Hamilton's great expectations not yet met but Ferrari fans show patience
On the short walk from the railway station in Imola to the Autodromo Enzo e Dino Ferrari, the tree-lined streets, scattering dappled spring sunshine, throng with the faithful. They come adorned in the rosso corsa of the Scuderia, heading towards their first home race of the season and the long-awaited chance to see the seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton take to the track for the team they feel are their own.
The anticipation, building for more than a year, is palpable and the passion that comes with it all too striking – as Hamilton is more than aware.
Related: Lewis Hamilton at 40: F1 trailblazer has it all to prove again at Ferrari
Since Monday the tifosi, as Italians call fans, have stood patiently outside the factory gates at Maranello, less than 50 miles from Imola. There each day to see the drivers arrive in the morning and waiting steadfastly until they leave in the evening, before they follow the team up the road to Imola.
When Hamilton announced he was to switch to Ferrari from Mercedes at the start of last season, the tifosi knew there was a full season to go before their man would don the scarlet but even at this race last year his arrival was being celebrated. The most successful driver in the sport's history finally united with the oldest and most successful marque and the dream of finally ending the Scuderia's drivers' championship drought stretching back to 2007.
Yet Ferrari are not in the place Hamilton or the team expected for their first foray together on Italian soil. Having finished as runners-up to McLaren last year and closing with a competitive car, this season has opened with disappointment, as the SF-25 struggles for pace and performance. The single swallow that was a win in the sprint race in China for Hamilton was not the harbinger of spring for Ferrari.
In Imola Hamilton knew the weight, the history and the hope that is part and parcel of driving for the Scuderia. 'It is pretty incredible the support this team has,' he said. 'There is a lot of high hope and expectation of course but that comes with greatness. When you are a great team, that is what people expect.'
Great expectations then but Hamilton is seventh in the drivers' title and 90 points behind the leader, McLaren's Oscar Piastri, with Ferrari fourth in the constructors'. At the last round in Miami he and his teammate Charles Leclerc found themselves in an intense fight with the two Williams cars, there absolutely on merit, and with Leclerc and Hamilton managing only seventh and eighth.
The tricky start to the season has been harder on Hamilton, who is adapting to a new team, its structure, operations and personnel after 12 years at Mercedes. This is a complex enough task even if the car is quick and compliant, which the Ferrari is not.
His frustration has been aired but it is as yet still only that, an immensely competitive driver urging his team on to more. The scrutiny on them all has only ramped up to a greater degree for this home race, as acknowledged by the team principal, Fred Vasseur.
'There is extra pressure but we have to take this as a positive, as a push and to see all the tifosi in the grandstands it's an extra motivation,' he said. 'Lewis's position is that he is taking it as a huge opportunity, this home race in front of the tifosi, with all this enthusiasm.'
Certainly here the British driver's arrival has been embraced. Kiarah and her friend Selena, 19-year-olds from Ravenna, were bedecked in Hamilton's No 44 branded Ferrari team gear, with Kiarah, having added a home made set of '44' deeley boppers, waggling enthusiastically with every bob of her head. 'We are so excited to see him,' they said almost in unison. 'We like his mentality, he is a winner. To have him at Ferrari, we are so happy,' said Kiarah. 'He will win for Ferrari, maybe not now but later, he will.'
Related: George Russell scornful of 'crazy' FIA's retreat on swearing drivers
There is, then, something of a mutual appreciation occurring between driver and perhaps the most ardent fans of them all. A relationship perhaps unique to Ferrari and its place in Italy, as Hamilton recognised and was soaking up at Imola. 'You know that Italians are passionate and that there is passion around Ferrari,' he added. 'But it's a lot more than you expect when you are actually in it and it is beautiful.'
Hamilton managed fifth fastest in first practice, with the time sheets headed again by the two championship leading McLarens, of Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris, but with under a tenth of a second separating the top five.
