'Broken the internet': F1 fans lose it over cryptic Lewis Hamilton post
Seven-time Formula One world champion Lewis Hamilton has sent the motorsport world into a frenzy with a somewhat cryptic post to his millions of followers.
Hamilton returned to social media after a lengthy absence that followed his heartbreaking and controversial title defeat to Max Verstappen in the final race of the 2021 F1 season.
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The 37-year-old had dropped out of public sight after he was denied a record eighth championship in the December finale in Abu Dhabi.
But he re-emerged on Saturday with a post that showed the seven-time champion smiling from what appears to the Grand Canyon.
"I've been gone. Now I'm back!" Hamilton wrote.
I’ve been gone. Now I’m back! pic.twitter.com/Y8i0cgJXZq
— Lewis Hamilton (@LewisHamilton) February 5, 2022
Such is the immense pulling power and popularity of the British star, those six simple saw Hamilton almost instantly start trending on Twitter.
As one fan on Twitter put it: "Lewis Hamilton has broken the internet with only his first post of 2022."
Hamilton did one brief post-race interview following his December 12 loss to Max Verstappen in Abu Dhabi.
He skipped the mandatory news conference, swerved the gala in Paris, and his last public appearance was three days after the Abu Dhabi race when he received his knighthood at Windsor Castle.
Hamilton declined to speak to the media at Windsor Castle and his last social media post had been the night before the season finale.
Speculation has swirled that Hamilton, who turned 37 last month, will retire from F1 over his disgust at how the championship was decided.
Lewis Hamilton's future unclear after 2021 heartache
Hamilton was within minutes of breaking Michael Schumacher's record with an eighth title until Nicholas Latifi's late crash changed everything.
Eventually, Verstappen beat Hamilton in a controversial one-lap shootout that the governing body is still reviewing.
Hamilton had a nearly 12-second lead with Verstappen in second when the crash brought out the yellow flag with five laps remaining.
Verstappen pitted for fresh tyres while Hamilton stayed on track. The race director, Australian Michael Masi, initially said lapped drivers could not pass the safety car, then reversed the call in a decision that left Verstappen second when the race resumed.
Verstappen then passed Hamilton to win his first world championship, leaving the Briton utterly deflated.
While Hamilton's post does in no way confirm that he's ready for another season of F1 with Mercedes in 2022, it has nevertheless sent social media into a spin.
LEWIS HAMILTON IS BACK pic.twitter.com/WoENQKU0mA
— leo🐋 LEWIS IS BACK (@LH44AA23) February 5, 2022
Lewis Hamilton’s comeback post did more numbers than any F1 related post congratulating max becoming a world champion in less the 20 minutes 🤣
— Tro🅿️icana Tae 🍊 (@blaxsupersaiyan) February 5, 2022
SIR LEWIS HAMILTON'S INFLUENCE 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/CXqkvLg0Wb
— 𝙃𝙖𝙧𝙧𝙮 (@teamLHarry) February 5, 2022
Lewis Hamilton has broken the internet with only his first post of 2022😂
— Aldas🇱🇹 (@Aldas001) February 5, 2022
Life was 🚫 but then 👆🏽 Lewis Hamilton 🤯 Seven times 7️⃣ champion 🏆 of the world 🌎 tweeted 🐦 then 😱 life was 🤩
— JD (@AMJFormula1) February 5, 2022
Me when I saw the “Lewis Hamilton just posted a photo” notification pic.twitter.com/ekqJx7HSQK
— Lesedi (@justsedii) February 5, 2022
Welcome back king!! 👑
You’ve been missed soooooooo much 💜 pic.twitter.com/nJXfnHE9w6— The 44 (@_the44) February 5, 2022
I'm renowned for my fierce and stoic neutrality, but I'm going to admit something
I'm a Lewis Hamilton fan. Come on Lewis #44 #2022WDC https://t.co/9jtQKNUe7r— Spanners (@SpannersReady) February 5, 2022
with AAP
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