Norbert Haug has admitted Mercedes is eyeing possible "contingencies",
in the event Michael Schumacher does not race the German team's 2013
car. "Of course we have to plan for all contingencies," said Mercedes' competition vice-president, amid raging speculation Lewis Hamilton might sensationally switch from McLaren to drive in Schumacher's place next year. |
Haug is quoted by SID news agency as revealing the team is conducting "open and faithful" talks with Schumacher.
And
when asked about Hamilton, he added: "Lewis grew up with us (Mercedes)
and with McLaren. We worked together even when he was 12 years old.
"But it is not possible to conclude from this that the current rumours have any basis."
An outright denial sounds different. Indeed, Haug acknowledged the speculation.
"As
long as seats are available, you have to deal with it. We do not
spread the rumours, but we have to live with them," he said.
The
latest rumours were fanned by former team owner and now British
television pundit Eddie Jordan, but McLaren's Martin Whitmarsh
questioned their credibility.
"I think that any article that
includes a sentence that begins 'Eddie Jordan understands ...' is
automatically questionable," he told the BBC.
But Jordan's
television colleague David Coulthard, a former long-time McLaren driver,
said the Irishman has earned more credibility than that.
"EJ has a
reputation for being a bit outspoken but he has brokered more driver
deals than almost anyone in the sport, has contacts all over the place
and is friendly with Lewis's manager, Simon Fuller," he wrote in the
Telegraph.
"I cannot recall him being wrong when he has stuck his
neck out like this. He was right about Michael Schumacher coming back
to the sport three years ago, for instance," Coulthard noted.
So for now, the Hamilton saga is the talk of the Monza paddock.
"He looks so unhappy at McLaren -- I think he will go," an unnamed team principal told the Guardian.
Jenson Button, Hamilton's teammate at McLaren, thinks the 2008 world champion would be mad to move.
"It wouldn't hurt me as much as I think it would hurt him," he said.
But
as Coulthard surmised, no one at present really knows if Hamilton is
staying or going. And "I'm not sure that he does either," said the
Scot.
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