Max Verstappen wins the Bahrain Grand Prix from pole to head a Red Bull 1-2 from Sergio Perez.
Aston Martin’s Fernando Alonso charged from fifth to third after late overtakes on Lewis Hamilton and Carlos Sainz.
Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc retired from second with a power unit issue on lap 40/57, Sainz holds on to fourth.
Lewis Hamilton finishes fifth ahead of the injured Aston Martin driver Lance Stroll. George Russell (Mercedes), Valtteri Bottas (Alfa Romeo), Pierre Gasly (Alpine) and Alex Albon (Williams) score points
After a series of penalties Esteban Ocon retired from the race, along with McLaren’s F1 debutant Oscar Piastri, who suffered an electrical issue
And that's all from us, thanks for joining us throughout the race! Enjoy the rest of your day, and we'll see you in two weeks' time for the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.
Just one race last season featured a non-Red Bull/Ferrari/Mercedes driver on the podium - given Alonso's pace today, I daresay we might not have that triopoly this year. Is triopoly a word? We hope it is.
"Great work over these two weeks. We know where we're not where we want to be, still work to do, but let's keep pushing," Hamilton says after claiming fifth.
Ah, that's why Zhou pitted late on. He went for the fastest lap of the race which takes it off Gasly in the Alpine, but he doesn't pick it up himself as he finished outside of the top 10. Cheeky.
In truth, it won't make much difference to Hulkenberg's race given he is 55s ahead of the five-stopping Norris, who has just been shown the black and white flag himself for the same offence.
Hulkenberg is shown the black and white flag for track limits - the first driver to get that in this race. He's currently running a distant 16th and nine seconds behind team-mate Magnussen. The Haas pace has been nowhere today.
Norris, who was an avid spectator to the Alonso-Sainz-Hamilton battle, pits for the fifth time as McLaren manages the pneumatic problem. The only good news for him is that should be the last time he needs to stop with seven laps to go.
Sargeant gets by Zhou for 12th place after battling the Alfa Romeo for a few laps. It is been a solid showing by the F1 debutant so far, just eight seconds and two places off team-mate Albon.
That Turn 4 nibble was very close to comfort - Alonso managed to slam on the anchors but just touched Sainz there. Still, Alonso is through and making a break for freedom.
Alonso gets third position! He got far too close for comfort into Turn 4, followed Sainz downhill, and pounced on a lock-up from his compatriot to get the move down with DRS into Turn 11!
"Try to protect the position," Sainz is told. "If I push these tyres won't make it to the end," comes the reply. Alonso is told to keep the pressure on.
De Vries, who didn't pit with the midfield runners during that brief virtual safey car period, is having his race ruined as he drops behind Tsunoda, Zhou and Sargeant on his aging hard tyres. The Dutchman is now 14th.
Alonso is now gunning for the final podium position, and he's hacked the gap to Sainz to 1.3s. Can Aston Martin break the Red Bull/Ferrari/Mercedes podium monopoly tonight?