Details surrounding Lewis Hamilton's debut Formula 1 test have been revealed by a former team member.
Hamilton started his F1 career with McLaren, bursting onto the scene in 2007, already challenging for a world championship title, before claiming his first of seven championships in 2008.
The 40-year-old is set to make his debut with the Maranello outfit later this month as part of their testing of previous cars (TPC) programme, before his Ferrari grand prix debut in Australia in March.
Hamilton F1 debut details revealed
Hamilton will work with former boss Fred Vasseur at Ferrari in 2025, a man he previously worked with during his GP2 days, claiming that particular title in 2006.
His immense talent became clear from the early stages of his single-seater career, and a test with the McLaren team in their 2006 car confirmed to the team that he was the right man for their new era, with both Kimi Raikkonen and Pedro de la Rosa departing the Woking outfit.
Now, Liam Lawson's trainer Matt Tait, who worked with Hamilton during his early days with McLaren, has exclusively provided GPFans with details on those initial tests with the team.
"I mean, he was quite a timid lad when I met him," Tait exclusively told Jim Kimberley on behalf of GPFans.
"He was quite timid. He was just very focused on racing, just asked questions all the time. How can I improve?
"So, like, engineering questions over the radio, like, he was constantly asking them, how he can improve, what can he do better, how can he drive the car, is his braking points okay, is he hitting the apex, is he doing this right, is he doing that right, how does he compare to the other drivers?
"I would just say it's more, he was just thirsty for knowledge. And then we'd go for dinner, we'd talk about how was it physically, how did he find it, and then he's like, 'what can I do to improve?'
"'How can I get stronger here? How can I get stronger there? What can I do about this? How's best to recover? What should I be eating?'
"Like, it's just all the time, and it was any little point that he could get a one per cent improvement, he wanted to do it.
"I mean, it was 2006 when I spent the most time with him," Tait continued, talking about Hamilton's GP2-winning season. "And you know, that just came out all the time.
"Like, he just really wanted to learn, and he wanted that seat. He really wanted that seat, and he would do anything to get there and push himself to get there. And that's just the mark of, of the lad, really.
"Yeah, I've got nothing, nothing bad to say about my experiences with Lewis, like, in terms of a competitor and a racing driver and just an overall nice lad.
"Like, that's the Lewis I knew. Obviously, like, things have changed, and you know, we all grow up. So whether he's still like that, I don't know."