2017 Chinese Grand Prix Explained

Type:F1
Country:China
Grand Prix:Chinese
Year:2017
Race No:2
Season No:20
Image Link:Shanghai International Racing Circuit track map.svg
Image-Size:200px
Official Name:2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix[1] [2] [3]
Location:Shanghai International Circuit, Shanghai, China
Course:Permanent racing facility
Course Km:5.451
Course Mi:3.387
Distance Laps:56
Distance Km:305.066
Distance Mi:189.559
Weather:Light rain at start, drying later.
Attendance:145,000[4]
Pole Driver:Lewis Hamilton
Pole Country:GBR
Pole Team:Mercedes
Pole Time:1:31.678
Fast Driver:Lewis Hamilton
Fast Team:Mercedes
Fast Time:1:35.378
Fast Lap:44
Fast Country:GBR
First Driver:Lewis Hamilton
First Country:GBR
First Team:Mercedes
Second Team:Ferrari
Next Round:2017 Bahrain Grand Prix
Previous Round:2017 Australian Grand Prix

The 2017 Chinese Grand Prix (formally known as the 2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix) was a Formula One motor race that took place on 9 April 2017 at the Shanghai International Circuit in Shanghai, China. The race was the second round of the 2017 FIA Formula One World Championship, and marked the fourteenth time that the Chinese Grand Prix has been run as a round of the Formula One World Championship.

The race was marked by difficulties in Friday practice sessions when weather in Shanghai prevented the medical helicopter from being available and only twenty minutes of running was possible. Lewis Hamilton took his sixth consecutive pole position at the Chinese Grand Prix, ahead of Sebastian Vettel and teammate Valtteri Bottas. The race began with a wet track but there was no rain during the race, and Hamilton led the race from start to finish and set the fastest lap. Vettel pitted to change from intermediate to slick tyres during a virtual safety car, dropping him to sixth position, but recovered to second place. Max Verstappen started 16th and went on to complete the podium, finishing third.

Report

Free practice

Both of Friday's practice sessions were significantly affected by the weather conditions of low cloud, rain and smog. The first session took place with the track surface damp, and featured little activity before the session was red-flagged with only 20 minutes of running having been completed. Safety rules require that an injured driver with a neurological condition must be able to reach a hospital within 20 minutes, either by helicopter or ambulance. Prevailing weather conditions made it impossible for the medical helicopter to land at the Shanghai hospital located 38 km from the track, and an ambulance would be unable to reach the hospital within the required time, and so the cars were prohibited from on-track running until an emergency medical transport became available.

The weather situation did not improve and the second practice session was abandoned altogether.[5] [6] Some drivers, including Hamilton and world championship leader Sebastian Vettel, had no running on Friday, and the fastest time set on Friday was 1:50.491 by Max Verstappen, set in wet conditions. There were calls led by Lewis Hamilton to change schedule to allow all sessions to be run. However, these were rejected by the organisation, as it would disrupt television schedules and, in case of potential rescheduling of the race to Monday, would also lead to significant logistical problems for the Bahrain race scheduled only a week later.[7]

Hamilton was granted permission to cross the track during the second practice session to greet fans and throw signed caps into the crowd in the grandstands; he used social media to suggest the situation provided an opportunity for new owners to be "proactive and creative".[8] [9] Calls were made for a contingency plan for circumstances where a practice session is cancelled such as opening paddock access for fans at the track.[10]

With dry weather on Saturday, described as "almost-sunshine in perpetually smog-grey Shanghai", the third practice session ran on time but faced the teams with the challenge of preparing for qualifying with just one practice session instead of the usual three. Most teams opted to split tyre duties between their drivers and to collect some data on performance on longer runs, while also using their only opportunity to prepare for the afternoon's qualifying session.[11] Weather forecasts predicted a high chance of rain during the race on Sunday, adding an extra complication to the teams' calculations going into their single practice session. The Force India team described the situation in a tweet: "Never has the Saturday morning session been so important."[12]

