Evening Telegraph (First Edition)

Hamilton in final Silver Arrows run

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“IF Lewis were to leave,” pondered George Russell as he addressed the prospect of Hamilton joining Ferrari. “That would put Mercedes in a tricky spot. It would almost look like he’s lost faith in the team.”

Russell was speaking in an episode of Netflix’s newly-released Drive To Survive series – a chapter the Mercedes’ PR machine envisaged would celebrate Hamilton’s decision to stay with them.

Hamilton, after all, had signed a two-year contract extension last August to remain with the Silver Arrows until the end of 2025.

But following Hamilton’s shock decision to tear up his contract a year early in favour of a move to Ferrari, Russell’s remarks – too late to be pulled from Netflix’s sixth season – shed a very public spotlight on the awkward dynamic that faces the grid’s once-dominant team and its superstar driver ahead of the new season which starts in Bahrain on Saturday night.

Mercedes transforme­d Hamilton from a man with a single world championsh­ip to a one-man winning machine. He has seven world championsh­ips and 103 victories.

But Hamilton is motivated by capturing the eighth title he believes he was robbed of in Abu Dhabi in 2021. And the 39-year-old no longer thinks he can achieve the record-breaking feat with Mercedes. As Russell would say, he’s lost the faith.

This year is being called Hamilton’s last dance with Mercedes. But do not expect it to be a samba.

Mercedes will remain at the sharp end of the grid this season. They have ditched the concept that has failed them so miserably for the past two years and introduced a new design philosophy – one that both Hamilton and Russell said is more predictabl­e and easier to drive.

But will it possess the speed to knock Red Bull and Max Verstappen off their perch?

Formula One works in cycles and, although Mercedes carried Hamilton to six championsh­ips in seven glorious years, this period belongs to the team from Milton Keynes, despite the controvers­y surroundin­g its team principal Christian Horner and allegation­s of inappropri­ate behaviour made against him by a female colleague.

Horner continues to deny the claims and a resolution is expected before Saturday’s curtain-raiser.

Red Bull swept all before them in 2023, winning every race bar one, with Verstappen taking 19 victories as he waltzed to a hat-trick of titles.

Such was their superiorit­y, Red Bull and their genius designer Adrian Newey could afford to start work on this year’s challenger long before the others.

And the finished product, unveiled in all its glory last week, sent shivers down the spines of their competitor­s. The fear, for those not in a Red Bull cockpit, is that Newey’s latest masterpiec­e is an improvemen­t on its brilliant predecesso­r.

Given the sport’s rule book is largely-unchanged and the budget cap means rival teams can no longer break the bank to discover a winning solution, Verstappen heads into this mammoth 24-round campaign as the favourite to become only the sixth driver in history with four world titles to his name.

But all is not lost – and that is when we return to Hamilton.

While Verstappen could prove an unstoppabl­e force on track, Hamilton’s agonisingl­y-long goodbye with Mercedes – one that is set to stretch nine months and six days – will provide a fascinatin­g subplot.

 ?? ?? FAREWELL: Lewis Hamilton will depart Mercedes at the end of this season.
FAREWELL: Lewis Hamilton will depart Mercedes at the end of this season.

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