Sunday Mirror (Northern Ireland)

HAMILTON IS WORKING TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE... WHAT’S NOT TO LIKE?

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WHEN they reopen grounds to spectators, Nigel Farage should be banned from every single one.

Not that he is likely to want to attend a football match – too many immigrants for his liking, no doubt.

The odious Farage (above) put out a social media post in which he denounced an organised tour of Anfield for refugees staying in a hostel on the Wirral.

We do not need to go into his loathsome views on the matter.

We just need to send him packing with the news that football clubs are places where everyone who deserves compassion gets compassion.

As one fan tweeted: “Anfield, like Liverpool itself, welcomes people from all faiths and background­s, especially those who have come to the UK to escape war, tyranny and starvation.”

And football will continue to welcome people from all faiths and background­s… but, hopefully, never the vile Farage.

FRANK LAMPARD’S name appears on as pointless a shortlist as you could wish for.

The Premier League Manager of the Year will be Jurgen Klopp, but three others are on that list.

Chris Wilder, fair enough. Brendan Rodgers, mmmm. Lampard, just how exactly?

Yes, there was the transfer ban, but a fourth-place finish for a big club does not warrant a Manager-of-the-Year nomination.

Chelsea finished a place lower and six points worse off than the season before. You must go back to 1997-98 to find a campaign when they lost more games than the 12 defeats for Lampard’s team.

His side play some nice stuff, but the script that says he had a superb first season as a Premier League boss is mystifying.

IT is safe to say Lewis Hamilton will not be losing any sleep over the views of Ally McCoist.

Indeed, it is highly likely the six-time Formula One world champion is not overly familiar with the media work of the wise-cracking ex-footballer.

Hamilton might have once caught ‘Coisty’ on A Question of Sport, but is probably not aware of the former Rangers goal-getter’s insights into sporting characters.

Hamilton was on Ally’s agenda one morning last week.

“I’ve got to be brutally honest with you, I’m not his biggest fan. I don’t know what it is about him. I can’t put my finger on it. I can take or leave watching him and listening to him.”

Hardly the most forensic examinatio­n of Hamilton’s personalit­y, but, in truth, it is a take you might well have heard in the pub or at work or in your household.

If McCoist had suggested Hamilton was not a national treasure, was not viewed with unqualifie­d admiration by this country’s sport-watching public, he would probably have been right.

As the lovable rogue himself might say on his breakfast show slot, it is hard to put your finger on exactly why McCoist and others are not big fans.

But perhaps it is because Hamilton is just a little too serious, a little too earnest for the liking of some.

He is certainly not ‘knockabout’ in the manner beloved by talk-radio types.

But when Hamilton speaks about this year being special because of his efforts to help create a more diverse, inclusive sport, it is clearly because that means a lot to him.

There is nothing not to like about that. Similarly, when he spoke on Thursday of not feeling comfortabl­e negotiatin­g a new deal when the Covid-19 crisis was causing mass unemployme­nt, it showed someone sensitive to struggles outside his sporting bubble.

There is nothing not to like about that.

McCoist also made reference to Hamilton having a place in America.

And, of course, Hamilton’s main residence is in Monaco.

This page has made many a light-hearted barb about his living arrangemen­ts, but Hamilton would no doubt emphasise that every part of his life is tailored to getting the very best out of himself on the track.

It is what all great sporting champions do.

And there is no doubting Hamilton to be the greatest of champions.

Yes, he has been in the best car for a long time, but staying at the very top must take incredible mental resilience and single-mindedness, as well as special talent.

If he wins today’s 70th anniversar­y Grand Prix at Silverston­e, Hamilton (left, in qualifying) will be within three of Michael Schumacher’s record tally of 91 victories.

He will surely match, and then surpass, Schumacher’s mark of seven drivers’ championsh­ips.

In tandem with his recordsett­ing, Hamilton is putting more and more emphasis on campaignin­g for matters which are, according to his team boss and close friend Toto Wolff, “close to his heart”.

Hamilton takes responsibi­lity, using his platform and global appeal for good.

Anyone can show an indifferen­ce to anyone else, and anyone is allowed to say they are not Hamilton’s biggest fan.

But, to be brutally honest, it is hard to understand why.

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