23/08/2025 20:00
Liam Lawson has detailed why he feels "guilty" about celebrating
strong results in F1. The New Zealander has enjoyed an upturn in
results of late, scoring points at three out of the previous four
rounds. It marks a significant improvement from his early-season
form, which saw him demoted from the Red Bull team after just two
grands prix. His recent run of strong results includes a
career-best sixth place at the Austrian Grand Prix. Lawson
highlighted a recent comment provided by world golf number 1
Scottie Scheffler, who stated that winning tournaments is
"fulfilling from the sense of accomplishment, but it's not
fulfilling from a sense of the deepest places of your heart. If I
win, it's going to be awesome for two minutes". Drawing his own
experience with dealing with sporting pressure, Lawson said: "That
[Scheffler's answer] is the best way to describe it. He was very
honest. "Any sport - it's not even sport - it's any industry that
you're working in, any goal that you're working towards, there's so
much that goes into it. "Especially in F1, there is so much
pressure around our jobs. It can relate to not just F1and sport, it
can relate to anything. "For me, I have experience in the sport, so
I can talk only on what I know. "There's just so much pressure
around it and you have these goals. As soon as you reach them,
you're straight on to the next one." Lawson's future beyond the
current season is currently unknown, as only Max Verstappen has his
future confirmed within the Red Bull camp. It installs a state of
being under constant pressure to perform, and with a quick
turnaround to the next event, he has little time to dwell on his
successes. "At the moment, with how tough the sport is, you have a
good result and it's just straight on to the next weekend," he
said. "Trying to enjoy those moments, it can be very, very hard to
enjoy them, just because that's just a mindset you have to have. "I
find it hard to be fully satisfied with something without feeling
guilty that I'm not putting the work in for the next weekend or for
the next race or the next season or whatever it may be. "I don't
know how it is, but obviously seeing an interview like that from
Scottie, it sort of shows you that that's actually just how it is
all the way through. "For anybody that's elite at anything and
sport or in business or whatever you're doing, to be the best at
it, I think it's almost just the mindset you have to have."