Hamilton would have hit Leclerc had
title not been in play
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[September 09, 2019]
By Alan Baldwin
MONZA, Italy (Reuters) - Formula One leader Lewis Hamilton
said he would have been far tougher with Ferrari's Italian Grand
Prix winner Charles Leclerc on Sunday had the Mercedes driver not
been fighting for his sixth world championship.
"I wouldn't have moved. We would have collided," the Briton said of
an incident where he was squeezed off track and forced to cut a
corner by the 21-year-old Monegasque in an aggressive defensive
move.
Hamilton ended the day 63 points clear of his closest rival and
Finnish team mate Valtteri Bottas, who finished second, with seven
of 21 races remaining.
Leclerc won Ferrari's home race from pole position, with Hamilton
putting him under plenty of pressure until his Mercedes's tires had
no life left in them.
Hamilton ended up third, but with a precious extra point for fastest
lap.
Leclerc, who has won the last two races, is fourth overall but 102
points behind the Briton and only mathematically in title contention
against a rival who has finished all but two races this season on
the podium.
"There is absolutely zero issue with us, I think he did an
exceptional job today," Hamilton told reporters after the race when
asked about the incident.
"If we get a moment together we might chat for a second and just
reverse roles and make sure he's cool with it if I'm in that
position and that happens.
"If that's cool, then that's how we are racing."
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Ferrari's Charles Leclerc celebrates winning the race with third
place Mercedes' Lewis Hamilton REUTERS/Massimo Pinca
Hamilton said he respected Leclerc but he was still discovering more
about how the youngster, in only his second season and first with
Ferrari, behaved on track.
"Charles is one of the most respectful drivers," he added. "This is
today the first time I've really come wheel to wheel with him as
such and when you arrive at a new driver you learn how they approach
different scenarios.
"Maybe I'll position the car differently next time, maybe I'll do a
better job."
Bottas, who pitted later and had fresher tires than Hamilton at the
end, moved into second place after Hamilton went straight at the
chicane.
The Briton said he would have let the Finn go past otherwise.
"I knew that he was much, much quicker and had a shot to potentially
win the race," he said. "I think that's the most important point for
the team.
"So in hindsight I didn't have to do that (let him overtake)," he
smiled.
(Reporting by Alan Baldwin, editing by Christian Radnedge)
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