Formula One: Lewis Hamilton Offers Veiled Apology After F1 Accusations
Lewis Hamilton had hit out at Formula 1 bosses, saying they are singling him out, after he was charged with two five-second penalties at the Russain GP.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: September 29, 2020 03:53 pm IST
Highlights
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Lewis Hamilton apologised after accusing F1 bosses of singling him out
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Hamilton was hit with two five-second penalties at Russian GP last Sunday
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Hamilton's Mercedes teammate Valtteri Bottas won the Russian GP
Lewis Hamilton has offered a veiled apology for his claim that Formula One bosses are singling him out after he was hit with a 10-second penalty at the Russian Grand Prix. Hamilton's bid to match Michael Schumacher's record of 91 victories in Sochi on Sunday was wrecked when he was punished with two five-second penalties for pre-race misdemeanours. He had also been given two penalty points on his super license by the race stewards but they subsequently cancelled them and instead fined his team Mercedes.
The six-time world champion claimed afterwards F1's governing body, the FIA, were finding new ways to stop him from winning.
But in a social media post on Tuesday, Hamilton wrote: "I may not always get it right in the face of adversity.
"I may not always react the way you want me to when tensions are high, but I am only human after all and I am passionate about what I do.
"I'm learning and growing every day, and I'll take my lessons and keep fighting on to the next one. Thank you to those who continue to support and are right there fighting with me."
Hamilton will now have to wait until at least Germany's Eifel Grand Prix on October 11 to match Schumacher's all-time tally.
F1's motorsport managing director Ross Brawn called on the British driver to learn from the incident.
Brawn said: "Personally, I would go away, lick my wounds and think about how I could prevent such incidences again in the future.
"That's what I know Mercedes will be doing. I know many of the people from my time at the team and they will recognise they have made some mistakes.
"Bad luck and mistakes happen, but it's how you respond that matters. It's easy to think the world is against you but there is nearly always something you could have done differently and you can learn from."
The F1 circus next heads to the Nurburgring for the first time since 2013 for the 11th of 17 rounds this year.
Despite Valtteri Bottas's triumph on Sunday, Hamilton, who finished third in Sochi, will head to Germany with a 44-point lead in his quest to be crowned world champion for a record-equalling seventh time.