MAX MAKES HISTORY, WINNER IN MEXICO CITY GRAND PRIX - FORMULA 1

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Tuesday, November 1, 2022

MAX MAKES HISTORY, WINNER IN MEXICO CITY GRAND PRIX

Max Verstappen cruised to a record-breaking Mexico City Grand Prix win ahead of Lewis Hamilton and team-mate Sergio Pérez, with the Dutch driver delivering a flawless drive to the flag from pole during which he only ceded the lead during his pit stop.

The 2022 champion’s Mexico win is his 14th of the campaign, handing him a new record for most wins in a single season ahead of fellow greats Michael Schumacher and Sebastian Vettel who won 13 in 2004 and 2013 respectively.

At the race start, Verstappen got away well on soft compound tyres to take the lead ahead of George Russell and Hamilton who both started on medium tyres.

As the Mercedes pair battled for position in the first corners, Russell went wide in Turn 3. That gave Pérez the chance to attack Russell and passed the Mercedes AMG driver in Turn 3 to take third place.

At the front, Verstappen settled into the first stint. He was shadowed throughout by Hamilton, however, and the pit stop window opened for the soft tyre starters the Mercedes AMG driver was just 2.3s behind the Red Bull driver.

Pérez was the first of the front runners to pit on lap 24, and he took on medium tyres. There was a problem fitting the rear left, however, and after 5.0s stationary he got away and rejoined behind Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc in P6.
Verstappen, complaining that his front-left tyre was dead, pitted at the end of lap 25 and after a 2.5s stop to switch to medium tyres he rejoined ahead of Sainz Jr. in third and began to hunt down Hamilton and Russell who now held the top two positions on their starting medium tyres.

Hamilton made his first stop on lap 29 switching to white tyres as he targeted a run to the chequered flag, and he dropped to third behind Verstappen. Pérez then inherited fourth place when Carlos Sainz Jr. pitted at the end of the next lap and Mercedes AMG brought Russell in for his sole stop at the end of lap 34.

After switching to white tyres Russell rejoined in fourth place, seven seconds behind Pérez. The final stint then became a tactical battle, with the Red Bull pair looking to nurse their medium tyres to the flag, while Mercedes AMG banked on the durability of the hard tyres to give them a late advantage.

The advantage didn’t materialise, however, and Verstappen and Pérez managed the pace well to the flag, with Verstappen building a 12-second gap to Hamilton, while Pérez found himself four seconds clear of Russell.

That gap stretched further when Fernando Alonso steered off track with an engine issue on lap 66 and following a brief VSC period Verstappen stretched to 14 seconds clear. And after 71 laps he crossed the line with 15.1 seconds in hand to claim his record-breaking 14th win.

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