Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

General
Top five roles on Motorsport Jobs this week

Video: What makes a good F1 driver and race engineer partnership

Formula 1
Video: What makes a good F1 driver and race engineer partnership

Formula E launches innovative Gen4 car at Paul Ricard

Formula E
Formula E launches innovative Gen4 car at Paul Ricard

How to make F1's 2026 rules simpler - and why Horner was half-right

Feature
Formula 1
How to make F1's 2026 rules simpler - and why Horner was half-right

Wood is a chip off the old block as he takes first win at Brands Hatch 750MC event

National
Wood is a chip off the old block as he takes first win at Brands Hatch 750MC event

Why riders' nationalities have become a problem for Liberty Media in MotoGP

MotoGP
Spanish GP
Why riders' nationalities have become a problem for Liberty Media in MotoGP

McLaren junior leads the way in British F4 as BTCC support series begin at Donington Park

National
McLaren junior leads the way in British F4 as BTCC support series begin at Donington Park

The key takeaways from the BTCC season opener

Feature
BTCC
Donington Park (National Circuit)
The key takeaways from the BTCC season opener

Hamilton says he needs a miracle now

Lewis Hamilton admits he will need a miracle to win the world championship in Abu Dhabi, going into the race 24 points behind Fernando Alonso with just 25 available

After his fourth place at Interlagos today, the Briton also trails Mark Webber by 16 points and Sebastian Vettel by nine, so he will need a victory and for misfortune to strike all three next weekend.

"We weren't quick enough here and we won't be quick enough in Abu Dhabi," Hamilton said. "Realistically, we need a miracle. But I'll keep trying, we have nothing to lose now."

Hamilton complained of struggling for grip throughout the Brazilian Grand Prix and afterwards said he was fortunate to finish as high as fourth.

"It was a tough race, the car was nowhere, I had no grip," he said. "I feel quite lucky to have finished where I finished.

"The car didn't feel like it did in practice, down the straights particularly. I didn't think the F-duct was working because I was struggling to overtake backmarkers and Fernando shot by on the straight.

"But the team did a great job with the strategy, you just can't win with a car that's not quick enough."

Team-mate Jenson Button declared himself happy with his drive up from 11th on the grid to finish fifth.

"It was down to the team making the right call on pitstop strategy, and to finish behind my team-mate is not so bad.

"We just have to build on this for next year, I don't think there's a team out there stronger than us."

Previous article Alonso: Title fight still wide open
Next article Vettel still optimistic about title

Top Comments

Latest news