Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Hamilton. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Hamilton. Mostrar todas las entradas

jueves, 20 de septiembre de 2012

Lewis Hamilton: “Se escribe mucha basura sobre mí” - 20minutos.es

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17 septiembre 2012

A Lewis Hamilton no le afectan los constantes rumores sobre su incierto futuro en McLaren. O, al menos, eso es lo que parece cuando escuchamos las palabras del piloto inglés, hermético a la hora de hablar sobre sus planes de cara a la próxima temporada:

“Hay un montón de especulaciones y se han escrito muchas historias, que no son verdad. Lo más importante es que yo estoy concentrado al 100% en ganar este Mundial de Fórmula 1. No puedo distraerme por toda la basura que se escribe sobre mí”

La insistencia de los periodistas tampoco ha servido de nada, porque Hamilton se niega a soltar prenda sobre el estado de sus negociaciones con McLaren:

“No tengo ninguna fecha límite. Por supuesto que todo se tiene que solucionar en algún momento, pero para eso tengo gente trabajando en esas negociaciones contractuales”

Dicho esto, Hamilton ha preferido centrarse en los aspectos deportivos para avisar a sus rivales de que se encuentra en plena forma y con ganas de levantar el título mundial:

“Estamos en una posición muy, muy fuerte. Hemos sido cada vez más fuertes y lo vamos a ser todavía más de aquí a final de temporada. Perdimos muchos puntos en las primeras carreras de la temporada, cuando teníamos un coche capacitado para haber ganado todas esas carreras, pero aprendimos de aquellos errores y ahora somos mucho más competitivos”

PD. Las palabras de Hamilton hay que tomárselas muy en serio porque nadie duda que McLaren tiene el coche más poderoso de la parrilla. De hecho, lo ha tenido desde que empezó la temporada.

Tags: basura, hamilton, mclaren | Almacenado en: Sin categoría

martes, 11 de septiembre de 2012

Fórmula 1.- Hamilton sigue sin renovar su contrato con McLaren ... - ecodiario

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El piloto británico Lewis Hamilton sigue pensando si renovar su contrato con su actual equipo, McLaren, que expira a final de temporada, alegando principalmente estar centrado en la presente campaña, en la que está segundo clasificado, por detrás de Fernando Alonso, mientras que desde el propio equipo han reconocido que quieren seguir contando con el campeón del mundo de 2008.

MADRID, 10 (EUROPA PRESS)

Hamilton tiene sobre la mesa la oferta de renovación por parte de su escudería, sin embargo todavía no se ha decidido a prolongar su contrato con McLaren, que a día de hoy, concluye con el fin de la presente temporada.

"No estoy pensando en el próximo año, quiero centrarme en este. Estoy intentando llevar este equipo a lo más alto. Quiere ayudarles a condeuir el campeonato de Constructores y ellos a mí el de pilotos. Es un equipo increíble y tengo una gran relación con ellos por lo que estoy con buenas sensaciones de futuro", explicó el piloto.

Por su parte, el director del equipo, Martin Whitmarsh, reconoció que no se plantea la opción de un futuro sin Hamilton. "No he pensado en un 'plan B'. Queremos que se quede, pero solo si él quiere. Supongo que tendremos alguna conversación antes de Singapur. Predecir cuando los dos nos pondremos de acuerdo es difícil. Es un gran equipo para que Lewis se quede. Somos ganadores, como él, y trabajamos muy bien en conjunto", indicó.

Actualmente, el británico está en la segunda plaza del Mundial, solo por detrás de Fernando Alonso, que le aventaja en 37 puntos. La misma plaza ocupa la escudería inglesa, que está a 29 puntos del primer equipo, Red Bull, a falta de siete pruebas para que concluya la temporada.

Hamilton ha estado ligado al equipo de McLaren desde sus inicios al volante de un coche. Desde que empezó a destacar bajo los mando de un 'kart' cuando era solo un niño recibió el apoyo de la marca británica, por lo que sería difícil para ambos pensar en un futuro separados.

jueves, 23 de agosto de 2012

Hamilton 'wants McLaren contract'

McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh says Lewis Hamilton has told him he wants to sign a new contract with the team.

Hamilton, 27, has a deal that runs out at the end of this season and there has been speculation that he could seek a fresh challenge elsewhere.

But Whitmarsh, who has known Hamilton since the British driver was 11, insisted talks have progressed well.

"If Lewis wants to stay in the team, which he has told me he does, then he should do," he said.

A drive is expected to become available at Ferrari at the end of the season, with speculation also surrounding Michael Schumacher's future at Mercedes.

