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Lewis Hamilton will beat George Russell in the Drivers’ Championship standings for the second season running in 2024, according to Express Sport readers. The seven-time world champion enjoyed the better of the team-mate battle at Mercedes in 2023.

When Russell arrived at Mercedes as Valtteri Bottas’ replacement ahead of the 2022 season, he was billed as a future world champion, and his one-off outing for the team at the 2020 Sakhir Grand Prix suggested that he had the potential to be a threat to his legendary team-mate right out of the blocks.

This transpired to be true as Russell finished in the top five at 15 of the first 16 races of the season, demonstrating staggering consistency. Hamilton, meanwhile, struggled with the unpredictable balance of the W13, while also taking a more experimental approach to race-day set-ups as Mercedes attempted to solve their extreme porpoising issues.

Lewis Hamilton

A first-ever Grand Prix victory arrived in Sao Paulo as Russell led home a one-two finish for the team before a mechanical DNF in Abu Dhabi sealed Hamilton’s fate in the head-to-head battle. When the chequered flag waved at the Yas Marina Circuit, the 25-year-old was 35 points clear of the seven-time world champion in the standings.

Despite this setback, Hamilton roared back in 2023, finishing in the top ten of every race in which he was classified as he sealed third place in the Drivers’ Championship with one round to spare. Russell, meanwhile, ended the year down in eighth place with just two podium finishes to his name following a messy campaign.

Following a survey of 5,791 Express Sport readers, 60 per cent believe that Russell will finish behind Hamilton again when the 2024 season comes to an end next December. Furthermore, 57 per cent of those questioned believe that he will never win a Drivers’ Championship title during his Mercedes career.

 

Max Verstappen overlooked Lewis Hamilton and his Mercedes team to name McLaren as the biggest threat to him and Red Bull next year.

Mercedes finished second in the constructors’ standings while no non-Red Bull driver outperformed Hamilton over the course of 2023. But McLaren’s improvement from the start of the season to the end makes Verstappen think his most likely British challenger next term is going to be Lando Norris.

“We were the only team that was really consistent,” he told the Talking Bull podcast. “Behind us was really up and down, it was one team second and then another team, so that’s where the battle was quite close.

“It will all depend on how much they improve in the winter time, but in terms of which one was the most impressive behind us from where they started to where they ended was definitely McLaren. So, it looks like they might be very strong next year.”

Red Bull won all but one of the 22 races across the season in the most dominant campaign by a single team that Formula 1 has ever seen. And the same can be said for Verstappen on a personal level after securing 19 of those 21 victories.

Their dominance meant the team got a head-start on their rivals in terms of their 2024 car development, leading to concerns they will be streets ahead again. But both Verstappen and team principal Christian Horner have said they anticipate the performance gap will be narrower next year with Red Bull close to the ceiling of what can be achieved with the current regulations.

“The others will improve their cars and get closer to us,” the Dutchman told BBC Radio 5 Live’s season review show. “I don’t think it’s that realistic to achieve that win rate again. But that’s fine. To already have a season like we’ve had is insane.

“The others are not stupid. They are all learning. Of course, the longer you keep the regulations the same, the closer it will get, because people start to understand which direction they have to develop in. Luckily, we hit the ground running really well with the regulations [in 2022], but I definitely expect next year, for sure, all will definitely take a step towards us.

“I don’t know which particular team, because if you look at the whole season it has been a bit up and down for everyone except us, so I don’t really know in the winter which team is going to make the biggest jump. Hopefully, of course, they still stay behind but we’ll see in Bahrain.”

And Horner added: ” I’m fully expecting, with stable regs and diminishing returns for us because I think we got to the top of the curve quicker than others, the field is going to converge… If you stand still in this business, you tend to be going backwards. And I think that we have got up that curve quicker than others. But we’re into a law of diminishing returns.”

Lewis Hamilton, unfortunately, is the only black driver in the sport. Using his platform, however, Hamilton has done a lot to give back to the underprivileged and minorities, especially those of color. Be it in the world of fashion or the world of Formula 1, the seven-time world champion can be traced back to the success of a lot of underprivileged talent.

