Verstappen closes season with 15th win as Leclerc clinches second in standings

  • Leclerc secures runner-up spot in drivers’ championship
  • Hamilton ends season without a win after retiring late in race

After the bang with which Formula One ended last season in Abu Dhabi it was perhaps fitting that this year a somewhat anticlimactic season bowed out with a whimper at the Yas Marina circuit.

Max Verstappen took the season finale win with the same dominant, inch‑perfect execution that long since secured his second championship but it was another victory that only emphasised how much the sport has missed a genuine fight at the front of the grid.

Lewis Hamilton was at the heart of it with Verstappen last year, losing out in that controversial decider at Abu Dhabi. The crushing disappointment has doubtless not been alleviated by an arduous season with an underperforming Mercedes. He cannot wait to see the back of the car that delivered a final ignominy at Yas Marina, when he was forced to retire with a hydraulic problem three laps from the end.

All too much then for the Mercedes team principal, Toto Wolff, who announced his intention to make one final use of the cars. To have them lurk at the team’s factory and engine plant, like Banquo’s ghost, “pour encourager les autres”.

Wolff said: “We are going to put these cars in the receptions in Brackley and Brixworth to remind us every single day how difficult it can be. This is a character‑building season. It’s raw and it’s bad and it’s OK to feel like this but next year we are back.”

For Hamilton there has been precious little to take away from the year, save his appreciation of how hard his team have worked to drag their car into a competitive state such that it was, in teammate George Russell’s hands, finally able to win a race at the last round in Brazil.

There was no such small comfort for Hamilton in Abu Dhabi. As the season ends so, too, does his remarkable record of being the only driver to have taken a victory in every season he has competed in F1 since his debut in 2007. He may shrug this off as an irrelevance but he has also fallen into territory in which he will not be happy. He finishes the title race in sixth, his lowest standing and behind Russell, who was fourth and took fifth place in Abu Dhabi.

In a 16‑year career, it is only the third time Hamilton has been outscored by a teammate.

There will be no fond memories of his recalcitrant W13, Hamilton conceded in what he described as one of his three worst seasons. “We started with a car we didn’t want and we finished with a car we didn’t want,” he said. “I am very pleased it is over and done with. I gave it everything, but ultimately the last race was like my whole season. It summed up my year.”

Verstappen has endured no such angst with his machinery. His win was a pedestrian affair unchallenged out front but the real battle was in his wake. Behind him Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and Red Bull’s Sergio Pérez were in a fight of their own for second place in the championship. They took it to the wire having adopted alternative strategies but Ferrari’s one-stop ultimately paid off. Leclerc managed his rubber brilliantly to the flag to seal second despite a charge from Pérez who was third. Red Bull once more denied their first drivers’ title one-two.

The team will not lose sleep over it. For all that it was serene for Verstappen this, too, was an apt reflection of his and Red Bull’s season, on track at least. He closes with 15 wins from 22 races, a record, and his team have taken 17, their best return. They go into the close season top and will remain favourites when racing resumes in March next year.

Mercedes have their work cut out to challenge them but it is Ferrari who must do the most soul searching this winter. They left it far too late in the season to finally pull off a strategic coup for Leclerc that also secured second place for the Scuderia in the constructors’ championship. Too little too late after a year strewn with errors and the winter presents a chance for the team to reset.

Their last title challenge was mounted by Sebastian Vettel who bade an emotional farewell in his last race, retiring after a 16‑year career and four world championships. “I’m sure I’m going to miss this more than I can think of,” he said. “I don’t have much more to say, I feel empty.”

He closed out with 10th place for Aston Martin at the track where he secured his first title in 2010 and was treated to a well‑deserved standing ovation as he climbed from his car for the last time.

The German is calling time on his career just as the new generation is stepping up. Verstappen is in the vanguard and with ease and finality in Abu Dhabi he once more demonstrated his ascendance in 2022. F1 must hope he is to be tested a little harder next time around.

Carlos Sainz was fourth for Ferrari, Lando Norris and Daniel Ricciardo sixth and ninth for McLaren, Esteban Ocon seventh for Alpine and Lance Stroll eighth for Aston Martin.

Contributor

Giles Richards

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Verstappen closes gap to Leclerc after easing to Emilia Romagna F1 GP victory
Red Bull’s Max Verstappen is only 27 points behind Charles Leclerc, who finished sixth after making a late error that allowed Lando Norries to be third

Giles Richards at Imola

24, Apr, 2022 @3:10 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc sees off Max Verstappen to win Austrian F1 GP for Ferrari
Charles Leclerc won the Austrian Grand Prix for Ferrari to cut the title deficit to Red Bull’s Max Verstappen, who came in second, to 38 points

Giles Richards at the Red Bull Ring

10, Jul, 2022 @6:29 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen wins dramatic Spanish F1 GP after Charles Leclerc retires
The world champion finished a place ahead of Red Bull teammate Sergio Pérez to take the lead in the championship, George Russell claimed third and Lewis Hamilton battled back from an early setback to finish fifth

Giles Richards at the Circuit de Catalunya

22, May, 2022 @3:11 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen holds off challenge of Charles Leclerc to win Miami F1 GP
Max Verstappen overtook Charles Leclerc early on in the inaugural Miami Grand Prix and held on to take victory, with Leclerc finishing second and Carlos Sainz taking third

Giles Richards at the Hard Rock Stadium Circuit

08, May, 2022 @9:26 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc wins Australian F1 GP after Max Verstappen is forced to retire
Charles Leclerc extended his lead at the top of the drivers’ championship with victory in Melbourne but Max Verstappen was forced out for the second time in three races

Giles Richards

10, Apr, 2022 @6:54 AM

Article image
Leclerc on Australian F1 GP pole with Verstappen second and Hamilton fifth
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc claimed pole for the Australian GP with an exceptional lap in Melbourne to beat Red Bull’s Max Verstappen into second

Giles Richards

09, Apr, 2022 @8:04 AM

Article image
Sergio Pérez triumphs in Monaco GP as Charles Leclerc fumes at botched stop
Sergio Pérez roared to a win at the Monaco Grand Prix as Max Verstappen extended his championship lead

Giles Richards in Monte Carlo

29, May, 2022 @4:29 PM

Article image
Charles Leclerc wins dramatic Bahrain F1 GP as Ferrari bring home one-two
Ferrari’s Leclerc and Carlos Sainz were first and second in the season-opener, with Lewis Hamilton third after the Red Bulls of Verstappen and Pérez had to retire

Giles Richards at Bahrain International Circuit

20, Mar, 2022 @5:18 PM

Article image
Max Verstappen wins Austrian F1 GP sprint race from Leclerc and Sainz
Max Verstappen took the eight points on offer for winning the sprint race for the Austrian GP at the Red Bull Ring and will start Sunday on pole

Giles Richards at the Red Bull Ring

09, Jul, 2022 @3:38 PM

Article image
Verstappen overtakes Leclerc to win F1 sprint race and take pole at Imola
World champion will start P1 on Sunday and claimed championship eight points, while Lewis Hamilton struggled with his Mercedes and will begin in 14th

Giles Richards at Imola

23, Apr, 2022 @3:36 PM