In the large striped jumper that he wore to the Formula One Grand Prix in Monaco on Sunday, Lewis Hamilton looked stylish.
Arriving in luxury on a small luxurious boat, the British driver seemed upbeat as he docked and got onto a scooter.
He looked great wearing the beige and navy short-sleeved polo shirt with wide-leg pants that matched.
Lewis accessorized with a pair of fashionable shades and a thick silver chain necklace, remaining comfortably attired in boots.
The seven-time world champion smiled as he rode his scooter to the Mercedes garage after arriving in the paddock.
Lewis, who has spent the last three seasons with an uncompetitive Mercedes, recorded the fastest lap in the first practice around the winding streets and the second-best time in the final warm-up.
He qualified for the race on Saturday in seventh position, as Ferrari’s Charles Leclerc won the pole position, besting Oscar Piastri of McLaren and teammate Carlos Sainz of third.
Max Verstappen, the leader of the world championship, qualified sixth, behind Lando Norris in fourth and Lewis’s teammate George Russell in fifth.
A reporter from Italy questioned Lewis earlier in the weekend about whether he thought would be more difficult: placing on the podium in the next 17 races or learning Italian before joining Ferrari. He chuckled.
“It seems like learning Italian will be the most difficult,” he remarked.
“However, currently, reaching the podium is probably the less likely option.”
It follows after Lewis announced that, upon retiring from racing, he would concentrate on “film and fashion.”
The Formula 1 driver has acknowledged that he has already consulted with several of his well-known colleagues who have already retired from competitive racing when considering his post-race plans.
‘I’d spoken to so many fantastic players, from Boris Becker to Serena Williams, to Michael Jordan,’ he said in GQ’s annual Creativity Issue.
Speaking with legendary athletes that I’ve encountered along the road, some of whom are still competing or are retired, makes me realize how unprepared they are for what is ahead.
Many of them had the comment, “I stopped too early.” Or simply: “Stayed too long.”
“When it ended, I didn’t have anything planned.” “My whole world came crashing down because my whole life has been about that sport” .
“I didn’t plan and it was a bit of a mess-up because I was really lost afterwards,” said a few of them.
That kind of hole existed. Such a gap. Furthermore, I had no notion how I would fill it. And at first, I tried to fill it so quickly that I filled it with the incorrect item.”
However, that simply made me consider, “Okay, when I stop, how do I avoid that?” I therefore started taking my search for alternative passions seriously.