Mercedes clinched their second successive Formula One constructors’ championship yesterday and Lewis Hamilton took a huge stride towards his third drivers’ title with victory in Russia.

Congratulated on the podium by President Vladimir Putin, Hamilton took his ninth win of the season and 42nd of his career after a throttle problem forced the early retirement of team-mate Nico Rosberg.

The Briton now has a lead of 66 points over Ferrari’s second-placed Sebastian Vettel and, if results go his way, can secure his own second successive crown in Austin, Texas, in two weeks’ time.

Mercedes team bosses had left the circuit long before the constructors’ title was confirmed, however, with the outcome depending on a stewards’ enquiry that eventually demoted Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen from fifth to eighth.

“We found out (about the title) upstairs. It just feels special to be a part of it and to have contributed to a team success,” Hamilton told reporters some two hours after the race had ended.

“It is a great, great, great feeling.”

With four races remaining, and a maximum 100 points to be won, Hamilton has 302 points to Vettel’s 236 and Rosberg’s 229.

“It looked like we were going to have a race and I was thinking this is great and we were going to put on a good show,” said Hamilton, who also won the inaugural Russian GP last year, of his afternoon.

“Nico made a mistake at turn one and went wide. I overtook him and after that, or maybe even before, he started to have some problems. It is very unfortunate for the team.”

Sergio Perez finished third for Force India, in a race with two safety car interludes following crashes, after Raikkonen rammed the rear of fellow Finn Valtteri Bottas’s Williams while battling for the final podium place.

“It doesn’t matter if he’s penalised, because I’m never getting those points back,” said Bottas bitterly.

The safety car was deployed after Perez’s team-mate Nico Huelkenberg spun on the opening lap and was hit by the Sauber of Marcus Ericsson with Max Verstappen’s Toro Rosso also caught up in the action.

Rosberg had led from pole, holding off Hamilton through the opening corners, but was forced to retire in the pits on the seventh of 53 laps.

“F1 is incredible sometimes how tough it is,” the German said.

“After a great start, leading the race and feeling confident. Straight after the safety car the pedal broke. It was quite dangerous. Definitely not a nice way to end the day.”

Hamilton, who has now won more races than the late Ayrton Senna, had already taken over the lead as Rosberg wrestled with the problem.

However his advantage was whittled away when Romain Grosjean, who was unhurt, crashed heavily on lap 12 and brought out the safety car again.

Perez had thought his podium hopes had gone when Bottas and Raikkonen, on fresher tyres, passed him in the closing laps but the collision put him right back for his first top-three finish of the season.

Meanwhile, Jenson Button and Fernando Alonso finished ninth and 10th respectively for struggling McLaren but the Spaniard lost his point after being handed a penalty for exceeding the track limits.

That left Toro Rosso’s 18-year-old Dutch rookie Max Verstappen with a point instead.

Result at the circuit in Sochi

1. Lewis Hamilton (Britain) Mercedes 1:37:11.024
2. Sebastian Vettel (Germany) Ferrari +00:05.953
3. Sergio Perez (Mexico) Force India-Mercedes 00:28.918
4. Felipe Massa (Brazil) Williams-Mercedes 00:38.831
5. Daniil Kvyat (Russia) RedBull-Renault 00:47.566
6. Felipe Nasr (Brazil) Sauber-Ferrari 00:56.508
7. Pastor Maldonado (Venezuela) Lotus-Mercedes 01:01.088
8. Kimi Raikkonen (Finland) Ferrari 01:12.358
9. Jenson Button (Britain) McLaren 01:19.467
10. Max Verstappen (Netherlands) Toro Rosso-Renault 01:28.424
11. Fernando Alonso (Spain) McLaren 01:31.210
12. Valtteri Bottas (Finland) Williams-Mercedes 1 lap
13. Roberto Merhi (Spain) Marussia-Ferrari 1 lap
14. Will Stevens (Britain) Marussia-Ferrari 2 laps
Retired from race  
Daniel Ricciardo (Australia) RedBull-Renault 6 laps
Carlos Sainz Jr (Spain) Toro Rosso-Renault 7 laps
Romain Grosjean (France) Lotus-Mercedes 42 laps
Nico Rosberg (Germany) Mercedes 46 laps
Marcus Ericsson (Sweden) Sauber-Ferrari 53 laps
Nico Huelkenberg (Germany) Force India-Mercedes 53 laps

Fastest lap: Sebastian Vettel,1:40.071, lap 51.
Next race: US Grand Prix – October 25.

Drivers standings
1. Hamilton 302; 2. Vettel 236; 3. Rosberg 229; 4. Raikkonen 123; 5. Bottas 111; 6. Massa 109; 7. Kvyat 76; 8. Ricciardo 73; 9. Perez 54; 10. Grosjean 44; 11. Huelkenberg 38; 12. Verstappen 33; 13. Nasr 25; 14. Maldonado 22; 15. Sainz 12; 16. Alonso 11; 17. Ericsson 9; 18. Button 8.

Constructors championship
1. Mercedes 531; 2. Ferrari 359; 3. Williams-Mercedes 220; 4. Red Bull 149; 5. Force India 92; 6. Lotus 66; 7. Toro Rosso 45; 8. Sauber 34; 9. McLaren 19; 10. Marussia-Ferrari 0.

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