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Hamilton: Verstappen was in Vettel's blind spot

Lewis Hamilton has suggested Sebastian Vettel probably couldn't see Max Verstappen and Kimi Raikkonen in the moments before they collided at the start of the Singapore Grand Prix.

 Sebastian Vettel, Ferrari SF70H, Max Verstappen, Red Bull Racing RB13, Kimi Raikkonen, Ferrari SF70H, immediately prior to contact

Andrew Hone / Motorsport Images

Vettel, Raikkonen and Verstappen were all eliminated from the Marina Bay F1 race as a result of the crash, for which the FIA stewards did not apportion blame.

Verstappen was convinced Vettel's aggressive defence of the lead after a slow start from pole caused the shunt, while Vettel couldn't explain the sequence of events that led to his disastrous retirement from the race

Hamilton emerged from fifth on the grid to win the grand prix, extending his points lead over Vettel to 28 with six races to run.

When asked for his views on the start, Hamilton explained it is often difficult for the poleman to know where his rivals are positioned in the immediate moments after the lights go out.

"Often – when you look at my last start at Monza – when you pull away, you can't actually see the guy who's in second place," said Hamilton, who described the crash as "an unfortunate racing incident".

"They're generally in your blind spot if they get as good a start as you, and it's difficult to know where they are.

"So your immediate thought is to cover your ground, get to the inside and cover and turn them down, so I assume that's what he [Vettel] did.

"When you do that, all of a sudden they appear in your mirror so you can understand where they are, or [if they are] in your peripheral view, but sometimes you do it and you realise you're ahead so you actually didn't need to.

"I don't [know] if Sebastian felt that way or not. I was only focused on trying to get away faster than Daniel [Ricciardo].

"I saw Kimi, so I was just keeping an eye on what's happening on my left side and if some drama was going to happen I was just going to have to go straight at turn one and not get collected, which I was conscious of."

Ricciardo also dodged the chaos to chase Hamilton home in second, and the Red Bull driver reckoned a "pretty average start" allowed him to better judge the events unfolding in front of him.

"It gave me some time to basically see what was going to happen," Ricciardo said. "I was just trying to play it cautious and look ahead and fortunately that was the right thing to do.

"The spray was really bad, so that meant it was a pretty chaotic first few corners."

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Edition

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