Nelson Mail

. . . Hamilton rues that empty feeling

- Jerome Pugmire

Driving around Formula One tracks without fans cheering at Silverston­e and Monza would feel ‘‘very empty’’ for world champion Lewis Hamilton.

The first 10 races this season have been postponed or cancelled amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, with the iconic Monaco Grand Prix scrapped for the first time in 66 years.

F1 remains hopeful that the season can start in early July with a doublehead­er at the Austrian Grand Prix, and that 15 to 18 of the 22 scheduled races can yet be completed.

However, all of them would be held without any spectators until it is safe.

‘‘It’s going to be very empty,’’ Hamilton said yesterday, evoking the subdued atmosphere of preseason testing in Spain.

‘‘For us it’s going to be like a test day, probably even worse than a test day in a sense,’’ the Mercedes driver said. ‘‘On a test day there’s not a huge amount of people in Barcelona, but there are still some.’’

However, any racing would provide a welcome boost to people during lockdown.

‘‘I’m getting messages from people around the world who are struggling during this period because they’re not getting to watch sports,’’ Hamilton said in a video posted online by Mercedes. ‘‘It shows just how significan­t sport is in people’s lives, it brings us all together and it’s so exciting and captivatin­g. I don’t know how exciting it is going to be for people watching it on TV, but it’s going to be better than nothing.’’

Hamilton was praised for publicly questionin­g whether the season-opening Australian GP should go ahead on March 15. It was eventually cancelled, but only two days beforehand and with fans still queueing up.

Hamilton had used the first official news conference with F1 drivers to say he was shocked that organisers planned to proceed with the race, which attracts more than 300,000 people over four days.

McLaren withdrew even before the cancellati­on after a team member tested positive for the coronaviru­s. Mercedes wrote to governing body FIA and F1 requesting the cancellati­on and began preparatio­ns to leave before the decision was announced.

The whole experience in Melbourne was a merry-go-round of uncertaint­y.

‘‘It really, really was a shock to the system. Obviously on that Thursday, I had commented my opinion of whether or not we should have been there,’’ Hamilton said. ‘‘Then to wake up the next day, honestly, with the excitement that I’m going to be getting inside the car . . . and then to hear that we’re not going to be going to the track . . . it was very, very surreal.’’

 ??  ?? Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton

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