Lewis Hamilton Biography
Few drivers have entered Formula One racing with as big a bang as Lewis Hamilton and a seemingly charmed racing career nurtured in no small part by Ron Dennis, principle at McLaren at the time. Hamilton’s sensational maiden season in 2007 – in which he lost out on the world championship by a single point – remains one of the most remarkable rookie campaigns in history. Going from McLaren to Mercedes when the team was just hiding his stride made it seem all too easy. But without his innate talent it would have all come to naught as F1 is strewn with the remains of other young phenoms.

In 1998 the McLaren boss signed him to the teamโs young driver programme. Dennisโs belief in Hamiltonโs talents was such that the contract even included an option on the 13 year-old should he ever make it into Formula One racing. At this stage, however, it was McLarenโs financial support that proved the bigger blessing for Hamilton, who up to that point had been supported by his dutiful father – and future manager – Anthony, who worked several jobs to keep his son racing. Multiple-World Championย Michael Schumacherย said of him,ย “he’s a quality driver, very strong and only 16. If he keeps this up I’m sure he will reach F1. It’s something special to see a kid of his age out on the circuit. He’s clearly got the right racing mentality.”

Although his subsequent move to the F3 Euroseries was less straightforward, Hamilton eventually found his feet, improving on fifth in the standings in his first year to win the title in his second. Hamilton was almost signed to Williams but BMW refused to fund him. Instead, he returned to McLaren and continued to win races in Formula Three. Hamilton ended the 2005 season having won 15 of the 20 rounds driving for the dominant ASM team. Autosport ranked him number 24 in its list of Top 200 Drivers. His foray into GP2 in 2006 proved equally thrilling. At his very best, Hamilton stunned onlookers with a string of spectacular performances. Outshining his more experienced team mate Alexandre Premat and a resurgent Nelson Piquet Jr with his bold driving style, he won the title ART Grand Prix

Hamilton started 2009 with a car woefully short on downforce and pace, and suffered the ignominy of disqualification in Australia after being judged to have deliberately misled race stewards regarding an incident with third place finisher Jarno Trulli. Whether Hamilton was coached into giving false testimony by his team has never been fully disclosed. Hamilton gradually turned his season around. July’s Hungarian Grand Prix saw him back on the top step of the podium. That was followed by another win in Singapore and a further three podiums – enough to propel him to fifth in the final standings. Jenson Button and Brawn GP secured the Drivers’ Championship and Constructors’ Championship titles respectively.

The 2011 season was to be the toughest of Hamiltonโs Formula One career. Frustrated by a car that initially lacked race-winning potential, a series of uncharacteristic errors – seemingly always involving Ferrariโs Felipe Massa – led to several stewards visits and an increasingly difficult relationship with the media, one not helped by their growing interest in his well publicized personal life. To add to his woes, Button had found his feet at McLaren and although Hamilton matched his compatriotโs three season wins with victories in China, Germany and Abu Dhabi, at the end of the year he found himself only fifth overall, three places behind his colleague.

Like many drivers given the right car Hamilton can be magical but any comparison with Fernando Alonso will find the Spaniard having the better of Hamilton when the car is lacking competitiveness. Currently with Mercedes that does not seem a likely issue. While Alonso struggles at McLaren, Hamilton continues to win races.
Is Lewis Hamilton the best Formula 1 Driver Ever?

To that end, debating where he stands relative to his current competitors has officially become pointless. It has been for a while. Everyone just assumes heโs going to win the championship each and every year, not by the skin of his teeth, but in a landslide.
Presently 35, Hamiltonโs reign isnโt expected to end anytime soon. Even sportsbooks are hedging against his dominance. He was theย odds-on favoriteย to win the 2020 F1 Championship by one of the widest margins in history.
This cannot be taken lightly. Charles Leclerc, a driver for Ferrari, is widely considered the closest thing Hamilton has to a peer right nowโand even he isnโt considered to have a practical shot at the F1 title so long as Hamilton remains at or near his peak.
But while Hamiltonโs place among his fellow F1 drivers is an open-and-shut case, his historical profile is less of a sure thing. Thatโs not an insult, by the way. Rather, it speaks to the profound, complex questions that are being asked about his still-ongoing legacy: Is he the best Formula One driver of all time?
Hamiltonโs feats as a member of the Mercedes team speak for themselves. He debuted in 2007. Since then, heโs amassed 84 wins and 151 podium finishes. Thatโs absolutely mind-melting. Think of it this way: Hamilton has 250 career stars under his belt. He effectively wins races in which he participates 34 percent of the time. And he secures a top-three finish or better more than 60 percent of the time. He has also recorded 47 fastest laps during his time on the circuitโa ridiculously high number, for those who may not know.
And then thereโs Hamiltonโs coup de grace: His F1 World Championship victories. He has six to his name, including each of the past three and five of the past six: 2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Those anticipating a seventhโand fourth consecutiveโchampionship arenโt alone. Theyโre in the majority. Theyโll also have to wait and see when Hamilton gets back on the track. The coronavirus pandemic has impacted live sports action pretty much anywhere, and no one quite knows when motorsports, including F1, are going to return.

