| 138th | Top English people |
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| Nationality |
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| Formula One World Championship career | |
|---|---|
| Current team | McLaren–Mercedes |
| Car # | 2 |
| Races | 53 |
| Championships | 1 (2008) |
| Wins | 11 |
| Podiums | 28 |
| Career points | 271 |
| Pole positions | 17 |
| Fastest laps | 3 |
| First race | 2007 Australian Grand Prix |
| First win | 2007 Canadian Grand Prix |
| Last win | 2009 Singapore Grand Prix |
| Last race | 2010 Bahrain Grand Prix |
| 2009 position | 5th (49 points) |
Lewis Carl Davidson Hamilton[1] MBE (born 7 January 1985 in Stevenage, Hertfordshire[2]) is a British Formula One racing driver, currently racing for the McLaren Mercedes team, and is the youngest ever Formula One World Champion.
At the age of ten, Hamilton approached McLaren team principal Ron Dennis at the Autosport Awards ceremony in December 1995 and told him, "I want to race for you one day...I want to race for McLaren." Less than three years later, he was signed by McLaren and Mercedes-Benz to their Young Driver Support Programme.[3] After winning the British Formula Renault, Formula Three Euroseries, and GP2 championships on his way up the racing career ladder,[3] he became a McLaren F1 driver for 2007, making his Formula One debut 12 years after his initial encounter with Dennis. Coming from a mixed-race background, with a black father and white mother,[3][4] Hamilton is often labelled "the first black driver in Formula One".[2][3][4][5][6]
In his first season in Formula One, Hamilton set numerous records and finished second in the 2007 Formula One Championship, just one point behind Kimi Räikkönen. He won his first World Championship the following season, ahead of Felipe Massa by the same margin of a single point. He has stated he wants to stay with the McLaren team for the rest of his F1 career.[7]
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Hamilton was named after American sprinter Carl Lewis.[3] His mother, Carmen Larbalestier (now Carmen Lockhart) is white British, while his paternal grandparents emigrated from Grenada to the United Kingdom in the 1950s,[3] his grandfather (Oliver Hamilton) working in the London Underground.[4] Hamilton's parents separated when he was two and he lived with his mother and half-sisters Nicola and Samantha[8] until the age of twelve, when he started living with his father Anthony, stepmother Linda and half-brother Nicholas, who has cerebral palsy.[9]
Hamilton's first taste of racing competition came at the controls of radio-controlled cars. His father bought him one in 1991, and Hamilton finished second in the national BRCA championship the following year. Hamilton said of the time: "I was racing these remote-controlled cars and winning club championships against adults".[10] That led to Hamilton sampling kart racing for the first time when, aged six, his father bought him his first go-kart as a Christmas present,[11] telling him that he would support his racing career as long as he worked hard at school. When supporting his son became problematic, his father took redundancy from his position as an IT Manager and became a contractor, sometimes doing up to three jobs at a time to support his son's career and still managing to find enough time to attend all Hamilton's races. He later set up his own computer company as well as working as a manager for Hamilton on a full time basis.[12]
Hamilton was educated at The John Henry Newman School, a voluntary aided Catholic secondary school in Stevenage, Hertfordshire.[13] He extended his skills to football, playing in his school team alongside current Aston Villa and England international midfielder Ashley Young.[12] Hamilton said that if Formula 1 had not worked for him he would have been a footballer, being a big fan of Arsenal F.C[14] or a cricketer, having played both for his school teams as a youngster.[15] He subsequently attended, in 2001–02, Cambridge Arts and Sciences (CATS), a private sixth-form college in Cambridge.[16]
In October 2007, Hamilton announced his intention to live in Switzerland, stating that he wished to get away from the media scrutiny experienced living in the United Kingdom. Hamilton mentioned on the television show Parkinson (broadcast on 10 November 2007) that taxation was partly responsible for his decision, in addition to wanting more privacy.[17] Hamilton received public criticism from UK MPs including Liberal Democrat MP Bob Russell for avoiding UK taxes.[18] Settling in Luins in Vaud canton on Lake Geneva,[19] other Formula One drivers, including world champions Michael Schumacher, Kimi Räikkönen and Fernando Alonso, also live in Switzerland.[20] Hamilton was one of several super-rich figures whose tax arrangements were singled out for criticism in a report by the charity Christian Aid in 2008.[21]
On 18 December 2007, Hamilton was suspended from driving in France for a month after being caught speeding at 196 km/h (122 mph) on a French motorway. His Mercedes-Benz CLK was also impounded.[22][23] Hamilton dated Nicole Scherzinger, the lead singer of the American girl band Pussycat Dolls from November 2007–January 2010, when they split up to focus on their respective careers. However, they both stated that they want to remain close friends.[24]. However on 23 February 2010 the Daily Mail reported that they are back together and plan to marry later that year.[25]
Hamilton was awarded an MBE by the Queen in the 2009 New Year Honours.[26]
In March 2009, Madame Tussauds unveiled a waxwork of Hamilton in his Vodafone McLaren Mercedes race suit. This wax replica cost around £150,000 and took over 6 months to complete.[citation needed]
Hamilton began karting in 1993 at the age of eight,[27] at the Rye House Kart Circuit[28] and quickly began winning races and Cadet class championships. At the age of ten he approached McLaren F1 team boss Ron Dennis for an autograph, and told him, "Hi. I'm Lewis Hamilton. I won the British Championship and one day I want to be racing your cars." Dennis wrote in his autograph book, "Phone me in nine years, we'll sort something out then." From the Cadet ranks, he progressed through to Junior Yamaha (1997) and Ron Dennis actually called him in 1998 after Hamilton won an additional Super One series and his second British championship.[10] Dennis delivered on his promise and signed Hamilton to the McLaren driver development program. This contract included an option of a future F1 seat, which would eventually make Hamilton the youngest ever driver to secure a contract which later resulted in an F1 drive.[27]
"He's a quality driver, very strong and only 16. If he keeps this up I'm sure he will reach F1. It's something special to see a kid of his age out on the circuit. He's clearly got the right racing mentality."
Hamilton continued his progress in the Intercontinental A (1999), Formula A (2000) and Formula Super A (2001) ranks, and became European Champion in 2000 with maximum points. In Formula A and Formula Super A, racing for TeamMBM.com, his team mate was Nico Rosberg who would later drive for the Williams and Mercedes GP teams in Formula One. Following his karting successes the British Racing Drivers' Club made him a ‘Rising Star’ Member in 2000.[30]
In 2001, Michael Schumacher made a one-off return to karts and competed against Hamilton along with other future F1 drivers Vitantonio Liuzzi and Nico Rosberg. Hamilton ended the final in seventh, four places behind Schumacher. Although the two saw little of each other on the track Schumacher praised the young Briton (see quote box).[31]
Hamilton began his car racing career in the 2001 British Formula Renault Winter Series. Despite crashing on his third lap in the car in testing, he finished fifth overall in the winter series.[10] This led to a full 2002 Formula Renault UK campaign with Manor Motorsport. Hamilton finished third overall with three wins and three pole positions. He remained with Manor for another year and won the championship with ten wins and 419 points to the two wins and 377 points of his nearest rival, Alex Lloyd. Having clinched the championship, Hamilton missed the last two races of the season to make his debut in the season finale of the British Formula Three Championship. Here he was less successful: in the first race he was forced out with a puncture,[32] and in the second he crashed out and was taken to hospital after a collision with his team-mate Tor Graves.[33] He did show his speed at both the Macau Grand Prix and Korea Super Prix, in the latter he qualified on pole position in his first visit to the track and in only his fourth F3 race.
At the beginning of 2004 Hamilton and McLaren had an argument which resulted in McLaren temporarily dropping him. Later in 2004 Williams would announce that they had come close to signing him but were refused the opportunity due to BMW, their engine supplier at the time, refusing to fund Hamilton's career.[34] Hamilton eventually re-signed with McLaren, and made his debut with Manor in the 2004 Formula Three Euroseries. They won one race and Hamilton ended the year fifth in the championship. He also won the Bahrain F3 Superprix and raced one of the Macau F3 Grand Prix. Hamilton first tested for McLaren in late 2004 at Silverstone.[35]
Hamilton moved to the reigning Euroseries champions ASM for the 2005 season and dominated the championship, winning 15 of the 20 rounds. This would have been 16 but for being disqualified from one win at Spa-Francorchamps on a technical infringement that caught out several other drivers.[10] He also won the Marlboro Masters of Formula 3 at Zandvoort.[36] After the season British magazine Autosport featured him in their “Top 50 Drivers of 2005” issue, ranking Hamilton 24th.
Due to his success in Formula Three, he moved to ASM's sister GP2 team ART Grand Prix for 2006. Just like their sister team in F3, ART were the leaders of the field and reigning champions having taken the 2005 GP2 crown with Nico Rosberg. Hamilton won the GP2 championship at his first attempt, beating Nelson Piquet, Jr. and Timo Glock.
His performances included a dominant win at the Nürburgring, despite serving a penalty for speeding in the pit lane. At his home race at Silverstone, supporting the British Grand Prix, Hamilton overtook two rivals at Becketts, a series of high-speed (up to 150 mph in a GP2 car) bends where overtaking is rare. In Istanbul he recovered from a spin that left him in eighteenth place to take second position in the final corners. He won the title in unusual circumstances, inheriting the final point he needed after Giorgio Pantano was stripped of fastest lap in the Monza feature race. In the sprint race, though he finished second with Piquet sixth, he finished twelve points clear of his rival.[37]
His 2006 GP2 championship coincided with a vacancy at McLaren following the departure of Juan Pablo Montoya to NASCAR and Kimi Räikkönen to Ferrari.[38][39] After months of speculation on whether Hamilton, Pedro de la Rosa or Gary Paffett would be paired with defending champion Fernando Alonso for 2007, Hamilton was confirmed as the team's second driver.[40] He was told of McLaren's decision on September 30, but the news was not made public until November 24, for fear that it would be overshadowed by Michael Schumacher's retirement announcement.[41]
It was announced prior to the start of the season that Hamilton would be partnering defending double World Champion Fernando Alonso who had joined McLaren after leaving Renault.
On his debut at the Australian Grand Prix, he qualified fourth and finished third in the race, becoming the thirteenth driver to finish on the podium in his first F1 career race (excluding those in the first ever World Championship round).[42] In Bahrain, Hamilton got his first front-row start, qualifying and finishing second behind Felipe Massa. Hamilton again finished second behind Massa in the Spanish Grand Prix, to take the lead in the drivers championship.[43] This meant that Hamilton took the record from Bruce McLaren as the youngest driver to ever lead the world championship.[44]
Hamilton finished second behind Alonso at Monaco and afterwards suggested he was prevented from racing his team mate. The FIA cleared McLaren following an investigation.
Hamilton had both his first pole position and first victory of his F1 career in the Canadian Grand Prix at Montreal. He led for most of the race even after the safety car was deployed four times increasing the chances of him being overtaken.[45] A week later Hamilton won the United States Grand Prix, also from pole position, becoming the first Briton since John Watson in 1983 to win an F1 race in the US,[46] and only the second person, after Jacques Villeneuve, to win more than one race in his rookie Formula One season since the first year of the Championship.
By finishing third at Magny-Cours behind Ferrari drivers Kimi Räikkönen and Felipe Massa, Hamilton extended his lead in the Driver's Championship to 14 points. This was the first time in his F1 career he finished a race in a lower position than he started, and the first time he had been passed on the race track in Formula One. He took pole at his home Grand Prix at Silverstone and led for the first 16 laps, but slipped to third, 40 seconds behind Räikkönen and Alonso.
During qualifying for the European Grand Prix, Hamilton crashed at the Schumacher chicane after a problem with the wheel nut caused by the air gun used on his car. He was taken to the circuit's medical centre on a stretcher with an oxygen mask and drip, but was conscious throughout.[47] He was unable to complete qualifying and his existing laptime was surpassed by all other competitors during Q3, thus he qualified in tenth position.[48] After a final medical check on Sunday morning, Hamilton was cleared to race.[49] During a heavy rainstorm which caused the race to be red-flagged Hamilton slid off into a gravel trap, however as he kept his engine running he was lifted back on to the circuit and able to rejoin the race after the restart. His ninth place finish in this race was his first non-podium and non-points finish, enabling title contenders Alonso and Massa to reduce Hamilton's championship lead.
Hamilton won the Hungarian Grand Prix from pole position following a controversial qualifying session. Alonso had set the fastest time, but was relegated five places down the grid to sixth for preventing Hamilton to leave the pit lane in time to complete his final qualifying lap. Kimi Räikkönen stayed within five seconds of Hamilton for the entire race (excluding pit stop periods). McLaren were docked any constructor's points earned during the race due to the incident in qualifying.
After declaring he had restored his relationship with Alonso,[50] Hamilton qualified second in Turkey. After dropping to third at the first corner, Hamilton looked set for a podium finish with 15 laps remaining, but a right-front tyre puncture forced him to crawl back to the pits, leaving him to finish fifth meaning his championship lead was cut once more.[51]
Alonso beat Hamilton in the Italian and Belgian Grands Prix, leaving the Briton with a two-point lead in the title race. However he extended his lead to 12 points after winning the Japanese Grand Prix in heavy rain after Alonso crashed. Following the race Hamilton was investigated by the race stewards over his involvement in an incident behind the safety car, which saw both Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber crash out of the race while following the McLaren. The trio were cleared on the Friday of the Chinese Grand Prix weekend.[52]
After securing pole position in China, which saw changeable weather conditions, Hamilton retired from the race. He experienced considerable tyre wear, notably his right rear, and he ran wide into the gravel trap in the pitlane where his car beached. This was Hamilton's first retirement of his Formula One career. It was later revealed that Bridgestone became unnerved at the glaringly worn tyres and advised McLaren to order him to make a pit stop which McLaren refused to do, believing it would be counterproductive. Hamilton himself couldn't tell the full extent of the tyre problem as raindrops were in his wing mirrors. Hamilton thus went into the final race of the season four and seven points ahead of Alonso and Räikkönen respectively.
In the Brazilian Grand Prix he failed to finish in a championship-winning position, finishing the race in seventh overall after being in eighteenth place at his worst point of the race. The drop to eighteenth occurred due to two incidents. In the first he was passed by Räikkönen away from the line before being boxed in by Massa and Räikkönen into the first corner, and 'wrong-footed' by Räikkönen mid-corner,[53] Hamilton was passed by Alonso in Turn 3. Hamilton attempted to re-pass Alonso in turn four, but ran wide, dropping four places to eighth. The second problem started on lap 9 when Hamilton encountered a gearbox problem, which meant that he was stuck in neutral and could not select any gears.[54] The gearbox became operational again after Hamilton switched settings on his steering wheel, but he lost 40 seconds while his car was coasting. For most of the race, Massa was leading with Räikkönen in second. If this had been the case come the chequered flag with Hamilton in seventh place, Hamilton would have become world champion. After the second round of pit stops, Räikkönen stayed out a couple of laps longer than Massa and took the lead.[55] Once in front Räikkönen made no mistakes in the remaining laps and won the race to become the Formula One world champion.
On 21 October 2007 it was announced that the FIA were investigating BMW Sauber and Williams for fuel irregularities, the BMW drivers had finished in fifth and sixth place, and if they were to be excluded Hamilton would be promoted to fifth and would win the 2007 Drivers World Championship by one point over Räikkönen. Ultimately no penalty whatsoever was given to any team as there was "sufficient doubt as to render it inappropriate to impose a penalty", though McLaren officially appealed this decision.[56] Hamilton subsequently told the BBC he does not want to win an F1 title through the disqualifications of other drivers.[57] A precedent had been set in 1995 when Michael Schumacher, then of Benetton-Renault, and David Coulthard, then of Williams-Renault, were both found guilty of possessing illegal fuel in their cars and in that situation both drivers were initially docked drivers points, but for unspecified reasons it would transpire over a week later that constructor points would be docked instead.
