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Brazilian F1 Grand Prix: Vettel wins, Hamilton roars back to fourth

Sebastian Vettel of Germany and Ferrari celebrates celebrates his win at the Brazilian Grand Prix.

Sebastian Vettel of Germany and Ferrari celebrates celebrates his win at the Brazilian Grand Prix. Photo: Getty

Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel took the chequered at the Brazilian Grand Prix for his first win since July as Daniel Ricciardo finished sixth for Red Bull after fighting back from a first lap collision and spin.

Newly crowned four-time world champion Lewis Hamilton produced the drive of the day from last to fourth for champions Mercedes.

Hamilton, who clinched the title in Mexico two weeks ago, started from the pitlane after changes to his car following a crash in qualifying but led the race before the halfway stage as others pitted.

Hamilton was already up to ninth after 10 laps, with the safety car deployed after opening lap collisions.

“It was fun. It was reminiscent of my karting days when I’d start at the back, particularly in my first year or two,” said Hamilton, voted driver of the day by fans in an online poll.

“I messed up yesterday and put myself in the worst position,” he added.

“Waking up this morning, my goal was really kind of just to redeem myself…. I was trying to get back to third but just ran out of tyres at the end.”

Valtteri Bottas, who had lined up on pole position for Mercedes, saw his hopes of overhauling Vettel for the runner-up position in the championship effectively disappear when he finished second.

F1 Grand Prix of Brazil - Lewis Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain looks to overtake Felipe Massa of Brazil at the Grand Prix on Sunday. Photo: Getty

The Finn lost the lead at the start to the German, who had the race under control from the first corner onwards on a sunny Sunday afternoon at Interlagos.

Vettel is now 22 points clear of Bottas with only the Abu Dhabi season-ender remaining. It was his fifth win of the season, the 47th of his career, and Ferrari’s first since Hungary at the end of July.

Finland’s Kimi Raikkonen held off Hamilton to take third place for Ferrari, the 2007 world champion’s third podium finish in a row.

Dutch 20-year-old Max Verstappen was fifth for Red Bull, and set the fastest lap.

Retiring Brazilian Felipe Massa said farewell to his home crowd with seventh place for Williams, the former Ferrari driver then ushered on to the podium to be interviewed in front of the crowd by retired compatriot Rubens Barrichello.

Massa’s former Ferrari teammate Fernando Alonso, who applauded the 36-year-old after they parked, was eighth for McLaren.

Force India’s Sergio Perez was ninth and Germany’s Nico Hulkenberg, lapped by the leader, took the final point for Renault.

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