Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Formula 1

Lewis Hamilton’s new £40m one-year Mercedes contract ‘unusual’ leaving futures up in air, says ex-F1 star Martin Brundle

LEWIS HAMILTON’s one-year Mercedes deal has been labelled as “unusual” by former F1 driver Martin Brundle.

The world champion stalled on signing new terms with the Silver Arrows only to agree a short-term 10-month deal when the expectation was it would be for at least two seasons.

Lewis Hamilton has signed a new short-term deal at Mercedes
Commentator Martin Brundle has labelled Hamilton’s situation ‘unusual’

And Sky Sports F1 commentator Brundle believes is smacks of the duo failing to agree on a long-term solution that has left them with Hamilton and Valtteri Bottas both out of contract at the end of this season.

He said: “I think it is very unusual, the situation alone. It has taken a long time, and for a team and a driver of such stature a one-year deal is unusual.

“It seemed like they couldn’t work it out, but had to force it because the new season is coming up.

“I think they thought the winter tests are coming, we have to do something.

“A one-year deal leaves Lewis, Valtteri and George Russell, the young driver who led of course when Hamilton was sidelined with COVID-19 back in Bahrain, all out of contract at the end of this year.

“Clearly at least one of the parties wanted to keep their options open, I suspect that was Mercedes, so they put it to bed for this year and are saying they will sort 2022 out somewhat earlier.”

Meanwhile, F1 chiefs will discuss the prospect of Saturday sprint races instead of qualifying at some races this season.

The proposal was mentioned last week by new F1 CEO Stefano Domenicali with the short races to determine Sunday’s grid.

BET OF THE DAY: GET THE BEST FOOTBALL PRICES ON THE MARKET WITH OUR EXPERT ADVICE

The ten greatest F1 drivers of all-time – according to ASON-CAL-1.jpg” alt=”” class=”alignnone size-large wp-image-13717596″ width=”542″ height=”1024″ />

“What we learned when we were changing the qualifying every two days was something that burnt our fingers.

“We need to avoid that, and therefore now I think that the format is quite stable. What we’re looking at is what could be the approach to a so-called Saturday sprint race.

“We’re thinking of testing this already this year. There are ongoing discussions with teams in the right forum.”