Ahead of the world championship finale, Hamilton answered a question about what it would mean to him to become the first black champion, saying: "It will show that not only white people can do it, but also black people, Indians, Japanese and Chinese. It will be good to mean something."[58] Having made few public remarks about his ethnicity since becoming an F1 driver, Hamilton added: "Outside of Formula One my heroes are foremost my father, then Nelson Mandela and Martin Luther King. Being black is not a negative. It’s a positive, if anything, because I’m different. In the future it can open doors to different cultures and that is what motor sport is trying to do anyway".[58]
Hamilton's relationship with McLaren team boss Ron Dennis dates back to 1995[59], with the first indication that Hamilton was unhappy with his team appearing after he finished second at Monaco in 2007. After post-race comments made by Hamilton which suggested he had been forced into a supporting role, the FIA initiated an inquiry to determine whether McLaren had broken rules by enforcing team orders.[60] McLaren denied favouring double world champion Fernando Alonso, and the FIA subsequently vindicated the team, stating that: "McLaren were able to pursue an optimum team strategy because they had a substantial advantage over all other cars. They did nothing which could be described as interfering with the race result".[60]
The tensions within the team surfaced again at the 2007 Hungarian Grand Prix. During the final qualifying session for the race Hamilton was delayed in the pits by Alonso and thus unable to set a final lap time before the end of the session. McLaren pointed out that Hamilton had disobeyed an earlier instruction to let Alonso pass in qualifying.[61] Alonso was relegated to sixth place on the starting grid, thus elevating Hamilton (who had originally qualified second) to first, while McLaren were docked constructors championship points. Hamilton said he thought Alonso's penalty was "quite light if anything" and only regretted the loss of constructors' points.[62] Hamilton was reported to have sworn at Dennis on the team radio following the incident.[63][64] British motorsport journal Autosport claimed that this "[led] Dennis to throw his headphones on the pit wall in disgust (a gesture that was misinterpreted by many to be in reaction to Alonso's pole)".[65] However McLaren later issued a statement on behalf of Hamilton which denied the use of any profanity.[66] As a result of these events, the relationship between Hamilton and Alonso temporarily collapsed, with the pair not on speaking terms for a short period.[50][67] In the aftermath it was reported that Hamilton had been targeted by Luca di Montezemolo regarding a Ferrari drive for 2008.[68]
Following the stewards' investigation into the incident at the 2007 Japanese Grand Prix, Alonso insinuated that the verdict had settled the championship in Hamilton's favour, saying: "I'm not thinking of this championship anymore, it's been decided off the track. The drivers' briefing has no purpose. You go there to hear what Charlie Whiting and the other officials say. Twenty one drivers have an opinion, Charlie and the officials another, and so it's like talking to a wall".[69]
The rivalry between Hamilton and teammate Alonso led to speculation that one of the pair would leave McLaren at the end of the 2007 season[70][71][72] and Alonso and McLaren subsequently terminated their contract by mutual consent on November 2, 2007.[73]
On December 14, 2007, it was confirmed that Heikki Kovalainen who drove for Renault in 2007 would drive the second car for McLaren-Mercedes for the 2008 Formula One season alongside Hamilton. In January 2008, Hamilton signed a new five-year multi-million pound contract to stay with McLaren-Mercedes until the end of the 2012 season.
Hamilton won the first race of the 2008 season, the Australian Grand Prix, having qualified on pole position. In the second race of the season, the Malaysian Grand Prix, he finished fifth after long duels with both Mark Webber and Jarno Trulli. He had been demoted to ninth on the grid, from fourth, for impeding Heidfeld's flying lap. At the third race of the year, the Bahrain Grand Prix, things did not start well for Hamilton when he had a crash in practice which destroyed his car. He continued with a spare chassis and took third place in qualifying. In the race, after a bad start, he crashed into the back of Alonso's Renault finishing 13th. This led to him being overtaken in the drivers Championship by Kimi Räikkönen and Nick Heidfeld.
He was back on the podium at the Spanish Grand Prix finishing third from fifth on the grid.[74] Hamilton finished second in the Turkish Grand Prix on Sunday May 11, 2008. He said that this was his best race he had ever competed in. Two weeks later, he won the Monaco Grand Prix putting him in the lead of the championship.
He achieved his eighth career pole position at the Canadian Grand Prix. During the race, he crashed into the back of Räikkönen after failing to see that the Finn was waiting at a red light at the end of the pit lane. Both cars were forced to retire and Hamilton was given a 10 position grid penalty for the next race, the French Grand Prix, as a result of this incident. At that race, Hamilton overtook Sebastian Vettel at the chicane on lap 1 but missed the apex and was given a drive through penalty which he served on lap 13, finishing the race in 13th. Despite an error in qualifying that saw him start fourth on the grid, Hamilton went on to win the British Grand Prix in difficult, wet conditions. His performance was stated as being one of his best drives to date.[75] Hamilton himself said in the post race press conference that it was his most difficult and most meaningful win.
In the next race at Hockenheim, Hamilton started from pole position, building up an 11 second lead over second-placed Felipe Massa early in the race. After stopping and re-emerging in the lead, McLaren then decided to keep Hamilton out on-track when the safety car was deployed mid-way through the race. When Hamilton finally pitted, he came out in fifth place, jumping to third after his team-mate let him by and Nick Heidfeld pitted. He then overtook Massa and Nelson Piquet, Jr. for the lead, eventually winning by 9 seconds.
Hamilton won the Belgian Grand Prix on the road, however he was later judged to have gained an unfair advantage by cutting a chicane when he used a tarmac run off area to avoid hitting Kimi Räikkönen.[76] McLaren said that their telemetry showed Hamilton backed off to let Räikkönen past[77] but Hamilton was given a 25 second penalty, thereby dropping him to third. As a result his main title rival Massa inherited the win. Hamilton's lead in the drivers' championship was cut to two points, and a subsequent appeal by McLaren to the FIA World Council was rejected on the grounds that the case was inadmissible.[78] The Italian Grand Prix was won by Sebastian Vettel in the Toro Rosso. Both Massa and Hamilton failed to capitalise on the weather and each other's poor grid positions finishing sixth and seventh respectively. This result cut Hamilton's lead in the Championship to one point. Hamilton finished third at the next race the Singapore Grand Prix. Massa failed to score any points, allowing Hamilton to increase his championship lead to seven points.
At the Japanese Grand Prix Hamilton took pole in qualifying. His closest rival for the Championship title, Felipe Massa, could only manage to qualify fifth.[79] As the race began Kimi Räikkönen made a good start from second position, getting ahead of pole-sitter Hamilton. Hamilton moved down the inside before the first corner, out-braking himself and running wide. This forced some of the drivers behind him to go off the track, including the cars of Räikkönen and Heikki Kovalainen, for which Hamilton was given a drive-through penalty. A second incident followed soon afterwards, on the second lap, when Hamilton attempted to pass Massa into the chicane at turn 10. Hamilton pulled alongside the Ferrari and as Massa ran wide into the corner, Hamilton made a move to pass him. Massa then ran up inside Hamilton and the cars collided at the second bend of the chicane, pushing the McLaren into a spin. Massa was later given a drive-through penalty for this move. Hamilton, who had been in sixth place behind Massa, dropped down to last place but managed to regain some places and managed to finish the race in 12th position. However his title rival Felipe Massa finished seventh after being given an extra point after a penalty was given to Sébastien Bourdais of Scuderia Toro Rosso. This meant that with just two races to go Hamilton led the World Championship by five points from Massa.
At the penultimate race of the season, the 2008 Chinese Grand Prix, Hamilton was much faster than all the other cars in the practice sessions, and in qualifying he did well again, qualifying on pole position.[80] He went on to win the race from Felipe Massa and Kimi Räikkönen, taking a 7 point lead in the World Championship into the last race of the season. Speaking afterwards, Hamilton said "All weekend we have had God on our side as always, and the team did a phenomenal job in preparing the car, which has been a dream to drive."[81]
Hamilton needed to finish at least fifth in the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix to secure the World Championship. After a hard fought race Lewis was in fifth but, after rain, and in the closing laps of the race, Sebastian Vettel of Scuderia Toro Rosso took the fifth position away from Hamilton. Had the race ended then, this would have given the driver's title to Massa.
