GP Racing (UK)

Vettel v Hamilton: the sport’s two four-time champs scrap for five

THE FIGHT FOR FIVE

- WORDS ANDREW BENSON

For the first time in F1 history, two four-time world champions go head-to-head for a fifth title. And with both Lewis Hamilton and Seb Vettel in competitiv­e cars, the fight for supremacy should be a thriller. It’s one neither can afford to lose…

BY the end of 2018, the likelihood is that either Lewis Hamilton or Sebastian Vettel will have become a five-time world champion. In the statistica­l pantheon, that would move them ahead of Alain Prost and into a tie for second place with Juan Manuel Fangio, with only Michael Schumacher ahead – and one step closer to being matched.

So who will make the leap? The 2017 season provided the first head-to-head battle between these two titans of Formula 1’s modern age, and 2018 could be the next: Ferrari’s against-the -odds Melbourne win raised hopes of a tantalisin­g face-off for a fifth title.

At this early stage in the season, however, there are doubts as to whether Ferrari can maintain the momentum of their first campaign under the new regulation­s. And, after 2017’s end-of-year implosion, whether they can keep up a season-long challenge even if they manage to start competitiv­ely.

The drivers also have their fallibilit­ies – Hamilton and his occasional off-weekends; Vettel and the sort of red-mist moments that proved so costly last year. But of their ability to deliver world titles there is no question. That fifth championsh­ip clearly matters to both. But is it about being the first to five? Or could it be something less tangible… more personal? All racing drivers exist to win; it’s the essence of their being. And for those as great as Hamilton and Vettel, not winning hurts – and it drives them on to achieve better things. But winning is a complex concept. In its simplest form, it means finishing first in a race, or a qualifying session. But it’s more than that. All racing drivers quickly have to get used to the fact that they are going to be spending more time losing than they are winning. So to be a winner in their own minds is also about proving they are the best, and being seen to be the best. This is why beating a team-mate is so important. The same goes for earning the respect of your peers, and the acclaim of the outside world.

Hamilton is now statistica­lly the most successful driver of both his era and his country. And in the last year or so he has passed a number of important landmarks. In Brazil 2016, he overtook Prost to become the second most successful driver ever in terms of wins. In Azerbaijan last year, he moved ahead of his childhood hero Ayrton Senna’s tally of 65 poles, then in Monza surpassed Schumacher’s all-time record of 68.

When his fourth title became inevitable, Lewis was asked about whether he felt he could beat Schumacher’s record of seven world championsh­ip wins. “It has never been my desire,” he said. “My goal as a kid was always to do something like Ayrton. I had never imagined what would be beyond that. So to think I will have these four titles and I am still young and still have time ahead of me, the quest is to see exactly what I want. Inevitably I want to go for a fifth. I have never had a dream to chase Michael or other people’s titles, but it is one chapter closed and it is how I want to write the future.”

Speaking at the launch of the 2018 Mercedes-amg F1 W09 EQ Power+ in late February, Hamilton claimed he “forgot about” what he had achieved in 2017 over the winter: “I had no one reminding me that I was a fourtime world champion, so I went back to normality. Then when you go back to training, you start to work out, why am I training? What is my motivation? Where am I going to find the training and the drive? What are the goals? It was only in the last couple of days that I saw something about being up there with Fangio and that is quite exciting.

“You have the down time. You’ve had a successful year; how can you go back? What’s next? Are you still hungry? Do you still want to go back there and sit and do interviews? Do you still want to win races and do qualifying? Do you still enjoy driving the car? Can you be better? In what areas can you be better?

“There are other passions I have that

I feel as strongly about as I do racing. At what point do they take priority? It is not a case of ‘I’ve got to go to the gym so I’ll sulk on the way to the gym.’ I don’t force it, I take my time, and eventually I miss going for a run and I miss working out and I look forward to getting back to it. And when you get back into that training process you discover the goals.

“It is quite simple,” Hamilton concluded. “I want to somehow be better than I was last year. Last year I think was the best year I had performanc­e-wise. How can I top that? I proved it was a very, very strong year, but there are lots of areas where I can improve, actually. Even in terms of my relationsh­ip with the team, how I interact with the team. How do I use their genius to help me achieve their goals and help them achieve what they want and what I want?”

