Daily Mail

LEWIS IN FIVE-STAR SHOW

Hamilton makes it a fabulous five British wins to join Clark

- JOE DOWNES reports from Silverston­e

LEWIS HAMILTON cruised to a record-equalling fifth British Grand Prix victory at Silverston­e yesterday — and closed the gap on world championsh­ip leader Sebastian Vettel to a single point. It was Hamilton’s fourth successive win on home soil and made all the sweeter when Vettel limped

home seventh after a late puncture. Hamilton said: ‘I feel like this is the best I’ve ever driven. I feel like I’m in my prime.’

LEWIS HAMILTON, the rock-star hero of modern Silverston­e, went surfing triumphant­ly on the hands of his adoring public.

By winning the British Grand Prix with a searing performanc­e, he had driven himself level with a different man from a bygone age, Jim Clark, and no acclaim for the Stevenage-born battler’s sporting prowess was too much.

The triple world champion gazed at the old golden trophy and surveyed the names engraved around its base. He could see that of Clark and himself among Stewart and Moss and Mansell and all the rest. But, of the Brits, only Hamilton and Clark have won Formula One’s oldest race five times. Only those two have won it on four successive occasions.

Fifty-five years separate Clark’s first victory from yesterday’s race, in which Hamilton reduced his deficit to Sebastian Vettel to a single point at the season’s halfway point after his Ferrari rival suffered a puncture in a late twist under leaden skies.

Clark’s original triumph came in 1962. And what did he do to celebrate winning his home race? He returned to the Borders and next morning he was herding sheep.

Times change and the jet- set Lewis, with the twinkling earrings, yelled from the podium: ‘I’m coming over to crowd surf. You better get ready for it.’

The throng in front of the ceremonial dais yelled their support, some waved flags. Nobody since Nigel Mansell has whipped up the Silverston­e crowd into seething delight as much as Hamilton.

But it was the links with Clark that swept Hamilton into the top drawer. ‘Legend’ was one descriptio­n thrown at him. He modestly said such a word does not resonate with him. It is for old age and retirement, he said. But he added: ‘I don’t know how I can drive the way I can. I feel blessed.’

This fabulous, often windswept track on an old airfield in Northampto­nshire has acted as the scene of some Hamilton magnificen­ce over the years — never more so than in 2008, when he was a minute better in the soaking wet than everyone else, echoes of Ayrton Senna at Donington in 1993. But his supremacy this past weekend was perhaps more complete, if less startling.

Sir Jackie Stewart, the only other Britain to win three world titles, and a close friend of Clark before the Scottish farmer died at Hockenheim in a Formula Two race in 1968, was quick to acknowledg­e a brilliant drive when he saw one yesterday.

‘He drove very, very well,’ said Stewart. ‘To have more than 10 seconds to play with was impressive.’

Why is Hamilton so strong at Silverston­e? ‘Cos I own it,’ he joked. Have we unearthed a new buyer to save the British Grand Prix? If only, although he did say the race should never be lost from the calendar. There are two years for a new deal to be struck between the BRDC and Liberty Media — respective­ly the track’s and the sport’s owners — and both sides are cautiously optimistic.

In light of the furore that followed Hamilton all the way to Silverston­e — snubbing the pre-race London parade last Wednesday — he was composure itself. He took pole by more than half a second. He led every lap. He set the fastest lap. He won by 14sec from his Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas.

Everything within his control worked out, so did everything outside his ken. Vettel’s rubber went pop on the penultimat­e lap. The German was one of three drivers to suffer front-left tyre failure. The rubber flapped before he was re-shod. He went from fourth to finish seventh.

Bottas is worthy of praise for his fine drive from ninth to second, including a smart pass on Vettel. Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen was third.

There were a few edgy skirmishes as Vettel and Max Verstappen duelled at high speed early on. Vettel tried to pass the Dutchman on the outside of Stowe. Verstappen was pushed on to the gravel and they bumped wheels on exit.

But Verstappen came back at him into Club with a vengeance. This time he squeezed Vettel and defended his position. Vettel waved his arms in anger, but bit his tongue. Verstappen let fly over the radio. ‘ He wants to play bumper cars,’ said the Red Bull scrapper. It was hard but fair racing, and hats off to them for that.

What Jolyon Palmer would have given for some action out there. He was due to start from 11th but a hydraulic fault meant his race was over before it started.

Palmer needs a run of luck to score his first point of the season but nothing is going his way.

Carlos Sainz was punted off by his Toro Rosso team-mate Daniil Kvyat. ‘Tell Dani he did a very good job there,’ said the Spaniard in a comment laced with sarcasm as Kvyaat was handed a drivethrou­gh penalty. More woe for McLaren with Fernando Alonso losing power from his Honda engine and retiring.

All were footnotes in the story of Hamilton’s drive through the record books.

 ?? JAMIE LORRIMAN ?? Hero worship: Hamilton crowd surfs
JAMIE LORRIMAN Hero worship: Hamilton crowd surfs
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