On the final lap of the race first Vettel and then Hamilton managed to pass Timo Glock of Toyota, after Glock (unlike Hamilton) had risked staying on the track with dry-weather tyres, despite the rain.[82] This moved Hamilton back up to fifth, ensuring that he finished one point ahead of Massa overall and winning the 2008 title. Hamilton's overtaking move happened after Massa had crossed the line to win. This meant that Hamilton had clinched the 2008 Formula One World Championship, becoming the youngest driver to win the title, as well as the first black driver.[83] He is also the first British driver to win the World Championship since Damon Hill triumphed in 1996.
On February 4, 2008, Lewis Hamilton was verbally heckled and otherwise abused during pre-season testing at the Circuit de Catalunya in Catalonia by several Spanish spectators who wore black face paint and black wigs, as well as shirts bearing the words "Hamilton's familly [sic]".[84] Hamilton became widely unpopular in Spain because of his rivalry with Spanish former team-mate Fernando Alonso. The FIA have warned Spanish authorities about the repetition of such behaviour.[85] In reaction to this behaviour, the FIA announced on 13 February 2008 that it will launch a "Race Against Racism" campaign.[86]
Shortly before the 2008 Brazilian Grand Prix, a website owned by the Spanish branch of the New York-based advertising agency TBWA and named "pinchalaruedadeHamilton" (burst Hamilton's tyre) was featured in the British media. The website contained an animated image of Interlagos that allowed users to leave nails and porcupines on the track for Hamilton's car to run over. Among thousands of anti-Hamilton comments left since 2007, some included racial insults.[87] His rival Fernando Alonso condemned the racist supporters.
After winning the championship in the previous Formula One season, Hamilton set out to defend his title in 2009.
A year after winning the 2008 Australian Grand Prix from pole position, Hamilton opened his 2009 season from the second to last row of the grid. After a gearbox problem in first stage of qualifying for the 2009 Australian Grand Prix, McLaren decided to replace the gearbox resulting in a penalty that moved Hamilton to the back of the grid.[88] Hamilton was then moved up into 18th place after Toyota's Timo Glock and Jarno Trulli were both penalised for over flexible rear wings.[89] After starting the race in 18th place, Hamilton moved up the pack throughout the race. After the midway point, Hamilton looked to have a decent chance to finish in the points. After making a few key passes late, Hamilton benefited from a late crash between Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel and BMW Sauber's Robert Kubica and was vaulted up into 4th place where he originally finished the race. He was then promoted to third after Jarno Trulli was penalised for overtaking Hamilton under safety-car conditions. During a post-race stewards' hearing, Hamilton and McLaren officials told stewards they had not purposely let Trulli pass, but it was revealed by release of the McLaren race radio communication that this was not true.[90] Hamilton was then disqualified for providing "misleading evidence" during the stewards' hearing.[91]
Hamilton later privately apologised to FIA race director Charlie Whiting for having lied to the stewards.[92]
In the second race of the season, the Malaysian Grand Prix, he finished seventh after heavy rain ended the race after just 33 laps at Sepang. Hamilton received half of the normal two points normally awarded to the seventh place finisher because the race ran for less than 75 percent of its scheduled distance, and was therefore not considered a full race.
Hamilton qualified ninth for the wet Chinese Grand Prix, during which he was able to pass several cars throughout the race, only to lose places with spins that he put down to aquaplaning on worn tyres.[93] One such spin let his team-mate Kovalainen past, but Hamilton did benefit late in the race from Adrian Sutil crashing out while sixth, the position Hamilton filled at the finish.
The fourth race of the 2009 Formula One season was the Bahrain Grand Prix. After starting from fifth on the grid, Hamilton progressed backwards and forwards throughout the race before finally finishing in fourth position, thereby earning five points. In Spain he came ninth and in Monaco after some setting the fastest first sector, crashed in Q1 and finished 12th in the race. In Turkey he was again out in Q1 when his team mate went into Q2. In the race Lewis didn't make much progress and finished a lowly 13th, ahead of team mate Kovalainen but was the slower of the two McLarens all weekend. A chance for points, and even hopes for a podium finish came at 2009 German Grand Prix when he qualified fifth, but a puncture on the first lap caused by a collision with Mark Webber's race winning Red Bull RB5 car sent him down to 19th as the -McLaren limped back to the pits damaging the floor and undertray. With the car damaged and aero benefits lost he finished 18th, last and the only driver in the race lapped.
Hamilton's fortunes were reversed at the 2009 Hungarian Grand Prix. After a KERS-assisted start from 4th that saw him second by turn 1, Mark Webber briefly leapfrogged him and he was down to third by turn 2. On lap 5 he retook the position, and following Alonso's retirement on lap 13, Hamilton led for the remainder of the race to finish 11.529s in front of Kimi Raikkonen, and take his 10th career win - the first for a KERS-equipped car.
Hamilton's newly-found return to form continued at the 2009 European Grand Prix, where he qualified on pole position for the first time in the season, heading a McLaren one-two with team-mate Heikki Kovalainen, because of a poor pit stop by the mechanics Lewis lost first position but finished a steady second to finish the weekend in style.
He was unable to repeat his 2008 Belgian win the next race however, as his race ended prematurely, when he, along with Jenson Button, Jaime Alguersuari, and Romain Grosjean crashed out on the opening lap.
At the 2009 Italian Grand Prix Hamilton started from pole but crashed out of third place on the last lap when chasing Jenson Button for second, giving Kimi Räikkönen a podium spot at Ferrari's home circuit and also mathematically eliminating his chances of defending the title.[94]
In September, Hamilton won at the 2009 Singapore Grand Prix for his second win of the 2009 season.[95] In Japan, he started third behind Sebastian Vettel and Jarno Trulli, where after passing Trulli at the start, he maintained his second place, but lost out to the Toyota driver after his final pit-stop and had to settle for third.
In the 2009 Brazilian Grand Prix, Hamilton started from 17th on the grid, and managed to finish on the podium in third place. This is the race where Jenson Button inherited the world championship drivers crown from Lewis by finishing fifth, the same position that won Hamilton the 2008 World Championship at the same race the previous year. The finale to the 2009 F1 calendar was at the newly built Abu Dhabi Circuit. Hamilton was quick throughout the practice sessions and qualified on pole, 6 tenths of a second quicker than Sebastian Vettel who sat in 2nd on the grid. Hamilton was looking strong to win the race, but retired on lap 20 due to a rear brake problem.
For 2010, Hamilton has been joined by fellow Brit and newly crowned world champion Jenson Button. Hamilton said that he is happy to welcome Button into the team and is looking forward to his challenge.
After having a difficult 2009 season Hamilton was set out to challenge for the title hoping that this year could be a much better season for him and McLaren. Hamilton finished third in Bahrain, having qualified fourth on the grid.
Hamilton has matched or set the following records in Formula One:
In his debut season, Hamilton took the record of Youngest World Drivers' Championship runner-up, at 22 years and 288 days, previously held by Kimi Räikkönen at 23 years and 360 days. In 2009, this record was taken by Sebastian Vettel, who was 22 years and 122 days when he secured runner-up position in the championship.
Hamilton is the first driver of black heritage to compete in Formula One (although Willy T. Ribbs tested an F1 car in 1986[99]) and the first driver of black heritage to win a major race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in any discipline. In addition, he is the third youngest driver to achieve an F1 pole position, and the fourteenth F1 driver to achieve a podium finish on his debut.[42]
During the 2007 European Grand Prix at the Nürburgring, Hamilton became the first driver to have his car recovered by a crane and put back on the track during an F1 race, although several drivers have been pushed back onto the circuit by the marshals without mechanical aids when judged to be in a dangerous position, such as Michael Schumacher during the 2003 European Grand Prix.[100] Since then, the FIA have now banned the use of mechanical assistance to help move a car back onto the track, meaning that Hamilton became the first and the last driver to have his car recovered by crane back onto the track.
Lewis Hamilton's contract for the McLaren driver development program made him the youngest ever driver to secure a contract which later resulted in an F1 drive.[27]
Due to the fact that Hamilton has said in the past that Ayrton Senna was his hero, some people assumed that his helmet is yellow in honour of him.[101] In actuality it was made yellow so that his father could tell which kart his son was driving back in his karting days. Hamilton chose the colours blue, green and red and they were originally in a ribbon design however Hamilton later felt that the design was "a bit old hat" so it was changed. In later years a white ring was added and the ribbons moved forward to make room for adverts and logos.[102]
| Season | Series | Team | Races | Wins | Poles | F/Laps | Podiums | Points | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | World Formula A Championship | TeamMBM.com (CRG/Parilla) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC |
| European Formula A Championship | 9 | 5 | ? | ? | ? | 75 | 1st | ||
| Formula A World Cup | 1 | 1 | ? | ? | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| 2001 | Formula Super A World Championship | TeamMBM.com (Parolin/Parilla) | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 28 | 15th |
| Formula Renault 2000 UK Winter Series | Manor Motorsport | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ? | 5th | |
| 2002 | Formula Renault 2000 UK | Manor Motorsport | 13 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 7 | 274 | 3rd |
| Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 92 | 5th | ||
| 2003 | Formula Renault 2.0 UK | Manor Motorsport | 15 | 10 | 11 | 9 | 13 | 419 | 1st |
| British Formula Three | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | NC | ||
| Formula Renault 2000 Masters | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 24 | 12th | ||
| Formula Renault 2000 Germany | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 25 | 27th | ||
| Korea Super Prix | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
| Macau Grand Prix | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
| 2004 | Formula Three Euroseries | Manor Motorsport | 20 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 69 | 5th |
| Bahrain Superprix | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| Macau Grand Prix | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | ||
| Masters of Formula 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | ||
| 2005 | Formula Three Euroseries | ASM Formule 3 | 20 | 15 | 13 | 10 | 17 | 172 | 1st |
| Masters of Formula 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| 2006 | GP2 Series | ART Grand Prix | 21 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 14 | 114 | 1st |
| 2007 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren–Mercedes | 17 | 4 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 109 | 2nd |
| 2008 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 18 | 5 | 7 | 1 | 10 | 98 | 1st |
| 2009 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 17 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 5 | 49 | 5th |
| 2010 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 15* | 3rd* |
* Season in progress.
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
| Year | Entrant | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | DC | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | ART Grand Prix | VAL FEA 2 |
VAL SPR 6 |
SAN FEA DSQ |
SAN SPR 10 |
EUR FEA 1 |
EUR SPR 1 |
ESP FEA 2 |
ESP SPR 4 |
MCO FEA 1 |
GBR FEA 1 |
GBR SPR 1 |
FRA FEA 19 |
FRA SPR 5 |
GER FEA 2 |
GER SPR 3 |
HUN FEA 10 |
HUN SPR 2 |
TUR FEA 2 |
TUR SPR 2 |
ITA FEA 3 |
ITA SPR 2 |
1st | 114 |
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
| Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | WDC | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes |
McLaren MP4-22 | Mercedes FO 108T 2.4 V8 | AUS 3 |
MAL 2 |
BHR 2 |
ESP 2 |
MON 2 |
CAN 1 |
USA 1 |
FRA 3 |
GBR 3 |
EUR 9 |
HUN 1 |
TUR 5 |
ITA 2 |
BEL 4 |
JPN 1 |
CHN Ret |
BRA 7 |
2nd | 109 | ||
| 2008 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes |
McLaren MP4-23 | Mercedes FO 108V 2.4 V8 | AUS 1 |
MAL 5 |
BHR 13 |
ESP 3 |
TUR 2 |
MON 1 |
CAN Ret |
FRA 10 |
GBR 1 |
GER 1 |
HUN 5 |
EUR 2 |
BEL 3 |
ITA 7 |
SIN 3 |
JPN 12 |
CHN 1 |
BRA 5 |
1st | 98 | |
| 2009 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes |
McLaren MP4-24 | Mercedes FO 108W 2.4 V8 | AUS DSQ |
MAL 7‡ |
CHN 6 |
BHR 4 |
ESP 9 |
MON 12 |
TUR 13 |
GBR 16 |
GER 18 |
HUN 1 |
EUR 2 |
BEL Ret |
ITA 12 |
SIN 1 |
JPN 3 |
BRA 3 |
ABU Ret |
5th | 49 | ||
| 2010 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes |
McLaren MP4-25 | Mercedes FO 108X 2.4 V8 | BHR 3 |
AUS |
MAL |
CHN |
ESP |
MON |
TUR |
CAN |
EUR |
GBR |
GER |
HUN |
BEL |
ITA |
SIN |
JPN |
KOR |
BRA |
ABU |
3rd* | 15* |
* Season in progress. ‡ Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.
| Sporting positions | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Danny Watts |
British Formula Renault UK series champion 2003 |
Succeeded by Mike Conway |
| Preceded by Jamie Green |
Formula Three Euroseries Drivers' Champion 2005 |
Succeeded by Paul di Resta |
| Preceded by Nick Heidfeld (1997) |
Monaco Formula Three Support Race Winner 2005 |
Succeeded by none race not held since |
| Preceded by Alexandre Prémat |
Formula Three Masters Winner 2005 |
Succeeded by Paul di Resta |
| Preceded by Nico Rosberg |
GP2 Series Drivers' Champion 2006 |
Succeeded by Timo Glock |
| Preceded by Kimi Räikkönen |
Formula One World Champion 2008 |
Succeeded by Jenson Button |
| Records | ||
| Preceded by Juan Manuel Fangio (1950) and Giuseppe Farina (1950) 3 wins |
Most Wins in a debut Formula One season 4 wins 2007, tied with: Jacques Villeneuve (1996) |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by Fernando Alonso 24 years, 58 days (2005 season) |
Youngest Formula One World Drivers' Champion 23 years, 300 days (2008 season) |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Awards and achievements | ||
| Preceded by Danny Watts |
Autosport British Club Driver of the Year 2003 |
Succeeded by James Pickford |
| Preceded by Tiago Monteiro |
Autosport Rookie Of The Year 2006–2007 |
Succeeded by Sebastian Vettel |
| Preceded by Jenson Button |
Hawthorn Memorial Trophy 2007–2008 |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by Jenson Button |
Autosport British Competition Driver of the Year 2007 |
Succeeded by Allan McNish |
| Preceded by Fernando Alonso |
Autosport International Racing Driver Award 2007–2008 |
Succeeded by Jenson Button |
| Preceded by Sebastian Vettel |
Lorenzo Bandini Trophy 2010 |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
| Preceded by Amélie Mauresmo |
Laureus World Breakthrough of the Year 2008 |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
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Lewis Carl Davidson Hamilton (born January 7, 1985, in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England) is a British Formula One driver.
|
File:LewisHamilton 2 2007 Lewis Hamilton at Stars and Cars 2007 | |
| Nationality British | |
| Date of birth | 7 January 1985 |
|---|---|
| Formula One World Championship career | |
| 2011 team | McLaren–Mercedes |
| 2011 car # | 3 |
| Races | 71 |
| Championships | 1 (2008) |
| Wins | 14 |
| Podiums | 36 |
| Career points | 496 |
| Pole positions | 18 |
| Fastest laps | 8 |
| First race | 2007 Australian Grand Prix |
| First win | 2007 Canadian Grand Prix |
| Last win | 2010 Canadian Grand Prix |
| Last race | 2010 Abu Dhabi Grand Prix |
| 2010 position | 4th (240 points) |
Lewis Carl Davidson Hamilton[1] MBE (born 7 January 1985 in Stevenage, Hertfordshire, England[2]) is a British Formula One racing driver, currently racing for the McLaren team.
Hamilton won the British Formula Renault, Formula Three Euroseries, and GP2 championships as his racing career advanced.[3] He became a McLaren F1 driver for 2007, making his Formula One debut (first race) 12 years after his first meeting with Ron Dennis. Hamilton comes from a mixed-race background, with a black father and white mother.[3][4] He is often labelled "the first black driver in Formula One".[2][3][4][5][6]
In his first season in Formula One, Hamilton set many racing records. He finished second in the 2007 Formula One Championship, just one point behind Kimi Räikkönen. He won the World Championship the next season by one point ahead of Felipe Massa. He sais he wants to stay with the McLaren team for the rest of his F1 career.[7]
Contents |
Hamilton was named after American sprinter Carl Lewis.[3] His mother, Carmen Larbalestier (now Carmen Lockhart) is British. His father's parents emigrated from Grenada to the United Kingdom in the 1950s.[3] Hamilton's parents separated when he was two. At first he lived with his mother.[8] When Hamilton was twelve, he started living with his father, Anthony.[9][10] Hamilton was raised Roman Catholic.[11]
Hamilton's first taste of racing came at radio-controlled cars. His father bought him one in 1991, and Hamilton did well.[13] Hamilton started kart racing when he was six. His father bought him his first go-kart as a Christmas present.[14] His father said he would support his racing as long as he worked hard at school. To support his son Anthony had to take extra jobs, but he found enough time to attend all of Hamilton's races.[15]
In October 2007, Hamilton announced his intention to live in Switzerland. He said this was to avoid the media scrutiny in the United Kingdom. Hamilton later admitted on the television show Parkinson, that taxation was part of the reason for his decision.[16] Hamilton was publicly criticism from UK MPs including Liberal Democrat MP Bob Russell for avoiding UK taxes.[17] He settled in Luins in Vaud canton on Lake Geneva.[18]
On 18 December 2007, Hamilton was suspended from driving in France for one month. He had been caught speeding at 196 km/h (122 mph) on a French motorway. His Mercedes-Benz CLK was also impounded.[19][20] Two days before the 2010 Australian Grand Prix, Victoria Police witnessed Hamilton "deliberately losing traction" in his silver Mercedes, and impounded the car for 48 hours. Hamilton immediately released a statement of apology for "driving in an over-exuberant manner".[21] In May 2010, Hamilton was charged with intentionally losing control of a vehicle.[22]
Hamilton was awarded an MBE by the Queen in the 2009 New Year Honours.[23]
Hamilton began karting in 1993 at the age of eight.[24] He quickly began winning races and class championships. At the age of ten he approached McLaren F1 team boss Ron Dennis for an autograph. He told him, "Hi. I'm Lewis Hamilton. I won the British Championship and one day I want to be racing your cars." Dennis wrote in his autograph book, "Phone me in nine years, we'll sort something out then."[3] Hamilton made good progress through the karting ranks. Ron Dennis signed Hamilton to the McLaren driver development program. This contract included an option of a future F1 seat. Hamilton would become the youngest ever driver to secure a contract which led in an F1 racing position.[24]
"He's a quality driver, very strong and only 16. If he keeps this up I'm sure he will reach F1. It's something special to see a kid of his age out on the circuit. He's clearly got the right racing mentality."
In 2001, Michael Schumacher made a one-time return to karts and competed against Hamilton along with other future F1 drivers Vitantonio Liuzzi and Nico Rosberg. Hamilton ended the final in seventh, four places behind Schumacher. Although the two saw little of each other on the track Schumacher praised the young Briton (see quote box).[27]
Hamilton began his car racing career in the 2001 British Formula Renault Winter Series. He finished fifth overall in the winter series.[13] This led to full Formula Renault UK seasons in 2002 and 2003. Hamilton finished 2002 in third place. In 2003 he won the championship with ten wins and 419 points. Since he had enough points to win the championship, Hamilton missed the last two races of the season. He make his debut in the British Formula Three Championship at the season finale. He did show his speed at both the Macau Grand Prix and Korea Super Prix. In Korea, he qualified on pole position in his first visit to the track. It was only his fourth F3 race.
Hamilton made his debut in the Formula 3 Euro Series in 2004. Hamilton ended the year fifth in the championship. He first tested for McLaren in late 2004 at Silverstone.[28]
Hamilton moved to the Euro Series champions ASM for the 2005 season. He dominated the championship, winning 15 of the 20 rounds.[13] He also won the Marlboro Masters of Formula 3 at Zandvoort.[29]
With his success in Formula Three, Hamilton moved to GP2 for the 2006 season. He won the GP2 championship at his first attempt, beating Nelson Piquet, Jr. and Timo Glock.
His 2006 GP2 championship happened at the same time there was a vacancy at McLaren. Juan Pablo Montoya left Formula on to race in NASCAR, and Kimi Räikkönen left to join Ferrari.[30][31] Hamilton was confirmed as the team's second driver. He would be paired with defending champion Fernando Alonso for 2007 season.[32] He was told of McLaren's decision on 30 September. The news was not made public until 24 November. McLaren was afraid the news would be overshadowed by Michael Schumacher's retirement announcement.[33]
Hamilton would be the team-mate of defending double World Champion Fernando Alonso. Alonso had joined McLaren after leaving Renault. On his debut at the Australian Grand Prix, he qualified fourth and finished third in the race. He became the thirteenth driver to finish on the podium in his first F1 career race (excluding those in the first ever World Championship round).[34] In Bahrain, Hamilton got his first front-row start, qualifying and finishing second. Hamilton again finished second behind Massa in the Spanish Grand Prix. This put him in the lead in the drivers championship.[35] Hamilton broke Bruce McLaren's record of being the youngest driver to ever lead the world championship.[36]
Hamilton had both his first pole position and first victory of his F1 career in the Canadian Grand Prix.[37]
During qualifying for the European Grand Prix, Hamilton crashed at the Nürburgring. He was unable to complete qualifying and started the race in tenth position.[38] During a heavy rainstorm which caused the race to be temporally stopped, Hamilton slid off into a gravel trap. He was able to rejoin the race after the restart. His ninth place finish in this race was his first non-podium and non-points finish.
Hamilton won the Hungarian Grand Prix from the pole position. At first, Alonso had set the fastest time. He received a five start place penalty for blocking Hamilton in the pit lane. This prevented Hamilton from running his final qualifying lap. McLaren was penalized also. They did not earn any constructor's points for the race.
After said he had restored his relationship with Alonso.[39] Hamilton qualified second in Turkey. Hamilton was running in third place. He got a flat tyre, and had to drive slowly back to the pits. He finished the race in fifth place. His championship lead was reduced.[40]
Alonso beat Hamilton in the Italian and Belgian Grands Prix. Hamilton now had a two-point lead in the title race. His lead increased to 12 points after winning the Japanese Grand Prix. The race was in heavy rain, and Alonso crashed out of the race. After the race, there was investigated by the race stewards (officials). They looked at Hamilton's actions behind the safety car. Both Sebastian Vettel and Mark Webber crash out of the race while following Hamilton. The race stewards did not find that anybody did anything against the rules.[41]
Hamilton earned the pole position in China. The race saw both dry and wet weather conditions. Hamilton retired from the race. He was experiencing heavy tyre wear. He tried to enter the pits. He ran wide and into the gravel trap. His car was stuck, and Hamilton recording the first retirement of his Formula One career. Hamilton went into the final race of the season with a four point lead.
In the Brazilian Grand Prix Hamilton failed earn any championship points. He finished the race in seventh position. Hamilton was passed by Räikkönen at the start. He was blocked in by Massa and Räikkönen into the first corner, and caught off balance.[42] Hamilton was passed by Alonso in Turn 3. Hamilton attempted to re-pass Alonso in Turn 4. He ran wide, and dropped to eighth place. Then a problem started on lap 9. Hamilton had a gearbox problem. He was stuck in neutral and could not select any gears.[43] Hamilton reset the settings on his steering wheel. The gearbox started working again. He had lost 40 seconds while his car was coasting.
For most of the race, Massa was leading and Räikkönen was in second. If the race had ended this way, Hamilton would have become world champion. During the second round of pit stops, Räikkönen the lead from Massa.[44] Räikkönen won the race to become the Formula One world champion.
