
F1 Insider Concerned About Lewis Hamilton's Future at Ferrari after Hungarian GP
Former Formula One driver and Sky Sports F1 reporter Martin Brundle has shared his concern about the future of Lewis Hamilton at Ferrari. Given the seven-time world champion's struggles since his Ferrari move early this year, Brundle stated he couldn't see Hamilton endure two more seasons if the situation were to continue this way.
Apart from his Chinese Grand Prix sprint race victory, Hamilton has for the most part been outperformed by his teammate Charles Leclerc. While the factor of adapting to his SF-25 F1 car could be taken into consideration, last weekend's race at the Hungaroring reached a new low in his Ferrari career.
Hamilton was knocked out of Q2 in the qualifying session, leading him to start the race from P12. On race day, Hamilton was unable to recover positions, and he finished the race in the same position as he started.
An incident involving Max Verstappen also occurred during the race at the Hungaroring, after the four-time world champion nearly pushed Hamilton off the track. While Verstappen was eventually cleared of any wrongdoing by the FIA, Hamilton appeared so dejected after the race that he didn't even attend the stewards' enquiry.
Twelfth placed Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Scuderia Ferrari in parc ferme during the F1 Grand Prix of Hungary at Hungaroring on August 03, 2025 in Budapest, Hungary.
Twelfth placed Lewis Hamilton of Great Britain and Scuderia Ferrari in parc ferme during the F1 Grand Prix of Hungary at Hungaroring on August 03, 2025 in Budapest, Hungary.Brundle stated his observations in his Sky F1 column, writing that while the summer break could offer Hamilton a much-needed break, the future looks slightly hazy. He wrote:
"I'm not looking forward to writing this next section, it's about Lewis Hamilton, who endured what must have been one of the worst weekends of his career, in and out of the car.
"He struggled for ultimate pace in qualifying, and with the pack so close he would start only 12th when his team-mate Leclerc was on pole. He would then describe himself as 'useless' in post-qualifying interviews and suggest the team should change the driver. That was best left unsaid, but he obviously wanted to openly punish himself.
"He's clearly in a difficult place personally, and during the race he would finish in that same 12th position, never really showing signs of progress. He sat in the car in parc ferme post-race for what seemed an age, was very downbeat in interviews again, and then declined to attend a stewards' enquiry about a rather ambitious move Max Verstappen made on him during the race in the blind and fast Turn 4, in which Lewis chose to drive off the road to avoid contact.
"He didn't want to contest the incident and conceded via his team, but Max did attend the meeting with a rational explanation from his viewpoint, and avoided a penalty. The summer break couldn't be more timely for Lewis to have a reset."
Brundle then revealed the harsh reality that could face Hamilton if he fails to bounce back. He added:
"It's painful to observe this great champion in so much strife, and we have to expect that he can weather the storm and return to form given his talent and experience, but otherwise I simply can't see him enduring two more seasons at Ferrari, or anywhere else, like this."
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