Made his Formula 1 debut for the team at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix Won his first F1 Grand Prix later that year in Canada Secured victory in his home Grand Prix at Silverstone on 6 July 2008. Became the youngest world champion in F1 history at the age of 23 in 2008, taking the title by a single point on the last lap of the last race in Brazil In total, Hamilton has 18 race wins and has been on the podium 46 times Hamilton, who claimed the driver's championship in 2008 and won the Hungarian Grand Prix last month, is fourth in the driver's standings and will be desperate to improve on last year's fifth place.

The 2011 campaign was doubly disappointing for Hamilton because, for the first time in his Formula 1 career, he was beaten by a team-mate. Jenson Button finished second in the championship behind Sebastian Vettel.

With nine races remaining this season, Hamilton is 47 points behind Fernando Alonso of Ferrari.

Hamilton met Red Bull's team boss Christian Horner at the Canadian Grand Prix in June, fuelling rumours that he was seeking a future away from McLaren.

But Whitmarsh, who has insisted for months that Hamilton should stay, reiterated his stance on Wednesday.

"Ultimately [the contract situation] is relatively straightforward," he said.

"Lewis and I have spoken two or three times at length. I think we are closer than we have ever been... our conversations have been about how we are going to beat the other teams, and how we are going to try and win races."


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viernes, 3 de agosto de 2012

VIDEO: Hamilton happy after Hungary win

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Hamilton delivers – but 'wait for judgement day'

By Gary Anderson BBC F1 technical analyst Lewis Hamilton was always going to win the Hungarian Grand Prix as long as he did not make any mistakes.

That is the advantage that pole position buys you at the Hungaroring - and Hamilton delivered a brilliant qualifying lap on Saturday to secure it by nearly half a second.

He nearly got sucked into an error at the first corner when he locked his inside front wheel and ran wide but he managed to survive it, largely because there was a battle going on behind him and he was already a long way clear.

From then on, it was about making the right strategy calls and controlling the race.

The Hungaroring is one of those tracks where it's so hard to overtake that if you have a decently quick car and you don't make any mistakes and you're at the front at the end of the first lap, you're probably going to make it.

But the two Lotus cars had opportunities out of which they did not make the most.

Lewis Hamilton Hungarian GP qualifying highlights

Both Romain Grosjean and Kimi Raikkonen were quick at the end of their second stints. The team brought Raikkonen in when they did because they felt that the edge had gone from his tyres and Hamilton's were just beginning to come on song.

But had they kept Raikkonen out for a couple more laps, they would have not lost anything and might have got that bit closer to Hamilton to make a difference.

By doing that, it would also have ensured Raikkonen had tyres that were that bit fresher for the last stint, which would have given him a slightly better chance in the closing laps.

The problem in Hungary is that the corners are so long.  That means the driver behind loses too much ground because of the downforce he is losing following another car and cannot challenge down the next straight.

But the Lotuses showed very strong pace and they are going to be a force to be reckoned with in the final nine races.

They are already very quick and at the next race in Belgium  on 2 September following the summer break they are expected to race the straight-line speed boosting innovation they have tested at the last two races in Germany and Hungary.

This is a device that ducts in air from above the driver's head and uses it to 'stall' the rear wing, boosting straight-line speed.

1. F Alonso - Ferrari 164

2. M Webber - Red Bull 124

3. S Vettel - Red Bull 122

4. L Hamilton - McLaren 117

5. K Raikkonen - Lotus-Renault 116

6. N Rosberg - Mercedes 77

7. J Button - McLaren 76

8. R Grosjean - Lotus-Renault 76

9. S Perez - Sauber 47

10. K Kobayashi - Sauber 33

It is in addition to the DRS overtaking device that all teams use - it's a kind of DRS-plus - and it will be especially effective at the next two races in Spa and Monza because of the long straights on those tracks.

So the other teams had better watch out.

Hamilton's victory puts him back into fourth place in the championship ahead of Raikkonen, but you would have to say the Finn is a title contender. I think team-mate Grosjean is too inexperienced to challenge - and he is also 40 points further behind.

Championship leader Fernando Alonso's Ferrari was not competitive in Hungary. As usual, he did the best he could with fifth place, and actually extended his advantage over second-placed Mark Webber of Red Bull, but the others all closed in a little.

You don't have to win every race to do well in this championship: the Lotus is a really good car and I don't see why Raikkonen cannot close that gap down.

He has had a few shaky races, but you have to remember that he has been away in rallying for two years and F1 has changed a lot in that time.

I've got a bit of a weak spot for Raikkonen - he's the kind of driver who if you make the car 0.1 seconds quicker, he will find you 0.2secs.

Now he is back up to speed and you can see the glint in his eye a little bit.

Red Bull were the focus of a lot of attention in Hungary after the technical row over their engine mapping in Germany the previous week.

Fourth for Sebastian Vettel and eighth for Webber is not the result they will have been hoping for - or that they should have got, given the speed of the car.

