Hamilton 'allowed' Bottas gap to grow

Lewis Hamilton says he managed the gap to teammate Valtteri Bottas during the Australian Grand Prix.

The Briton crossed the line 21 seconds behind Bottas in second place to pick up 18 points. Mercedes was forced to bring Hamilton in for an early pit stop to cover Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel.

After losing the lead on the run down to into the first corner, Hamilton says that his race was all about saving his tyres after his stop to ensure that he got to the end of the race.

"Valtteri had a lot more pace in the car,” Hamilton said. “But here you need a 1.8 second delta to overtake the car ahead. So as soon as we got through turn one it was really about managing.

“I was planning to just stay close behind, two, three seconds. Then obviously I had the issue with the car and the gap started to slowly increase. So it would have continued to increase. 

“But then after that I was trying to look after the tyres and then I got [pit] stopped super-early in reaction to the Ferraris.

"I knew from then on the race was done because I had 47 laps [to go], so I knew immediately I was going to be in trouble on the long run so I drive well off the pace. Well, well off the pace to make sure at the end of the race I still had life left in the tyres.

“I knew on those following laps Max [Verstappen] and Valtteri were still out and they kept going for laps and laps so I knew at the end I would have someone on my back.

"But rather than push and keep close, struggle with the tyres and at the end have big degradation, which Vettel had which was understandable because his tyres were so old, I was quite happy with the pace I was able to pull out at the end.”

Hamilton remained positive about the result, stating that he was happy with his drive despite losing out to Bottas.

“I’m generally happy with how I drove today,” he said. “I did what I needed to do, no more, no less.

“I don’t focus on the gap because I allowed the gap to be the size that it was. So that’s no real issue for me. And obviously the strategy was not ideal in the scenario that I had.

“But with what I was given I think I did a relatively decent job it’s just obviously the start I lost out quite a lot.”

"I let you win!"

  • 3
  • Mar 17 2019 - 13:35

Replies (6)

Login to reply
  • "I let you win!"

    • + 3
    • Mar 17 2019 - 13:35
    • I think it's a fair comment - that's exactly what it looked like, his race was effectively over once he stopped early as he would never have had the pace to take Bottas cleanly.

      • + 0
      • Mar 17 2019 - 16:23
  • f1ski

    Posts: 726

    Just when I thought he had matured
    Bwahhhhhhhjhbnjnn?????

    • + 2
    • Mar 17 2019 - 14:25
  • f1dave

    Posts: 782

    His body language at the end said different than his mouth.

    • + 0
    • Mar 17 2019 - 17:50
  • RogerF1

    Posts: 501

    Why are Mercedes so quiet about VB’s win? No plaudits, no congrats on a great drive, great start to the season!!! Just a bleat from the team of miraculous fault to LH’s car and charitable donations from the driver. Not impressed.

    • + 1
    • Mar 17 2019 - 18:14
  • jaybee

    Posts: 16

    It's amazing how many so-called fans (well, the Hamilton-haters) don't seem to, or choose not to, understand F1 team racing. Hamilton lost the race at the start when Bottas beat him, passed him, and then had the pace to forge ahead. Hamilton then became the #2 team player. He, rather than Valterri had to pit early to guard against the undercut and therefore had to manage his tires for the long haul. He still had the pace to hold off Verstappen although, if the race had been much longer, Max might have got him.

    • + 0
    • Mar 18 2019 - 22:06

AZ Azerbaijan Grand Prix

Local time 

AZAzerbaijan Grand Prix

Local time 

World Championship standings 2025

Show full world champion standings

Test calendar

See full test schedule

Related news

Give your opinion!

Will Bottas challenge Hamilton for the world championship in 2020?

Formula 1 Calendar - 2025

Date
Grand Prix
Circuit
-
Bahrain
14 - Mar 16 2025
Australia
21 - Mar 23 2025
China
4 - Apr 6 2025
Japan
11 - Apr 13 2025
Bahrain
18 - Apr 20 2025
Saudi Arabia
2 - May 4 2025
United States of America
16 - May 18 2025
Italy
23 - May 25 2025
Monaco
30 - Jun 1 2025
Spain
13 - Jun 15 2025
Canada
27 - Jun 29 2025
Austria
4 - Jul 6 2025
United Kingdom
25 - Jul 27 2025
Belgium
1 - Aug 3 2025
Hungary
29 - Aug 31 2025
Netherlands
5 - Sep 7 2025
Italy
19 - Sep 21 2025
Azerbaijan
3 - Oct 5 2025
Singapore
17 - Oct 19 2025
United States of America
24 - Oct 26 2025
Mexico
7 - Nov 9 2025
Brazil
21 - Nov 23 2025
United States of America
28 - Nov 30 2025
Qatar
5 - Dec 7 2025
United Arab Emirates
See full schedule

Formula 1 Calendar - 2025

Date
Grand Prix & Circuit
14 - Mar 16 2025
Australia Albert Park
21 - Mar 23 2025
4 - Apr 6 2025
11 - Apr 13 2025
18 - Apr 20 2025
Saudi Arabia Jeddah Street Circuit
2 - May 4 2025
United States of America Miami International Autodrome
16 - May 18 2025
23 - May 25 2025
Monaco Monte Carlo
30 - Jun 1 2025
13 - Jun 15 2025
27 - Jun 29 2025
Austria Red Bull Ring
4 - Jul 6 2025
United Kingdom Silverstone
25 - Jul 27 2025
1 - Aug 3 2025
Hungary Hungaroring
29 - Aug 31 2025
Netherlands Circuit Zandvoort
5 - Sep 7 2025
Italy Monza
19 - Sep 21 2025
Azerbaijan Baku City Circuit
3 - Oct 5 2025
17 - Oct 19 2025
United States of America Circuit of the Americas
24 - Oct 26 2025
7 - Nov 9 2025
Brazil Interlagos
21 - Nov 23 2025
United States of America Las Vegas Street Circuit
28 - Nov 30 2025
5 - Dec 7 2025
United Arab Emirates Yas Marina Circuit
See full schedule

Driver profile

  • Country Finland
  • Date of b. Aug 28 1989 (36)
  • Place of b. Nastola, Finland
  • Weight 70 kg
  • Length 1.73 m
Show full profile

Team profile

Show full profile
show sidebar