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MELBOURNE, AFP: Valtteri Bottas upstaged his Mercedes world champion teammate Lewis Hamilton yesterday to win the season-opening Australian Formula One Grand Prix in a sizzling performance that he called his “best ever”.
The flying Finn started second on the grid but got a jump on the pole-sitting Briton at the first corner and never looked back, scorching round the Albert Park circuit to take the chequered flag a massive 20.9 seconds ahead of Hamilton.
Red Bull’s precocious Max Verstappen came third to join them on the podium after audaciously overtaking Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel midway through the race.
“How about that! Yes!” said Bottas over the team radio after also taking the new bonus point for the fastest lap.
“I don’t know what just happened. I don’t know what to say. It was definitely my best race ever,” he said after. “I felt so good and the car was so good.
Four-time world champion Vettel had to settle for fourth, trailing in 57.1 seconds behind Bottas. Ferrari partner Charles Leclerc was fifth, with Kevin Magnussen in a Haas sixth.
Bottas, whose last triumph was at the Abu Dhabi season finale in 2017, was overshadowed last year by Hamilton, failing to win a race, hampered by mechanical problems and bad luck but was fast in qualifying and only narrowly edged out of pole position.
“In the beginning, it was all about managing the race and building the gap,” Bottas said. “I knew I could do it, I’ve done it before, it was about being at my best level.” Bottas, now in his third year with Mercedes, knows he must perform with promising Frenchman Esteban Ocon, 22, waiting in the wings as the team’s reserve driver. He delivered in spades yesterday for his fourth Grand Prix win in his 119th race.
“It’s a good weekend for the team,” said Hamilton. “Valtteri drove an incredible race today so he deserved it. We have some work to do, (but) it is more than we could have hoped for as a team.”
Starting on soft tyres on a fine day, Bottas got an electric start and built a gap of 1.153 seconds on Hamilton after the opening lap, with Vettel, Verstappen and Leclerc trailing in their wake.
The gap kept growing, and when Vettel pitted on lap 14 to swap for medium tyres Mercedes called in five-time champion Hamilton soon after.
Bottas stayed out, pumping out fastest laps, and when seven laps later he pitted he emerged more than 10 seconds ahead of his teammate, who was clearly bemused.
“What was the reason for stopping so early?” Hamilton asked over the team radio, to be told it was to cover Vettel’s early stop.
With Bottas having an unsurmountable lead, the battle was on for second, with Verstappen hounding Hamilton but unable to find a way through.
“I had to overtake Sebastian to get onto podium which is not easy here but was happy to pull that move off,” said Verstappen, who was ecstatic at beating the Ferraris.
Mercedes have been in a class of their own all weekend, turning the tables on preseason testing when Ferrari looked like the team to beat.
The Italian team’s performance will be a source of worry, especially as they haven’t won the constructors’ title since 2008 and their last driver to become world champion was Kimi Raikkonen in 2007.
In contrast, Mercedes and Hamilton have been dominant, winning the drivers’ and constructors’ titles five years in a row.
Carlos Sainz Jr. was the first casualty, forced to stop his McLaren with smoke and flames billowing out of his engine on lap 10 while he was running 14th.
It was also a day to forget for local hero Daniel Ricciardo in his first race for Renault after switching from Red Bull. He lost his front wing after running onto the grass before the first corner and had to pit for a new nose. He finally retired on lap 30 of the 58-lap race.
The next Grand Prix is in Bahrain on 31 March.