I loved every minute, says Hamilton after tough opening win

Race winner Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrates on the podium after the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on March 28, 2021
Race winner Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrates on the podium after the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on March 28, 2021
Image: Lars Baron/Getty Images

Lewis Hamilton fended off young challenger Max Verstappen in one of the toughest battles of his Formula One career in Bahrain on Sunday and said he had loved every minute of it.

Mercedes' seven times world champion took the chequered flag in the season-opener with less than a second separating him from his Red Bull rival after soaking up intense pressure over the closing laps in a long final stint on hard tyres.

Verstappen had reeled in Hamilton steadily to seize the lead with four laps to go after going behind on strategy but in doing so ran wide, outside the track limits, and had to hand back the advantage. There was to be no second chance.

The Dutch 23-year-old had been fastest in pre-season testing, topped all three practice sessions, secured pole position and was the hot race favourite.

"I think ultimately if he hadn’t made the mistake he probably would have won the race, but that’s what makes and loses you wins," said Hamilton, who took his career tally to a record-extending 96.

Formula One has for years been waiting for a proper battle between the sport's most successful driver and the man tipped to be his successor and Sunday delivered round one in a record 23-race season.

"I loved every minute of it. Every minute of the weekend I’ve loved," said Hamilton.

"These guys (Red Bull) have done a better job so far and so for us to come away with this result, given that we weren’t the fastest this weekend, is a real result."

Verstappen had led from the start but Mercedes pitted Hamilton early to try and get a jump on the Red Bull, with the lead switching between the two on differing tyre strategies.

"Stopping early, we knew it was going to be difficult but we had to cover Max. They've had amazing performance all weekend so it was going to take something pretty special," said the Briton "Max was all over me right at the end."

"The pressure was immense.

"He’s a fantastic driver and they have the quicker car so to keep him behind, on fresh tyres also, was one of the hardest (challenges) that I’ve had for a while."

Meanwhile, Russian rookie Nikita Mazepin's Formula One race debut lasted just three corners before he crashed his Haas.

Mazepin veered off into the barriers seconds after the start, with the new Aston Martin safety car deployed for the first time.

The 22-year-old had qualified last but started 18th after Aston Martin's Sebastian Vettel collected a five place grid penalty for failing to respect warning flags in Saturday's qualifying and dropped to the rear.

Red Bull's new Mexican signing Sergio Perez started from the pit lane after his car stopped on the formation lap, forcing the others to go around one more time and reducing the race distance by one lap.

- Reuters

 

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