Western Daily Press

Angst quickly forgotten, insists ‘passionate’ Lewis

- PHILIP DUNCAN Press Associatio­n

LEWIS Hamilton has defended his furious radio outbursts in Sunday’s Turkish Grand Prix. The British driver took aim at his Mercedes team with a series of rants after he dropped from third to fifth following a late pit-stop during the rain-hit race.

The world champion, who now trails Max Verstappen by six points, vented his disdain at Mercedes’ decision, angrily shouting: “Why did we give up the place? We shouldn’t have come in... I told you.”

He then demanded race engineer Peter Bonnington leave him alone.

However, in a social media post on

Monday, Hamilton said: “Don’t ever expect me to be all polite and calm on the radio when I’m racing.

“We are all very passionate, and in the heat of the moment that passion can come out, as it does for all the drivers.

“My heart and spirit are out there on the track. It’s the fire in me that has got me this far.

“But any angst is quickly forgotten and we talked it through, and are already looking ahead to the next race. We took the risk to stay out, hoping it would dry, and it didn’t. I wanted to risk it and try and go to the end, but it was my call to stay out and it didn’t work. In the end we did pit and it was the safest thing to do.”

Hamilton occupied third with eight laps to run, navigating his way from 11th without changing tyres on a damp track. The seven-time world champion first resisted Mercedes’ decision to bring him in on lap 42 of 58 before he was later overruled.

It appeared a cautious move from the Silver Arrows, given that the fivepoint swing between finishing third and fifth could prove pivotal in Hamilton’s bid for a record-breaking eighth title.

However, former driver and Sky Sports broadcaste­r Martin Brundle believes Hamilton was at fault for initially defying Mercedes.

Brundle, who took part in 158 grands prix, said: “It was a mistake on Lewis’ part. All Mercedes had to do was mimic what Red Bull were doing, but Lewis put his team offbalance and it was a bit of a noman’s-land stop in the end. You have to respect Lewis’ seven world titles and his gut feeling out on track, but he has to respect the team.”

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