The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Sixth F1 world title for Lewis Hamilton after victory in US

FORMULA ONE: British driver finishes second in Texas behind team-mate

- PHILIP DUNCAN

Lewis Hamilton wrote his name into the pantheon of Britain’s all-time sporting greats by winning his sixth Formula One world championsh­ip in America.

The 34-year-old moved above the sport’s Argentinia­n godfather Juan Manuel Fangio and within striking range of Michael Schumacher’s record collection of seven after he took the chequered flag in Texas in second place.

Hamilton was required to finish only in the top eight to be certain of clinching the championsh­ip yesterday.

Valtteri Bottas did all he could to take the title fight on to Brazil by passing Hamilton – on a different strategy to his Mercedes team-mate – for the victory with four laps remaining.

Red Bull driver Max Verstappen ran Hamilton all the way to the line, finishing just eight tenths of a second behind the Englishman.

“Get in there, Lewis,” came the roar from Hamilton’s race engineer, Pete Bonnington. “That is it. Champion of the world. You did that in style, mate.”

“Still we rise, guys,” replied an emotional Hamilton. “What an incredible weekend. To everyone that came out, I cannot believe it. I really can’t believe it.”

Hamilton parked up in the spot reserved to celebrate his world championsh­ip.

Still sitting in his car, he removed his helmet and balaclava before standing on top of his silver machine and lapping up the adulation of the crowd. He then ran into the arms of his mechanics.

“It is overwhelmi­ng if I am honest,” said Hamilton. “I feel so much emotion.

“I have got my mum and dad here, my stepmum and stepdad here. It is an honour to be up there with the greats. My dad told me when I was six or seven never to give up – that’s the family motto.

“I don’t know about how many championsh­ips I can win, but as an athlete I feel as fresh as I could be. We will keep pushing.”

After the 34-year-old navigated his way safely through an opening lap fraught with danger, his fifth title in six years rarely looked in doubt.

With history beckoning, he might have been forgiven for slotting in behind Sebastian Vettel – but that is not his style.

Hamilton launched an audacious move around the outside of the Ferrari driver at the right-handed Turn 8 before making the passing move stick into the fast-approachin­g ninth bend.

Bottas was keeping to his part of the bargain. A fine start from pole saw him lead ahead of Max Verstappen with Ferrari’s Vettel out because of a left-rear suspension failure.

Red Bull brought Verstappen in on lap 13 for the first of two scheduled stops and, when Bottas came in for rubber on the following lap, Hamilton led.

Hamilton had made a one-stop strategy work in Mexico last weekend to claim a surprise win and hoped to do it again to celebrate another title with an 84th career win in his 248th start.

He resisted a call to stop for rubber on lap 23 but after Bottas passed him, came in the next time around. He was tasked with massaging his tyres for 32 laps.

Verstappen and Bottas pulled in for their respective second stops and Hamilton led by nine seconds.

On lap 51, the two Mercedes cars ran side-by-side in the duel for victory, with Bottas running off the road to avoid contact. But on the following lap, the Finn cruised past.

Verstappen tried but failed to pip Hamilton to the runner-up spot, with Charles Leclerc finishing fourth.

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 ?? Picture: Getty Images. ?? Lewis Hamilton celebrates after clinching the championsh­ip yesterday in Austin.
Picture: Getty Images. Lewis Hamilton celebrates after clinching the championsh­ip yesterday in Austin.

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