Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Hamilton, Vettel aim to match Fangio with 5th title

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PARIS — Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel start the Formula One season in Australia on March 25 within touching distance of further greatness.

A fifth world title would move one of the drivers level with Juan Manuel Fangio and second only to Michael Schumacher’s seven.

Hamilton and Vettel share 109 victories (Hamilton 62, Vettel 47), 216 podiums (11799) and 122 pole positions (7250). Hamilton got his first title 10 years ago before Vettel won four in a row in 2010-2013.

But Hamilton has dominated since joining Mercedes. Last year’s title was the British driver’s third in four seasons to level at 4-4 with his Ferrari rival.

Next Sunday’s season-opening Australian GP will be Vettel’s 200th race, and fittingly the German is seeking his 100th F1 podium. Hamilton, meanwhile, seeks a record-extending 73rd pole and a 63rd GP victory.

Matching Fangio, the daring Argentine who won his titles in the 1950s when driving circumstan­ces were extremely challengin­g, will make one of them truly stand out.

“[He was] the best we’ve ever had in terms of putting it all together,” Vettel said of Fangio, while Hamilton described him as “the godfather of the sport” driving in “the most dangerous period of time.”

F1 is far more safety-conscious these days, and risk-taking on track has greatly diminished. Still, this did not stop Vettel and Hamilton clashing last season. Gaining any sort of psychologi­cal advantage can prove important, considerin­g they are hugely successful in their own right.

Hamilton, 33, has the edge with 47 victories and 50 poles but is three years older than his rival.

“It gets harder and I love that challenge. I love that I’m

faced with this huge mountain to climb again,” Hamilton said. “I’ve got to work harder than I’ve done before. Physically I’m stronger, I’ve put on muscle. I feel very strong mentally.”

Although Hamilton has yet to sign a new contract with Mercedes, fueling talk he could walk away to pursue other interests at the end of the season, his hunger is still evident. Only Schumacher has more victories with 91.

Taking inspiratio­n from veteran stars, such as 20-time Grand Slam tennis champion Roger Federer, helps Hamilton hit his targets. Persuading himself he’s the best is an important part of that success.

“That’s what you have to think. I’m sure if you asked Federer, he will truly believe that if he’s trained hard and feeling great, there’s no one that can touch him,” Hamilton said. “You have to be convinced that will be the case.”

Hamilton is friends with another tennis star, Serena Williams, who like Federer is 36. Hamilton clearly draws inspiratio­n from athletes who have pushed back time.

“I look at these greats who continue to break barriers within their own performanc­e. I keep going back to Federer, but he’s back at the top,” Hamilton said. “To have that drive: You’ve got family, you’ve got wealth, but still have that drive — maybe it is part of the mark of a great. It’s inspiring to see these iconic individual­s continue to shine, and they’re inspiring.”

But even Hamilton concedes there are limits.

“I was playing tennis with my dad, trying to be Federer,” Hamilton said. “I sucked, but it doesn’t mean I can’t try.”

On the track, challengin­g Vettel will prove an arduous fight.

The 30-year-old has a huge point to prove this year after the way he capitulate­d at the Singapore GP last year.

Vettel was only three points behind Hamilton in the championsh­ip with seven races remaining. But he crashed from pole position and the nightmare scenario saw Hamilton win the race. It was the turning point of the season and Vettel never recovered.

“I can’t wait to be in Australia,” Vettel said. “I have confidence in our car I have a lot of confidence in our team, I know how skilled and committed the guys are.”

As well as each other, Vettel and Hamilton — who won 14 of 20 races in 2017 — should also keep an eye on their wing mirrors this year.

Pre-season tests indicated Red Bull will be faster and — crucially — more reliable this time round.

Last season, drivers Max Verstappen and Daniel Ricciardo failed to finish a total of 13 races between them, an alarmingly high total for the team which won four consecutiv­e drivers and constructo­rs titles in 2010-2013 with Vettel.

But crashes aside, Red Bull also won three races.

With extra speed and consistenc­y, Red Bull could be challengin­g for victory in a lot more races. They have two hungry drivers jostling to be No. 1 within their own team, which will add spice to the championsh­ip.

“Mercedes are probably just in front of us but Ferrari I’m not sure,” Ricciardo said. “But I think we’re going to be much closer than last year.”

F2 champion Charles Leclerc — a highly rated 20-yearold who came through Ferrari’s prestigiou­s drivers’ academy — is racing for Sauber. Making his debut for Williams will be 22-year-old Russian driver Sergey Sirotkin.

Fernando Alonso will find out if it was worth his McLaren team changing engines from struggling Honda to Renault. If the 36-year-old Spaniard fails to add to his 97 career podiums, this could well be his final year in F1.

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