Sir Lewis Hamilton will race for Mercedes-AMG for the final time at today's Abu Dhabi grand prix (8 December), bringing to an end one of the longest-running and most successful tenures in the sport's history.
As the seven-time world champion begins brushing up on his Italian and packing his bags for a new era in Maranello, we're looking back at our exclusive interview with Hamilton from 2021, when he won the Autocar Editor's award, for an individual who has had outstanding success personally or for their company.
In our wide-reaching conversation, Hamilton recounts his journey from the kart track to the F1 grid, considers the shape of modern motorsport and discusses his work – on- and off-track – to promote diversity and inclusion in all walks of life.
The following story is taken from the 9 June 2021 edition of Autocar
In the last scene of season three of Netflix’s fly-on-wall series Formula 1: The Drive to Survive, we see a news reporter interviewing a young Lewis Hamilton. “As Lewis began to win, the fact that he was the only black face on the grid became an issue,” says the reporter.
Hamilton is not talking about all the success he is having but instead about the racist abuse he has experienced while karting. “In the past years, I’ve had racist names called to me but lately anybody that’s said anything to me I just ignore them,” says a young Lewis.
It cuts to his dad, Anthony. “We don’t get involved with people who have problems about whether we win or what colour we are,” he says. “We go out on our track and do our best.”
The footage is heartbreaking. Here’s a young boy doing what he loves, with a dream to get to Formula 1 and maybe one day be world champion, but while having to face discrimination and be grilled about it. No ‘How are you finding your karting?’ questions, just ‘What’s it like to be abused for the colour of your skin?’
“I was just eight years old,” says a 36-year-old Hamilton reflecting on the report, now talking as a seven-time Formula 1 world champion. “For someone to look down at a young eight-year-old and tell them they’re not going to achieve anything in life, they must be in a really bad place.

In May last year, 46-year-old black American George Floyd was murdered by a white policeman in Minnesota. The shocking footage was seen by the world and ushered in a global anti-racism movement – one of the most vocal leaders of which was Lewis Hamilton.





