<p>Formula One's Australian season-opener left Valtteri Bottas with a winning feeling that the Finn is determined to hang on to in Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix.</p>.<p>The 29-year-old Mercedes driver, who started the year in meaner and more aggressive mood, took a crushing victory in Melbourne two weeks ago to finish more than 20 seconds clear of team mate Lewis Hamilton.</p>.<p>The result handed him the maximum 25 points for the win plus an extra point for setting the fastest lap.</p>.<p>Buoyed by the margin and finding himself heading the championship standings for the first time, albeit with 20 races remaining, Bottas must try to stay ahead at Bahrain’s Sakhir circuit.</p>.<p>"When you feel you are performing at your best is a beautiful feeling," the four times race winner told reporters on Thursday. "I now just need to keep the momentum and feel that again soon."</p>.<p>Bahrain has been one of Bottas's stronger venues in the past.</p>.<p>The Finn scored his first Formula One pole position around the 5.4-Km layout and came within a second of snatching victory from Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel last year.</p>.<p>He is aware, however, that he could face a far tougher challenge on Sunday from Briton Hamilton and a resurgent Ferrari than he did in Australia.</p>.<p>"We were all positively surprised on the performance we had in Melbourne but... it is a bit of a funny circuit,” said the Finn.</p>.<p>"I would say here this weekend and (at the next race in) China, we’re going to get a much better picture of the real performance at this point of the year."</p>
<p>Formula One's Australian season-opener left Valtteri Bottas with a winning feeling that the Finn is determined to hang on to in Sunday’s Bahrain Grand Prix.</p>.<p>The 29-year-old Mercedes driver, who started the year in meaner and more aggressive mood, took a crushing victory in Melbourne two weeks ago to finish more than 20 seconds clear of team mate Lewis Hamilton.</p>.<p>The result handed him the maximum 25 points for the win plus an extra point for setting the fastest lap.</p>.<p>Buoyed by the margin and finding himself heading the championship standings for the first time, albeit with 20 races remaining, Bottas must try to stay ahead at Bahrain’s Sakhir circuit.</p>.<p>"When you feel you are performing at your best is a beautiful feeling," the four times race winner told reporters on Thursday. "I now just need to keep the momentum and feel that again soon."</p>.<p>Bahrain has been one of Bottas's stronger venues in the past.</p>.<p>The Finn scored his first Formula One pole position around the 5.4-Km layout and came within a second of snatching victory from Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel last year.</p>.<p>He is aware, however, that he could face a far tougher challenge on Sunday from Briton Hamilton and a resurgent Ferrari than he did in Australia.</p>.<p>"We were all positively surprised on the performance we had in Melbourne but... it is a bit of a funny circuit,” said the Finn.</p>.<p>"I would say here this weekend and (at the next race in) China, we’re going to get a much better picture of the real performance at this point of the year."</p>