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Max Verstappen beats Lewis Hamilton to F1 world title on last lap in Abu Dhabi

Who, amongst Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen, will win the F1 1 Drivers Championship for 2021?


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Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen head into a winner-takes-all championship decider in Abu Dhabi this Sunday with different views of what is fair and acceptable driving.

Once the dust has settled and the debris has been picked through, that's the fundamental conclusion from the craziest and most dramatic race yet in a Formula 1 season that has been packed full of them.

The Saudi Arabian Grand Prix will go down in history as one of the most remarkable races F1 has ever seen. And it has set Verstappen and Hamilton up for one of the sport's most dramatic climaxes, both needing to work out how to deal with the other on track.

In a race packed full of controversy and incident, Verstappen and Hamilton had no less than four flash points between them, including a collision.

The Red Bull driver was found guilty in two separate incidents and handed penalties for dangerous and/or unfair driving, totalling 15 seconds of race time in all.

Hamilton called his rival a "crazy guy" over the radio during the race - adding in a swear word for good measure - and did not take it back afterwards, even if he did admit that the comments were made in the heat of the moment and he would "maybe feel differently" once he'd watched the race back.

Verstappen, for his part, repeated his belief that he was driving within acceptable limits, but refused to be drawn too much on the various controversies.

"We don't need to make headlines out of it," he said. "They don't deserve that."

Headlines, though, there most certainly will be, whatever anyone thinks of the rights and wrongs of the various incidents.

In a nutshell, the key moments of the race were as follows:

At the first restart after a red-flag period, Verstappen went around the outside of Hamilton's Mercedes at the first corner and then took the lead by cutting inside the kerb on the second. It gave Verstappen the lead, and dropped Hamilton, who had been forced wide, behind Alpine's Esteban Ocon.

But the move was judged to be against the rules because Verstappen had passed Hamilton by going off the circuit. As it happened, the race was stopped immediately for a separate incident, and there followed the extraordinary sight of Red Bull negotiating with race director Michael Masi as to where Verstappen should line up for the restart.

They agreed on him starting third, behind Ocon and Hamilton. Into the first corner, Verstappen then dived for the inside, and quite brilliantly and legitimately passed both into the first corner to take the lead.

Hamilton quickly dispatched Ocon, and another intense race between the title contenders began to unfold.

Hamilton was clearly quicker, a smarter tyre choice and better race set-up inverting the performance tables from qualifying, when Verstappen had been on course for pole before crashing at the final corner.

Starting lap 37, Hamilton got a run on the Red Bull heading down to Turn One and was marginally ahead on the outside as they turned into the corner.

In a situation with remarkable similarities to the controversy in Brazil two races ago, Verstappen went in deep and ran off the track, Hamilton avoided him and went off, too, and Verstappen retained the lead.

Unlike in Brazil, where the incident was not investigated, this time Red Bull were told Verstappen had to give the place back. The team instructed him to do so. But the message did not get through to Mercedes until the two cars were heading towards the final corner and they had no time to tell Hamilton.

Verstappen slowed to let Hamilton by. Hamilton did not understand what was going on and slowed down behind him until Verstappen hit the brakes hard and Hamilton tried to take avoiding action, clipping his front wing against the Red Bull's rear tyre.

They then raced on for six further laps, during which Verstappen was handed a five-second penalty for the Turn One incident. He tried initially to see if he could pull that margin and more on Hamilton to secure the win, but found he could not, and so slowed to let Hamilton by again, only to immediately pass him back.

A lap later, Hamilton finally got by into the last corner, pushing Verstappen wide and to the limit of the track as he did so, a move that earned Mercedes a warning that Hamilton was close to being given a black-and-white flag for dangerous driving.

Digging into the incidents

Let's look at the Turn One incident first:

The background to it is that many of the drivers had not understood why Verstappen had not been investigated in Brazil. They felt what he had done should not have been permitted.

The Brazil incident was discussed extensively at the drivers' briefing at the following race in Qatar, the drivers seeking clarity as to what was and was not allowed in terms of fair racing.

The drivers were told that, while all incidents would be judged on their individual merits, if it was felt a driver had pushed someone off track or forced them to avoid a collision, he would be penalised, as the rules dictate.

Verstappen said: "He had a run [on me] a bit like Brazil and of course I braked late and got a little bit off line and had a moment and went wide. But he also didn't make the corner, so we both basically missed the corner and then I don't think it's fair to say I got the penalty.

"I find it interesting I am the one who gets penalised when both of us ran outside the white lines. In Brazil it was fine and now suddenly I get a penalty for it.

"You could clearly see we both didn't make the corner. But I don't want to spend too much time on it. We both have to move forward. We are talking more about white lines and penalties than proper F1 racing and that's a little bit of a shame."

Hamilton said: "We have seen multiple incidents like Brazil where we're supposed to do our racing on track between the white lines and the rules haven't been clear from the stewards and those things have been allowed.

"I know I can't overtake someone and go off track and keep the position. That's well known between all us drivers. But it doesn't apply to one of us, I guess."

Did he think Verstappen had driven dangerously?

"I definitely feel there were scenarios where that was the case," Hamilton said. "This is not the first time I've had to avoid a collision, and that's how it goes at the moment."

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said he felt the penalty was "harsh", adding: "Is he [Verstappen] solely to blame if two drivers run off track?"

The answer to that from the stewards in Jeddah is, effectively, yes he is. Verstappen was the one on the inside, with Hamilton alongside on the outside. Verstappen went in too deep and ran wide, whether deliberately or because he lost control, so it's his fault, they ruled.

And that's because in that scenario the driver on the outside has a choice to either give way or crash. It was exactly this sort of approach from Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher that led to these rules being imposed, when they chose to ignore what until then had been a gentlemen's agreement between drivers.

Red Bull, meanwhile, pleaded inconsistency on behalf of the stewards.

Horner said: "I would ask you to look at Lewis' incident in the final corner where he pushed Max off in the same way.

"Any driver who has come through karting or has raced in any category, that is hard racing. It is how these kids have raced through their careers.

"Lewis gives what he gets and he's very wily with how he does it. These are two guys who are fighting over such fine margins pushing to the boundary. If you don't want them to run wide, put a gravel trap there."

Why was Verstappen penalised again?

Now for the collision on the run to the last corner.

Verstappen said: "I went to drive to the right side and I slowed down and I was braking and downshifting and he just stayed super-close behind me and I don't really understand why. I was just trying to let him by.

"I'm just going slower and slower, pulling the downshift. We had a… oh I don't know, a miscommunication or whatever and he ran into the back of me and that was it."

Hamilton was asked why he had not just gone past Verstappen if he saw him slowing in front of him.

"One, it wasn't clear," he said. "Two, I didn't get the information [that he had to let me by]. Then it became apparent he was trying to let me past, which was what he had been asked to do, but before the DRS zone.

"That would mean he would just DRS back past me. That was the tactic. The worst part was the heavy braking that happened at one point. That's when we collided. That was the dangerous part."

Hamilton is referring to the fact that they were approaching what's known as the DRS detection point - where if a driver is within one second of the car in front, he can use the overtaking aid to boost his speed down the following straight. Hamilton was trying to avoid a scenario where Verstappen let him by, only to pass him back with DRS down to Turn One.

The stewards looked into this incident after the race. They gave Verstappen a 10-second time penalty and two penalty points on his licence.

Their reasoning was that Verstappen had been told to give the place back "strategically" and "it was obvious that neither driver wanted to take the lead prior to the DRS detection line".

They added: "The key point was that [Verstappen] then braked suddenly [at 69 bar] and significantly, resulting in 2.4g deceleration… The sudden braking was determined to be erratic and hence the predominant cause of the collision."

What does this mean for Abu Dhabi?

The background to all this is that Hamilton went into the race knowing that Verstappen could afford a collision between the two of them and he could not.

If neither finished, the gap between them going to Abu Dhabi would have remained at eight points. That's the most Hamilton could make up on Verstappen in one race if he wins and the Dutchman is second.

But that would not be enough for Hamilton to win the title, because although they would be level on points in that scenario, Verstappen would be champion on the basis of having one more win.

That's absolutely not to say Verstappen tried to take Hamilton out on Sunday. He drove like he always does. Hamilton knows that will be how Verstappen drives, but he also knew that he had to win, and a non-finish would be the end of his title hopes. So he had to be the one to give way in any on-the-edge wheel-to-wheel scenario.

In a way, although they are now tied on points, that position has not changed much.

All things being equal, they will race for the win again at Yas Marina on Sunday. But Verstappen has nine wins to Hamilton's eight. So if neither finish, Verstappen will be champion.

Do Red Bull care how they win it, Horner was asked?

"Yes of course we do," he said. "We want to win it on the track, not in the stewards' room, not in a gravel trap. It has been a tough fight, all the way through the year. There has been some fantastic racing. I hope it is a fair and clean race in Abu Dhabi."

Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said: "In Brazil, I said we are setting a precedent if it's not investigated that could end up really ugly for the championship. And we have seen incidents that were pretty much Brazil at slower speeds. And we don't want to have that in Abu Dhabi. The quicker car with the quicker driver should win the championship and not by taking each other off.

"I would hope today's race has enough repercussions that everybody is going to learn from it and adapt for the final race in Abu Dhabi.

"Similar driving if it were deemed by the stewards to be over the line would probably also be penalised in Abu Dhabi and that could well end in a messy situation for everybody and I don't think the championship deserves a result influenced by a collision. So I very much trust in the self-regulating decision."

BBC
 
Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen head into a winner-takes-all championship decider in Abu Dhabi this Sunday with different views of what is fair and acceptable driving.

Once the dust has settled and the debris has been picked through, that's the fundamental conclusion from the craziest and most dramatic race yet in a Formula 1 season that has been packed full of them.

The Saudi Arabian Grand Prix will go down in history as one of the most remarkable races F1 has ever seen. And it has set Verstappen and Hamilton up for one of the sport's most dramatic climaxes, both needing to work out how to deal with the other on track.

In a race packed full of controversy and incident, Verstappen and Hamilton had no less than four flash points between them, including a collision.

