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    Lewis Hamilton snubs current rival Max Verstappen as he names his toughest ever opponent in F1

    LEWIS Hamilton has revealed his toughest-ever rival in Formula One is Fernando Alonso.And the Spanish veteran, 41, quickly returned the compliment by describing Brit Hamilton as a “legend”.
    Hamilton and Alonso didn’t always see eye-to-eye
    Dutch ace Verstappen pipped Hamilton to the F1 title after an epic battleCredit: AFP
    It will surprise many fans that Hamilton did not choose Max Verstappen after the Dutch star pipped him to the title last year.
    While they might now be engaging in a public love-in, Hamilton and Alonso had a heated rivalry as McLaren team-mates in 2007.
    Hamilton told Sky Sports: “I remember the task of being alongside Fernando when I was 22.
    “I was so young mentally and of course, OK in terms of skill, but it’s a lot of pressure to go against a great like him.
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    “So I would say out of pure pace, I always say my toughest opponent is Fernando and his ability.
    “We had some good battles, I wish we could have more and hopefully he’s going to continue to race, so hopefully we will have more in the future.”
    At that time Hamilton was the new kid on the block and Alonso had won the F1 title in the two previous years with Renault.
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    However their competition at McLaren was so intense that Alonso left to return to Renault.
    And in 2008, that left Hamilton in the clear as McLaren’s No1 driver to bag the first of his seven world titles.
    That feisty year with Alonso is something Hamilton has clearly never forgotten.
    Alonso has completed a shock switch from Alpine to Aston Martin.
    And he said: “Lewis had the talent already in 2007 and he still has the talent now. He has been a tremendous driver, and a legend of our sport.
    “So it has been always a pleasure to share all this time with him and back then probably no one thought that someone will be able to win seven titles like Michael Schumacher.” More

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    Late Murray Walker said Lewis Hamilton is a better F1 driver than Senna and Schumacher because he is a ‘clean’ racer

    THE LATE Murray Walker said Lewis Hamilton is a better driver than Michael Schumacher or Ayrton Senna – because he’s a “clean” racer.The legendary commentator, who passed away in 2021 aged 97, watched hundreds of F1 drivers across eight decades.
    Mercedes star Lewis Hamilton was lauded by legendary commentator Murray WalkerCredit: PA:Press Association
    Hamilton has won a record-equalling seven world titlesCredit: Getty Images – Getty
    But Walker revealed in 2020 that the seven-time world champion is the cream of the crop because he has never used dirty tactics to win races.
    Both Schumacher and Senna had contentious moments during their careers, but Walker claimed Hamilton is as “clean as a whistle”.
    Speaking about the Brit, he said: “Well, people say to me, ‘Who is the greatest?’, and I always say, ‘Look, I think it’s impossible to say, because the drivers and the circuits and the cars were different’.
    “Juan Manel Fangio took a lot of beating, Jim Clark, Sir Jackie Stewart — there again I could go on — but which is the best I really don’t know.
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    “I used to say Fangio. I think I’m going to have to say very shortly Lewis Hamilton, because if you look at it in terms of statistics, he’s already got more poles than Schumacher.
    “He’s got at least three years in him if he doesn’t hurt himself or leave Mercedes for some reason or they decide to stop, in which case he’s got at least another three championships ahead of him, so statistically he will become the greatest.
    “But he’s also in my opinion — and this is very contentious indeed — better than either Schumacher or Senna because both of them, Schumacher and Senna, adopted at various times in their career highly debatable driving tactics.
    “Like Schumacher stopping deliberately at Monaco to prevent Fernando Alonso getting pole position, like Schumacher colliding with Jacques Villeneuve at Jerez in 1997, like Senna with Alain Prost in 1990 in Japan, and Lewis Hamilton has never been anything like that.
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    Michael Schumacher won a total of 91 Grand Prix races as well as seven world championshipsCredit: EPA
    “He’s always driven as clean as a whistle. He’s an extremely nice, gigantically talented driver, and I don’t think we’ve ever seen anybody like him before.”
    Hamilton has dominated for much of the last decade, but Walker said the sport’s best era was in the 1970s and 1980s but believes it is still just as exciting.
    Speaking to In the Fast Lane, the official podcast of the Australian Grand Prix, Walker added: “A lot of it is looking backwards through rose-coloured glasses.
    “It’s still mighty exciting when you take into account what a contest it is with man and machine.
    “But I have to admit that for me the 70s and 80s were the most exciting time — but then I was very much more involved with it at the time because I was literally a part of it and having to communicate to the public worldwide what was going on.
    “It was very exciting times, when people like Jackie Stewart were driving, and we got the most incredible races at Silverstone, with Nigel Mansell beating Nelson Piquet, for instance, and various others.
    “You have to bear in mind that I’m an old codger. I was actually at the first grand prix they held at Silverstone in 1948 — and that was before Formula One even began.
    “In those days of course the engine was in front of the driver, the driver wasn’t wearing any safety clothing.
    “They used to wear a skullcap and no crash helmet. The medical facilities were absolutely minimal, the cars were mobile deathtraps.
    “They are infinitely more sophisticated now than they were, and it’s no less exciting from my point of view.” More

