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Hamilton adds to F1 history making

Monday, June 11, 2007

He was the first black driver on the circuit and now has his first victory.

MONTREAL (AP) — Lewis Hamilton’s learning curve just got a lot shorter.

The 22-year-old Englishman, the first black driver in Formula One history, added his first F1 victory to an already remarkable career start by winning the crash-filled Canadian Grand Prix Sunday.

And he made it look easy.

Hamilton started from the pole, also for the first time. Apart from losing the lead for three laps when he made his first of two pit stops, he led all the way and was never challenged.

The slim, soft-spoken youngster has six consecutive top-three finishes in six starts, something no other first-year F1 driver has accomplished.

“This is history,” Hamilton said, grinning.

Not much competition

The only one to give the Mercedes McLaren driver any competition during the 70-lap race on Circuit Gilles Villeneuve’s 2.71-mile road course was BMW Sauber’s Nick Heidfeld. He chased Hamilton all day without catching him.

The only thing that kept the race close at all was accidents — four full-course caution flags that wiped out the leads Hamilton built with seeming ease.

He kept winning the restarts though and beat Heidfeld to the finish by 4.3 seconds.

“It was a fairly simple race, apart from the restarts,” Hamilton said.

“I’m the type of guy that will usually push right to the end, but it’s a tricky circuit, and if you make one mistake you go into the marbles and into the wall. So I quieted down towards the end and just enjoyed it.”

Celebrates at end

Once he had the race in hand, the youngster scrambled out of his cockpit. He thrust his arms in the air and jumped up and down. He then bounced to the ground, trotted to a barrier and jumped across to dive into the midst of his crew, hugging everyone in sight.

“It’s been a fantastic season already,” he said. “We’ve had six podiums and I’ve been ready for quite some time for the win — it’s just been a matter of when and where.”

Heidfeld was almost as happy with his runner-up finish, matching his career best.

“I think I had a very good chance to finish second even in normal race conditions, without so many safety cars [on the track] and without Fernando [Alonso] being penalized,” Heidfeld said.

Alonso, the two-time and reigning F1 champion, started alongside his McLaren teammate on the front row. He made a mistake on the start when he drove off the course in the first turn and allowed Heidfeld to dive past into second.