Lewis Hamilton cruised to a dominant Italian Grand Prix victory to put a stranglehold on the world title - but faces an investigation over tyres.
Hamilton's seventh victory in 12 races this season puts him a comfortable 53 points ahead of team-mate Nico Rosberg - more than two wins - as the German retired.
But there will be an investigation after his left-rear tyre pressure was found to be below the minimum allowed at the start.
Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel was second as Rosberg suffered an engine failure with three laps to go.
Hamilton survived a scare in the final laps when his team told him he had to drive flat out but not what the problem was.

It seems Mercedes were trying to get Hamilton to build a lead of more than 25 seconds in case of a penalty for the tyre pressure, which was 0.3psi lower than the minimum amount specified by Pirelli on safety grounds.
Hamilton crossed the line exactly 25.0 seconds ahead of Vettel.
Rosberg's left-rear tyre was also found to be below the required pressure - by 1.1psi in his case.
Williams's Felipe Massa fended off a late attack from team-mate Valtteri Bottas to take the final podium place.

Hamilton in total control

Hamilton's win, his most crushing of a season he has dominated from the first race in Australia back in March, came despite reliability concerns over an upgraded engine fitted to his car.
Both Mercedes drivers started the weekend with the new-specification unit, which used up all the team's seven remaining development 'tokens' in one go.
But Rosberg's had to be removed after the team discovered a contamination problem with it after final practice.
After checking Hamilton's engine, Mercedes decided it was safe to keep it in the car for the race, but the team admitted that it would be a nervous afternoon.
They also expected a major challenge from Ferrari, who had also introduced an upgraded engine for this high-speed track.

Hamilton was in imperious form. The 30-year-old built a 1.5-second lead on the first lap after concerns about an aggressive start from Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen on the front row alongside him disappeared when the Finn's car bogged down at the start and he was swamped by the field.
Hamilton blasted away from Vettel in second place, building a 12-second lead in 20 laps, sometimes pulling away at as much as a second a lap.
His lead over Vettel was out to well over 20 seconds when suddenly there was a scare in the closing laps as he was asked to start producing flat-out laps.

His engineer Peter Bonnington told him "don't ask questions, just execute", adding: "We will explain later."
"I can't go much quicker," Hamilton said. "What do I need to do?"
He was reassured that he was "doing what you need to do".

Vettel v Rosberg for second

Rather than try to threaten Hamilton, who soon pulled his advantage out to more than 20 seconds, Vettel had to look backwards at the advancing Rosberg.
His fellow German was only five seconds behind once the two had completed their pit stops, after Rosberg leapfrogged both Williams cars in one go with an early pit stop and stunning first lap out of the pits.

Rosberg was at a disadvantage having stopped seven laps earlier than Vettel, but he inched towards the Ferrari, getting the gap down to 3.7 seconds with 12 laps to go.
With three laps to go, Rosberg was two right behind Vettel but then the Mercedes stopped with flames pouring from his engine at the second chicane.
The engine that had been fitted on Saturday had already done five races, and it seems the demands of Monza were too much for it.

The midfield

Behind the Williams drivers, Raikkonen passed Force India's Sergio Perez for sixth place with three laps to go, moving up to fifth after Rosberg's retirement.
It was a good comeback but a disappointing result after such a strong qualifying performance.
The Mexican's team-mate Nico Hulkenberg won a close fight with Sauber's Marcus Ericsson for seventh, ahead of the Red Bulls of Daniel Ricciardo and Daniil Kvyat.