The evolution of Lewis Hamilton

By Michael Lamonato / Expert

In 2011 Lewis Hamilton was talking to the press ahead of the penultimate race of the most disappointing season of his Formula One career.

At the end of a 12-race baron patch in which he twice crashed out by his own fault, and twice finished on the podium, he was accused of not being able to handle being shown up by teammate Jenson Button.

“Rubbish,” he protested. “My issues have been much bigger than that.

“Jenson has done a great job to get things in the right place: he’s got his dad, who’s there at every single race; he’s got his manager, his friends, and his girlfriend there all the time.

“He’s got a great bubble around him, and with that he’s able to go out there and perform without any worries on his mind.

“Jenson’s in a much stronger position than me.”

Let’s call this Hamilton mark I: Hamilton before reconciling with his father, in an on-again, off-again relationship, and with an increasingly uneasy relationship with his own team.

It’s difficult to pinpoint when mark II began, but make no mistake that this second, improved Lewis has truly bloomed in 2014.

This was to be the season of Nico Rosberg, of the cool and calculating German mastering a highly technical new formula. A season for the cerebral, not the classic foot-on-the-loud-pedal drivers like Hamilton.

Certainly the first half of 2014 followed this script. His salvaging of the Canadian Grand Prix went to the heart of Rosberg’s professorial approach to driving.

But a skill as deeply instinctive as Hamilton’s was only ever going to be held down for so long. His performances were tempered only by his own mistakes as he slowly brought the car and his abilities into alignment. Five consecutive and largely uncontested victories are testament to this inevitability.

But talent tells only part of the story – that year in 2011 illustrates how deep a driver as gifted as Hamilton can sink. His moves to right himself began in the 2011–12 offseason and culminated with a move to Mercedes for a 2014 title assault.

The challenge 2014 has thrown at him would have been unimaginable this time last year, though. The title fight has been purely psychological between competitors racing in identical machinery, and has been the sternest test possible of Hamilton’s transformation.

Monaco was the first hurdle: utterly convinced of a Rosberg qualifying conspiracy that led to an effortless race win, his best efforts in the following five rounds proved ineffectual to stem Rosberg inching away with the championship lead.

Enter Belgium. Rosberg takes Hamilton out of the race in a clumsy attempt to make a point about his ability to race wheel-to-wheel.

“This means war,” said Hamilton, reflecting on that weekend after his win in Austin. “I was like, ‘I’m going to turn this up. I’m going to have to turn this up’.

“I turned the energy from that negative bomb into a positive,” he concluded, summing in a single sentence the most significant difference between our two versions of Hamilton.

Lewis is no longer someone else’s man. He doesn’t belong to his managerial father, his girlfriend, his collection of rapper and pop star friends or, as of this week, his management company, with which he parted in favour of self-management. Lewis Hamilton is now his own man.

“I have made a conscious decision these last few years, I have felt more mature,” he said after Austin with his long-awaited second world championship within touching distance.

“It goes back to growing up in Stevenage, where I never thought I would be in this position [with] people supporting me all over the world, wearing my top, the cap, and waving the flags.

“[F1] is a great platform for me to inspire others; to inspire people never to give up and to keep pushing and keep working at it to achieve what you want.”

Hamilton has made peace with himself. Old Lewis would have crumbled this season, but new Lewis has proved unstoppable.

There is one final piece to the 2014 Hamilton puzzle, however, and it is Nico Rosberg himself.

Mark Webber in 2010, infamously disenfranchised by certain elements inside Red Bull Racing, though quick to reject rumours that he received inferior equipment, did admit there was a certain something, a subtle feeling, that all things weren’t equal between himself and Sebastian Vettel:

“When young, new chargers come onto the block, that’s where the emotion is. That’s the way it is. I’ve got favourites in life. It’s human nature,” he said, explaining the strength of the Vettel–RBR bond he could never forge for himself.

Rosberg was undoubtedly at fault in Belgium, and he was publicly, shockingly, shamed for it by his own team. He was cast from the bubble he’d called home for longer than Lewis and, even if temporarily, was made an outsider.

If you were to choose a defining moment of the season, it would be this one. It was the moment Hamilton confirmed he’s a changed man. It was the moment he subtly, inadvertently, won the emotions of his team. And it was the moment he decided the championship in his favour.

Follow Michael on Twitter: @MichaelLamonato

The Crowd Says:

2014-11-27T18:55:20+00:00

Ed

Guest


Alonso could not beat Hamilton in Hamilton's rookie year. If not for some bad luck, Hamilton would have been champion in 2007.

