Lewis Hamilton showed signs of frustration with his former
F1 team,
McLaren, after the
Italian Grand Prix at Monza. The seven-time World Champion lectured the British team after the race, saying it was clear to him in the cockpit that McLaren were making key mistakes that would cost them victory.
McLaren have the chance to topple Red Bull and win both
Formula 1 World Championships. They are well within touching distance (eight points) in the Constructors' Championship, and some will see them as favourites to leapfrog Red Bull in the standings at the next race in Baku. Meanwhile, Norris has a slim chance of winning the Drivers' World Championship. He has a 62-point gap to bridge with eight Grands Prix weekends remaining.
Hamilton believes McLaren should've won the
Italian Grand Prix despite what happened at the start of the race.
"McLaren had the pace but they pushed too hard. They were doing much too faster laps early on and killed the tyres," Hamilton told
Sky Sports.
"They must've planned for a two-stop, and that's why they were pushing so hard. If they had backed off and gone longer, they for sure could've made a one-stop. I was getting the information of the times they were doing and I thought 'there's no way their tyres would last at that pace," Hamilton said before congratulating his future teammate
Charles Leclerc for doing a
"fantastic job".