Sports & Fitness

Throwback for Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton's thoughts on racing at 13

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 17 Nov 2020 2:26PM

Throwback for Hamilton
Mercedes' British driver Lewis Hamilton gives an interview after winning the Turkish Formula One Grand Prix. - AFP pic, November 17, 2020

LEWIS Hamilton is on the cusp of so many great things having clinched his record-equalling seventh Formula One title following a come-from-behind victory at the Turkish grand prix.

The Briton has made winning so routine that it is sometimes easy to forget his humble beginnings and initial struggles after clinching his first world title with McLaren in 2008.

However, his appearance in a profile piece on the covers of the US-based Autoweek magazine seems almost prophetic now. 

Pic courtesy of F1i.com

When the 13-year-old karting champ was signed by one of Formula One's greatest talent spotters, and the then McLaren boss Ron Dennis in 1998, Autoweek immediately jumped on the opportunity to feature him in their regular column about young up and comers, “10 Secret People who will change your world including this 13-year-old driver.” 

The magazine's racing correspondent Russell Bulgin wrote back then that “Hamilton isn’t bratty, precocious or obnoxious, he just sounds like a slightly old-fashioned race driver, a pint-sized old-fashioned race driver.” 

Hamilton said that he had always liked remote-controlled cars and that he had always wanted a motorbike, but his dad thought it was too dangerous, leading him pick up karting.  

“When we raced, dad thought that was quite good, so we just carried on.” 

When Bulfin asked the rising star the secret to his racing success, he responded, “Stay consistent. I don’t know, um… always make sure that you give the mechanic – or your dad or whoever – enough information about the kart and just make sure that you go quicker and over the finish line first.” 

On his setup preference, Hamilton expressed that he like it to be “just right so I can push and push without getting too much oversteer or too much understeer.” However, he also admitted that finding the balance is not an easy task to accomplish.  

On whether he prefers to start from pole position and pull away, or start at the back of the grid in the pack and fight his way to the front, Hamilton’s response was, “Well, if I get a pole position, I like to pull away. But I like to start at the back and work my way up because I’m really good at going through the pack. I really enjoy racing everybody. When you’re at the front, everybody’s coming for you.” 

At the young age of 13, Hamilton humbly shared that his friends do treat him like a superstar, but when it is time to put in the works for school, he switches gear. There is of course one course that he could not stand, which was French. Although he understands that F1 drivers need to know two languages, Hamilton thinks that “French has got to be one of the hardest languages. Nearly everyone around speaks English.” 

Apart from the RM246,390 a year that he earned, McLaren also provided Hamilton with advise, “And just helping and guiding us along the way. We probably could ring up Ron Dennis to pick his brain, but we wouldn’t." 

Although Hamilton only gets advice on women from fellow F1 driver, David Coulthard, they are good friends and always have a chat.  
Hamilton’s heroes then were Schumacher and Senna, and his goal was exactly what you would assume. 

“Driving in Formula One,” he said. “And standing on the podium in the first place as soon as possible.”

Related News

Malaysia / 8mth

A reminder that life, not things, matter most

Off beat / 8mth

PAS kicks up fuss over champagne shower involving Petronas CEO at Singapore F1

Sports & Fitness / 2y

Max Verstappen wins 10 races in row, breaks F1 record

People / 2y

Michelle Yeoh, Jean Todt marry after 19 years together

Sports & Fitness / 3y

‘Scrap the whole thing’, Verstappen trashes new F1 sprint format

Sports & Fitness / 3y

Hamilton praises Brazil for fining Piquet over racist comments

Spotlight

Malaysia

Bersatu-PH tie-up a possibility as coalition seeks Malay support, analyst says

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Woman molested on her way home from work (video)

Malaysia

Court allows Daim's daughter to permanently keep passport

Malaysia

Santiago pokes holes in data centre hype, asks: Who really benefits?

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Jeweller vows to pursue Rosmah until ‘every penny’ is recovered as RM67.5m battle enters enforcement phase

Malaysia

Ambulance carrying two injured men crashes en route to hospital after MPV collision in Besut

Malaysia

Man blames 'lack of love' for sexual assault on teens

Business

BNM's OPR to stay at 2.75 pcent in 2026 amid strong domestic demand - Kenanga IB

Malaysia

Missing jewellery: Rosmah ordered to pay RM67.5 million

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

World Cup set for record-breaking expansion amid ticket price controversy and political tensions

Sports & Fitness

South Korea stage late comeback to beat Czech Republic 2-1 in World Cup opener

Sports & Fitness

FIFA introduces sweeping changes ahead of World Cup to curb time-wasting, tackle discrimination

Sports & Fitness

World Cup kick-off marred by clashes as Mexico opens campaign with victory over South Africa