Hamilton romps to victory, equals Schumacher’s win record, as bad luck befalls Bottas; Verstappen a distant runner-up, joyful Ricciardo P3
Mercedes ace Lewis Hamilton scored a decisive win in Sunday’s German Grand Prix, aka the Eiffel GP, taking advantage of his teammate Valtteri Bottas’s misfortune and putting the rest of the field in the dust to earn his 91st career F1 victory. That ties the English six-time champion with the legendary Michael Schumacher for all-time wins in Formula 1 and Hamilton has six more races left on the calendar to exceed a mark that many through would never be approached much less surpassed. Recovering decisively from the two previous relatively lost race weekends where he shot himself in the foot with avoidable penalties, Hamilton now has a 69-point bulge in the Driver’s standings over Bottas after the latter DNF’s through no fault of his own. Hamilton is also on track to tie another epic Schumi record by earning his seventh Drivers’ Championship, putting his name in the hat for best-ever F1 pilot and potentially transforming a very weird and belated, COVID-marred 2020 campaign into a season for the ages. In a nicely symbolic coda to the race weekend, Hamilton was gifted one of Schumacher’s race helmets from 2012, the German legend’s last season, by son Mick Schumacher. The fast-rising Mick hopes to be able to dice with Hamilton on track in the very near future and one day try for a championship season of his own to carry on family tradition. But that is for the future. In this present, Hamilton has proven to be the greatest driver of this generation by some distance and Sunday’s easy win just reinforced that.
Despite starting from pole, Bottas was rounded up by Hamilton relatively quickly when his team leader passed the Finn for P1 on Lap 13. Hamilton would never look back and while Bottas was hoping to use an undercut strategy with an early pit stop to try and get back to the front it all came to naught when his Silver Arrow suffered terminal loss of power and he was forced to retire on Lap 19. Suddenly all the talk of Bottas mounting a late season challenge to Hamilton’s supremacy fizzled just like his power unit. That left one putative contender remaining with the majority of the 60-lap event still to be contested: Red Bull’s Max Verstappen. But despite looking quick enough to challenge the front running Merc at times, the Dutch wunderkind could never really match Hamilton’s pace over the long runs. This was proven when a Safety Car on Lap 44 erased nearly all of Hamilton’s lead by bunching up the field and seemed to give Verstappen the late-race opening he was looking for. But when the Safety Car was withdrawn on Lap 49, Verstappen could make no inroads over the remaining eleven laps and Hamilton ended up cruising home over four-seconds to the good. Red Bull may be gradually getting closer to Mercedes’ supreme pace but they are running out of races to truly overhaul them.
Bottas’ misfortune opened the door to a podium position from one of the “best of the rest” in the field and Renault’s Daniel Ricciardo seized the opportunity by charging through it with a masterful drive to take a skillful P3. Holding off the game Racing Point of Sergio Perez down the stretch, the veteran Aussie grabbed his first podium since 2018, his first as Renault driver and the factory team’s first since way back in 2011. It seems almost a pity that Ricciardo will be moving on to McLaren next year after such a satisfying achievement for both driver and team but that’s the way the F1 world turns. Just ask Perez, who was racy all day long to continue his strong streak of points finishes with a solid P4. Racing Point declined to re-sign the steady Mexican earlier and he still doesn’t have a ride for next season. And just ask today’s other Racing Point driver, Nico Hulkenberg, who pinch hit for the team on short notice for the second time, this time repacking the ill Lance Stroll, and fought his way from dead last on the grid all the way up to a terrific P8 finish, earning him rightful Driver Of The Day accolades. The German will be back broadcasting the next race assuming Stroll makes a full recovery from whatever is ailing him.
Carlos Sainz took P5 for McLaren, Pierre Gasly was P6 for AlphaTauri and the Ferrari of Charles Leclerc finished behind those two ostensible midfield runners in P7, which was still far superior to his Scuderia stablemate Sebastian Vettel’s latest pointless P11. Roman Grosjean scored his first points of the year for Haas in P9, as did Alfa Romeo’s Antonio Giovinazzi in P10, who bested Vettel’s factory Ferrari with the laps winding down in a desperate bid to extend his F1 career, which is likely in jeopardy.
Top 10 finishers of the German GP:
POS |
NO |
DRIVER |
CAR |
LAPS |
TIME/RETIRED |
PTS |
1 |
44 |
Lewis Hamilton |
MERCEDES |
60 |
1:35:49.641 |
25 |
2 |
33 |
Max Verstappen |
RED BULL RACING HONDA |
60 |
+4.470s |
19 |
3 |
3 |
Daniel Ricciardo |
RENAULT |
60 |
+14.613s |
15 |
4 |
11 |
Sergio Perez |
RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES |
60 |
+16.070s |
12 |
5 |
55 |
Carlos Sainz |
MCLAREN RENAULT |
60 |
+21.905s |
10 |
6 |
10 |
Pierre Gasly |
ALPHATAURI HONDA |
60 |
+22.766s |
8 |
7 |
16 |
Charles Leclerc |
FERRARI |
60 |
+30.814s |
6 |
8 |
27 |
Nico Hulkenberg |
RACING POINT BWT MERCEDES |
60 |
+32.596s |
4 |
9 |
8 |
Romain Grosjean |
HAAS FERRARI |
60 |
+39.081s |
2 |
10 |
99 |
Antonio Giovinazzi |
ALFA ROMEO RACING FERRARI |
60 |
+40.035s |
1 |
Complete race results available via Formula1.com.
The next race is in a fortnight’s time — the Grand Prix of Portugal from the Autódromo Internacional do Algarve, which has never hosted an F1 race. Regardless, look for the peerless Hamilton to continue his onslaught on the Formula 1 record books there now that he seems to have put his brief bumpy patch well and truly behind him. Hope to see you then!