Daily Star Sunday

LEW MUST BE JOKING

Hammy writes off title hope

- By JOHN NORFOLK

LEWIS HAMILTON says he has NO HOPE of winning a record eighth Formula One title this season, after he finished 14th in the sprint race at Imola.

The seven-time world champion crossed the line an eye-watering 41.4 seconds behind winner Max Verstappen after just 21 laps of racing.

World champion Verstappen passed Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc on the penultimat­e lap to take the chequered flag and secure pole position for today’s Emilia Romagna Grand Prix.

But Hamilton (right) endured yet another woeful afternoon in his desperatel­y uncompetit­ive Mercedes machine.

The British driver started 13th before dropping two places on the opening lap.

Hamilton regained one spot when he passed Aston Martin’s Lance Stroll but, after failing to score, he is already 50 points behind Leclerc in the championsh­ip standings – the equivalent of two victories.

And, with yesterday’s result deciding the grid for today’s main event, he faces losing even further ground in the title race.

“We are obviously not fighting for the championsh­ip,” said Hamilton. “We are fighting to understand the car, improve and progress through the year. That’s all we can hope for now.

“Ultimately we haven’t got it right, but everyone is working as hard as they can to reverse it.”

Hamilton and his Mercedes team are still attempting to remain positive following their unsatisfac­tory start to the new campaign.

But the first signs of tension were evident after qualifying on Friday, with Hamilton and Mercedes boss Toto Wolff involved in a heated exchange at the back of the team’s garage.

“It’s quite funny how it’s being interprete­d,” said Wolff, as he tried to play down the dispute.

“Lewis and I shared frustratio­n that we weren’t able to extract performanc­e. It was basically the same point of view and sheer anger. There’s no division and no blame.

“There’s pressure to get it right, but nobody in the team is enjoying the ride at the moment. We just need to dig ourselves out of the hole. “Today marks the low of this first four races. And it’s obvious that we’re not anywhere near the fight at the front.” Hamilton’s Merc team-mate George Russell started and finished 11th, a day after both Mercedes cars failed to qualify in the top 10 for the first time in a decade. Wolff added: “Points on Sunday should be the minimum, but that is not where we set our expectatio­ns. This weekend is a complete write-off and, beyond the fact that we are learning, it has been another humbling experience.”

In Mercedes’ absence at the front, Ferrari and Red Bull are the class of the 2022 field, with Leclerc and Verstappen trading blows for the fourth round in a row.

Verstappen started first before losing the lead to Leclerc following a slow getaway from the line.

But, after a frenetic conclusion, Verstappen ruined Ferrari’s homecoming party by fighting his way ahead of Leclerc at the Variante Tamburello, to take the chequered flag and finish 2.9secs ahead of his Ferrari rival.

Sergio Perez finished third in the other Red Bull ahead of Carlos Sainz, with Lando Norris in fifth place for McLaren.

Verstappen said: “I don’t know what happened at the start, it was just really bad.

“Initially it looked like Charles had a bit more pace but then he ran into trouble with the tyres.

“With other tyre compounds coming into place tomorrow, it might look a bit different.”

 ?? ?? CRUCIAL MOMENT: Verstappen overtakes Leclerc for the lead
CRUCIAL MOMENT: Verstappen overtakes Leclerc for the lead

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