Western Mail

Being a good sport could cost me – Lewis

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MERCEDES fear Lewis Hamilton’s remarkable show of sportsmans­hip at the Hungarian Grand Prix could cost him this year’s championsh­ip.

As Sebastian Vettel took the chequered flag at the Hungarorin­g to claim his fourth victory of the season, Hamilton surrendere­d the final spot on the podium to his Mercedes team-mate Valtteri Bottas.

Bottas had earlier been ordered aside by Mercedes so Hamilton could take the challenge to the Ferrari duo of Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen at a track where overtaking is notoriousl­y difficult.

But Hamilton, who said he would give the place back to team-mate Bottas should he fail in his pursuit of the Ferrari duo, remained true to his word, and pulled aside on the final corner of the final lap.

He would have been 11 points behind Vettel had he remained in third. His glowing sporting gesture, however, means he will now head into the sport’s summer shutdown 14 points adrift of his rival.

“It cost us three points and it could cost us the championsh­ip and we are perfectly conscious of that,” Mercedes boss Toto Wolff said.

“Saying I wouldn’t regret the decision would be very naive.

“The truth is that if you miss out on the title by three points everybody would say it is because of Budapest and I would be the first one to shoot myself in the knee.

“But standing by your values is what is going to make us win more championsh­ips.

“The purpose of us being here is doing the right things and winning in the right way. Sometimes doing it the right way and standing by your values is f ****** tough and it was today, believe me. “I feel rubbish” After moving seven seconds clear of Bottas, and with an eye on the championsh­ip, Hamilton might have been forgiven for holding position.

Ferrari, as they historical­ly do, have thrown their complete backing behind one driver. Vettel is their main man, but Hamilton, who opposes such preferenti­al treatment, vowed to win this year’s championsh­ip the right way.

“The mind is more cut-throat and every point counts, and it’s do-or-die,” Hamilton said. “The heart told me that the right thing to do was to let Valtteri past. I want to win the championsh­ip the right way, and I don’t know whether that will come back to bite me.”

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