Hamilton reaches a new F1 low as Britain celebrates its latest star
Hamilton reaches a new F1 low as Britain celebrates its latest star
As Lando Norris basks in the glory of his first Formula 1 victory, the sun continues setting on another British driver's successes.
Somehow, Lewis Hamilton sits behind team-mate George Russell and now Norris in the list of recent wins as the seven-time champion braces for another year of disappointment.
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Russell stormed to the Brazilian top step in 2022, Norris brought the heat to Miami in 2024, but Hamilton hasn't held a winner's trophy since Saudi Arabia in 2021.
How did it get so bad for a once invincible-seeming record-breaking driver, and when will it get better?
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F1's British bromance
There was a sign of the paddock camaraderie when Hamilton was so effusive in his post-race congratulating of Norris as the drivers returned to the Miami pit lane last Sunday.
On-board cameras showed the Mercedes driver enthusiastically giving his compatriot applause and a thumbs up for his hard work by finally clinching the hallowed P1 finish.
A cynic might think Hamilton was just delighted that Norris beat his 2021 title rival, Max Verstappen, but that's not the case.
Hamilton has long praised Norris' ability behind the wheel, sharing team radio messages like "Such a great driver Lando" in the 2021 Austrian GP.
Although he'd prefer to be the one taking the chequered flag, the 'game recognises game' expression is apt for his appreciation of a worthy winner.
Yet there might also be a slither of encouragement for Hamilton to know that the all-dominant Red Bull team is beatable in a fair fight.
Perhaps some of his Miami cockpit gesticulations are tied to a feeling that it's time to pick up the fight.
Some of his recent comments to the media suggest so...
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Mercedes' fading F1 hopes
"I've had enough of this, let's get back to where we belong," said Hamilton when speaking to CBS in Mercedes' New York City pre-race media flurry.
We, of course, know that Hamilton is heading to Ferrari in 2025, so any Mercedes gains in 2024 could be detrimental to his longer-term ambitions.
That doesn't mean he'll be happy to sit on the sidelines for a third season away from the lead pack and only pick up an occasional podium, but it looks like that is what he must endure.
After an uncompetitive 2023, three teams have won in 2024, and Mercedes isn't one of them - that will hurt a lot.
We're not anywhere near the craziness of the 2012 season when seven different drivers won the first seven races for five teams, yet we're inching closer to that than last year when only Red Bull stood atop the podium for 14 consecutive races.
If McLaren and Ferrari can defeat the Milton Keynes team, then why not Mercedes? And why not Hamilton?
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Russell picks up Hamilton's advantage
Although Russell's Brazilian victory is more recent than Hamilton's last win, there must be so much frustration inside the King's Lynn driver's head.
He's missed the Mercedes highs by a single season after Toto Wolff kept Valtteri Bottas alongside Hamilton in the second Silver Arrow as Russell trundled around the back in an underperforming Williams.
Russell outscored Hamilton in their first season together, and is already streaking clear of his illustrious team-mate in 2024, too.
Perhaps that indicates a sway in Mercedes' priority when the team know only one of their two drivers is sticking by them for the immediate future.
Should Mercedes make a McLaren-style leap forward in 2024 and challenge for victories, why would they back their defector over someone they hope will bring many future wins?
No matter of the public backing from Toto Wolff or anyone at Mercedes, the Brackley-based team will naturally begin phasing Hamilton out of their minds as 2024 continues and Russell's time to lead approaches.
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When will Hamilton win in F1 again?
There's a romance in thinking Hamilton can take another victory to round out his Mercedes years, much like how Raikkonen grabbed that late USGP win in the twilight of his Ferrari tenure.
However, the cold, hard truth is Hamilton is in a midfield team that struggles to escape Q2 while still thinking they're part of F1's front-running force.
Hamilton's Ferrari switch continues to make more and more sense — especially if Adrian Newey also jumps to Maranello.
Sadly, for Hamilton fans, there's little sign that he'll be the British representative making God Save the King ring out from the podium any time soon.
As McLaren's sublime Miami Sunday showed, Britain's Formula 1 future is not reliant on Sir Lewis Hamilton's success.
Somehow, Britain's best Formula 1 driver is at the bottom of the current British pile, and it seems like an Italian Prancing Horse is the only way to rescue him.
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GP BAHRAIN
29 Feb - 2 Mar
Max Verstappen
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GP SAUDI ARABIA
7 - 9 Mar
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GP AUSTRALIA
22 - 24 Mar
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GP CHINA
19 - 21 Apr
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GP USA
3 - 5 May
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GP ITALY
17 - 19 May
Max Verstappen
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- GP CANADA 7 - 9 Jun
- GP SPAIN 21 - 23 Jun
- GP AUSTRIA 28 - 30 Jun
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F1 Standings
Drivers
- Oliver Bearman
- Charles Leclerc
- Carlos Sainz
- Lando Norris
- Oscar Piastri
- Pierre Gasly
- Esteban Ocon
- Sergio Pérez
- Max Verstappen
- Alexander Albon
- Logan Sargeant
- Lewis Hamilton
- George Russell
- Nico Hülkenberg
- Kevin Magnussen
- Fernando Alonso
- Lance Stroll
- Valtteri Bottas
- Zhou Guanyu
- Daniel Ricciardo
- Yuki Tsunoda
Races
- Gulf Air Grand Prix of Bahrain 2024
- Saudi Arabian Grand Prix 2024
- Grand Prix of Australia 2024
- MSC Cruises Grand Prix of Japan 2024
- Grand Prix of China 2024
- Miami Grand Prix 2024
- Gran Premio dell'Emilia Romagna 2024
- Grand Prix of Monaco 2024
- AWS Grand Prix du Canada 2024
- Gran Premio de España 2024
- Grand Prix of Austria 2024
- Grand Prix of Great Britain 2024
- Grand Prix of Hungary 2024
- Grand Prix of Belgium 2024
- Heineken Dutch Grand Prix 2024
- Grand Prix of Italy 2024
- Grand Prix of Azerbaijan 2024
- Grand Prix of Singapore 2024
- Grand Prix of the United States 2024
- Gran Premio de la Ciudad de Mexico 2024
- Grande Prêmio de São Paulo 2024
- Heineken Silver Las Vegas Grand Prix 2024
- Qatar Grand Prix 2024
- Grand Prix of Abu Dhabi 2024
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