated qualifying, when the whole Toro Rosso Honda team did a very good job, just as they did today. It was a shame that Brendon missed out by one place on giving us a double points finish. We have had some tough race weekends recently, so it’s good to go into the summer break having finished in the points in the last two races. We hope to keep up that momentum starting in Spa."

Pirelli

Mario Isola, Head of Car Racing

“With a wet qualifying session yesterday, the teams had a free choice of slick tires to start the race, which led to some split strategies. In particular, Vettel went in a different direction from his key rivals, which enabled him to make progress from his grid position, as was the case with Ricciardo as well. The data that the teams collected from Friday was reliable enough to formulate their race strategies, with the track having effectively reset itself after the rain. Consequently, we saw a few different tactics throughout the field, with the teams making good use of all three compounds, which stood up well to track temperatures that were close to the highest we have ever seen."

Results

POS NO DRIVER CAR LAPS BEHIND
1 44 Lewis Hamilton Mercedes 70 +0.000s
2 5 Sebastian Vettel Ferrari 70 +17.123s
3 7 Kimi Raikkonen Ferrari 70 +20.101s
4 3 Daniel Ricciardo Red Bull Racing 70 +46.419s
5 77 Valtteri Bottas Mercedes 70 +50.000s
6 10 Pierre Gasly Toro Rosso Honda 70 +73.273s
7 20 Kevin Magnussen Haas Ferrari 69 +1 lap
8 14 Fernando Alonso McLaren Renault 69 +1 lap
9 55 Carlos Sainz Renault 69 +1 lap
10 8 Romain Grosjean Haas Ferrari 69 +1 lap
11 28 Brendon Hartley Toro Rosso Honda 69 +1 lap
12 27 Nico Hulkenberg Renault 69 +1 lap
13 31 Esteban Ocon Force India Mercedes 69 +1 lap
14 11 Sergio Perez Force India Mercedes 69 +1 lap
15 9 Marcus Ericsson Sauber Ferrari 68 +2 laps
16 35 Sergey Sirotkin Williams Mercedes 68 +2 laps
17 18 Lance Stroll Williams Mercedes 68 +2 laps
NC 2 Stoffel Vandoorne McLaren Renault 49 DNF
NC 33 Max Verstappen Red Bull Racing 5 DNF
NC 16 Charles Leclerc Sauber Ferrari 0 DNF

Drivers' standings

POS DRIVER POINTS
1 Lewis Hamilton 213
2 Sebastian Vettel 189
3 Kimi Raikkonen 146
4 Valtteri Bottas 132
5 Daniel Ricciardo 118
6 Max Verstappen 105
7 Nico Hulkenberg 52
8 Kevin Magnussen 45
9 Fernando Alonso 44
10 Sergio Perez 30
11 Carlos Sainz 30
12 Esteban Ocon 29
13 Pierre Gasly 26
14 Romain Grosjean 21
15 Charles Leclerc 13
16 Stoffel Vandoorne 8
17 Marcus Ericsson 5
18 Lance Stroll 4
19 Brendon Hartley 2
20 Sergey Sirotkin 0

Constructors' standings

POS CONSTRUCTOR POINTS
1 Mercedes 345
2 Ferrari 335
3 Red Bull/Renault 223
4 Renault 82
5 Haas/Ferrari 66
6 Force India/Mercedes 59
7 McLaren/Renault 52
8 Toro Rosso/Honda 28
9 Sauber/Ferrari 18
10 Williams/Mercedes 4

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