The Star Malaysia

IT’S CRAZY TO MA ATCH ‘GODFATHER’S FIVE TITLES, SAYS S HAMILTON

Hamilton: Crazy to match F1 ‘godfather’ Fangio’s five

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AUSTIN: Lewis Hamilton described Juan Manuel Fangio as the “godfather” of Formula One and said it was crazy to think he could soon join the late Argentine as a five-time world champion.

Fangio was, until Michael Schumacher won seven titles, the man with the most and the 1950s champion remains revered as possibly the greatest driver of all time and certainly of his deadly era.

Hamilton can equal the South American’s haul tomorrow with three races to spare, the 33-year-old Mercedes driver needing only to score eight points more than Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel in the US Grand Prix.

“He’s the godfather for us, one of the greats from the beginning and will always be admired in the sport,” the Briton told reporters.

“It is crazy to think that I’m embarking on a similar number of championsh­ips that he had.”

Hamilton had no envy of Fangio’s era, however – a time of frequent driver funerals and also an age completely alien to his background as the grandson of 1950s Caribbean immigrants to England.

Hamilton has broken down barri- ers as Formula One’s first and only mixed-race champion, and did so coming from an under-privileged background without wealth or any family history of motor racing.

At a time when Fangio was dominant on the racetrack, Hamilton’s paternal grandfathe­r Davidson was working for the London undergroun­d transport system having newly-arrived from Grenada.

The sort of social leap Hamilton, now a global superstar with the fortune to match, has achieved would have been inconceiva­ble when the European-dominated Formula One world championsh­ip started up in 1950.

“I don’t know if the 50s was a particular­ly good time, it wasn’t a great time for black people either, so I probably wouldn’t have been racing back then,” said Hamilton.

“I’m grateful to be in this era and with the technology that we have and seeing the cars advance.”

Hamilton has driven cars from Fangio’s era, notably joining the Argentine’s great rival Stirling Moss a few years ago for a spin in an old Mercedes at Monza, which also proved an eye-opener.

“It’s always really strange to hear the drivers’ mental philosophy back then,” he said.

“Sir Stirling would say you’d want to fall out if the car’s going to crash: you hope that you get thrown out the car. It’s a much more confined space for us (now) – it’s all about being stuck in and being safe.”

Hamilton has now won 71 races, compared to Fangio’s 24 and second only to Schumacher’s tally of 91, but a season in the Argentine’s day had as few as six or seven races compared to the 21 today.

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 ?? AFP ?? The trend setters: Michael Schumacher (left) has won seven Formula One world titles while Juan Manuel Fangio (right) has captured five. Lewis Hamilton (pic below) is on the threshold of winning his fifth world title at this weekend’s US Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.—
AFP The trend setters: Michael Schumacher (left) has won seven Formula One world titles while Juan Manuel Fangio (right) has captured five. Lewis Hamilton (pic below) is on the threshold of winning his fifth world title at this weekend’s US Grand Prix in Austin, Texas.—

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