The Red Bull driver was found guilty in two separate incidents and handed penalties for dangerous and/or unfair driving, totalling 15 seconds of race time in all.

Hamilton called his rival a "crazy guy" over the radio during the race - adding in a swear word for good measure - and did not take it back afterwards, even if he did admit that the comments were made in the heat of the moment and he would "maybe feel differently" once he'd watched the race back.

Verstappen, for his part, repeated his belief that he was driving within acceptable limits, but refused to be drawn too much on the various controversies.

"We don't need to make headlines out of it," he said. "They don't deserve that."

Headlines, though, there most certainly will be, whatever anyone thinks of the rights and wrongs of the various incidents.

In a nutshell, the key moments of the race were as follows:

At the first restart after a red-flag period, Verstappen went around the outside of Hamilton's Mercedes at the first corner and then took the lead by cutting inside the kerb on the second. It gave Verstappen the lead, and dropped Hamilton, who had been forced wide, behind Alpine's Esteban Ocon.

But the move was judged to be against the rules because Verstappen had passed Hamilton by going off the circuit. As it happened, the race was stopped immediately for a separate incident, and there followed the extraordinary sight of Red Bull negotiating with race director Michael Masi as to where Verstappen should line up for the restart.

They agreed on him starting third, behind Ocon and Hamilton. Into the first corner, Verstappen then dived for the inside, and quite brilliantly and legitimately passed both into the first corner to take the lead.

Hamilton quickly dispatched Ocon, and another intense race between the title contenders began to unfold.

Hamilton was clearly quicker, a smarter tyre choice and better race set-up inverting the performance tables from qualifying, when Verstappen had been on course for pole before crashing at the final corner.

Starting lap 37, Hamilton got a run on the Red Bull heading down to Turn One and was marginally ahead on the outside as they turned into the corner.

In a situation with remarkable similarities to the controversy in Brazil two races ago, Verstappen went in deep and ran off the track, Hamilton avoided him and went off, too, and Verstappen retained the lead.

Unlike in Brazil, where the incident was not investigated, this time Red Bull were told Verstappen had to give the place back. The team instructed him to do so. But the message did not get through to Mercedes until the two cars were heading towards the final corner and they had no time to tell Hamilton.

Verstappen slowed to let Hamilton by. Hamilton did not understand what was going on and slowed down behind him until Verstappen hit the brakes hard and Hamilton tried to take avoiding action, clipping his front wing against the Red Bull's rear tyre.

They then raced on for six further laps, during which Verstappen was handed a five-second penalty for the Turn One incident. He tried initially to see if he could pull that margin and more on Hamilton to secure the win, but found he could not, and so slowed to let Hamilton by again, only to immediately pass him back.

A lap later, Hamilton finally got by into the last corner, pushing Verstappen wide and to the limit of the track as he did so, a move that earned Mercedes a warning that Hamilton was close to being given a black-and-white flag for dangerous driving.

Digging into the incidents

Let's look at the Turn One incident first:

The background to it is that many of the drivers had not understood why Verstappen had not been investigated in Brazil. They felt what he had done should not have been permitted.

The Brazil incident was discussed extensively at the drivers' briefing at the following race in Qatar, the drivers seeking clarity as to what was and was not allowed in terms of fair racing.

The drivers were told that, while all incidents would be judged on their individual merits, if it was felt a driver had pushed someone off track or forced them to avoid a collision, he would be penalised, as the rules dictate.

Verstappen said: "He had a run [on me] a bit like Brazil and of course I braked late and got a little bit off line and had a moment and went wide. But he also didn't make the corner, so we both basically missed the corner and then I don't think it's fair to say I got the penalty.

"I find it interesting I am the one who gets penalised when both of us ran outside the white lines. In Brazil it was fine and now suddenly I get a penalty for it.

"You could clearly see we both didn't make the corner. But I don't want to spend too much time on it. We both have to move forward. We are talking more about white lines and penalties than proper F1 racing and that's a little bit of a shame."

Hamilton said: "We have seen multiple incidents like Brazil where we're supposed to do our racing on track between the white lines and the rules haven't been clear from the stewards and those things have been allowed.

"I know I can't overtake someone and go off track and keep the position. That's well known between all us drivers. But it doesn't apply to one of us, I guess."

Did he think Verstappen had driven dangerously?

"I definitely feel there were scenarios where that was the case," Hamilton said. "This is not the first time I've had to avoid a collision, and that's how it goes at the moment."

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner said he felt the penalty was "harsh", adding: "Is he [Verstappen] solely to blame if two drivers run off track?"

The answer to that from the stewards in Jeddah is, effectively, yes he is. Verstappen was the one on the inside, with Hamilton alongside on the outside. Verstappen went in too deep and ran wide, whether deliberately or because he lost control, so it's his fault, they ruled.

And that's because in that scenario the driver on the outside has a choice to either give way or crash. It was exactly this sort of approach from Ayrton Senna and Michael Schumacher that led to these rules being imposed, when they chose to ignore what until then had been a gentlemen's agreement between drivers.

Red Bull, meanwhile, pleaded inconsistency on behalf of the stewards.

Horner said: "I would ask you to look at Lewis' incident in the final corner where he pushed Max off in the same way.

"Any driver who has come through karting or has raced in any category, that is hard racing. It is how these kids have raced through their careers.

"Lewis gives what he gets and he's very wily with how he does it. These are two guys who are fighting over such fine margins pushing to the boundary. If you don't want them to run wide, put a gravel trap there."

Why was Verstappen penalised again?

Now for the collision on the run to the last corner.

Verstappen said: "I went to drive to the right side and I slowed down and I was braking and downshifting and he just stayed super-close behind me and I don't really understand why. I was just trying to let him by.

"I'm just going slower and slower, pulling the downshift. We had a… oh I don't know, a miscommunication or whatever and he ran into the back of me and that was it."

Hamilton was asked why he had not just gone past Verstappen if he saw him slowing in front of him.

"One, it wasn't clear," he said. "Two, I didn't get the information [that he had to let me by]. Then it became apparent he was trying to let me past, which was what he had been asked to do, but before the DRS zone.

"That would mean he would just DRS back past me. That was the tactic. The worst part was the heavy braking that happened at one point. That's when we collided. That was the dangerous part."

Hamilton is referring to the fact that they were approaching what's known as the DRS detection point - where if a driver is within one second of the car in front, he can use the overtaking aid to boost his speed down the following straight. Hamilton was trying to avoid a scenario where Verstappen let him by, only to pass him back with DRS down to Turn One.

The stewards looked into this incident after the race. They gave Verstappen a 10-second time penalty and two penalty points on his licence.

Their reasoning was that Verstappen had been told to give the place back "strategically" and "it was obvious that neither driver wanted to take the lead prior to the DRS detection line".

They added: "The key point was that [Verstappen] then braked suddenly [at 69 bar] and significantly, resulting in 2.4g deceleration… The sudden braking was determined to be erratic and hence the predominant cause of the collision."

What does this mean for Abu Dhabi?

The background to all this is that Hamilton went into the race knowing that Verstappen could afford a collision between the two of them and he could not.

If neither finished, the gap between them going to Abu Dhabi would have remained at eight points. That's the most Hamilton could make up on Verstappen in one race if he wins and the Dutchman is second.

But that would not be enough for Hamilton to win the title, because although they would be level on points in that scenario, Verstappen would be champion on the basis of having one more win.

That's absolutely not to say Verstappen tried to take Hamilton out on Sunday. He drove like he always does. Hamilton knows that will be how Verstappen drives, but he also knew that he had to win, and a non-finish would be the end of his title hopes. So he had to be the one to give way in any on-the-edge wheel-to-wheel scenario.

In a way, although they are now tied on points, that position has not changed much.

All things being equal, they will race for the win again at Yas Marina on Sunday. But Verstappen has nine wins to Hamilton's eight. So if neither finish, Verstappen will be champion.

Do Red Bull care how they win it, Horner was asked?

"Yes of course we do," he said. "We want to win it on the track, not in the stewards' room, not in a gravel trap. It has been a tough fight, all the way through the year. There has been some fantastic racing. I hope it is a fair and clean race in Abu Dhabi."

Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said: "In Brazil, I said we are setting a precedent if it's not investigated that could end up really ugly for the championship. And we have seen incidents that were pretty much Brazil at slower speeds. And we don't want to have that in Abu Dhabi. The quicker car with the quicker driver should win the championship and not by taking each other off.

"I would hope today's race has enough repercussions that everybody is going to learn from it and adapt for the final race in Abu Dhabi.

"Similar driving if it were deemed by the stewards to be over the line would probably also be penalised in Abu Dhabi and that could well end in a messy situation for everybody and I don't think the championship deserves a result influenced by a collision. So I very much trust in the self-regulating decision."

BBC
Momentum with Lewis and Mercedes. Back him to grab his eighth.

Max has driven so well this year but has lost his head in the last few races and mistakes have crept in. He is a future multiple world champion, no doubt in my mind
 
Hamilton will snatch it at the last.

I still recall his first title which he won on practically the final corner of the final race, it was particularly thrilling and memorable.

This will be is his occasion. He comes good when the pressure is at its greatest.
 
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I've gone Verstappen.

Expect a twist in what has been a brilliant yet crazy season.
 
Hamilton to make it 7 championships in 8 years.
 
https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/59557655

Chaos, crashes and controversy - the 2021 Formula 1 season has had it all - and sets up a thrilling winner-takes-all finale between Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen.

It has been a roller-coaster year with the championship lead changing hands a number of times over the course of the 21 races, but Hamilton's win in Saudi Arabia last time out means the pair head to Abu Dhabi dead level.

BBC Sport takes a look back at some of the key moments of one of the most memorable seasons in Formula 1 history.

Red Bull rise at the Emilia Romagna GP

It was clear in pre-season that Red Bull had the pace advantage over Mercedes at some tracks and they took their first win of the season in the second race.

Both drivers displayed their credentials as the main title hopefuls, with Verstappen recovering from half a spin following a red flag to power off to a victory, while Hamilton overcame a rare error that saw him slide into the barriers at half-distance to finish second.

