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Sergio Perez described his final laps as the best of his career to claim a podium finish at the Azerbaijan GP on Sunday.

The Mexican would overcome being biffed in the rear into Turn 2 at the start and a five-second penalty for overtaking before the first Safety Car line at the restart before taking advantage of Sebastian Vettel struggling with a flat-spotted tyre to pass into Turn 1 with three laps to go.

From then it was about holding on to the end and the Force India driver would do so to take his second third-place finish in Baku in three years.

“I think today I did the best laps of my whole career,” he said. “The last two laps with Sebastian Vettel were so difficult.

“I was on the Supersoft tyres and had to keep a strong rhythm behind [Kimi] Raikkonen to make sure Sebastian couldn’t get close enough.

“In the end we did it. I’m speechless.”

The drama continued after the race with Perez investigated for two possible illegal uses of DRS, however, the stewards did not decide to punish.

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His wild celebrations were in contrast to the emotions across the garage though as Esteban Ocon was taken out by Raikkonen on the first lap, having gotten ahead of the Ferrari at Turn 2.

"I was ahead of him on the straight. I was completely ahead, he was behind,” the angry Frenchman told Canal+.

“I don’t know what he did, he released the brakes and hit me.

“It’s clearly a missed opportunity after a great start to the weekend. I think [Sergio] Perez is going to score a lot of points, it’s good for the team."

The stewards deemed their collision at Turn 3 a racing incident, with many feeling Ocon should have left the Finn more space on the inside.

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Daniel Ricciardo admits he was fortunate just to complete qualifying in one piece at the Azerbaijan GP on Saturday, after a brief hit against the wall.

The Australian went into qualifying as one of the potential pole favourites after setting the best time in practice, however, when Mercedes and Ferrari turned their engines up, his Red Bull team was left trailing once again on the 2.2km main straight.

That meant it was up to the drivers to optimise their time in the corners but for Ricciardo, there was almost a repeat of history.

“Q3 on the first run we brushed the wall and lost some time,” he revealed. 

“When I turned in I thought it was going to be more than a kiss. It was at Turn 15, where I crashed two years ago.

"The car turned enough but I still hit it. I knew I went in very fast, like too fast but it’s fine.”

The race winner two weeks ago in China would return to the pits, fearing damage to his tyre and would benefit from a slipstream behind Kimi Raikkonen on his final effort to claim fourth, just ahead of teammate Max Verstappen.

“Second row is pretty good for us on Saturday. In the end it’s not bad," Ricciardo claimed.

"It was not the easiest session, Q2 was very close with the supersofts. We had a couple of yellow flags and it was difficult, but we just made it through."

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The 28-year-old was also content with the gap to the front, knowing his Red Bull will be stronger in the race.

“I think Seb was about four tenths or something in front, so I think we can live with that for now," he said.

"I think we’ll be closer again when we get to Barcelona and Monaco, but it’s not too bad around this circuit and it gives a good chance to be right there tomorrow.”

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Lewis Hamilton admitted his victory at the Azerbaijan GP on Sunday was a reminder that he should never give up during a race.

The Briton's hopes looked lost as Sebastian Vettel pulled out a lead early on and the world champion then fell further back as a mistake at Turn 1 necessitated an earlier stop for tyres.

But when the Ferrari driver did the same error trying to pass Valtteri Bottas at the second Safety Car restart and the Finn then suffered a tyre failure after hitting debris with three laps to go, the stars aligned for Hamilton to take his first win of the season.

“I never give up and I think today was a real… It has been a while since I’ve been reminded of that lesson my Dad taught me years and years ago," he told Sky Sports post-race.

"I kept going, I kept pushing, kept pushing and then things turned out the way they did and that was coming to the realisation of just how true still that mindset needs to be and is."

Despite the win, which also sees him return to the top of the championship standings by four points, the Mercedes driver admits it was one he probably didn't deserve.

"The Ferraris were faster than us all weekend and Valtteri did an exceptional job and really, after that Safety Car, deserved to win the race. He had done everything he needed to," he claimed.

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Nevertheless, the 33-year-old conceded it was just another example of the crazy twist and turns the 2018 season has already taken just four races in.

"I mean, I’m coming out of the last corner and I’m just in disbelief that the position I was in was just very very emotional for me," Hamilton explained.

"Being that in previous years here I’ve been in the lead, done everything I’ve needed to do and something went against me and then it just… I said this morning I think it was or yesterday, maybe third time lucky and it really really was that scenario today.

"This happens to be a track where luck… You kind of need it, you know, because there are a lot of Safety Cars and a lot of incidents that go on.

"So on one side, I’m really proud that I just kept on going, the guys did an exceptional job with the pit stops and strategy so yeah, a big thank you to them."  

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Kimi Raikkonen made his frustration pretty clear after an error at the final corner ruined what was looking like a near-certain pole position lap for the Azerbaijan GP.

The Finn was two-tenths up on his teammate Sebastian Vettel's initial best time through the first two sectors, but would have a big slide off the exit kerb of Turn 16 which cost him a huge amount of time.

It rounded off a pretty difficult session for Raikkonen too after he was forced to switch to the Ultrasoft tyre in Q2 to ensure participation in Q3 after errors on both his attempted laps on the Supersoft compound.

Though blustery winds were causing problems at different parts of the track, including the final real turn, the 2007 champion admits that was not a factor in what happened.

“No, obviously it was a f***-up,” he said. “A mistake. It cost us quite a few places so not the greatest end.

“I don’t know, I took it easier even on the entry because obviously it’s been a bit trickier with the wind all day.

"It just got sideways, I got it back but I knew already it was all gone because it’s flat out and a long straight [to complete the lap].”

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The result is the Ferrari driver will start the race from sixth on the grid and will be a less favourable strategy than those in front, however, it also marked another occasion where Raikkonen had been faster than Vettel until it really mattered.

“Right now I’m disappointed with what happened today,” he said when asked by Motorsport.com about the inability to convert his strong practice pace into a pole position

“I’ve been a few times disappointed. This is a different story and today, what can you do? I can only look in the mirror. It’s painful.”

His moment also benefitted Daniel Ricciardo, as the Australian used his slipstream along the main straight to beat Red Bull teammate Max Verstappen into fourth.

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Sebastian Vettel wasn't letting any disappointment set in despite seeing another win ripped away at the Azerbaijan GP on Sunday.

The four-time world champion was serenely controlling the race in Baku after producing the perfect restart following an opening lap Safety Car and has built up a three-second gap by the end of the first green flag lap.

However, a decision to pit on Lap 30 would backfire as Valtteri Bottas, who opted to stay out for as long as possible, benefited from the two Red Bulls colliding and needing a second Safety Car period which he would use to pit for Ultrasoft tyres.

Vettel would do the same, but his attempted overtake on the Mercedes driver would go wrong as he ran wide at Turn 1 before later being passed by Sergio Perez to drop off the podium.

“I’m happy I tried but not happy it didn’t work,” the German said on trying to pass Bottas at the restart.

“I don’t think it was overly optimistic to jump on the inside but I was a bit trapped as I couldn’t see where I was in relation to Turn 1.

"I locked up but I wasn’t overly late."

It marked the second successive race that strategy and a Safety Car combined to cost Vettel a good result and with Lewis Hamilton taking victory after Bottas retired with a tyre failure, it also cost him the championship lead.

The Ferrari driver wasn't flustered though, adding: "I think it was a strong race and that’s how it goes sometimes.”

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Front row starters Sebastian Vettel and Lewis Hamilton are both gearing up for a rematch of their famous battle from last year's race in Baku on Sunday.

It was the Ferrari driver that just had the advantage in qualifying, beating the current world champion by less than two-tenths of a second to claim a third pole of the season.

However, having struggled throughout the weekend to optimise the tyres, the Mercedes man was satisfied with his performance.

“That was close. We did the best job we could. It was very very close,” Hamilton said in the paddock later.

“I lost a bit in the last sector and Sebastian did a great job, but I'm really happy with what the team did to get us from where we were yesterday to today.

"We are in the mix. I will try to give Sebastian a hard time tomorrow."

And that is exactly what the four-time world champion is expecting as he looked ahead to the race.

"It will be an intense race. Anything can happen here and Safety Cars are likely," Vettel pointed out.

"The good point is that our car was really good this afternoon so it should be in a good place tomorrow.

"Yesterday I struggled a bit with confidence and trust in the car and rhythm but today, when it clicks, it just keeps coming."

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There was no name calling or finger pointing between the two Red Bull drivers as they understood the gravity of their mistake by colliding during the Azerbaijan GP.

Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo had been fighting tooth and nail throughout Sunday's race in Baku with the Dutchman getting ahead early on but being unable to pull away from his teammate.

That meant the two men were often side-by-side on the approach to Turn 1 with the Dutchman strongly rebuffing his Australian partner, sometimes more by luck than judgement.

Eventually, though it would all end in tears as Verstappen's robust defence left Ricciardo nowhere to go but straight into the back of the other Red Bull taking both cars out of the race.

"It's really disappointing for the team. We lost a lot of points today, unnecessarily," the 20-year-old told Sky Sports later.

"I don't think we need to speak about whose fault because at the end of the day we are racing for a team. We are representing a lot of people and when this happens it is just not good for both of us."

Ricciardo added: “It is not a nice situation. I think we both feel pretty bad that it ended like that. For the team it is pretty crappy."

Despite the near-misses on several occasions prior to their final coming together, there was also no hard feelings that limits had been crossed.

“Thankfully, we are allowed to race especially myself and Max, we love to race as we’ve showed," Daniel said.

“That’s cool and we did get close a few times in the race, touching and that. Sometimes we were on the limit and it is unfortunate that it ended like it did."

"It was hard racing but fair, we gave each other space," Max continued. "We had this little brush with the wheels but I think in racing that can happen.

"What happened after that is not good."

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Though Verstappen was sure there would be no lasting effects from the incident, his teammate was a little less enthusiastic about being together.

“We are not into each other right now, it’s more about saying sorry to the team, trying to apologise for the best way we can," Ricciardo explained.

‘We don’t want to be in that situation.”

After the race, both drivers were reprimanded for the incident by the stewards with a feeling that both had contributed in some way to causing the collision.

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Sebastian Vettel made it three poles in a row this season after setting a benchmark that would not be beaten in qualifying for the Azerbaijan GP.

The Ferrari driver posted a 1m41.498s on his first flying lap in Q3 and it would go unbeaten, although only thanks to teammate Kimi Raikkonen making a big mistake at Turn 16 on his final attempt having been two-tenths up in the first two sectors.

Mercedes couldn't quite find the extra speed to challenge Vettel with Lewis Hamilton less than two-tenths behind in second and Valtteri Bottas third, though both drivers were satisfied with their performance.

Daniel Ricciardo benefitted from a small slipstream on the main straight behind Raikkonen after his mistake at the final corner as he just pipped Max Verstappen into fourth on his final lap but Red Bull were again left to rue their lack of power over a single lap.

Raikkonen was very disappointed to only claim sixth after looking on course to put two near-misses at pole behind him in Bahrain and China,  later blaming his "f***-up".

The Finn also had quite a messy Q2 as errors on both attempted flying laps on the Supersoft tyre for him to run again on the Ultrasoft and miss out on starting on a more durable tyre.

Ricciardo was somewhat lucky too as his best time on the red-striped tyre was only enough to make the top 10 by a tenth of a second, causing a brief scare no doubt on the Red Bull pitwall.

In the midfield, it was 2017 all over again with Force India inserting themselves as the fourth best team in seventh and eighth, just ahead of the two Renaults.

Esteban Ocon would just have the edge over teammate Sergio Perez and the memories of Baku last year where the pair collided could well be lingering at the start of the race.

Meanwhile, Carlos Sainz will start ninth as Nico Hulkenberg takes a five-place grid drop for changing his gearbox after a problem in final practice.

That promotes Lance Stroll upto 10th and Sergey Sirotkin to 11th on what was the best day of the season so far for Williams by some margin.

McLaren's single lap pace woes continued with Fernando Alonso starting 12th but Charles Leclerc enjoyed his best qualifying so far in F1 for Sauber and moves up to 13th just ahead of the demoted Hulkenberg.

Haas also had problems with Kevin Magnussen only 15th and Romain Grosjean having to retire from Q1 after a gearbox issue trying to select reverse after venturing down an escape road.

There was near-disaster at Toro Rosso as Pierre Gasly had to take severe avoiding action at almost 180mph on the approach to Turn 15 to avoid his teammate Brendon Hartley, who was recovering back to the pits with a puncture.

Neither junior Red Bull driver would make it out of the first qualifying segment.

Full results can be seen below:

(Hulkenberg +5 places for gearbox penalty)

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Lewis Hamilton benefitted from a dramatic turn of events late on to take his first victory of the 2018 Formula 1 season at the Azerbaijan GP.

The Briton had looked to have lost his chance of victory when, running second, he locked his brakes into Turn 1 trying to keep pace with long-time leader Sebastian Vettel and was forced to pit earlier than most for new tyres.

However, a collision between the two Red Bulls brought out a Safety Car which not only closed up the field but allowed Valtteri Bottas on a longer strategy to pit and keep the lead from the Ferrari driver with a final four-lap dash to the finish.

Vettel would try to attack the Mercedes in front immediately at the restart but would lock his brakes diving down the inside into Turn 1, dropping the German to fourth.

But disaster would strike for Bottas at the end of the lap after he ran over debris on the main straight causing a tyre failure which took the Finn out of the race.

That left the pathway clear for the current world champion to come home and take his first win since Austin last year, his longest streak without a victory in the hybrid era.

