Edward Gorman, Motor Racing Correspondent
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Lewis Hamilton's second season in Formula One could yet bring him his first drivers' championship, but if it does, he will look back on the French Grand Prix here yesterday as among the lowest of the low points.
Having started from thirteenth on the grid, courtesy of the ten-place grid penalty imposed after his pitlane crash in Canada two weeks ago, the young McLaren Mercedes driver needed, at all costs, to produce a measured and controlled display to ensure he got himself in the points.
But in a moment of first-lap, adrenaline-fuelled impetuosity, Hamilton drove overaggressively when trying to get past Sebastian Vettel, the German Toro Rosso driver, and found himself encumbered with a drive-through penalty for running off-track though the apex of Turn 7, and his race was run.
On a damp day in Burgundy that was dominated by Ferrari, Hamilton could finish only tenth despite some enterprising and impressive driving in the mid-field. A long way ahead of him, Kimi Raikkonen, of Ferrari, should have cruised from pole to flag to his third win of the season, but a structural failure in his car's exhaust system forced the Finn to give way to his team-mate, Felipe Massa, who gratefully accepted his third victory of the season.
The win lifted Massa - widely and unfairly regarded as not good enough to be world champion - into the outright lead in the drivers' championship, two points ahead of Robert Kubica, of BMW Sauber, who was fifth yesterday. This makes Massa the first Brazilian to lead the title chase since the great Ayrton Senna was at the head of the field following the Monaco Grand Prix in 1993.
The laconic Raikkonen is now third, three points behind Kubica, while Hamilton slipped from second to fourth, ten points off the lead. It is still early days, but there was a distinct feeling, as the Formula One circus packed up ready for testing at Silverstone this week, that the 23-year-old's season is unravelling. As one veteran of more than 500 grands prix in the press room put it: “It's all beginning to snowball in the wrong direction.”
Whether that will turn out to be true, only time will tell. What is unarguable, however, is that Hamilton's second season in Formula One is proving to be far more error-prone than his first. Last year he drove to nine podiums in a row in his first nine races. This year he has returned from three race weekends without a point, more than any other driver in the top eight in the championship. He has made two big mistakes and arguably another one yesterday and he has incurred penalties on three occasions.
What is more Hamilton, and his father, Anthony, who manages him, have become openly irritated by what they see as the unnecessarily bad press that he has been getting as a result. This was clearly on Hamilton's mind when he spoke after qualifying on Saturday. “I found out that there was a lot of negativity in the media, and that's to be expected,” he said.
“That's what they do: they build you up and then they break you down, but they can't break me. There's a lot of crap coming out in the papers. I'm here to race, and I don't want all this stuff. But I'm very strong mentally, and my belief in my own ability is stronger than ever and there's nothing that can break me.”
Within McLaren, where the collective belief in Hamilton remains as strong as his own self-belief, there was irritation at yesterday's penalty which they did not believe their man deserved. In the heat of the moment Ron Dennis, the team principal, indicated McLaren was being “picked-on” by the FIA. Hamilton himself described it as “an extremely close” call. “I felt I'd got past fairly and was ahead going into the corner. But I was on the outside and couldn't turn in, in case we both crashed. Then I lost the back end and drove over the curb,” he said.
As he indicated, the key question was whether Hamilton had got ahead of Vettel before he ran off the track, missing the apex of the corner. The stewards either believed he had not achieved this or concluded that he could not have pulled off the manoeuvre without running off track. The incident was shown in coverage only from the in-car camera on Hamilton's McLaren. However, the FIA, the world governing body, confirmed last night that the stewards had viewed it from a separate angle and the infringement was said to be “very clear”. They found that Hamilton had gained an unfair advantage by missing the apex.
In response to suggestions that McLaren are being unfairly treated, it was also being pointed out by the FIA that Hamilton's was the third drive-through penalty handed out this year. The previous two were imposed on Rubens Barrichello, the Honda driver, for speeding in the pitlane in Malaysia and on Raikkonen after Ferrari failed to fit his tyres within three minutes of the start at Monaco.
Mention in dispatches yesterday must go to Jarno Trulli, the veteran Toyota driver who filled the third place on the podium after a tenacious drive in a car that was no match for either the Ferraris ahead of him or the McLaren of Heikki Kovalainen, who finished one place behind him.
Results
(70 laps): 1, F Massa, below (Br, Ferrari) 1hr 31min 50.245sec; 2, K Raikkonen (Fin, Ferrari) 1:32:08.145; 3, J Trulli (It, Toyota) 1:32:18.445; 4, H Kovalainen (Fin, McLaren Mercedes) 1:32:19.145; 5, R Kubica (Pol, BMW Sauber) 1:32:20.745; 6, M Webber (Aus, Red Bull Renault) 1:32:30.545; 7, N Piquet Jr (Br, Renault) 1:32:31.245; 8, F Alonso (Sp, Renault) 1:32:33.545; 9, D Coulthard (GB, Red Bull Renault) 1:32:41.245; 10, L Hamilton (GB, McLaren Mercedes) 1:32:44.745; 11, T Glock (Ger, Toyota) 1:32:47.945; 12, S Vettel (Ger, Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari) 1:32:48.245; 13, N Heidfeld (Ger, BMW Sauber) 1:32:52.245; 14, R Barrichello (Br, Honda); 15, K Nakajima (Japan, Williams Toyota); 16, N Rosberg (Ger, Williams Toyota); 17, S Bourdais (Fr, Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari); 18, G Fisichella (It, Force India Ferrari); 19, A Sutil (Ger, Force India Ferrari) all at 1 lap behind. Not classified: 20, J Button (GB, Honda) 16 laps completed.
