Verstappen wins chaotic and farcical Australian Grand Prix

It was mayhem in Melbourne as Max Verstappen survived a wacky races shoot-out to win the Australian Grand Prix that ended under a safety car two-and-a-half hours after it had started.

What was almost the last, crazy twist came when Kevin Magnussen hit the wall and sent his Haas’ right rear tyre into the air, spraying debris everywhere, causing a red-flag for a second time with just three laps remaining.

There was a 15-minute delay as wheel-rim debris was cleared away. The restart was extraordinary. Four cars crashed out, including a big coming together of the Alpines of Pierre Gasly and Esteban Ocon, two more collided but made it back to the pits. Debris was strewn everywhere again. 

With just a couple of corners completed, the red flag was waved once more for a third, and it would eventually prove, final time. Off they all went to the pits.

Was the race over, everyone wondered? 57 of the 58 laps had been completed and a formation lap back to the grid would click it over to 58. Restarting the race for a fourth time would, therefore, mean an impossible 59 laps, one more than the laws permitted. Delay and confusion ensued. The crowd performed the Mexican wave as the FIA scratched their heads and thumbed their rulebook.

It was madness.

After a long delay: a decision. The cars were merely parade behind the safety car in the order they had restarted earlier, not where they had finished when the crash-ridden antics were paused and that third red flag was waved.

This would allow the chequered flag to be waved, the 58th lap having been honoured.

The ruling to revert to their previous order helped Fernando Alonso, of Aston Martin, because he had just collided with Ferrari’s Carlos Sainz, who was handed a five-second penalty for the coming together, and fallen back. So, Alonso maintained third place — with Lewis Hamilton second — when the embarrassing final, sedate, safety-car parade lap was performed.

Just 12 cars got to the end. Sainz was the last of them, almost crying at his penalty. Before the late drama unfolded, Verstappen had been the beneficiary of a Red Bull operating like a car from another planet. 

Although passed at the start by both Hamilton and the luckless George Russell, who suffered a blown engine, the Dutchman swept to the front on lap 12 by leaving Hamilton for dead, and that looked as if it would be that — his first win in Melbourne and his second in three races this season — until the unexpected late turn.

Having zoomed past Hamilton, Verstappen opened up a 2.5-second advantage in a single lap such was his unassailable dominance, before slowing to a canter and controlling events almost until the end. Hamilton was holding off Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso, who finished third.

Hamilton’s podium was his — and Mercedes’ — first of 2023. — Daily Mail

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