Motorsport on Monday: 21/07/14
PH motorsport columnist Sean explores the Hamilton conundrum
Yes, he's in the best car in the field, but to come from 20th on the grid to finish third, minimising the damage to championship rival, leader and teammate Nico Rosberg was nothing short of spectacular. For me, at least, it proves why Hamilton is the best driver on the grid.
But it also got me thinking about the person and why his racing can sometimes fluctuate between searingly hot performances where nobody can get near him, and more mediocre stints behind the wheel.
The Hamilton conundrum
When he burst onto the scene in 2007, scoring a podium on his F1 debut, he injected a shot of interest for the passing Sunday afternoon fan. For those that had followed him through junior formulae and later GP2, it was no great surprise given the bags of talent and bags of money behind him having been backed by McLaren from an early age.
Here was a British sportsman who was humble but determined, driven yet not at all cocky - someone who was very good at their job and having fun with it.
After his championship victory a year later, Hamilton had a tumultuous time in Woking. The car simply wasn't quick enough, and Lewis' desire to win despite the MP4-24's lack of performance - in fact, the MP4-25, 26 and 27 while we're at it - came across to some as petulance.
The McLaren factor
But when you've been conditioned all your racing life by being part of the McLaren family - knowing that when you get to the pinnacle of world motorsport you'll be racing for one of the most historic teams on the grid in likely one of the most sophisticated and capable race cars that season - for the machinery underneath you to not match your talent must be frustrating. Consistently finishing in fourth, fifth and sixth when you're used to winning and have the talent to must be hard.
Inevitably you're going to complain, which is part of the job. If a driver doesn't grumble, the technical side of things won't improve as quickly - but there's whinging and there's whinging. I'm sure Hamilton's detailed feedback helped further what the team were trying to do in terms of development, but how he faced up to the media, he didn't do himself any favours in the eyes of many.
That a post-race interview is one of the only forms of public outlet, often immediately after the event, it was always likely Hamilton's frustrations would show, but I think it's always been for the right reasons: because he wants to win, not because he expects to win.
Multi media
It also can't be difficult dealing with the media in your face constantly, but it's not as if Lewis has helped himself over the years.
From his presence on Twitter - including his dog Roscoe and his love of selfies with rap superstars - to misdemeanours on the road (I mean, who'd ever "deliberately lose traction" in an AMG...), his on-off relationship and moves to tax havens around the world, the press has played a big, prying part in Lewis's life.
He's a 'normal' F1 driver if there is such a thing. By that I mean he speaks his mind rather than rolling out the corporate party line. You know, "the car was good today but we couldn't capitalise on our performance during the race" - read it was slow in quali and even slower on Sunday. Hamilton often tells it how it is and for that, whatever else some may or may not like about the person or the driver, he deserves respect. And in fact, since he's been at Mercedes, it seems Hamilton has turned a corner.
Stage three
His time at Merc could be classed as stage three of his F1 career, with his debut and success at McLaren stage one, and the time in between his switch stage two. The drive and determination is still there, but Hamilton is now harnessing his frustrations in a different way.
Nowhere was this more evident than Silverstone. After admitting he made a mistake aborting his hot lap in qualifying, starting the race from sixth, Hamilton heaped an incredible amount of pressure on himself at his home Grand Prix.
The nuances of words are fascinating here. He said, "I didn't feel good. I lost a lot of time at the beginning of the lap. I was already 1.5 seconds down", but that "it wasn't the engineers' fault." At McLaren, the word "we" might have been mentioned a few more times.
But after a disappointing Saturday - after which you didn't need a degree in psychology to understand he was incredibly dejected - Lewis channelled his energy into his racing. An incredible opening lap plus clever management of rubber pretty much secured him the win after Rosberg's retirement.
This same renewed attitude was present last weekend, with Hamilton seeming to extract even more determination from the unfortunate events in qualifying. Before an accident not of his making might have sent him into a dangerous downward spiral. Not now.
Importantly, he kept his championship hopes alive, too. And as a Brit, I for one hope Hamilton can add another world title to his tally.
Still, the race was quite entertaining as there were battles further down the field. It's all a bit meaningless when only one car is ever going to win though.
He has a talent for balancing the car on the limit, and when he does, his pace goes pretty unmatched. I guess it's easier to drop it though if he's not in the right car or mood, whilst Rosberg stays consistent.
What he perhaps lacks is the humbling experience of being a true backmarker - let's not forget Fernando Alonso started at Minardi. Lewis has become accustomed to being given the best equipment, and when something goes wrong he just can't handle it - in a far too public manner.
I think he's definitely a better driver than Rosberg, but he needs to beat him this year. If he can't beat an inferior teammate in a dominant car then what does he have left?
Many other sports have entire academies to manage the progression of sports people and as for spoilt - perhaps Football provides a better example of spolit, pampered and the consequences there of.
He seems to be his own worst enemy but I like the fact he is open and you can actually see what he is feeling at any given time. Nothing wrong with that.
When you look at his stats then he is significantly more successful than Rosberg the Robot. Something people tend to forget.
The last 2 races have been much more interesting because of his mistakes before the race which ias both good and of course not so.
Really?
Rose tinted specs in full effetc here IMO.
From my memories of past greats, Mansell's droning-moaning were far more off putting than this young 'gangsta' who uses his mobile device a bit too much, and looks sad after a less than great perfromance....
Bizarre.
Really?
Rose tinted specs in full effetc here IMO.
From my memories of past greats, Mansell's droning-moaning were far more off putting than this young 'gangsta' who uses his mobile device a bit too much, and looks sad after a less than great perfromance....
Oh come on, hes a fast driver, one of the fastest with no doubt, but the above quote? Really?
I am paraphrasing, but just a couple of early quotes i can think of from him-
Reporter - 'You seemed to be getting closer than anyone else to the wall of champions in quali.'
Hamilton - 'But I’m not anyone else'
Reporter - 'Are you pleased to have qualified on the front row?'
Hamilton - 'Yeh its great to be away from the monkies at the back'
I understand that there is a fine line between arrogance and confidence, never more so, and so critical than for a professional sportsman, but Hamiton, in my view, consistently sits just on the wrong side of that line.
That being said, I like the way Lewis drives, so for me on raceday I'll always cheer him on. I also think Jenson is one of the nicest guys on the grid, so I'll always cheer him on too.
Watching Alonso and Ricciardo go hammer and tong in the Ferrari and Redbull was captivating this weekend. I think both drivers would leave Lewis for dust given the Mercedes hardware. Maybe Lewis needs yet another 5 years to mature a little...oh and hopefully loses those diamond ear rings and awful haircut
Hamilton was like a freight train on Sunday and a little too expectant that everyone should get out of his way. Either way good drive and kept the gap smaller than expected to Rosberg
Yes he earns huge money doing something we would all love to do, but he does it because he wants to win and wants to be perfect every time. I have to have the same mindset in surgical training, and yes, what I do is great, but like Lewis, if I don't get everything as perfect as I want, or something takes longer than it should, I beat myself up about it, but it's what makes you push yourself to be better, and as a racer thats the mindset to have.
Jenson wasn't exactly all smiles after the race with his comments but he is one of the niceset guys in the paddock.
Its racing, its being peeved with mediocrity and inefficiency, its why when it go's right he's excellent (Silverstone) and when it goes wrong his is a nightmare (Silverstone!!!)
Tom
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