Hamilton finished the season with four wins, and in second place in the World Drivers Cup with 109 points.
The first sign that Hamilton was unhappy with his team appearing after he finished second at Monaco. His post-race comments suggested he had been forced into a supporting role. The FIA look to see if McLaren had broken rules by enforcing team orders.[45] FIA determined that McLaren did not break any rules..[45] During qualifying at the Hungarian Grand Prix, Alonso held Hamilton up in the pits. This caused Hamilton to miss one last lap to try and earn the pol position.[46] Alonso was moved back to the sixth starting position. This moved Hamilton to the pole. McLaren was docked constructors championship points. Hamilton said he thought Alonso's penalty was "quite light if anything" and only regretted the loss of constructors' points.[47] As a result of these events, the relationship between Hamilton and Alonso temporarily collapsed. The pair were not on speaking terms for a short period.[39][48]
After the Japanese Grand Prix, Alonso felt that a race stewards' verdict had settled the championship in Hamilton's favor. He said: "I'm not thinking of this championship anymore, it's been decided off the track. The drivers' briefing has no purpose. You go there to hear what Charlie Whiting and the other officials say. Twenty one drivers have an opinion, Charlie and the officials another, and so it's like talking to a wall".[49]
After the season was over, Alonso and McLaren terminated their contract on 2 November 2007. Both sides agreed to the departure of Alonso.[50]
In January 2008, Hamilton signed a new five-year contract to stay with McLaren-Mercedes until the end of the 2012 season. For the 2008 season, Heikki Kovalainen would drive the second car for McLaren-Mercedes.
The first race of the 2008 season, the Australian Grand Prix, Hamilton qualified on pole and won the race. having position. In the Bahrain, Hamilton destroyed his car during a practice crash. He used a spare chassis and took third place in qualifying. In the race, he crashed into the back of Alonso's car and finished 13th. He was back on the podium in Spain finishing third.[51] Hamilton finished second in Turkey, and won the Monaco Grand Prix a two weeks later, putting him back into the championship lead.
He qualified on the pole in Montreal but he crashed into the back of Kimi Räikkönen during the race. There was a red light at the end of the pit lane. Hamilton did not see that Räikkönen was stopped at the light. Hamilton was given a 10 position starting grid penalty for the next race, the French Grand Prix. Hamilton went on to win the British Grand Prix in difficult, wet conditions. This was called one of his best performance to date.[52] Hamilton himself said in the post race press conference that it was his most difficult and most meaningful win.
In the next race at Hockenheim, Hamilton started from pole position, and won by 9 seconds.
Hamilton won the Belgian Grand Prix, but this win was called into question. He was left the race track in a chicane avoid hitting Kimi Räikkönen. The race officials said that gave Hamilton an unfair advantage.[53] McLaren said that their monitoring equipment showed Hamilton slowed down to let Räikkönen past.[54] Hamilton was given a 25 second penalty. The penalty dropping him to third place. McLaren appealed the penalty to the FIA World Motor Sport Council. The appeal was rejected. The council said the case was inadmissible.[55]
At Fuji, Hamilton took pole in qualifying. Felipe Massa was his closest rival for the Championship title. Massa could only manage to qualify fifth.[56] As the race began Kimi Räikkönen made a good start, and passed Hamilton. Hamilton ran wide at the first corner. This forced some of the drivers behind him to go off the track. Hamilton was given a drive-through penalty for his actions. On the second lap, when Hamilton tried to pass Massa at turn 10. Hamilton pulled alongside and made a move to pass him. Massa then ran wide and both cars hit. Hamilton car went into a spin. Massa was given a drive-through penalty for this move. Hamilton dropped down to last place. He managed to finish the race in 12th position, but earned no points.
At the Chinese Grand Prix, Hamilton was much faster than all the other cars in practice. He qualified on pole position.[57] He went on to win the race, and a 7 point lead in the World Championship.
The Brazilian Grand Prix was the last race of the year. Hamilton needed to finish at least fifth the to win the World Championship. After a hard fought race Hamilton was in fifth place. In the closing laps of the race, it started to rain. Sebastian Vettel passed Hamilton for fifth position.
Massa had already won the race. With Hamilton in sixth place, it looked like Massa would win the title. During the final lap of both Vettel and Hamilton passed Timo Glock. Glock was using dry-weather tyres and Hamilton was using wet-weather tyres.[58] This put Hamilton back into fifth place. Hamilton's pass gave him one more point than Massa.
Hamilton had won the 2008 Formula One World Championship. He became the youngest driver to win the title, as well as the first black driver.[59] He is also the first British driver to win the World Championship since Damon Hill in 1996.
On 4 February 2008, Hamilton was verbally taunted and abused during pre-season testing at the Circuit de Catalunya in Catalonia. Several Spanish spectators wore black face paint and black wigs. They wore shirts saying "Hamilton's familly [sic]".[60] Hamilton had become unpopular in Spain because of his rivalry with Spaniard Fernando Alonso. The FIA warned Spanish authorities not to let this behavior continue.[61] the FIA announced on 13 February 2008 that it will launch a "Race Against Racism" campaign.[62]
Hamilton started the 2009 season-opening Australian Grand Prix from 18th place on the grid. Hamilton finished the race in third place after Jarno Trulli was penalized. Trulli had passed Hamilton while behind the safety-car. There was a post-race stewards' hearing. Hamilton and McLaren told the stewards they did not let Trulli pass. The McLaren radio communication proved that was a lie.[63] Hamilton was disqualified from the race for providing "misleading evidence" during the stewards' hearing.[64] He later apologized in private to FIA race director Charlie Whiting for lying.[65]
During the next six races, Hamilton did not perform well. He qualified outside the top ten three more times, with fifth place his best start. He only scored a few points. At Nürburgring he qualified fifth. On the first lap he and Mark Webber hit each other. Hamilton had a flat tyre and damaged his car. He finished 18th.
Hamilton's performance improved at the Hungaroring. Hamilton started fourth. A good start with a KERS assisted car start moved him to second place by the first corner. By lap 13 he was leading the race. He finish 11.5 seconds ahead of Räikkönen. It was Hamilton's 10th career win and the first for a KERS-equipped car.[66] In Valencia, Hamilton qualified on pole position for the first time in the season, and his team-mate, Heikki Kovalainen qualified second. In the race a poor pit stop by the mechanics lost Hamilton first place. He finished second.[67]
Hamilton crashed out of the next two races, the Belgian and Italian Grands Prix. This removed any chance of defending his title.[68] In September, at the Singapore Grand Prix, Hamilton took his second win of the season.[69] He finished third at the next two races, the Japanese and Brazilian Grands Prix. In the inaugural (first ever) Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, Hamilton qualified on the pole. He led the race, but retired on lap 20 due to a rear brake problem. This was his first mechanical-related retirement in Formula One.[70]
After a difficult 2009 season, Hamilton set out with a new challenge for the title. He finished third in Bahrain. In Australia, Hamilton failed to make the top ten in qualifying. He starting the race from eleventh place on the grid, and ending the race in sixth place. He had a late-race collision with Mark Webber. At Malaysia, McLaren misjudged the weather during qualifying, and let Hamilton go out on the wrong tyres for the wet conditions. He started 20th on the grid for the race, but came through with a sixth place finish. Hamilton was given a warning during the race. He weaved four times trying to break the aerodynamic tow of Vitaly Petrov. Hamilton was not trying to block him. After the race the rules were clarified. A driver may weave only once, even to break a tow.
In Shanghai, Hamilton finished in second place, behind teammate Jenson Button. This was McLaren's first 1-2 finish for two and a half years. Hamilton was involved in a pit lane incident with Red Bull driver Sebastian Vettel. Both drivers received a reprimand from race stewards.
Hamilton qualified third for the Spanish Grand Prix. Near the end of the race he was running in second behind Mark Webber. Hamilton had already set the fastest lap of the race. The next to the last lap of the race, he ran off the track and hit the wall. The left front suspension was destroyed and Hamilton was out of the race. The wheel rim had failed and destroyed the tyre, sending Hamilton out of control. He was classified with a 14th place finish.
