London :Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel held on by the skin of his teeth to win a tense Bahrain Formula One Grand Prix in his 200th race start on Sunday.
His tyres fading, the championship leader took the chequered flag only 0.6 seconds clear of Mercedes’ Valtteri Bottas who piled the pressure on in the final 10 laps.
Bottas’s team mate and reigning world champion Lewis Hamilton, who had started ninth after a five place grid penalty for an unscheduled gearbox change, finished third.
Vettel now leads Hamilton by 17 points after two of the 21 races.
The win under the floodlights was the 49th of Vettel’s Grand Prix career and an unprecedented fourth at the Sakhir desert circuit.
It also made the 30-year-old, who won in Melbourne two weeks ago, the first Ferrari driver since compatriot Michael Schumacher in 2004 to win the first two races of a season.
“These tyres were done, done, in the last 10 laps,” a jubilant Vettel told his team over the radio after crossing the line.
He had earlier told his team that everything was under control but that, he recognised later with a smile, was not at all the reality.
“With Bottas’ pace I thought he would catch me. I tried to keep it as clean as possible. Our plan worked but just, Bottas had a bit of a sniff but ran out of laps,” said the four times champion.
Vettel had led from pole position, with Bottas slotting into second place at the start from third on the grid, but ended up having to battle the Mercedes pair alone.
Mercedes’ decision to go for the more durable medium tyres and a one-stop strategy, compared to Ferrari’s move to bolt on softer rubber in anticipation of a two-stop race, brought the evening alive.
Drama in the pits, when team mate Kimi Raikkonen was brought in to test the strategy, decided Ferrari in favour of keeping Vettel out.
Raikkonen was given the green light to exit before his left rear tyre had been changed, with the Finn’s car then hitting a mechanic who was taken to hospital with a suspected broken leg while the driver retired.
Hamilton could take some consolation in equalling Raikkonen’s all-time record of 27 successive points finishes.
“I started ninth so third is not bad at all,” said the Briton. “It’s damage limitation.”