Lewis Hamilton celebrated his 50th Formula
One victory on Sunday with a pole-to-flag US Grand Prix drive that kept his
title hopes alive and trimmed Mercedes team mate Nico Rosberg’s lead to 26
points with three races remaining.
Rosberg, who had been chasing his 10th
triumph of the season, finished second on a sunny Texan afternoon with a big
crowd but little drama - even if Hamilton spent much of it worrying about
reliability.
The straightforward victory was Hamilton’s
fourth in Texas in five seasons and ended a barren stretch for the triple world
champion dating back to his last win in Germany in July.
“This has always been a good hunting ground
for me,” said the Briton, the third driver after Michael Schumacher and Alain
Prost to win 50 races, in a podium interview conducted by British actor Gerard
Butler.
“I love being here in the States, it very
much feels like home,” he added, with tennis player Venus Williams and skier
Lindsey Vonn watching on.
“All I can do is do my best and continue to
drive as I have this weekend,” said Hamilton, who confessed he had completely
forgotten that it would be his 50th win. “Nico has been driving fantastically
well all year so the battle will continue.”
Rosberg, finished 4.5 seconds behind and
had dropped back to third at the start before events lent the German a helping
hand.
Australian Daniel Ricciardo, who had seized
second at the start, was third for Red Bull but his Dutch team mate Max
Verstappen failed to finish due to a gearbox failure.
Rosberg, whose advantage means he can still
take his first title without having to win again this season, said it was
‘damage limitation’.
The German has 331 points to Hamilton’s
305, with seven points the difference between a win and second place.
The Mercedes drivers are the only ones in
title contention and the team has already won the constructors’ championship
for a third year in a row.
Hamilton, who won his third title at the
circuit last year after a Rosberg error-gifted him the race win, shook hands
with his team mate as they waited to go on the podium.
The body language contrasted to the 2015
aftermath, when Hamilton tossed Rosberg a cap and had it thrown back at him.
Verstappen had pushed Rosberg hard early on
but any hope of getting between the Mercedes drivers ended when he pitted with
his team not expecting it.
The 18-year-old then dropped to a crawling
pace before pulling across the gravel and parking up but marshals were unable
to move the Red Bull to safety without the use of a crane, leading to a virtual
safety car.
That allowed the Mercedes drivers to pit
and gain time on Ricciardo, who had already done so. “They basically got a free
pit stop,” said the exasperated Australian over the radio.
Verstappen said the team had told him to
keep going initially.
Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel finished fourth
but a bungled stop put paid to team mate Kimi Raikkonen’s race with the Finn
leaving before the wheel had been fully detached.
“I saw some sparks coming out. At the end
of the pit lane the team told me to stop ... the rear wheel nut had not fitted
properly,” said Raikkonen, who let the Ferrari roll back before parking up.
Ferrari were fined 5,000 euros for the unsafe release.
Fernando Alonso was fifth for McLaren with
fellow-Spaniard Carlos Sainz sixth for Toro Rosso and Brazilian Felipe Massa
seventh for Williams.
Mexican Sergio Perez finished eighth for
Force India, after fighting back from the rear following a first lap tangle
with Toro Rosso’s Daniil Kvyat, and McLaren’s Jenson Button was ninth.
Kvyat collected a 10 second time penalty
for causing the collision.
Frenchman Romain Grosjean collected a point
for Haas, the first US-owned team in 30 years who were making their home debut,
but Mexican team mate Esteban Gutierrez failed to finish.