Naturally, when the tragic death of George Floyd occurred in 2020, Lewis Hamilton was extremely impacted. In a podcast with popular author Jay Shetty, he revealed that the infamous incident was one of the toughest things he has had to endure in his life.

Lewis Hamilton’s Despair

Anthony Hamilton, the seven-time world champion’s father, has been an integral part of his driving career. One of the principles that Anthony Hamilton taught his son was to never show a sign of weakness and to never cry. Since it’s been ingrained in the Mercedes driver, he has not been one to show emotions or cry out in public. However, this changed with the George Floyd incident.

Speaking to Jay Shetty, Lewis Hamilton opened up. “My dad never let me cry as a kid. He said that’s a sign of weakness. He said ‘don’t ever let me see you shed a tear.’” He continues, “In 2020, I hadn’t cried for at least 10 years. There was a lot of bottled-up stuff that had come up. I didn’t even know I was suppressing the pain I was feeling. I remember being on my knees thinking, what is happening to the world.”

Lewis Hamilton

However, this emotional episode made one thing clear for the Mercedes driver. That was when he made up his mind to be outspoken about these issues, because according to him, “If I don’t do it, nobody’s going to do it.”

Around the same time, Hamilton was also inspired to create the Hamilton Commission, which aimed to improve the diversity in motorsport. He has been instrumental in creating the diversity charter, which all teams have to follow.

The Hamilton Commission and subsequent results

The Hamilton Commission, after conducting thorough studies, found out that only 3% of all employees wear black. They cited many reasons for this, including hiring from specific colleges that are predominantly white-dominated

Ever since then, Lewis Hamilton has called out multiple teams, including Ferrari on their lack of diversity. “There’s still no diversity at Ferrari, I mean, hardly any. If you look at Ferrari who have thousands of people working with them. I’ve heard no word of Ferrari saying that they hold themselves accountable and this is what they’re going to do for the future.”

Toto Wolff warned his drivers to manage their expectations ahead of a crucial 2024 season for Mercedes.

This year, for the first time in more than a decade, the Silver Arrows failed to win a single race. On a personal level, Lewis Hamilton is currently enduring a drought of more than two years since he last stood on the top step of a podium.

Both he and George Russell will be chomping at the bit to get back to winning ways next year. It will be a huge challenge, though, given how dominant Max Verstappen and his Red Bull team have been over the past two campaigns.

Team principal Wolff acknowledged that as he was quizzed on the biggest challenge facing Mercedes in 2024. In a video released by the team, he made it clear he doesn’t want any of his colleagues and subordinates to have their heads in the clouds.

“It’s to set the expectations right because we have a huge mountain to climb,” the Austrian replied. “There’s a team that is so successful and we have a big gap to close. At the same time, I believe we’ve taken some proactive steps to close that gap.

“Is it going to be good enough? I don’t know – but we’re going to see it in testing and then in the first race in Bahrain. I’m super excited. I’d like to start going now. It’s the stopwatch that’s going to tell us what job we’ve done.”

Reflecting on a difficult 2023 campaign, he added: “We learned a lot. The races and the seasons that are difficult are the ones where you learn the most, and we always say, the days we lose are the days our competitors are going to regret because we learn the most.

“I think there are so many lessons that we learned as an organisation, as humans, but also technically that will be beneficial going forward. I wouldn’t be able to pick one out, though, because there are so many things that we have looked at that will help us progress over the next year.”

Wolff has already admitted his team is taking a big risk to close the Red Bull gap. “We are changing the concept. We are completely moving away from how we laid out the chassis, the weight distribution, the airflow,” he said of Mercedes’ W15 car development.

“I mean, literally, there’s almost every component that’s being changed because only by doing that, I think we have a chance.” But he also warned: “We could get it wrong also. So, between not gaining what we expect, catching up and making a big step and competing in the front, everything is possible.”