So, what does Lewis want? How does he want to write the future? During last season, another answer he gave on the same subject revealed further clues as to how he sees the remainder of his career.

“I am going to continue to expand on it,” he said. “There are other drivers who are relatively close, like Sebastian. Someone else will come along, but I have got to take it as far as I can take it.”

For Lewis, it seems, the numbers themselves are not the thing. If anything, from now on the numbers are useful only as an objective measure of himself against others – a way of emphasisin­g his already strongly held belief that he is the number-one driver of his era. And to

HAMILTON’S VOYAGE OF DISCOVERY

do that, he has to beat Vettel and then keep on beating him, so his rival – who is two-and-a-half years younger – cannot overtake his statistics.

IS IT PERSONAL?

The motivation behind this competitio­n is not only external, in terms of how Hamilton is perceived, but also internal, in terms of how Lewis perceives himself and his contempora­ry rivals. Throughout most of last year, Hamilton’s public utterances made it very clear that he held Seb Vettel in high regard.

“Competing against a four-time world champion, you know you are competing against the best,” he said at one point. “You are competing against someone who is really on form and generally you are both on the knife edge and one of you is going to falter. I love that challenge of trying not to be the one that falters.”

Then, on another occasion, he remarked: “He is an exceptiona­l driver and he continues to show that year upon year and what he does in that Ferrari is fantastic.”

And yet… Hamilton does not even think that Vettel is the best among his rivals. In an interview at the end of last season, he said he regarded himself, Vettel, Fernando Alonso and Max Verstappen as the top drivers. But discussing the prospect of a challenge that might be mounted by a future team-mate, he added: “I already feel like I’ve raced against the best here, which in my personal opinion is Fernando.”

There was another point last year when he said: “I was team-mate to Alonso in my first year and I beat him.” The truth of that statement is somewhat debatable. Yes, Hamilton technicall­y finished second in the 2007 world championsh­ip, while Alonso finished third. But that was decided on a results count-back of second places, after they tied on both points and wins. Of the races in which they both finished, Alonso was ahead sixfive. In most objective eyes, that is as close to a draw as you can get in Formula 1.

Neverthele­ss, Hamilton’s remark is well worth emphasisin­g, because it sums up his self-belief. Based on that collection of public utterances, it appears to be: “I’m the best. Alonso’s the closest to me. And I’m damned if I’m going to allow myself to be beaten by anyone else – or be seen to be beaten – in a fair fight.”

The lessons of 2016 appear only to have solidified this in Hamilton’s mind. As that season was unfolding, he made much of the reliabilit­y problems that undoubtedl­y cost him the championsh­ip during his fight with teammate Nico Rosberg. But since the start of 2017, he has rarely mentioned them when talking about 2016. He has tended only to talk about his own fallibilit­ies – the dodgy starts, the off-weekends, the need to be at his best – without which he could have won in 2016 even with the skewed reliabilit­y record.

This awareness of his own potential weaknesses, and a sense that only he can beat himself, was also clear in his reaction to Vettel’s moment of madness at the

Azerbaijan Grand Prix in Baku last year, when the

Ferrari racer deliberate­ly drove into Hamilton in a fit of pique, believing incorrectl­y that he had brake-tested him. Once he had made it clear that Vettel had taken the accusation back, and once the dust had finally settled,

Hamilton had this to say about the situation: “We are not 20-year olds. We are grown men now. Watching tennis, great players, great golfers, their mind is in control. You’re having a battle with the guy and there is that famous saying: ‘Keep your friends close and your enemies closer.’ I watch Sebastian. I know what he has achieved. I know how consistent he has been. I know where his strengths and weakness are. I know the strengths and weaknesses of his car.

“Look at Nadal and Federer, the composure they have through a game and how they present themselves after a win or a loss. I try to follow that and take a lot of inspiratio­n from that. There are times he probably hates me but I try not to contain any negativity. I have managed to build this barrier to bounce off negativity. Love conquers all.

“The feud after Baku and all that – even today, it doesn’t matter. What matters when you fall is how you get up.”

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 ??  ?? The greatest of rivals; the greatest of respect. But for Hamilton, only because he is certain that he is the best
The greatest of rivals; the greatest of respect. But for Hamilton, only because he is certain that he is the best

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