Lewis Hamilton spent a period of the Belgian Grand Prix on Sunday ahead of rival Max Verstappen, but the Mercedes driver was soon caught by Red Bull’s champion elect
Max Verstappen has admitted that it was initially “impossible” to overtake Lewis Hamilton during Sunday’s Belgian Grand Prix, despite the Red Bull driver cruising to an eighth successive victory.
Having been forced to start from P6 at Spa following a five-place grid penalty for a pre-race gearbox change, Verstappen needed only 17 laps to take the lead. After passing Mercedes’ Hamilton, Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc and team-mate Sergio Perez, the 2023 champion elect never looked back before romping to victory.
But Verstappen insists that his win wasn’t so easy as one would assume, giving neutral fans some hope that the Dutchman might not to be unbeatable. “I was a bit unlucky, because I got stuck behind Lewis, because he was in the DRS of Charles, and with them having the highest top speed, Lewis, this weekend, it was just impossible to pass,” Verstappen explained.
“So I had to wait for him to drop out of the DRS and as soon as he didn’t have DRS anymore, I could pass. And then I think two or three laps later, I could pass Charles. But with that, I think I hurt my tyres a bit too much.