Chinese GP Sprint: Max Verstappen beats Lewis Hamilton to win as Fernando Alonso retires from dramatic contest

19 April 2024, 12:58 | Updated: 20 April 2024, 11:22

Max Verstappen chased down and passed Lewis Hamilton to claim victory in the opening Sprint of the 2024 Formula 1 season at the Chinese Grand Prix.

Hamilton passed pole-sitter Lando Norris to take the lead at the first corner but was powerless to resist the pace of Verstappen, who came from fourth on the grid to ease into the lead before the halfway stage of the 19-lap contest, and then comfortably pulled clear.

Verstappen's Red Bull team-mate Sergio Perez took third after coming out on top of a dramatic four-car battle, which saw Fernando Alonso retire after making contact with the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz.

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While Sainz was able to finish, the Spaniard suffered damage dropped down to fifth after being overtaken by team-mate Charles Leclerc in the closing stages.

Alonso was adjudged by the stewards to have caused the collision and received a 10-second penalty after the race, which had no impact given he failed to finish.

Having run off track when trying to hold off Hamilton on the opening lap, Norris was left to settle for sixth ahead of McLaren team-mate Oscar Piastri.

Hamilton's Mercedes team-mate George Russell, the only driver to use soft rather than medium tyres, drove a strong race to come from 11th on the grid to take the final point in eighth.

The victory extends Verstappen's world championship lead to 15 points over Perez as the Dutchman seeks a fourth consecutive drivers' title. Red Bull's advantage over Ferrari at the top of the constructors' standings grows to 26 points.

While Verstappen's searing pace establishes him as the clear favourite for Sunday's full-distance race, the fact that teams are able to change their car set-ups under 2024's new Sprint format left room for the likes of Perez and the Ferraris to reduce their pace deficit ahead of qualifying.

How Verstappen denied Hamilton unlikely win

After a wet Sprint Qualifying session on Friday mixed up the grid, the question was whether the top three of Norris, Hamilton and Alonso could deny Verstappen, who had appeared to have the fastest car in dry conditions.

The pre-race consensus was that only Norris' McLaren might have the pace to put up serious resistance, but the Brit's hopes of a maiden F1 victory were over almost immediately.

Having spun his wheels when pulling away on the formation lap, Norris once more made an imperfect start when the contest began for real, as Hamilton got alongside him on the inside line approaching Turn 1.

From that point, Hamilton was always going to come out on top at the long first corner, but Norris made a poor decision in refusing to accept that reality and attempted to hang on around the outside before running out of grip and space as he ran wide and dropped to seventh.

It seemed inevitable Verstappen would be able to overhaul Hamilton and Alonso, but early complaints over his battery and a failure to close in on the Aston Martin created hope of an upset, with Sainz applying pressure on the Red Bull.

However, Verstappen would eventually become more comfortable with his set-up and suddenly closed up to Alonso before easing past on the back straight on lap seven.

Hamilton had a two-second lead over the Red Bull at that point, but lost most of his advantage when running wide at the end of lap eight, leaving him as a sitting duck for Verstappen to pass on the following lap at Turn 14.

"The first few laps were quite hectic," Verstappen said. "They were pushing quite hard up front and I had Carlos behind with new tyres, so it was very difficult to keep him behind initially.

"Once everyone settled in a bit, we became stronger and I felt a bit more comfortable with the balance of the car and could look after the tyres, so pleased with that."

Hamilton's decision not to put up much of a fight was quickly vindicated, as Verstappen pulled away at more than a second per lap to eventually win by more than 13 seconds.

"That's the best result I've had in a long time," Hamilton said as he received a huge ovation from the crowd with F1 returning to China for the first time since 2019.

"I'm super, super happy and grateful. Of course we couldn't fight the Red Bulls but this is a huge step and huge improvement."

Alonso given penalty after chaotic battle for third

While Alonso was unable to provide Hamilton with a buffer to Verstappen, the Aston Martin driver did do his former team-mate a favour by holding up the Ferraris and Perez for much of the remainder.

A DRS train formed behind Alonso, whose resistance was finally ended by Carlos Sainz on lap 17, but not without a fight.

Sainz cut back inside of Alonso at the Turn 6 hairpin and seemed to have got the pass done before the latter made a somewhat reckless dive back up the inside a few corners later.

Contact between the pair would give Alonso race-ending damage, but Sainz was forced wide and off track on the outside of Turn 10, which allowed Perez to swoop into third.

After summoning both drivers, the stewards found Alonso guilty of causing the collision and gave him a 10-second penalty, along with three penalty points on his licence.

The 42-year-old now has six of the 12 penalty points a driver is allowed to incur over a 12-month period, having received three at last month's Australian Grand Prix following an incident with Russell.

Sainz was then under pressure from Leclerc and was guilty of some overzealous defence of his own, bumping and pushing his Ferrari team-mate off track at the final hairpin.

Leclerc would complete the pass moments later but complained that his team-mate had "crossed the line" with his defence, with Sainz offering a post-race apology.

After reviewing the incident between the Ferraris, the stewards decided no further investigation was necessary.

Sky Sports F1's live Chinese GP schedule

Saturday April 20
7am: Chinese GP Qualifying build-up*
8am: Chinese GP Qualifying*
10am: Ted's Qualifying Notebook*

Sunday April 21
7am: Grand Prix Sunday: Chinese GP build-up*
8am: The CHINESE GRAND PRIX*
10am: Chequered Flag: Chinese GP reaction*
11am: Ted's Notebook*

*also live on Sky Sports Main Event

You can watch every session of the Chinese Grand Prix live on Sky Sports F1 and steam every F1 race and more with a NOW Sports Month Membership - No contract, cancel anytime

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