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F1 News: Lewis Hamilton's "Astonishing" Driving Style Most Similar To Michael Schumacher's

Peter Windsor compares Lewis Hamilton to Michael Schumacher and Ayrton Senna
F1 News: Lewis Hamilton's "Astonishing" Driving Style Most Similar To Michael Schumacher's
F1 News: Lewis Hamilton's "Astonishing" Driving Style Most Similar To Michael Schumacher's

F1 journalist Peter Windsor has compared seven-time champion Lewis Hamilton to other F1 legend's and has concluded that he is most like Michael Schumacher, who he shares the record number of championship wins with.

Windsor has compared Hamilton to three-time champion Ayrton Senna as well as Schumacher, in terms of driving style. Windsor explained, as quoted by SilverArrows.net:

“I would say Lewis is nearer to Michael.

“In terms of the way he uses the throttle and the brakes and the steering, I think he’s much nearer to Michael. In fact, I think he’s ahead of Michael in a couple of significant areas and I think he’s a little bit softer than Michael in all his inputs, particularly with braking.

“I think Lewis’s feel for the brake pedal is probably better than any driver in the history of the sport in terms of how he applies it and the rate at which he comes out of it.

“That speed of movement, or the slow motion of movement, the suppleness of movement, is just astonishing with Lewis.

“I think that’s probably his greatest attribute. And that of course then gives you such a stable platform around which you can do everything else with the throttle and the steering.

The journalist went on to speak about Senna's driving style and compared it to rival and at one time teammate, Alain Prost. Windsor explained that the Brazilian driver was "fairly linear" and his "corner entries weren't as early as Alain Prost's". He said:

“I think Ayrton was fairly linear actually in the way he drove, which was very Lewis-like, but his corner entries weren’t as early as Alain Prost’s to my eye.

“If you took 1988 as a good year to compare the two, Alain would always have a slightly earlier turn in than Ayrton, so his corners were a little bit shorter.

“And Ayrton always had that business of the throttle blipping where he just wanted to feel that moment to get the power on, whereas Lewis and Michael never had to do that in order to find that moment.

“So you may think, what made Ayrton so great? Well, what made Ayrton so great was his incredible precision.

Windsor concluded:

“If the average great grand prix driver can shave a wall to within two centimetres, Ayrton could do it within half a centimetres 100 times over, apart from the apex of Mirabeau in the middle of the Monaco Grand Prix, which we have to put down to a lack of concentration.

“For sure Lewis, for sure Michael, for sure Nigel Mansell, for sure Alain Prost, Niki Lauda all had phenomenal judgment.

“But I think Ayrton possibly took that to a higher level."

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Lydia Mee
LYDIA MEE

Lydia is the lead editor of F1 editorial. After following the sport for several years, she was finally able to attend the British Grand Prix in person in 2017. Since then, she's been addicted to not only the racing, but the atmosphere the fans bring to each event. She's a strong advocate for women in motorsport and a more diverse industry. 

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