Raikkonen breaks win drought with victory in Texas stymieing Mercedes celebration; Verstappen banks another wonder drive for P2; Hamilton a disappointing P3 as Vettel lives to fight another day after spin
One of the more captivating and enjoyable Grand Prix of the 2018 season ended up providing one of the more popular results, as well — a win by Ferrari’s hard luck Kimi Raikkonen at the United States Grand Prix on Sunday. Racing brilliantly at the beautifully designed Circuit of the Americas, Raikkonen passed the pole-sitting Mercedes of Lewis Hamilton going into the uphill Turn 1 on the opening lap. The Finnish veteran refused to be shoved out of the way by the aggressive Englishman, commandeered the optimal apex and exit angle and promptly pulled away from the normally superlative Silver Arrow and into the race lead. Ferrari’s strategy of starting Raikkonen on the Ultra Soft Pirelli tires paid instant dividends in that high traction moment against Hamilton’s Soft-running Merc and Raikkonen instantly established a commanding race lead. But Ferrari’s opening lap joy was short-lived, as their team leader and sole remaining championship contender, Sebastian Vettel, once again could not control his aggression. The German 4-time Champion, desperate to keep his slim title hopes alive and recover from a foolish 3-spot grid penalty incurred by speeding under a Red Flag in Friday practice, diced with the Red Bull of Daniel Ricciardo as he tried to pull himself up from P5. But Vettel pushed too hard, wheel banging with the tough-to-pass Aussie and coming off second best with yet another catastrophic spin. Just as he had done in Suzuka two weeks ago, Vettel watched as the field streamed by him. He rejoined far down the order and another difficult day of recovery in front of him.
The race’s first major strategy decision came on Lap 9 when Ricciardo’s Red Bull ground to a halt on track and necessitated a Virtual Safety Car. Told to do the opposite of the lead Ferrari, Hamilton watched Raikkonen jink slightly to the pits but then continue on. So Hamilton dove in for his first tire change for the Soft compound. It seemed a shrewd move by the Mercedes pit wall, as their ace only lost a fraction of the time to the field under yellow as he would have during a normal stop. However, by pitting so early it put the possibility one-stop strategy into serious doubt. Hamilton rejoined in P4 behind his teammate Valtteri Bottas, who lost a position to the hard charging Red Bull of Max Verstappen on an undercut during their own respective pit stop sequences. Amazingly Verstappen had battled his way up to P2 from way back in P18 on the grid yet another passing clinic by the just-turned-21 Dutch phenom.
Hamilton did indeed have to make a second stop for fresh rubber late in the race on Lap 41, unlike Raikkonen and Verstappen who were able to make the one-stopper work by running longer opening stints. Continue reading