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Hamilton rewinds to ‘moment’ that changed his life forever

Few careers in modern sport carry the weight, records and legacy of Lewis Hamilton – but even the most decorated figures in Formula 1 still have a single, crystal-clear starting point in mind.

For Hamilton, that “moment” came not in the heat of a race win or a championship celebration, but on a grid walk in Monza, back in 2006, when a quiet conversation turned into the doorway to one of the most dominant careers the sport has ever seen.

Nearly two decades later, the seven-time world champion revisited that memory with striking clarity – and a sense of disbelief that never quite faded.

A grid, a whisper, a future unlocked

In September 2006, Hamilton had just sealed the GP2 title and arrived at Monza as a rising star embedded in the McLaren ecosystem, watching and learning from the world he was about to enter.

What happened next, he says, unfolded in a moment that didn’t fully register until much later.

“My moment was Monza 2006, I’d just won the GP2 championship,” Hamilton explained in Montreal recently.

“Kimi [Raikkonen] was on pole and I had the privilege of going onto the grid, and I was standing in front of Kimi’s car, and Ron [Dennis] put his arm around me and he told me, looking up to Turn 1, he says, ‘I’m going to give you a chance’.”

The simplicity of those words masked their significance. At the time, Hamilton admits, he struggled to interpret exactly what had been decided in that instant.

"That was the moment,” he recalled. “In the moment, I couldn’t quite believe it and I didn’t know if he was like, ‘I’m going to give you a chance’… I didn’t know what it was going to be a chance at, if it was really…

“That’s what I was thinking when I left. But obviously that was the moment that he had decided that he was going to give me a chance for 2007.”

That “chance” would become one of the most consequential decisions in modern Formula 1 history, as Hamilton stepped into McLaren’s race seat in 2007 and immediately reshaped the competitive landscape.

From rookie fire to record books

Hamilton’s rookie season ended in heartbreak as the title slipped away, but redemption arrived quickly. In 2008, he became world champion for the first time – the first of seven titles that would ultimately see him match the legendary Michael Schumacher.

His journey through McLaren, then Mercedes, where he collected six further championships between 2014 and 2020, and later his controversial title battle loss in 2021, has defined an era of dominance rarely seen in any sport.

At the end of the 2024 season, Hamilton embarked on a bold new chapter with Ferrari – yet even now, the memory of Monza remains a fixed point in his story.

Reflecting on his career and legacy, Hamilton offered a perspective that goes beyond trophies and statistics – one rooted in evolution and mindset rather than external validation.

“I’ve never really thought about how you would define success. I think success can be perceived in lots of different ways,” he said.

"I think waking up every day and trying again, always trying to be better than your previous self, evolving into the person that you feel comfortable in, who you want to be, overcoming adversity, proving people wrong that try to hold you back or bring you down, the way you show up.

"Of course from the outside world results are what people call success, but I think internally for me it’s just progress. If you’re progressing, you’re succeeding.

“That’s why I’ve always said I’m really grateful for the records and those sorts of things, but they’re not things I ever think of.

"The things I think of is every day how I tune my brain, because ultimately I’m really focused on… You can tune yourself to believe what you want. And I’m always trying to work on my inner self to programme myself to be moving forward, not looking at what’s behind me.

“It’s a part of the journey but not necessarily the most important thing. The important thing is how you’re getting up, it’s how you’re pushing forward, it’s how you’re trying to evolve, and just looking forward, always looking forward, never looking back.”

From an unexpected moment on the Monza grid to a career that rewrote the record books, Hamilton’s recollection serves as a reminder that even the most extraordinary journeys often begin with a single, uncertain sentence: I’m going to give you a chance.

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Michael Delaney

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