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    Lewis Hamilton continues incredible F1 season break tour of Africa with trip to Rwanda to go up volcano and see gorillas

    LEWIS HAMILTON has continued his Africa adventure by visiting Rwanda.The British Formula 1 star is exploring his “motherland” as he enjoys the season’s summer break.
    Lewis Hamilton has been holidaying in Africa during the F1 season breakCredit: Instagram / @lewishamilton
    The 37-year-old’s latest trip has taken him to RwandaCredit: Instagram / @lewishamilton
    Hamilton got to see amazing gorillas in their natural habitatCredit: Instagram / @lewishamilton
    Hamilton, 37, began his trip by going to Namibia last week.
    And he has continued his journey by travelling over to Rwanda.
    While in the Central African country, Hamilton has taken part in some exciting activities.
    The seven-time world champion visited amazing gorillas in their natural habitat after hiking up a volcano – before thanking conservationists for taking care of the endangered animals.
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    Posting a number of his incredible snaps to Instagram, Hamilton wrote: “Every day in the motherland is more beautiful than the last.
    “My second stop was Rwanda, where we hiked up a volcano to see gorillas in their natural habitat. It was mind blowing.
    “They were so calm and beautiful, getting that close to them was a surreal experience that I will never forget.
    “Thank you to the amazing conservationists that took care of us and are doing amazing work to ensure the safety of these beautiful creatures and thank you, Rwanda 🇷🇼”
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    Hamilton was similarly excited after exploring the Namibian desert last week.
    He wrote then: “This year I’m spending my summer break doing something I’ve wanted to do for years.
    “I’m finally tracing my roots through Africa and guys, to say this journey has been a grounding experience is an understatement.
    “This has been a life changing reset. I feel like I have gained a new perspective on life, grown an even stronger love for animals and became even closer with my brothers who I’ve shared this special journey with.
    “Everywhere I look I’m surrounded by so much beauty, and I feel truly re-centred and at peace.
    “My first stop was Namibia, one of the most stunning places I’ve ever seen with my own eyes. Words and pictures do not do it justice.
    “The hot air balloon ride was surreal.
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    “We had to land sideways which is definitely something I’ll never forget.
    “I could not think of a better place to spend this time off. Sending everyone peace and light, I’m off to the next stop.”
    Hamilton is loving his holiday to his “motherland”Credit: Instagram / @lewishamilton
    The seven-time world champion hiked up a volcanoCredit: Instagram / @lewishamilton
    Hamilton has been thankful to those who have shown him aroundCredit: Instagram / @lewishamilton More

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    Inside battle to save Michael Schumacher’s life moments after horror ski crash left him with catastrophic brain injuries

