
Lewis Hamilton emerged from the smoke of his donuts in Abu Dhabi, knelt down next to his Mercedes and patted the side of the car.
It might not have been the fairytale result they wanted, but he and Mercedes had still signed off on a high. A Q1 exit in part due to a bollard wedging itself under his floor made for a tough Sunday outlook, but Hamilton was at something approaching his best with a measured drive through the field, capped with a beautiful move around the outside of teammate George Russell on the final lap to take fourth place.
“Every moment that I’ve got in the car this week I’ve known that it’s one of the last,” Hamilton said. “It’s been really, really clear and really hard to let go. I think when I stopped the car I just wanted to embrace the moment, because it’s the last time I’m going to step into a Mercedes and represent them.
“It’s been the greatest honor of my life. They’ve powered every race, every pole position, every win we’ve had together, every championship, so I think when I knelt next to it … it was just giving thanks. Firstly, thanking my own spirit for not giving up and continuing to push, thanking everyone that powered and built that car; I’m proud of everyone.”
The fact that Hamilton’s move to Ferrari has been known for so long means the shock has subsided, with the Briton likening it to living with a partner for a year after announcing you would be breaking up, but he and Mercedes’ final race together really is a landmark moment in Formula 1 history.
At the end of 2012 — when Hamilton had only been in F1 for five years but felt like a McLaren lifer — he took the brave step to leave his comfort zone in search of a team that would offer a chance of more personal freedom and a front-running car.
“Obviously, I remember meeting Niki ,” he said. “And I remember making the decision … It definitely wasn’t as painful and difficult as this year has been in terms of the emotions. I think because it was at the end of the year, it was much quicker and there wasn’t enough time for it to really settle in for anyone, I think, within the team.
“This one is much more emotional because I’ve been with the team so long and we’ve been through so much together.”
His decision to move teams over a decade ago was like searching for the holy grail, and Hamilton certainly found it at Mercedes.
Many before failed in that quest. Fernando Alonso is one such driver who is so often cited as moving teams in search of a happy home and never quite being in the right place at the right time.
But for Hamilton and Mercedes it was a perfect fit. An organization where he had a teammate in Nico Rosberg who would push him and ensure it wasn’t simply his team, but also where his faith in making the move had further galvanized a workforce that was getting ever closer to becoming a true contender.
When Hamilton started with Mercedes, he was still maturing. Turning 28 ahead of his first season, you could have expected him to be in his prime, but this was a driver who still had plenty of developing to do on and off track. We just didn’t know it at the time.
The 2014 season had a double-points finale but it wasn’t required as the gap between the two Mercedes drivers was just 17 points before Hamilton wrapped up title number two. The third was much more emphatic, but having won the championship early in Austin, allowing Rosberg the opportunity to win the three remaining races — the first time Rosberg had beaten his teammate in three c onsecutive races that both had finished — created momentum that would prove tough to halt.