With a week to go until Christmas, here is all the F1 news you may have missed on Monday, December 18.

From Christian Horner’s moment of clarity to a young driver joining Max Verstappen’s former teams, there was still plenty of news even deep into the off-season.

So here is everything you may have missed from the F1 world:

Juan Pablo Montoya encounter gives Christian Horner view of Red Bull future

Christian Horner may be one of the best team principals going but before he took his place on the pit wall, he tried desperately to become a driver.

Unfortunately for him, his life preservation instinct was just a little bit too high.

“I had this very vivid moment where I was running in Formula 3000, now the Formula 2 equivalent, and Juan Pablo Montoya [was there].

“We were at Estoril before the season, and there was a long straight. It’s an old-school track, and it had two very fast right-hand corners with a barrier that was about 20 metres from the track.

“It was a sixth gear corner so we’re talking 160/170 miles an hour. I’m coming out of the pit lane that filters onto the track and Montoya comes haring past, he commits to this right-hand turn and I can just see the car moving and dancing around and the rim is trying to pop through the sidewall of the tyre and he’s on opposite lock.

“And he’s got his right foot absolutely planted. I just knew at that point, ‘I can’t do that. I cannot.’

Young prospect begins same path as Max Verstappen

Max Verstappen’s former team Van Amersfoort can boast nurturing one of the finest F1 talents in history and they will be hoping to do the same next year as Sophia Floersch has signed up to race with the team in F3.

“I am super excited to be back with Van Amersfoort Racing, it feels like coming home,” Floersch said of her full-time return to VAR.

“I have confidence in our ability to progress and deliver strong performances together in the upcoming FIA F3 season.”

Lewis Hamilton named one of the world’s best dressed

Hamilton is no stranger to style having been spotted entering into the paddock in a number of different outfits and his fashion sense has been awarded by Essence.

They named him one of the best-dressed men of the year, seeing him join the likes of Usher, Pharrell Williams and Oklahoma City Thunder basketball player Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Helmut Marko details upcoming Christian Horner meeting

After a reported power struggle between the pair was rubbished by all parties, Marko has said he will sit down with Horner to discuss their future.

Both have been with Red Bull since the team’s inception but there were reports of tension late in the 2023 season.

“There are different trends and variants,” he said.

“The decisions are still open – including what I will do next. My current contract runs until the end of 2024.

“Of course, I also have an obligation to Red Bull and Max. Nevertheless, the overall package has to fit. Nothing has been decided yet.”

Charles Leclerc makes pole position admission

Charles Leclerc has earned the unwanted reputation of not being able to win from pole having done so just four times in his career.

To put that into perspective, Leclerc has won from just 17% of his poles and even Verstappen has a better conversion rate when Leclerc started ahead of him.

Such is the way of things that Leclerc even admitted poles do not feel like a “highlight” anymore.

 

“Normally it’s the victories,” he told Germany’s Auto Motor und Sport.

“Of course, a pole position feels good, but I’ve already got 23 of them. And of course, the whole thing is clouded by the fact that I already know on Saturday that Sunday will be much more difficult.

“That’s why pole positions are no longer a real highlight. That’s why the best thing for me this year was that I helped to understand the car and transform it in a direction that is better and will lead us back to success in the medium term.

“Especially because it was so difficult to reach this understanding. Usually, it’s always just about finding a few more points of downforce. This time it’s much more complex and it’s much harder to make the connection between a change and the lap time.”

Toto Wolff has stated that the United States Grand Prix in Austin was the best Formula 1 race of the season for Mercedes, despite Lewis Hamilton being disqualified.

The sprint format weekend ended in controversy when both Hamilton and Charles Leclerc were disqualified from the race for excessive wear on their skid blocks.

The seven-time world champion had finished in second-place prior to the ruling, with Carlos Sainz promoted up the order to the final remaining podium spot behind Max Verstappen and Lando Norris in second and third respectively.

