Irish Daily Mail

HAMILTON TO SWAP SEATS?

- JONATHAN McEVOY

LEWIS HAMILTON has spoken of his desire to end his career at Ferrari,

Sportsmail understand­s. The triple world champion, who will be a free agent once his Mercedes contract expires at the end of next season, has confided his dream to friends in the last couple of months.

Although there is no evidence that Hamilton has opened talks with Ferrari, his comments add spice to the driver market ahead of tomorrow’s British Grand Prix, in which Hamilton is aiming for a record-equalling fifth victory.

Further intrigue is added by Red Bull team principal Christian Horner’s suggestion that his Mercedes counterpar­t Toto Wolff is trying to ensure Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel is available for the start of the 2019 season, by which time Hamilton’s Mercedes contract will be up.

Horner said: ‘I would think Seb’s got Toto in his ear trying to say extend for just a year (beyond the end of this season), and then he’s probably got Ferrari saying it’s three years or nothing.’

Hamilton, 32, has shown his impetuosit­y in this field before. During his time at McLaren, he marched into Red Bull’s paddock hospitalit­y area in Montreal in 2011 to ask Horner for a move to his then dominant team.

The British driver has connection­s at Ferrari, having visited their Maranello headquarte­rs to collect road cars over the years. He was pictured in Los Angeles last year driving a £1million, 200mph LaFerrari in traditiona­l scarlet livery.

Last night, meanwhile, Hamilton received a championsh­ip fillip when his team-mate Valtteri Bottas, winner of last week’s race in Austria, was handed a five-place grid penalty for a change of gearbox.

During practice, Hamilton had been more impressive than the bare facts suggested.

Although he was beaten by Bottas in both of yesterday’s sessions, he missed out on posting his best time on the faster, supersoft tyres because he ran wide through the fast Becketts section.

His time on the slower soft tyres was still only 0.047sec slower than Bottas’.

Mercedes, therefore, start favourites for pole, with championsh­ip leader Vettel only fourth quickest yesterday, fourth-tenths behind the Silver Arrows.

Hamilton would find it a huge relief to banish a torrid few days of negative publicity brought about by his decision to miss the pre-race promotion in Trafalgar Square by starting on pole. He is also desperate to trim his 20-point deficit to Vettel, having only finished fourth in Austria.

Speaking after practice, Hamilton went out of his way to put in some remedial work with the British public, saying: ‘Each time I left the garage I gave the fans a wave and I could see them waving back. I just want them to know that I can see them and I really appreciate all the support.

‘Today’s been a really good start to the weekend and it’s great to be back at Silverston­e. The track is absolutely incredible with these new cars. It was already one of the very best circuits in the world, but with this car and the speed we are able to carry through the corners, it’s just phenomenal — like the greatest rollercoas­ter ride ever.’

Hamilton still could not escape criticism for his absence on London’s streets on Wednesday night in front of a six-figure crowd with Jackie Stewart, the only other Briton to win three world titles, saying: ‘He should have been there. Lewis is a first-class guy and he’s got a huge following.’

 ?? EPA ?? Flying Finn: Bottas was fastest but was hit by a five-place grid penalty
EPA Flying Finn: Bottas was fastest but was hit by a five-place grid penalty
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland