Irish Daily Mail

No-show is ‘pathetic’

- By JONATHAN McEVOY

LEWIS HAMILTON pulled out of his media duties yesterday, saying he was too upset by Niki Lauda’s death to talk about it — a no-show that Lauda’s friend and former team-mate John Watson called ‘pathetic’.

Hamilton was due to attend the FIA press conference ahead of the Monaco Grand Prix but, after discussion­s with his Mercedes team, decided to miss the set piece. Mercedes then asked the FIA for an exemption, which they granted.

Despite the last-minute absence Hamilton worked with his engineers away from the public gaze, having earlier rocked up in the paddock on his MV Agusta motorbike.

Lauda, in his role as non-executive chairman, played a big role in tempting Hamilton to join the team. Writing on his social media, Hamilton called the Austrian, ‘the bright light in my life’.

But Watson, who raced alongside Lauda at McLaren in the early Eighties, believes Hamilton should have faced the press.

He said: ‘It’s pathetic. I would like to know how Lewis can justify this. I know he was friendly with Niki, but I find it bizarre that a man of his stature would not be able to face people and tell them what Niki did for Mercedes and give him his due credit for the role he performed.

‘He should have spoken out of respect. To be so upset that he apparently cannot discuss his admiration for how Niki helped him — that’s pathetic.

‘Lewis has not had to deal with tragedy in his motor racing career the way previous generation­s had to. Niki’s life was not cut desperatel­y short as some drivers’ lives were.

‘He died peacefully with his family around him. What a life: champion driver, airline owner, team manager.

‘And his personal life was worthy of a movie in itself. I don’t Off track: Hamilton in the pit lane at Monaco yesterday think he had any regrets. If the roles were reversed, Niki would have been in there telling the press in his typical blunt way what a great driver and what a fine world champion Lewis is.’

Watson, 73, holds the distinctio­n of having come from further back on the grid than any modern Formula One driver, 22nd at Long Beach in 1983, to win a race during which he competed against Lauda for the victory. The two kept in touch after the triple world champion’s lung transplant in August.

Lauda, who created his legend by coming back to win his last title after nearly burning to death in his Ferrari in 1976, was aged 70 when he died in Zurich University Hospital. Hamilton’s press conference place was taken by his team-mate Valtteri Bottas, who explained the request to fill in was conveyed to him by Mercedes’ marketing team that afternoon. Of Hamilton’s condition, Bottas said: ‘He seemed okay.’

The paddock is being decked out with various tributes to Lauda. As well as footage of him being broadcast in hospitalit­y units, the helmet he wore while winning the 1984 Austrian Grand Prix, during his championsh­ip season at McLaren, will be displayed.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Ireland