Verstappen Wins Dutch GP In Front Of Adoring Home Crowd

Calum Gill 16:24 05/09/2021

Max Verstappen won his home Dutch Grand Prix in front of an adoring sea of orange at Zandvoort, to reclaim the championship lead from Lewis Hamilton.

The Red Bull driver led all the way from pole position, comfortably keeping a following Hamilton at bay. Mercedes tried what they could to challenge Verstappen, putting Hamilton on a two-stop strategy, then trying to use the other car of Valtteri Bottas to hold him up, but Red Bull always appeared to be in control.

There appeared to be some disagreements between Hamilton and the team on the strategy deployed, but their conversations were a function of the fact that Verstappen just had that bit of extra pace to be able to answer everything Mercedes threw at him. "They were just too fast today," Hamilton said over the radio on the slowing down lap. Everyone apart from the podium three ended up at least a lap down.

Bottas was third, ahead of Alpha Tauri's Pierre Gasly and Ferrari's Charles Leclerc. Fernando Alonso drove a strong race in the Alpine, ahead of the other Ferrari of Carlos Sainz, and Verstappen's teammate Sergio Perez, who fought back from a pit lane start to claim eighth place. The other Alpine of Esteban Ocon and McLaren's Lando Norris rounded out the top ten finishers.


-Full weekend results


Dutch delight for the home boy

After leading from the start, Verstappen was 3.5 seconds ahead of Hamilton when Mercedes pulled the seven-time champion in for a pit stop on lap 20, too early for the predicted one-stop race.Red Bull responded a lap later with Verstappen, but Mercedes left Bottas out and the Finn took the lead. As Verstappen and Hamilton closed in, the Finn was told he had to defend if he wanted to try to win the race. But as soon as Verstappen caught him, Bottas went in too deep at the chicane, allowing the Red Bull to close right in and sweep past down the pit straight. That was Bottas' hopes finished, and Hamilton's were effectively the same, even if the Briton continued to try to put up a fight.

After the first pit stops, Hamilton was less than two seconds behind for 16 laps, which is close enough to try for the under-cut strategy - pit first and try to use the grip from fresher tyres to gain a place.But Mercedes missed the chance and, in three laps from lap 36 to lap 39, Verstappen pulled a further second clear, at which point Mercedes pitted Hamilton. Red Bull responded the following lap - fitting hard tyres rather than the mediums Hamilton took at his second stop - and Verstappen retained the lead. Hamilton complained that Mercedes had stopped him too early, then that his tyres would not go to the end. When Mercedes suggested he manage them, he asked them whether they were asking him not to race, because he was pushing to close the gap, at which point they told him to keep going.

Hamilton closed in again to just over a second behind Verstappen as they lapped other cars, but dropped back again once they were back on a clear track. Hamilton's consolation was a late pit stop to claim the point for fastest lap. There was an interesting twist, though, when Mercedes pulled Bottas in for a late pit stop and ordered him not to go for fastest lap - only for the Finn to ignore the plea.

Before the end of the lap, strategy director James Vowles came on the radio and asked him to "please abort the fastest lap attempt" but despite that Bottas did post the quickest time - which many will see as an indication that George Russell will be announced as his replacement at Mercedes within the next few days. Bottas later claimed he "didn't go for it" - and he did back off in the final sector, apparently to make it easier for Hamilton to reclaim it. It mattered not - Hamilton pitted on the next lap and reclaimed the point from his team-mate.


The rest of the field

Daniel Ricciardo just missed out on the points in eleventh place for McLaren, with the two Aston Martin's of Lance Stroll and Sebastian Vettel behind him. Despite qualifying seventh, Alfa-Romeo's Antonio Giovinazzi could only place 14th, ahead of temporary teammate Robert Kubica, and Williams' Nicholas Latifi. George Russell in the other Williams dropped back after qualifying eleventh, the Brit coming home 17th ahead of Haas' Mick Schumacher. Yuki Tsunoda and Nikita Mazepin both suffered engine failures that took them out of the running in the middle part of the race.

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