    MICHAEL Schumacher’s life hung by a thread as medics battled to save him after the ski crash that left him with horrific brain injuries.The Formula 1 legend was airlifted off the ski slope above Méribel in the French Alps after his head hit a rock while he was skiing with his son Mick.
    Medics battled to save Schumacher’s life when he was airlifted to hospitalCredit: PA:Press Association
    His wife Corinna broke down in tears as she accepted a prize honouring MichaelCredit: Splash
    Schumacher fell and hit his head while crossing an off-piste area – suffering a serious head injury despite wearing a ski helmet during the 2013 accident, which was just a year after he retired.
    When the seven time world Formula 1 champion arrived at Grenoble University Hospital’s intensive care unit, a team of medics was waiting to spring into action to save his life.
    Professor Jean-Francois Payen said it was a case of working “hour by hour” as the team went took three key measures to save then 44-year-old’s life.
    First, he was placed into a medically-induced coma to relieve pressure on his brain.
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    Doctors lowered his body temperature to 34-35C as part of the coma, slowing his metabolism to help reduce inflammation.
    A surgical team then operated urgently to release some pressure in his head.
    At one point his family were told to brace themselves for the worst and the situation was bleaker than doctors had made out.
    “The family has been told that only a miracle can bring him back now,” a senior German journalist was reported as saying.
    At the time, medics said Schumacher was likely to stay in an induced coma for at least 48 hours, or even several weeks.
    In the end he was placed in a medically induced coma for almost six months after the accident.
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    In June 2014, he was discharged from hospital so he could receive treatment at his family home near Switzerland’s Lake Geneva.
    Only small trickles of information have been released since, with reports that Schumacher remains in a wheelchair and can react to things around him.
    Schumacher is now 53 and his health remains a mystery and his wife Corinna has kept a tight grip on details about his condition.
    She recently down in tears during an emotional ceremony as the F1 legend was honoured with an award.
    Speaking in a Netflix documentary Corinna revealed “I miss Michael every day”.
    Although she admitted he was “different,” she insisted that “he’s here and that gives us strength”.
    Corinna also offered a brief glimpse as their life at home saying: “We’re together. We live together at home. We do therapy.”
    In 2019, it was reported that Schumacher was set to undergo breakthrough stem cell therapy in a bid to regenerate and rebuild his nervous system.
    He suffered a catastrophic brain injury in a skiing accident in 2013Credit: AFP
    Renowned French cardiologist Dr Philippe Menasche, who had operated on him previously, was set to carry out the treatment to transfer cells from Schumacher’s heart to his brain in 2019.
    But he warned fans that he “does not work miracles” following the first widely-reported stem cell therapy on the sports star the previous year.
    He also slammed claims he was carrying out “experiments” on the legendary racing driver.
    Following the treatment at the Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris, France, he was said to be “conscious”, although few other details were given about his condition.
    But he said details of Schumacher’s treatment would remain “secret” for reasons of medical confidentiality.
    Schumacher has reportedly undergone pioneering stem cell therapy in ParisCredit: AFP
    His condition is still unknown, almost nine years on from his tragic accidentCredit: EPA
    It’s reported Schumacher has received medical care costing as much as £115,000-a-week as his family, friends and pals all hope he can recover from his horror ski crash.
    His family have reportedly been forced to sell off Schumacher’s beloved private jet and holiday home in Norway – worth an estimated £25m – in a bid to cover his medical costs.
    In 2020, his former boss and close friend Jean Todt revealed Schumacher was receiving treatment tailored to help him “return to a more normal life”.
    Todt, who oversaw five of his seven titles as Ferrari team boss, is one of just a handful of visitors allowed to see him at home.
    He told Radio Monte-Carlo he had watched F1 races with the legendary driver on TV.
    “I’m always careful with such statements, but it’s true. I saw the race together with Michael Schumacher at his home in Switzerland.”
    Recent reports have suggested the Schumacher family are seeking to spend the winter months at a new property in Majorca.
    Schumacher is one of the greatest F1 drivers of all time, dominating the sport in the early 2000s after rising to power in the 90s.
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    He raced from 1991 to 2006, and again from 2010 to 2012 – a second act of his career which saw him become instrumental in setting up Lewis Hamilton’s dominant Mercedes team.
    The German won five world championships with Ferrari and two for Benetton. More

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    Lewis Hamilton reveals he rarely drives on normal roads outside of F1 track as Mercedes star ‘finds it more stressful’