The next weekend at Monaco Hamilton and teammate Jenson Button raced with a diamond encrusted steering wheel. Hamilton's steering wheel had the year "08" placed on it in diamonds for his championship in 2008. Button had the year "09" on his wheel for his championship in 2009.[71] Hamilton qualified and finished fifth. For the Turkish Grand Prix, Hamilton qualified a season's best second. Hamilton was running in second place when Vettel and Webber collided with each other on Lap 40. That moved Hamilton into first place. Jenson Button was then in second place. They passed each other once before the end of the race. Hamilton took his first victory of the 2010 season, moving him to third in the Drivers Championship.
Hamilton qualified on pole for the Canadian Grand Prix. He has started from the pole at every of his F1 races at Circuit Gilles Villeneuve. Hamilton won the race and moved into the lead the Drivers Championship.
A day after the Grand Prix Hamilton flew back into the UK and drove Ayrton Senna's championship winning McLaren MP4/4. Hamilton was clearly excited and overcome with emotion. He described it as 'one of the best days of his life'. He also stated that he had 'ticked off one of his dreams' by driving the car.[72]
Hamlilton qualified third in Valencia. He passed Mark Webber at the start of the race. During a safety car period, Hamilton passed the second safety car line about 0.5 seconds after the safety car exited the pits. Hamilton passed the safety car instead of slowing down to follow the safety car. Fernando Alonso was behind Hamilton and had to remain behind the safety car. Alonso complained on the radio to his team. The stewards investigated the incident and penalized Hamilton with a drive through penalty. There was a 20 minutes before the penalty was announced. This allowed Hamilton to build up a large gap with the car behind him. When he served his penalty, he stayed in second place. This made Alonso and the Ferrari team mad.[73] Hamilton then accused Alonso of "sour grapes". Hamilton and Alonso made-up before the next race.[74] Hamilton finished second and retained his lead in the drivers championship.
He finished second at Silverstone and fourth at Hockenheim. In Hungary, Hamilton qualified fifth but retired during the race due to engine problems. He lost the championship lead to Webber.
After the one month long summer break, Hamilton won the Belgium Grand Prix and set the fastest lap. This moved him into first place in the championship. But at both the Italian and Singapore Grands Prix, he retired from the race. This has moved him into third place.
Hamilton has matched or set the following records in Formula One:
In his debut season, Hamilton took the record of Youngest World Drivers' Championship runner-up, at 22 years and 288 days, previously held by Kimi Räikkönen at 23 years and 360 days. In 2009, this record was taken by Sebastian Vettel, who was 22 years and 122 days when he secured runner-up position in the championship.
Hamilton is the first driver of black heritage to compete in Formula One (although Willy T. Ribbs tested an F1 car in 1986[80]) and the first driver of black heritage to win a major race at Indianapolis Motor Speedway in any discipline. In addition, he is the third youngest driver to achieve an F1 pole position, and the fourteenth F1 driver to achieve a podium finish on his debut.[34]
| Season | Series | Team | Races | Wins | Poles | F/Laps | Podiums | Points | Position |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2000 | World Formula A Championship | TeamMBM.com (CRG/Parilla) | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC |
| European Formula A Championship | 9 | 5 | ? | ? | ? | 75 | 1st | ||
| Formula A World Cup | 1 | 1 | ? | ? | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| 2001 | Formula Super A World Championship | TeamMBM.com (Parolin/Parilla) | 10 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 28 | 15th |
| Formula Renault 2000 UK Winter Series | Manor Motorsport | 4 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | ? | 5th | |
| 2002 | Formula Renault 2000 UK | Manor Motorsport | 13 | 3 | 3 | 5 | 7 | 274 | 3rd |
| Formula Renault 2000 Eurocup | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 92 | 5th | ||
| 2003 | Formula Renault 2.0 UK | Manor Motorsport | 15 | 10 | 11 | 9 | 13 | 419 | 1st |
| British Formula Three | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | NC | ||
| Formula Renault 2000 Masters | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 | 24 | 12th | ||
| Formula Renault 2000 Germany | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 25 | 27th | ||
| Korea Super Prix | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
| Macau Grand Prix | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | NC | ||
| 2004 | Formula Three Euroseries | Manor Motorsport | 20 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 5 | 69 | 5th |
| Bahrain Superprix | 1 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| Macau Grand Prix | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | ||
| Masters of Formula 3 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | N/A | 14th | ||
| 2005 | Formula Three Euroseries | ASM Formule 3 | 20 | 15 | 13 | 10 | 17 | 172 | 1st |
| Masters of Formula 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | N/A | 1st | ||
| 2006 | GP2 Series | ART Grand Prix | 21 | 5 | 1 | 7 | 14 | 114 | 1st |
| 2007 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 17 | 4 | 6 | 2 | 12 | 109 | 2nd |
| 2008 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 18 | 5 | 7 | 1 | 10 | 98 | 1st |
| 2009 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 17 | 2 | 4 | 0 | 5 | 49 | 5th |
| 2010 | Formula One | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | 19 | 3 | 1 | 5 | 9 | 240 | 4th |
* Season in progress.
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
| Year | Entrant | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | DC | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | ART Grand Prix | VAL FEA 2 | VAL SPR 6 | SAN FEA DSQ | SAN SPR 10 | EUR FEA 1 | EUR SPR 1 | ESP FEA 2 | ESP SPR 4 | MCO FEA 1 | GBR FEA 1 | GBR SPR 1 | FRA FEA 19 | FRA SPR 5 | GER FEA 2 | GER SPR 3 | HUN FEA 10 | HUN SPR 2 | TUR FEA 2 | TUR SPR 2 | ITA FEA 3 | ITA SPR 2 | 1st | 114 |
(key) (Races in bold indicate pole position) (Races in italics indicate fastest lap)
| Year | Entrant | Chassis | Engine | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | WDC | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2007 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | McLaren MP4-22 | Mercedes FO 108T 2.4 L V8 | AUS 3 | MAL 2 | BHR 2 | ESP 2 | MON 2 | CAN 1 | USA 1 | FRA 3 | GBR 3 | EUR 9 | HUN 1 | TUR 5 | ITA 2 | BEL 4 | JPN 1 | CHN Ret | BRA 7 | 2nd | 109 | |||
| 2008 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | McLaren MP4-23 | Mercedes FO 108V 2.4 L V8 | AUS 1 | MAL 5 | BHR 13 | ESP 3 | TUR 2 | MON 1 | CAN Ret | FRA 10 | GBR 1 | GER 1 | HUN 5 | EUR 2 | BEL 3 | ITA 7 | SIN 3 | JPN 12 | CHN 1 | BRA 5 | 1st | 98 | ||
| 2009 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | McLaren MP4-24 | Mercedes FO 108W 2.4 L V8 | AUS DSQ | MAL 7† | CHN 6 | BHR 4 | ESP 9 | MON 12 | TUR 13 | GBR 16 | GER 18 | HUN 1 | EUR 2 | BEL Ret | ITA 12‡ | SIN 1 | JPN 3 | BRA 3 | ABU Ret | 5th | 49 | |||
| 2010 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | McLaren MP4-25 | Mercedes FO 108X 2.4 L V8 | BHR 3 | AUS 6 | MAL 6 | CHN 2 | ESP 14‡ | MON 5 | TUR 1 | CAN 1 | EUR 2 | GBR 2 | GER 4 | HUN Ret | BEL 1 | ITA Ret | SIN Ret | JPN 5 | KOR 2 | BRA 4 | ABU 2 | 4th | 222 | |
| 2011 | Vodafone McLaren Mercedes | McLaren | Mercedes 2.4 L V8 | BHR | AUS | MAL | CHN | TUR | ESP | MON | CAN | EUR | GBR | GER | HUN | BEL | ITA | SIN | JPN | KOR | IND | ABU | BRA | NC | 0 |
* Season in progress.
† Half points awarded as less than 75% of race distance was completed.
‡ Did not finish, but was classified as he had completed more than 90% of the race distance.
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