Lewis Hamilton will stay at McLaren long-term, team expect
McLaren are confident they can secure a long-term deal with Lewis Hamilton when they come to negotiate a new contract this summer.
Hamilton, whose contract runs out this year, has had a frustrating season and has indicated his loyalty to a team who brought him into F1 only goes so far.
Martin Whitmarsh McLaren boss“ There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind”
The contractual situation of other top drivers means he might push for a one-year deal to keep his options open.
But team boss Martin Whitmarsh is "expecting" to seal a longer contract.
McLaren typically prefer driver contracts that last for three years, with the first two years fixed and the third under option - as is the case with the contract Hamilton's team-mate Jenson Button signed in 2011. Hamilton's current contract was for five years.
McLaren started this year with the fastest car but a series of operational problems have blunted Hamilton's championship challenge, and the team have struggled for pace in the last two races.
The 2008 world champion heads into this weekend's German Grand Prix - with the Hungarian race following a week later - in fourth place in the championship, 37 points off the leader, Ferrari's Fernando Alonso.
His options for the future reduced dramatically last week when Mark Webber signed a new deal with Red Bull for 2013. That leaves only Mercedes, the least competitive of the top teams, as a viable alternative to McLaren for Hamilton.
For 2014, however, at least one seat at world champions Red Bull might be available.
Webber is only on a one-year deal, however, while there is also the possibility that his team-mate Sebastian Vettel might go to Ferrari for 2014.
Alonso is believed to have vetoed having Hamilton as his team-mate at Ferrari.
Whitmarsh said: "We're going to the next two races trying to win, as we go to every race.
Hamilton's McLaren highlights
- Made his Formula 1 debut for the team at the 2007 Australian Grand Prix
- Won his first F1 Grand Prix later that year in Canada
- Secured victory in his home Grand Prix at Silverstone on 6 July 2008.
- Became the youngest world champion in F1 history at the age of 23 in 2008, taking the title by a single point on the last lap of the last race in Brazil
- In total, Hamilton has 18 race wins and 46 podiums
"We've known Lewis for a long time. We have been concentrating on a season. There has been more speculation, more concern, more interest in this situation in the media than perhaps within the team or within Lewis's mind.
"We appear nowadays to be often asked questions about it, but I don't think it occupies as much time in our mind as it does in column inches."
McLaren are introducing some aerodynamic upgrades to the car for the German race in the hope of battling for victory against Red Bull and Ferrari.
Whitmarsh said: "The sidepods from the front to the rear are quite different, so you'll notice those and [there are] other bits and pieces that the sharper eye will see."
He blamed the team's unexpectedly poor performance at the British Grand Prix two weeks ago on the team failing to get their tyres into the right operating window. Hamilton and Button finished eighth and 10th at Silverstone.
"For everyone, not just McLaren, trying to understand and exploit the tyres correctly is proving quite a substantial challenge," Whitmarsh said.
He said the team's race was "quite difficult" after a poor qualifying session in the wet, which he blamed on not having enough temperature in the 'intermediate' tyres they were using.
And in the race he said two sets of the same 'hard' tyre that had been prepared in the same way behaved differently on Hamilton's car.
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Comment number 118.
f1fan0120th July 2012 - 17:43
garysim take off your Hamilton Hating tinted glasses and look at the facts.
For a start Jenson constantly complains about the car and Hamilton does not.
Hamilton has not once complained about Stewarding decisions or drivers this year although he would have been very justified in doing so.
I think your hatred of Hamilton is clear for all to see in your pathetic attempts to throw mud his way.
Link to this (Comment number 118)
Comment number 117.
Boristhegreek20th July 2012 - 17:14
Nit picking? Hamilton was facing a 6 race ban for comments he made after the 2011 Monaco GP. That he called Red Bull racing 'just' a drinks company was in every newspaper. And then theres a host of other howlers. That he was a team player but in the same sentence blamed his team for lie-gate. Hamilton is a liability. I guess Red Bull and Ferrari are Hamilton haters too for not hiring him?
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Comment number 116.
garysim20th July 2012 - 16:30
f1fan01 take of your hamilton tinted glasses and look at the facts, no driver complains about their car, other drivers or steward decisions more than hamilton. the common denominator in all those points is him. he is the problem. @ 111 he never apologised or retracted the statement so must still believe and think it so that makes it relevant.
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Comment number 115.
f1fan0120th July 2012 - 16:20
@114 Boristhegreek.
post 108 definitely applies to you also...
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The Hamilton Haters are forever nit picking and trying to take everything Hamilton says out of context so they can try and have a go at him but their arguments are so weak they are easy to spot a mile off.
Link to this (Comment number 115)
Comment number 114.
Boristhegreek20th July 2012 - 16:09
@alex What you think and what is the reality doesnt seem to be equal. Schumacher went to Ferrari when it was totally in tatters. He build it up and never said build me a fast car or im out. Thats all that Hamilton is saying these days. And frankly hes the ONLY one who does that. It doesnt HELP negotiations one bit. Just as Lew saying 'just a drinks company' prolly didnt HELP for a Red Bull seat.
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Comments 5 of 118