Hamilton joins Vettel in the fight for fifth title
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[January 16, 2018]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Formula One entered
a new era in 2017 and next year promises another first even if
Mercedes and Lewis Hamilton keep on winning.
The Briton's fourth title, in the sport's first season under new
U.S.-based owners Liberty Media after the Bernie Ecclestone decades,
has set the scene for an unprecedented battle on the track in 2018.
Never before have two quadruple world champions fought each other
for a fifth crown but Hamilton and Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel will
be lining up to do just that come the Australian season-opener on
March 25.
How they shape up will be fascinating to watch, with Hamilton
staying remarkably cool and composed in 2017 while Vettel let the
rising pressure get to him and occasionally blew his top.
Hamilton rewrote significant chunks of the record books in 2017,
overtaking Jackie Stewart to become his country's most successful
driver of all time and first to take four titles.
He took his tally of wins to 62, more than anyone other than retired
seven-times world champion Michael Schumacher (91), and eclipsed the
German's all-time record of pole positions to end the season with
72.
The 32-year-old scored in every race, while Vettel's challenge faded
amid collisions and mechanical failures.
Mercedes completed the championship double for the fourth year in a
row, despite rule changes that made the cars faster and wider on
fatter tires.
Hamilton won nine of the 20 races while Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel,
the overall runner-up after leading until September, took five.
Ferrari, whose last driver's championship was with Kimi Raikkonen in
2007, aim to be stronger in 2018 -- when there will be one more race
and the engine quota is reduced from four to three per driver.
"I can't expect him to make the same mistakes," said Hamilton before
collecting his winner's trophy. "I've got to make sure I'm even
better next year to stay ahead of him."
MCLAREN REVIVAL?
With Vettel's team mate Raikkonen nearing the end of his career and
Valtteri Bottas some way off Hamilton at Mercedes, Renault must also
raise their game if others are to enter the title reckoning.
The French manufacturer now has former champions McLaren on the list
of engine customers after that team's tortured relationship with
Honda finally ended.
Spaniard Fernando Alonso, a double world champion who missed Monaco
in May to try and win the Indianapolis 500, can hope to be back on
the podium for the first time since 2014 when he was at Ferrari.
Honda, who could at least celebrate Takuma Sato becoming the first
Japanese to win the Indy 500, now focus on Red Bull-owned Toro
Rosso.
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Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton tries to overtake Ferrari's Sebastian
Vettel. REUTERS/Albert Gea/File Photo
Red Bull won three races with Renault engines, with Dutch
20-year-old Max Verstappen and Australian Daniel Ricciardo
increasingly taking the fight to Mercedes and Ferrari.
One of those victories proved a highlight of the season, with
Ricciardo triumphant in Azerbaijan in a cracker of a race.
It was also a low point for Vettel, who collided with Hamilton
behind the safety car in an incident of 'road rage'.
"The worst feeling I had was after Baku I think, just because I sort
of ruined the race with something unnecessary, so I struggled with
that," the Ferrari driver said.
Hamilton won the title in Mexico but singled out winning at
Silverstone as a highlight because of the support he received from
the home fans after the 'negativity' surrounding his absence from an
earlier London event.
That free demonstration was part of Liberty's plans to bring the
sport closer to fans and raise the profile.
The jury remains out on their efforts, with teams concerned about a
drop in revenues next season as a result of the increased spending.
There are also some big battles looming over the sport's direction,
with Ferrari warning they could walk away after contracts expire in
2020 if they do not like what is being offered.
Those who left the scene in 2017, apart from 87-year-old Ecclestone
who was handed an emeritus title and attended only a handful of
races, included retiring Brazilian Felipe Massa and Britain's Jolyon
Palmer.
The Malaysian Grand Prix also bowed out but France returns next
season for the first time since 2008, and as part of an
unprecedented triple header with Austria and Britain, while Germany
is also back after a year's absence.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Pritha Sarkar)
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