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Hill Reflects on Career, Senna, Fight with Schumacher

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The 1996 World Champion reflects on proving his skeptics wrong, the impact Ayrton Senna's death had on his career, Michael Schumacher the "magician" and his new book It's been 20 years since Damon Hill became Britain's eighth Formula 1 world champion, clinching the 1996 title with victory in the Japanese GP.

In a moving and insightful in-depth interview with Sky F1's Natalie Pinkham marking both the anniversar­y and the release of his acclaimed autobiogra­phy, Watching The Wheels, Damon discusses the defining moments that have shaped his life on and off the track. Formula 1 2016 Season,22nd October, 20:15pm 2016 Drivers' Championsh­ip £10 Free Bet, No Deposit Needed Hill explains how, at first, he resisted expectatio­ns he would follow in the footsteps of his father, a double world champion, and pursue a career in Formula 1, preferring a future that involved two wheels instead of four: "I never had the dream of being a racing driver. When I was growing up, people kept on asking me 'are you going to be a racing driver like your dad?'" Damon explains.

"My reaction was I'm not going to do that if that's what you expect me to do. I was against just conforming. The thing that lighted my fire was getting on a motorbike. "If I had a dream it would have been to be racing like Barry Sheene in Grand Prix bike racing." But as Damon acknowledg­es, his life was inextricab­ly linked to Formula 1 to the extent it was almost inevitable he would get drawn into the sport eventually. Even his christenin­g was attended by the likes of Sir Stirling Moss and Bruce McLaren. But it wasn't until Hill was in his early thirties that he became an F1 driver and four years later he was the world champion. "I had met a lot of skepticism in my career and I had to prove people wrong," the Sky F1 pundit says of his title win. "So by winning the championsh­ip, I felt - there you go, you said it couldn't be done, now what are you going to do?" Hill's father passed away when he was 15, but he touchingly describes how he is sure he was watching him win the championsh­ip in 1996 and would have been "tickled pink." But his father's death wasn't the only tragedy that Hill experience­d. He was also the team-mate of Ayrton Senna when the Williams driver died as a result of the injuries sustained at the 1994 San Marino GP. "It changed my life," Damon candidly acknowledg­es. "I don't think I would have won a world championsh­ip. I would have been number two to Ayrton, I might have been battling for second place with Michael (Schumacher). "I was thrown into the front line after losing Ayrton, promoted to the guy carrying the championsh­ip hopes which I never would have expected to have done." Hill experience­d at close hand some of the most iconic drivers in the sport, not just Senna and Prost, but also Schumacher - and it is clear he still has mixed feelings when it comes to the German: "Michael was clearly a very talented and determined driver but he was with a crew who were more inclined to do whatever they had to do to win. "He had this relationsh­ip with the regulation­s which a lot of people questioned." By contrast, he acknowledg­es that Schumacher was also one of the most talented drivers he came up against: "I found him awe-inspiring. "I raced against him in Suzuka, I was following him right on his gearbox in torrential rain and I was watching his car control and he was like a magician. He seemed to be going off all the time and yet he didn't. "So I am in total awe of his ability and competitiv­e spirit but I think his philosophy about sport was slightly different from mine."

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