They were right to start Webber, who had qualified down in 11th, on the harder tyre but they stopped him too early on lap 20.

Had he gone a bit further - which he could have done - it would have meant they had the biggest possible window if the predicted rain came and it would have meant his stint at the end of the race on the soft tyres would have been short.

But because they stopped him early at his first and second stops, it meant he had to do a third stop to fit another set of soft tyres before the end.

Vettel also did a third stop but for him it made sense, as it meant he had fresher tyres at the end and he would have been able to gain a position had Hamilton, Raikkonen or Grosjean run into tyre problems in the closing laps. It was just that they did not, as it turned out.

The big mystery about Red Bull remains why they had such outstanding pace in Valencia at the end of June, where Vettel was 1.5secs faster than anyone else before he retired - and where that has gone.

The next track, Spa, has Red Bull stamped all over it.

They will have time to clear their head over the summer break, take stock of the last three races and where they need to do better, and that is where we will find out where they are.

Spa starts the run-in to the end of the season and the teams will be able to bring one big update to that race. After that the races come so thick and fast it will be dotting the i's and crossing the t's.

The Belgian Grand prix will be judgement day for a lot of people.

Gary Anderson, the former technical director of the Jordan, Stewart and Jaguar teams, is the BBC F1 technical analyst. He was talking to BBC Sport's Andrew Benson


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Title all to play for - Hamilton

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer Lewis Hamilton says his victory in the Hungarian Grand Prix proves that he can still win the world title.

The McLaren driver is still 47 points behind championship leader Fernando Alonso, who finished fifth, but Hamilton says it shows he has the pace to close the gap.

"Game on - it's a long way to go. This shows it's all to play for," he said.

"Not enough points taken from Fernando, as he still got 10 points, but if we can continue this performance."

Hungary was the 11th race of the season and there are still nine remaining, starting with the Belgian Grand Prix at Spa-Francorchamps on 2 September, following Formula 1's summer break.

Hamilton took his victory, which came from pole position, following race-long pressure from the two Lotus cars of Kimi Raikkonen and Romain Grosjean and he said their pace proved McLaren still had to improve their car.

"We need to improve the car still in many areas, and that, I'm sure, we will do," he said.

"Lotus are going to win at some stage. That car looks absolutely fantastic to drive; they are doing a great job.

"It's not unexpected - they've won world championships in the past, they are a fantastic team. And they're picking their pace up.

1. Lewis Hamilton 1:41:05.503

2. Kimi Raikkonen +00:01.032

3. Romain Grosjean +00:10.518

4. Sebastian Vettel +00:11.614

5. Fernando Alonso +00:26.653

6. Jenson Button +00:30.243

7. Bruno Senna +00:33.899

8. Mark Webber +00:34.458

9. Felipe Massa +00:38.350

10. Nico Rosberg +00:51.234

"They're that quick and yet they don't have the rear end [exhaust-influenced aerodynamics] Ferrari, Red Bull and us have. When they get that, the rest of us are going to be in trouble."

Despite Ferrari's lack of pace, Alonso actually extended his lead to 40 points over his closest rival in the championship, Red Bull's Mark Webber, who could only finish eighth.

And the Spaniard lost only two points to the man in third place, Webber's team-mate Sebastian Vettel, who finished one place ahead of the Ferrari in fourth.

Alonso said: "It was more or less what we could do and even better because, to be honest, finishing in front of Webber and one place behind Vettel is very good for us in terms of the championship.

"We were not competitive and we struggled a bit in the race, but thanks to the strategy and the consistency of the car we were able to finish in a good position."

Webber said: "Look, we've just got to stop the friendly fire. Yesterday was my fault in qually, but we have had some instances where we need to just keep doing better.

"That's how this team operates and I'm looking forward to the back part of the championship."

Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button said he felt the team's strategy had not worked for him - he complained that they brought him in for his second and third pit stops too early.

11 - McLaren 7 - Williams 5 - Ferrari He said: "We decided to go to for a three-stop [strategy], but every time I pitted, even though the tyres were good, I pitted into traffic.

"I don't know why we pitted when we did. I said to the guys: 'Is this traffic quicker than the guys I'm racing?' And they said: 'No.' And I said: 'So why have we pitted into this traffic?

"I don't know, there must have been be a misunderstanding where I would come out of the pits. Hopefully we'll learn from this, because it happened twice.

"I'm not happy with the strategy, but happy where we've taken the car."


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VIDEO: Hamilton delighted with Hungary pole

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Hamilton holds on for Hungary win

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton took his second victory of the season as he beat Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen in the Hungarian Grand Prix.

Hamilton led throughout but had to fend off a determined challenge from both Raikkonen and the Finn's team-mate Romain Grosjean, who was third.

