Fresh from
dominating the desert sands of Bahrain, Nico Rosberg cruised to a similarly comfortable win in the industrial smog of
Shanghai as he sauntered to victory in an action-packed Formula One Chinese Grand Prix.
In doing so, he extended his championship lead over Mercedes team mate Lewis Hamilton, who battled up to seventh with
some feisty driving after starting last thanks to an engine unit problem in qualifying which saw him fail to set a lap
time.
Rosberg crossed the line a mammoth 37.7 seconds ahead of German compatriot Sebastian Vettel, who recovered after
colliding with his Ferrari team mate Kimi Raikkonen at the first corner, to claim his third win from three races this
season.
Daniil Kvyat finished third to score Red Bull their first podium finish since last September’s Singapore Grand
Prix.
Sunday’s win was the 17th of Rosberg’s career and extends his streak of race victories to six, dating back to last
November’s Mexican Grand Prix.
Surpassing Sir Stirling Moss’ unwanted record of being the driver with the most race victories without a world
championship, the German is now looking ahead to the big prize as he leads Hamilton at the top of the standings by 36
points with 18 rounds of a record 21-race season to run.
Hamilton’s tumultuous weekend didn’t let up on race day, as he immediately hit trouble at the start when he lost his
front wing, through no fault of his own, in a first-corner collision.
The Briton used some good-old fashioned racing nous and clever strategy from Mercedes to work his way up to third, but
his challenge faded in the later stages of the race.
Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo finished fourth. The Australian rocketed off the line from second on the grid and shot
past Rosberg into an early lead, but was pushed onto the back foot after being forced into an early stop by a tyre
failure.
Raikkonen, who came off worse in the first-corner collision with team mate Vettel, was sixth ahead of Felipe Massa of
Williams.
Max Verstappen was eighth ahead of Toro Rosso team mate Carlos Sainz, while Valtteri Bottas rounded out the top ten
for Williams.
The race was interrupted by an early safety car after a series of incidents at the very first corner left debris
across the track.
The safety car led to a chopping and changing of the order with some drivers choosing to pit even as others stayed
out, putting a mix of tyre strategies into play.