Vettel set the session's fastest time of 1:33.336, just 0.053 s ahead of teammate Kimi Räikkönen;[13] both of these times were more than two seconds faster than Nico Rosberg's pole position time from the 2016 race (1:35.402).[14] The two Mercedes drivers finished the session around 0.3 to 0.5 s behind the Ferraris, though Hamilton made a mistake at the hairpin on a lap which matched Vettel's pace in the first two sectors. Valtteri Bottas lost track time when the 'T wing' was dislodged from his car and repeatedly ran wide at the final corner. The rest of the field were at least a second per lap slower than the leading cars, led by Felipe Massa (1:34.773) ahead of the Red Bull drivers. The Red Bulls set the early pace in the session when running on heavy fuel loads, but were unable to match the pace of Ferrari or Mercedes in qualifying simulations.[15] Behind Red Bull, competition was much closer, with positions eight to ten (Lance Stroll, Jolyon Palmer, and Carlos Sainz Jr.) covered by only 0.041 s and positions eleven to sixteen (Nico Hülkenberg, Kevin Magnussen, Sergio Pérez, Romain Grosjean, Daniil Kvyat, and Esteban Ocon) covered by 0.362 s. Two-times world champion Fernando Alonso and the McLaren team were left competing only with Sauber at the bottom of the timing sheets, at least 2.5 s off the pace and described by a commentator as "battl[ing] with the poor performance, reliability and fuel consumption of the Honda engine".[16]

Qualifying

Sky Sports F1 predicted that Ferrari went into qualifying with an advantage over Mercedes and that those two teams appeared to be in a class of their own,[17] a prediction borne out by the results. Vettel set the fastest time in the first part of qualifying of 1:33.078, just over a quarter of a second ahead of Hamilton, who shaded Räikkönen by less than one one-hundredth of a second – but the Ferraris were on the soft tyres and the Mercedes on the (faster) super-softs. Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo was the "best of the rest" in all three qualifying sessions, though around a second off the fastest times, showing that Red Bull's relatively poor pace compared to the top two teams in Australia was not a one-off and placing them in an "unwanted league of their own".[18]

Haas driver Grosjean had a spin at the final corner early in the session, managing to keep the car off the wall and returning to the pits with only a ruined set of tyres. Sauber driver Antonio Giovinazzi was not so fortunate. He was running in fifteenth late in the session when he spun on the astroturf on the outside of the final corner, hitting the wall hard and coming to rest in the middle of the track.[19] With double waved-yellow flags on the start–finish straight, no driver could set an improved time and Giovinazzi advanced to Q2 but with a car that was unable to run and so qualified 15th. Two drivers eliminated in Q1, Palmer and Grosjean, who were both looking to out-qualify Giovinazzi when his accident occurred, were subsequently given five grid-slot penalties; the stewards stated that they "made no attempt to significantly reduce [their] speed in the area of a double waved-yellow flag". Grosjean disputed this statement, posting telemetry on Twitter showing that he braked 50 m earlier for the corner and was travelling 45 km/h slower,[20] though the stewards' decision was final. Haas team boss Guenther Steiner supported Grosjean, arguing he had clearly slowed and lamenting the lost opportunity as Grosjean "could have made it into Q3".[21] The rebuild of Giovinazzi's car necessitated a new gearbox, leading him to be demoted to 18th on grid, ahead of only Grosjean and Palmer.[22]

Red Bull's Verstappen had engine misfire problems and did not set a qualifying time until late in the session, 1.5 s slower than his teammate in fifth. Verstappen was trying for an improved time when Giovinazzi crashed and was consequently eliminated in 19th place, though he was scheduled to start from 17th on the grid.[23]

In the second phase of qualifying, Vettel set a fast time early in the session but Hamilton was only slower by 0.015 s on the same tyres. Räikkönen set the fastest time of 1:32.181 late in the session, 0.21 s ahead of his teammate, and faster than Michael Schumacher's all-time lap record for the circuit set in 2004.[24] Fifth-fastest driver Ricciardo was nearly a second behind Bottas in fourth place. The two Mercedes drivers and Ricciardo were the only drivers not to do a second run. Hülkenberg and Pérez posted improved times in the last moments of the session, advancing to Q3, with Sainz, Ericsson, Magnussen, and Alonso eliminated.