Kimi Raikkonen would be involved in an incident with Esteban Ocon on a hectic first lap, with the two drivers colliding at Turn 3. The 'Iceman' would hobble back to the pits with a puncture, switching to the Soft compound tyre which he would run for the rest of the race to take second.

Sergio Perez was also buffeted on the opening lap, but he too would benefit from the Red Bull controversy and would then pass a weakened Vettel in the closing stages to finish third and take his second podium in Baku.

The Ferrari driver would finish fourth ahead of Carlos Sainz, who was involved in an excellent battle with both Red Bulls early on, passing them on the Ultrasoft tyre. His strategy of pitting early would hamper his race a little but the late drama would enable another strong result for the Spaniard.

The Driver of the Day was Charles Leclerc for Sauber in sixth as the F2 champion produced a brilliant performance to take his first points in F1.

The most remarkable result perhaps belonged to Fernando Alonso in seventh as the McLaren driver suffered two punctures after colliding with Sergey Sirotkin on the opening lap.

He would manage to get back to the pits and fought through floor and other damage to continue his seven-race points streak, dating back to Mexico last year.

Lance Stroll scored Williams' first points of the year in eighth with Stoffel Vandoorne ninth in the second McLaren. Brendon Hartley would also manage his first F1 point in 10th for Toro Rosso.

The big controversy though was the collision between the two Red Bull drivers, something that had looked on the cards throughout the race in Azerbaijan.

Max Verstappen produced a bold move into Turn 2 at the first Safety Car restart to move ahead of his teammate Daniel Ricciardo, but from that point, it was the Australian who appeared faster.

The two Renaults would complex the picture early on as their pace on the Ultrasoft tyre was better compared to the Bulls on Supersoft.

Sainz would benefit from Verstappen's initial move to jump Ricciardo and the Spaniard would then use battery issues on the Dutchman's car to drive past using DRS.

Nico Hulkenberg would do the same but soon after would see his race end in the barriers at Turn 4.

The battle resumed when Sainz pitted with Ricciardo able to slipstream past on the main straight but each time Verstappen would refuse to yield at Turn 1, rubbing wheels on one occasion and barging past at Turn 2 on another.

Daniel had finally looked to have done the deal when he passed Max into Turn 1 on Lap 31 but by pitting one lap sooner than allowed the 20-year-old to stay out and emerge ahead when he changed tyres.

Then came the incident as Ricciardo closed in with DRS and looked to dummy his teammate by switching to the inside at the last moment but Verstappen would come back across leaving the Chinese GP winner with nowhere to go but straight into the back of his Red Bull.

The stewards later reprimanded both drivers for the incident.

The other non-finisher was Romain Grosjean as the Frenchman lost control of his Haas trying to warm up his tyres behind the Safety Car and slammed into the wall in an embarrassing moment.

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Sebastian Vettel put a subdued Friday behind him and leapt to the top of the timings in the final practice session ahead of qualifying at the Azerbaijan GP.

The German would post a 1m43.091s in his Ferrari, a tenth of a second slower than the fastest time of the weekend so far, but enough to be four-tenths clear of both Mercedes, teammate Kimi Raikkonen and Max Verstappen all of whom were covered by just 0.117s.

Red Bull's pace remains somewhat of an unknown, however, after not opting to complete any true low-fuel runs until the end, but then would be compromised to just a single warm-up lap as a crash for Sergey Sirotkin with 10 minutes to go caused a seven-minute red flag period.

Friday pacesetter Daniel Ricciardo would not complete a representative time as a result, ending the session down in 12th, nevertheless, a close battle between the top three teams does appear on the cards.

Force India continue to use their traditional strategy of optimising top speed to good effect with Sergio Perez taking sixth with Esteban Ocon also inside the top 10 in ninth.

Kevin Magnussen also looks a strong contender for Q3 in seventh, though his Haas teammate Romain Grosjean was struggling massively under braking and with the rear of his car, in a situation eerily similar to last year, with the Frenchman down in 15th.

Lance Stroll was eighth for Williams with Sirotkin doing enough for tenth before crashing hard into the wall at Turn 3, though it's unlikely those positions will be maintained when everyone goes maximum attack in qualifying.

Some teams are faltering though, with Fernando Alonso 11th and Stoffel Vandoorne 18th as McLaren's weakness over a single lap continues. Renault too are way down the order with Carlos Sainz and Nico Hulkenberg 16th and 17th after focusing on the Supersoft tyre.

Though Pierre Gasly and Charles Leclerc could well be the names to watch punching above their weight in qualifying, as the former GP2/F2 champions claimed 13th and 14th.

Full classifications can be seen below:

 

         

 

 

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