Lewis Hamilton sweeps Autosport Awards

F1 star Hamilton pits on Park Lane to pick up trophies

Lewis Hamilton may have narrowly missed out on this year’s Formula One world title, but the reception he received at the Autosport Awards this evening was regal. The 22 year-old arrived at the Grosvenor House Hotel on London’s Park Lane behind the wheel of a £300,000 McLaren Mercedes SLR roadster to collect prizes for Best British Competition Driver, Best International Racing Driver and Rookie of the Year.

The awards were voted for by readers of Autosport magazine. The ceremony will be broadcast on ITV1 on Tuesday 4th December at 11:20pm Hamilton  was  left  speechless  after  a  moving  presentation  by  Viviane  Senna,  sister  of  Lewis’  hero Ayrton,  who  flew  to  the  Awards  from  Sao  Paulo  especially  to  congratulate  Britain’s  racing  star.  “He reminds me of Ayrton, as a pilot. And he has the same kindness in his eyes”, she said. This wasn’t the first time Lewis was honoured at the glamorous Autosport Awards, for back in 1995 ten year-old Lewis was up on stage to collect more silverware. “I’m just as nervous standing up here now as I was then”, said Lewis.

“This has been an incredible year for me. To get to my first grand prix and get  on  the  podium  was  amazing,  and  it  just  got  better  and  better.  By  the  mid-point  of  the  season  I realized  I  had  a  chance  and  that  I  shouldn’t  mess  around”.  Despite  conceding  the  championship  to Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen, the McLaren driver was philosophical. “You have to lose to learn how to win. We’ll be right there next year.”

Searching for the next big thing was also on the agenda, with the announcement of the 2007 McLaren Autosport BRDC Award for a rising star of British motorsport. Having toughed it out against five other talented pilots in a showdown at Snetterton, 18 year-old Stefan Wilson from Sheffield followed in the footsteps of Jenson Button and David Coulthard to take the spoils: A test drive in a Vodafone McLaren Mercedes  Formula  One  car  and  £50,000  towards  his  career,  as  well  as  membership  of  the  British Racing Drivers Club and a £6,000 one-off Graham Chronograph Swordfish timepiece. The brother of former F1 driver and one-time Award nominee Justin Wilson, Stefan was thrilled by the limelight.

“It’ll separate  me a bit from my brother and gives me the chance to tease him”, he said. Stefan finished second in the Formula Palmer Audi championship in only his debut season of single-seater racing. The International Rally Driver award went to Marcus Grönholm, who narrowly missed out on this year’s championship and has announced his intention to retire. “I drove my last stage just a few hours ago. It will take a long time for that to sink in”, he said. Jason  Plato  was  voted  National  Racing  Driver  of  the  Year,  and  he  too  narrowly  missed  out  on  the BTCC title.

Commenting on his lucky escape from a burning car while filming a feature for Fifth Gear, Plato joked: “Adrenelin is the most amazing drug. Best one I’ve ever had.” And  Dario  Franchitti  was  honoured  for  winning  the  IndyCar  championship  and  Indy  500.  Having survived two enormous crashes this year, the Scot shed some light as to why he has chosen to switch to NASCAR in 2008. “When I hit the ground the first thing I thought was ‘I’ve gotta stop doing this’. I don’t know if I was thinking about IndyCar or just crashing the thing!” Tribute was paid to rally driver Colin McRae who was killed in September, and Lewis Hamilton had his own special memory of the Scotsman.

“I met him when I was ten and he offered me a drink. He was such a character.” More drinks were on the cards after the trophies had been dealt, with motorsport’s royalty heading for a special after-party at London’s Pacha superclub.

THE LIST OF WINNERS British Club Driver of the Year: Duncan Tappy National Rally Driver of the Year: Mark Higgins National Racing Driver of the Year: Jason Plato International Rally Driver of the Year: Marcus Grönholm John Bolster Award for technical achievement in motor racing: Patrick Head Best International Racing Car: McLaren-Mercedes MP4-22 Pioneering and Innovation Award: HANS Gregor Grant Awards: Fabrizio Giovanardi & Dario Franchitti Rookie of the Year: Lewis Hamilton British Competition Driver of the Year: Lewis Hamilton International Racing Driver of the Year: Lewis Hamilton McLaren Autosport BRDC Award: Stefan Wilson


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