Hamilton had an untidy first lap in the third phase of qualifying, but still laid down a provisional pole position time of 1:31.902, with Vettel in second down by 0.184 s, followed by Bottas. Räikkönen's pace was 0.7 s slower Hamilton, but still ahead of Ricciardo in fifth by almost the same amount. All of the top four subsequently improved their times but the positions remained unchanged. Hamilton's new lap record time was 1:31.678 and Vettel's 1:31.864 was only one one-thousandth of a second ahead of Bottas, with Räikkönen at 1:32.140 nearly nine-tenths of a second ahead of Ricciardo. Sixth place went to Massa, nearly half a second behind the Red Bull and just ahead of Hülkenberg's Renault. Williams driver Lance Stroll, competing in his first Q3 session in only the second race of his Formula 1 career, took tenth place. This was a major improvement from the 19th place he managed on début, partly attributed to changing to a lighter power steering setting – Stroll won the 2016 European Formula 3 Championship where power steering is not used, and accepted that taking some wrong decisions is an inevitable part of stepping up to Formula 1.[25]

Hamilton's pole position was his sixth in a row, a run he began at the 2016 United States Grand Prix, which places him equal sixth on the list of most consecutive pole positions.[26] It was also his sixth pole position at the Chinese Grand Prix, placing him equal fifth on the list of most pole positions at a single race,[27] and the 75th pole position for the Mercedes team in 150 races.

Race

Background

The FIA took steps to ensure that access to emergency medical treatment, lack of which had led to cancellation of most of Friday practice, would not impede running of the race itself. A police escort was made available to facilitate rapid ground transportation, and specialist neurological equipment was relocated to a hospital located five kilometres from the track.[28] This included arranging "for a complete neurosurgery team from Huashan Hospital to be present at Ruijin Hospital on Sunday" leading the FIA medical team to be "satisfied that the Ruijin Hospital will not only be easily accessible in all weather conditions, but will also be able to provide the required care".[29]

There was considerable rain on the morning of the race, but the start was to be taken following the standard procedure. The track was damp before the race, but would dry out as the day progressed. Notably, the main straight remained considerably wetter than the rest of the track, observed by Martin Brundle of Sky Sports F1 as possibly owing to the architecture of the media centre and overpass pavilions precipitating the track beneath with residual rainwater – something Giovinazzi would later learn with chagrin when he spun and crashed as a result of losing grip thereunder.

As the first 'wet' race of the season with new regulation wider tyres, virtually all teams began on intermediates both to gather data on their performance and as a precaution. Only artificial pre-season testing at Barcelona had emulated similar conditions, although not all teams were present there.[30] Pitlane reporter Ted Kravitz would go on to later note that within the first few laps, significant degradation of the intermediate tyres was found on the front left tyres across the board – a matter made in turn more complicated by the semi-dry/wet nature of the track. Many drivers, including Alonso and Vettel reported of drying conditions before the race, whilst Hamilton's team estimated that a transition point where slicks would be appropriate would come around lap 6.[31] Despite this, only Sainz went to the grid with super-soft option slick tyres; however, Palmer, who was marred by a grid penalty, peeled away from the formation lap into the pits before the race start to change out his intermediates for slicks, starting his race from the pit lane.[32]