    LEWIS HAMILTON has revealed that he rarely drives on normal roads outside of F1 circuits as he finds it too stressful. The seven-time World Champion has made tearing round tracks and overtaking rivals at nearly 200mph look easy in his long career.
    Lewis Hamilton’s struggles on normal roads are not reflected on F1 circuits, where he has often been a cut above the restCredit: Rex
    He is among the most experienced drivers on the current grid – and has the record to back up his skills.
    But the Brit made the ironic confession that while the high-speed, twisting roads of Silverstone during a Grand Prix weekend do not scare him, normal roads do.
    Hamilton admitted to Vanity Fair that the experience of driving in a normal road car left him feeling under too much pressure.
    He said: “I just think I find it stressful. I try not to do things that don’t add to my life.”
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    Driving around the south of France during his interview, he added to the magazine: “This is now stressful for me. This road is crazy. So much going on here.
    “I’m going to turn around in a second. Look, we’re on these roads, anything can happen.
    “People say: ‘Dude! You drive around at 200 miles an hour!’ And I’m like, in terms of fear factor, that’s easy for me. I guess we’re just all wired differently.”
    Despite his road concern, Hamilton is still known to be a big collector of different vehicles and has in his collection Ferrari LaFerrari, a McLaren P1 and an MV Agusta bike.
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    As he tries to become more environmentally conscious, the star will now mostly only drive his electric Mercedes EQC.
    The 37-year-old also revealed it was not just normal driving which unsettled him, and revealed his long-term fear of spiders.
    In fact the Mercedes driver will always check the hotel room for spiders during his trips down under for the Australian Grand Prix.
    Hamilton is currently enjoying the F1 season break, having headed into the hiatus on five-race podium streak. More

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    Inside Michael Schumacher’s ‘secret treatment’ to ‘rebuild’ ex-F1 champ as he receives ‘£115,000-a-week’ in medical care

    MICHAEL Schumacher’s health is still a mystery – but he is reported to have undergone “secret” pioneering medical treatment, with hopes that it could rebuild the legendary F1 ace.Schumacher is reported to have received medical care costing as much as £115,000-a-week as his family, friends and pals all hope he can recover from his horror ski crash.
    Michael Schumacher is understood to be undergoing treatmentCredit: Getty – Contributor
    His wife Corinna broke down in tears as she accepted a prize honouring MichaelCredit: Splash
    Schumacher’s health has been shrouded in secrecy since he suffered a catastrophic brain injury while skiing in 2013.
    But it has been reported the Formula One champion has had a team of 15 nurses and doctors offering around-the-clock care for him.
    The 53-year-old was placed in a medically induced coma for almost six months after the accident while he was on the slopes with his son Mick.
    It was reported after the ski crash he had surgery to remove blood clots from his brain.
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    But in June 2014, he was discharged from hospital so he could receive treatment at his family home near Switzerland’s Lake Geneva.
    His family have reportedly been forced to sell off Schumacher’s beloved private jet and holiday home in Norway – worth an estimated £25m – in a bid to cover his medical costs.
    And only small trickles of information have been released since, with reports that Schumacher remains in a wheelchair and can react to things around him.
    However, in 2019, it was reported that Schumacher was set to undergo breakthrough stem cell therapy in a bid to regenerate and rebuild his nervous system.
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    Renowned French cardiologist Dr Philippe Menasche, who had operated on him previously, was due to carry out the treatment to transfer cells from Schumacher’s heart to his brain.
    In stem cell therapy, cells are taken from either bone marrow or the patient’s own heart and injected into other parts of the body in order to repair damaged tissue.
    Italian neurosurgeon Dr Nicola Acciari said at the time that the legendary driver was suffering from muscle degeneration and osteoporosis as a result of being bed-bound for so many years.
    She said: “The goal is to regenerate Michael’s nervous system.”
    French journalist Jean-Michel Décugis told The Times that the stem cell therapy will have an “anti-inflammatory effect” which will most likely impact the brain.
    He said: “Our sources say that Michael Schumacher is receiving stem cell perfusions that… produce a systemic anti-inflammatory effect.
    “That is to say they reach the whole body and you could imagine that they reach Michael Schumacher’s brain.
    “It’s quite mysterious. Officially [Menasché] works only on the heart.
    “He is carrying out experiments with [secretome] that is made by a laboratory from new stem cells and injected into veins, until now only on animals.”
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    Mr Décugis also claims that Schumacher is being injected with secretome – protein found in the human body – which he says Menasche calls “stem cell juice.”
    Dr Menasche however warned fans that he “does not work miracles” following the first widely-reported stem cell therapy on the sports star in October 2018.
    He also slammed claims he was carrying out “experiments” on the legendary racing driver.
    And in September 2019, he said details of Schumacher’s treatment would remain “secret” for reasons of medical confidentiality.
    Following the treatment at the Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris, France, he was said to be “conscious”, although few other details were given about his condition.
    And years since he is claimed to have undergone the treatment, there has been no concrete updates – amid reports that the Schumacher family are seeking to spend the winter months at a new property in Majorca.
    In 2020, his former boss and close friend Jean Todt revealed Schuey was receiving treatment tailored to help him “return to a more normal life”.
    Todt, who oversaw five of Schumacher’s seven titles as Ferrari team boss, is one of just a handful of visitors allowed to see him at home.
    “I am very discreet on this subject,” he told Ouest France. “We all know that Michael had a very serious accident and, unfortunately, it had significant consequences for him.
    “Since then, he has been treated so that he can be able to return to a more normal life.”
    Schumacher has reportedly undergone pioneering stem cell therapy in ParisCredit: AFP
    His condition is still unknown, almost nine years on from his tragic accidentCredit: EPA
    Last month, Schuey’s wife Corinna broke down in tears – and she has previously admitted the F1 hero “is different now”.
    As she accepted the State Prize of North Rhine-Westphalia on her stricken husband’s behalf, she became emotional as she commented on her husband’s condition.
    And speaking on the Netflix documentary Schumacher, she said: “I miss Michael every day.
    “But it’s not just me who misses him, it’s the children, his father, everyone around him.”
    Although she admitted he was “different,” she insisted that “he’s here and that gives us strength”.
    Corinna also offered a brief glimpse as their life at home.
    She said: “We’re together. We live together at home. We do therapy.
    “We do everything we can to make Michael better and to make sure he’s comfortable. And to simply make him feel our family, our bond.”
    Former boss Ross Brawn told The Guardian in 2016 he still visits his friend regularly.
    “Michael was such a strong character and all through his racing career he only suffered a broken leg,” he said. “The irony of this happening during a quieter life was terrible.”
    He went on: “We go see him and hope and pray that one day he will make a recovery. I was quoted as saying he’s improving and it was not what I really meant. The family are conducting his convalescence in private and I need to respect that.
    “So I don’t want to comment on his condition beyond saying we’re extremely hopeful we’ll see Michael as we knew him at some point in the future.”
    Speaking just before his 50th birthday, she reassured his supporters that he was in “good hands” and that the family were doing “everything humanly possible to help him”.
    Todt also told Radio Monte-Carlo in 2019 that he had watched F1 races with the legendary driver on TV.
    “I’m always careful with such statements, but it’s true. I saw the race together with Michael Schumacher at his home in Switzerland.”
    He suffered a catastrophic brain injury in a skiing accident in 2013Credit: AFP
    Meanwhile, sources – described as “close relatives” – claimed in French magazine Paris Match back in 2018 that Schumacher cries when he sees natural beauty.
    They said: “When you put him in his wheelchair facing the beautiful panorama of the mountains overlooking the lake, Michael sometimes cries.”
    Michael is one of the greatest F1 drivers of all time, dominating the sport in the early 2000s after rising to power in the 90s.
    He raced from 1991 to 2006, and again from 2010 to 2012 – a second act of his career which saw him become instrumental in setting up Lewis Hamilton’s dominant Mercedes team.
    The German won five world championships with Ferrari and two for Benetton.
    Schumacher retired in 2012, but just a year later he was involved in a life-changing skiing accident while on the slopes with Mick.
    And meanwhile, Schumacher’s former manager Willi Weber accused the star’s family of lying about his condition.
    The 80-year-old said he is still “angry” that the brood hasn’t updated him on the F1 icon’s health since his skiing accident nine years ago.
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    He took swipes at both Corinna and Jean Todt, saying: “They kept me out, telling me it’s too early, well now it’s too late.”
    Weber initially understood the need for secrecy from the Schumacher family but that since he got out of hospital, “we have only heard lies from them”. More