1. Lewis Hamilton 1:41:05.503

2. Kimi Raikkonen +00:01.032

3. Romain Grosjean +00:10.518

4. Sebastian Vettel +00:11.614

5. Fernando Alonso +00:26.653

6. Jenson Button +00:30.243

7. Bruno Senna +00:33.899

8. Mark Webber +00:34.458

9. Felipe Massa +00:38.350

10. Nico Rosberg +00:51.234

Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel was fourth ahead of Ferrari's Fernando Alonso and McLaren's Jenson Button.

Alonso extended his title lead over Red Bull's Mark Webber to 40 points.

The Australian was ahead of the Spaniard after their second stops, but Webber suffered a failed differential and made a third stop for fresher tyres with 13 laps to go, which dropped him back down to eighth place at the flag.

Webber is two points ahead of Vettel in the championship, with Hamilton a further five points adrift and one ahead of Raikkonen as F1 heads into its mid-season four-week break before the Belgian Grand Prix on 2 September.

Jenson Button, slower and harder on his tyres than team-mate Hamilton, finished the race sixth, ahead of the Williams of Bruno Senna, Webber, Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Mercedes driver Nico Rosberg.

Hamilton's win came as a result of a controlled defensive drive, not dissimilar to Alonso's victory in Germany a week ago.

The McLaren driver led from pole position and measured his pace ahead of the faster Lotus cars.

The 2008 world champion said: "There is a long way to go and we have a lot of work to do, but we are going to give it everything."

4 - Michael Schumacher 3 - Ayrton Senna, Lewis Hamilton 2 - Jenson Button, Damon Hill, Mika Hakkinen, Nelson Piquet, Jacques Villeneuve Grosjean was his main opposition for the first two-thirds of the race, as Raikkonen bided his time fighting up from sixth place on the first lap, after he dropped a place to Alonso at the start after a temporary problem with his Kers power-boost system.

But clever strategy by Lotus, founded on their car's excellent tyre usage, gave Raikkonen clear air in the middle of the race before his second and final stop and put in an impressive sequence of laps to make up enough ground to pass Button, Alonso, Vettel and Grosjean.

The two Lotus cars were side by side rounding the first corner when Raikkonen emerged from the pits but the Finn legitimately pushed the Frenchman to the outside of the track on the exit of the corner and consolidated second place, before setting off after Hamilton.

David Coulthard, Lee McKenzie and Lewis Hamilton Hamilton happy after Hungary win

He quickly closed on to the McLaren's rear, and the question then became which driver's strategies would work out best - and would Hamilton's tyres last when he had made his final stop five laps before Raikkonen.

But the extra wear generated by following another car took the edge off Raikkonen's tyres, and he had to settle for second place as Hamilton took his first win since the Canadian Grand Prix in June and became only the third driver after Alonso and Webber to win more than one race this season.

Raikkonen said: "We came second, it's not enough. We had some problems with the Kers in the first lap which didn't help us, but we had good speed. We keep trying the next race to win, we keep saying that but at least we are up there all the time. I take the second place, but for sure we are not happy until we win."

Grosjean was left to fend off Vettel, a problem that removed itself when the German made a third stop for tyres late in the race with 10 laps of the 69 remaining.

Zsolt Baumgartner became the first Hungarian to drive in Formula 1 at the 2003 Hungary GP, where he retired in the 34th lap

Vettel used his fresher tyres to try to close a 15-second gap on the Lotus but ran out of time.

Button ran third in the early laps, but his heavier tyre wear forced him on to a three-stop strategy, one more than Hamilton's.

Button's race was further hindered by coming out from his second stop behind Senna, although the Briton managed to rejoin ahead of the Brazilian after his final stop having made up ground following Senna's second and final stop.


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Dominant Hamilton on Hungary pole

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton was in a league of his own as he took pole position for the Hungarian Grand Prix.

The Englishman set two laps fast enough for pole, an early benchmark that proved out of reach of his rivals and then an even faster lap to take pole by 0.413 seconds.

1. Lewis Hamilton 1:20.953

2. Romain Grosjean 1:21.366

3. Sebastian Vettel 1:21.416

4. Jenson Button 1:21.583

5. Kimi Raikkonen 1:21.730

6. Fernando Alonso 1:21.844

7. Felipe Massa 1:21.900

8. Pastor Maldonado 1:21.939

9. Bruno Senna 1:22.343

10. Nico Hulkenberg 1:22.847

Lotus driver Romain Grosjean was second ahead of Sebastian Vettel's Red Bull.

Jenson Button was fourth, Kimi Raikkonen fifth, Fernando Alonso sixth and Mark Webber only 11th.

The top 10 was rounded out by Alonso's Ferrari team-mate Felipe Massa, the Williams of Pastor Maldonado and Bruno Senna, and Nico Hulkenberg's Force India.

Red Bull's Webber, second in the championship behind Ferrari driver Alonso, was knocked out in the second session.

The Australian could manage only 11th fastest time, despite being only 0.308 secs slower than Vettel, who was second fastest in that session behind Hamilton.

Hamilton said: "It is great to finally see the upgrades working and I have been able to put the car where I want to this weekend. We are not saying we are relaxed.

"We know we have a lot of work to do, starting this weekend."

It was a hugely impressive performance by Hamilton, who has looked the man to beat all weekend, and Grosjean lived up to the potential Lotus had appeared to have.

The Frenchman and his team-mate Raikkonen are expected to be a serious threat in the race, where their impressive tyre preservation ensures they are nearly always a factor.

2011 - Sebastian Vettel

2010 - Sebastian Vettel

2009 - Fernando Alonso

2008 - Lewis Hamilton

2007 - Fernando Alonso

Grosjean said of his second place: "It is good to be back at the front. We had a difficult race in Germany but I am glad we have been able to improve here and I think tomorrow is going to be interesting."

Alonso's performance, meanwhile, proved Ferrari's point that they do not have the fastest car in terms of outright pace in the dry, and that the Spaniard's 34-point championship lead has been caused largely by his impressive consistency.

Although Alonso has been on pole for the last two races, both those qualifying sessions were in the wet.

Red Bull's performance, on a track on which they have dominated for the last two seasons in terms of pure pace, will confirm in many minds that they have been knocked backwards by a rule change before this race restricting the manner in which they were altering engine settings for improved cornering performance and tyre wear.

But Red Bull's Vettel said: "It has been more a case of it being difficult getting everything to work properly. The speed is there but it has been a struggle to get the balance. I think with the progress we have made we should be in a good position tomorrow."

Romain Grosjean, Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel Hungarian GP: Lewis Hamilton delighted with pole

It was a terrible day for Mercedes, the challenging layout of endless corners at the Hungaroring exposing the weakness in their car that has been apparent for some time.

Nico Rosberg was only 13th fastest and Michael Schumacher was down in 17th, nearly a second slower than his team-mate after aborting his second flying lap because it was not going to be fast enough to get him into the top 10.

At Toro Rosso, Jean-Eric Vergne out-qualified team-mate Daniel Ricciardo for only the third time this season and the first time since the Spanish Grand Prix in May.

The Frenchman lines up 16th, with Ricciardo knocked out in the first session and 18th.

Saturday, 28 July: Third practice 09:55 BST; BBC Sport website live text and audio commentary and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra. Qualifying 12:55 BST; BBC Sport website and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra & highlights on BBC Two at 17:00 BST. Sunday, 29 July: Race 12:45 BST; BBC Sport website live text and audio commentary and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra & Race highlights 19:00 BST BBC One/BBC HD/online.

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Strong result is vital - Hamilton

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton has admitted that it is vital he converts pole position into a strong result at the Hungarian Grand Prix.

He is 62 points behind championship leader Fernando Alonso after a series of setbacks in recent races.

Continue reading the main story

“The upgrades are working, you have to keep pushing, you always need more but for now they've done a really good job”

Lewis Hamilton Hamilton said: "I hope we can transfer this into a good result. It's very much needed.

"It has been a very long time. As long as we remain focused on getting results anything is possible this season."

Hamilton has not been fastest in qualifying since the Spanish Grand Prixin May, when he was demoted to the back of the grid for a technical infringement, and his last victory was in the Canadian Grand Prix four races ago.

Since then, he has failed to finish in the European Grand Prix in Valencia after crashing in the closing stages, taken an eighth place in the British GP and then retired again with a gearbox problem caused by a puncture in Germany last weekend.

But some upgrades that McLaren introduced in Germany, and which improved the car in the dry, have continued to perform well in Hungary.

Hamilton was on pole by nearly half a second and set two laps fast enough to start at the front of the grid.

Alongside him on the front row is Lotus's Romain Grosjean, with Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel third, followed by the second McLaren of Jenson Button, Grosjean's team-mate Kimi Raikkonen and Alonso.

2 Both Lewis Hamilton and Jenson Button have two Hungarian GP wins to their name

Grosjean, who is in his first full season in F1, has been in erratic form in the last few races, and Hamilton said he hoped the Frenchman would keep his head at the start.

"I hope Grosjean is in the right frame of mind as I am and we have a nice, good, safe and fair battle down to the first corner," Hamilton said, "and I hope we have a strong race together."

Of his own prospects, Hamilton said: "My feeling is the start is most important because I've had a lot of bad starts this year - a lot of clutch issues, and I'm really hoping tomorrow we don't have that and we're able to put our strategy into force and I'm able to look after my tyres the way I want to.

"Being able to get into a lead at the first corner makes it easier to win the race.

