The Star Malaysia

Hamilton’s engine trouble just bad luck, says technical head Lowe

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LEWIS Hamilton’s engine problems are down to bad luck and “anybody with an ounce of intelligen­ce” knows Mercedes did not sabotage the Briton’s car in Malaysia last weekend, team technical head Paddy Lowe (pic) said.

Triple Formula One world champion Hamilton retired at Sepang when his car’s engine suffered a fiery failure 16 laps from the end while he was leading the race comfortabl­y.

He said afterwards that “someone doesn’t want me to win”, later clarifying that he was referring to a “higher power” and not the team.

Lowe told reporters ahead of tomorrow’s Japanese Grand Prix, which Hamilton will start with a 23-point gap to team-mate and championsh­ip leader Nico Rosberg, that it was just chance.

“We all know that you can throw three double-sixes in a row. That is possible, statistica­lly. And yet when you see it done, emotionall­y you feel ‘how did that happen’? We have got a little bit of that scenario with Lewis,” he said.

“It is the way the dice have been thrown.

“Things do go wrong. We understand that and it just so happens that, by pure coincidenc­e, that has occurred repeatedly on Lewis’ car.”

Lowe said Hamilton’s post-race comments had been misinterpr­eted.

“I can’t agree with you that the driver hinted there was sabotage,” said Lowe when asked about that. “Lewis has been very clear, certainly with us, that that’s completely out of the question.

“We’ve had other failures in the year that are very unfortunat­e and if we were good enough to arrange such sabotage we wouldn’t have any failures,” he added.

“We never ... would ever even contemplat­e it, even if we could engineer it, which we couldn’t. Anyone intelligen­t could work that out.”

Mercedes traced Hamilton’s engine failure in Malaysia down to a “big-end bearing failure” and have introduced measures to guard against further problems this weekend.

Hamilton, who converted a 43-point early-season deficit to Rosberg into a 19-point lead with a streak of six wins from seven races going into the August break, faces an uphill task in producing a similar comeback.

The Briton, who suffered a slew of engine-related problems earlier in the season while Rosberg won the first four in a row, needs to win tomorrow but also knows that the German has raised his performanc­e.

Rosberg was fastest in both yesterday’s practice sessions at Suzuka.

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