Championship Leader Hamilton Powers To Monaco GP Victory
26th May 2019
The defending five-time world champion and current series leader, who came home less than a second ahead of Red Bull's Max Verstappen, said he survived the Dutchman's late attacks by "fighting with the spirit of Niki (Lauda)"
- Lewis Hamilton resisted intense race-long pressure on Sunday to secure a narrow, dramatic and emotional victory for a mourning Mercedes in the Monaco Grand Prix
- Verstappen's Red Bull team-mate Pierre Gasly came home fifth ahead of Carlos Sainz of McLaren, Daniil Kvyat and his Toro Rosso team-mate Alex Albon
- Daniel Ricciardo, last year's winner for Red Bull, was ninth for Renault ahead of Romain Grosjean of Haas
MONACO, Principality of Monaco- Lewis Hamilton resisted intense race-long pressure on Sunday to secure a narrow, dramatic and emotional victory for a mourning Mercedes in the Monaco Grand Prix.
The defending
five-time world champion and current series leader, who came home less than a
second ahead of Red Bull's Max Verstappen, said he survived the Dutchman's late
attacks by "fighting with the spirit of Niki (Lauda)".
He lifted his red
helmet in tribute to the three-time champion Austrian and non-executive
chairman of Mercedes who died on Monday.
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Verstappen, who was
involved a pit-lane collision during the race, was classified fourth after
taking a five-second penalty. This elevated Sebastian Vettel to second for
Ferrari and lifted the luckless Valtteri Bottas to third in the second
Mercedes.
"Lewis, it's
James... Incredible drive," said Mercedes' strategist James Vowles before
team boss Toto Wolff told him: "That was for Niki."
"That was the
hardest race I think I’ve had," said Hamilton. "I was fighting with
the spirit of Niki. He's been truly an influential person in our team and we
miss him."
'I
Owe It All To Niki', Hamilton Says Of Five-Time World Champion Status
Verstappen's Red
Bull team-mate Pierre Gasly came home fifth ahead of Carlos Sainz of McLaren,
Daniil Kvyat and his Toro Rosso team-mate Alex Albon.
Daniel Ricciardo,
last year's winner for Red Bull, was ninth for Renault ahead of Romain Grosjean
of Haas.
It was Hamilton's
third win in Monaco and the 77th of his career, opening up a clear lead
ahead of Bottas in the drivers' title race.
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The result extended
Mercedes' run of season-opening wins to six, but brought an end to their
sequence of one-two triumphs.