Hamilton sympathises with fans over his F1 dominance

Race winner Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrates on the podium with a tribute to the late 'Black Panther' actor Chadwick Boseman during the F1 Grand Prix of Belgium at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps on August 30 2020.
Race winner Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP celebrates on the podium with a tribute to the late 'Black Panther' actor Chadwick Boseman during the F1 Grand Prix of Belgium at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps on August 30 2020.
Image: Getty Images/ Francois Lenoir

Lewis Hamilton has acknowledged that if he had been a Formula One fan watching the same man reel off one dominant win after another, it might have sent him to sleep.

“Having been a fan growing up, having lived in different eras, watching the [Michael] Schumacher era, of course I know what it's like,” said the Briton, sympathising with fans after his fifth win in seven races at Sunday's Belgian Grand Prix.

With yet another pole-to-flag procession in his Mercedes, even Hamilton was reminded of the days between 2000 and 2004 when he would watch Schumacher dominate with Ferrari.

“I was a teenage kid. I would have woken up, had my bacon sarmie and probably watched the start and gone to sleep, and then woke up to watch the end,” he said.

“If I was watching today I would do the same most likely and watch the highlights because it's much shorter,” Hamilton, who is now a vegan, said.

The 35-year-old has won five of the last six world championships, and with a 47-point lead over Red Bull's Max Verstappen, is on course to equal Schumacher's record of seven titles this year.

He's also on course to beat the German great's unprecedented career haul of 91 before the season is over.

He has enjoyed 68 wins with Mercedes, who have started every race this season from pole and have failed to win just once all year.

Their dominance is set to continue until at least 2022, when a wholesale rules change will see the introduction of new, more raceable cars come in.

A budget cap, limiting how much money teams can spend on making their cars faster, set to come in next year and tighten in 2022, should also level the playing field.

“What fans and people need to understand is that this isn't our fault,” said Hamilton.

“Ultimately, the decision-makers who design the cars, who set rules, are the ones on whom you can apply pressure to do a better job moving forward, if that's possible.” 


subscribe

Would you like to comment on this article?
Register (it's quick and free) or sign in now.

Speech Bubbles

Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.