Lewis Hamilton has been described as like "a shark in the ocean"
that "smelled blood" en route to ending two and a half years of
hurt with his British Grand Prix victory. There was barely a dry
eye in the house when Hamilton took the chequered flag at
Silverstone for his 104th F1 victory but his first since the 2021
Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, and for 946 days. Hamilton delivered a
superb drive in changeable conditions, notably doing enough in the
final stint on soft tyres to remain ahead of Red Bull rival Max
Verstappen who had opted for the hard Pirellis when they both
pitted for the final time with 15 laps remaining. "It was beast
mode - home turf," said nine-time grand prix winner Webber on
Channel 4. "I think it was the back of the first stint when they're
talking about rain coming, this is him smelling blood at that
point. That's like a shark in the ocean. "[This is Hamilton
thinking] I've got opportunities here. I'm going to put pressure on
everyone around me. I've got so much experience. I've got so much
beautiful archive of success here. "He grabbed that race by the
scruff of the neck, the key decisions, he drove the team. This is
what I want. This is when I want it, and I'm going to deliver. So
cool heads. "I'm a big Lewis fan. I know I said he's on the fringe
of results but [I questioned] 'Where's that motivation? Where's
that mojo? But you give him a flash of something like we saw, then
stand back." Hamilton like Nadal with 'micro doubts' It was a
victory a long time in coming, one that meant so much to Hamilton
given his tears over the radio, and again in the arms of his father
Anthony. That outpouring of emotion highlighted to former Red Bull
driver Webber the desire and hunger that resides in the 40-year-old
to still want to achieve and be successful. "For a man of his
calibre, that [win] is obviously massive," said Webber. "And also
for an individual like him, when you've got a trophy cabinet like
his, with over 100 wins, but he still has that paranoid perfection,
those micro doubts that people like Rafa Nadal talk about, [asking
themselves] 'Can I still do this?' "Because the bar is so high
anyway, when he lifts, just watch out. That is one of the biggest
moments of his life. It could be his last win, but from when the
lights went out, he was on the case and got the job done."
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