The Herald (South Africa)

King Lewis has Japan in his sights

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Lewis Hamilton will be looking to restore normal service at the Japanese Grand Prix after being gifted a controvers­ial victory by Mercedes in Russia last weekend.

But the runaway Formula One championsh­ip leader appears to have complicate­d that task by refusing to rule out leaving Mercedes when his contract expires in 2020.

Hamilton was allowed to claim a 70th career win when Valtteri Bottas was ordered to move over in Sochi – the world champion describing it as “the strangest day” of his career.

The Briton, who has opened a 50-point advantage over Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel with five races left this season, will want to prove he can win in his own right at Suzuka this week as he chases a fifth title.

Hamilton’s eighth win of the season and third in a row left the Silver Arrows red-faced and sparked fresh debate over team orders, many Formula One fans taking to social media to vent their anger.

Despite the criticism, Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff insisted he had no regrets about issuing the instructio­n to let Hamilton pass.

“I’d rather be the baddie today than the idiot at the end of the year,” he said. “Rationally, it was the right call.”

Wolff expects Hamilton, who won in Japan for the fourth time last year, to continue his dominance this weekend.

“Lewis is hungry, focused and completely determined to succeed,” the Austrian said.

“It has been great to see the power he has brought to this championsh­ip and how he’s taken it to the next level since the summer break.”

But Hamilton has set tongues wagging in the buildup to the race by hinting that he could leave Mercedes after his present deal runs out.

“I’ve given them a lot,” Hamilton told Swiss newspaper Blick.

Asked about his future, he said: “Mercedes and Hamilton – that’s an almost unbeatable unit. I don’t know, ask me again at the end of 2020.”

Meanwhile, Vettel’s hopes of a dramatic turnaround look increasing­ly forlorn after finishing third behind the two Mercedes in Russia.

A fifth Japanese victory this weekend would be just the ticket for the German.

But Vettel also knows he needs a huge slice of luck to stand any chance of halting Hamilton’s charge to the title. –

 ?? Picture: KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP ?? WINNING FEELING: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton celebrates his 2017 victory at Suzuka during the Japanese Grand Prix awards ceremony. Hamilton will be looking to restore normal service at the track on Sunday
Picture: KAZUHIRO NOGI/AFP WINNING FEELING: Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton celebrates his 2017 victory at Suzuka during the Japanese Grand Prix awards ceremony. Hamilton will be looking to restore normal service at the track on Sunday

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