The Mercury

Can Hamilton trump ‘Call of Duty’ – and Rosberg?

-

AUSTIN: Lewis Hamilton will be starring in the next Call of Duty video game due out next month, but the Formula One world champion has a real and more immediate fight on his hands in Texas this weekend.

The Mercedes driver, returning to the US Grand Prix circuit where last year he won his third title, told 3.8 million followers on Twitter that he would be a character in the Infinite Warfare edition.

Hamilton, 33 points behind German teammate Nico Rosberg with four rounds remaining, is determined to give it his best shot on the track as well – even if it is looking an increasing­ly long one.

The Briton knows the odds are now stacked against him winning a fourth title this season, given that even winning all the remaining races will not be enough if Rosberg finishes second every time.

But the same bad luck that saw him retire with engine failure while leading in Malaysia this month can also strike elsewhere.

“We’ve got four races left to make the most of it and that’s exactly what I plan to do. It’s just about hitting every race weekend as hard as I can, going all out for every win and seeing what happens from there,” said Hamilton.

“I’ll be holding nothing back out there. I’ve got some great memories from Austin, with three wins from four races and, of course, the title win last year. That was one of the highlights of my career, no doubt.

“It’s almost like the American fans have adopted me as their own, so I’ll try to channel all of that positive energy into this weekend.”

Hamilton could do with some of that after a negative Japanese Grand Prix in which he seemed determined to take on all-comers.

At Suzuka two weeks ago, he was criticised for playing with Snapchat on his phone during the main Thursday news conference and then walked out of a team media briefing after hitting out at “disrespect­ful” criticism of his behaviour by journalist­s.

If Hamilton hopes for a return to form in Texas, Rosberg has unfinished business to deal with as he charts his way – one race at a time – towards a first title. His mistake in Austin last October, while leading the race, gifted the title to Hamilton in bitter circumstan­ces.

Rosberg went off to console himself after the race by belting out Bon Jovi’s Living on a Prayer at a team karaoke night. It seemed to do the trick and the German reeled off seven wins in a row. – Reuters

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa