The Eau Rouge bet between Kovalainen and Hamilton

Jamie Woodhouse
Lewis Hamilton

Lewis Hamilton, Heikki Kovalainen and the Eau Rouge bet.

Former McLaren driver Heikki Kovalainen has revealed how a bet on how quickly Lewis Hamilton could take Eau Rouge made him a believer.

Ahead of the 2009 Belgian Grand Prix, Hamilton made a bet with then-team-mate Kovalainen on how quickly he could take the sweeping high-speed Eau Rouge corner on the first lap out of the pits during FP1.

Kovalainen lost the bet, but you probably guessed that already.

Speaking in the latest Beyond the Grid F1 podcast, Kovalainen said: “We were at Spa, and the first practice was just about to start, and I think Lewis came to me and said: “Would you like to do a bet, just on the out lap, that who goes faster through Eau Rouge straight out of the box?

“In those days it wasn’t like easy flat out straight out of the box on Friday morning. And I said, “Yeah, yeah, we’ll do that.” Then he just went with the right leg straight and went flat out the first lap. I had a tiny lift and I lost the bet. But that was the kind of thing that he was… I kind of knew that that’s lost money for me. I was never gonna win that. So yeah… he’s got unbelievable fighting spirit.”

Kovalainen believes he wasn’t far off Hamilton’s level, but he burned out due to the constant need to push himself that far.

“He was just that tiny bit faster all the time, and I had to stretch, every session,” he said.

“It was straight from the winter test, you know, I was always like… I had to stretch to match him or be ahead of him, like an average lap wasn’t good enough. And when you’ve done that for a year and a half… I kind of run out of energy.

“In the second half of the second year, 2009 in McLaren, it’s fair to say that I drove below my own ability even. Rather than focusing on my own race and my own results, and trying to get close to Lewis, I started to overdrive. I got frustrated and, in fact, the gap just got bigger and I made some mistakes.

“I think the reason why that happened during that second half of 2009 was because I had to stretch all the time. And when you’re stretching for too long time, you run into a wall at some point.

“I think it’s just his pace was just a tiny bit quicker consistently. I don’t have any trouble admitting it. He is one of the greatest, if not the greatest driver. I’m glad I went against him.

“But at that point of my career, it was also quite detrimental for my career. I had a momentum, but I wasn’t able to keep the momentum going with Lewis as my team-mate.”

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