Report

Hamilton defended his pole immediately with a rapid and clean start, remaining unchallenged for the remainder of the race session. Vettel defended second place fending off a bold challenge from Bottas on the outside in turn 1. Räikkönen lost his place to Ricciardo early on and would prove to be on the back foot for the remainder of the race, later holding up teammate Vettel. Incidentally, Vettel was noted by the stewards as being laterally to the left of his grid space at the start and was investigated for being out of position – since his car was edged towards Hamilton, yet no action was taken. Many middle- and back-markers also made significant gains in the first lap, especially Verstappen, who overtook nine cars in the space of two minutes earning the title of "Driver of the Day".[33] The early action was however soon neutralised following contact between Pérez and Stroll which left Stroll spun out and beached in a gravel trap with a ruined set of tyres. The removal of his car warranted a virtual safety car during which Vettel pitted for slicks.[34] Just moments after racing resumed, Giovinazzi had a major crash on the start–finish straight, the second time he had spun off on the straight, marking an end to his unfortunate weekend. Debris strewn across the surface and the Sauber car's removal prompted deployment of a safety car. As the safety car led traffic through the pits, avoiding the removal work and obstructions, most drivers seized the opportunity to change to slicks.[35] Hülkenberg was given a five-second penalty for overtaking Grosjean under the virtual safety car, and a further ten-second penalty for overtaking Ericsson under the safety car.[36] In a move he described as a "stupid mistake", Bottas spun behind the safety car while trying to warm his tyres, dropping down to 12th and was criticised by his team boss and former manager Toto Wolff.[37]

By the time the safety car came in, Hamilton was leading from Ricciardo and Verstappen, who had made a series of overtakes in the slippery conditions, with the Ferraris fourth and fifth.[38] Verstappen overtook Ricciardo on lap 11 for second place, having started 16th, again demonstrating his skill in difficult conditions (similar to the 2016 Brazilian Grand Prix). With the Ferraris unable to overtake Ricciardo, Hamilton and Verstappen pull out a significant lead, with Hamilton four seconds ahead of Verstappen and nine seconds ahead of Ricciardo by lap 20 – the lap Vettel overtook Räikkönen. Two laps later, Vettel overtook Ricciardo and rapidly closed in on Verstappen. By lap 27, Hamilton had built a lead of 8.5 s over Verstappen with Vettel about 1.5 s further back, and Ricciardo and Räikkönen about 2 s apart and 4 s behind Vettel. Verstappen made a mistake on lap 29, locking up and allowing Vettel to pass for second, 10.6 s behind Hamilton with 27 laps remaining. Verstappen stopped for fresh super-soft tyres the following lap, returning to the track 6th behind Bottas.

Verstappen showed great pace on his fresh tyres, quickly overtaking Bottas, and leading to pit stops for Vettel (who was losing time to Hamilton) and then for Hamilton on lap 37, returning to the track on new soft tyres just ahead of Räikkönen. Räikkönen was the last of the top six drivers to stop for tyres despite repeated complaints of tyre problems, likely because pitting demoted him from second to sixth, behind the two Red Bull cars. By lap 42, the top five positions were Hamilton – Vettel – Verstappen – Ricciardo – Räikkönen. The Red Bulls closed up and battled over the final podium position over the last few laps, but Ricciardo did not manage to overtake his teammate, and the order remained unchanged throughout the last 15 laps. Bottas recovered to take sixth place, and Sainz, Magnussen, Pérez, and Ocon rounded out the top ten.

The race was the 54th win of Hamilton's Formula 1 career, his 5th victory in the Chinese Grand Prix (having won previously in 2008, 2011, 2014, and 2015), and the 65th win for Mercedes in their 150th race. With Hamilton winning the race and Vettel in second, the two go to the third race in Bahrain equal in the World Drivers' Championship standings, with 43 points each, but with Mercedes having overtaken Ferrari in the Constructors' Championship. The fastest lap of the race was set by Lewis Hamilton on lap 44 (1:35.378), which was over four seconds faster than Nico Hülkenberg's fastest lap of 1:39.824 in the 2016 race.[39] Hamilton became the second driver, after Schumacher, to win five or more times at three different tracks, and he equalled Alain Prost's career total of 106 podiums,[40] placing him equal second on the all-time list of career podium finishes.[41] The race was the third "grand slam" of Hamilton's career – winning from pole position after leading every lap and setting the fastest lap – adding to 2014 Malaysian and 2015 Italian Grands Prix. Hamilton also equalled Jim Clark's career record of 11 "hat-tricks" – races won from pole while setting the fastest lap – placing him equal second on the all-time list.