Qualifying positions (*ten place penalties for pitlane collision at Canadian GP; †five place penalty for impeding during qualifying): 1, Raikkonen 1min 16.449sec; 2, Massa 1:16.490; 3, Alonso 1:16.840; 4, Trulli 1:16.920; 5, Kubica 1:17.037; 6, Webber 1:17.233; 7, Coulthard 1:17.426; 8, Glock 1:17.596; 9, Piquet Jr 1:15.770; 10, †Kovalainen 1:16.944; 11, Heidfeld 1:15.786; 12, Vettel 1:15.816; 13, *Hamilton 1:16.693; 14, Bourdais 1:16.045; 15, Nakajima 1:16.243; 16, Button 1:16.306; 17, Barrichello 1:16.330; 18, Fisichella 1:16.971; 19, Sutil 1:17.053; 20, *Rosberg 1:16.235.
Championship positions: Drivers: 1, Massa 48pts; 2, Kubica 46; 3, Raikkonen 43; 4, Hamilton 38; 5, Heidfeld 28; 6, Kovalainen 20; 7, Trulli 18; = Webber 18; 9, Alonso 10; 10, Rosberg 8; 11, Nakajima 7; 12, Coulthard 6; 13, Barrichello 5; = Vettel 5; = Glock 5; 16, Button 3; 17, Piquet Jr 2; = Bourdais 2.
Constructors: 1, Ferrari 91; 2, BMW Sauber 74; 3, McLaren Mercedes 58; 4, Red Bull Renault 24; 5, Toyota 23; 6, Williams Toyota 15; 7, Renault 12; 8, Honda 8; 9, Scuderia Toro Rosso Ferrari 7.
Grands Prix to come: July 6: British GP (Silverstone). July 20: German GP (Hockenheim). Aug 3: Hungarian GP (Budapest). Aug 24: European GP (Valencia). Sept 7: Belgian GP (Spa-Francorchamps). Sept 14: Italian GP (Monza). Sept 28: Singapore GP. Oct 12: Japanese GP (Fuji). Oct 19: Chinese GP (Shanghai). Nov 2: Brazilian GP (Interlagos).
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Please stop blaming Hamiton, he´s a real talent probably the best raw talent ever, and put your eyes on Ron Dennis who is poorly managing the team, pressuring since the beguinning too much this young man. See Mclaren performance with two great but underexperienced pilots.
Alvaro, Bavaro, Dominican Republic
If there was a wall, Hamilton would have smashed right into it.
Chris, Ottawa,
"Where the parents of athletes are prominent "advisors" at ringside, courtside or in the front row of the garage seats, there will always be problems" Sorry Mr Rees.. You ever notice Tiger Woods's parents there with him on the 18th hole at every major even when he started out?
Rob, London,
Was Kimi's car underweight at the end of the race? Surely it must have been marginal, having lost the flapping exhaust pipe and part of the bodywork being burnt away! Will we ever know?
Glen, Truro,
Montoya and his mirrors (he had to pull it ohh himself).
Last year Alonso in Fuji, his bodywork was hanging after Vettel hit him.
Nobody cried faul then. Why do they now?
javier, MAdrid, Spain
I think Felipe Massa is becoming good enough to be World Champion. He may be disregarded by the press but I see him driving better every race. LH may have been wooed into believing he ought to end up with 8 World Championships. Meanwhile. FM may silently pounce on the chance to take it this year.
Michel Angstadt, Serranillos del Valle, (Madrid) Spain
Richard, absolutely.
Don't burn the guy out before he's had a couple of seasons; there is plently of time. Not winning the title is hardly a failure! He's a fabulous young man who has an amazing career ahead of him. Let him be, grow and develop. PS: he really just drove a bit too hard yesterday
Jen, Sydney, Australia
As they say, you don't win a GP in the first lap but you can certainly lose it (or spoil it!) That was reckless driving, by no means controlled agression, he almost lost his front wing twice and very nearly punctured his team mate rear tyre. Bah!
Luca, Beijing, China
I think it's high time hamilton realises that he has no god given right to win every race drives in.The defiant stance that he has adopted of late has done him more harm than won him favours.He has to learn that all achievers embraced humility before asurping greatness.
tom, craven arms, shropshire
It's time for Lewis Hamilton to lose his colossal sense of entitlement.
