Published • loading... • Updated
After Another Disastrous Race, Lewis Hamilton Confesses He's Not Looking Forward to 2026 with Ferrari
Hamilton's struggles have left Ferrari fourth in constructors standings, risking a $26 million prize money loss, with the British driver finishing outside podiums for the first time since 2007.
- After the Las Vegas Grand Prix, Lewis Hamilton started 20th after a qualifying disaster and recovered to finish 10th, deepening a bleak 2025 campaign with only two races left.
- The switch to Ferrari, once seen as transformative, has seen Hamilton post four fourth-place finishes while the team that finished second last year has regressed.
- Statistically, Hamilton now sits sixth in the drivers standings, only 15 points clear of Mercedes rookie Kimi Antonelli, and faces an uncommon slump not seen since 2007–present.
- Financially, the consequences are clear: the constructors standings drive prize-pool shares, and if Hamilton can't halt his slump, Ferrari could face losses as revenues rise after the 2025 season.
- The paddock moves to Qatar from November 28, where Hamilton faces two critical races but `anticipates another couple` bad weekends after Las Vegas.
Insights by Ground AI
15 Articles
15 Articles
Lewis Hamilton's Ferrari disagreement, 'replacement' options named, very worrying comment - The Mirror
Lewis Hamilton's future in F1 and Ferrari is back under the spotlight after another disastrous weekend at the Las Vegas Grand Prix for the seven-time world champion
·London, United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleFor Ferrari, it's a Formula One season to forget. It's getting more and more embarrassing for the Scuderia.
·Germany
Read Full ArticleSeven-time Formula One world champion Ferrari driver Lewis Hamilton said he is not looking forward to next season, after a difficult year with his new team and a poor race weekend in Las Vegas.
·Belgrade, Serbia
Read Full ArticleCoverage Details
Total News Sources15
Leaning Left2Leaning Right3Center2Last UpdatedBias Distribution43% Right
Bias Distribution
- 43% of the sources lean Right
43% Right
L 29%
C 28%
R 43%
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium










