Verstappen secured the championship in Las Vegas by finishing in sixth
f14 weeks ago
Lewis Hamilton made a mistake in Sunday’s Hungarian Grand Prix and it almost cost him dear. His biggest error, however, was not in disobeying controversial team orders but pushing too hard on the very first lap with cold brakes after starting from the pitlane.
The Briton was lucky his Mercedes only brushed the barriers in the resulting spin, causing no damage to the car, rather than ending his race there and then. It would also have been costly had he carried out instructions over the radio two thirds of the way through the race not to hold up German team mate and championship leader Nico Rosberg. But he did not do that.
To do otherwise would have been unfair in the circumstances and damaging to his own title hopes, even if Mercedes might have gone on to win. Hamilton knew it and, ultimately, the team recognised it too. “From my point of view, Lewis was right,” said retired triple champion Niki Lauda, now the team’s non-executive chairman.
Some will argue that since Formula One is a team sport, the team comes first and orders must be obeyed. The simple answer to that is yes, but not always. As an extreme case, think back to the 2008 Singapore Grand Prix when Brazilian Nelson Piquet junior was ordered by his Renault team to crash deliberately into a wall to bring out the safety car and help Fernando Alonso win. By Piquet’s own admission he did as he was told and triggered one of the biggest scandals of Formula One’s modern era. It would have been better for all had he not done so. The same applies to Ferrari’s manipulation of the 2002 Austrian Grand Prix in Michael Schumacher’s favour.
The argument is sure to rumble on, throughout social media and wherever Formula One fans meet to discuss the race. Rosberg, who finished fourth with Hamilton third, felt hard done by and could argue he had been deprived of a win by the Briton. “Lewis didn’t let me by although he was ordered to do so, and that’s not good,” he said later.
Rosberg had also led from pole position before losing position due to the unfortunate timing of the safety car.
The strategy, three stops to Hamilton’s two, could have got him back ahead. But then again, he secured pole only after Hamilton’s car caught fire in qualifying without completing a lap. Luck works both ways.
Hamilton was quickest in all three practice sessions and Hungary was his track, one where he had been triumphant in the two previous years. He was on a charge and chasing to win. It’s each man for himself now. The second half of the season promises to be a thriller.
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