In the afternoon session Piastri was once more on top, two-hundredths clear of Norris but with both drivers enjoying a full two-tenths on Alpine's Pierre Gasly in third, Mercedes's George Russell fourth and Max Verstappen fifth for Red Bull.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
11 minutes ago
- Yahoo
It was not right – Max Verstappen takes blame for crash with George Russell
Max Verstappen has issued a veiled apology for his wild crash with George Russell by admitting it 'was not right and should have not happened'. The four-time world champion was hit with a 10-second penalty by the stewards for causing a collision with Russell with two laps remaining of Sunday's Spanish Grand Prix. Advertisement Russell said he felt Verstappen's move was deliberate and accused the Red Bull driver of letting himself down. He also suggested that Verstappen should have been disqualified for the crash. Verstappen refused to accept blame for the coming together after the race and even sarcastically offered Russell a tissue after he was informed of his British rival's criticism. However, in a message posted on social media on Monday, Verstappen said: 'We had an exciting strategy and good race in Barcelona, till the safety car came out. 'Our tyre choice to the end and some moves after the safety car restart fuelled my frustration, leading to a move that was not right and shouldn't have happened. Advertisement 'I always give everything out there for the team and emotions can run high. You win some together, you lose some together. See you (at the next race) in Montreal.' Verstappen, who was on the slower hard tyre compound, lost third place to Charles Leclerc after he opened the door to the Ferrari driver when he made a mistake on the exit of the final corner in a six-lap shootout to the flag following the deployment of a safety car. Russell then attempted to sling his Mercedes underneath Verstappen's Red Bull at the first corner before the Dutchman took to the escape road and remained ahead of the Briton. Advertisement 'Max, can you let Russell through, please?' said Verstappen's race engineer, Gianpiero Lambiase. 'What? I was ahead, mate. What the f***! He just ran me off the road.' Verstappen slowed down at turn five to allow Russell past, but then accelerated and drove into his rival's Mercedes. 'What the f***'?' Russell said on the radio. Verstappen later moved out of Russell's way and crossed the line in fifth. However, he was hit with a timed penalty by the stewards – demoting him to 10th – and also punished with three penalty points on his licence which leaves him just one point away from a race ban. He now trails championship leader Oscar Piastri by 49 points in the standings. Mercedes' George Russell said he felt Max Verstappen's move was 'deliberate' (Bradley Collyer/PA) It marked another controversial chapter in Verstappen's career following run-ins last year with Lando Norris and multiple clashes with Lewis Hamilton in their title duel four years ago. Advertisement Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, who has been linked with a move for Verstappen, said: 'I don't know exactly what the motivations were and I don't want to jump on it and say it was road rage, but it wasn't nice. 'The great ones, whether it's in motor racing or in other sports, you just need to have the world against you and perform at the highest possible level. 'That's why sometimes these greats don't recognise that actually the world is not against you, it's just you who has made a mistake or screwed up.'
Yahoo
37 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Rabiot gives availability to Milan after Allegri appointment
Former Juventus midfielder Adrien Rabiot has hinted that he would be open to joining Serie A rivals Milan after the appointment of former Bianconeri head coach Massimilano Allegri towards the end of last week. Allegri has returned to Milan on a two-year contract with an option for a further 12 months, 11 years after he first left the Rossoneri. He replaces Sergio Conceicao, whose tenure in San Siro lasted almost exactly six months. Advertisement Rabiot, who spent five years with Juventus, three of them under Allegri, left Turin last summer, not long after the coach was given his marching orders. France midfielder Adrien Rabiot reacts during the UEFA Euro 2024 semi-final football match between Spain and France at the Munich Football Arena in Munich on July 9, 2024. (Photo by JAVIER SORIANO / AFP) (Photo by JAVIER SORIANO/AFP via Getty Images) The Frenchman has gone on to play a key role in Roberto De Zerbi's Olympique de Marseille side, contributing with 10 goals and six assists from 31 matches in all competitions this season. While he remains under contract with the Ligue 1 club for another year, until the summer of 2026, Rabiot says that he will 'always be available to talk' with Allegri. Rabiot: 'I will always be available to talk to Allegri' In an interview with La Gazzetta dello Sport, published on Monday, Rabiot revealed that colleagues often refer to him and Allegri as being like father and son. Juventus coach Massimiliano Allegri looks on during the Italian Serie A football match between Juventus and AC Milan at The Allianz Stadium in Turin on April 27, 2024. (Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO / AFP) (Photo by MARCO BERTORELLO/AFP via Getty Images) 'Chosing Marseille without Champions League was not a guarantee. Now that we've qualified, it would be great to be able to play in that stadium in that environment,' Rabiot said when asked if he would be open to joining Allegri in Milan. Advertisement 'I talk with Allegri often,' he continued. 'Giovanni Rossi, De Zerbi's advisor, also works with him and when he calls, he says 'come here, I'll pass you onto your dad'. 'I can talk about everything with Allegri, not just football. I really appreciate him as a person. He has a winning mentality. And of course, if he calls me, I will always be available to talk to him.'