It was a bitter pill to swallow for Hamilton and Mercedes, so it therefore raised some eyebrows when Wolff opted for Austin as the best race of the season for the Silver Arrows.

Wolff: Austin best F1 race for Mercedes

“This might sound weird because we got disqualified, but Austin” he told Mercedes’ official YouTube channel.

“We brought an upgrade package that worked, the car was performing well and we were hunting down the leader.

Lewis Hamilton

“You could say, ‘Well, you were disqualified for a car that was too low’, but the genuine performance was there and that was an enjoyable weekend.

“I’ve always said that I’d rather have a fast car that we haven’t tuned in the right way. And obviously, you need to finish.

“But that was the [best] weekend overall, seeing the correlation between the wind tunnel and the track was good.”

 

Mercedes driver Lewis Hamilton is determined to accomplish a specific goal before retiring from Formula 1 – bringing the sport back to Africa. The seven-time world champion disclosed his ambition to reintroduce Grand Prix races to the continent, which has not hosted a premier-class event in the past 30 years.

Hamilton has consistently advocated for the inclusion of South Africa in the Formula 1 calendar for quite some time. His broader aspiration is to see the continent of Africa hosting a Formula 1 event, and he is determined to remain involved until this becomes a reality.

He has been actively “working in the background” to reintroduce the sport in the location where it left off 30 years ago before he retires from Formula 1. Talking to his fans in Abu Dhabi, he said:

Lewis Hamilton

South Africa Lost An Opportunity To Greed

The last Formula 1 Grand Prix was held in 1993 at Kyalami, South Africa. While officials in South Africa are also inclined to have Kyalami back on the calendar, 1979 World Champion Jody Scheckter revealed that a deal was about to be made but, negotiations fell apart due to the greed for money from the circuit officials. He told Total Motorsport earlier this year:

Africa Has FOM Backing

On a positive note, Formula 1 CEO Stefano Domenicali confirmed in 2022 that Africa will be back on the calendar “very soon,” as other places apart from Kyalami were also interested in hosting the event. He told Sky Sports F1:

LEWIS HAMILTON has promised Mercedes will be a “different animal” next year.

The seven-time world champion has also made a bold prediction for 2024

Mercedes are facing a big off-season as they bid to challenge Red Bull’s dominance in the new season.

Red Bull won all but one of the 22 races in 2023 as Max Verstappen claimed a third consecutive title ahead of team-mate Sergio Perez.

Hamilton finished behind the Red Bull duo in third on the Drivers’ Championship and is hopeful ahead of the upcoming F1 campaign.

Speaking at the season-ending FIA prize gala in Baku earlier this month, he explained: “It’s always the exciting time of the year because I have seen the car in the wind tunnel.

“I always go by the wind tunnel when I go to the factory and to see it evolving in whichever direction it ends up going.

lewis hamilton

“As soon as I was leaving, again I popped in just to see where we were and when I come back it’ll be again a different animal.

“But I have full faith in everyone that’s working on it and hopeful that we’ll be in a much more competitive position next year.”

Hamilton had been presented with an award at the ceremony in recognition of his third place finish this year.

However, there was a mystery surrounding the trophy after the event.

The Brit driver’s award went missing, with a fan claiming he had been given it as a “gift” on social media.

F1 pre-season testing for the 2024 season starts in Bahrain on February 21.

Meanwhile, the season itself will kick-off with the Bahrain Grand Prix in Sakhir on March 2.

Lewis Hamilton being anything other than an F1 star seems crazy for a modern audience – but even the greats have to prove themselves early on.

In many ways, Hamilton is not a typical F1 driver. A typical F1 driver’s dad for example does not work three jobs for his son to compete, a typical F1 driver does not have one of the best rookie seasons in history, a typical F1 driver does not win 103 races and a typical F1 driver certainly does not win seven World Championships.

Regardless of how his career ends, Hamilton is one of the all-time greats of Formula 1 history. We are going to take an in-depth look at the race that officially put him on the map: the 2008 British Grand Prix.