There was even a hint of what was to come in the tussle between the two when Verstappen forced Hamilton wide early on as the two raced side-by-side.

Baku blow-out

In June Verstappen was excelling again, storming his way to victory at the devilishly tricky street circuit in Azerbaijan before his tyre exploded on the 200mph straight, causing him to crash out.

After a resulting red flag, a feisty Hamilton looked set to take the lead at the restart, only for him to uncharacteristically knock a switch to activate his 'brake magic' function - which helps to keep heat in the discs at low speed - and cause his Mercedes to overshoot the first corner in a cloud of tyre smoke, eventually finishing a lowly 15th.

Sparks fly at Silverstone

This was the race where the tensions in the title battle really took off.

Verstappen arrived at Silverstone in strong form after winning three races in a row, but Hamilton as in no mood to see his rival celebrate another victory in front of the Briton's home fans.

At Copse corner on the very first lap the two collided. Verstappen's race was ended immediately and there was even a trip to hospital for precautionary checks. Hamilton, who was blamed for the crash and given a 10-second time penalty, went on to claim a dramatic win.

Those in the Red Bull camp did not hold back with their criticism of Hamilton after the race, with Verstappen calling his celebrations on the podium "disrespectful" and "unsportsmanlike" while team principal Christian Horner said it was a "hollow victory".

Having started the British GP 32 points adrift of Verstappen, Hamilton finished it just seven behind. A seismic moment in the 2021 title battle.

Hungary chaos helps Hamilton

After a blistering start to the season, disaster struck for Verstappen at the Hungarian Grand Prix - the final race before the summer break.

The first few laps of the race were some of the most dramatic seen in F1 for years as wet conditions resulted in a first-lap pile up in which Verstappen became tangled up in. Five cars were eliminated and although Verstappen was able to continue, his Red Bull was damaged and performance seriously compromised.

Nevertheless, things still looked OK for the Dutchman with Hamilton finding himself dead last after five laps because of a delayed pitstop, but the seven-time world champion fought back superbly to finish third and move into an eight-point lead at the top of the drivers' championship.

Another collision in Italy

With tempers flaring after that Silverstone race, there was little surprise at another coming together between the two.

The second time this season the pair collided was at the Italian Grand Prix.

At this point, Verstappen's lead over Hamilton was five points but neither driver was able to pick up an advantage from this race as their crash led to both retiring.

The incident happened midway through the race when Hamilton came out of the pits alongside Verstappen and as the pair battled for position the two collided, with the rear of Verstappen's car landing on Hamilton's Mercedes.

Both retired, beached in the gravel. The Dutchman was deemed "predominantly to blame" and handed a three-place grid penalty by stewards for the next race.

Team tensions boil over in Brazil

Tensions were not just heightened between the drivers - there has been a war of words between the rival teams off the track for much of the season.

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff and Red Bull counterpart Christian Horner have had plenty to say about each other's team.

Most recently, Red Bull raised concerns about the legality of the Mercedes rear wing, with Horner claiming it was giving Hamilton a speed boost over Verstappen - who was handed a 50,000 euro fine for handling Hamilton's car after qualifying in Brazil.

Earlier in the season, Mercedes had been wary of a similar phenomenon on the Red Bull.

Red Bull's concerns came at the same race Mercedes had requested a review of Verstappen's driving - during the Sao Paulo Grand Prix they believed Verstappen deliberately ran Hamilton off the circuit to avoid being passed, a review that was rejected by the FIA.

It was a race Hamilton went on to win after a blistering performance, in which he overcame two separate grid penalties, amounting to 25 places.

Nothing may have come by either team's objections - be it the car's legality or a driver's conduct - but the relationship between Red Bull and Mercedes has hit an all-time low in 2021.

Saudi drama sets up thrilling finale

The final flashpoint to get the title battle to a winner-takes-all finale happened just a few days ago - at the chaotic and controversial Saudi Arabian Grand Prix.

In one of the most dramatic grands prix in years, the race was stopped twice, featured three starts and had an extraordinary series of events between the title contenders.

But the most significant event happened in the final few laps when race leader Verstappen was told to give back a position to Hamilton that he had gained illegally.

Communication confusion resulted in Hamilton being caught off guard by Verstappen slowing down and he crashed into the back of the Red Bull, prompting Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff to slam his headphones to the floor in frustration as he watched from the pits.

Despite damage to his front wing, Hamilton was able to continue but Verstappen did not give back the position until six laps later.

Hamilton went on to win the race while Verstappen finished second despite being handed further time penalties, setting things up for Abu Dhabi.
 
Just hoping for a Silverstone type tyre blowout for Lewis, and Verstappen overtakes to win the championship the last corner. After the bad luck Verstappen has suffered this year (Baku & Hungary), he needs some to go his way.

Hamilton has been cool and calm and has the faster car. Verstappen has been pulling off some amazing quali and drives. Its been a bit like Prost vs Senna.
 
I want to say Max, but the momentum is with Hamilton. Really hope Max can pull off a win against the run of play though, about time we see a new champion.
 
Max Verstappen says he is treated differently from other drivers when it comes to the rules on fair racing.

His comments raise the stakes at the start of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix weekend, where Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton will race to decide this year's Formula 1 title.

Verstappen said: "It seems other drivers do the same things and only I get a penalty.

"The only thing I ask is that it's fair for everyone. That's not the case."

The Red Bull driver was given three different penalties at last weekend's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix for offences he was deemed to have committed while racing against Hamilton's Mercedes.

One was for overtaking while off the track, one was for forcing Hamilton off the circuit and one was for braking in front of him and causing a collision.

Hamilton emerged the winner from a dramatic and controversial race to enter the final race of the season at Yas Marina level on points with Verstappen.

Whoever finishes ahead on Sunday will win the title - it would be a record eighth for Hamilton and Verstappen's first.

Verstappen cited two other incidents in Jeddah in which he said other drivers had done the same thing and not been penalised.

He insisted that in his mind he had not broken any rules with regard to fair racing.

"For me I was not wrong," Verstappen said. "Only I was 'wrong'; other people got nothing.

"We were both off the track. Somehow they judged it was my fault, which I don't agree with, and the other penalty as well I don't agree with. And then afterwards he pushed me off the track and he even looks at me and pushes me off the track edge and he only gets a warning for that."

Before the weekend, race director Michael Masi has highlighted in his event notes clauses in F1's regulations that give governing body the FIA the power to take points off drivers if they transgress.

These refer to "any infringement of the principles of fairness in competition, behaviour in an unsportsmanlike manner or attempt to influence the result of a competition in a way that is contrary to sporting ethics".

This has been seen as a warning to both drivers not to engage in any dirty driving in their title fight.

Hamilton said this move by the FIA was "fair", adding: "Hopefully they won't need to be used and we have a great race."

Verstappen said: "I know what's in the sporting code. There has been nothing added for this weekend."

Verstappen added that he would not change his approach to racing for this weekend, despite being penalised in Jeddah.

"Why should I change when others are allowed to race like that? Everyone should be allowed to race like that," he said.

Asked if he trusted Verstappen, Hamilton said: "I do believe everyone here racing comes to win. I would like to believe everyone wants to do it the right way. I don't even let that creep into my mind."

Hamilton said of the rules over what is permitted in terms of side-by-side battling: "For me it's quite clear."

And asked whether he believed Verstappen was "crazy", as he had said over the team radio in Jeddah, Hamilton said: "Look, when we're in the races we say all sorts of things because when you're in the heat of the moment, adrenalin is on the edge. It's a figure of speech. We racing drivers are all a bit crazy to do the things we do and take the risks we do."

And he said he was giving no thought to the idea that he could break the record he shares with Michael Schumacher for world titles.

"It just feels like another championship for me," Hamilton said. "I don't look at it as a multiple. Every year you start from grounds zero and you are focused on winning. I don't turn up with (number) one on my car, I turn up with 44, and I don't consider myself the champion. I consider myself the one fighting for the championship."

BBC
 
Red Bull's Max Verstappen led the way in the first practice session in the Formula 1 championship showdown at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

He was 0.196 seconds quicker than Mercedes driver Valtteri Bottas, while Verstappen's title rival Lewis Hamilton was third, 0.346secs off the pace.

Hamilton had a quicker lap - just 0.033secs off Verstappen's pace - deleted for exceeding track limits.

The two are tied on points heading into a winner-takes-all finale on Sunday.

Whoever finishes ahead in the grand prix will be champion. If neither finish, Verstappen will take the title on the basis of having one more win.

The first practice session at Abu Dhabi is notoriously unrepresentative because it is held in daylight in mid-afternoon, while qualifying and the race start at twilight and run into night time, when track temperatures are cooler.

Verstappen was ahead from his first lap and looked comfortable around the remodelled Yas Marina circuit, which has been speeded up in the hope of improving the quality of the action on a track that has a reputation for producing boring races.

The build-up to the weekend has been dominated by the fall-out from last weekend's Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, in which Verstappen and Hamilton engaged in their most ill-tempered duel of the season, with Verstappen penalised by officials three times for different incidents.

He has arrived in Abu Dhabi claiming that he is being treated differently by officials.

Red Bull's Sergio Perez was fourth fastest, ahead of Alpha Tauri's Yuki Tsunoda, Alpine's Fernando Alonso, Alpha Tauri's Pierre Gasly, the Ferraris of Charles Leclerc and Carlos Sainz and Aston Martin's Sebastian Vettel.

Kimi Raikkonen, in the final race of his illustrious career, had a spin at Turn Nine and Vettel also lost control towards the end of the session at Turn 15, the second last corner, after hitting the inside kerb on the apex.

BBC
 
Abu Dhabi Grand Prix: Lewis Hamilton fastest in second practice

Mercedes have backed the decision to highlight the potential consequences of dirty driving before the Formula 1 title decider in Abu Dhabi.

Governing body the FIA emphasised rules for powers to take points away for "unsportsmanlike" driving or behaviour "contrary to sporting ethics".

Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said it was "a good deterrent for everyone".