Moving his father out of the way would be a good start. Where the parents of athletes are prominent "advisors" at ringside, courtside or in the front row of the garage seats, there will always be problems.
T. Rees, Geneva, Switzerland
The other FIA penalties mentioned are ALL for back-and-white infringements of the rules. There is NO grey area.
Yesterdays decision based on the stewards, extremely poor judgement.
And until sorted out at the top, the FIA will continue to make these bad decisions.
NOT a LH fan, a F1 fan.
Lance, Crawley, UK
Over-aggressive driving has already cost LH so much, when will he learn? Raw talent is nothing without clear thinking. Borrowing a line from the movie Top Gun, his ego is writing checks that his body (or abilities) cant cash.
Max, Miami, USA
Its only his second season and he is still in contention for the title.I believe he will come good in the end.You can't have it both ways, when he chooses not to talk to the press he is criticised when he does he is still criticised.Give the kid a break!
Davis, Kampala, Uganda
The MAIL has synthesized perfectly in the headline: Lewis on road from polite to prima donna.
paul, edinburgh, uk
RUBBISH!!! no way Kovi is better than Hamilton. This is Hamilton bashing. Sure he's hyped but then again he has shown us more than once his raw speed, his creative passing ability, his raw talent its exciting to watch him. Now Lewis be humble shut up and get on with it and we all need to simmer down
michael, cologne, germany
Why doesn't the second driver for Mc Laren get much publicity,he's much better than his team mate.
james allen, manchester, england
Is Hamilton the new Henman of British sport ?
Andy, Perth,
Oh dear, oh dear! heaps of money, glamorous Mediterranean lifestyle, little tantrums and the foot's of the gas! WAKE UP Lewis we've seen it all before!! Still everything to prove!!! Only my view of course...
Christopher Paul, High Wycombe, England
'But I was on the outside and couldn't turn in, in case we both crashed.' quote from poster boy
very clear then that he had not passed. anyone can be over zealous and rush up to the corner so fast so as to get a nose in front
like canada when poster boy said 'it all happened so fast'
racing is fast
harvey amies, moscow, russia
I'm surprised the Ferrari wasn't pulled in for the flapping exhaust to be taken off. When it did finally fly off it was towards the stands, and one of the commentators commented that it would make a good souvenir for a spectator. It looks to me as if Alonso has already written this season off.
Stephen, Kent, UK
I just wish Lewis would shut up and get on with the job. It SEEMS there are two bodies trying to make a point. The corporate one wishing a megabucks selling Lewis machine and the FIA with it's umpires teaching Lewis and friends a lesson or two. He's black, he's damn good, but he's loud - too loud!
michael, cologne, germany
Hamilton is now taking some of his own medicine.
It really doesn't taste so good when it doesn't benefit you, does it?
About the press and everybody around him. Hamilton should not listen to either negative things, nor positive. he should just concentrate on driving. he should stop talking too.
carmen , murcia,
Calm down Lewis. Plenty of time left for you. Who was the famous GP ace who when asked how he drove replied: "As slowly as possible!"
albert hall, hall, england
"an extremely close call. I felt I'd got past fairly and was ahead going into the corner. But I was on the outside and couldn't turn in, in case we both crashed. Then I lost the back end and drove over the curb"
Yes HAM you did the same last year in Monza but the ex-steward was Anthony's friend!
jose, Oviedo,
There is a complete lack of consistency shown by the FIA. Actually I thought he was silly not to concede the place back to Vettel. But there are numerous examples of other cars gaining positions in similar ways and all done without penalty. Also the Ferrari should definetly have been black flagged.
Peter, Portsmouth,
Once again, the FIA target McLaren.
Lewis didn't deserve the penalty and would have passed Vettel seconds later [if he had given back the position].
A potentially excellent race ruined by the increasingly Mafia-esque FIA.
Mark, Deal, U.K.
8 races down, 10 races to go.
10 points behind the leader.
x4 contenders who will be taking points off of each other in every race. I don't think 10 points behind is a major issue.
McLaren are doing well under Bishop's PR guidance not to fuel the debate they are unfairly treated.
Stuart Rowland, Oxford, UK
It is unreasonable to expect Hamilton to win the WDC in his second year. Reasonable is to have a two time WDC in your team and throwing your support behind him. With proper support from McLaren, Alonso would have won the title last year and probably be well on the way to winning it this year too.
R. Khan, Sydney, Australia
Strange how a Ferrari can have a fairly large piece of metel flapping about in the wind, but no black flag to remove the item before it fell off. Can you imagine that falling off on the fast run to the hairpin and bouncing into a following cars cockpit!
Pete, St Albans, England
The FIA now seems to decide who will be champion.
Out with Mosley - fast
Richard, Bucharest,
Not sure why we're expecting Lewis to scoop the title so early in his career? This is all good grounding for him, demonstrating how difficult F1 can be. He needs crashes, penalties and close finishes to mould him into a multiple world champion. Schumacher can tell him all about!
Richard Gooch, London, UK