The build-up

Hamilton entered the sport in 2007 having first caught the eye of McLaren owner Ron Dennis in 1995, when a confident, young boy strode up to the McLaren chief at an awards show and told him he would race in a McLaren car one day.

It was a bold prediction and no doubt one someone in Dennis’ position had heard a hundred times before, but even one of the sport’s wisest heads would not have predicted what Hamilton would go on to achieve.

The young Briton secured the McLaren drive for 2007 having won the 2006 GP2 Series and no one was quite ready for how quickly he would hit the ground running. Fernando Alonso had just moved across from Renault, perhaps sensing that he would be the clear lead driver against an inexperienced rookie team-mate, yet supremacy is not what the Spaniard found.

Hamilton was quick, excitingly quick, and finished on the podium in the first nine races including wins in Canada and the US.

Lewis Hamilton

The start to the season was not a flash in the pan either. Hamilton would win twice more before the year was out but ended one point behind winner Kimi Raikkonen and ahead of two-time champion Alonso on countback.

Even if he did miss out on the title, it was the best rookie season in memory but it is not uncommon for drivers to have an incredible year and then fade away into mediocrity.

Question marks still remained over Hamilton. Yes he was good, but multiple-championship-winning good? That was yet to be answered.

2008 began with a new team-mate by his side in the form of Heikki Kovalainen and Hamilton achieved the perfect start with victory at the season-opener in Australia. Felipe Massa, who would later prove to be Hamilton’s main title threat, meanwhile retired in the opening two grands prix.

But it was not the all-conquering season that his later title wins became known for.

He finished 13th in Bahrain having hit the Renault of his former colleague Alonso. He won his first European race in Monaco but followed that up with an embarrassing retirement in Canada, before a P10 at Magny-Cours meant that, going into Silverstone, Hamilton trailed leader Massa by 10 points and was fourth in the championship.

Hamilton was in a bullish mood after the French race in which he received a penalty for overtaking Sebastian Vettel by missing a chicane. “There’s nothing you can do that can distract me,” he said. “You can keep on giving me penalties, whatever you want. I’ll keep battling, and trying to come back with a result.”

It was the first sign of the ‘us against the world’ mentality that would serve him and Mercedes so well in the future but in 2008, there were real question marks about this young talent.

The scene was set for Silverstone

The first punch went to Massa who set the fastest time in FP1, Hamilton trailed his team-mate. FP2 saw Massa slip to eighth but still Hamilton could not improve on his P3. FP3 saw the McLaren driver slip further down to P5.

There was very little sign of this being anything other than another race weekend to forget for Hamilton. That suspicion only grew after qualifying. Hamilton would start P4 having finished 0.786s behind his own team-mate Kovalainen. Massa may have qualified P9 but it was not only the Brazilian ahead of Hamilton in the standings, but Robert Kubica and Raikkonen as well who was starting one spot ahead of the McLaren driver.

So when Hamilton sat in his MP4-23 in P4, three places back from where he had been at the same race last year, he may have been one of the only people out of 85,000 in attendance that believed a win was possible.

From the first second, he soon had more believers.

The start to the 2008 race remains one of Hamilton’s best ever. The conditions were a typically British summertime day. Wet, misty and very changeable. The top three struggled for grip as the five red lights went out. The number 22 car didn’t.

The three front runners bunched on the outside heading into Copse but Hamilton opted for the inside line and it almost very nearly spelled disaster. The rear of his McLaren kicked out widely but Hamilton kept it tamed. He found grip when no-one else could and as they made the short sprint to Copse, Hamilton moved into the lead.

Kovalainen fought back, retaking the lead before Maggots but behind the front two, spinning chaos ensued. Mark Webber was the first to go, next was Massa, sending the championship leader tumbling down the order.

Come lap 5 and the two were still battling and, as they headed into Stowe, Hamilton again moved away from the racing line and onto the wet surface in an overtake that resembled Nigel Mansell’s move on Nelson Piquet 21 years earlier.

