The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Hamilton snubs F1’s London showpiece

- By Oliver Brown Partying in Greece: Lewis Hamilton has claimed that he needs a break Tour details: P19

Lewis Hamilton has risked incurring the wrath of Formula One’s owners, Liberty Media, after snubbing a major promotiona­l event for the British Grand Prix at Trafalgar Square tonight in favour of a twoday holiday.

The timing by Hamilton, who posted pictures of himself partying on the Greek island of Mykonos, was especially awkward on the day that Silverston­e officials triggered a break clause to end their hosting of the race in 2019. John Grant, chairman of the British Racing Drivers’ Club, hit out at a “crazy situation” that has allowed the country’s bestattend­ed sporting event to become commercial­ly unviable.

Liberty are understood to have told Hamilton that his presence for this evening’s parade of F1 cars through the capital, expected to be watched by a quarter of a million people, was required. But even as a triple world champion and one of only two British drivers on the grid, he appears to have placed his own needs above those of the sport.

Hamilton claimed, after a disappoint­ing fourth-place finish in Austria last weekend, that his chances of catching championsh­ip leader Sebastian Vettel were receding and that he would take a break to refresh himself.

That will be of little comfort to Liberty at a time when they are trying to galvanise broader interest in the Silverston­e weekend around F1’s one British superstar.

Liberty have told Silverston­e that there is no room for renegotiat­ing their contract, where the promoter’s fee rises by five per cent year and on which the circuit made a £4.8 million loss last year.

Grant lamented the impasse that has thrown the British Grand Prix’s future into fresh danger.

“It’s a crazy situation, where the top end of the sport is being subsidised by the grassroots, rather than the other way around,” Grant told The Daily Telegraph.

“It’s not one we can carry on supporting. So, we had to protect our position. The event generates lots of revenue – it’s a question of managing our costs, which we do extremely well.

“The reason the costs are higher than the revenue is the promoter’s fee, simple as that.

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