Classification

Qualifying

DriverConstructor
Q1Q2Q3
144 Lewis HamiltonMercedes1:33.3331:32.4061:31.6781
25 Sebastian VettelFerrari1:33.0781:32.3911:31.8642
377 Valtteri BottasMercedes1:33.6841:32.5521:31.8653
47 Kimi RäikkönenFerrari1:33.3411:32.1811:32.1404
53 Daniel Ricciardo1:34.0411:33.5461:33.0335
619 Felipe MassaWilliams-Mercedes1:34.2051:33.7591:33.5076
727 Nico HülkenbergRenault1:34.4531:33.6361:33.5807
811 Sergio PérezForce India-Mercedes1:34.6571:33.9201:33.7068
926 Daniil KvyatToro Rosso1:34.4401:34.0341:33.7199
1018 Lance StrollWilliams-Mercedes1:33.9861:34.0901:34.22010
1155 Carlos Sainz Jr.Toro Rosso1:34.5671:34.15011
1220  Kevin MagnussenHaas-Ferrari1:34.9421:34.16412
1314 Fernando AlonsoMcLaren-Honda1:34.4991:34.37213
149 Marcus EricssonSauber-Ferrari1:34.8921:35.04614
1536Sauber-Ferrari1:34.963No time18
162 Stoffel VandoorneMcLaren-Honda1:35.02315
178 Romain GrosjeanHaas-Ferrari1:35.22319
1830 Jolyon PalmerRenault1:35.27920
1933 Max VerstappenRed Bull Racing-TAG Heuer1:35.43316
2031 Esteban OconForce India-Mercedes1:35.49617
107% time

1:39.593

Source:[42]
Notes:

Race

DriverConstructorLapsTime/RetiredGridPoints
144data-sort-value="ham" Lewis HamiltonMercedes561:37:36.158 125
25data-sort-value="vet" Sebastian VettelFerrari56+6.250218
333data-sort-value="ver" Max VerstappenRed Bull Racing-TAG Heuer56+45.1921615
43data-sort-value="ric" Daniel Ricciardo56+46.035512
57data-sort-value="rai" Kimi RäikkönenFerrari56+48.076410
677data-sort-value="bot" Valtteri BottasMercedes56+48.80838
755data-sort-value="sai" Carlos Sainz Jr.Toro Rosso56+1:12.893116
820data-sort-value="mag" Kevin MagnussenHaas-Ferrari55+1 Lap124
911data-sort-value="per" Sergio PérezForce India-Mercedes55+1 Lap82
1031data-sort-value="oco" Esteban OconForce India-Mercedes55+1 Lap171
118data-sort-value="gro" Romain GrosjeanHaas-Ferrari55+1 Lap19
1227data-sort-value="hul" Nico HülkenbergRenault55+1 Lap7
1330data-sort-value="pal" Jolyon PalmerRenault55+1 Lap20
1419data-sort-value="mas" Felipe MassaWilliams-Mercedes55+1 Lap6
159data-sort-value="eri" Marcus EricssonSauber-Ferrari55+1 Lap14
data-sort-vale="16"Ret14data-sort-value="alo" Fernando AlonsoMcLaren-Honda33Driveshaft13
data-sort-value="17"Ret26data-sort-value="kvy" Daniil KvyatToro Rosso18Hydraulics9
data-sort-value="18"Ret2data-sort-value="van" Stoffel VandoorneMcLaren-Honda17Fuel pressure15
data-sort-value="19"Ret36nowrap data-sort-value="gio" Antonio GiovinazziSauber-Ferrari3Accident18
data-sort-value="20"Ret18data-sort-value="STR" Lance StrollWilliams-Mercedes0Collision10
Source:[44]

