Vettel extends lead over Hamilton with Ferrari double in Hungarian Grand Prix
Ferrari's German driver Sebastian Vettel (C) celebrates his win on July 30, 2017, as 2nd-placed Ferrari's Finnish driver Kimi Raikkonen (L) and 3rd-placed Mercedes' Finnish driver Valtteri Bottas (R) look on. (AFP Photo)


Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel overcame steering difficulties to win a tense Hungarian Grand Prix on Sunday and extend his championship lead over rival Lewis Hamilton to 14 points heading into the summer break.

The four-time Formula One champion made a decent start from pole position, crucially holding off teammate Kimi Raikkonen on the long straight into Turn 1. On a Hungaroring track where overtaking is notoriously hard, there were limited chances to catch him after that.

But Vettel was hampered by a steering issue for more than half the race, allowing the Mercedes cars to close the gap on him and Raikkonen — who in turn was being slowed down by Vettel.

"I'm over the moon. It was a really difficult race. I had my hands full," Vettel said. "The steering started to go sideways and it got worse. I really had to stay focused the whole race."

Vettel held on for his 46th career win, while Raikkonen expertly defended his position for a Ferrari 1-2.

"Grazie! Forza Ferrari!" a jubilant Vettel shouted on the team radio after crossing the line for his fourth win of the season.

This one owed much to Raikkonen's cagey driving, and Vettel in turn owes his Finnish teammate a favor after this. He patted Raikkonen on the arm in appreciation as they prepared to mount the podium.

Raikkonen used all of his experience to fend off Hamilton, who eventually finished fourth behind Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas.

Earlier, Bottas had let Hamilton past in order to attack the Ferraris. Hamilton then sportingly gave him third place back right at the end.

"Thanks to Lewis for keeping his promise," Bottas said, underlining the feeling of mutual respect between the teammates.

Over at Red Bull, there is unlikely to be such harmony.

Red Bull's Max Verstappen was fifth after knocking out of the race his teammate Daniel Ricciardo on the first lap.

Ricciardo's race was over after the contact on Turn 2, bringing the safety car out for a few laps as his car was towed off the track.

Verstappen was the perpetrator — swerving into his teammate when going wide on the exit from a turn.

"Was that who I think it was?" a stunned Ricciardo said over his team radio seconds after being hit.

It was a big blow for Ricciardo, who had secured five podium finishes in the previous six races. As he watched replays of the incident in his team garage, Ricciardo looked stone-faced when he saw confirmation that it was his own teammate who was responsible.

"That was amateur to say the least," Ricciardo told broadcaster Sky Sports afterward.

Verstappen was given a 10-second time penalty for the incident, helping Hamilton's cause.

But Raikkonen's wily driving never gave him a real chance.

Hamilton had written off his chances of victory after qualifying, saying it would be an "easy breeze" for Ferrari on the tight and twisty 4.4-kilometer (2.7-mile) circuit nestled in the hills surrounding Budapest. Only the sinewy street circuit of Monaco is tougher to overtake on.

Even before the race had started, Hamilton sounded extremely anxious as he spoke on the grid about overheating in his rear tires.

In the end, it was Ferrari sweating in the hot Hungarian sun.

Ferrari faced an awkward dilemma as the race wound down with Vettel leading but under instruction to avoid contact with the kerbs because of his steering problems. The result was that Vettel was slowing down Raikkonen just behind him.

"The Mercedes are catching," a worried Raikkonen said over his radio.

Bottas let Hamilton past him, on the condition that he would give the position back if he couldn't get a clean shot at Raikkonen.

With 18 laps left, Hamilton was told he had "five laps" — or about seven minutes — to catch Raikkonen.

"No pressure, then." Hamilton replied.

Here are the driver and constructor standings after the Formula One Hungarian Grand Prix at Hungaroring on Sunday:

Drivers Points:1. Sebastian Vettel (Germany) Ferrari 2022. Lewis Hamilton (Britain) Mercedes 1883. Valtteri Bottas (Finland) Mercedes 1694. Daniel Ricciardo (Australia) Red Bull 1175. Kimi Raikkonen (Finland) Ferrari 1166. Max Verstappen (Netherlands) Red Bull 677. Sergio Perez (Mexico) Force India 568. Esteban Ocon (France) Force India 459. Carlos Sainz Jr (Spain) Toro Rosso 3510. Nico Huelkenberg (Germany) Renault 2611. Felipe Massa (Brazil) Williams 2312. Lance Stroll (Canada) Williams 1813. Romain Grosjean (France) Haas 1814. Kevin Magnussen (Denmark) Haas 1115. Fernando Alonso (Spain) McLaren 1016. Pascal Wehrlein (Germany) Sauber 517. Daniil Kvyat (Russia) Toro Rosso 418. Stoffel Vandoorne (Belgium) McLaren 119. Jolyon Palmer (Britain) Renault 020. Marcus Ericsson (Sweden) Sauber 021. Antonio Giovinazzi (Italy) Sauber 0Constructors Points:1. Mercedes 3572. Ferrari 3183. Red Bull - TAG Heuer 1844. Force India - Mercedes 1015. Williams-Mercedes 416. Toro Rosso - Renault 397. Haas - Ferrari 298. Renault 269. McLaren 1110. Sauber - Ferrari 5