MARTIN WHITMARSH feels Lewis Hamilton has a tendency to "try too hard sometimes", but can be forgiven as he strives to become Formula One world champion.
Hamilton was warned not to over-drive by his engineer Phil Prew during qualifying for Saturday's British Grand Prix after running wide on one of his hot laps.
Only after the 23-year-old McLaren ace had clinched a stunning win in the wet at Silvers
tone did he concede to doing a "terrible job" the previous day when he could qualify only fourth on the grid.
At that stage it appeared to be another mistake from Hamilton to compound those he made during the races in Canada and France and which had put him under an intense spotlight, but he redeemed himself with his glorious triumph to shoot him back to the top of the drivers' standings on 48 points alongside Ferrari duo Felipe Massa and Kimi Raikkonen.
"Lewis does try too hard sometimes," was McLaren F1 CEO Whitmarsh's assessment of the young Briton.
"He pushed very hard in the last sector in qualifying, probably overdriving it there.
"By his own standards it was a pretty poor qualifying session, but luckily he was still on the second row.
"He then came out in such a strong frame of mind, believing 'okay, it didn't go right in qualifying, but I've the ability in the race to win this thing'.
"He then gauged it pretty right in the race. It will go down as one of those races people will talk about for years."
The full article contains 267 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.