Wednesday, 28 May 2014

Fast and furious! Hamilton and Rosberg have given Formula One the fight it craved

The two characters that have set the Formula One season alight are ideally drawn for dramatic effect: Englishman Lewis Hamilton, the fastest driver of his generation yet emotionally vulnerable, against the German Nico Rosberg, only a fraction slower but ice cool in his calculation.
The stewards cleared Rosberg of deliberately thwarting Hamilton’s final qualifying lap at the Monaco Grand Prix by running off the track at Mirabeau corner. Rosberg started from pole, won the race and took the championship lead off Hamilton.
But if Rosberg did know what he was doing — as many, though not all, paddock observers believe — it was a crime perpetrated with so much forethought and so immaculately executed that it is hard not to equate Rosberg to the sort of villain who strokes a white cat on his lap.
Frosty: Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg's relations were strained at a controversial Monaco Grand Prix
Frosty: Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg's relations were strained at a controversial Monaco Grand Prix

His answers to the press, and seemingly to the stewards, were more coolly convincing than Michael Schumacher’s in similar circumstances, when he ‘parked’ on the racing line in qualifying eight years ago to block Fernando Alonso’s crack at pole. Rosberg’s father, Keke, who was world champion in 1982, famously called Schumacher ‘a cheap cheat’ for his skulduggery.
Even more impressively, Rosberg refused to be ruffled by Hamilton’s simmering anger at press conferences after qualifying and after the race. He said calmly that he and Hamilton are friends; Hamilton said emphatically they weren’t.
It may have irked Hamilton that his insinuations were met with serene indifference. Fire, in this instance, could not melt ice.
They managed not to speak on the night of the race. Rosberg and his fiancee, Vivian, left the gala dinner on Sunday to arrive at the Amber Lounge at 1.15am to party with about 20 friends and 15 mechanics. They were briefly joined by Bayern Munich footballer David Alaba and ended the celebrations at breakfast time on the terrace at Le Meridien.
Hamilton was also at the Amber Lounge, but his table was a diplomatically long way from Rosberg’s.
Blanked: Hamilton and Rosberg did not talk to or look at each other on the podium in Monte Carlo
Blanked: Hamilton and Rosberg did not talk to or look at each other on the podium in Monte Carlo

Nico Rosberg
Mercedes' British driver Lewis Hamilton gestures on the podium
Contract: Rosberg leapfrogged Hamilton to the top of the standings after his win in Monaco

Rosberg clearly has a steeliness that belies the coiffured blond locks that won him the nickname Britney, as in Spears, from his fellow drivers. His manner with those of us he deals with on a professional basis is cordial but not matey. He is self-assured and self-possessed.
Interviewing him earlier in the season in the back of his Mercedes, I was twiddling with a pen and it snapped in my hand. He said: ‘Are you nervous?’ It seemed a typical Rosberg comment, a half-joke but one with a point.
On that Thursday, the first of the four-day grand prix weekend, he arrived early at the track. His driver parked up in an empty car park and Rosberg started work with his engineers, knowing his cerebral approach — he turned down a place to study engineering at Imperial College — offers the best, possibly the only, way to beat Hamilton to the title.
Feud: Hamilton was unhappy at the way Rosberg achieved his pole position on Saturday
Feud: Hamilton was unhappy at the way Rosberg achieved his pole position on Saturday

Mercedes chairman Niki Lauda admitted as much, seeing in  Rosberg’s attention to detail something of his own approach. Hamilton he described as quicker and more naturally gifted.
Ah, Hamilton. He is brilliant yet brittle. That is the view of a former karting rival of Hamilton and Rosberg, Dutchman Giedo van der Garde, formerly of Caterham but now a test driver at Sauber. He has placed a bet on Rosberg winning the title on the basis the German has the mental fortitude that Hamilton lacks.
Bernie Ecclestone, possibly the best judge of a driver, said at the start of the season that he thought Rosberg would prevail.
But Hamilton’s former McLaren team-mate, Jenson Button, has backed his fellow Briton to recover for the next race in Montreal a week on Sunday. Speaking from experience, he said: ‘Lewis would arrive at the next race after an upset very quiet, then go out and blitz it. He will do the same in  Canada — he will probably be untouchable in Canada.’
Upset: During an interview after the race, Hamilton said he and Nico are not friends
Upset: During an interview after the race, Hamilton said he and Nico are not friends

An important factor in deciding who wins the title is how Hamilton will fare without his father Anthony’s daily presence. He has not won a title at any level without him as his manager. He was the one person who would fight for his son against the world.
In Anthony’s absence, Mercedes must make Lewis feel loved if he is to perform at his best. That is not easy because when they put their two drivers on different strategies, and Hamilton perceives Rosberg’s is the better one, his frustrations — paranoia even — could devour him.
The other control Anthony had over his son was in ensuring he was not distracted by off-track glamour: rappers, life in LA, the red carpet. Perhaps those factors have provided balance to Hamilton’s life, made him more rounded and worldly, but there remains the possibility that he could be drawn too often to those sirens.
Much, therefore, falls on Lauda, whose words after the race were refreshing. He knows he cannot stop his drivers feuding — there is too much at stake for that — but he can draw a line which they must not cross. He has said they must be just about civil towards each other and not drive each other off the track.
Thirsty work: The Brit has won four of the six races this season, but still trails Rosberg in the drivers' standings
Thirsty work: The Brit has won four of the six races this season, but still trails Rosberg in the drivers' standings
Flashback: Hamilton and Rosberg together during their younger days
Flashback: Hamilton and Rosberg together during their younger days



This rivalry is precisely what  Formula One needed. Suddenly it makes no odds that Mercedes are so far ahead because the championship fight is perfectly distilled into a mano a mano fight, with two-thirds of the season to go.
One regret: the BBC did not show the Monaco Grand Prix live, a deprivation for the casual,  non-Sky audience.
Sky show all races live, the BBC then pick the three races they most want to show live. They selected the British Grand Prix, the Canadian Grand Prix — because it is at peak viewing time — and the last race, Abu Dhabi, as it could be the title-decider.
Sky then choose three races that they do not want the BBC to get their hands on. Monaco, along with the other potential deciders, Brazil and the United States, were on that list.
It is a shame because we have a 21st century answer to the Senna-Prost rivalry unfolding before us.

FIVE GREAT RIVALRIES

FERNANDO ALONSO  v LEWIS HAMILTON 
Alonso, the champion, demanded No 1 status over Hamilton at McLaren in 2007. It was denied him.
McLaren-Mercedes drivers Lewis Hamilton, right, and Fernando Alonso, sit for a group photo prior

NELSON PIQUET  v NIGEL MANSELL 
Piquet called his 1986 and 1987 Williams team-mate ‘an uneducated blockhead with a stupid and ugly wife’.
Nigel Mansell punches the air in celebration after winning the British Grand Prix at Brands Hatch

ALAIN PROST v AYRTON SENNA 
The two star drivers regularly collided on the track. Prost said they made up before Senna died.
Reminiscent: Ayrton Senna (left) and Alain Prost (centre) were at war when team-mates at McLaren

NIKI LAUDA v JAMES HUNT 
Lauda was given the last rites after a crash in Monza; he came back but lost the 1976 title in the final race.
Niki Lauda (AUT) Ferrari, who won the race, and James Hunt (GBR) McLaren

STIRLING MOSS v MIKE HAWTHORN 
The sporting rivalry. Moss campaigned not to have Hawthorn disqualified in Portugal and lost the title to him by a point.

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