Sebastian Vettel won a tense Hungarian GP on Sunday in a Ferrari one-two that stretched his championship lead to 14 points after Mercedes rival Lewis Hamilton sportingly surrendered third place to his teammate.
The German, savouring his fourth win of the season and 46th of his F-1 career, took the chequered flag 0.9 seconds ahead of teammate Kimi Raikkonen.
The Finn had looked faster than Vettel for most of the afternoon.
“I’m over the moon, that was a really difficult race,” said the winner, who had to wrestle with a skewed steering wheel on a sweltering afternoon at the Hungaroring and had no room for error.
Hamilton finished fourth after slowing down on the last lap and allowing Finnish teammate Valtteri Bottas to go past, despite the loss of vital points to the Briton’s championship challenge.
Bottas had let Hamilton through on the 45th of the 70 laps, on the assurance that his teammate would hand back the place if he could not overtake the Ferraris, and the triple champion duly kept his word.
“Really thanks to Lewis for keeping the promise in the end and letting me by,” said Bottas. “I don’t think every teammate would have swapped back.”
Hamilton, whose radio was malfunctioning for some of the race and would have had more of a chance had he got past Bottas earlier, said he had done what he had to do.
“It’s tough in the championship but I’m a man of my word,” he said. “I did say that if I can’t overtake them I would let him back through.”
On a circuit where overtaking is notoriously hard, the top five all finished in their starting order with Max Verstappen fifth for Red Bull.
McLaren’s best finish
Fernando Alonso, who celebrated his 36th birthday on Saturday, gave struggling McLaren its best finish of the season so far by taking sixth place and also setting the fastest lap of the race.
Belgian teammate Stoffel Vandoorne was 10th in a double points finish for the former champion, which moved off the bottom of the table and ahead of Sauber.
The last Ferrari driver to win from pole position in Hungary was Vettel’s compatriot Michael Schumacher, who was dominant in 2004 and went on to win his seventh and last championship that season.
Hungary was the last race before the August break, with nine of the 21 rounds remaining.