The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Mercedes, Hamilton’s struggles put to the test in Melbourne

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MELBOURNE, Australia: An uncompetit­ive Mercedes and admission that he is “struggling mentally and emotionall­y” have put Lewis Hamilton’s remarkable record at the Australian Grand Prix under severe threat this weekend.

Britain’s deposed seven-time world champion is bidding to make it an incredible seven straight pole positions in Melbourne.

But Hamilton has endured a torrid start to the season with Mercedes alarmingly adrift of pace-setters Red Bull and Ferrari, unable to challenge for grid position or victory in both Bahrain and Saudi Arabia.

The once-dominant German manufactur­er has had problems with porpoising – bouncing at high speed – after a radical design overhaul in the off-season to meet new technical regulation­s designed to promote closer racing.

“Hard some days to stay positive,” the 37-year-old Hamilton said on Instagram last week.

“I have struggled mentally and emotionall­y for a long time, to keep going is a constant effort but we have to keep fighting. We have so much to do and to achieve.”

Hamilton, who was demoralise­d at the messy way his world crown slipped from his grasp last year in the final race at Abu Dhabi, described his car as “undriveabl­e” after qualifying only 16th in Saudi Arabia a fortnight ago.

It was the first time since the 2017 Brazilian Grand Prix, where he crashed, that the Briton had failed to progress from the Q1 section of qualifying.

Things didn’t improve much during the race, ending 10th to earn a solitary point, some 1:13.948 secs adrift of winner, world champion and rival Max Verstappen of Red Bull. While Hamilton managed third in the opening round at Bahrain, it was only after both Red Bull drivers – Verstappen and Sergio Perez – retired in the closing stages.

After those back-to-back races to open the season, Mercedes have had an extra week to dissect the data and work on their problems heading to Albert Park.

Red Bull motorsport advisor Helmut Marko has no doubt Mercedes, who have claimed eight straight constructo­rs’ championsh­ips, will fix their issues, denying their early form spelt an end to their dominant era.

“I’m fully convinced they’ll be back if they get the bouncing under control,” he told Formel1. de ahead of Melbourne.

“And Lewis Hamilton is nine points behind Verstappen so that’s nothing either. I don’t think it’s an end (of an era), but maybe it’s a fight on the same level.”

Hamilton might only be nine points behind Verstappen, but he’s already 29 adrift of Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc, with another failure this week making his quest for an unpreceden­ted eighth world title even more difficult.

He can take consolatio­n from Albert Park being a happy hunting ground, with the Briton Melbourne’s pole master, claiming it eight times and every year since 2014.

 ?? ?? Lewis Hamilton
Lewis Hamilton

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