Billionaire and ex-Formula one boss, Bernie Ecclestone says Lewis Hamilton is no longer the ‘fighter’ he once was and will regret his public support for the Black Lives Matter movement.
In an outspoken interview ahead of this weekend’s British Grand Prix at Silverstone, Ecclestone claimed Hamilton was not driving to his potential in his pursuit of a record eighth World Championship title and hinted that he could yet walk away from his new two-year £80million Mercedes contract.
Hamilton goes into this weekend’s race on a five-race losing streak which leaves him 32 points adrift of Red Bull rival Max Verstappen.
The seven-time world champion drove superbly to win three of the opening four rounds, but fell off the road at a rain-hit Imola in April and threw away an unlikely win at last month’s Azerbaijan Grand Prix when he fluffed his lines at the restart.
“I have spoken to lots of people about this and perhaps Lewis is not quite the fighter that he was,” Ecclestone said to the Press Association.
“There are lots of occasions this year where he could have done better and he hasn’t. Before he hasn’t had any competition, the equipment has always been super, and he hasn’t really had to make the effort. But now maybe he is thinking that he better take it a bit easier.
“At the beginning of the year I thought he would look to win the championship and then retire. But it appears not, even though I wouldn’t rely too much on contracts. He can escape from that.
“He probably had a look at the clothing range and music but realised that it is not as easy to make money there as it is in Formula One.”
Ecclestone, says he is supportive of Hamilton’s anti-racism stance, but he doesn’t support drivers taking a knee before races.
Last year, Hamilton labelled the 90-year-old Ecclestone as “uneducated and ignorant” after he said in a CNN interview that “in lots of cases black people are more racist than white people”.
Asked if he and Hamilton still speak, Ecclestone said;
“On and off. The last time was around the time of his support of Black Lives Matter. Lewis thought I was against it but he was wrong because I know what he is trying to do.
“He called me because I spoke to his father, Anthony. I said the trouble for Lewis is that he has gone out of his way to wave the flag for Black Lives Matter and that people are making an awful lot of money out of this, and not him.
“As soon as the passion wears off, he will be left with it being his fault. And all he has ever done is try do something to support it.
“It is the same thing with football where these things have become the fashionable thing to do to make it look as if you are interested in doing something. But I wonder what people actually do apart from talking about it?
“Lewis has done more than most on this. I don’t know what the footballers have actually done other than support each other.”
Hamilton, is the only black driver in F1, and on Wednesday, July 14, F1 bosses announced scholarship, apprenticeships and intern placements for underrepresented groups.
“I said to Lewis it would be good to do something together to give a lot more races the possibility in Formula One rather than it basically being white and English,” added Ecclestone.
“Lewis has done a lot but now it needs to go farther than that and everybody else needs to think about doing something because I am quite sure there are a lot of people from other nations that have drivers, mechanics and engineers as competent today as the white people.
“If Ron Dennis had not got hold of Lewis when he was a kid and believed in Lewis and supported him throughout, Lewis wouldn’t have made it.
“Lewis’ father believed in him, and was behind him completely, so we have to find families where the parents are well behind the kids and are prepared to make sacrifices so the children get an opportunity.”