Red Bull team principal Christian Horner called for consistency of decisions.

Red Bull's Max Verstappen and Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton are tied on points and whoever finishes ahead in the race will emerge as champion.

However, Verstappen would win the title if both retire or crash out together, as he has one more victory than Hamilton.

The FIA's decision to highlight clauses in the sporting code in race director Michael Masi's event notes before the weekend is seen as a warning to the drivers to race cleanly on Sunday.

And the race at a remodelled Yas Marina track takes place a week after a bad-tempered and controversial Saudi Arabian Grand Prix in which Verstappen was penalised three times for driving infringements, once for overtaking off the track, once for forcing Hamilton off the track and once for braking in front of his title rival and precipitating a collision.

Hamilton set the pace in Friday practice, with Verstappen in fourth place, 0.641 seconds behind.

Wolff said: "I think with all the controversies we had in the last few races, it is very good that Michael and the FIA have come out with a reminder of what the ISC [international sporting code] stands for."

He welcomed the decision to remind the drivers "what is on and what is not on, in terms of driving standards".

Horner said: "I can see why Toto and Lewis with the disadvantages of race wins would be pushing for that, but nobody's going into the race saying it's going to end in a crash.

"There has been great speculation about it but our focus is on trying to win this on track and do it at the chequered flag."

He added: "There has to be consistency of stewarding of penalties and that is the thing that drives people more mad than anything else, when there is perceived to be an inconsistency.

"That piece of the sporting code has always been here. Nobody wants to see this championships end up in front of the stewards."

Horner's remarks are a reference to the fact that in Brazil three races ago Verstappen was not penalised for forcing Hamilton off the track when defending his position and in Saudi Arabia he was.

Verstappen said on Thursday that he does not think he has been treated equally by the stewards in comparison with other drivers and that he sees no reason to change his driving.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/59612265
 
Hamilton fastest in final practice, Verstappen 2nd

Hamilton and Verstappen battle for F1 title - both head into season finale level on points
 
Looking tough for Max, that Mercedes looks primed for this track. Both Hamilton and Bottas quicker than him in Q1
 
Stunning lap from Max in P3 to grab that pole. Red Bull step up while Mercedes with another screw up in strategies.
 
Qualifying top 10

1) Verstappen

2) Hamilton

3) Norris


4) Perez

5) Sainz

6) Bottas

7) Leclerc

8) Tsunoda

9) Ocon

10) Ricciardo
 
Merc have it in control. On better tyres for tommorows race, max won't have the help from Perez for a slipstream.
 
Red Bull's Max Verstappen struck the first blow in his title decider against Lewis Hamilton by taking a stunning pole position in Abu Dhabi.

Verstappen was 0.371 seconds faster than the Mercedes driver after a brilliant first qualifying lap at Yas Marina.

Verstappen and Hamilton head into the race tied on points. The race is effectively winner-takes-all, although if neither finish Verstappen will be champion because he has one more win.

Hamilton was more than 0.5secs adrift after their first laps in final qualifying and although he improved on his final run he could not get close to Verstappen's time.

And there is a strategy twist because Verstappen and Hamilton will start the race on different tyres, the Dutchman on the soft and the Briton on the medium.

Verstappen was forced to switch to the soft tyres in the second session, which defines the starting tyre, after locking his brakes and damaging one of his medium tyres.

McLaren's Lando Norris took an excellent third, ahead of Red Bull's Sergio Perez.

The second Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas was only sixth, also behind the Ferrari of Carlos Sainz.

Verstappen delivered the pole lap he almost managed in Saudi Arabia last weekend.

In Jeddah, he was on for one of the laps of the season only to crash at the final corner. Instead, the blow for Hamilton came at the final race.

Verstappen was aided by a slipstream from Perez, which gained him 0.2secs on the straight, but he was also nearly the same margin quicker than Hamilton in the final sector, which has most of the corners.

Verstappen said: "It's an amazing feeling. Incredibly happy with this. It is of course what we wanted but it is never easy, especially with their form recently."

And he played down the disadvantage of starting on the soft, despite having sworn in the cockpit when he first locked the wheel, knowing that it meant he would be forced to go to the softs.

"I felt good on both tyres," he said. "In the evening, it is a bit cooler so a bit easier for the soft tyres. We will see tomorrow."

Hamilton, who received boos from the some of the crowd as he did his television interview after the session, said: "Max did a great lap today so we just couldn't compete with that time at the end there.

"In the first lap, I dropped a bit of time in Turn Five but the last lap was nice and clean. I just couldn't go any quicker. I couldn't beat that time he did today. He fully deserved that pole.

"But it was looking really strong through practice."

Red Bull and Mercedes will have wanted Perez and Bottas to join their team-mates in the top four, but neither was able to manage it because of an excellent performance from Norris.

The Briton, one of the stars of the season, snuck ahead of Perez by just 0.016secs to put his McLaren at the head of the second row.

Norris: "We were confident all weekend we could get to qualifying and do a good performance but probably not to be this high on the grid."

And he said he was not sure how to handle the first lap, whether to get in the middle of the title fight or not, if he had the opportunity.

Bottas' performance will have been a disappointment to Mercedes, as it effectively removes their options to use him as a strategic option against Verstappen in the race.

He is in a Ferrari sandwich, with Charles Leclerc in seventh, ahead of the Alpha Tauri of Yuki Tsunoda, Alpine's Esteban Ocon and McLaren's Daniel Ricciardo.

bbc
 
Abu Dhabi GP: Lewis Hamilton says Max Verstappen had 'fantastic' pole lap but remains optimistic for F1 decider

Lewis Hamilton is optimistic he remains in a "good position" heading into Sunday's decisive title-deciding Abu Dhabi GP despite losing out on pole position to title rival Max Verstappen.

Mercedes boss Toto Wolff, meanwhile, conceded after qualifying that it was "one-zero" to Red Bull in the Decider in the Desert but then declared: "This is a long race and... it's Lewis Hamilton in the car."

In yet another twist to a gripping season, Mercedes' apparent single-lap pace advantage around the revamped Yas Marina circuit from practice disappeared when it mattered most in qualifying as the impressive Verstappen delivered a dominant Q3 performance in his Red Bull to claim his 10th pole position of the year - but first in five races - from Hamilton, by three tenths of a second.

Verstappen and Hamilton are tied on points at the top of the championship. Whoever finishes ahead of the other in the top eight is world champion, while Verstappen will take the crown on countback of wins if they are still deadlocked on points at the end of Sunday's 58-lap race.

"Max did a great lap today. We just couldn't compete with that time at the end there," said Hamilton, who starts from second place on the front row.

"It was looking really strong through practice.

"That was a fantastic lap from him. We're in a good position with our tyres for tomorrow and I hope we can have a good race."

Speaking to Sky Sports F1 soon afterwards, Hamilton said: "In an ideal world we were meant to be on pole. We thought we had the pace, but they were rapid right at the end.

"I'm not really that surprised because if you look at their pace on some the days there was bits of time that they were doing that they couldn't complete it. And you saw in the last race [in Saudi Arabia] he was almost four tenths up into the last corner, so their car is very, very strong at the moment.

"So it was kind of expected: today he didn't crash, he finished it, and it's the same as the last race."

Behind their big rival on the front row, but Hamilton and Mercedes potentially hold a strategic advantage for the decisive 58-lap race due to the fact they will start on the more durable medium tyres compared to the softs that Verstappen is locked into.

Red Bull's initial plan had also been to start on the yellow-marked mediums but Verstappen damaged his set with a lock-up at the start of a second push lap in Q2 and had to switch down to the red-marked softs.

Asked what this tyre difference will mean for the short run to the first corner on Sunday, Hamilton said: "It will be very, very hard to beat him, it's not very far down to Turn One, and he's on the soft tyre which usually gives you an extra four metres or something like that."

Hamilton, who has three other cars on soft tyres directly behind him, added: "The soft runners are going to be like busy bees of course, they are going to be around me a lot. It's not going to be as easy on the medium; but we'll see. I hope it's the better tyre for the long run, we'll wait and see."

https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/2...ole-lap-but-remains-optimistic-for-f1-decider
 
Not long to wait now.

Feels like we are destined for a dramatic and an incident-packed finale.
 
Unbelievable we have come down to the last race level on points, with a front row lockout by the two of them, on different strategies as well...so many possibilities.

This has been such an epic season and any result tonight, this one will be to remember for years
 
The *****ly Dutchman or the people's champion; fighter of human rights and endorser of companies that are responsible for one of the worst disasters in modern history.

Verstappen will 'fly' away from the off I reckon. Will secure with a big margin
 
Verstappen immediately loses his pole advantage as Hamilton goes past him!
 
Lewis with his medium tyres pulled off a great strategy, max struggled with his softs.
 
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Wow brilliant from Checo to slow Hamilton down and allow Verstappen to catch up.
 
MIRACLE! Verstappen has done it on the last lap!!!
 
Brilliant Brilliant end. Controversial to the end, just like the entire season.

Well deserved Max. The new Formula one world champion
 
What an incredible finish! Im not really a F1 fan but that finish ranks as one of the top sporting moments ive seen.
 
Not surprised, they’ve been out to get him all season. The racist agenda and extreme levels of controversy have ensured the outcome, appalling stuff.
 
<b>Guardian Formula One: Max Verstappen beats Lewis Hamilton to F1 world title on last lap in Abu Dhabi</b>

— Verstappen overtakes champion on final lap after safety car

— Hamilton had led for most of race before dramatic late twist

Max Verstappen has won his first Formula One world title after winning the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, edging out championship rival Lewis Hamilton in a dramatic and controversial final-lap shootout.

Hamilton was able to keep his fierce rival at arm’s length after overtaking him on the first lap, before the safety car came out after Nicholas Latifi crashed out with six laps to go. That left Verstappen right behind him when the race restarted, and the Red Bull man took his chance to win in extraordinary fashion, overtaking on the final lap.

The defending champion had made the perfect start as he beat Verstappen off the line and led into the first corner. The pair almost collided at turn seven on the first lap, with Hamilton running wide to stay in front as Verstappen pushed to regain the lead.