"The upgrades are working, you have to keep pushing, you always need more but for now they've done a really good job. I don't know how they're going to work in the long runs."

Romain Grosjean, Lewis Hamilton and Sebastian Vettel Hungarian GP: Lewis Hamilton delighted with pole

Jenson Button, who was a close second behind Alonso in the German Grand Prix, was disappointed with fourth place - he was 0.63 seconds slower than Hamilton.

He said he was not entirely happy with the car but felt he could have a strong race.

"Lewis did a very quick lap," said Button. "I didn't really get it together, not great, but it's all right. Qualifying is done, it's reasonable and we can race well."

Saturday, 28 July: Qualifying highlights on BBC Two and online at 17:15 BST. Sunday, 29 July: Race 12:45 BST; BBC Sport website live text and audio commentary and BBC Radio 5 live sports extra & Race highlights 19:00 BST BBC One/BBC HD/online.

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viernes, 27 de julio de 2012

AUDIO: Ron Dennis on Hamilton future

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McLaren expect long Hamilton deal

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren are confident they can secure a long-term deal with Lewis Hamilton when they come to negotiate a new contract this summer.

Hamilton, whose contract runs out this year, has had a frustrating season and has indicated his loyalty to a team who brought him into F1 only goes so far.

Continue reading the main story

“ There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind”

Martin Whitmarsh McLaren boss The contractual situation of other top drivers means he might push for a one-year deal to keep his options open.

But team boss Martin Whitmarsh is "expecting" to seal a longer contract.

McLaren typically prefer driver contracts that last for three years, with the first two years fixed and the third under option - as is the case with the contract Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button signed in 2011. Hamilton's current contract was for five years.

McLaren started this year with the fastest car but a series of operational problems have blunted Hamilton's championship challenge, and the team have struggled for pace in the last two races.

The 2008 world champion heads into this weekend's German Grand Prix - with the Hungarian race following a week later - in fourth place in the championship, 37 points off the leader, Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.

His options for the future reduced dramatically last week when Mark Webber signed a new deal with Red Bull for 2013. That leaves only Mercedes, the least competitive of the top teams, as a viable alternative to McLaren for Hamilton.

For 2014, however, at least one seat at world champions Red Bull might be available.

Webber is only on a one-year deal, however, while there is also the possibility that his team-mate Sebastian Vettel might go to Ferrari for 2014.

Alonso is believed to have vetoed having Hamilton as his team-mate at Ferrari.

Whitmarsh said: "We're going to the next two races trying to win, as we go to every race.

Made his Formula 1 debut for the team at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix Won his first F1 Grand Prix later that year in Canada Secured victory in his home Grand Prix at Silverstone on 6 July 2008. Became the youngest world champion in F1 history at the age of 23 in 2008, taking the title by a single point on the last lap of the last race in Brazil In total, Hamilton has 18 race wins and 46 podiums "We've known Lewis for a long time. We have been concentrating on a season. There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind.

"We appear nowadays to be often asked questions about it, but I don't think it occupies as much time in our mind as it does in column inches."

McLaren are introducing some aerodynamic upgrades to the car for the German race in the hope of battling for victory against Red Bull and Ferrari.

Whitmarsh said: "The sidepods from the front to the rear are quite different, so you'll notice those and [there are] other bits and pieces that the sharper eye will see."

He blamed the team's unexpectedly poor performance at the British Grand Prix two weeks ago on the team failing to get their tyres into the right operating window. Hamilton and Button finished eighth and 10th at Silverstone.

"For everyone, not just McLaren, trying to understand and exploit the tyres correctly is proving quite a substantial challenge," Whitmarsh said.

He said the team's race was "quite difficult" after a poor qualifying session in the wet, which he blamed on not having enough temperature in the 'intermediate' tyres they were using.

And in the race he said two sets of the same 'hard' tyre that had been prepared in the same way behaved differently on Hamilton's car.


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Hamilton keen to avoid setbacks

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer Lewis Hamilton has admitted he cannot afford many more bad results if he is to retain any hopes of winning this year's world championship.

The McLaren driver is 64 points off the lead, held by Ferrari's Fernando Alonso, with 10 races remaining.

Hamilton said retiring from Sunday's German race was "as big a dent as you can take".

He added: "You can only take so many dents, especially when the guy leading has finished every race in the points."

McLaren had two poor races in Valencia and Silverstone, with Hamilton retiring and finishing eighth, after his victory in Canada last month.

But Hamilton is hopeful McLaren will be competitive at this weekend's Hungarian Grand Prix following an upgrade that proved effective in Germany and that view was backed up by team-mate Jenson Button, who was second to Alonso at Hockenheim.

"There are still some areas where we are weak compared to the Ferrari and Red Bull," Button said. "I got to look at their cars quite a lot at Hockenheim but there are some areas where we are stronger also.

