Leigh retains F1 esports title as Mercedes celebrate a virtual double
LONDON:BRITISH teenager Brendon Leigh won the Formula One esports championship for the second year in a row on Saturday as Mercedes added a virtual double to the five successive constructors’ and drivers’ titles won on the real racetrack.
“The first year was special, this is sensational,” declared the 19-year-old former kitchen porter who secured the crown with a race to spare in London.
Mercedes won eight of the 10 virtual races to clinch the inaugural team title in a championship involving all the sport’s actual outfits with the exception of Ferrari, who have stayed away.
Leigh won six races and his Hungarian teammate Daniel Bereznay two, including the final one on the virtual Abu Dhabi layout that offered double points and went double the distance.
The Briton ended up with 216 points, with Bereznay runner-up on 166, according to provisional results. Mercedes scored 382, with Toro Rosso second on 210 and Sauber third on 119.
“Mercedes just seems to be dominant this year, not only in the real world but the virtual one as well,” said Sean Bratches, Formula One’s managing director for commercial matters, who handed over the trophy.
Mercedes clinched a fifth successive Formula One title double in Brazil last weekend, adding the constructors’ crown to the drivers’ won by now five-times world champion Lewis Hamilton.
Leigh won the inaugural esports championship in Abu Dhabi last year, a success that led to him shedding more than 20kg as he transformed from a chubby teen to a lean, professional gamer.
He suggested that work in the gym, with a Formula One trainer, had made all the difference in a virtual world where, unlike the real one, the drivers start with a level playing field.
“We’ve worked superhard behind the scenes and clearly it shows that Mercedes know what they’re doing,” said Leigh.
“People probably don’t realise how much fitness I’ve done and how good my fitness is right now. It’s really paid dividends, especially in the longer races like Singapore which is super-intense and you don’t get a break.”