Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton has closed the gap to title rival Max Verstappen following a dominant victory in the inaugural Qatar Grand Prix at the Losail International Circuit, with Verstappen recovering from a grid drop that saw him start P7 to finish second, as Alpine’s Fernando Alonso took the final podium position.
After a clinical start from pole position, Hamilton was able to control the pace at the front of the field with in indomitable lights-to-flag win, his second in a row after Brazil. But while Hamilton was impressive, so too was Verstappen, who was dropped from P2 to seventh on the grid for failing to respect double waved yellow flags in qualifying.
Verstappen shrugged off the disappointment, though, jumping to P4 at the start before quickly making his way up to second, before following Hamilton home to limit the damage to his title lead, which now stands at eight points as Verstappen claimed the fastest lap bonus point.
Meanwhile, there was joy down at Alpine as Alonso returned to the podium for the first time since the 2014 Hungarian Grand Prix, the Spaniard having executed an aggressive drive to survive late-race pressure from Red Bull’s Sergio Perez to take third.
1 Lewis Hamilton HAM Mercedes | 1:24:28.471 | 25 |
2 Max Verstappen VER Red Bull Racing | +25.743s | 19 |
3 Fernando Alonso ALO Alpine | +59.457s | 15 |
4 Sergio Perez PER Red Bull Racing | +62.306s | 12 |
5 Esteban Ocon OCO Alpine | +80.570s | 10 |
Perez’s fourth place was a decent recovery considering he’d started P11, while he finished ahead of the Alpine of Esteban Ocon, with Lance Stroll taking P6 for Aston Martin.
The Ferrari pair of Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc were P7 and P8. Lando Norris took P9 after a late stop for the McLaren driver, as Sebastian Vettel took the final points-paying position for P10 – with Pierre Gasly failing to make a two-stop strategy work, dropping from P2 on the grid to P11, allowing Alpine to move clear of AlphaTauri in P5 in the standings.
Meanwhile, it was a day to forget for Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas, who took his own grid drop, dropping from P3 to P6, before falling to 11th at the start and then suffering mid-race tyre issues – as did Williams’ George Russell and Nicholas Latifi – before Mercedes retired him.
So, with just two races to go now, it’s Hamilton within touching distance of Verstappen in the drivers’ fight. Roll on Saudi Arabia.
2021 Qatar Grand Prix: Onboard for Max Verstappen’s start from P7
AS IT HAPPENED
Even before the first ever Qatar Grand Prix had got under way, there was drama off-track as Max Verstappen was dropped from P2 to P7 on the grid, and Valtteri Bottas from P3 to P6, for a failure to respect yellow flags in qualifying – a double for Verstappen, a single for Bottas.
As the five lights went out, Hamilton swept in front of Pierre Gasly, promoted to his first front row start by those penalties, allowing the Mercedes to hold position at the front.
Bottas, meanwhile, dropped like a stone, sinking from sixth to 11th (Vettel also dropping from P10 to P17) as Verstappen went the other way, benefitting from Carlos Sainz and Lando Norris scrapping into Turn 1 to surge to P4, while it was only a chop from Fernando Alonso into Turn 2 that stopped Verstappen going to P3 – Alonso then passing Gasly to claim P2 in the same manoeuvre.
Hamilton was moving clear at the front – but crucially for Verstappen if he was to keep his race hopes alive, the Dutchman was quickly through on Gasly and Alonso to hold P2 by Lap 5 of 57, with only his title rival around four seconds up the road from him.
2021 Qatar Grand Prix: Hamilton leads out reshuffled grid at start in Losail
Verstappen was moving forward, and so was Sergio Perez in the sister Red Bull, Perez climbing from his P11 to P6 by Lap 9. Bottas was moving less quickly, with Toto Wolff moved to radio the Finn on Lap 8 to give him the hurry-up – Bottas quickly responding by passing Yuki Tsunoda and Lance Stroll to move to P9 by Lap 10.
Out in front, Hamilton and Verstappen quickly settled into a race of their own, Hamilton able to slowly open the gap to his rival to 7s by Lap 15 – with Verstappen a further 22s clear of Alonso, with Norris ahead of Perez after Gasly pitted for a first time on Lap 13.
Lap 17 caught Mercedes’ eye, as Verstappen brought his Red Bull RB16B in for a stop, taking on hards and holding onto P2 as he emerged just in front on Alonso. Hamilton radioed to Mercedes to tell them his tyres were still okay, but they brought him in a lap later anyway to cover off Verstappen.
Hamilton wasn’t best pleased, telling the team it was “definitely way too early to stop” but was brusquely told that with the pace advantage he was enjoying – sufficient for Hamilton to be 10s clear of Verstappen when he emerged from his stop – it had been worth mirroring Red Bull.
With the halfway point reached by Lap 29 of 57, the order was: Hamilton, 7s up from Verstappen, with Bottas third but yet to stop, ahead of Perez, Alonso, Gasly, Norris, Ocon, Stroll and Sainz – Perez getting past Alonso after a titanic scrap on Lap 29 through the first sequence of corners.
Bottas was dramatically forced into his first stop on Lap 33 when he appeared to suffer a puncture, Bottas sliding into the gravel at Turn 7, before recovering to the pits for hards, emerging P14 as Perez was promoted into P3 behind Hamilton and Verstappen.
The big question now was whether Hamilton or Verstappen would feel compelled to stop again in light of Bottas’ issues – Verstappen in a comfortable position in P2, 50s ahead of third-placed team mate Perez by Lap 40.
Verstappen answered the question on Lap 41 when he stopped for mediums, Hamilton unsurprisingly responding a lap later for the same tyres, as the pair of them maintained status quo at the front.
Perez stopped on Lap 41 too, emerging P7 as Alonso was promoted into the podium positions – with Alonso telling his team to ask fifth-placed Ocon to “defend like a lion” (a reference to Ocon’s comments about Alonso’s defence that enabled his Hungary win) to keep Perez behind.
Ocon listened, too, but despite some energetic sparring on Lap 47, Perez was through on the Alpine driver and up to P5 – although the Mexican questioned Red Bull’s decision to sacrifice track position by two-stopping him.
2021 Qatar Grand Prix: Bottas picks up puncture and damages front wing
Bottas’ tyre issues were seemingly mirrored by the Williams drivers of George Russell and Nicholas Latifi on Laps 50 and 52, with both drivers suffering left-front tyre problems – while Bottas was retired from the race on Lap 50, bringing to an end a miserable evening under the floodlights for the Finn.
Latifi retired on Lap 55, with a Virtual Safety Car called out, Verstappen taking the opportunity to dive into the pits for softs. Perhaps Red Bull were hoping the move would spook Mercedes – but there was no such luck, as Hamilton duly swept across the line to secure back-to-back wins after Interlagos. He had been, quite simply, untouchable all evening.
Verstappen’s stop at least allowed him to put on soft tyres, Verstappen claiming the fastest lap bonus point along with his 18 points for P2, his lead reduced from 14 points to eight points over Hamilton, with two races to go.
If Verstappen felt a little jaded, Alonso felt pure joy, as he benefitted from the VSC to hold onto P3. “Finally we got it,” said Alonso after the race. “I’m so happy for the team.” Perez took P4 and will likely have some questions over Red Bull’s two-stop move for him, while Ocon took fifth, to move Alpine a decisive 25 points clear of AlphaTauri in their fight for fifth in the constructors’.
A stealthy performance from Stroll was enough to give the Aston Martin driver P6, ahead of the Ferrari pair of Sainz and Leclerc, with Norris ending up P9 – McLaren having suspected a puncture a few laps from the end and stopping the Briton, as Vettel recovered from his poor start to claim the final point.
After starting second, Gasly finished a galling P11, having opted for a two-stop, ahead of Daniel Ricciardo – a third point-less race in a row for the Australian – as Yuki Tsunoda took 13th. Kimi Raikkonen was P14 for Alfa Romeo, having enjoyed a beautiful battle with Latifi, with his team mate Antonio Giovinazzi P15, ahead of Mick Schumacher, Russell and Nikita Mazepin.
So, yet another twist in this fascinating title fight. Is Hamilton now in the driving seat for title number eight? Or can Verstappen fight back in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi? It’s going to be fascinating to find out.
2021 Qatar Grand Prix: Hamilton wins with Verstappen second at Losail International Circuit
The key quote
“We needed those points today. I can’t wait to watch the race replay to find out what happened behind me. I’m really grateful for these points, it’s been a hell of a year. Back to back wins here, feel good, I feel fit, fitter than I’ve ever felt. Bring on the next two!” – Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes
What’s next
From one new Grand Prix in the Middle East to another now, as we head to Jeddah, and the inaugural Saudi Arabian Grand Prix on December 3-5. The all-new Jeddah Corniche Circuit promises to be the fastest street circuit in F1, while with another night race in store, the atmosphere will be electric.