The race stewards did not take any further action over the incident, a decision which left Verstappen and Red Bull outraged. The Dutchman struggled to keep pace on soft tyres and pitted at the end of lap 13, switching to hard tyres and forcing Hamilton to stop on the next lap.

Verstappen’s teammate, Sergio Pérez, found himself in the race lead and worked hard to stop Hamilton retaking it allowing Verstappen to close the gap again with 20 laps gone. Hamilton quickly built a comfortable lead but the introduction of a virtual safety car on lap 38 allowed his rival to pit quickly again and briefly raise hopes of a fightback.

Those hopes looked dashed until Latifi’s crash and a dramatic, unexpected finale. A shell-shocked Hamilton came home second, with Carlos Sainz (Ferrari) in third after Pérez retired late in the race.
 
What an unreal end to the season. I was sad to see Hamilton miss out but Verstappen has earned it. He's been so aggressive this year and you can see he wanted just a little bit more.

This race reminded me of 2008 when Hamilton won his maiden F! championship on the last lap.

This season needs a Netflix/Amazon documentary or maybe even a film of its own! Literally couldn't write a better script.
 
Not surprised, they’ve been out to get him all season. The racist agenda and extreme levels of controversy have ensured the outcome, appalling stuff.

Ooh come on..

Max had so many things going against him. Remember GP in England? Bottas crashing into Max?

Also today Max overtook him and got hit.

Verstappen has done an amazing job in that Red Bull.
 
Ooh come on..

Max had so many things going against him. Remember GP in England? Bottas crashing into Max?

Also today Max overtook him and got hit.

Verstappen has done an amazing job in that Red Bull.

Racism played a huge part but Hamilton stuck his neck too far out and the Arabs did a number on him today
 
So glad MV won! Well done!

Though laughing at those who are claiming LH lost because of racism. LOL! Get real!
 
I dont watch F1 much so am out of the loop but can someone explain the alleged racism?

Did it only start this season because I guess it wasn't an issue when he won all those times.
 
I dont watch F1 much so am out of the loop but can someone explain the alleged racism?

Did it only start this season because I guess it wasn't an issue when he won all those times.

If LH loses, it’s down to racism, if he wins it’s down to skill. The woke mentality.

There was no racism, LH got his due for playing dirty all season and bringing politics into F1.
 
If LH loses, it’s down to racism, if he wins it’s down to skill. The woke mentality.

There was no racism, LH got his due for playing dirty all season and bringing politics into F1.

This.
If there is a victim its Max, so many calls went against him and 2 times he had 0 point due to both MERC drivers crashing him out.

Racism being used as an excuse is just so sorry and pathetic!
 
Stop tagging me please, everyone is entitled to their opnion! LEWIS THE GOAT.
 
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A bit sad that the racism card is so prominent while (go and check the facts) Max got so many calls against him.

Anyways Max won and that doesnt mean Lewis is not a great driver but overall, 22 races this season, Max deserved the title.

Have a good evening!
 
Mercedes have lodged two official protests following the hugely dramatic end to the Abu Dhabi GP that saw Max Verstappen move ahead of Lewis Hamilton to clinch the race and title win.

In another twist to an incredible championship, Mercedes have alleged a breach against the classification after the late decision regarding lapped cars, and against Verstappen for overtaking Hamilton under the Safety Car.

Red Bull team representatives have now left lengthy meetings with Race Stewards.

Mercedes' protests follow late controversy at Yas Marina, as a Safety Car wiped out Hamilton's big advantage out in front and allowed Verstappen to pit for fresh soft tyres but still stay second in the title decider.

There were five lapped cars between Verstappen and Hamilton as of Lap 57 of 58, although F1 Race Control then allowed those cars to un-lap themselves before signalling an end of the Safety Car period, leading to one final lap of the race and championship.

Utilising his tyre advantage, Verstappen passed Hamilton into Turn 5 to, seemingly, clinch his maiden title.

Verstappen passes Hamilton on last lap for title after huge drama

But Mercedes are protesting "against the classification established at the end of the competition", alleging a breach of Article 48.12 of the FIA Sporting Regulations which states that "any cars that have been lapped by the leader will be required to pass the cars on the lead lap and the safety car".

Daniel Ricciardo, Lance Stroll and Mick Schumacher, who had been lapped but were not in between Hamilton and Verstappen like the other five cars, did not un-lap themselves.

They are also querying Verstappen's conduct under the Safety Car. Article 48.8 of the same regulations is: "No driver may overtake another car on the track, including the safety car, until he passes the line for the first time after the safety car has returned to the pits."

Mercedes have not yet given any post-race TV interviews and Hamilton was not in the usual press conference alongside Verstappen. Told of their protests, Verstappen, who has spent lots of time with the stewards this year, said: "Not much to say about that. I think that sums up a little bit the season."

What are Mercedes alleging and what could be the penalty?
It was one of the most incredible finales to any race let along the title-deciding one, and it certainly all went against Hamilton and Mercedes. Although what is now left to decide, is whether it was also against the rules the FIA sets. Investigations may last long into the Abu Dhabi evening.

Verstappen, after pitting for soft tyres following Nicholas Latifi's crash, initially had five cars - Lando Norris, the two Alpines, Charles Leclerc and Sebastian Vettel - between him and Lewis Hamilton under the Safety Car. And at first, it seemed that Michael Masi and F1 Race Control, who were in contact with all the teams, were not going to move those cars, splitting Verstappen from Hamilton for the resumption.

But late into Lap 57 they allowed just those five cars to pass Hamilton and the Safety Car.

Hamilton was then a sitting duck for the last lap.

Christian Horner had his say after Max Verstappen won the Abu Dhabi GP and his maiden title in extraordinary circumstances when Nicholas Latifi's crash led to a safety car late on.

"What Mercedes are upset about is that the other cars behind, so Ricciardo, Stroll and Schumacher, weren't asked to pass. So they're saying, all the cars should have been allowed to pass, not just those," said Sky F1's Karun Chandhok.

"From an FIA standpoint, I think if they'd waited for those three cars, we would not have had the final lap of racing."

Although Sky F1's Martin Brundle questioned what the penalty could even be for such a scenario. "The question for me is if the procedures weren't followed, what is the remedy?" he said.

"Mercedes will say they want a lap back, I'm not sure where the precedent would be for that. Letting the lapped cars un-lap themselves was brought in to stop them interfering in the main race.

"I believe the lapped teams were pushing like crazy for the information, and Michael Masi didn't want to let them through while there was a break-down and marshals on track, because when you release someone, you go like hell.

"There's a lot of technicality in this, but I go back to my point, what's the remedy if the FIA didn't follow their own procedures? It's a lawyer's job sorting this one out. It's not a sporting one."

However Sky F1's Nico Rosberg added: "It's the fact they let half of them un-lap, and then also it says by regulation you need to wait another lap to then do the start. So there's a lot of things where he [Masi] didn't follow the rules."

Mercedes other protest regards whether Verstappen overtook Hamilton under the Safety Car, and in the final sector the Dutchman did appear to edge ahead of the slow-moving Mercedes - although pictures weren't clear-cut.

And Verstappen was well behind Hamilton when he did put the foot down to start the 58th and final lap.

"On this one, if you really take what is written, he was for a fraction of a second ever so slightly ahead," said Rosberg. "But come on, we're trying to decide a championship. This one for me, I think shouldn't apply."

Sky F1's Ted Kravitz said that the penalty for the offence, if Verstappen is found guilty, could be a five seconds penalty which - as Hamilton was 2.2s down at the chequered flag - would hand the Englishman the race and title win as the drivers were level on points going into the decider.

What's been said about the incidents?

Understandably, there has been plenty of debate in the paddock about the end of the race, particularly F1's decision to allow one final lap. Red Bull, as to be expected, praised the move.

"Everything was clear, so why would you then run another lap behind the Safety Car?" said Verstappen. "When everything is clear, you have to release the track so I think that's a fair point from the Race Director.

"Of course it worked for me but it can also work against me."

Team boss Christian Horner stated: "We were screaming at him [Michael Masi} 'let them race'. That's what we've been talking about all year and this championship came down to the last lap. A great strategy call to make that pit stop, to take that set of softs and then it was down to Max and make it happen.

"It's unheard of to leave the cars un-lapped. You could see they wanted to get the race going again and they don't need to catch up the back of the pack. They made absolutely the right call - difficult circumstances and they called it right."

But while Mercedes have not yet commented, other drivers weren't so sure.

George Russell, who is joining Mercedes next year, called the decision "unacceptable". "Max is an absolutely fantastic driver who has had an incredible season and I have nothing but huge respect for him," he posted on Twitter.

"But what just happened is absolutely unacceptable. I cannot believe what we've just seen."

Norris, who was one of the drivers to un-lap themselves, added: "I'm not too sure what was said from the FIA.

"At first we weren't allowed to overtake, as the backmarkers, so if that influenced decisions to Mercedes and to Lewis and that's the reason they didn't do their pit-stop.

"But then the FIA suddenly changed their minds and they were allowed to let us past. That's where I'm not so sure. For it to end like that, I'm not so sure."

SKY
 
The racism calls are ridiculous however the decision at the end was farcical, it was literally against the rules

And that was only done so they get an exciting finish, that's not Max's fault but Masi has made a pigs ear of this
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">BREAKING: The FIA Stewards have dismissed Mercedes' protests against the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix final classification <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/AbuDhabiGP?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#AbuDhabiGP</a> &#55356;&#56806;&#55356;&#56810; <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/F1?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#F1</a> <a href="https://t.co/VPNIfaFDMC">pic.twitter.com/VPNIfaFDMC</a></p>— Formula 1 (@F1) <a href="https://twitter.com/F1/status/1470108100862619653?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">December 12, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Ok maybe not racism as such but Hamilton has been getting a bit ott with his hypocritical criticism and has always been breaking barriers. It's been extremely tough for him and he's been nigh on unstoppable the last 9 years The one time there was a chance he get beaten and FIA ripped up the rulebook. Had there been no stoppage Hamilton would've had to career out of the race
 
Formula 1 stewards have rejected both of Mercedes' protests over the dramatic late stages of the Abu Dhabi GP, confirming Max Verstappen as the race winner and 2021 world champion ahead of Lewis Hamilton.

