Home > The driving passion behind F1's Fernando Alonso-Lewis Hamilton confrontation
by Andrew Findlater on 06 August 2007
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Comments (7)
by Nick on August 06, 2007
I know it isn't cool to swear at the team boss who has taken you to the top of the sport, but at least it indicates he has a passion for the sport and on the whole he seems far more respectful of McLaren and the F1 world as a whole than grumpy Alonso who will surely leave before the season is out!
by James on August 06, 2007
Lewis comes out of this not totally blameless at all. He disobeyed team orders, he has a huge attitde on him, he's spoken out to the press about Alonso which is never a good idea to do. He moaned at Monaco about Mclaren not allowing him to win (would he really have got past Alonso on a track harder to pass at than Hungary?) Alonso did wrong (if it was his actions, they'll never be proven whether it was him or his engineer) he was punished, but over the past few years he's been a great guy, great character and i hope they get to race each other soon. The media has gone Lewis friendly over this entire affair yet seem to totally blank out anything Lewis may have said/done.
by Jon Davies on August 07, 2007
The entire fued is six of one, half a dozen of the other. Both drivers are equally culpalbe, and to lay the blame at the door of Alonso for the Hungaroring incident, with only a small side-note for Hamilton, is ridiculous. Hamilton started the problems on Sunday by deliberately disobeying team orders because he wanted to win -- the exact same thing he did at Monaco. Both drivers are fierce competitors and both will do anything to win, but you can understand their frustrations. Alonso may be expecting too much help from a team known for its equality, but then again Hamilton seems to think that he's the best thing since sliced bread, and certainly acts like the McLaren garage is his simply because he's been there since before he was even in the womb. The problem is, as the poster above me pointed out, that the entire media in the UK are Lewis-crazy, as is the case whenever a British sportsman starts to do well (Jenson Button last year, Henmania at Wimbledon). They won't write a bad thing about him because t
They won't write a bad thing about him because that doesn't sell, and if something bad happens then it is always entirely the other party's fault. Remember Wayne Rooney last year? His sending off wasn't his fault and blame had to be placed elsewhere. We can only hope Alonso does a Cristiano Ronaldo and blows everyone away.
by Andrew Findlater on August 07, 2007
The more I look back on it, the more culpable Hamilton is. I was only focusing on Alonso's role for the article above, but Hamilton has made several comments to the media and outbursts at his team when things are going wrong. I also found the Lewis-Monaco incident odd, as Alonso had destroyed Lewis throughout the weekend and had destroyed him in the first stint, after which they didn't race each other. If anything, they are always going to clash and one of them will leave eventually, although as I have said I expect Alonso to be there next season, mostly as he has nowhere as good as McLaren to go to. Hamilton effectively whined to the media on Sunday that Alonso wasn't talking to him. Also, I haven't seen Alonso swear at his team boss. The next race will be an interesting one.
by greg on August 13, 2007
Everyone except Ferrari and Schumacher fans said F1 was getting boring a couple of years back. Now we finally have Mc Laren back on top and these two idiots with the championship in either of their grasps will destroy each other and their teams chances. Ferrari must be lapping this up because it wont be long before they take each other out and while they are pointing the finger at each other the red team will win. But one thing is for sure F1 isnt boring at the moment. Just a pity its not a fued between two teams
by Justin Wallace on August 29, 2007
We are always told "Alonso said this" "Hamilton said that". These days its all PR. In the end; I say the truth doesn't matter. The result is what counts. Alonso will stay at Mclaren because of this. Renault or any other immediate option can't provide him next year with a championship winning car. Right now, I'm just enjoying F1's first four way championship battle in 20 years! What a great season and kudos to both McLaren and Ferrari for letting their drivers duke it out.
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