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Hamilton’s £40m deal up in air as chief thinks on future

- PHILIP DUNCAN

IN BARCELONA

LEWIS HAMILTON’S future at Mercedes has been thrown into fresh doubt after his boss Toto Wolff revealed he could step back from Formula One at the end of the year.

Hamilton’s £40million-a-season contract is up for renewal in five months, and the world champion is on the record as saying his plans hinge on team principal Wolff’s movements.

Like Hamilton, Wolff, who has presided over Mercedes’ unrivalled and remarkable six consecutiv­e driver and team championsh­ips, is out of contract at the end of the campaign. The Austrian, 47, said discussion­s over a new deal with Ola Kallenius, chairman of Mercedes’ parent company Daimler, are ongoing and positive.

Speaking ahead of tomorrow’s Spanish Grand Prix, Wolff said: “Lewis staying is the best thing he can do and what he wants to do.

“He has the possibilit­y of achieving great success, winning more races and hopefully championsh­ips and it is flattering that he says that his future is dependent on what I do. But he doesn’t need me. He has a great team there that will always support him.

“I don’t want to spin that

I am leaving, that is not the case. I am in a moment of reflection where F1 is heading to, what is happening with Covid and for personal reasons, too.

“My wife Susie [Wolff] is in a good place running a Formula E team but that means she is away a lot. I have been to God knows how many Formula One races, something like 120 in the last eight years.

“I really have enjoyed many years in Formula One in my role as team principal. I am happy that my relationsh­ip with Ola is as good as it can be and we speak almost every day and there are many factors that make me want to stay in Formula One.

“On the other side, it takes its toll and this plays into my considerat­ion. It doesn’t mean I will not be around as a team principal or in another role but it is just that I am thinking about it. I never want to be in a situation where you go from very good to good.”

Hamilton, who holds a 30-point championsh­ip lead over Red Bull’s Max Verstappen in his bid for a record-equalling seventh world championsh­ip, looks likely to extend his stay with Mercedes. Indeed, he said on the eve of last month’s British Grand Prix that he could race on for another three years.

But Wolff’s comments might provide the Briton, who said he is yet to open formal discussion­s with Mercedes over a new deal, with food for thought.

The 35-year-old finished fastest in practice for the sixth round of the championsh­ip at Barcelona’s Circuit de Catalunya as his Mercedes team continued to flex their muscles.

Meanwhile, McLaren boss Zak Brown has reignited his row with Otmar Szafnauer by telling his Racing Point rival: “I’ve never been fined a dollar, let alone 400,000” for breaking Formula One rules.

Racing Point have been docked 15 points and fined £361,000 by the FIA for copying parts of the Mercedes that Lewis Hamilton drove to a sixth world championsh­ip in 2019.

Brown described claims that Racing Point had imitated the Silver Arrows simply by taking photograph­s as “BS”. Racing Point team principal Szafnauer then hit back by saying Brown is “not an engineer” and “knows more about historic racing than Formula One”.

But speaking ahead of this weekend’s Spanish Grand

Prix, Brown responded: “I thought a lot of what Otmar said was accurate. I am not an engineer, I don’t know the rulebook from page one to the last page but as CEO you have a racing team and it is their job to know that.”

 ??  ?? Mercedes chief Toto Wolff was in speculativ­e mood yesterday as Lewis Hamilton (below) was quickest in practice in Spain
Mercedes chief Toto Wolff was in speculativ­e mood yesterday as Lewis Hamilton (below) was quickest in practice in Spain
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