The drama is not over yet, however, as Mercedes have lodged their intention to appeal the verdicts, which were released long after an extraordinary and controversial race finale.

On Sunday night at least, Red Bull and Verstappen were celebrating his maiden F1 title.

"It's disappointing we had to go through that," Red Bull boss Christian Horner, who three times went to see stewards after the race along with Mercedes team representatives, told Sky Sports News.

"It's been an amazing year, I'm proud of Max and the whole team. He's the world champion and the deserving world champion."

"Relieved," said Verstappen. "It's been a very stressful day."

Mercedes lodged two official protests following an incredible title decider that ended with Verstappen passing Hamilton on the very last lap. One was regarding the restart procedure from F1 race director Michael Masi, and another alleging that Verstappen overtook Hamilton under the Safety Car.

The team were particularly infuriated by the fact five of the lapped cars that initially separated Hamilton and Verstappen under the Safety Car were allowed to un-lap themselves before the race soon restarted again for the final lap, which Verstappen had a huge tyre advantage for.

The stewards deliberated for over three hours before dismissing both protests.

Red Bull Team Principal Christian Horner says the F1 stewards made the right decision after Mercedes protested against Max Verstappen's victory at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.
Soon after, Mercedes lodged their intention to appeal and they now have 96 hours to launch an official appeal.

Coincidentally, that timeframe takes them up to Thursday night when Verstappen is due to be crowned champion at the FIA Awards Ceremony.

SKY
 
In my opinion, max should respect the integrity of the game and give the title to Hamilton.
 
all this racism talk is nonsense, anyone who has watched this f1 season from the start will know how many times lewis was favored ahead of max in many key decisions, even in the first lap of the final there was a debatable call at turn 5 i think where lewis should have allowed max back in front after going off the track but stewards claimed the gap had already closed.

Mercedes made a risky call not call in hamilton and change his tyres earlier and it would have paid off had the race not restarted, you could hear the realization in lewis voices when he was told max would be right behind him with fresh tyres if the safety car went off, brilliant end to a wonderful season, i think max deserved the win.
 
Racism talk is non sense. But that doesn't mean Hamilton wasn't treated fairly in this race.

Max needed all the luck and support from everyone while Hamilton was racing everything in his own.

The winning of max was a collaborative approach not only from the team but other factors also. Hamilton on the other hand raced like a true racer.

In my books, Hamilton is the actual winner.
 
Racism talk is non sense. But that doesn't mean Hamilton wasn't treated fairly in this race.

Max needed all the luck and support from everyone while Hamilton was racing everything in his own.

The winning of max was a collaborative approach not only from the team but other factors also. Hamilton on the other hand raced like a true racer.

In my books, Hamilton is the actual winner.

Did you actually watch the other 21 races?
 
Merc are really not happy about this. Serves them right for not improving the car when Sir Lewis asked.

Congrats to Verstappen who has been brilliant all season. Two knights of the track. The young warrior overcomes the veteran. This time.
 
Max Verstappen: Formula 1 world champion reveals messages from Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes

Max Verstappen says he was congratulated by both Lewis Hamilton and Mercedes team boss Toto Wolff after winning the Formula 1 title.

Verstappen triumphed after a controversial end to the season amid arguments over the rules after a late-race safety car period that tore the title from Hamilton's grasp.

Verstappen said: "Toto sent me a text - congratulations on the season and that I deserved to win, that was very nice." The Red Bull driver added: "Lewis is a great sportsman in general."

Verstappen was talking in his first news conference since becoming champion, and he admitted he was suffering a little after partying through the night in celebration with the Red Bull team.

He said he understood how much Hamilton would have been hurting.

The Briton led for the vast majority of the race and was on course for the title, only to lose it on the final lap.

"Of course it helps if you have already seven titles," Verstappen said. "That comforts him a bit.

"I think if it was the other way around, it would have been more painful for me because I didn't have one.

"Lewis came up to me and congratulated me. It must have been very tough in that last lap. It also shows the respect we have for each other.

"Of course we had our tough times through the season but we respect what we're doing and we were pushing each other to the limit and it has been very enjoyable racing against him."

Race stewards rejected two protests lodged by Mercedes against the way race director Michael Masi conducted the final laps.

The team have lodged an intention to appeal against the decision and have until about 19:00 GMT on Thursday to decide whether to press ahead.

Mercedes objected to the fact that Masi had not followed the rules or normal protocols governing the operation of the safety car.

The safety car period left Hamilton, on worn-out, old tyres, exposed to Verstappen, who had fitted fresh ones when the safety car was deployed, a decision Mercedes could not risk taking because it would have cost them the lead.

Mercedes argue that had the rules been followed correctly, the race would not have been restarted and Hamilton would be champion.

Verstappen said that the controversy did not take the shine off his win.

"I think it's a bit of a part of the whole season - it's been like that already a few times, with protests or whatever," he said.

"It is what it is. That's racing sometimes. For me, nothing really changed. We were still celebrating and we did win it on track. We didn't do anything wrong. We just raced when there was a green light. That made it enjoyable for us.

"Lately we weren't the quickest team anymore and I could see my lead getting smaller. It has been very hard.

"Last year some races didn't feel like a work-out but this year most of the races have been flat out between me and Lewis - it has been completely different physically.

"You could see some races when we jumped out of the car we were quite run down, but that's how it should be."

Verstappen revealed that he had had a phone call with Red Bull co-owner Dietrich Mateschitz after the race and expressed his gratitude and commitment to the team, who made him the youngest F1 driver in history in 2015 at the age of 17.

"I thanked him for the support and said I hoped we could do this for many more years and of course together," Verstappen said.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/59643983
 
Some images and video from this very memorable race

353fe2c2-e769-456f-b58a-85afdf78b645.jpg

5bb89379-1001-4eb6-a57e-ab66cbf57a65.jpg

<div style="width: 100%; height: 0px; position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.604%;"><iframe src="https://streamable.com/e/xkv33s" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="100%" allowfullscreen style="width: 100%; height: 100%; position: absolute;"></iframe></div>
 
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Abu Dhabi GP: Lewis Hamilton claimed F1 title-deciding race was 'manipulated' in radio message

Lewis Hamilton said "this has been manipulated" in a radio message to his Mercedes team after the controversial ending to the Abu Dhabi GP.

In a message aired via car on-board channels, Hamilton suggested to race engineer Peter Bonnington with four corners of the race to go: "This has been manipulated, man."

Hamilton lost the title after being overtaken on the race's final lap by Max Verstappen after a Safety Car triggered a sequence of events that incensed Mercedes.

Mercedes were angered by Race Control's handling of the restart procedure after only the five lapped cars between Hamilton and Verstappen were able to overtake and the race restarted at the end of that same lap.

Stewards heard their case but dismissed it, saying FIA race director Michael Masi had acted within the regulations. But Mercedes have lodged an intention to appeal the decision and have until Thursday evening to formalise any challenge.

Mercedes continue to assess their options.

The only post-race interview Hamilton concluded was his immediate one in parc ferme, in which he sportingly congratulated Verstappen on his title victory.

"Firstly, congratulations to Max and to his team," Hamilton told Sky F1's Jenson Button.

"I think we did an amazing job this year. My team, everyone back at the factory, have worked so hard this whole year, it's been the most difficult of seasons. I'm so proud of them and I'm so grateful to be a part of the journey with them.

"This last part of the season we gave it absolutely everything and never gave up."

Put to him by Button that he appeared confident to come back and fight for an eighth title again next year, Hamilton replied: "Of course I've been feeling good, great, in the car these past couple of months, particularly at the end.

"If I'm honest, we're still in the pandemic and I just really wish everyone to stay safe and have a good Christmas with all their families. Yeah, we'll see about next year."

Although that latter comment about 2022 sparked some social media intrigue, Hamilton signed a new two-year Mercedes deal earlier this season.

https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/1...eciding-race-was-manipulated-in-radio-message
 
Did you actually watch the other 21 races?

Yup. Two wrongs doesn't make it right.

Based on this race isolated, it was Hamilton who was the deserving winner. You can make arguments for other races where you may say that max received short end of the stick which I'll do agree. But in this race, it was Hamilton the true winner.
 
Interesting that Honda has a championship. Toyota cried for many years and spent a huge amount of money but did not succeed.
 
Sir Lewis Hamilton has been knighted in recognition of a glittering career in Formula 1 just days after he controversially lost out on a record eighth title.

Hamilton was dubbed a knight by the Prince of Wales during a Windsor Castle investiture ceremony on Wednesday, but he declined to speak to reporters afterwards.

He was joined by his mother Carmen Lockhart and was all smiles as they posed for pictures in the castle's quadrangle.

When congratulated on his award, Hamilton said: "Thank you."

The 36-year-old is the fourth F1 driver to be knighted, following in the footsteps of Sir Jack Brabham, Sir Stirling Moss and Sir Jackie Stewart, and the first to be awarded the honour while still competing.

Hamilton was recognised in the New Year Honours list following a record-breaking year in which he eclipsed Michael Schumacher's all-time victory tally and emulated the German by winning a seventh world title.

But on Sunday, rival Max Verstappen claimed his first Formula 1 world title after his season-long battle with Hamilton came down to a one-lap shoot-out in Abu Dhabi.

The deployment of the safety car after a late crash at the Yas Marina Circuit wiped out the lead Hamilton had built over his rival, and Verstappen had the advantage as he was using fresher tyres.

After the Red Bull driver stormed past Sir Lewis - who missed out on a fifth title in succession - the British racing star said on the car radio "This has been manipulated, man", but he was later magnanimous in post-race interviews.

He told Sky Sports at the time: "Congratulations to Max and his team. I think we did an amazing job this year. Everyone back at the factory and here worked so hard in this most difficult of seasons."

