Lewis Hamilton stands out from the group in a mint inexperienced T-shirt and gray camouflage trousers as he makes use of alias 'Andrew' to order a milkshake in LA
Lewis Hamilton appeared ever-trendy as he loved a procuring journey to Westfield Century Metropolis in Los Angeles on Thursday.
The racing driver, 37, stood out from the group in an unmissable mint inexperienced T-shirt which he mixed with a pair of gray camouflage cargo trousers.
He accessorised his look with an orange baseball cap and sipped from a chocolate milkshake which appeared to have an alias 'Andrew' written on it.
Strolling via the advanced in a pair of black-and-white leather-based trainers, he was enamoured together with his cellphone throughout the outing.
The Hertfordshire native donned a black face masks amid the continued coronavirus pandemic.
His newest look comes after Method One introduced a deal to proceed racing in Abu Dhabi via to 2030.
The Abu Dhabi Grand Prix is held on the Yas Marina Circuit and was added to the F1 calendar in 2009.
'We're delighted to verify that we are going to be racing in Abu Dhabi till 2030 underneath this new settlement', F1 chief government and president Stefano Domenicali stated on Thursday.
'We're massively wanting ahead to the season finale this weekend when extra Method One historical past shall be made.'
In Novembery, Lewis bit again at his critics and stated accusing Mercedes of attempting to cheat their approach to his eighth world title is the 'worst declare to ever make'.
'All of us have egos and that is what controls our feelings, and it's egos combating one another,' Hamilton instructed The Occasions.
'There may be defence, there's respect, however I did see somebody say one thing about dishonest, and that is the worst declare to ever make.'
He added: 'I referred to as James Allison and Mike Elliott and stated, "I really want to know about these things," and so they took me via particulars of the place we're.
'We now have completed all these assessments and that is the place it's, however I do not prefer it when folks put that [cheating accusations] on the market.'