Hamilton Reveals Long Battle with Depression in Times Interview

British driver Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes-AMG Petronas being interviewed after coming in third in the qualifying for the Singapore Formula One Grand Prix at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore, 21 September 2024. (EPA)
British driver Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes-AMG Petronas being interviewed after coming in third in the qualifying for the Singapore Formula One Grand Prix at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore, 21 September 2024. (EPA)
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Hamilton Reveals Long Battle with Depression in Times Interview

British driver Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes-AMG Petronas being interviewed after coming in third in the qualifying for the Singapore Formula One Grand Prix at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore, 21 September 2024. (EPA)
British driver Lewis Hamilton of Mercedes-AMG Petronas being interviewed after coming in third in the qualifying for the Singapore Formula One Grand Prix at the Marina Bay Street Circuit, Singapore, 21 September 2024. (EPA)

Seven-time Formula One champion Lewis Hamilton battled with depression for years from an early age as he dealt with the pressure of pursuing a career in motor racing and faced bullying at school, the 39-year-old told The Times in an interview.

Hamilton, who has been racing competitively since he was six, said he has also battled with depression as an adult, and has found it difficult to open up about his journey.

"I think it was the pressure of the racing and struggling at school. The bullying. I had no one to talk to," Hamilton said in the interview published on Saturday.

"I’ve struggled with mental health through my life, depression from a very early age when I was, like, 13... when I was in my twenties I had some really difficult phases."

Hamilton made his Formula One debut in 2007 when he was 21, becoming the first Black driver in the series. He won the championship next year and matched Michael Schumacher's record of seven championships in 2020.

The Briton said he felt more mature today than he was earlier in his career.

"You’re learning about things that have been passed down to you from your parents, noticing those patterns, how you react to things, how you can change those," he said.

"So what might have angered me in the past doesn’t anger me today. I am so much more refined."

Hamilton said he has tried silent retreats to improve his mental health, and while talking to a therapist years ago did not help, he would like to find one in the future.

The Mercedes driver, who is set to join Ferrari next year, is sixth in the championship, with the next race set for Austin next month.



AC Milan, Inter Ultras Arrested for Alleged Organized Crime Offences

AC Milan's ultras fans celebrate during a Serie A match against Lecce at the San Siro stadium on September 27, 2024. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
AC Milan's ultras fans celebrate during a Serie A match against Lecce at the San Siro stadium on September 27, 2024. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
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AC Milan, Inter Ultras Arrested for Alleged Organized Crime Offences

AC Milan's ultras fans celebrate during a Serie A match against Lecce at the San Siro stadium on September 27, 2024. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP
AC Milan's ultras fans celebrate during a Serie A match against Lecce at the San Siro stadium on September 27, 2024. Gabriel BOUYS / AFP

Hardcore supporters of AC Milan and Inter Milan were arrested on Monday for alleged organized crime offenses, Italian police said.
In a statement, Italy's finance police said that leading figures among the "ultras" of two of the country's most important football clubs had been arrested for "criminal conspiracy aggravated by mafia methods, extortion, assault and other serious crimes".
"The suspects are almost all members of the Milan teams' ultras groups while the crimes relate to revenues made around football," added the finance police.
A police source told AFP that 19 people had been arrested in total, including the two heads of the Inter and Milan ultras, Luca Lucci and Renato Bossetti.
Monday's arrests come a few weeks after the reputed heir of a powerful crime family was killed by one of Bossetti's predecessors.
Andrea Beretta, who himself has a long criminal record, stabbed to death Antonio Bellocco during an altercation outside a boxing gym in a Milan suburb early his month.
Bellocco's death was a shock because of his reportedly high status within the 'Ndrangheta mafia, which led to Beretta's family being placed under special surveillance by the police over fears of violent reprisals.
It also highlighted suspicions that mafia mobs were infiltrating ultra groups, attracted by the earnings some supporters' organizations allegedly earn through illicit activities ranging from ticket touting to drug dealing.
Beretta took a leading role in the Curva Nord section of the San Siro after career criminal Vittorio Boiocchi was shot dead outside his home in October 2022.
Italian media widely reported at the time of his murder aged 69 that Boiocchi had bragged in wiretapped conversations about earning 80,000 euros ($88,000) a month through his position as ultra leader.