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Our Champions League team of the season: A teen sensation to a marauding Gunner
Goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma (Paris Saint-Germain) He does have his weaknesses, such as the occasional panic under the crossed ball, but this was the season the Italian reclaimed his title as the world's best goalkeeper. PSG's path to glory saw him outshine Ederson, Alisson, and Emi Martínez before besting Yann Sommer in the final. Donnarumma made a series of saves only he can make, throwing that huge, rangy frame to its full expanse while playing behind a backline built to attack rather than concentrate on defence. Defenders Achraf Hakimi (PSG) If this is the age of full-back being the most multipurpose player in football, then Hakimi is best in class. The Moroccan matched defensive rigour with attacking instincts that saw him score four goals and supply five assists in PSG's run, including the opening strike of the final. His signing in 2021 was probably the first building block of the team that reigned supreme in 2025. Advertisement Related: Luis Enrique secures status as one of the all-time greats with PSG triumph | David Hytner Willian Pacho (PSG) Marquinhos is the long-serving veteran of the champions, but his partner, Pacho, signed from Eintracht Frankfurt last year for €45m, has completed the Parisians' backline. He became the first Ecuadorian to lift the trophy after his dominant display in Munich blunted Inter's Lautaro Martínez and Marcus Thuram. Playing all 17 matches and logging more minutes than any other player with 1,542, Pacho also won the ball back far more than any player: 124 times. Alessandro Bastoni (Inter) Munich was a living nightmare for Inter defenders. They also conceded six across the two legs in their semi-final classic with Barcelona. But to focus on those matches is to forget the supremacy the Inter defence enjoyed in the extended group stage, where they conceded just a single goal in eight matches. Until the semis and final, Bastoni, an Italian defender of the classic style, had marshalled a three-man defence performing far better in Europe than in Serie A, but still ended a campaign of which he can be proud in tears. Advertisement Nuno Mendes (PSG) Mirroring Hakimi's command of his flank in attack and defense, Mendes was tasked in the final with stopping the runs of Inter's Denzel Dumfries, one of the competition's most effective players this season. The Dutchman ended up chasing Mendes's shadow. That followed a season where the Portuguese player, just 22 years old, scored four Champions League goals and ravaged opponents, both attackers and defenders, with his athleticism. Mohamed Salah has rarely been kept so quiet. Midfielders João Neves (PSG) PSG's title-winning team did not come cheap but they have invested well, with a summer deal worth €70m landing Neves, one of the most wanted young midfielders in Europe. Small but combative, Neves now stars in the best midfield in Europe in combination with Vitinha and Fabián Ruiz. He had been a slow burn through his first season. When PSG were playing to stay alive in the group stage, Neves was the match-winner against Manchester City, Seven tackles, all successful, seven shots, including a goal, he began to embody a team fighting like wild dogs to win the ball back. Advertisement Related: Viva Vitinha: how PSG's deep conductor proved Lionel Messi wrong | Barney Ronay Declan Rice (Arsenal) English clubs had a chastening Champions League season, mostly because of PSG, and Arsenal were the semi-final victims. Despite Mikel Arteta's protestations, the Gunners were well beaten but this was the club's best run in the competition in more than a decade. At the fulcrum was Rice, who is maturing into a midfielder who can run a game, as he did most obviously against Real Madrid – a two-legged performance Gunners fans will happily fall back on as something to cherish after their team's exit. Rice usually saved his marauding best for Europe. Pedri (Barcelona) If the modern PSG are a hyper-realised, updated version of Pep Guardiola's Barcelona team, the club he long left behind proved to be this season's entertainers. Hansi Flick is football's great gambler, his team a high-line, high wire act. In the middle of the morass is Pedri, a midfielder of balance, creativity and now experience. Thankfully, he is recovered from the injury problems that his 75-game 2020 caused and fills the mould Andrés Iniesta once did, never looking like losing the ball, forever dangerous to the opposition. Forwards Ousmane Dembélé (PSG) A mark of Luis Enrique's quality as a coach is that he made a productive, consistent player out of one of the game's great enigmas. PSG played mostly without a centre-forward but it was Dembélé who led the line, cutting in from flanks, operating as a false No 9, interchanging with his fellow wingers, his movement creating space and angles to work with. Advertisement Related: PSG 2.0 have potential to dominate but young stars could be lured away | Nick Ames Khvicha Kvaratskhelia (PSG) There may be little coincidence that once the Georgian was bought from Naples in January, PSG's status as a giant struggling to make the knockout stages was shedded as they instead became the most decisive champions in European Cup history. The best attacking player in Serie A, a maverick talent that resembles both a throwback and the future proved a revelation in destroying defences. The English teams in particular struggled with him, and when he was going though on goal in Munich, he was able to show off his party-trick finish, at the near post. Lamine Yamal (Barcelona) The best team did not have the best player, and that's how it's supposed to work. When Barcelona were torching opposition defences, winning games from impossible positions, it seemed as if Lamine Yamal would win the Champions League at 17. He will just have to do it at 18. European defences had no answer to his speed and quality of finishing. Those slaloming runs and thunderbolt finishes against Benfica and Barcelona could be seen as preludes to greatness if he were not already great. Substitutes Emi Martínez came up big in Aston Villa's hugely enjoyable run to the last eight. Denzel Dumfries had five goal involvements in the Inter v Barcelona semi-final. Raphinha and Serhou Guirassy were joint-top for goals, with the Brazilian outstanding for Barcelona, the Guinean a ray of light for a faded Dortmund team. Désiré Doué, scoring two goals in the final, completed PSG's thrilling attacking trio.