Sports & Fitness

Lewis Hamilton avoiding Mercedes penalty by not 'revving the nuts' off engine

Championship leader has ‘no idea’ if he needs to take penalty or not despite upcoming tracks more suited for rival Red Bull than Mercedes

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 30 Sep 2021 9:00PM

Lewis Hamilton avoiding Mercedes penalty by not 'revving the nuts' off engine
Although Mercedes driver, Lewis Hamilton (pictured above), had previously stated that the plan was to get to the end of the season without triggering an engine penalty, he has ‘absolutely no idea’ after the Russian Grand Prix and, with engine concerns looming and mistakes starting to creep into his performances, is intent on focusing only on the present – AFP pic, September 30, 2021

LEWIS Hamilton is doing all he can to avoid an engine penalty across the remaining seven races this year but insists he has "absolutely no idea" whether he will need to take one.

The Mercedes driver leads the race for this year's F1 title by two points over rival Max Verstappen, who rescued second at Sochi, after taking his own penalty to add a new PU into his pool.

Now, with upcoming tracks forecasted to suit Red Bull more than Mercedes, the Dutch driver has the advantage of being able to push his allocation of engines more than Lewis.

Although Lewis had previously said the plan was to get to the end of the season without triggering a penalty, when pressed on whether he could still do so, the championship leader said: "I have absolutely no idea.

"Of course, I have lost one engine, Valtteri [Bottas] has had several and there have been others that Mercedes have seen up and down the paddock.

"Right now, I am trying to treat my engines, the ones we put in, with absolute care when I am driving in terms of how much I am gassing it, how much... just revving the thing, revving the nuts off it, trying to minimise the laps that I do."

Overcoming a tricky weekend to emerge victorious in Russia, Lewis suffered two minor crashes in qualifying before losing places at the race start.

The British driver is now intent on focusing only on the present with engine concerns looming and mistakes starting to creep into his performances.

"I can't control the future," he added. "All I can do is try to maximise, whenever I have the opportunity.

"Obviously now, there have been two, the sprint race [in the Italian GP], with the [slow] start and then qualifying [in Russia]." – Agencies, September 30, 2021

Spotlight

Opinion

When bullying turns violent, Malaysia must confront what is happening inside schools

By The Vibes Says

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

Malaysia

EPF members withdraw RM19.87 billion from Flexible Account as of May 31

Malaysia

Melaka: Student who was allegedly bullied chases schoolmate with box cutter

World

Fresh US-Iran strikes deepen Middle East crisis as ceasefire crumbles

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

Racism row deepens as Paraguayan Senator claims Instagram hack after Mbappé clash

Sports & Fitness

Merino's late winner sends Spain past Belgium into World Cup semi-finals

Sports & Fitness

Mbappe inspires France past Morocco and into World Cup semi-finals after stunning redemption