The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Driver has nothing planned if he wins record-breaking fifth race in a row

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Lewis Hamilton insists he does not have a celebratio­n planned even if he is crowned king of the British Grand Prix on Sunday.

England’s run to the World Cup quarter-finals has taken centre stage in the sporting psyche, but a near sell-out crowd of 140,000 spectators are expected on race day with Hamilton standing on the brink of history.

Hamilton, 33, needs just one more win to become the first driver in Formula One history to claim a record fifth consecutiv­e win at Silverston­e, and a sixth in all in front of the British crowd.

Hamilton, who trails Sebastian Vettel by one championsh­ip point ahead of the Silverston­e race, toasted his triumphs in 2016 and last year by crowd-surfing with the fans. Hamilton’s Mercedes team meanwhile, have not lost a race at the Northampto­nshire track since 2012.

“Those celebratio­ns are all kind of spur of the moment things,” Hamilton said. “So, for anybody to pre-plan something you are allowing, perhaps not karma, but negative things to potentiall­y happen.

“It is like if England celebrate before they get through to the next round. It is probably not a good idea.

“Those past experience­s were just incredible and I watched some of the footage recently. Engaging with the fans here is just electric.

“I hope to do that again and naturally you want to make everyone proud. It is the cherry on the cake if you are able to pull something out of the bag.”

Hamilton, however, was left trailing Vettel on an incident-packed day of practice yesterday.

Hamilton had it all his own way in the opening session as he led Valtteri Bottas in a Mercedes one-two, but Vettel’s pace later in the day suggested that the Ferrari driver could thwart the Briton’s hopes of a dream win.

Vettel set a best lap of one minute and 27.552 seconds to edge out Hamilton by 0.187 sec.

“The track is the fastest it has ever been,” Hamilton added. “The faster this track gets, the better it gets.

“However, it is also the bumpiest track I’ve ever experience­d. With the speeds we’re going now and the G forces we’re pulling, I think it’s going to be the most physical race of the year.

“It’s going to be very, very close this weekend because the Ferraris are really fast. We’re in for a serious fight which is great for the fans and I hope that we can pull through.”

Bottas was third in the running, three tenths down on Vettel, with Kimi Raikkonen fourth for Ferrari and Red Bull’s Daniel Ricciardo fifth.

Max Verstappen took advantage of Mercedes’ capitulati­on in Austria last Sunday to take the chequered flag, and claim his opening win of the season, but the Dutchman came crashing back down to earth here.

First, Verstappen’s opening running was brought to a premature end when he pulled to the side of the main straight with a gearbox failure.

Then, with 10 minutes of the second 90-minute session gone, Verstappen slammed into the barriers on the exit of Luffield.

 ?? Picture: PA. ?? Lewis Hamilton is on brink of history.
Picture: PA. Lewis Hamilton is on brink of history.

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