USA TODAY US Edition

Hamilton on good ground at US Grand Prix

- Jim Vertuno The Associated Press

AUSTIN, Texas – Lewis Hamilton has a certain love affair with the rolling hills and scrubland in the heart of Texas.

It’s easy to see why. The Mercedes driver has been almost invincible here, with five wins at the United States Grand Prix since 2012, including a season championsh­ip secured in 2015.

That makes it an almost perfect spot for more.

Win another race and another championsh­ip on Sunday and the Mercedes driver will sit all alone in second in Formula One history, with only a short step left to reach the top.

The British driver is on the cusp of securing a sixth career championsh­ip that would move him past Argentina’s Juan Manuel Fangio, the “Godfather” of F1 drivers, and within one of the record seven won by Germany’s Michael Schumacher, who is still regarded as the sport’s greatest champion.

Hamilton should have little trouble doing it. All he needs to do is finish eighth or higher on Sunday.

“It’s been a good hunting ground for me, so very excited to go there and who knows whether we can get the job done?” Hamilton said. “We’ll hopefully have a good race there.”

Hamilton nearly closed out the championsh­ip last weekend with his surprising win in Mexico City, but teammate Valtteri Bottas’ third-place finish pushed the title chase into another week. Bottas is the only other driver still mathematic­ally in the championsh­ip hunt, but just barely.

“I don’t mind,” Hamilton said after not quite closing it out. “I love racing.”

Hamilton didn’t win the Texas race last year, finishing third as Kimi Raikkonen took the checkered flag. But he was in spectacula­r form Sunday in Mexico City, getting his 10th win of the season on a track that favored rivals Red Bull and Ferrari.

Hamilton is a de facto spokesman for growing Formula One in the U.S. Still young and stylish at 34, an environmen­tal activist on social media, Hamilton is a valuable face and force for promoting the series in America, which hasn’t been as easy as F1 officials hoped when they returned to American soil with the Texas track and race in 2012.

Efforts to start other races haven’t been so easy. A dream race in Miami couldn’t take hold in the downtown venue on Biscayne Bay the series wanted and the current idea of racing around the parking lot of the stadium where the NFL’s Dolphins play has run into fierce opposition from locals.

The Texas race has been a stronghold and Hamilton still does his part. He was in New York City with an event in Times Square before coming to Austin.

Hamilton sees himself – the first and still only black driver in Formula One who comes from a middle class family – as a story that can be inspiring to an American audience. “I think my story and my family’s story is something that a lot of people in different countries can relate to,” Hamilton said.

Ferrari and Red Bull could still put up a fight Sunday at the Circuit of the Americas. Ferrari has started on pole the last six races and the U.S. Grand Prix winner has come from the front row every year since the Texas track opened. The recent runs from pole have produced just three victories however, and none since Singapore on Sept. 22.

 ?? CHARLES COATES/GETTY IMAGES ?? Formula One’s Lewis Hamilton has won the United States Grand Prix five times.
CHARLES COATES/GETTY IMAGES Formula One’s Lewis Hamilton has won the United States Grand Prix five times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States