Max Verstappen comfortably beat the Mercedes driver at the Styrian Grand Prix to extend his championship lead over Lewis Hamilton to 18 points.
Verstappen started from pole position at his team's home circuit, the Red Bull Ring, and held the lead in Turn 1. He remained in full control, with Hamilton never coming close to challenging for victory, falling 35 seconds behind.
The size of Hamilton's deficit was in part due to a late pit-stop for fresh tyres, which enabled him to claim the extra point awarded to the driver who sets the fastest lap of the race.
Verstappen's win was Red Bull's fourth in a row, a run it will be expected to increase to five next week when the circuit hosts the second F1 race, the Austrian Grand Prix.
Red Bull's ominous pace will only reinforce the growing belief that the team has a clear edge on speed over Mercedes for now.
The battle behind the title rivals was between teammates Verstappen and Hamilton for the last place on the podium. Mercedes' Valtteri Bottas had qualified in second place, but was dropped to fifth on the grid due to a penalty for spinning in the pit-lane during Friday's practice.
Sergio Pérez was ahead of Bottas for the opening lap, although he struggled to overtake Lando Norris in the opening laps, but Mercedes was able to put Bottas in front in the first pit-stop window. A slow stop for Perez helped Bottas' cause.
Perez briefly pitched for new tires with 16 laps remaining after closing the fastest lap of the race, but he didn't have enough speed to catch Bottas. Perez was just half a second behind Bottas when the pair crossed the finish line for the final time.
Norris claimed another impressive fifth place for McLaren, ahead of Ferrari duo Carlos Sainz and Charles Leclerc.
Leclerc's finish was particularly impressive, given the fact that he was driven to the back of the field on the opening lap after losing his front wing in a collision with Pierre Gasly, which ultimately ended the AlphaTauri driver's race early. .
Leclerc's fightback voted him F1's Driver of the Day.
Lance Stroll, Fernando Alonso and Yuki Tsunoda rounded out the top ten.
George Russell looked ready for his long-awaited first point for Williams and ran into the top ten until his pit-stop. However, Williams faced issues and the pit-stop was slow. Russell was soon called to the pits to retire the car.