28 years ago today, McLaren placed an audacious bet on a 13-year-old karter that would alter the F1 history books forever.
On April 3, 1998, Ron Dennis announced Lewis Hamilton's signing to the McLaren-Mercedes Young Driver Support Programme, a decision that seemed remarkable at the time and proved transformative in hindsight.
The youngster had already won the British Cadet Karting Championship, but McLaren was backing him based purely on potential, raw talent detected in a child barely into his teenage years.
The story had begun three years earlier at the 1995 Autosport Awards, when 10-year-old Hamilton approached Dennis and declared his ambition: "I want to race for you one day... I want to race for McLaren."
Hamilton himself later recalled telling Dennis he wanted to "race his car and be world champion." Rather than dismissing the boldness, Dennis engaged with the boy, an encounter Hamilton never forgot.
That 1998 signing set in motion one of motorsport's greatest partnerships.
Hamilton entered Formula 1 with McLaren in 2007, finishing on the podium nine consecutive times from his debut and missing the championship by a single point.
A year later, aged 23, he delivered McLaren their first drivers' title since 1999, becoming the youngest world champion at that point.
Hamilton eventually secured one championship with McLaren before his contentious 2012 departure to Mercedes, where he added six more titles to reach seven, equalling Michael Schumacher's record.
Today, at 41 and racing for Ferrari, Hamilton has fashioned a monumental legacy. However, his beginnings will always be traced to that April day in 1998, when Dennis gambled on a teenager from Stevenage.
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