SKY
 
Sir Lewis Hamilton has been knighted in recognition of a glittering career in Formula 1 just days after he controversially lost out on a record eighth title.

Hamilton was dubbed a knight by the Prince of Wales during a Windsor Castle investiture ceremony on Wednesday, but he declined to speak to reporters afterwards.

He was joined by his mother Carmen Lockhart and was all smiles as they posed for pictures in the castle's quadrangle.

When congratulated on his award, Hamilton said: "Thank you."

The 36-year-old is the fourth F1 driver to be knighted, following in the footsteps of Sir Jack Brabham, Sir Stirling Moss and Sir Jackie Stewart, and the first to be awarded the honour while still competing.

Hamilton was recognised in the New Year Honours list following a record-breaking year in which he eclipsed Michael Schumacher's all-time victory tally and emulated the German by winning a seventh world title.

But on Sunday, rival Max Verstappen claimed his first Formula 1 world title after his season-long battle with Hamilton came down to a one-lap shoot-out in Abu Dhabi.

The deployment of the safety car after a late crash at the Yas Marina Circuit wiped out the lead Hamilton had built over his rival, and Verstappen had the advantage as he was using fresher tyres.

After the Red Bull driver stormed past Sir Lewis - who missed out on a fifth title in succession - the British racing star said on the car radio "This has been manipulated, man", but he was later magnanimous in post-race interviews.

He told Sky Sports at the time: "Congratulations to Max and his team. I think we did an amazing job this year. Everyone back at the factory and here worked so hard in this most difficult of seasons."

SKY

So he finally took the knee in-front of the establishment he’s criticised in the past.
 
A bit sad that the racism card is so prominent while (go and check the facts) Max got so many calls against him.

Anyways Max won and that doesnt mean Lewis is not a great driver but overall, 22 races this season, Max deserved the title.

Have a good evening!

LH deserved to lose. First he goads the ME establishment with his rainbow helmet stunt; then he requests Mercedes to paint his car black. He was politics in top gear. No need for it.

If it weren’t for LH’s wokedom nonsense, he’d be far more respected as a driver.
 
Max Verstappen has admitted that he and Lewis Hamilton "sometimes hated each other" this year but that the mutual respect between them remains high.

The Red Bull driver said a shared moment after the title was decided at the controversial Abu Dhabi Grand Prix returned their relationship to normal.

"You look each other in the eye," he said. "You don't say a lot but you do relate a lot and you really appreciate the fight.

"Sometimes we did hate each other, but that's fine. That's the competitive spirit of both of us. He is an incredible driver."

Hamilton knighted by Prince Charles
Verstappen was speaking on his return to Red Bull's headquarters for the first time since winning the title.

And the Dutchman admitted that his title win, achieved in controversial circumstances after a late-race safety car, had been fortunate.

"We have won it on track," he said. "People say it was a lucky win. Absolutely, the win was very lucky.

"But we also have been very unlucky throughout the season, otherwise the championship would have been decided way earlier, even with the dominance Mercedes had towards the end of the season.

"I'm like, 'Well, sometimes a little bit of luck in your life is nice as well.'"

The 24-year-old Dutchman's driving has been criticised this year for being too forceful and he has been penalised a number of times for incidents with Hamilton.

But Verstappen said he did not expect to change his approach to wheel-to-wheel racing even if Formula 1 officials keep to their current line that he is not allowed to force drivers off the track when trying to attack or defend.

"Probably not because maybe I just have to make them realise, being forceful," Verstappen said.

"I have a very good relationship with them. When I'm in there [the stewards' office], it's not like I don't like them. I go to them and we have a good chat and we talk about it and it doesn't go into my favour.

"It's not like I then dislike them or whatever; I just don't agree with what they decide.

"From my side, I'm like: 'Well, that's how I race and that's how I think it's fair but I don't agree with that particular decision.'"

And he said he felt for race director Michael Masi, who has been heavily criticised for his handling of the race and a series of inconsistent decisions this year, and who is under pressure in his role.

"It's a really tough job he has," Verstappen said. "People say maybe he needs help. Yeah, fair point. Everyone needs help. I need help as well.

"Michael is a nice guy and he tries his very best and it's very unfair to now start hating on him because it is a very tough job."

Verstappen also spoke to BBC sports editor Dan Roan on Wednesday, covering a range of topics.

Here are the best bits from the interview.

Lewis Hamilton was on course for the title, but was left exposed on old tyres as the race restarted for one final lap after a safety car - Verstappen then passed him to win. Hamilton's Mercedes team say they will appeal against a decision to reject their post-race protest against the handling of the race. Verstappen says he has "no doubts" about keeping his title despite the appeal still being a possibility.

I can't speak for them [Mercedes]. I think races should be won on the track and for the whole season we have been doing that.

Across the whole season we had the most poles and most wins. It was intense and pretty insane with the last race but I do think as a team we deserved it.

When you look at all the emotions from everyone throughout that final race, I think it was actually very good for the sport what was happening throughout the race.

I look at myself, what can I do better? That's the same for the organisers. They will always say, 'what can we do better for next year?' That's what you have to keep in mind.

I wasn't even sure when it was going to restart. Then I heard it was going to restart and I was behind him [Hamilton].

I was like, well that's my only shot at it. It's going to be second or first. I was very ready for it.

The problem I had when I crossed the start/finish line to try and attack him, I got a massive cramp in my leg so I had to deal with that as well.

You see all the footage of people going crazy in the garage or on the pit wall but I had to first go for the title and deal with a cramp in my leg as well, which is very painful.

Because of the adrenalin, you have to deal with it. It wasn't easy but that last lap was pretty intense.

I knew I had the grip advantage but you still need to go for the pass. Luckily it all worked out.

Lewis Hamilton was magnanimous in his post-race interviews, but said over his team radio at the end of the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix that the race had been "manipulated".

Emotions run very high. It has done before throughout the season, so I think that's normal.

What was nice was that immediately after the race, he came up to me. We had our moments throughout the year when we clashed but we really respect each other.

We have pushed each other to the limit. Most of the time - all the racers - we were on the limit of what we could do, what the car could do.

Also for the teams, they were under pressure to make the right calls. We always have to deliver our best otherwise we knew the other guy would beat us. We can look back at it and really cherish that.

It must have been incredibly tough on Lewis and the team but he has won seven titles so maybe that comforts him in a way. Next year I'm sure he will be delivering to his very best, which is a very, very high level.

It depends on how our cars are but personally I hope [the rivalry with Hamilton continues]. He's been an amazing competitor. It has been a real pleasure driving against him.

'My dad threw everything at this' - on family

Verstappen has been supported throughout his career by his father Jos, who is a former grand prix driver himself.

[Winning the world title] is a life mission my dad and myself had from when I was a little kid.

My dad basically threw everything at it. He believed in me - he went all the way. When you achieve something like this, it was very emotional talking to my dad.

You think back to all the travels throughout Europe you did in the van in go-karting back in the day working towards that ultimate goal.

My close family, friends, my mum, my sister - it's been a real family effort because they had to suffer for it. That made it that extra special for sure.

t has been hectic all the way through so I'm also pretty tired at the moment after always trying to be perfect and on top of my game. Winning the championship, your body needs a bit of time to recover.

Confidence has never been a problem because as a driver, you always have to believe you can do it. Now that you have achieved it, it just relaxes you a bit.

If I don't win the race and come second next year, I will still be upset - I still want to win.

Anything that happens now is a bonus but that doesn't mean that once I have the opportunity to win, I won't go for it in the same way again.

Not much will change but in the back of your mind you are a bit more relaxed because your ultimate goal you have achieved already.

For now I'm not thinking about it too much, I just need a few weeks to relax. I know once I'm ready again to go, I'm going to give it everything I can.

https://www.bbc.com/sport/formula1/59672474
 
Mercedes have decided to withdraw their appeal against the controversial finish to the title-deciding Abu Dhabi GP
 
Lewis Hamilton: Toto Wolff says he can give no assurances British star will continue in F1 after Abu Dhabi pain
Mercedes' team principal Toto Wolff says Lewis Hamilton and the team have been left "disillusioned" by events in Abu Dhabi and that they will "never get over" season finale; Hamilton signed a new two-year contract with Mercedes earlier in the season

Toto Wolff says he can give no assurances Lewis Hamilton will continue in F1 after Sunday's controversial ending to the title-deciding Abu Dhabi GP.

Mercedes' team principal Wolff says Hamilton and the team have been left "disillusioned" by events of the season finale.

The Austrian "would very much hope Lewis continues racing" but also suggested Hamilton "will never overcome the pain and the distress that was caused on Sunday".

Max Verstappen, on fresh tyres, overtook Hamilton on the race's final lap to claim the race win and world title after a controversial Safety Car restart procedure.

On Thursday, Mercedes announced they had withdrawn their appeal against the race result, but remain deeply dismayed about how the race played out.

"Lewis and I are disillusioned at the moment," said Wolff. "We are not disillusioned of the sport, we love the sport with every bone in our body and we love it because the stopwatch never lies.


"But if we break that fundamental principle of sporting fairness and authenticity of the sport, that suddenly the stopwatch doesn't become relevant anybody because we are exposed to random decision making it is clear that you start to question if all the work that you have been putting in, all the sweat tears and blood can actually be demonstrated in terms of bringing the best possible performances on track because it can be taken away randomly.

"It's going to take a long time for us to digest what has happened on Sunday. I don't think we will ever come over it, that's not possible.

"And certainly not him (Hamilton) as a driver. I would very much hope the two of us and the rest of the team we can work through the events... But he will never overcome the pain and the distress that was caused on Sunday."

Hamilton signed a new two-year contract with Mercedes earlier in the season.

Asked directly whether Hamilton, who turns 37 in January, would be back next year, Wolff indicated that was not a certainty.

"I would very much hope Lewis continues racing because he is the greatest driver of all time," he said.

"As a racer his heart will say I need to continue because he's at the peak of his game," he added. "But we have to overcome the pain that was caused upon him on Sunday. He is a man with clear values."

