Currently reading: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton wins Spanish Grand Prix

British racer moves to the head of the Formula 1 points by beating team-mate Nico Rosberg in a tense tactical tussle

Lewis Hamilton stormed to his fourth victory of the season by fending off a late attack from team-mate Nico Rosberg in the Spanish Grand Prix at Circuit de Catalunya on Sunday.

Crucially, the result moved the Briton to the head of the Formula 1 World Championship standings for the first time this season.

The two Mercedes drivers continued their dominant start to the season by locking out the front row during qualifying. For a while on Saturday it looked as if Rosberg – who had finished second to his team-mate in the previous three races – might be able to regain the upper hand, but Hamilton charged to his fourth pole position of the season.

Red Bull Racing's Daniel Ricciardo annexed third on the grid ahead of the impressive Valtteri Bottas in his Williams, but no-one could get within one second of Hamilton's pole lap time.

On Sunday Hamilton converted his pole position into an immediate lead. Rosberg slotted into second place ahead of Bottas, Ricciardo and the Lotus of Romain Grosjean, who seized fifth despite a dramatic tyre-smoking lock-up under braking for the first right-hand corner.

Hamilton established an advantage of about two seconds over Rosberg. At the first round of tyre changes, Hamilton had small cause for concern because his stop was slightly slower than his team-mate, but when Rosberg emerged from his pit visit two laps later, the Briton was still in the lead.

However, they were now on different tyre strategies, Hamilton on the softer-compound rubber and Rosberg on the theoretically slower hard variants. The fact the German went two laps longer on his first set meant Hamilton had to work hard to build a bigger cushion before his team-mate switched back to the softer rubber in the closing stage of the race. 

As he tried to push hard, Hamilton complained over the car-to-pit radio that he was suffering from handling issues on his softer tyre. Rosberg's pace in this sector of the race, meanwhile, showed that using the harder compound was not as much of a disadvantage as had been expected.

Hamilton held a lead of just under four seconds when he peeled off for his second tyre change, which again was a comparatively tardy stop by current standards. As with the first stint, Rosberg remained out longer but complained that his harder rubber was beginning to grain, and he was unable to eat into the leader's advantage.

Rosberg changed on to the softer rubber and emerged back in second place, about four seconds down on Hamilton with 21 laps of the race remaining. Attention now focused on whether the German could use his grip advantage to chase down Hamilton sufficiently to mount an attack.

Rosberg set a succession of fastest laps to half the deficit, but a warning from his pit crew to look after his tyres prompted him to moderate his attack slightly. With eleven laps left to run, Hamilton reported that his left-front tyre was beginning to grain, and over the next few tours Rosberg went back on the offensive, trimming the gap further.

Advertisement

Read our review

Car review

It rode and handled in a way that put nearly everything else in its shade, and it's yours from £20k

Back to top

For lap after lap Hamilton was keep the gap just above one second, meaning Rosberg was unable to take advantage of the drag-reduction system to mount an attack on the long main straight.

On lap 64 of 66, the pressure told and Hamilton made a small mistake, running slightly wide and allowing Rosberg to close even further. The pressure was intense over the final two laps, but Rosberg made a slight brake lock-up on the final lap, which might have cost him the opportunity to attack the leader. He was just 0.6sec adrift at the end after 66 laps of hard racing.

A long way behind the Mercedes drivers, Ricciardo turned in yet another solid performance, having consistently impressed with his pace since his switch from Toro Rosso to the top-line Red Bull Racing team. Having been jumped by Bottas at the start, he leapfrogged the Williams driver during the first round of pit stops.

But the Australian's team-mate, Sebastian Vettel, endured a difficult weekend. He qualified tenth after getting stranded on the circuit with a gearbox problem, and was then hit with a five-place grid penalty because his engineers were forced to change the failed component.

Come the race, the four-time world champion fought hard to climb into the points, and went out of sequence on his pit stop strategy in an effort to find clear air on the circuit and leapfrog his rivals. He staged an aggressive charge up the order, overtaking Bottas for fourth with just four laps remaining and setting the fastest lap of the race.

The Ferraris of Fernando Alonso and Kimi Räikkönen circulated in close proximity for most of the race, having qualified sixth and seventh, with the Finn holding the advantage over his Spanish team-mate for most of the event. However, Alonso was on fresher tyres in the closing laps and quickly drafted up onto the tail of the sister Ferrari, nipping past with just four laps remaining.

Next the Formula 1 circus moves on to the Monaco Grand Prix on May 25.

Provisional results

Spanish Grand Prix, round 5/19, 11 May 2014

Back to top

1 Lewis Hamilton (Mercedes)

2 Nico Rosberg (Mercedes)

3 Daniel Ricciardo (Red Bull)

4 Sebastian Vettel (Red Bull)

5 Valtteri Bottas (Williams)

6 Fernando Alonso (Ferrari)

7 Kimi Räikkönen (Ferrari)

8 Romain Grosjean (Lotus)

9 Sergio Perez (Force India)

10 Nico Hülkenberg (Force India)

Join our WhatsApp community and be the first to read about the latest news and reviews wowing the car world. Our community is the best, easiest and most direct place to tap into the minds of Autocar, and if you join you’ll also be treated to unique WhatsApp content. You can leave at any time after joining - check our full privacy policy here.

Join the debate

Comments
6
Add a comment…
Peter Cavellini 12 May 2014

Retirement.......?

If, just to go off topic here,Jenson would care to note,had the chance to go somewhere else,which team would have him?,to me i think he should go the Webber way, retire from F1 and do Le Mans style racing,moaning and looking dejected all the time doesn't help his case,has he locked himself into a contract just as the team hit a rough patch?,by the way,here's a question......F1 race.....10 laps?,more exciting?,well, yes, because yesterdays race was just that!
Straff 11 May 2014

F1

Emperor's new clothes, guys. Just rubbish
Larvea 26 September 2018

Straff wrote:

Straff wrote:

Emperor's new clothes, guys. Just rubbish

Yeah, I agree... Unfortunately :/

 

 

--

https://gdgtpreview.com/category/pdf-manual-directory/

kendwilcox47 11 May 2014

Jenson.

O Jenson,if only they would give you a good car.
Factczech 11 May 2014

Jenson

@kendwilcox47- He has a good car! When are we British fans going to get behind Hamilton?
He has been the best British driver for years and even on an article about his victory today you are on about Jenson without even acknowledging the fact that Lewis won?

Too many excuses are being made for and by Jenson, he has even started to blame Magnussen, too.

Paulius 11 May 2014

Agreed, Jenson seems like a

Agreed, Jenson seems like a great guy, but I've always seen him as a somewhat above average driver, capable with a great car (that explains his title), but nowhere near the likes of Alonso or Hamilton. At the moment, Hamilton has the best car for sure, but so does Rosberg and Hamilton's destroying him at every turn, today, even if Rosberg had five more laps he wouldn't have gone through, remember Bahrein.