I always wondered how race car drivers handle their cars on city streets. It must be tough for someone used to going 200 mph to have to drive at 60 or 65... Even I have to struggle with my tendency to want to step on it (didn't I tell you about my 130-mph adventure in the Richard Petty Driving School?) .. Well this AP story about Formula One sensation and incredibly talented young driver Lewis Hamilton shows that the F1 stars sometimes live in the fast lane even when they're not on the racetrack. Not being able to drive in France shouldn't be too much of an inconvenience for Hamilton, who is British. -- David
PARIS (AP) - Formula One driver Lewis Hamilton had his driver's license suspended for a month in France after he was caught speeding by police.
Hamilton was clocked going 196 kph (123 mph) in a Mercedes on the A26 highway near the northern town of Laon on Sunday night, police spokesman Arnaud Dujardin said Tuesday.
"He (Hamilton) recognized the infraction he had committed straight away," Dujardin said by telephone. "He was very courteous. The police officers then took him back to his hotel."
Hamilton's car was taken away by police and picked up by a friend of the British racing star on Monday. Dujardin said the police officers did not recognize Hamilton, who was alone in the car, until they looked at his identification papers.
"They did not know it was him. All they saw was a car going too fast," Dujardin said, adding that Hamilton is banned from driving on French roads for one month.
"He no longer has a permit on national territory," Dujardin said. "He cannot drive in France, although I don't know whether that applies to (England)."
The 22-year-old McLaren driver led the world championship standings for much of his rookie season but finished runner-up, one point behind Ferrari's Kimi Raikkonen. Hamilton won four races.
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Bling goes the Driver:
Lewis Hamilton, holding diamond-studded helmet, admires the $50 million 'Ponahalo" necklace
(Photo and wire story from May 23)
Formula One leader Lewis Hamilton had a taste of Monaco's millionaire lifestyle on Wednesday when he was handed a diamond-studded helmet to wear in Sunday's showcase grand prix.
"I'm blinged out. I got bling on my helmet, how cool is that," enthused the 22-year-old rookie at a presentation organised by diamond company and McLaren team sponsor Steinmetz on one of the larger floating palaces moored in the Mediterranean principality's exclusive harbour.
Hamilton and double world champion team mate Fernando Alonso will wear helmets with 'Monaco 07' written in white diamonds on the side.
The helmets will then be auctioned for charities chosen by the drivers.
Both drivers flanked a model wearing the 'Ponahalo', a necklace made up of at least $50 million worth of stones cut from one 316 carat rough diamond -- the largest to come out of the De Beers Venetia mine in South Africa.
The necklace, paraded under the watchful gaze of security guards, will be shown to some of the world's wealthiest individuals over the grand prix weekend before being sold to the highest bidder -- assuming the unspecified reserve price is reached.
Both McLaren drivers were also given $10,000 rings, each one with a tyre tread motif in diamonds, to keep.
Hamilton, the youngest leader in the history of the championship with a two point advantage over Alonso after four races, could become the first rookie to win the most glamorous race of all.
However he said he felt at home in his extraordinary surroundings.
"I'm fit, probably fitter than I've been all season, and more relaxed than I've been all season," he told reporters.
"This is the best race of the season, and already the atmosphere is building up. I can really feel it. I'm just so excited to be here, standing on the back of the biggest boat I think I've ever seen," added Formula One's first black driver.
"But then, driving the streets of Monaco is any driver's dream."
Hamilton has finished all four of his races so far on the podium, the first rookie to achieve that feat, and has been runner-up in his last three grands prix.
Brimming with confidence, he saw no reason why the run of success might not continue.
"We just need to remain consistent. We've only had four races, and it's already been an amazing journey just to get here," he said.
"I just need to keep on enjoying it, making sure I keep my feet on the ground. With this sort of weekend it's easy to just start floating -- well we are floating at the moment -- because it's an amazing experience.
"I am really, really enjoying it."