JENSON BUTTON has insisted that Lewis Hamilton is a more "complete human" now compared to when they were team-mates.
The two Brits raced together while at McLaren Mercedes' F1 team between 2010 and 2012.
During their time as team-mates, Hamilton and Button were close competitors.
Hamilton, 38, picked up ten wins and 22 podiums, whereas Button, 43, won eight races and earned 27 other podium finishes.
Despite Hamilton's legacy in the sport, in this period he scored 657 points while his team-mate was able to earn even more with 672.
The pair had many memorable wheel-to-wheel duals as well as a public fallout when Hamilton tweeted a picture of Button's top-secret telemetry during the 2012 Belgian GP.
READ MORE IN FORMULA ONE
Shakira spotted at Spanish F1 as rumours swirl over relationship with Hamilton
Win an Audi RSQ3 + £1k or £45,000 cash alternative from just 89p
According to The Times, the pair do not talk away from media duties, but Button has claimed that Hamilton has grown as a human.
The retired racer also praised the standard to which his former team-mate is still driving at.
He told The Times: "I think he’s in a good place, which is great.
"The difficult years make you as a driver, and he’s not had so many of them.
Most read in Motorsport
Shakira and Lewis Hamilton 'in early stages of dating' after cosy dinners
F1 faces THIRD race cancellation as forest fires threaten Canadian GP next week
F1 legend spots ‘good sign’ for Hamilton as Brit targets record eighth title
Sky Sports suspend two F1 commentators after sexism storm on live TV
CASINO SPECIAL – BEST CASINO WELCOME OFFERS
"But he’s still performing unbelievably well, and he seems a more complete human being than he probably was back then."
Button is instead closer to Hamilton's current team-mate George Russell.
The 2009 Formula One World Championship winner has also praised veteran racer Fernando Alonso but insisted the Spaniard's longevity has not made him regret getting out of the F1 driver's seat.
He added: "I had different ideas. I started a family and I don’t want to miss them all the time and them feel like their dad isn’t around.
"Motor racing can be very stressful.
"That’s why I retired from F1 because I felt like I had nothing new to learn.
"I wanted to do things that I enjoyed. That’s why I’m at Le Mans."
Source: Read Full Article