Bottas Takes Turkish GP Win As Verstappen Regains Championship Lead

Calum Gill 15:42 10/10/2021

Valtteri Bottas claimed a dominant first wet-weather Formula 1 victory at the Turkish Grand Prix as Lewis Hamilton lost the championship lead to Max Verstappen.

Bottas comfortably led the first 37 laps of the 58-lap race from pole position before he swapped his worn intermediates for a brand-new set and dropped behind the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc, who was running behind Bottas and Max Verstappen prior to the pair pitting. Leclerc asked his team if he could try and go to the end of the race without a pitstop and had just under 10 seconds in hand over Bottas with 20 laps to go. A couple of lock-ups at the Turn 12 left-hander chipped away Leclerc’s advantage and Bottas closed to within a second of Leclerc with 14 laps to go. On lap 47 of 58, Bottas caught Leclerc and swept past the two-time grand prix winner at Turn 1 with ease, prompting Ferrari to abandon the no-stop strategy and pit Leclerc at the end of the lap.

This allowed Red Bull’s Verstappen to move into second place with his championship rival Hamilton, who had charged from 11th on the grid, looking as if he’d copy Leclerc’s no-stop strategy plan. But like Leclerc, Hamilton was forced to convert to a one-stop and pitted with eight laps remaining, dropping from third to fifth place, after a lengthy debate with his team. There was no such uncertainty for Hamilton’s team-mate Bottas who took a dominant victory - his first F1 win in rainy conditions - 10.912 seconds ahead of Verstappen and with the fastest lap bonus point.


-Full weekend results


Sergio Perez earned his first podium since Paul Ricard in third place following a tidy move on Leclerc around the outside of Turn 12 late on for third place. Perez had crucially held off Hamilton’s advances earlier in the race, giving his team-mate Verstappen space to make his pitstop and emerge ahead of his yet-to-stop title rival. Leclerc was forced to settle for fourth place after his victory hopes faded, with a disgruntled Hamilton just hanging on to fifth place ahead of Pierre Gasly and Lando Norris.

Hamilton fumed “I told you” when his pitstop left him lacking pace just two laps into his stint and he was unable to make any impression on Leclerc with graining tyres. Gasly had to overcome a five-second penalty for tipping Fernando Alonso into a spin at Turn 1 on the opening lap on his way to picking up sixth place for AlphaTauri, with Norris seventh. Carlos Sainz charged from 19th place on the grid to eighth place for Ferrari, with Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll ninth and Esteban Ocon, the only driver to stick with the no-stop strategy, 10th for Alpine. 


The rest of the pack

The two Alfa-Romeo cars placed just outside of the points paying positions, with Antonio Giovinazzi eleventh and Kimi Raikkonen twelfth. They came home just ahead of McLaren's Daniel Ricciardo, AlphaTauri's Yuki Tsunoda - who fell to fourteenth from a ninth place start - and Williams' George Russell. After being hit by Gasly at turn 1, Alonso turned from victim to perpetrator as he slammed into the side of Mick Schumacher’s Haas, ruining Schumacher’s best qualifying position of his rookie season as he dropped to the back of the field. 

He finished ahead of the other Williams car of Nicholas Latifi, ahead of Sebastian Vettel who finished down in 18th place as the only driver to fit the dry tyres. The Aston Martin driver made a horrendously misjudged switch to medium tyres with 23 laps to go, before swiftly moving back onto the intermediates. The two Haas cars rounded out the order, with Schumacher ahead of Nikita Mazepin. Every driver took the chequered flag, the second time that has happened in 2021.

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