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July 23, 2015

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Title talk on back seat as F1 mourns Bianchi

The championship tussle between Lewis Hamilton and Nico Rosberg will take a back seat at the Hungarian Grand Prix this weekend, with Formula One still coming to terms with the death of Jules Bianchi.

The 25-year-old Bianchi died in a hospital in his hometown of Nice on Friday from injuries sustained in a head-on crash during the Japanese GP last October.

The outpouring of sympathy and support for Bianchi’s family reflected just how popular he was. He was also highly rated, and made enough of an impression in his 34 GPs for many observers to predict he would be a future star. Bianchi had been expected to replace Kimi Raikkonen at Ferrari.

Hamilton, Rosberg, Brazilian driver Felipe Massa and French driver Romain Grosjean attended Bianchi’s funeral in Nice on Tuesday, along with four-time F1 champions Alain Prost and Sebastian Vettel and FIA president Jean Todt.

“Saying goodbye to Jules was incredibly hard for everyone,” Hamilton said. “For myself, I wished I had known him better. But from what I knew of him, he was a kind heart with a great spirit and a bright future.”

Bianchi made his GP debut for Marussia in 2013. The previous year, he drove for the Force India team in several practice sessions. “We had the pleasure of working with Jules during 2012 and he left a strong impression on everyone,” Force India team principal Vijay Mallya said. “An outstanding young man and a tremendous talent who was destined for great things in Formula One. The world has lost a true racer and we have all lost a friend.”

With his win three weeks ago at the British GP, Hamilton extended his lead over Rosberg to 17 points, a morale booster after Rosberg had won three of the past four races heading to Silverstone.

It seems increasingly likely that the F1 championship will be won by one of the Mercedes drivers, who have won eight of nine races so far, with five wins for Hamilton.

Ferrari driver Sebastian Vettel, who drove brilliantly to win the Malaysian GP in the second race of the season, is already lagging 59 points behind Hamilton in third place.

McLaren, meanwhile, must stop the decline.

Despite two world champions in Fernando Alonso and Jenson Button, the team has only five points so far as it struggles with new Honda engines. At the British Grand Prix three weeks ago, Alonso forced Button out of his home race.




 

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