The Asian Age

Maverick Hami drives home a point

- Lewis Hamilton celebrates with fans after winning the British GP on Sunday.

Silverston­e, July 17: Booed and disparaged before the race, an unconventi­onal Lewis Hamilton silenced his critics and rebooted his bid for a fourth world title with a recordequa­lling fifth British Grand Prix victory.

The three-times world champion claimed his 67th pole position and his 57th Grand Prix victory on Sunday to move within a point of championsh­ip leader Sebastian Vettel, seventh in his Ferrari after a late puncture.

But prior to the triumph, Hamilton was under a cloud after failing to show up for a pre-race promotiona­l event in London, where his name was booed by fans and negative media coverage dominated the Mercedes driver’s grand prix build-up.

Mercedes team chief Toto Wolff, who had been dismayed by the negative reaction to Hamilton’s decision to take a two-day break on the Greek island Mykonos rather than turn up to promote his sport, attempted to deflect the criticism.

“I think that sometimes he just needs the right impulse to extract maximum performanc­e,” said Wolff. “I think maybe that is an answer to the critics.

“I still don’t understand why the British hero is being beaten up before the Grand Prix. It probably made him even more determined to show his fans how he can drive. And how he can drive...”

Few would argue that Hamilton is not the most uniquely talented driver in the current field with a rare gift for speed in all conditions, but many prefer to point at his unconventi­onal, by Formula One standards, lifestyle decisions.

In such a conservati­ve sport, only now realising a need for change following the takeover by the American Liberty Media group, Hamilton’s arrival as the first black champion driver — notwithsta­nding Indian driver Narain Karthikeya­n’s spell with Jordan — remains unique 10 years after his debut.

The Briton loves travelling, music, spending time in the United States and doing his own thing.

Turning the tables on critics On Sunday, he ended a run of two disappoint­ing races due to problems beyond his control, with a triumph that turned the tables on the jeerers and saw him heralded as a hero by many in the vast 125,000 crowd and ‘crowdsurfi­ng’ with groups of fans.

“I have more poles than most,” he said. “I am obviously building up the wins that I have. My performanc­e is second to none. If you don’t know now that my preparatio­n is mostly on point, then I guess you never will...”

Hamilton’s point has been that he is his own man and knows what is best for him, in terms of conduct and preparatio­n... and if that includes a beach stint on a Greek island, then so be it.

“I will be training hard next week — in different locations, as I always do,” he added, when asked about his plans before the next race in Hungary later this month.

Another master-class may be more difficult to deliver on the hot, slow and dusty Hungarorin­g, but Hamilton should not be faulted for his determinat­ion to succeed.

One more pole position in Hungary would lift him level with the all-time record of seven-time champion Michael Schumacher of Germany and another win would make him the championsh­ip leader ahead of Vettel as the sport heads into its European summer vacation.

 ?? — AP — AFP ?? Silverston­e: Kimi Raikkonen said his car felt normal and he had no warning of the first of two tyre failures to hit Ferrari’s hopes in the closing laps of British Grand Prix.
The Finn said the front left tyre of his car was behaving ‘more or less...
— AP — AFP Silverston­e: Kimi Raikkonen said his car felt normal and he had no warning of the first of two tyre failures to hit Ferrari’s hopes in the closing laps of British Grand Prix. The Finn said the front left tyre of his car was behaving ‘more or less...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India