Wolff said both he and Hamilton will not attend Thursday night's FIA prize-giving ceremony. Mercedes chief technical officer James Allison would be in Paris to collect the trophy for the team's record-extending eighth Constructors' Championship.

"I won't be there because of my loyalty to Lewis and because of my own personal integrity," he said.

'We were deeply wronged on Sunday'
After talks with Mercedes this week, the FIA has committed to conducting a review of the events of Abu Dhabi in order to learn lessons and make changes for 2022 after controversy concerning the Safety Car.

"We will hold them accountable for the actions because we cannot continue in a sport that is meant to be sport followed by entertainment and not the other way around," said Wolff.

"That we are held ransom by ad-hoc decisions in every field, be it technical or sporting, and therefore there needs to be clear measures in place before the start of the season so every driver, every team and the fans understand what is on and what is not on."

Wolff made clear "we believe we had a very strong case" to appeal but ultimately they made the "heavy-hearted" decision not to the proceed to the FIA's own International Court of Appeal "because we wouldn't have gotten the result back".

"If you look at it from the legal side, if it would have been judged in a regular court you are almost guaranteed that we would have won," he said.

"But the problem with the ICA is the way it's structured, the FIA can't really mark their own homework, and there is a different between being right and maintaining justice. There is a lesson to be learned, how can we make sure that going forward in situations like that the right decisions are being taken."

Wolff confirmed that Hamilton had been involved with every step of the process since the aftermath of Sunday's race.

"Neither him nor us want to win a world championship in the court room," the Mercedes team boss added. "But the other side we were deeply wronged on Sunday and it wasn't just a case of a bad call; it was a freestyle reading of the rules and it left Lewis like a sitting duck.

"It was tremendously hard for him and us a team to withdraw the appeal because we were wronged. We deeply believe that in Formula 1, the pinnacle of motor racing, one of the most of the important sports in the world, justice is being done."

FIA race director Michael Masi has come under heavy criticism in the aftermath of the finale and Wolff acknowledged that "the race director s certainly under bigger pressure and some of that s due to our own faults"

But asked if he would seek talks with the Australian, Wolff said: "I'm not interested to having a conversation with Michal Masi. The decisions that have been taken in the last four minutes of this race have dropped Lewis Hamilton of a deserved world championship.

Mercedes withdraw Abu Dhabi appeal
Mercedes have withdrawn their appeal against the controversial finish to the title-deciding Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

In their first comment about the events of last Sunday, Mercedes said they left Abu Dhabi in "disbelief of what we had just witnessed" in regards to the Safety Car procedure and lodged an appeal after the race "in the interest of sporting fairness".

The FIA, F1's governing body, issued a statement on Wednesday night in which they promised to conduct an "analysis and clarification exercise" on what unfolded, together with teams and drivers, to learn lessons for 2022. They also described the fallout from the controversy as "tarnishing the image of the championship".

Mercedes said that "together with Lewis, we have deliberated carefully over how to respond" to Sunday's race.

Having been in "constructive dialogue" with the FIA and F1, Mercedes said they welcomed the governing body's steps and now would work with stakeholders to "build a better Formula 1 - for every team and every fan who loves this sport as much as we do".

Mercedes also made clear they would "hold the FIA accountable for this process".

https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/1...star-will-continue-in-f1-after-abu-dhabi-pain
 
Lewis Hamilton: Toto Wolff says he can give no assurances British star will continue in F1 after Abu Dhabi pain
Mercedes' team principal Toto Wolff says Lewis Hamilton and the team have been left "disillusioned" by events in Abu Dhabi and that they will "never get over" season finale; Hamilton signed a new two-year contract with Mercedes earlier in the season

Toto Wolff says he can give no assurances Lewis Hamilton will continue in F1 after Sunday's controversial ending to the title-deciding Abu Dhabi GP.

Mercedes' team principal Wolff says Hamilton and the team have been left "disillusioned" by events of the season finale.

The Austrian "would very much hope Lewis continues racing" but also suggested Hamilton "will never overcome the pain and the distress that was caused on Sunday".

Max Verstappen, on fresh tyres, overtook Hamilton on the race's final lap to claim the race win and world title after a controversial Safety Car restart procedure.

On Thursday, Mercedes announced they had withdrawn their appeal against the race result, but remain deeply dismayed about how the race played out.

"Lewis and I are disillusioned at the moment," said Wolff. "We are not disillusioned of the sport, we love the sport with every bone in our body and we love it because the stopwatch never lies.


"But if we break that fundamental principle of sporting fairness and authenticity of the sport, that suddenly the stopwatch doesn't become relevant anybody because we are exposed to random decision making it is clear that you start to question if all the work that you have been putting in, all the sweat tears and blood can actually be demonstrated in terms of bringing the best possible performances on track because it can be taken away randomly.

"It's going to take a long time for us to digest what has happened on Sunday. I don't think we will ever come over it, that's not possible.

"And certainly not him (Hamilton) as a driver. I would very much hope the two of us and the rest of the team we can work through the events... But he will never overcome the pain and the distress that was caused on Sunday."

Hamilton signed a new two-year contract with Mercedes earlier in the season.

Asked directly whether Hamilton, who turns 37 in January, would be back next year, Wolff indicated that was not a certainty.

"I would very much hope Lewis continues racing because he is the greatest driver of all time," he said.

"As a racer his heart will say I need to continue because he's at the peak of his game," he added. "But we have to overcome the pain that was caused upon him on Sunday. He is a man with clear values."

Wolff said both he and Hamilton will not attend Thursday night's FIA prize-giving ceremony. Mercedes chief technical officer James Allison would be in Paris to collect the trophy for the team's record-extending eighth Constructors' Championship.

"I won't be there because of my loyalty to Lewis and because of my own personal integrity," he said.

'We were deeply wronged on Sunday'
After talks with Mercedes this week, the FIA has committed to conducting a review of the events of Abu Dhabi in order to learn lessons and make changes for 2022 after controversy concerning the Safety Car.

"We will hold them accountable for the actions because we cannot continue in a sport that is meant to be sport followed by entertainment and not the other way around," said Wolff.

"That we are held ransom by ad-hoc decisions in every field, be it technical or sporting, and therefore there needs to be clear measures in place before the start of the season so every driver, every team and the fans understand what is on and what is not on."

Wolff made clear "we believe we had a very strong case" to appeal but ultimately they made the "heavy-hearted" decision not to the proceed to the FIA's own International Court of Appeal "because we wouldn't have gotten the result back".

"If you look at it from the legal side, if it would have been judged in a regular court you are almost guaranteed that we would have won," he said.

"But the problem with the ICA is the way it's structured, the FIA can't really mark their own homework, and there is a different between being right and maintaining justice. There is a lesson to be learned, how can we make sure that going forward in situations like that the right decisions are being taken."

Wolff confirmed that Hamilton had been involved with every step of the process since the aftermath of Sunday's race.

"Neither him nor us want to win a world championship in the court room," the Mercedes team boss added. "But the other side we were deeply wronged on Sunday and it wasn't just a case of a bad call; it was a freestyle reading of the rules and it left Lewis like a sitting duck.

"It was tremendously hard for him and us a team to withdraw the appeal because we were wronged. We deeply believe that in Formula 1, the pinnacle of motor racing, one of the most of the important sports in the world, justice is being done."

FIA race director Michael Masi has come under heavy criticism in the aftermath of the finale and Wolff acknowledged that "the race director s certainly under bigger pressure and some of that s due to our own faults"

But asked if he would seek talks with the Australian, Wolff said: "I'm not interested to having a conversation with Michal Masi. The decisions that have been taken in the last four minutes of this race have dropped Lewis Hamilton of a deserved world championship.

Mercedes withdraw Abu Dhabi appeal
Mercedes have withdrawn their appeal against the controversial finish to the title-deciding Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

In their first comment about the events of last Sunday, Mercedes said they left Abu Dhabi in "disbelief of what we had just witnessed" in regards to the Safety Car procedure and lodged an appeal after the race "in the interest of sporting fairness".

The FIA, F1's governing body, issued a statement on Wednesday night in which they promised to conduct an "analysis and clarification exercise" on what unfolded, together with teams and drivers, to learn lessons for 2022. They also described the fallout from the controversy as "tarnishing the image of the championship".

Mercedes said that "together with Lewis, we have deliberated carefully over how to respond" to Sunday's race.

Having been in "constructive dialogue" with the FIA and F1, Mercedes said they welcomed the governing body's steps and now would work with stakeholders to "build a better Formula 1 - for every team and every fan who loves this sport as much as we do".

Mercedes also made clear they would "hold the FIA accountable for this process".

https://www.skysports.com/f1/news/1...star-will-continue-in-f1-after-abu-dhabi-pain

If LH and team are disillusioned then why withdraw the appeal? Hmmmm.
 
Max Verstappen says Lewis Hamilton 'has every reason' to return to F1 next year

Max Verstappen says Lewis Hamilton has every reason to return to Formula 1 next year despite his unhappiness over the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.

Mercedes F1 boss Toto Wolff said on Thursday that Hamilton was "disillusioned" and he could not guarantee he would return next year.

Verstappen said: "I can understand the first few days after a race like that you're not happy.

"But you should also understand this is racing and these things can happen."

Verstappen said seven-time champion Hamilton should spend some time thinking about what he has achieved in F1 - and what he could go on to achieve.

"He should just look back at what he has achieved already," said the Red Bull driver said, who grabbed the championship from Hamilton on the last lap of the Abu Dhabi race after a controversially handled safety-car period.

"That should give him a lot of comfort and it should also be that drive to keep on going because he is still trying to challenge for that eighth title and for sure he can do that next year so I don't see any reason to give up just now."

Verstappen pointed out that Hamilton himself had won a title in similar circumstances, when he deprived Ferrari's Felipe Massa on the last corner of the last lap of the last grand prix in 2008.

"I don't feel sorry [for him] but I can understand that it can be very painful but at the end of the day," he said. "He also won a championship like that."

https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/formula1/59691827
 
Instead of making statements about LH, Max should have taken the moral ground and return the trophy. This win doesn't earn respect.
 
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