Lewis Hamilton's second place at Russian Grand Prix hailed as 'miracle' by Mercedes in lengthy open letter penned to F1 fans
- Lewis Hamilton 'limped' to second-place finish at the Russian Grand Prix
- Hamilton's podium finish has been described as a 'miracle' by Mercedes
- The Silver Arrows penned an open letter to fans posted on their website
- Letter explained Hamilton had 'zero' water pressure for the last 16 laps
- Mercedes revealed Nico Rosberg's lead was also jeopardised on Sunday
Mercedes have described Lewis Hamilton's second-place finish at the Russian Grand Prix as a 'miracle' after the Brit 'limped across the line' for a podium finish on Sunday.
In an open letter addressed to their fans and posted on their website, the team hit back at rumours suggesting they are favouring Nico Rosberg ahead of the current world champion.
Hamilton has endured a horrendous return to the track this season while Rosberg has claimed four wins out of four and allegations of foul play have circulated on social media.
Lewis Hamilton collects his second-place trophy following an excellent drive from a lowly tenth on the grid
The Brit's second-place finish has been described as a 'miracle' by Mercedes in an open letter written to fans
But Mercedes, who also revealed Rosberg's lead was jeopardised by 'alarming' read-outs from the MGU-K, have attempted to quash speculation by describing the weekend's issues in depth.
The open letter explained that Hamilton, who trails his German team-mate by 43 points in the drivers' standings, had 'zero' water pressure for the last 16 laps of the Russian Grand Prix.
'We were baffled and gutted by the repeat MGU-H failure on Lewis' car in qualifying,' the team explained in the open letter which was posted on Mercedes' website. 'But we kept calm, gathered our thoughts and sprung into action.
'It took a monumental effort from a significant number of people back in the UK and in Russia to fly spare parts out to the track, fit them to the spare Power Unit by working through the night and make sure Lewis could start from P10 on Sunday without having broken parc ferme. This made Sunday all the more stressful for each of us. But, in the end, we were relieved just to get both cars to the flag.
Hamilton (left) fought through the field, passing Valtteri Bottas (left) and Kimi Raikkonen on his way to second
The current world champion (left) battled back from 10th on the grid to earn himself a creditable second place
'Shortly after his pit stop, we saw some alarming behaviour from Nico's MGU-K. We spent a number of laps reassuring him that he had a good gap over Lewis and could ease off before the FIA gave us the all-clear to tell him to switch to a setting that would control the issue.
'At the wheel, Nico wouldn't have had any inkling of the stress on the pit-wall. When he put in the fastest lap on the penultimate lap of the race, he was still in that 'safe' setting - demonstrating just how much pace the car had last weekend.
'Not long after Nico's issue arose, we started to see the water pressure falling on Lewis' car. At the time, he was pushing hard to catch Nico and pull away from Kimi - posting several purple lap times in the process. Again, we needed to await confirmation from the FIA of what we could tell him via the radio.
Nico Rosberg (right) celebrates winning his seventh straight race after triumphing in the Russian Grand Prix
Hamilton looks on with a wry smile as Rosberg celebrates his fourth win of 2016 by spraying champagne
'After several calls asking him to take it easy, the all-clear came to let him know that he was losing water pressure. With zero - yes, zero! - water pressure remaining for the last 16 laps, the job he did to nurse the car home and still retain second place was truly remarkable.
'He had to keep the car as cool as possible to avoid damaging the engine whilst also keeping Kimi at a safe distance, which was no mean feat. We genuinely aren't sure by what miracle the car limped across the line - but we're certainly not going to complain.'
The Brit started 10th in Sunday's race after his engine expired in qualifying, and despite a Herculean effort from his team to get his car ready, the Briton encountered further problems as he began to reel Rosberg in.
Following his second-place finish, Niki Lauda labelled talks of the German team favouring Rosberg as 'b******t,' while Toto Wolff called those questioning the professionalism of his outfit 'lunatics'.
And Mercedes also went on to defend their mechanics by insisting 'there is no "A" or "B" team here' and concluded the letter by claiming 'if we can convince even half of you of what we really stand for, we'll consider that a battle well won'.
Niki Lauda told Sky Sports on Sunday Mercedes do their best to ensure reliability for Rosberg and Hamilton
Toto Wolff (left), pictured speaking to Ferrari boss Maurizio Arrivabene, called conspiracy theorists 'lunatics'
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