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London (Reuters): The titles are won and the pressure is off but the Formula One season could yet have a sting in the tail for four-times world champion Lewis Hamilton and triumphant Mercedes.
Resurgent Red Bull believe they can win the last two races, in Brazil this weekend and Abu Dhabi at the end of November, while Ferrari are also eager to wrap up 2017 with a flourish.
“The last four races we’ve had the quickest car on a Sunday,” said Red Bull boss Christian Horner after Max Verstappen won in Mexico and Hamilton finished ninth to take the title.
“Hopefully Brazil can be a good track for us and why not in Abu Dhabi? It will be great to finish the season with at least one more victory.”
Verstappen excelled in the wet at Sao Paulo’s atmospheric Interlagos circuit last year, when his performance in racing from 16th to third in 15 laps drew comparisons with some of the greats.
The Dutch 20-year-old has now won two of the last four races, after a run of poor reliability, while Red Bull have scored more points than second-placed Ferrari since the end of the August break.
“As you would expect I’m hoping for another damp race weekend as I don’t think we can be as competitive there in the dry, especially with the elevation changes on the straight,” said Verstappen.
Australian team mate Daniel Ricciardo, also a winner this season in Azerbaijan, was hopeful even though the circuit is not one of his favourites.
Hamilton has won nine times this year, including five of the last seven, and can still equal the career best of 11 in a season he achieved in 2014. He took both the pole and victory at Interlagos last year.
Finnish team mate Valtteri Bottas is third overall and only 15 points behind Ferrari’s Sebastian Vettel, a four-times winner this year, with Mercedes determined to finish one-two for the fourth season in a row.
”Now the pressure is kind of off, we can go and enjoy these next couple of races,“ said Hamilton after Mexico. ”I think it’s important that we focus exactly as we have and continue to race as we have.
“This is not an opportunity for us to take our eye off the ball,” added the Briton, who was planning on visiting the Inca citadel of Machu Picchu in Peru with friends in between the Latin American races.
“The pressure is off so we should be able to perform better than we ever have and I believe we can.”
Sunday will also be a home farewell for Brazilian Felipe Massa, who is leaving Williams and Formula One at the end of the season.
Last year he made an emotional exit only to return when Bottas moved to Mercedes from Williams to replace the retired 2016 champion Nico Rosberg.
“I take so many great memories with me as I prepare for my final two races,” said the former Ferrari driver who missed out on the 2008 title to Hamilton by a single point. “Although they will be emotional, I am looking forward to ending on a high note and preparing for a new chapter in my career.”
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - Champions Mercedes plan to use the last two races of the Formula One season to test new ideas and parts for 2018 now that they have won both titles.
The British-based team said in a preview for Sunday’s Brazilian Grand Prix that, with nothing at stake, they could afford to become “a little bolder” and experiment in Friday practice.
The experiments could also be carried over into the race for newly-crowned four times world champion Lewis Hamilton and team mate Valtteri Bottas.
“These two final weekends are not only an opportunity to test new parts, but also allow experiments for those tasks that the team simply doesn’t have the opportunity to complete during a normal race weekend,” said Mercedes.
“The team will have an intense programme on the next two Fridays in Brazil and Abu Dhabi to make the absolute most of the opportunities that have been afforded by early title success.” Mercedes won the constructors’ championship for the fourth year in a row in Texas last month while Hamilton, now Britain’s most successful driver of all time, took his fourth title in Mexico.
Mercedes said they would be using prominent aerodynamic devices, of the type usually seen in pre-season testing and which carry extra weight, in Friday practice.
They will also test some new pit-stop equipment and techniques in live conditions for the first time.
Team boss Toto Wolff said there would be no easing up when it came to racing, however.
”Inside the team, we are looking at the next two race weekends as the first two grands prix of 2018,“ said the Austrian. ”We have two races that we are determined to win in order to take that positive momentum into the winter.
“Every time we race, we race to win. That is the mind set we take to Sao Paulo.”
Reuters: New Zealander Brendon Hartley, who last month made his Formula One debut with the Toro Rosso team, won the world endurance championship with Porsche for the second time.
The 27-year-old, his compatriot Earl Bamber and Germany’s Timo Bernhard took the number two Porsche to second place in the penultimate round of the championship in Shanghai to secure the title.
Porsche, who are leaving the championship at the end of the season, also won the manufacturers’ crown for the third year in a row.
Toyota won the race with Japan’s Kazuki Nakajima, Britain’s Anthony Davidson and Swiss racer Sebastien Buemi.
Le Mans 24 Hours winner Hartley, who also won the world championship in 2015 with Bernhard and Australian Mark Webber, is set to complete the Formula One season with Toro Rosso after making his debut at last month’s U.S. Grand Prix.
He also looks likely to be confirmed for 2018 with French rookie Pierre Gasly.