Again, though, Hamiltonโs greatest-of-all-time stock is no longer tightly tethered to his outcomes on the track. The one-man dynasty heโs built says all it can. Any other statistical bumps are merely cherries atop the ice cream sundae that is his highly decorated career.
What really separates Hamilton in the best-ever discussion is the extent to which he has transcended the sport he dominates. He is a cultural icon in one of the most difficult periods for professional athletes.
Social mediaย has lent itselfย to an always-on culture, which is at once a gift and a curse. Every athlete, including Hamilton, is a brand. This helps the best of the best get seriously paidโHamilton has made nearly $500 million for his career as of February 2019,ย according to Forbesโbut it also opens them to relentless, constant criticism. And this scrutiny isnโt specific to their profession. It spills into their personal lives. Everything they do is a headline. Every mistake they make is a misstep not only to be learned from, but to be publicized and politicized and used as a catch-all verdict on their value as both an athlete and human being.
Hamilton has navigated this part of his job description masterfully. And while numbers enthusiasts are quick to throw away more subjective arguments, his character has to be part of his resume. He has invited, maybe even created, a whole new subset of Formula One fans, in large part because they can relate to his background, and because heโs been willing toย speak out on issuesย that journey beyond his sport.
That burden he carries, as both a cultural and racing icon, cannot be dismissed or downplayed. It is one so few athletes have had to bear, and it is one even fewer have embraced. Michael Jordan, widely considered one of the five most famous athletes of all time, was definitively apolitical during the prime of his basketball career. He was at once accessibleโto fans, to media membersโand wore a cloak of armor. He was candid without always revealing anything.
This doesnโt make MJ any less of an icon. Hamilton is just a different sort of icon, at a time when itโs much harder to be a universally revered one.
Between that and the list of on-track accomplishments that so obviously, so loudly, so decidedly speak for themselves, the question of whether Hamilton is Formula Oneโs greatest of all time isnโt really a question. He is.
Lewis Hamilton’s Best Races
There was never really any doubt that Lewis Hamilton would one day exceed Michael Schumacherโs record of 91 Grand Prix victories. In fact, most fans were pretty sure a few seasons ago that Hamilton would become the driver with the most Grand Prix wins in history: It was always going to be a case of โwhenโ, not โifโ.
Clinching that milestone will undoubtedly reignite the debate over Hamiltonโs place amongย the greatest F1 drivers in history. Most will say that the numbers speak for themselves, citing Hamiltonโs win percentage compared to, say, Schumacher (34.87% vs 29.55%). Others might point to the advantage Hamilton had with his car over the last several years. Indeed, when it comes to Hamilton, things can get pretty heated as some point to the driver as emblematic of modern F1โs.
There is no right answer to the debate, but we can agree that he has been one of the best drivers of modern times, and that he has delivered some thrilling performances. Below we are going to look at five of those most thrilling victories from the man who now has 91 to choose from:
2018 German Grand Prix
Whenย looking back on this, there was quite a measure of serendipitous good fortune for Hamilton, who won the race from way back on 14th on the grid. What would have happened if Sebastian Vettel hadnโt made a critical mistake and crashed out on Lap 52? What would have happened if it hadnโt started raining? These are moot points though, as Hamilton cut through the field like a racehorse to put the pressure on the drivers at the front. Ignoring a call to pitstop (a miscommunication, we were told), he hung on quite easily and regained momentum in the World Championship.
2011 Chinese Grand Prix
Itโs worth reminding Hamiltonโs naysayers that the British driver didnโt always enjoy the advantage of the best car on the track. Such was the case in 2011 when he drove for McLaren against superior Red Bull cars. Nevertheless, Hamilton was magnificent in an intriguing battle with old foe Sebastian Vettel, overtaking the German with 12 laps to go after a daring dive on the turn. This felt like an old school race, and Hamilton seemed to love every minute of it.
2014 Bahrain Grand Prix
When it comes to the greatest F1 rivalries, we tend toย look back at Laudaย vs Hunt, Senna vs Prost, and so on. But we tend to forget how heated things got between Hamilton and his then Mercedes team-mate Nico Rosberg. The pair, who were childhood friends, threw everything at each other, leading to many fall outs and many physical collisions. The 2014 Bahrain Grand Prix was a masterclass, though, as Hamilton held off an incessant Rosberg lap after lap. One of the best lead-from-the-front drives youโll ever see in F1.
2008 British Grand Prix
Like the other man on 91 wins, Michael Schumacher, Hamilton is also considered a master of wet-weather driving, and that was on show at Silverstone in the Britโs 26th Grand Prix start. In fact, the conditions on track were atrocious, but Hamilton, starting in 4th, put on a masterclass of inclement weather handling, lapping almost everyone on the track and finished well over a minute second-placed Nick Heidfeld. This was the first race where the world really began to look at Hamilton and think, โthis kid could be an all-time greatโ.
2018 Italian Grand Prix
Everythingย seemed set up for a Ferrari โhomeโ victory at Monza, with Sebastian Vettel and Kimi Raikkonen starting ahead of Hamilton on the grid. More pertinently, it was clear in qualifying that Ferrariโs cars had better speed and power. Hamilton was having none of it, however, and chipped away at the Ferraris, eventually passing Raikkonen with eight laps remaining. Luck and Ferrariโs in-fighting had an influence on the outcome, of course. But thatโs what great drivers do โ take advantage of everything the race lays out before them.