Championship standings after the race

Drivers' Championship standings
DriverPoints
1 Sebastian Vettel43
2 Lewis Hamilton43
3 Max Verstappen25
14 Valtteri Bottas23
15 Kimi Räikkönen22
Source: [45]
Constructors' Championship standings
ConstructorPoints
11 Mercedes66
12 Ferrari65
337
4 Toro Rosso12
5 Force India-Mercedes10
Source:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix. Formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Limited. 7 April 2017. 28 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170128075344/https://www.formula1.com/en/championship/races/2017/China.html. dead.
  2. Web site: 2017 Formula 1 World Championship Programmes - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project. Malcolm. Mitchell. Progcovers.com. 18 November 2018.
  3. Web site: Shanghai International Circuit - The Motor Racing Programme Covers Project. Malcolm. Mitchell. Progcovers.com. 18 November 2018.
  4. News: F1 reveals overall rise in 2017 attendance. GPupdate.net. 8 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20171209011037/https://www.gpupdate.net/en/f1-news/361717/f1-reveals-eight-per-cent-rise-in-2017-attendance/. 9 December 2017.
  5. News: Second practice called off after safety helicopter grounded. BBC Sport. 7 April 2017. 7 April 2017. Andrew. Benson.
  6. News: Chinese GP Practice: Heavy cloud restricts Friday running in Shanghai. Sky Sports F1. 7 April 2017. 8 April 2017. James. Galloway.
  7. News: Chinese GP format to be unchanged despite Shanghai weather concerns. Sky Sports F1. 7 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  8. News: Chinese Grand Prix: Hamilton calls for race weekend changes after Shanghai cancellation. Andrew. Benson. BBC Sport. 7 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  9. News: Lewis Hamilton meets the fans during Chinese GP practice delays. 7 April 2017. 8 April 2017. Sky Sports F1.
  10. News: F1 urged to create "contingency plan" after practice cancellation. Ben. Anderson. 7 April 2017. 8 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  11. News: FP3 – Ferrari set searing Shanghai pace. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017. formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Limited.
  12. ForceIndiaF1. 850557423207239680. Time for FP3! Never has the Saturday morning session been so important - 60 minutes to get all data we need for qualifying! #ChineseGP. Sahara Force India. Force India. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  13. Web site: 2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix – Practice 3. formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Limited. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  14. Web site: 2016 Formula 1 Pirelli Chinese Grand Prix – Qualifying. formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Limited. 16 April 2016. 16 April 2016. 16 April 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160416140244/http://www.formula1.com/content/fom-website/en/championship/results/2016-race-results/2016-china-results/qualifying.html.
  15. News: Chinese GP: Vettel fastest as Ferrari sets stunning pace in FP3. Andrew. van Leeuwen. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  16. News: Chinese GP: Sebastian Vettel on top in final practice as Ferraris outshine Mercedes. Andrew. Benson. BBC Sport. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  17. News: Chinese GP Practice Three: Sebastian Vettel tops Ferrari one-two. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017. Pete. Gill. Sky Sports F1.
  18. News: Sky Sports F1. Conclusions from Chinese GP Qualifying: What we learnt. James. Galloway. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017.
  19. News: Chinese GP 2017 Qualifying: Antonio Giovinazzi crashes out. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. Sky Sports F1.
  20. 850666277400170496. RGrosjean. Romain Grosjean. Romain Grosjean. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. So apppatently I made no effort to slow down and didn't abandon the lap... data shows a different point of view. Btw didn't even open my DRS.
  21. News: Haas boss "doesn't get" Grosjean's yellow flag penalty. Glenn. Freeman. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  22. News: Antonio Giovinazzi picks up F1 grid penalty for Chinese GP. Adam. Cooper. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017. Autosport.
