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How a record 10th WRC title bid was reignited after Ogier vs Neuville epic

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How Lindblad has shown that he's found his feet in F1

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Why Verstappen burst out laughing during British GP simulator runs

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Marquez held 'informal talks' with Honda before committing to Ducati

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How Russell resorted to "abnormal" driving style to win F1 Austrian GP

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How Russell resorted to "abnormal" driving style to win F1 Austrian GP

Five things we learned from MotoGP’s action-packed Dutch GP

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Austrian Grand Prix Driver Ratings 2026

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Mercedes boss questions Ferrari's "limitless" F1 upgrades amid budget cap era

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Lewis Hamilton dismisses claims Formula 1 should ban team radios

Formula 1 world champion Lewis Hamilton has dismissed claims that a ban on pit-to-car radios would make a big difference to the racing

There has been criticism of late that the amount of information that a driver receives during races, with regards areas such as tyres, engine modes and fuel levels, is too high.

But Hamilton said drivers get less information than they received a few years ago and he suggested people are just looking at something to blame.

"What do you think's going to happen if they don't tell me about tyres?" he said. "I'm still going to drive the same.

"And if they don't tell us about fuel, maybe more cars won't finish. If that's more exciting then we can do that.

"But we get a lot less information now than we did years ago.

"A couple of years ago we had loads more information. I'm not really sure.

"People are just looking to blame something because they weren't happy about something."

Hamilton highlighted the way the tyre Pirelli tyres behave in the current era and fuel consumption challenges as a reason for why assistance from engineers is required.

"With the way these tyres are, the optimal way to get to the end of the race is something we don't have all the information in front of us for," he said.

"You can't feel how much fuel you're using, you're driving as fast as you can the majority of the time, so you need some guidance with that.

"With the tyres, sometimes as they start to lose rubber it's difficult to feel it, it's very subtle changes.

"You don't know when temperatures are going to drop, so that's when you need the guidance."

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