British Grand Prix result: Lewis Hamilton wins after Max Verstappen crashes on lap one in clash with rival

Championship leader Verstappen was transported to a local hospital while Hamilton triumphed despite a 10-second penalty

Alex Pattle
Monday 19 July 2021 08:25 BST
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Hamilton v Verstappen in numbers

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Lewis Hamilton won the Formula One British Grand Prix on Sunday after Max Verstappen crashed out on lap one after a coming-together with his title rival.

Championship leader Verstappen started in pole position at Silverstone after winning the inaugural F1 sprint race on Saturday, but the Red Bull driver’s left rear tyre hit Hamilton’s front right tyre on the Copse corner on the opening lap, leading the Dutch driver to spin off the track and hit the barrier hard at approximately 180mph.

Verstappen, who had won the last three grands prix ahead of Sunday’s event, emerged from his wrecked car and was checked by medical staff before being transported to a local hospital.

In the immediate aftermath of the crash, which resulted in Hamilton receiving a 10-second penalty, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc surged past the Briton and into the lead.

A red flag followed, leading to a 40-minute suspension of racing, but Leclerc retained his focus for a standing restart and would retain his lead for 49 laps – despite intermittent engine mapping issues.

Hamilton was hunting the Monegasque, however, and finally caught Leclerc on Copse with just two laps to go in a dramatic finish.

Hamilton saw out the final laps to record his third straight British GP victory, seventh in eight years, and eighth overall. In doing so, the defending champion – second in the drivers’ standings – closed the gap to Verstappen to eight points in the race for the title.

Leclerc finished second for his first podium of the season, with Hamilton’s Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas third and Briton Lando Norris fourth.

Norris’s McLaren teammate Daniel Ricciardo came fifth, ahead of Spaniards Carlos Sainz and Fernando Alonso. Elsewhere, Britain’s George Russell finished 12th, one place behind Pierre Gasly, while Red Bull’s Sergio Perez came 16th. Sebastian Vettel span off the track shortly after the restart in a display of poor car control, and – although he was able to quickly resume – the four-time F1 champion’s Aston Martin was retired late on.

“Is Max okay?” Hamilton asked the Mercedes team radio as the cars pitted shortly after the lap-one crash.

The seven-time champion, 36, added shortly thereafter, “I was ahead there, man. He turned into me,” before adjusting his evaluation to suggest that he was “alongside” his title rival.

During the race’s suspension, Red Bull’s team principal Christian Horner offered a different perspective while communicating with the Federation Internationale de l’Automobile (FIA) over the radio.

“It was 100 per cent Max’s corner,” Horner said. “As far as I’m concerned, full blame is on Lewis. I hope you’re gonna deal with it appropriately.

“Thank God [Max] walked away. Lewis has stuck a wheel in. He knows you don’t do that here.”

After the race, a visibly frustrated Horner said to Sky Sports: “I hope Lewis is very happy with himself. He’s put a competitor at risk.

“I don’t care what Lewis said. For me, that’s a hollow victory. [Ten seconds] wasn’t much of a penalty, was it?”

In the moments after the crash, Mercedes’ team principal Toto Wolff told the FIA that he had emailed them diagrams of the incident and the trajectory of both cars. A representative of the governing body insisted that they had been focusing on the race rather than checking their emails, however.

At the conclusion of the race – the 10th grand prix of the season – the message for Hamilton on the Mercedes team radio was: “Lewis, we never give up, we never give up. It’s still on.”

“Damn right,” Hamilton responded.

There are 13 grands prix remaining this year, with the Hungarian event up next on 1 August.

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