logo
Lewis Hamilton remains optimistic despite difficult Ferrari debut

Lewis Hamilton remains optimistic despite difficult Ferrari debut

Yahoo20-03-2025

Lewis Hamilton insisted now is not the moment to throw the toys out of the pram as he said his Ferrari career will not be defined by one race.
Hamilton's debut for the Italian giants ended in a disappointing 10th at last weekend's season-opening round in Australia.
The 40-year-old admitted he was low on confidence following the rain-hit race.
But speaking ahead of his second appearance for Ferrari in China, Hamilton said: 'It is not a moment to throw the toys out of the pram.
'It wasn't the race that we want but we move forward and everyone here has their heads high and the energy is still good in the garage. We are not defined by that, and we will not defined by one race.'
For much of his first appearance in red, Hamilton ran in eighth, trailing Williams' Alex Albon, while politely asking new race engineer Riccardo Adami to 'leave it to me' on several occasions.
Adami was urging Hamilton to use an overtake button in his Ferrari.
New team, new race engineer for Lewis #F1 #AusGP pic.twitter.com/Aquzh45ViX
— Formula 1 (@F1) March 16, 2025
But the seven-time world champion explained: 'Everyone over-egged that (the radio exchanges). It was literally just a back and forth.
'I was very polite. I wasn't swearing. I was really struggling with the car and I needed full focus on a couple of things.
'We are getting to know each other but there are no issues between us at all.
'Go and listen to the radio calls with others and their engineers. They are far worse.
'The conversation that Max (Verstappen) has with his engineer over the years, and the abuse that poor guy has taken.
'With us, we are literally just getting to know each other.
'Afterwards, I was like, 'hey, bro, I don't need that bit of information. But if you want to give me this, this is the place I'd like to do it. This is how I'm feeling in the car. And at these points, this is when I do and don't need the information'.
'And that's what it's about. There's no issues. It's done with a smiley face and we move forward.'
This view of Piastri's overtake on Hamilton 🤩👏
🎥 @_aarava#F1 #AusGP pic.twitter.com/Q0YuiilN4P
— Formula 1 (@F1) March 17, 2025
Heading into this weekend's round in Shanghai, McLaren appear to hold an advantage over the rest of the field with Hamilton's former Mercedes team-mate George Russell even claiming the British team should win every race.
Lando Norris leads the standings after his triumph in Australia.
Hamilton, bidding for a record eighth title, said: 'I don't think we are on the pace of McLaren – they have done a great job and look very strong – but we can close the gap.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70
All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70

Fox Sports

time6 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

All Blacks great Stu Wilson, known for his ebullient personality and pioneering play, dies at 70

Associated Press WELLINGTON, New Zealand (AP) — Stu Wilson, an elusive All Blacks winger whose playing style reflected his ebullient personality, has died. He was 70. Wilson's death was confirmed by New Zealand Rugby, which did not specify a cause. He died in his sleep Sunday at his home in Tauranga on New Zealand's North Island. Wilson was a natural joker whose play was many years ahead of its time. He foreshadowed the larger, stronger wingers who are now commonplace but he also had pace, balance and an ability to break tackles. Wilson scored 19 tries in 35 tests for the All Blacks which, at the time of his retirement, was the all-time record for New Zealand. That included a hat-trick of tries against the British and Irish Lions at Dunedin in 1983. He captained the All Blacks on their 1983 tour to Britain and formed a brilliant attacking partnership at provincial and international level with his fellow winger and friend Bernie Fraser. After retiring Wilson became an amusing and popular commentator for television. David Campese, an ex-Australia winger who made his test debut opposite Wilson in 1982, told Television New Zealand 'as a player, Stu made rugby look easy and earned huge respect as captain in 1983.' 'He had a swerve to beat anyone, extreme pace, intellect and power, able to break through tacklers, making him a try-scoring machine.' ___ AP rugby: in this topic

After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak
After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak

San Francisco Chronicle​

time7 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak

PARIS (AP) — After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Jannik Sinner was on the brink of capturing his first French Open title on Sunday after a dominant run on the clay courts of Roland-Garros. Facing defending champion Carlos Alcaraz, the top-ranked Italian was firmly in control. Sinner's deep groundstrokes, excellent service, heavy top spin, and subtle variations had worn down Alcaraz, who found himself 5-3 down and trailing 0-40 in the fourth set, and facing three match points. At that moment, it felt like the best of all possible worlds for the 23-year-old Sinner. But then the momentum swung. Alcaraz fought back, saved the first match point when Sinner sent a forehand long. On the second, Sinner missed a return. The third ended with Alcaraz winning a short baseline exchange. Sinner had just let his chance slip away. From there, Alcaraz produced one of the greatest comeback in Roland-Garros history to win the longest final ever played on the Parisian dirt — 5 hours and 29 minutes — 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (10-2). 'It's an amazing trophy, so I won't sleep tonight very well, but it's okay,' Sinner said during the trophy ceremony. Exciting rivalry There is hardly anything between the two best players in tennis at the moment, who have now combined to win the last six Grand Slam titles and appear poised to build one of the sport's most compelling rivalries in the years ahead. Sunday's duel delivered a match of rare intensity, filled with punishing baseline rallies, exquisite drop shots, and brilliant passing shots — thrilling a packed Court Philippe-Chatrier. 'This one hurts' 'Obviously, this one hurts,' he said. 'There's not so much to say right now. But again, I'm happy with how we're trying to improve every day and put myself in these kinds of positions. It was a very high-level match, that's for sure. I'm happy to be part of it. But yeah, the final result hurts.' It was a particularly tough ending for Sinner, who had not dropped a set on his way to the final, including a dominant semifinal win over three-time French Open champion Novak Djokovic. Before facing Alcaraz, Sinner had never lost a Grand Slam final, winning his first three. A victory would have made him just the fifth man in the Open Era to win three consecutive major titles. 'I'm pretty sure you are going to be a champion, not once but many, many times,' Alcaraz told him during the trophy ceremony. 'It is a privilege to share the court with you in every tournament, making history with you.' 'Now it's my time to take something from the close people I have,' he said. 'As I've always said, before my career started, I never would've imagined finding myself in this position. It wasn't even a dream because it felt so far away — I wasn't even thinking about it. Now I find myself here, playing the longest final in the history of Roland-Garros. It hurts, yes, but on the other hand, you can't go on crying.' ___

After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak
After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak

Fox Sports

time7 hours ago

  • Fox Sports

After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Sinner's eye-catching run at French Open ends in heartbreak

Associated Press PARIS (AP) — After a flawless fortnight in Paris, Jannik Sinner was on the brink of capturing his first French Open title on Sunday after a dominant run on the clay courts of Roland-Garros. Facing defending champion Carlos Alcaraz, the top-ranked Italian was firmly in control. Sinner's deep groundstrokes, excellent service, heavy top spin, and subtle variations had worn down Alcaraz, who found himself 5-3 down and trailing 0-40 in the fourth set, and facing three match points. At that moment, it felt like the best of all possible worlds for the 23-year-old Sinner. But then the momentum swung. Alcaraz fought back, saved the first match point when Sinner sent a forehand long. On the second, Sinner missed a return. The third ended with Alcaraz winning a short baseline exchange. Sinner had just let his chance slip away. From there, Alcaraz produced one of the greatest comeback in Roland-Garros history to win the longest final ever played on the Parisian dirt — 5 hours and 29 minutes — 4-6, 6-7 (4), 6-4, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (10-2). 'It's an amazing trophy, so I won't sleep tonight very well, but it's okay,' Sinner said during the trophy ceremony. Exciting rivalry There is hardly anything between the two best players in tennis at the moment, who have now combined to win the last six Grand Slam titles and appear poised to build one of the sport's most compelling rivalries in the years ahead. Sunday's duel delivered a match of rare intensity, filled with punishing baseline rallies, exquisite drop shots, and brilliant passing shots — thrilling a packed Court Philippe-Chatrier. 'This one hurts' Reflecting on the match in his post-final press conference, Sinner tried to draw positives from a devastating loss. 'Obviously, this one hurts,' he said. 'There's not so much to say right now. But again, I'm happy with how we're trying to improve every day and put myself in these kinds of positions. It was a very high-level match, that's for sure. I'm happy to be part of it. But yeah, the final result hurts.' It was a particularly tough ending for Sinner, who had not dropped a set on his way to the final, including a dominant semifinal win over three-time French Open champion Novak Djokovic. Before facing Alcaraz, Sinner had never lost a Grand Slam final, winning his first three. A victory would have made him just the fifth man in the Open Era to win three consecutive major titles. 'I'm pretty sure you are going to be a champion, not once but many, many times,' Alcaraz told him during the trophy ceremony. 'It is a privilege to share the court with you in every tournament, making history with you.' Sinner, who will remain world No. 1, said he'll lean on his family and loved ones to recover from the loss. 'Now it's my time to take something from the close people I have,' he said. 'As I've always said, before my career started, I never would've imagined finding myself in this position. It wasn't even a dream because it felt so far away — I wasn't even thinking about it. Now I find myself here, playing the longest final in the history of Roland-Garros. It hurts, yes, but on the other hand, you can't go on crying.' ___ AP tennis: in this topic

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store