5:07 Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton joins Ted Kravitz after winning the Drivers’ Championship for a sixth time, thanking his fans and talking about his journey.
Ted Kravitz: “I think it’s important to remember the ‘wilderness’ years – let’s call it, Lewis Hamilton: The Wilderness Years.
“There was that early success in 2008, his second year of Formula 1 with McLaren, but in 2009 the car wasn’t that good, Jenson Button won the title with Brawn, and then we got into the Sebastian Vettel era. Hamilton battled through and I remember the McLaren wasn’t always great, he was maturing, figuring out his own way, and success was rather thin on the ground.
“He watched Vettel get four in a row and I think that has made him the driver he is today.
- Hamilton wins 2019 F1 world title
- Will Hamilton beat Schumacher’s record?
- Hamilton ‘above Cloud Nine’
“Like Juan-Manuel Fangio, the man who he has just eclipsed in terms of titles, he found the best team at the right team and has now won another five championships – and there’s no sign of him stopping. Why shouldn’t Mercedes, with everything they have had to overcome this year – another rule change and a resurgent Ferrari in the second half of the season – go on and deliver a car that’s capable of a seventh title?
“Whether Lewis decides after a seventh or an eighth that life has some other path for him, we’ll see, but you can’t doubt that we’ll look back at his career and think we were lucky to be watching it as it happened.”
The race craft
Anthony Davidson: “The thing that impresses me again and again with him is his ability to get very close in combat with other cars and rarely touch them. If he does ever get into a position where the two cars touch, nine times out of 10 he’ll be the one who comes out of it best.
“That’s a key attribute to building championships and winning them. That coupled with his speed and his consistency is something he’s worked on through the years and shows a level of maturity.
“That’s what has helped win him many championships in a row and is something other drivers should look to try and emulate if they want to be as good as him.”
The will to win
Johnny Herbert: “He wants the challenge and that’s how he goes racing – he has to be tested all the time.
“He’s motivated enough to go for the seventh title and I’m absolutely sure he’ll then want to go and do eight, which will probably be the hardest one.
“I admire his hunger for racing and we should enjoy it because this level of performance is a rare thing to see.”
Sourse: skysports.com