Hamilton determined to deliver in Baku
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[June 21, 2017]
By Alan Baldwin
LONDON (Reuters) - Azerbaijan, a new
race last year, is the only grand prix on Formula One's current
calendar that Lewis Hamilton has yet to win and the Briton heads
back to Baku determined to deliver this weekend.
After a dominant weekend in Canada where he led a Mercedes one-two
to regain momentum after a stinging defeat to Ferrari in Monaco,
Hamilton is on a high and with the praise of team boss Toto Wolff
ringing in his ears.
"Lewis is in the best place I have seen him during any of the last
five years since he joined the team," the Austrian said this week.
"Not only because he had a great weekend in Montreal, but because he
is coping so well with the difficult days. This is what the very
best are made of."
Hamilton will also be keen to banish the memory of a disappointing
first visit to the anti-clockwise track running along the shores of
the Caspian Sea and around the walls of the medieval old town.
"Last year I think I was very quick there; I just didn't deliver. So
the plan is to make sure I deliver," he said in Montreal after
closing the gap between him and Ferrari's championship leader
Sebastian Vettel to 12 points.
Hamilton hit the barriers in qualifying in Baku last year, lining up
10th on the grid. He then struggled with engine modes before
eventually finishing fifth.
His then team mate and eventual champion Nico Rosberg, who retired
at the end of last season, took pole, fastest lap and victory in a
race that was designated the European Grand Prix but has since
changed name.
That means that nobody on the current starting grid is a previous
winner in Baku and only Vettel, who was a distant second that day,
and Force India's Mexican Sergio Perez have stood on the podium
there.
FIGHTING DISPLAY
Mercedes struggled in Monaco with getting performance out of the
tyres but, after a huge effort at the factory, were back to their
best in Montreal. Hamilton will apply the lessons from both to the
searing heat of Baku.
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Mercedes’ Lewis Hamilton waves after the qualifying session.
REUTERS/Chris Wattie
"You take each experience and you pile them up. What we learned in
Monaco will definitely impact Baku. It's a much longer circuit; I
think it's very smooth, a lot more flat," he told reporters.
"Downforce efficiency is going to be important there."
Hamilton and Vettel both have three wins from seven races, with
champions Mercedes -- despite trying to portray themselves as
underdogs -- ahead 4-3 thanks to Valtteri Bottas's win in Russia.
Bottas clocked the highest ever recorded speed in a Formula One
session during qualifying in Baku last year with Williams, hitting
373 kph on the longest straight of any race on the calendar.
Vettel showed all his mettle in Canada, however, when he started on
the front row, dropped to last and came back through the field to
fourth with a fighting display that earned him the Driver of the Day
award.
"I wanted to get a trophy. I didn't get one," he said after his
first non-podium finish of the year. He should resolve that on
Sunday.
Behind the leaders, Red Bull's Australian Daniel Ricciardo will be
gunning for a fourth successive podium appearance while Force India
pair Perez and French youngster Esteban Ocon aim for more solid
points.
(Editing by John O'Brien) [© 2017 Thomson Reuters. All
rights reserved.]
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