Hamilton can equal pole record, take F1 lead in Hungary
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[July 26, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
BUDAPEST (Reuters) - If all goes to
plan for Lewis Hamilton in Hungary this weekend, the Mercedes driver
will equal one of Michael Schumacher's all-time records and head
into Formula One's summer break as sole leader of the championship.
Hamilton remains a long way off Schumacher's record 91 race wins but
Saturday's qualifying at the Hungaroring could see him equal the
great German's hitherto unmatched 68 pole positions.
A 58th career win for the Briton, and sixth at the circuit outside
Budapest, on Sunday would send the triple world champion off on
vacation with at least a six-point advantage over Ferrari's
Sebastian Vettel.
Four-times champion Vettel has led since winning the Australian
season-opener in March, jointly with Hamilton after China, but the
German arrives in Hungary only a point clear after 10 of 20 races.
Hamilton, beaten by now-retired team mate Nico Rosberg to the 2016
title, but winner in Hungary, has not led the championship on his
own since last September but has the momentum after a crushing home
victory at Silverstone.
"There’s lots more things that can come up in the future but I think
the team’s really energised," he said after winning from a career
67th pole position, adding that Mercedes had "absorbed all the
energy" from the fans at Silverstone.
"So I hope we can take that into the next races."
Mercedes are 55 points clear of Ferrari in the constructors'
standings but team boss Toto Wolff was wary of suggesting the
champions were the favorites again rather than being the 'underdogs'
he had talked of after Monaco.
"The moment you say that, you go to the next race and are slapped in
the face," the Austrian told reporters.
"It is tricky. Our car is not always easy to set up and we have
become much better at doing so in a great team effort.
"But I’d like to see Budapest and how the car works on a low speed,
high temperature track and then maybe have a more complete picture."
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Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton celebrates his win on the podium
REUTERS/Jason Cairnduff
MINIMIZE MISTAKES
With 250 points still to be won in the drivers' championship, Wolff
said it was too early to pick a favorite.
The key, he said, was to extract every inch of performance and
minimize mistakes, mindful that Russia and Monaco had not worked out
for Hamilton despite every expectation of success.
"With these new regulations it’s not set in stone that it works like
it has done in the past," said Wolff.
"Going into the summer break with a lead is nice. But there was a
very famous Austrian skier who was always sector world champion but
never won the championship.
"So I’d like to have the gap (lead) before the holiday, but it
doesn’t mean anything for the world championship."
For Vettel, Hungary is a chance to rebuild his advantage at a track
that also holds good recent memories -- in 2015 the Ferrari driver
won after Hamilton started on pole.
Finnish team mate Kimi Raikkonen, for whom Budapest is almost a home
race, and compatriot Valtteri Bottas in the Mercedes will also be
strong contenders, as will Red Bull's Max Verstappen and Daniel
Ricciardo.
"I love that track and it has always been a good one forme," said
Ricciardo, who won in 2014. "We’ve got lots more grip this year so
it’ll be a bit more fun."
(Editing by Peter Rutherford) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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