As
the dust settled on the Indian Grand Prix, the post-race attitude of
McLaren's two world champions spoke volumes as to their current states
of mind. After a brief chat for TV, Lewis Hamilton headed straight to
the airport, reflecting on another forgettable weekend. Jenson Button,
after his sixth podium in seven grands prix, laughed and joked with the
media into the evening.
However,
for the first time, Button admitted he was enjoying his dominance over
his team-mate. When he joined McLaren at the start of 2010 it was widely
believed he would wilt in the shadow of Hamilton and that he was
recruited as a definite No.2 to the 2008 champion. But over the last two
season Button has impressed everyone with his on and off track
performances while Hamilton has seemingly lost his way.
As
has happened most weeks, Button's discussions with the media inevitably
turned to his team-mate. But when asked to analyse where things went
wrong for Hamilton in India, Button fired back: "I don't give a f***."
It
wasn't a angry response, just one which highlighted frustration that
Hamilton's problems were overshadowing McLaren - and Button's -
resurgence.
"If
you have someone like Lewis, who is bloody quick, it means a lot when
you can finish in front of him, yes," Button said. "He is also another
world champion, so he is no slouch.
"We
all want to beat our team-mate, whatever we say. That's the way it is.
We have the same equipment. It is a real challenge to beat him, but that
is the challenge I wanted when I came here. I wanted to find out where I
really stand compared to Lewis. I have had better races than Lewis in
the second half of the season, but he has had phenomenal races when I
have not been able to touch him.
"Lewis
will be strong next year. Sometimes you wish he wasn't that quick but
it is competitive. He will definitely be there next year, no doubt, and
we will have good fights and you will have two Brits fighting it out for
the championship."
Martin
Whitmarsh, the McLaren boss, admitted Hamilton's loss of form was not
helped by his being repeatedly bettered by Button. "If you are honest,
the first driver you want to beat is your team-mate," he said. "Lewis is
the great exciting driver he is, but he will not like being beaten by
anyone. Least of all by Jenson."
Button's
performances have not gone unnoticed with one outsider, however, with
Flavio Briatore - the team principal who fired Button from Renault -
admitting his previous opinion of him was incorrect.
"I was quite wrong about the English driver," Briatore told La Politica nel Pallone. "He has been the real surprise this year. He worked for us and I would never have guessed he was so good."
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