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F1 2022: Lewis Hamilton Worried Before Season-opening Bahrain Grand Prix

Lewis Hamilton has do🐷ubts over whether the Mercedes' W13 car is quick enough to win the first race in Bahrain.

Lewis Hamilton i🍌s a seven-time F1 champion, six of t𝓀hem with Mercedes.
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Lewis Hamilton believes fans will be in for an unusual surprise when the Formula One season starts next weekend and he begins his quest to wrestle back the title he agonisingly lost to Max Verstappen on the last lap of the final race. (More Sports News)

Hamilton is a seven-time F1 champion — six of them with Mercedes — but he has doubts over whether the W13 car is quick enough to wi👍n the first race in Bahrain, and maybe even several races after that.

"I think people will be surpris🃏ed. It's a bit different this year," the 37-year-old British driver said. 

"At the moment ꦇI don't think we'll be competing for wins." 

Hamilton insists this is not bluff or mind games, or that Mercedes is talking itself down deliberately while secretly holding something back to unleash on its riv🧔als next Sunday in Sakhir.

"We have far bigger challenge🥀s this time and they're not one-week turnarounds, I think it will take a little bit longer. From what I've been told we have a considerable amount of pace to find," a downbeat-sounding▨ Hamilton said as preseason testing left F1's powerhouse team with more questions than answers. 

"We have some hurdles to ov✃ercome, and obviously next week we'l💝l get a much better showing of our pace." 

That's not the usual𒁃 fighting talk from Hamilton, F1's record holder with 103 wins and 103 poles. He was within minutes of being F1's most successful driver ever with eight titles, uꦇntil Verstappen's controversial victory in Abu Dhabi shredded that dream in seconds.

That was also the last race of a two-team era, dominated by Hamilton and Merc༺edes after🍒 Red Bull and Sebastian Vettel had enjoyed four years of joy.

But F1 wanted change, a more level playing field, more outsiders w♐🌌ith a shot at success, less money for the big guns to keep dominating the also-rans, or the “midfield” as the humdrum term was coined. 

So new regulations came in for this year.

"I think it's one of the most exciting✤ seasons we've ever embarked upon," Hamilton said when preseason testing started three weeks ago. 

"♛;Walking down the pit lane and seeing all the differ🧔ent cars." 

They are a bit he༺avier tܫhan before but overtaking could increase this season.

"They're defi⛦nitely a bit stiffer than before. I don't mind it, the car's quite enjoyable﷽ to drive," Verstappen said. 

"It see🦄ms like it's a little bit easier to follow cars.” 

Most drivers agree with that assessment.

In a bid to increase fairer competition, budgets were cut from USD 145 million (132 million euros) to USD 140 million (127 million euros) for each team this year and will dro🐼p to USD 135 million (1♛23 million euros) in 2023.

Big rivals on the track last year, when they talked like boxing heavyweights before a weigh-in,🌃 Red Bull team principal Christian Horner and his Mercedes counterpart Toto Wolff both agree it's a serious issue.

"(You must) structure the company and organization in the right way to meet the cost cap aꦅt USD 140 million," Wolff said. 

"꧋;Also in a high inflation environment we're not only losing five million (dollars). You have to decide very carefully where you invest your dollar." 

There cou🅺ld be several areas to look at, then, for Merceꦦdes.

It has struggled to adapt the car with one of the main issues being "porpoisi💝ng" — another F1 term — which means an aerodynamic issue where cars hop and bounce on the track.

"We do seem a step behind our rivals, and we do haveꦇ a lot of work to do between now and next week to understand," Hamilton's teammate George Russell said. 

"Because in every (racing) condition the Red Bull and Ferrari seem a step 🅘ahead of us. We're not🐲 as competitive as we'd like." 

Verstappen hinted at that as he drove excellently on Saturday to set the fastest time in all of the testing. And, after a horrid 2020 🅠campaign  and a handful of podiums but no w🎉ins in 2021, Ferrari could be smiling again. 

It's been 15 years since Kimi Raikkonen won the title — an eternity for F1's most famed team — but The Prancing Horse galloped well in testing and Charles Leclerc is quietl𒀰y confident.

"It's definitely one of the smoothest preparations I've had for a season," he said💫. “No major issues." 

Leclerc showed what he could do in 2019, his first season at Ferrari, leading 🉐Hamilton 7-5 for most pole positions and then-teammate Vettel 2-1 for wins.

If Ferrari gets it right, he might have a crack at challenging his old rival Verstappen. The 24-year-olds haven🧸't always got on, and Leclerc said it was tense between them during their karting years.

A microscopic examination of tensions is all the rage now in F1, largely thanks to Netflix's "🐻;Drive to Survive" which started to air its fourth season on Friday iജn time to spice things up on track.

It takes an inside look at F1 drivers and team officials, showing h🌃eated arguments and other incidents in the globetrotting racing series. 

Not everyone's a fan. 

"I'm quite a down-to-earth guy. I just wan༒t i♔t to be facts and just don't hype it up," Verstappen said. 

"It's just not my thing." 

Besides, he has to focus on holding off Hamilton.

But Vettel, who successfully defended a title three times, thinks Verstappen won't feel any extra pressure asꦯ reigning champ♏ion.

"💦You have the No. 1 on your car and it's a privilege," said Vettel, who won with Red Bull from 2010-13. 

"I didn't see it as an extra burden. If anything, it was a boost, so I 𒈔think he will probably feel the same."