Salary cap should not handicap sport's top talent, says Hamilton

27 November 2020 - 09:01 By Reuters
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Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP in the paddock before the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on November 26, 2020 in Bahrain.
Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Mercedes GP in the paddock before the F1 Grand Prix of Bahrain at Bahrain International Circuit on November 26, 2020 in Bahrain.
Image: Mark Thompson/Getty Images

Any proposed cap on the salaries of Formula One drivers should be careful not to hold back the sport's top talent, seven-times champion Lewis Hamilton said on Thursday.

Formula One has been discussing a cap on driver salaries as part of a wider effort to level the financial playing field between the wealthiest and poorest teams on the grid.

“I'm not personally opposed to it,” the Briton, who equalled Michael Schumacher's record haul of seven titles at the last race in Turkey, told reporters in a video conference call at the Bahrain Grand Prix.

“I do think about the next up and coming young stars that are coming through and I don’t particularly see why they should be handicapped if they’re bringing something huge to the sport.”

The sport has already agreed a $145m (roughly R2,202,521,000) cap on teams' overall budgets for next year, which is set to reduce further to $140m in 2022 (roughly R2,126,572,000).

The salary cap, however, is not a part of those measures and is still some way away, with a proposal calling for it to be implemented in 2023 put before the Formula One Commission in October.

“If you look at other sports, there have been salary caps in some of those sports ... I think the one difference is that in those places the individuals own their image in many areas, they can try to maximise their image elsewhere,” said Hamilton.

“This sport controls pretty much the driver’s image,” added the 35-year-old, who earns an estimated £40m (roughly R811,007,160) a year and is in negotiations over an extension to his Mercedes contract, which is set to expire at the end of this year.

The drivers were the stars of the sport and Formula One needed to recognise that, said Hamilton, who, having surpassed Schumacher's tally of race wins, podiums and pole positions, is now the most successful driver in the sport's history.

“It is a multi-billion dollar sport and they should be rewarded for what they do bring to it,” he added.


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