"We've got to the position where they're a little quicker here, and we're a bit quicker there. It's a much better position to be in."

Australian - 3rd Malaysian - 3rd Chinese - 3rd Bahrain - 8th Spanish - 8th Monaco - 5th Canadian - 1st European - 19th British - 8th German - Ret Alonso is the only man to win three races this season, in which he has displayed a combination of consistency and skill unmatched by any rival, despite driving a car that has never been the out-and-out fastest in dry qualifying.

But the Spaniard insists that it is far too early to start thinking about winning a third title.

He said: "We are in a good position in terms of the points we achieved in the first half of the season, in the first 10 races, but we are only half [way through the season].

"There remain another 10 important races with the same possibilities for everybody.

"The distance between the top five, top six is not a distance or a gap that is impossible to recover. You just need one good race or two good races and you are up there.

"So, we need to keep the concentration, try to keep maximising what we have in our hands every weekend - sometimes we know that can be a podium, sometimes maybe it's a fifth position, sometimes a seventh.

"But we cannot afford to make any mistakes or anything that we will regret."

Alonso, who won back-to-back championships in 2005-06, said that if he did win what would be his third world title, it would mean an enormous amount.

"When we finished Brazil in 2006 it was a dream for me to [even think to] win three World Championships in my career," he said.

"If it's this year, in two years time or in six years time, I don't know but the third one will be very important for me.

"To have the same as Ayrton [Senna] had - three world championships - he was my idol or my reference when I was in go-karts. And some big names, [Niki] Lauda etc, so three is a pretty good number which I always dream of, and hopefully [will] arrive sooner rather than later."


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Hamilton tops practice in Hungary

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton set the pace in Hungarian Grand Prix practice from Lotus's Kimi Raikkonen.

He headed both sessions. Team-mate Jenson Button was second in the first and eighth in the second, which was disrupted by a rain shower.

Hamilton ended the day 0.185 seconds quicker than Raikkonen, with Williams's Bruno Senna a surprise third.

The Ferrari drivers Felipe Massa and Fernando Alonso were fourth and fifth, and Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel eighth.

"It's been a real positive day for me, I'm very happy," said Hamilton.

"We're on the right path but we've still got work to do and we know the Red Bull looks very quick, so does the Lotus and obviously the Ferrari as well.

"So we are by no means feeling comfortable. We're going to keep pushing."

Red Bull, who have dominated in the dry at the Hungaroring in the last two seasons, were surprisingly off the pace in the first session, although they looked more competitive in the second.

Vettel was 0.829 secs behind Hamilton in the second session, while team-mate Mark Webber was 14th fastest in the afternoon, although neither ran the faster 'soft' tyres before it rained.

Webber was 13th in the morning, when Vettel was 15th.

Speculation will centre on whether this apparent comparative lack of pace is related to a rule change focused on Red Bull and the engine settings they were running at the German Grand Prix last weekend.

The second session was interrupted by a rain shower about halfway through, but most of the leading runners managed to get out to do their lower-fuel runs on the 'soft' tyre before it hit.

"Some drivers did not get the best out of the 'soft' tyres, such as Button," said BBC F1 technical analyst Gary Anderson. "Hamilton, Raikkonen and Senna all benefited from the cloud cover before the rain started.

"The Renault engine-setting situation will affect the mapping for the wet as well as the dry, but I'm sure Red Bull will be a factor [in the race]."

Force India's Paul di Resta was seventh fastest, with Lotus's Romain Grosjean ninth, ahead of the Mercedes of Michael Schumacher and Nico Rosberg.

Schumacher went out on wet tyres after the rain but locked his brakes and crashed into the tyre barriers at the downhill Turn 12.

It was the second time in a week that the veteran German had crashed in a wet second practice session.

"I just locked up and run out of road," The Mercedes driver said. "By hitting the tyres, I lost the front wing, but other than that, nothing is damaged on the car, I believe.

"It was the kind of incident that happens when suddenly a shower hits the dry track. The car felt OK until then."

The rain meant that the teams did not have a chance to do their usual race-simulation runs on the softer tyre.

In the first session, there was another impressive performance from Williams reserve driver Valtteri Bottas, standing in for race driver Bruno Senna in this sesson as normal.

He finished the session ninth fastest, behind Mercedes' Nico Rosberg, Ferrari's Felipe Massa and Lotus driver Kimi Raikkonen.

Bottas was 0.148 secs quicker than team-mate Pastor Maldonado - and 15 minutes before the end of the session he had been seventh quickest, nearly half a second ahead of the Venezuelan.

In the first session, Hamilton was 0.101 secs quicker than Button, with Alonso third and a further 0.475 secs behind.


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Hamilton predicts McLaren revival

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer McLaren's Lewis Hamilton believes he can bounce back from a disappointing race in Germany by challenging for victory in Hungary this weekend.

