Sergio Pérez passed polesitter Charles Leclerc at the start and resisted race-long pressure from the Ferrari driver to take a hard-earned victory at the Singapore Grand Prix.
Following the race he was summoned to the stewards and handed a reprimand and a five-second time penalty for safety car infringements, but with a 7.5s gap to Leclerc, kept his win.
With Leclerc crossing the line second, third place went to Carlos Sainz Jr. in the other Ferrari.
Championship leader Max Verstappen finished seventh. The Dutchman rose steadily through the order after a poor start but then was forced to battle back from 14th after a late-race lock-up.
After the start was delayed by over an hour due to torrential rain in the build-up to the race, Pérez seized the lead as soon as lights went out. The Mexican got better traction off the line and powered past Leclerc as they raced towards the first corner.
Further back Verstappen bogged down at the start and dropped to P12. The championship leader was soon making his way back through the field, however, and he was soon past Magnussen, Lance Stroll and Yuki Tsunoda to claim P9.
The Safety Car then made its first appearance of the evening, when Nicholas Latifi and Zhou Guanyu tangled in the first sector and with the Chinese driver’s car stuck just off track in Turn 5, the race was quickly neutralised.
When the Safety Car left the track Checo controlled the restart well to hold the lead ahead of Leclerc and Sainz Jr., while further back Verstappen passed Vettel and then AlphaTauri’s take seventh place.
The Dutchman’s next target was Fernando Alonso, but the Spaniard defended well and Verstappen found himself bottled up behind the Alpine driver for the next 10 laps.
He was freed on lap 21, however, when Alonso suffered and engine failure and steered his Alpine up an escape road. Verstappen swept past to take sixth place.
The VSC was then deployed when Alex Albon crashed and a power unit failure sidelines Esteban Ocon in the second Alpine, Lewis Hamilton then hit the barriers at Turn 7. The Briton was able to carry but fell back between fourth-placed Lando Norris and Verstappen in sixth.
It was the cue for Leclerc to pit and the Ferrari driver took on medium tyres but the stop was slow. Pérez pitted from the lead and after taking on medium tyres he was able to comfortably rejoin in the lead.
The Mexican was followed to the pit lane by Sainz Jr. and then Verstappen who also fitted medium tyres. However, the race was again neutralised just after the Dutchman’s stop when Yuki Tsunoda hit the barriers in Turn 10 and the Safety Car was released.
It was then that Pérez was noted by the stewards for potentially dropping too far off the course car as he led ahead of Leclerc, Sainz Jr. and Norris. After the race the Mexican driver was handed a repirmand and a five-second for falling more than 10 car lengths behind the Safety Car.
The stewards said they "do not accept that the conditions were such as to make it impossible or dangerous for PER to have maintained the required less than 10 car length gap, but ut added that they " took into account the wet conditions and the difficulties highlighted by PER as mitigatory circumstances for this incident."
In the second decision, the stewards said that the Red Bull driver had ignored a warning from race direction to close the gap and as such was handed the five-second penalty.
The SC left the track at the end of lap 38 and once again Checo controlled the restart perfectly. Further back Verstappen lined up an attack on Norris but when he made the move, he locked up badly and was forced down an escape road.
He was able to continue but dropped to P8 and after pitting to shed flat-spotted tyres for new softs he rejoined in P14. Leclerc then began to close in on Pérez.
The Mexican was soon on the radio complaining that he was suffering with driveability both under braking and out of corners but despite the setback he doggedly held off the Ferrari driver and with 17 minutes left in the time limited race, Leclerc, managing his tyres, backed off and Pérez broke DRS.
Pérez continued to pull away at the front and as the two-hour mark was reached, he completed the final lap with 7.5s seconds in hand. Leclerc was left with second place ahead of Sainz, while Norris claimed a solid fourth place ahead of McLaren team-mate Daniel Ricciardo.
Lance Stroll was sixth for Aston Martin and Verstappen passed the second Aston of Sebastian Vettel on the final lap to claim seventh. Behind Vettel, Hamilton finished ninth and the final point on offer went to Pierre Gasly.
Monday, October 3, 2022
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SERGIO PEREZ WINNER OF 2022 SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX
SERGIO PEREZ WINNER OF 2022 SINGAPORE GRAND PRIX
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