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    Lewis Hamilton reveals how teachers told him he’d NEVER make it as F1 driver as kid – before becoming multi world champ

    LEWIS HAMILTON has revealed how teachers told him he would never make it as an F1 driver. The seven-times world champion has proved them wrong with his incredible success.
    From humble beginnings in Stevenage, Lewis Hamilton is now the most successful Formula One driver of all timeCredit: Instagram, @lewishamilton
    Hamilton has been speaking about the past, present and future this weekCredit: iNSTAGRAM @lewishamilton
    Hamilton has been on the F1 grid since 2007 and achieved a historic 100th race win at last year’s Russian Grand Prix.
    During F1’s mid-season break, the Mercedes driver has been reflecting on his journey to the top.
    Watching a video of himself as a child driving a remote control car, Hamilton told Vanity Fair about all those who doubted him.
    He said: “I remember being super nervous and [I had] my Mickey Mouse voice.
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    “You can see in my eyes I’m just super focused. I think that’s just how I’ve always been.
    “The reason that I’ve been able to do what I do is because of those experiences. And I think that’s the same for all of us, right?
    “That has sculpted us and some molded us into the people we are today.
    “I think there was a lot of at school and even at races just parents telling [me] ‘there’s no way you’re going to be a racing driver. You ain’t got what it takes’.
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    “Teachers telling me ‘you’re never gonna be good at anything’. When I look back now, I think, wow, those parents [and] those teachers must’ve been going through a lot to have projected that on to a young kid.”
    Hamilton achieved his first race win in the 2007 Canadian Grand Prix, and could have even won the Championship in his rookie year if not for Kimi Raikkonen taking advantage of McLaren’s missteps.
    He put things right a year later, piping Felipe Massa to the title in Brazil on the final lap as rain hit the circuit.
    Moving to Mercedes in 2013, Hamilton went on to win the Driver’s Championship a further six times.
    He could have had another crown at the end of the 2021 season but lost out in controversial circumstances at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix. More

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    Red Bull boss Christian Horner admits Lewis Hamilton can feel ‘aggrieved’ for F1 title loss at Abu Dhabi GP

    RED BULL team boss Christian Horner has admitted Lewis Hamilton and his fans can feel aggrieved over his title loss at Abu Dhabi last year. The seven-time World Champion missed out on an eighth F1 crown after the extremely controversial ending to the 2021 season.
    Team boss Christian Horner saw Red Bull win their first Driver’s Championship since 2013 last yearCredit: Getty
    Hamilton went quiet for several weeks after last year’s Abu Dhabi GP finaleCredit: Rex
    Hamilton and his title rival Max Verstappen went into the final race of last season level on points.
    After leading the entire race, the Mercedes driver was overtaken by his Dutch challenger on the final lap after race director Michael Masi applied the safety car rules incorrectly.
    The Australian has since left the FIA, and said he has faced death threats over the ending to the race.
    Audio also emerged after where Hamilton revealed he believed the result had been “manipulated”.
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    Despite the extraordinary ending at the Abu Dhabi GP, Horner insists Verstappen is the rightful champion – but admits he understands the ill-feeling from Mercedes.
    He told Sky Sports: “I always tend to look forwards so Abu Dhabi already seems a long time ago. The page always turns.
    “I can understand that if you were a Lewis fan or a Mercedes fan, that you’ll feel pretty aggrieved by the events of Abu Dhabi.
    “If you’re a Max fan, you’ll feel it was redemption for earlier in the year.
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    “That’s where sport is always going to be polarising. Last year wasn’t just about Abu Dhabi, last year was about 22 races.
    “Do I think Max deserved that championship? Absolutely. I’m not ever going to get too hung up on it.”
    After last year’s tense title tussle which saw momentum swing from Verstappen to Hamilton every other race, this season has proven to be more straightforward for the Red Bull driver.
    Verstappen is currently running away with the title and opened up an 80-point lead over his closest competitors going into the mid-season break.
    Arguably his most accomplished moment so far was starting from 10th on the grid to win the Hungarian Grand Prix.
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    It’s not just the 24-year-old’s brilliant driving which has led to his domination over the rest of the grid.
    He has been helped by a series of high-profile errors at Ferrari which has left fans scratching their heads. More