2014-11-12T21:48:07+00:00

Paige

Guest


I would contend that Daniel Ricciardo's performance will have more of an effect on Daniel Ricciardo's legacy. F1 fans have this illogical idea that if a top star of the sport gets beaten by his teammate, then that top star really isn't a top driver. Maybe it just means that said teammate is also a great driver? Forget the pace advantage; a driver who is more comfortable with the car than his teammate is probably going to go faster due, more than anything, to confidence alone. And Leaving this factor out, Daniel has shown some undeniably brilliant stuff this season with his race craft. His perofrmances show, more than anything, that he is simply a brilliant driver in being able to beat his teammate and show the racing skill that he has. Even if Seb has been beaten this year, he has still had some very good performances. But even with his problems, Seb has still had some very, very strong races this year: Spain, Germany, Singapore, and Japan to name examples. On a final note, I want to emphasize just how important it is for a driver to feel comfortable with a car setup in order to go fast. I don't care how great you are: if you get into a zone with the car in which you are not comfortable, it can take a long time to fix. It happens to drivers in every form of racing in the world. You guys should watch NASCAR some to see how champions can be beaten consistently over a season by non-champion teammates simply because his engineers have not found a setup combination with which the driver feels comfort and can push- and then come back the next year and win 5 or 6 races and be consistently quicker. Consider this in the context of the fact that NASCAR drivers are generally running at higher cornering speeds than F1 cars, so having comfort in the car is a MAJOR thing for them when chucking a car through a corner at 170-180 MPH. It would be very akin to the need for a driver to feel comfortable with the car, for example, under high-speed braking into a slow corner or under direction change at high speed. If you don't have confidence in the car, you don't stand much of a chance. Just look at how Kimi transformed this weekend in Brazil and was suddenly able to battle Fernando. It's hard to drive like that unless you have confidence in what is underneath you.

2014-11-08T01:42:10+00:00

Frankie Hughes

Guest


Wouldn't have any titles*

2014-11-08T00:49:14+00:00

Frankie Hughes

Guest


The making of Hamilton mark 2 happened to occur when F1's premier driver, Fernando Alonso, is in a shocking car. And the reigning 4 time champion is struggling with the regulation changes. Let's face it if Hamilton was partnered with Alonso in either 2008 and 2014(all but champion) he would've any world titles.

AUTHOR

2014-11-07T13:31:58+00:00

Michael Lamonato

Expert


I had a similar point of view at the start of the season. I really thought the Monaco incident was going to destroy him and we'd see him crumble barely halfway through the season, simply because of the way he perceived it to be such a great injustice against him. Yes, he has something of a persecution complex, but he hasn't let that get him down this season in the way he used to. That being the case, I think his development in the last few seasons has been genuine. He's been kicked to the ground a fair few times this year, and it's the first time he's stood back up again on his own. It's a lasting change, this season's proving it. I doubt it's the case that he's been told to behave himself - Mercedes knew full well it was hiring the guy who wears his heart on his sleeve, and probably offered him the contract partially to get a bit of that star power for the brand. Be in doubt that Hamilton's a changed man. He's not perfect, but right now he's unstoppable.

AUTHOR

2014-11-07T13:26:06+00:00

Michael Lamonato

Expert


Thanks! Your Senna argument's spot on, I'd say. Never any questions about it, yet today it's in vogue to hate the quickest guys for being quick. That's not to say we can't re-evaluate drivers as we go - certainly Daniel Ricciardo's performance will have an effect on Vettel's legacy, but then that's why he's off to Ferrari to try to prove he can do it again for a different team.

2014-11-07T11:09:54+00:00

Renell

Guest


Two comments in, even in The Roar, Hamilton haters continue to mock. As someone who wasn't a Vettel fan, it was easy to attack him. But one thing that'll never be diminished by any criticism or mockery are his four titles. Hamilton has a chance to further cement his legacy, and it hope he does it. Yes, winning machinery creates winning drivers. Yet we've seen drivers given great cars only to squander chances. Webber's best chance was in 2010, but it was thrown away by bad strategy and a dogged Vitaly Petrov. Alonso and Hamilton threw away the 2007 WDC. In 2005, Kimi was winning races one GP, then retiring in the following. In 2009, Barrichello and Button were in a dominant car for most of the year, but it was the latter who took the opportunity to become champion. There was never an asterisk beside Senna's 1988 championship just because his Mclaren absolutely destroyed the opposition. Whoever wins the championship this year will win not just because Mercedes had the best car, but because their side of the garage was the best when it needed to be. Nice read. Not often we get good quality F1 articles over here.

2014-11-07T07:44:53+00:00

Simoc

Guest


Absolute bollocks. Hamilton has a Mercedes F1 car which is the fastest car on the grid by a margin. Hamilton has always been ultra quick, as fast as anyone there and faster than most. And he is still a complete dipstick. He has obviously been told to behave himself after his juvenile early season rants and is still behaving to date. But don't count on it lasting should things turn bad for him.

2014-11-07T06:21:38+00:00

Alex

Guest


I would even pinpoint the exact moment this season as Hamilton *passing* Rosberg into the first chicane at Monza

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