Chased to the end by Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton, a tearful George Russell won his first race in Formula One on Sunday by 1 1/2 seconds at the Brazilian Grand Prix. (More Motorsport News)
Mercedes driver George Russell claimed the first victory of his Formula One career when he won a closely-contested sprint race at the Brazilian Grand Prix.
Chased to the end by Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton, a tearful George Russell won his first race in Formula One on Sunday by 1 1/2 seconds at the Brazilian Grand Prix. (More Motorsport News)
It was also Mercedes’ first GP win of an otherwise disappointing season with Hamilton making it an impressive 1-2 for the team in a statement of intent for next season.
“I need some tissues,” Russell said from inside his crash helmet. “I am crying, boys and girls.”
Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz Jr. completed the podium at Interlagos.
The 24-year-old Russell dominated the race in Sao Paulo from the start, which had him in pole position on the grid. He had seven podium finishes before Sunday’s victory.
Russell became the first British driver to hear “God Save the King” played for the race winner after the death of Queen Elizabeth II on Sept. 8 and accession of King Charles III.
“It has been an emotional roller coaster ... Lewis put me under so much pressure,” a still emotional Russell said after a race in which safety cars were used frequently. “This is just the beginning.”
Hamilton, who started second, had dropped to eighth after his car made contact with Max Verstappen’s Red Bull on the seventh lap. The Dutchman was given a five-second penalty and finished in sixth place.
Hamilton did not want to elaborate on the incident with Verstappen.
“What can I say? You know how it is with Max,” Hamilton said after the race.
Verstappen was unapologetic.
“I was not upset by the penalty, but if you ask me would I do it again? Absolutely,” Verstappen said. “I went round the outside in turn one, and I just felt it as soon as I was going next to him that he had no intention to leave me space, and I was like, ‘OK if you are not going to leave me space then we will just collide’.”
Verstappen and his Red Bull team have already been crowned F1 champions.
Verstappen and teammate Sergio Perez seemed to be in disagreement at the end of the race. Perez, who is still fighting for second place in the drivers’ championship, was sixth when he was overtaken by Verstappen near the end of the race and finished behind him. Team radio shows Verstappen was ordered to allow Perez to finish ahead of him to score more points, but the champion disagreed.
Perez will enter the final race of the season tied on points with Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, who finished fourth at Interlagos.
“I told you already. You guys don’t ask that again to me. Are you clear about that? I gave you my reasons and I stand by it,” Verstappen said after he was asked by team bosses why he had not allowed Perez to overtake.
Perez sounded upset on team radio. “It shows who he really is,” he said.
Later, the Mexican told journalists Verstappen won his two world championships because of him. However, after the drivers left the Interlagos track, both teammates attempted to temper their dispute.
“If there’s a chance to help him in Abu Dhabi, then I will be there, and I will of course support him,” Verstappen said, according to a statement shared by Red Bull. Perez seemed to accept the apologies. “It is something we have discussed internally, we will move on and keep working together as a team,” he said.
The Brazilian GP was the penultimate race of the season ahead of Abu Dhabi on Nov. 20.