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McLaren Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain celebrates taking poll position in front of team mate Heikki Kovalainen after the qualifying session for Sunday’s Japanese F-1 Grand Prix at Fuji Speedway in Oyama, central Japan, October 11, 2008. [Agencies]
Now at his second Shanghai Grand Prix, again as championship leader, he is ready to learn from the mistake that triggered a late meltdown last year and drive an error-free race.
“There is always some experiences that build you as a person and add to your character,” the McLaren-Mercedes driver said of last year’s painful withdrawal during a promotion for technical partner Mobil 1.
“That was not the end of the world.”
Hamilton would have secured the championship in the Chinese financial hub provided he finished the Shanghai race in the top eight and ahead of then teammate Fernando Alonso.
Briton Lewis Hamilton answers questions at a press conference on Tuesday in Shanghai. Gongguan
However, the Briton and his team approached the race too riskily and wore out tires before pit stop.
The incident was a big blow to then sizzling rookie driver, who made no mistakes before coming to Shanghai in his astonishing and record-breaking debut season.
But the 23-year-old son of a Caribbean immigrant said he is not haunted by the memory and believes the experience was vital to his development.
“Having such a fantastic year, it was a good time to have an experience like that because it prepared me to come here for this race,” the 23-year-old said of this weekend’s return event.
Ahead of it he is in a similar position to what he was in last year: He had previously won four titles before; he can still become the youngest champion in Formula One history and has an opportunity to secure the title with one race remaining.
“It’s another opportunity to prove myself in Shanghai,” he said. “I have a great opportunity (to win the championship).”
“My confidence is not knocked and it is not different (with previous races),” he added.
“I still come here with confidence, perhaps with more humility.”
Hamilton stressed he and his team would not push the envelope too much to secure more points but play things safely.
“I hope with the same approach, we can do a better job this weekend,” he said.
“I hope this time in Shanghai will be better than last year.”
After a disappointing weekend in Fuji, Japan, where he incurred drive-through penalties with title contender Felipe Massa of Ferrari and scored no points, Hamilton said he can’t wait to race in Shanghai in front of a swelling fan club.
“It’s great to be back. There were more fans in the airport and I am more excited,” he said. “I had not so great a weekend in Fuji. But I learned from the experience and I am still positive.”
Hamilton is sitting on 84 points, five ahead of Massa. BMW Sauber’s Robert Kubica is in third with 72 points followed by defending champion Kimi Raikkonen on 63.
Hamilton’s McLaren teammate Heikki Kovalainen is fifth with 51 points.
In constructor standings, Ferrari leads McLaren Mercedes by seven points.
Former champions urge Hamilton to keep his cool
Britons Jackie Stewart and Damon Hill have told compatriot Lewis Hamilton he must keep his cool in the season’s last two races if he is to join them as a Formula One champion.
The 23-year-old McLaren driver leads Ferrari’s Brazilian Felipe Massa by five points and could become the sport’s youngest champion if circumstances favour him in China this weekend.
However Hamilton failed to score in Japan on Sunday, reviving fears that history may be repeating itself after he allowed a commanding lead to slip through his fingers at the same stage last year.
“This was not his finest hour,” triple champion Stewart told the RBS website (www.rbssport.com/f1), commenting on Hamilton’s wild start and subsequent drive-through penalty at Fuji.
“His approach in that first corner was slightly arrogant to other drivers.
“The Japanese race demonstrated that Lewis is still very young, in only his second season, and although he comes across as very cool in interviews, he doesn’t always have the same level of mind management when he’s racing.
“Lewis Hamilton can still win the championship, but not if he drives the last two races the way he drove in Japan.”
Both leading contenders have struggled for consistency in the final run to the title, with Massa finishing seventh in Japan and failing to score in the previous race in Singapore due to a team blunder at his first pitstop.
Renault’s Fernando Alonso, the double world champion who was Hamilton’s team mate and foe at McLaren in 2007, has won the last two races.
Hamilton had scored 107 points by this stage last year but currently leads with just 84.
Whoever wins the title will end up with the lowest overall tally by a champion since Ferrari’s now-retired Michael Schumacher triumphed with 93 points in 2003.
“If Lewis keeps a cool head, then he’ll be fine. I think he will get the job done,” Hill, Britain’s last champion with Williams in 1996, told BBC radio.
“There is no question about his speed or ability, he just needs to stay cool and let it happen.
“Lewis is impatient to win that first title but you can’t force it.
“It is a mark of Lewis’s career that he’s always been very keen to get the job done and move on, and you need that impatience. But it can sometimes trip you up if you’re not wary.”

Moto GP World Champion Valentino Rossi looks on during the first training session in his 2008 model Ferrari Formula One car at the Mugello racetrack, northern Italy, November 20, 2008. [Agencies]
He had serious tests for Ferrari in 2005 and 2006 but decided to stick with two wheels.
“With a lot of work I could have become a good F1 driver. It is hard to say if I would have become a winner or not, but the potential was there,” he told reporters after a strong test.
Rossi managed a fastest lap of one minute 22.5 seconds, less than two seconds behind recent times recorded by Ferrari drivers Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen on the same track.
Wearing his distinctively-coloured helmet, he was roared on by around 1,000 fans and could have gone faster had his 51-lap run not been cut short by an approaching thunderstorm.
The chances of Rossi ending up in Formula One look to have gone but the 29-year-old has talked about the possibility of moving into rallying permanently when he finishes with MotoGP.
The Italian was second in the Monza rally last weekend and is due to race in the British round of the world championship next month.
Ferrari’s seven-times champion Michael Schumacher has entered occasional motorcycle races since retiring in 2006 while rally champion Sebastien Loeb tested for the Red Bull Formula One team in Spain this week.

McLaren’s Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton of Britain and Ferrari’s Felipe Massa (background L) of Brazil wave to the crowd before the Brazilian F1 Grand Prix in Sao Paulo Nov. 2, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
“I don’t think it will make it easier,” Hamilton said on Tuesday. “With the new regulations it’s going to make it very tough to win the championship again.”
The sweeping changes come as automakers reel from the global financial crisis. Honda pulled out of F1 this month after Super Aguri quit in April. FIA said the first batch of changes for 2009 will help larger teams cut costs by about one-third over 2008.
“We have less testing obviously but I think we as a team are in a position to pull together and make a difference in some other way,” Hamilton said. “But everyone’s in the same boat.”

Formula one driver Lewis Hamilton poses with the trophy during the 60th Bambi media awards ceremony in the southwestern German town of Offenburg Nov. 27, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)
Changes to be introduced after next season will be even more radical with races maybe shortened to save money and refueling banned, which could dramatically alter the spectacle for fans.
Hamilton’s McLaren team boss Ron Dennis called it a “challenging period.”
“It’s amazing how many different things happen in a year but all we’re thinking about is how we can continue in the sport and continue to put on a good show,” Hamilton said.
Hamilton missed out on becoming the first rookie champion by one point last year, but rebounded to become the youngest F1 champion at 23 in November – by a single point.
Hamilton overtook Toyota’s Timo Glock on the final bend at the season-ending Brazilian Grand Prix to finish fifth and secure the title after Ferrari’s Felipe Massa had won his home race as he needed to.
Hamilton expects more of the same close racing next season despite the dramatic changes. “We don’t know who’s going to be quick, surely we’re going to be at the front, with Ferrari maybe, BMW, but you never know. Maybe there’s going to be a fourth team up there with us.”
Hamilton added that becoming F1’s first black champion “was hard” because of having “to break down the barrier and it was not easy but we got there, and I have been accepted very well.”