Formula 1 Racing

Damaged endplate led to Hamilton’s “extremely fair play” offer to Russell · RaceFans

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes, Suzuka, 2024

Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff praised Lewis Hamilton for his “extremely fair play” when he offered to let his team mate overtake him during the Japanese Grand Prix.

Hamilton sustained minor damage to his front-right end plate when he and Charles Leclerc touched in turn three at the restart of yesterday’s race. The flick on the outside of the endplate was cracked, and the loss of front downforce gradually became apparent as the first stint wore on.

Mercedes put Hamilton and George Russell onto hard tyres for the restart. Although the damage was slight, Hamilton noticed the increase in understeer as he wasn’t able to match the lap times of Leclerc ahead of him even as the Ferrari driver ran longer on his medium compound tyres:

Lap: 7/53 HAM: 1’38.374
Pete Bonnington And main loss to George turn 14. It’s about a tenth and a half there.
Bonnington And think about a little bit more management turn eight.
Lap: 9/53 HAM: 1’38.533
Hamilton Lots of understeer. [Unclear] these guys.
Bonnington Lewis surface temp balance looks pretty good. Remember this will be a quite long stint.
Bonnington Dropping some of the lift-and-coast will also help your balance.
Hamilton Let me know where I’m losing out.
Lap: 10/53 HAM: 1’38.703
Bonnington Losses exit 14, exit turn nine. George was a 38.2, as was Leclerc.
Hamilton Fronts are just so hot.
Bonnington Copy. And we’re seeing high deg on the medium runners.
Lap: 11/53 HAM: 1’39.292
Bonnington So Leclerc 39.0.
Bonnington And cars will be stoping soon.
Lap: 12/53 HAM: 1’39.202
Bonnington Leclerc 39.2.

With Russell closing behind him, and despite any obvious prompt from his team, Hamilton offered to let his team mate by. It cost him around a second to do this, but Russell was able to immediately improve his pace by around eight tenths of a second per lap.

“That was extremely fair play,” Wolff told Channel 4 after the race. “It wasn’t like he was giving up a position for a podium [but] it was really trying to understand why wasn’t he fast at that stage.”

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Mercedes increased Hamilton’s front wing angle during both of his visits to the pits to compensate. By the end of the race his lap times improved and in the final stint, by which time both Mercedes had switched to the medium tyre compound, Hamilton began to close on Russell, who was fighting Oscar Piastri ahead of him.

Lap: 11/53 HAM: 1’39.292, RUS: 1’38.949
Marcus Dudley Still on target.
Dudley So could be some people…

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