The Herald (South Africa)

Hamilton smitten by speed

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LEWIS Hamilton is more in love with Formula 1 now than he has been in the past – and he relishes the technical challenge of beating his rivals to stay on top.

As Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg seeks a way to defeat his partner for the first time in five races this year, and rivals Ferrari raise their performanc­e potential in pursuit of a second triumph, two-time world champion Hamilton admitted on Thursday that he relished the pressure.

“I love it, this is what it is all about,” said the 30-year-old.

“The season is going very well and we are feeling the challenge, but I wouldn’t want it any other way.”

Ahead of this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix at the sun and wind swept Circuit de Catalunya, the Briton said he was enjoying a more innovative and technical approach to his racing this season.

“I feel very happy with how it has gone,” he said.

“I left the last race thinking it had been a great couple of weeks. When you have a year like last year, to continue with it is not easy, but so far it has been better than last year.

“I am by no means in the clear, we have a long way to go and I know others are working very hard to close that gap, so I need to stay on my toes, really continue to be innovative with the things I do on track and with my engineers to extract the most we possibly can.

“We arrive at the track every weekend and do the same thing, so for me it is trying to be innovative with the set-up, trying new things, new approaches, different techniques, all those different things.

“When it’s driving against competitor­s, for example, it is not using the same pat- terns, it is coming out with new, fun, exciting ways of getting around the corner or attacking a driver, which is what I love -and is probably why I love the sport more now than I have in the past.”

At 30, Hamilton has clearly matured into a more independen­t thinker.

Widely regarded as one of the most aggressive and flamboyant racers, he is now adding to that natural flair for speed with a greater understand­ing of, and desire to use, his engineerin­g team and the potential of his car.

Ironically, at the very time when teammate Rosberg appears to be struggling to match his sheer speed, Hamilton has cho- sen to prove he can match the German’s supposedly superior “thinking” style of racing.

Rosberg, however, dismissed the notion that he had slowed down this season, in relation to Hamilton, and instead suggested he could win this weekend’s Spanish Grand Prix if he “maximises” his performanc­e.

The 29-year-old German, who is 27 points behind the Briton in this year’s drivers’ championsh­ip after the opening four races, was in bullish form on Thursday.

“Of course, the results speak for themselves and it is pretty clear,” he conceded, when asked specifical­ly about his disappoint­ing form this year and theories that he is already struggling to match Hamilton.

“But, for me, Barcelona is a race on its own and I come here after a personal boost from Bahrain and I just want to optimise this weekend.

“That’s it and I am not really thinking about it more than that.”

In each of the four Grands Prix so far, Hamilton has been dominant, beating his teammate in qualifying and the races.

“It’s just a matter of maximising the weekend and it’s not really come together until now,” the German said.

“Parts have gone well, but other parts not so well and I just need to put it all together. Of course I will try to do that from now onwards.”

Looking composed in a regulation black team T-shirt, Rosberg said red was the colour that he and Mercedes now feared most, in the form of Ferrari.

“We expect it to be similar now to the last couple of races,” he said.

 ??  ?? LEWIS HAMILTON
LEWIS HAMILTON

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