Lewis Hamilton furious with Mercedes’ strategy in Japanese Grand Prix as ‘f***-up’ forces him to wait for World Championship

Lewis Hamilton has accused Mercedes of costing him a shot at victory in the Japanese Grand Prix, forcing him to wait to claim a sixth World Championship.

Hamilton will move to within one title of Michael Schumacher’s record if he wins in Mexico a week next Sunday and Valtteri Bottas, who on Sunday claimed his first triumph since April, finishes fifth or lower.

However, the Briton’s chances of sewing up the championship for a third successive year in Mexico City would have been greater but for a questionable strategy decision – one which Hamilton described on the radio as a ‘f***-up’ – as he finished third.


Lewis Hamilton remains on course to win the drivers’ championship

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For the second time in three races, the championship leader was aggrieved to have lost out on strategy. In Singapore, he claimed his pit wall’s failure to react to an early stop by Sebastian Vettel robbed him of an easy win.

Here, Hamilton’s argument was three-fold. First, he lost 10 seconds to Bottas after being kept out on old tyres for three more laps than his team-mate.

Then, Hamilton believed he would have been better off changing to the most durable hard rubber.

And, when he was not, the Englishman thought he should have been told to manage his tyres, not blitz them in trying to catch Vettel, who like Bottas, was on an obvious two-stop strategy. Hamilton finished half a second behind the Ferrari driver.

“That was just a f***-up,” said Hamilton complaining to his race engineer, Pete Bonnington. “How have I lost that much time? I am basically out of the race.”