Kovalainen then proved to not be in as much control as Hamilton as he too spun and slipped down the grid.

The next battle was one of strategy with Raikkonen closing in on Hamilton but the pair made differing calls as they headed into the pits. Both topped up on fuel but only Hamilton received a new set of inters, with Ferrari gambling that the weather would continue to ease off and left Raikkonen on the same tyres.

But it should have come as no surprise that the man born 50 miles away, and had spent the majority of his life up until that point racing at Silverstone, was better at predicting the weather patterns. In came another spell of rain and back went Raikkonen who lost eight seconds a lap to Hamilton.

And after that, Hamilton was in a race of his own. Building the lead lap after lap, the only thing that could have stopped him was the heavy rain and it very nearly did when he cut across the grass as the skies blackened over middle England.

But wet races are when the greats separate themselves from the rest. It seems every legend has a wet race where they have excelled and in 2008, Hamilton had his.

In an era where one driver rarely finished so far ahead of the rest of the pack, Hamilton crossed the line over a minute ahead of any other driver.

At the time, there were questions of his commitment to F1 but those doubts were answered. With the victory, he moved joint top on points and never gave the lead up again.

What it meant for Lewis Hamilton’s future

Doubt about Hamilton evaporated much the same way the standing water did as the sun finally emerged at Silverstone. Victory at his home race was something Hamilton had desired and it formed a bond that has never been broken.

“There’s something about racing in your home country that affects you,” he said in the aftermath. “The constant support of the crowd gives you a boost throughout the whole weekend.

“It’s not something you experience anywhere else, but it does make you that bit more determined to succeed.”

Hamilton’s love affair with the British crowd is still just as strong now as it was then but, more than a bonding exercise, 2008 Silverstone was a game changer for the driver.

Any suggestion that he was a one-season wonder had been cast aside and as we all know now, he was on the way to his first of a record-equalling seven World titles.

There have been plenty of spectacular wins in Hamilton’s 103-strong collection but you would be hard pressed to find a more important one than this.

Jenson Button is adamant that Lewis Hamilton is “definitely good enough” to win more Formula 1 races and titles.

That’s despite David Coulthard questioning whether the seven-time world champion still has what it takes to fight Max Verstappen for those honours. Hamilton has not won a race in more than two years while his Dutch rival has secured three successive championships.

He turns 39 next month but has two more years to run on his current Mercedes deal, signed earlier this year. And former racer Coulthard wonders whether time is running out for Hamilton at the very top level.

“This is not Lewis at his prime,” said the Channel 4 pundit. “This is Lewis in a very frustrating two-year state of underperforming. When he gets a winning car again, it’ll be really interesting to see if he can rediscover the old Lewis magic.”

Red Bull failed to win only one race in 2023 while Verstappen himself tasted victory 19 times out of 22. Toppling the Dutchman and his all-conquering team looks to be a tall order for all their rivals.

Speaking to AFP, 2009 world champion Button made clear his belief that the 2024 championship will again be Verstappen’s team’s to lose. “Red Bull are going to be at the front again next year,” he said.

“They had a strong car this year and they’ve been able to work on next year’s car. The thing is, if you just look at the results of the race, you go, ‘Oh Max Verstappen won again’. But when you actually watch the races, there have been some amazing races this year

“Max hasn’t had it all his own way. He’s come out on top in the end but there have been some great fights this season. I have enjoyed the year. Would I like more people winning? Yes of course. But it’s just not happened.”

And while Button insists “it’s not going to be easy to beat Max”, he is similarly certain that Hamilton still has the skills and the drive to take the fight to Verstappen if given a car capable of allowing him to do so. He added: “Lewis wouldn’t race if he didn’t think he wasn’t good enough. Lewis is definitely good enough to win races and to win a championship – with the right car.

“Coming up against Max is difficult but if Lewis is in a car that suits him and Max is in a car that suits him… I look forward to that fight. Hopefully we will see it before Lewis retires, he’s definitely got the ability to do that.”