Seven days can be a long time in Formula One and it once again proved to be true for Lewis Hamilton.
Last Sunday you did not need to be a body language expect to know how despondent the triple world champion was after he had finished fourth and lost further ground to Sebastian Vettel in the drivers’ championship.
To have the fastest car in the field, and yet be 20 points behind in the standings, largely through no fault of his own, had demoralised the Briton to the extent that he was so miserable with television media that he later felt obliged to explain his right to be downhearted.
“When you personally don’t deliver and when things stack up against you, it’s hard to come out smiling,” he had said in Spielberg. “That would mean you don’t care enough. The fact is, I care.”
Fast forward seven days to this Sunday and the F1 world got to see the other end of the spectrum of Hamilton emotions as he crowd surfed with fans after winning the British Grand Prix for a record-equalling fifth time.
The victory at Silverstone, which was his fourth in a row at the Northampton track, as well as improving his mood, also blew open the championship on a day when Vettel endured his first real misfortune of the season.
With two laps to go of the race Hamilton had led, as he had done throughout the event, with Vettel fourth, and set to gain 13 points on the Ferrari driver.
But, then the twist came. Initially it looked as if it would be in Vettel’s favour as his teammate Kimi Raikkonen, who had been running second, slowed with a puncture, and pitted.
This moved Vettel upto third, behind Hamilton and the second Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas, who had charged through from ninth on the grid to highlight just how strong the German marque’s machine now is, and he was now set to lose only 10 points to his title rival.
But, he then suffered his own tyre deflation, and the time lost from returning to the pits, pitting, and returning to track dropped him to seventh, and his championship lead slashed to just a single point.
Hamilton was keen to dedicate his victory to his team, and after matching Jim Clark and Alain Prost’s record of five wins at the track, he said: “I was very, very fortunate, the team did an exceptional job this weekend.
“The car felt great and we were genuinely faultless.”
The race at Silverstone underlined that when Hamilton has a problem free weekend he and his Mercedes car are the fastest package in F1.
The depression in Austria arguably came from the fact that unreliability and mistakes within his own team were threatening to undo his title hopes, just as they did last year when he lost out to then teammate Nico Rosberg.
A lot of angst from Hamilton following the incident with Vettel in Azerbaijan last month, where the German pushed his car into his behind the safety car, came from the fact that he had actually lost ground to his rival despite the clash.
Vettel was penalised with a 10-second stop-go penalty, but Hamilton’s headrest became loose and he had to pit to have it reattached, and instead of winning the race and gaining 15 points on Vettel, he lost two as he finished fifth to the Ferrari man’s fourth.
Then in Austria, a gearbox change before the race weekend gave him a five-place grid penalty, and he finished fourth when his teammate Bottas won.
Vettel was second there, and two races that Hamilton would have expected to win instead ended up losing him eight points.
But, Hamilton had no issues all weekend at Silverstone, and after taking pole by more than half-a-second, he controlled the race.
Yes, Vettel was held up and lost a lot of ground in the first part of the race stuck behind the Red Bull Racing car of Max Verstappen in fourth spot for the first half of the race, before passing him in the pit-stops, but he would have been unlikely to fare much better than Raikkonen, who was almost 10 seconds behind in second by the time the pit stop window opened mid-race.
Given the raw speed of Mercedes, they have won three of the past four races, and six of 10 this season, further mechanical failures and bad luck does appear the only way for Hamilton to miss out on not leaving the Etihad Airways Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, the final round of the season, in November as champion.
For Vettel and Ferrari, it is clear that relying on Mercedes problems will not be enough for them to win their respective championships and they need to find a step forward in performance in their car over the summer break, which comes after the Hungarian Grand Prix on July 30, if they are to turn the tide and find the form that saw them claim a 1-2 finish as recently as in May in Monaco.
Start-up hopes to end Japan's love affair with cash
Across most of Asia, people pay for taxi rides, restaurant meals and merchandise with smartphone-readable barcodes — except in Japan, where cash still rules. Now, as the country’s biggest web companies race to dominate the payments market, one Tokyo-based startup says it has a fighting chance to win with its QR app.
Origami had a head start when it introduced a QR-code payment service in late 2015 and has since signed up fast-food chain KFC, Tokyo’s largest cab company Nihon Kotsu and convenience store operator Lawson. The company raised $66 million in September to expand nationwide and plans to more than double its staff of about 100 employees, says founder Yoshiki Yasui.
Origami is betting that stores, which until now relied on direct mail and email newsletters, will pay for the ability to reach customers on their smartphones. For example, a hair salon using Origami’s payment app would be able to send a message to past customers with a coupon for their next haircut.
Quick Response codes, the dotted squares that can be read by smartphone cameras, were invented in the 1990s by a unit of Toyota Motor to track automotive parts. But when the Japanese pioneered digital payments almost two decades ago with contactless cards for train fares, they chose the so-called near-field communications technology. The high cost of rolling out NFC payments, convenient ATMs and a culture where lost wallets are often returned have all been cited as reasons why cash remains king in the archipelago. In China, however, QR codes dominate.
Cashless payments, which includes credit cards, accounted for just 20 per cent of total consumer spending in Japan during 2016, compared with 60 per cent in China and 89 per cent in South Korea, according to a report by the Bank of Japan.
Global state-owned investor ranking by size
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United States
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China
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UAE
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Japan
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5
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Norway
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Canada
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Singapore
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Australia
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Saudi Arabia
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South Korea
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It Was Just an Accident
Director: Jafar Panahi
Stars: Vahid Mobasseri, Mariam Afshari, Ebrahim Azizi, Hadis Pakbaten, Majid Panahi, Mohamad Ali Elyasmehr
Rating: 4/5
Countries recognising Palestine
France, UK, Canada, Australia, Portugal, Belgium, Malta, Luxembourg, San Marino and Andorra
Book%20Details
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The President's Cake
Director: Hasan Hadi
Starring: Baneen Ahmad Nayyef, Waheed Thabet Khreibat, Sajad Mohamad Qasem
Rating: 4/5
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Volvo ES90 Specs
Engine: Electric single motor (96kW), twin motor (106kW) and twin motor performance (106kW)
Power: 333hp, 449hp, 680hp
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On sale: Later in 2025 or early 2026, depending on region
Price: Exact regional pricing TBA