Swing To Trade
  • Stock
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Sports
Sports

Lewis Hamilton’s Ferrari transition work in progress entering Miami GP

by admin May 3, 2025
May 3, 2025

MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Lewis Hamilton’s favorite part about joining Ferrari so far? It’s easily the Italian food.

‘I’m trying to stay off the pizzas and the pasta, which I’m not doing very well with. I was there last week and have like three pizzas in two days,” Hamilton said with a laugh during a media day Thursday ahead of the 2025 Miami Grand Prix weekend at Miami International Autodrome.

Hamilton’s performance five races into his Ferrari career after leaving Mercedes, however, has been far from a lighthearted or laughing matter for the seven-time F1 champion.

While Hamilton won the first Sprint race of the season at the Chinese Grand Prix March 22, he was disqualified from the the main race due to a technical matter. Hamilton started the year with a 10th place finish in Australia. He finished seventh in Japan, fifth in Bahrain, and seventh again in Saudi Arabia.

More concerning, Hamilton has placed behind his Ferrari teammate Charles LeClare in four of the five races, China being the exception, and he’s placed behind both Mercedes drivers — George Russell and Kimi Antonelli — in three races this season.

It makes you wonder if Hamilton — who has watched Red Bull’s Max Verstappen take hold of the sport, winning four consecutive F1 Drivers’ Championships after Hamilton’s last in 2020 — still has it. Hamilton’s elusive eighth title would break a tie with Michael Schumacher for the most all-time in F1.

‘I try not to really focus on opinions of people that have no insight into actually what is going on – insights from individuals that have never been in my position,” Hamilton said when asked about other’s opinions of the state of his career amid his tough start at Ferrari. ‘So yeah, I just keep my head down and try to continue to enjoy the work that I do with the people I work with.’

Acclimating to a new car and new team takes time, but Hamilton ould makes some progress this week in Miami after visiting Ferrari’s F1 headquarters in Maranello, Italy last week.

Still, the pressure is on. He’s placed sixth in the previous three Miami races, and it’s been nearly a year since his last F1 win.

Hamilton stood atop the podium twice last year: He won at his home race, the British Grand Prix at Silverstone on July 7, and he won the Belgium Grand Prix July 28. Hamilton inherited the latter victory after finishing second when his former teammate was disqualified from first place because his car did not meet post-race weight requirements.

The two victories ended a winless drought Hamilton experienced during the 2022 and 2023 F1 seasons. He finished in second place eight times during that span.

Before then, Hamilton was the sport’s best driver after championships in 2008, 2014, 2015, 2017, 2018, 2019 and 2020.

“When I joined Mercedes, the first six months were tough getting attuned to working with new people,” Hamilton said. “Obviously, the engineers I’m working with now are used to setting up a car for a different driver and a different driving style, and I’m used to driving a car with a different driving style. So, it’s a combination of a bunch of different things.”

Asked to elaborate more specifically, Hamilton said there are “many things, lots of different things — there’s not one particular.”

Is there any way Hamilton and Ferrari can shorten their adjustment to each other to less than the six months it took him when he first joined Mercedes in 2013?

‘We’re trying to work as hard as we can to shorten that, but it could be longer,” Hamilton said. “Who knows?”

There’s a long season ahead — 16 more races this year — to work out their new relationship, but time isn’t on 40-year-old Hamilton’s side.

“There are things that we’ve made adjustments to,’ he said. ‘We’ll see how they work this weekend.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

previous post
Award-winning NHL goalie pulled for a third time: What’s going on?
next post
Romero beats Garcia in Times Square: Breakdown of main event fights

Related Posts

Packers’ Micah Parsons feared to have suffered serious...

December 15, 2025

NFL playoff picture: Cowboys on brink, Chiefs out,...

December 15, 2025

NCAA men’s hockey power rankings: Big Ten teams...

December 15, 2025

Lions’ playoff hopes fading after loss in LA

December 15, 2025

Diego Pavia issues apology after bashing Heisman voters

December 15, 2025

Moore accuser told police ‘she has never been...

December 14, 2025

Michigan launches investigation into athletic department, possible coverup

December 14, 2025

Pitt tops Purdue for fifth straight trip to...

December 14, 2025

John Cena’s last match results: Winners, highlights

December 14, 2025

Lakers guard out at least a week with...

December 13, 2025
Join The Exclusive Subscription Today And Get Premium Articles For Free

    Your information is secure and your privacy is protected. By opting in you agree to receive emails from us. Remember that you can opt-out any time, we hate spam too!

    Recent Posts

    • Here’s why this FTSE 100 Index stock jumped ~380% in 2025

      December 15, 2025
    • Sanofi shares slide as FDA delays MS drug decision and late-stage trial disappoints

      December 15, 2025
    • Interview: ‘the biggest mistake is treating 2026 as a reset year,’ Jac Arbour on modernising portfolios for next market regime

      December 15, 2025
    • India plans to turn to private capital to unlock nuclear energy growth

      December 15, 2025
    • JPMorgan rolls out tokenized money-market fund on Ethereum: report

      December 15, 2025
    • About us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Copyright © 2025 SwingToTrade.com All Rights Reserved.

    Swing To Trade
    • Stock
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Sports