Formula One team bosses have voted Lewis Hamilton the sport's best driver, despite the Briton losing his title to Mercedes teammate Nico Rosberg, in an annual Autosport magazine poll. Germany's Rosberg, who won his first world championship in a tense Abu Dhabi season-ender last Sunday, was third in the secret vote behind Red Bull's 19-year-old Dutch sensation Max Verstappen. Red Bull's Australian Daniel Ricciardo was fourth. Hamilton won 10 out of 21 races this season — the first time a driver has won more than seven and not ended up as champion -to Rosberg's nine. The triple world champion also ended up with 12 pole positions but lost out by five points to Rosberg, who enjoyed greater car reliability and was consistently on the podium. Hamilton got more points in the 2016 Autosport poll, which asks bosses to name their top 10 and awards points to each driver according to Formula One's scoring system, than he did last year when he won the title with three rounds to spare. Hamilton one of the best, but no friend — Rosberg Formula One world champion Nico Rosberg hailed Mercedes teammate Lewis Hamilton as one of the greatest drivers of all time Wednesday but ruled out forging any friendly ties with the Briton as long as they raced each other. Rosberg, who lost out to Hamilton in the previous two years, made it third time lucky when he clinched his maiden title with a second-place finish behind the triple world champion at the season finale in Abu Dhabi Sunday. The pair have been at loggerheads all season and their frosty relationship had been compared by Mercedes boss Toto Wolff as a volcano ready to erupt. Hamilton compounded matters further when he deliberately slowed the pace from the front in Abu Dhabi, hoping to back Rosberg into a position where rival drivers could overtake the German in a last-ditch effort to overhaul his 12-point deficit. "Lewis is one of the best of all time. He sets a high standard," the 31-year-old Rosberg told reporters during a visit to his Wiesbaden birthplace in Germany. The tense atmosphere between the childhood friends as they waited for Sunday's podium ceremony spoke volumes, with Rosberg hoisting the sport's 86-year-old commercial supremo Bernie Ecclestone into the air but choosing to ignore Hamilton. There was minimal eye contact, let alone a handshake. "It will always be difficult between us. We are in the same team and race against each other for titles," Rosberg said. "It is virtually impossible to have a good relationship. We used to be best friends when we were young so at least we have this respect for each other. This helps somewhat," he added. "I do not know how he feels at the moment but I know how I felt in 2014 and 2015." Rosberg lost any hope of claiming the 2014 title with an engine problem at the final race of the season but he has be free of such reliability issues this year. "For me it was difficult to stomach. In 2015 I lost to him again. It will now take some time for him to process this," Rosberg said. — Agencies