Lewis Hamilton said on the platform in the wake of winning the Brazilian Grand Prix. You can state that once more. The 52nd triumph of the Mercedes driver’s career kept the title battle alive for a last race standoff in Abu Dhabi in two weeks’ opportunity. Rosberg will begin that race as a solid most loved to wind up title holder. Be that as it may, a disorganized, crash-strewn race at a misleadingly wet Interlagos underscored the inlet between the two men.
Rosberg takes a 12-direct lead toward the Yas Marina circuit and to secure his first world title needs to complete just third there regardless of the possibility that Hamilton wins.
Be that as it may, on days like Sunday in Brazil, there is probably who is the immense driver and who the great one.
Hamilton was in his very own association in states of outrageous trouble, untouchable even by a roused Max Verstappen. The title holder was the main driver the TV cameras did not find committing an error of some sort, all while driving at a speed past the compass of his adversaries.
Factually, there is very little to pick between the two Mercedes drivers this season – they have nine wins every; Hamilton has 11 posts and Rosberg eight.
Rosberg drove an exceptionally strong race, and survived one scary minute when he practically put the car in the divider quickening through the wrinkles right on time in the pit straight.
“I feel like I have been my strongest this year,” Hamilton told BBC Sport after the race. “There were a couple of things that really got in the way”.
Had he not held that, the race would have seen the huge turnaround in focuses that Hamilton expected to get appropriately once more into the title race. As it seems to be, he will more likely than not require a mechanical issue on Rosberg’s car in Abu Dhabi to win a fourth world title.
“It’s never easy but I didn’t have any mistakes for sure,” Hamilton said. “When you make mistakes it really hurts and I was more focused than ever and there was never going to be a moment I made a mistake. To win this, it has been a grand prix I have always wanted to win since I watched Ayrton win here in 1991. It has taken me a long time to get here and it is a historic day for me. To stand on the podium in Brazil where Ayrton was so loved was really special.”