The story appears on

Page B14

March 11, 2011

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » Sports » Motor Racing

Hamilton unhappy with racer

LEWIS Hamilton talked down his Formula One title chances on Wednesday, describing the new McLaren as a let-down that was still some way off being a winner.

The 2008 world champion made clear that McLaren had missed a trick and was playing catch-up, with time running out before the start of the season.

"Do I believe I have a car to win the world championship at the moment? I don't. No," the 26-year-old Briton told reporters after a difficult day in the car at the final pre-season test in Barcelona.

"We should definitely have been able to have continued from '08 and won another championship in the last two years, but we haven't.

"Looking at how the car has developed over the winter and seeing how it has come out, I was really, really excited getting into it thinking we really had hit the nail on the head," he added.

"But we've missed that nail a little bit, although it's not like we don't have any other opportunities to get it right."

McLaren finished runner-up to champion Red Bull last year but had hoped to close the gap significantly with its new car. Instead, it has been off the pace and struggling with reliability at the tests in Spain.

Hamilton was only fourth fastest on Wednesday, with his best lap more than a second slower than Red Bull's champion Sebastian Vettel.

More worryingly, he did just 57 laps to Vettel's 112. Toro Rosso's Swiss driver Sebastien Buemi, who was second quickest, did 120 laps.

"It has been a tough day in the sense that we've not done enough miles," said Hamilton, whose team last won a constructors' title in 1998.

"I came here hoping to do more laps, to get in a good 100-odd laps, to get in a race distance. Usually at this time of the year this is when we come with pit stops and one or two race distances a day, but we were nowhere near even completing one."

The car suffered hydraulics problems and an exhaust failure on Wednesday. One positive was that some of the upgrades tried out seemed to be an improvement. However, Hamilton now has just one day of testing remaining before the start lights go out for the opening race in Australia on March 27.





 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend