Definitely looks to be ending this year. Think RB and Max will see to that.
That is really not something to hold over Hamilton's head imo. Even if he didn't win a race this year, it changes nothing about how he will be remembered.
It's something that's never happened before - a driver winning a race in every season they raced in. That's why it's a special record and it looks like it will have to wait for some future driver to achieve.
Fair enough/
I’d suggest he retires by the end of 2023!CHT wrote: ↑14 Sep 2022, 01:51Lewis will be 38 years old next year, and in modern F1 terms, he should be considered relatively old. For comparison, Michael Schumacher won his 7th and last WDC in 2004 at the age of 35. Historically those F1 drivers who won WDC at age of 38 and older were from the early 90s and earlier.
I think the greatest challenge for LH is to maintain the hunger even when he is not competing for wins or not having a championship-winning car. Guess for LH, there is only 1 prize left in his career, which is the record-breaking 8th WDC.
IMO, 2022 will be a terrible year for Lewis if George is able to finish the season ahead of his 7x world champion teammate. At the moment it is 35 points with 6 races to go. The last time this happened was when NR won the WDC with a much smaller margin.
For LH to win the 8th WDC in 2023, I think a few things will need to happen
1) Merc will need to deliver an outstanding and reliable car for 2023
b) RBR and Ferrari will have to mess up their development or have reliability issues
c) LH will need a teammate who doesn't challenge him for position and wins
Based on what we are seeing now, it's very unlikely any of the above will happen next year. So unless miracle happens, I think it's likely we will see LH career mirror that of Valentino Rossi, where he will face more challenges from the younger generation of drivers, making mistakes, losing his motivation and going on a slow decline.
Alonso doesn't seem to struggle. I wouldn't expect Hamilton to either. Age is only a number. Michael would have won 2007 and 2008 if they didn't sack him.CHT wrote: ↑14 Sep 2022, 01:51Lewis will be 38 years old next year, and in modern F1 terms, he should be considered relatively old. For comparison, Michael Schumacher won his 7th and last WDC in 2004 at the age of 35. Historically those F1 drivers who won WDC at age of 38 and older were from the early 90s and earlier.
I think the greatest challenge for LH is to maintain the hunger even when he is not competing for wins or not having a championship-winning car. Guess for LH, there is only 1 prize left in his career, which is the record-breaking 8th WDC.
Based on what we are seeing now, it's very unlikely any of the above will happen next year. So unless miracle happens, I think it's likely we will see LH career mirror that of Valentino Rossi, where he will face more challenges from the younger generation of drivers, making mistakes, losing his motivation and going on a slow decline.
Same here! Season is a resounding success if HAM nets a single win!
Alonso, like many other ex wdc are all struggling to get a drive with top teams. partly because in modern f1, equipment and development plays a much greater role in winning than driver ability and top teams are more inclined to promote their young drivers instead of buying ex wdc drivers to win races.AR3-GP wrote: ↑14 Sep 2022, 03:00Alonso doesn't seem to struggle. I wouldn't expect Hamilton to either. Age is only a number. Michael would have won 2007 and 2008 if they didn't sack him.CHT wrote: ↑14 Sep 2022, 01:51Lewis will be 38 years old next year, and in modern F1 terms, he should be considered relatively old. For comparison, Michael Schumacher won his 7th and last WDC in 2004 at the age of 35. Historically those F1 drivers who won WDC at age of 38 and older were from the early 90s and earlier.
I think the greatest challenge for LH is to maintain the hunger even when he is not competing for wins or not having a championship-winning car. Guess for LH, there is only 1 prize left in his career, which is the record-breaking 8th WDC.
Based on what we are seeing now, it's very unlikely any of the above will happen next year. So unless miracle happens, I think it's likely we will see LH career mirror that of Valentino Rossi, where he will face more challenges from the younger generation of drivers, making mistakes, losing his motivation and going on a slow decline.
Nah... Lewis lost to slower, and even luckier drivers than George. Button was slow but steady and luckier than George, and Nico was quick, arguably faster than George and basically just stuck it out enough win in straighter fight. So losing to George on points means nothing really. Especially when George has proven to be slower in both race and Q.CHT wrote: ↑14 Sep 2022, 01:51
I think the greatest challenge for LH is to maintain the hunger even when he is not competing for wins or not having a championship-winning car. Guess for LH, there is only 1 prize left in his career, which is the record-breaking 8th WDC.
IMO, 2022 will be a terrible year for Lewis if George is able to finish the season ahead of his 7x world champion teammate. At the moment it is 35 points with 6 races to go. The last time this happened was when NR won the WDC with a much smaller margin.