  23. News: Verstappen blames engine misfire for Q1 exit. Edd. Straw. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  24. News: Chinese GP Qualifying: Lewis Hamilton claims Shanghai pole. James. Galloway. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017.
  25. News: Stroll boosted by switch to lighter power steering. Edd. Straw. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network.
  26. Web site: Pole positions – consecutively. 9 April 2017. statsF1.com.
  27. Web site: Pole positions – by Grand Prix. 9 April 2017. statsF1.com.
  28. News: FIA takes steps to ensure Chinese GP will run on time. Adam. Cooper. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. 9 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170409021241/https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/fia-takes-steps-to-ensure-chinese-gp-will-run-on-time-890911/. dead.
  29. News: Autosport. Chinese GP: FIA makes special arrangements at nearby hospital. Jonathan. Noble. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017.
  30. Web site: Insight: What is it about Pirelli rain tyres that means wet F1 races need careful management?. Allen. James. 17 November 2016. Jamesallenonfi.com. 10 April 2017. 11 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170411063524/https://www.jamesallenonf1.com/2016/11/insight-what-is-it-about-pirelli-rain-tyres-that-means-wet-f1-races-need-careful-management/. dead.
  31. Web site: 2017 Chinese Grand Prix radio notes: Race. Collantine. Keith. 10 April 2017. F1fanatic.co.uk. 10 April 2017.
  32. Web site: 2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix – Starting Grid. 9 April 2017. Formula1.com. 10 April 2017.
  33. News: Max Verstappen named Driver of the Day for Chinese GP. Motorsport Week. 9 April 2017. 10 April 2017. Jack. Leslie. 10 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170410214324/https://www.motorsportweek.com/news/id/14267. dead.
  34. News: F1 – Hamilton wins Chinese Grand Prix ahead of Vettel and Verstappen. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017. FIA.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile.
  35. News: Chinese GP: Hamilton wins as wet start causes fireworks. Valentin. Khorounzhiy. motorsport.com. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017. Motorsport Network.
  36. Web site: Hulkenberg given two penalties for Safety Car errors. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017. Keith. Collantine. f1fanatic.co.uk.
  37. News: Chinese Grand Prix: Valtteri Bottas says spin under safety car was 'stupid mistake'. Andrew. Benson. BBC Sport. 9 April 2017. 10 April 2017.
  38. News: Chinese GP: Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes back to winning ways. James. Galloway. 9 April 2017. 9 April 2017. Sky Sports F1.
  39. News: 2016 Chinese Grand Prix Race – Official Classification. 17 April 2016. 9 April 2017. FIA.com. Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile. https://web.archive.org/web/20160417121908/http://www.fia.com/file/40470/download?token=4VDVV5Zr. 17 April 2016. live.
  40. News: Lewis Hamilton wins Chinese Grand Prix ahead of Sebastian Vettel. BBC Sport. 9 April 2017. 10 April 2017. Andrew. Benson.
  41. Web site: Podiums by number. statsf1.com. 9 April 2017. 10 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170409213216/http://www.statsf1.com/en/statistiques/pilote/podium/nombre.aspx. 9 April 2017. dead.
  42. Web site: 2017 Formula 1 Heineken Chinese Grand Prix – Qualifying. formula1.com. Formula One World Championship Ltd. 8 April 2017. 8 April 2017.
  43. News: Grosjean, Palmer hit with grid penalties. Lawrence. Barretto. 8 April 2017. 9 April 2017. motorsport.com. Motorsport Network. 9 April 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170409112120/https://www.motorsport.com/f1/news/grosjean-palmer-hit-with-grid-penalties-891115/. dead.
  44. News: 2017 Chinese Grand Prix Race – Official Classification . 9 April 2017 . 9 April 2017 . FIA.com. live . https://web.archive.org/web/20170409090559/http://www.fia.com/file/55248/download?token=pyVOy2R9 . 9 April 2017 .
  45. Web site: China 2017 - Championship • STATS F1. www.statsf1.com. 15 March 2019.