Hamilton retired at Hockenheim with a gearbox problem caused by an early puncture.

But he was was buoyed by McLaren's pace following the fitting of new parts.

"There's good reason to feel confident; our upgrade package seems to have delivered the pace we anticipated," Hamilton said.

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“Things haven't always gone our way in the first half, but I certainly feel like we're experiencing something of a turning point for the whole team”

Lewis Hamilton McLaren Driver Hamilton said McLaren would be stronger in the second half of the season.

He currently lies fifth in the championship - 62 points off the lead, held by Ferrari's Fernando Alonso - after a first 10 races marked by usually strong pace but also operational errors and occasional lack of competitiveness, especially in the wet.

Hamilton said: "Things haven't always gone our way in the first half, but I certainly feel like we're experiencing something of a turning point for the whole team.

"We've really stepped up and delivered the pace we needed, our strategy has been spot-on and our pit stops, despite a troubled start at the beginning of the year, are now consistently the fastest in the pit lane."

Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button was second at the German Grand Prix, which was won by Alonso, and the team say they can erode the Spaniard's advantage.

Team boss Martin Whitmarsh said: "I firmly believe we have the drivers, car and team to win both titles - and I think the difficulties we encountered during the first 10 races of 2012 have strengthened our resilience and hardened our resolve to fight back to the front.

"At Hockenheim last weekend, we had a car capable of taking on and beating our main rivals - the aim now is to ensure both Jenson and Lewis both score points in every race and to take as many points away from our rivals as possible.

"On paper, it may look a difficult task, but we are singularly determined to close down the gaps between ourselves and the championship leaders."

Alonso wins the German Grand Prix Alonso wins at Hockenheim

McLaren managing director Jonathan Neale said the team were "under no illusions about how hard we need to work".

And he said the title would be a three-way fight between Alonso, McLaren and the Red Bull drivers Mark Webber and Sebastian Vettel, who are second and third in the championship table.

"While it is undeniable Fernando has driven really well this season," Neale said, "if you look at the points conversion rate of Red Bull, they are very strong and we have to get in among that mix.

"I don't think Fernando has a clear advantage over Red Bull at this stage."

Neale admitted that the team's uncompetitiveness in the wet was "a source of concern for us" and said he would prefer a dry weekend in Hungary.


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Hamilton pass was stupid - Vettel

By Andrew Benson Chief F1 writer at Hockenheim Red Bull's Sebastian Vettel called McLaren driver Lewis Hamilton "stupid" for racing him in Germany when he was a lap behind.

Hamilton, delayed by an early puncture, was trying to make up ground and passed Vettel as the German was racing with eventual winner Fernando Alonso.

Vettel said: "I don't see the point in him trying to race us. It is a bit stupid to race the leaders."

“I don't think we need a different rule. I didn't expect him to attack”

Sebastian Vettel Vettel said it caused him temporarily to lose second place to Jenson Button.

The world champion was passed by the Englishman at the second pit stops, but regained the position two laps from the end, although he is under investigation by the stewards for a potentially illegal overtake.

"That potentially lost me the position to Jenson, I pitted two or three laps after that," Vettel said.

He added: "I don't think we need a different rule, if you want to go quick and you are a lap down and there is no chance to win the race, you should respect it and use common sense. I didn't expect him to attack."

McLaren team boss Martin Whitmarsh said: "Racing drivers race. If that's stupid, I don't know. [Lewis] was quicker. He overtook and he pulled away, I'm not sure of the stupidity in that but that's for others to comment on."

Hamilton then closed on Alonso, but the Spaniard did not let him get close enough to pass.

"I didn't feel any risk," Alonso said.

"I knew if Lewis was close enough and using the DRS [overtaking aid] and trying to overtake and going for it, I had no problems to leave the space.

"I knew he was not in the race, we did not want to risk anything.

0 - Sebastian Vettel continues his record of never having won an F1 race in July, after 10 attempts

"But for me it was a good to have Hamilton between me and Sebastian because we were approaching the pit stop time, and it means Lewis is one second behind me and Sebastian one to 1.5 seconds behind him. so Sebastian is 2.5 second behind me. So I tried to keep Lewis behind."

Red Bull team boss Christian Horner added: "If you look at the rules, I don't think there is anything to say a car can't unlap itself.

"What was frustrating for us is that it cost us a second and unfortunately he didn't unlap himself from Fernando as well.

"A driver's emotions are going to be running high and its unusual. Usually when you lap a car it doesn't drive back past you.

"It was an unusual situation in that Lewis was on fresh tyres, he was a lap down. In Sebastian's opinion, it affected his race. It did affect his race.

"And of course that's frustrating if it doesn't affect two leaders identically but within the rules he did nothing wrong. Arguably he helped his team-mate."


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