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Lewis Hamilton has spoken out again on Israel’s continued attacks on Palestine, which have been ongoing for more than six months.

The British driver had previously admitted that he found it ‘really hard’ to process the number of children dying as a result of the continued military action.

UNICEF have said that over 13,000 children have been killed in Gaza since the start of Israel’s military offensive last year, and a UN agency claimed last month that one in three children under the age of two in northern Gaza is ‘acutely malnourished’.

Speaking at the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix earlier in the season, Hamilton said: “It is really hard and difficult to wake up each day knowing that there are thousands of kids dying, and that there is nothing that you can do about it.”

Hamilton: This has to end
Reposting a UNICEF Instagram post to his own story on the same platform, Hamilton added: “This has to end.”

The Mercedes star has previously admitted the impact of images from Gaza posted on social media, saying: “The rest of the world just goes on as it is, and it is massively disappointing to see how countries and governments are handling it, and to think where we are in 2023, with everything through history, it doesn’t look like we’ve learnt anything.

“So, to be able to compartmentalize that and just go ahead with doing your job, I think that is difficult, I mean it is all over social media. There is not a moment, a day that you don’t see something pop up on the news, and you are just trying to remain positive through the darkest time.”

Fernando Alonso rocked the Formula One driver market on Thursday by signing a new contract with Aston Martin. The veteran had been considered a strong contender for a seat at either Red Bull or Mercedes, with Lewis Hamilton departing the Silver Arrows to join Ferrari in 2025.

Max Verstappen Profile - Bio, News, High-Res Photos & High Quality Videos

Alonso had reportedly been on a three-man shortlist drawn up by Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff. There were also suggestions that the Spaniard could replace Sergio Perez at Red Bull.

Max Verstappen’s future remains unclear, despite a loose insistence that the Dutchman remains committed to Red Bull for the remainder of his contract until 2028. Wolff has been openly flirting with the idea of making a shock move for the three-time world champion from rivals Red Bull.

Vettel decision timeline revealed after F1 return rumors

Sebastian Vettel is set to decide in the coming ‘days and weeks’ about a potential return to F1, according to reports.

It’s just two years since Vettel called it a day and retired from F1, but the German has been linked with a sensational return.

Vettel is believed to be a possible candidate to replace Lewis Hamilton at Mercedes, after the German constructor missed out on Fernando Alonso, who is signing a contract extension at Aston Martin.

The four-time world champion has also been rumored to be of interest to Porsche’s World Endurance team as well, and their head of operations has teased his decision could be imminent.

Speaking to Motorsport-Total.com: “We have read in the media that he is in talks with several people. But we only know that he has not yet decided what he will do.

“We also do not know if he will run again, where and when. That will be known in the coming days or weeks.

“So we also don’t know if he will race with us in the future.”

Drivers closest to race ban for points penalty
Twelve points and you’re out. That’s the rule put in place by the FIA, with a one-race ban handed out to any drivers who reach that threshold.

But which F1 racers are closest to the 12-point cutoff?

Sergio Perez, Red Bull – 8 points

Logan Sargeant, Williams – 6 points

Lance Stroll, Aston Martin – 5 points

Lewis Hamilton, Mercedes – 4 points

George Russell, Mercedes – 4 points

F1 winner questions Lewis Hamilton 'transparency' claims - GPFans.com

Former F1 ace warns against growing street circuit expansion
Former F1 champion Mario Andretti has voiced his concern about the growing number of street circuits on the calendar.

Speaking to Sports Illustrated, Andretti said: “I think we have to be very careful to keep the traditional circuits that have made Formula One what it is today, and not ever forget that. Many of these traditional circuits like Silverstone have upgraded to the standards that you expect.

“And again, I’m one of those individuals that value so much where we came from and let’s not ever forget that.

“It’s fine to go forward and bring on new things, but never forget where we came from. So in my opinion, nothing will substitute Silverstone at the moment in England. ”

Full 2025 schedule confirmed by FIA
Elsewhere in the 2025 schedule, it’s a return to Australia for the opening race of the season, while the USA maintains its three-race status.

The British GP remains in its usual mid-summer spot, while the season concludes in the UAE on December 7th.

Lewis Hamilton’s dream already slashed for first season in Ferrari car
Lewis Hamilton’s first season as a Ferrari driver won’t include a dream visit to Africa for the 2025 F1 season.

The continent has once again been snubbed on the calendar – something Hamilton has previously been outspoken about.

Speaking last year, the seven-time world champion said: “There’s one more race we need and that’s going to be Africa. We have all the other continents and why not there? So that’s the one I’m working on pushing right now.”

Ferrari making new ‘push’ for Adrian Newey
Ferrari are reportedly ‘pushing’ once more to take highly-rated engineer Adrian Newey from Red Bull.

Auto Motor und Sport report that Ferrari are making a fourth attempt to sign Newey, who has previously admitted to turning down the job on several occasions.

The Italian team want Newey, the mastermind behind Red Bull’s successful cars, to work alongside Lewis Hamilton from the 2025 season.

Who could benefit from Fernando Alonso’s Aston Martin contract?
Fernando Alonso’s new Aston Martin contract surprised many F1 onlookers.

The Spaniard had been linked with Red Bull and Mercedes but decided to pen a multi-year extension with his current team.

That decision is likely to have a ripple effect throughout the grid.

Express Sport’s Fraser Watson took a look at five drivers who may benefit from the deal.

Fernando Alonso and Carlos Sainz

Fernando Alonso’s ‘enduring talent’ highlighted
Martin Brundle has hailed Fernando Alonso’s ‘enduring talent’ after the Spaniard penned a new Aston Martin contract.

Alonso, who is 42, has signed a multi-year extension to quash rumours of a move to Mercedes or Red Bull.

Brundle tweeted: “That man has incredible motivation and staying power. And enduring talent. Exceptional, in any sport, in any era.”

Mercedes ‘finalise’ Max Verstappen contract
Mercedes have reportedly finalised Max Verstappen’s salary and bonuses in the event that the Dutchman agrees to join from Red Bull.

Toto Wolff has publicly admitted that the Silver Arrows would like to sign Verstappen, who has been linked with an exit from Red Bull amid a power struggle behind the scenes.

According to Auto Motor und Sport, Mercedes chiefs have already planned the terms of the contract that they will offer to Verstappen if the 26-year-old agrees to enter surprise talks.

Wolff lost Fernando Alonso from a reported three-man shortlist to replace Lewis Hamilton on Thursday. Alonso has agreed to remain with Aston Martin.

Max Verstappen

Frederic Vasseur has been warned that he may live to regret bringing Lewis Hamilton to Ferrari.

Ferrari boss Frederic Vasseur has been warned that he may have jumped the gun by ditching Carlos Sainz in favor of Lewis Hamilton. The Brit will partner Charles Leclerc from next season onwards, leaving Sainz without a drive for 2025 despite being one of the best performers on the grid this year.

Sainz has finished on the podium in every race he has competed in this season, claiming third place in Bahrain before winning the Australian Grand Prix. His victory came just two weeks after he was forced to sit out of the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, where he was replaced by Oliver Bearman after undergoing surgery to remove his appendix.

Hamilton, meanwhile, is enduring his worst start to a season in recent memory having finished no higher than seventh after the opening three races. Former F1 driver Christian Danner has warned that Sainz’s impressive form is ‘messing everything up’ at Ferrari, who he believes might live to regret their decision to replace him with Hamilton.

Hamilton has endured his worst start to an F1 season in 2024
Hamilton has endured his worst start to an F1 season in 2024

“If you want Hamilton, you’ve kept the wrong one because he [Sainz] is faster, but that’s highly political,” Danner told MotorsportMagazin. “He [Vasseur] should have waited a little longer. It wasn’t a necessity. I wouldn’t blame Lewis for stumbling at the moment, but one thing is clear.

“Sainz in this kind of form, when he has Leclerc under control like this, you can say that he [Vasseur] perhaps made his decision too early. Sainz is approaching it with a commitment, a joy and an aggressiveness. I really like that. It also requires a fervent attitude: ‘Now it’s me and no one else’.

“You can see it not only in his eyes, but in every corner and at the moment, Carlos Sainz is messing everything up at Ferrari. First of all, you’ve signed the wrong driver for next year. Hamilton is behind, he’s [Sainz] much better.”

Sainz will be replaced by Hamilton next year no matter what he does this season
Sainz will be replaced by Hamilton next year no matter what he does this season

Sainz is likely to attract plenty of interest from other teams ahead of next season thanks to his impressive start to the current campaign. He has already been linked with a move to Stake, who will become the Audi works team in 2026, but it has also been speculated that he could join Red Bull if Sergio Perez is relieved of his duties.

Christian Horner refused to rule out the possibility of moving for Sainz after his impressive victory in Australia, saying: “We want to field the best pairing we can with Red Bull Racing so sometimes you have got to look outside the pool as well.

“The market is reasonably fluid in certain parts. I mean, based on a performance like that, you couldn’t rule any possibility out so I think we just want to take the time.”

Wolff on Verstappen to Red Bull
Toto Wolff has a seat he needs to fill at Mercedes for 2025, and Max Verstappen is one name that has been linked to the vacancy.

Wolff Mercedes Saudi Arabia

Verstappen’s future at Red Bull was uncertain around the time of the Saudi Arabian Grand Prix, as he hinted that if Helmut Marko left the team, he would consider doing so as well as Red Bull dealt with the ongoing power struggle within the team and the Christian Horner allegations, which he denied.

Verstappen appeared to hint that his future remained at Red Bull until his contract expires in 2028 in Australia, but Wolff has insisted that a link-up with the Dutchman “needs to happen.”

Ricciardo’s McLaren struggles revealed
Daniel Ricciardo left McLaren after two seasons at the end of 2022, following poor performance which he could not dig himself out of and re-capture the form he showed at Red Bull or Renault.

Max Verstappen: Formula 1 world champion agrees new long-term deal with Red  Bull | F1 News | Sky Sports

He was race-engineered at McLaren by Tom Stallard, a veteran who has worked with Fernando Alonso, Stoffel Vandoorne and Carlos Sainz.

Stallard has revealed his thinking at the time Ricciardo was released by McLaren in favor of Oscar Piastri.

Nyck de Vries exclusive interview!
Nick Golding caught up with Nyck de Vries at the recent Sao Paulo E-Prix, where the Mahindra driver recorded a 15th-place finish.

De Vries is now nearly a year on from his axing by what was then the AlphaTauri Formula 1 team and has spoken candidly of his time in Grand Prix racing and rebuilding his career after being let go after the 2023 British Grand Prix.

Toto Wolff reveals plans to step back from raceday management - GPFans.com

Vettel to Le Mans
Sebastian Vettel has taken part in a Le Mans preparation test for Porsche Penske at Aragon in Spain.

The four-time F1 World Champion has not raced since his retirement after the 2022 season, although was notably in the paddock in 2023 in Japan to launch a nature project at Suzuka.

No official program beyond the hypercar test has been announced by Vettel, but would you like to see the 53-time Grand Prix winner head to Le Mans to take on the twice-around-the-clock enduro?

Lewis Hamilton looking for partner on celebrity dating app Raya

Lewis Hamilton has become the latest celebrity to sign up to exclusive dating app Raya in a bid to find a partner, according to British media outlet The Sun.

The 39-year-old Formula 1 driver has a profile on the app, which matches influencers and is a favorite among celebrities

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The Brit, who reportedly had relationships with Shakira and Nicole Scherzinger, was previously on the same app in 2015, with a source even telling the website: ‘Lewis has been swiping a lot of socialites in London and uses it when he travels.

“He’s happy to be single, but eventually he’d like to find The One,” the Daily Mail claimed.

Hamilton has expertly curated his profile

Hamilton went through his profile with meticulous attention. The anthem he chose, “Search & Rescue” by Drake, and the designation of his occupation as “travelling” offer an insight into his diverse interests and activities beyond careers.

It is worth remembering that Raya is a dating app in which isn’t for everyone and which examines the profile of each candidate through a committee of experts, who are the ones who decide who is or is not suitable to be part of this elite community. The waiting list to join this application is thousands of people and not even 10 percent of those who apply get in.

Max Verstappen, Lewis Hamilton and George Russell were all forced to retire from the Australian Grand Prix during an eventful race on the streets of Melbourne. Carlos Sainz took the chequered flag in Melbourne to complete a Ferrari one-two, with Charles Leclerc and Lando Norris joining the Spaniard on the podium.

Verstappen started on pole but was forced to call it a day after just five laps with smoke billowing from the back of his Red Bull car. He was then involved in a frosty exchange with an engineer as he tried to come to terms with the unfortunate manner of his retirement.

Hamilton went on to suffer a mechanical problem of his own, with the Brit grinding to a halt at the edge of the circuit due to an engine failure. Just moments before the end of the race, Russell crashed out after losing the rear end while chasing Fernando Alonso in the battle for sixth place.

Leclerc confident
Charles Leclerc is confident that Ferrari are moving in the right direction and slowly closing the gap to Red Bull.

He said: “It’s been a long time since we have had the genuine pace to have Red Bull… I wouldn’t say under control, because we don’t know what was the real pace of Max today, but I will say that from FP1, we knew that pole position and the race win was possible because we had very good tyre degradation, very good pace, and that is a very encouraging sign.

“However, if you look at the first three races, two out of the first three races they had the upper hand in the race. So we still have a lot of work to do. But that’s exactly what we need to do as a team.”

Russell’s full radio message after crash
George Russell’s radio message following his crash this morning has been revealed.

“Red flag, red flag, I’m in the middle of the track, red flag, red flag. Red, red, red, red, red,” Russell shouted on team radio

“I’m in the middle. Red. F***. Why so long?”

Wolff wants to punch himself
Toto Wolff claimed he wanted to give himself a knock after Mercedes scored no points in Melbourne.

He said: “On one side, I want to punch myself on the nose. On the other side, it’s a testimony that when you get things right, you can turn it around pretty quickly and continue to believe.

“At the moment, it’s a very tough time.”

Horner could sign Sainz
Christian Horner has refuse to rule out signing Carlos Sainz for Red Bull next season after the Ferrari star won the Australian GP.

“We want to field the best pairing we can with Red Bull Racing so, sometimes, you got to look outside the pool as well,” Horner said.

“The market is reasonably fluid in certain parts. I mean, based on a performance like that, you couldn’t rule any possibility out.

“So I think, we just want to take the time and, obviously, Checo [Perez] was compromised today and has had a great start to the season too so we’re not in any desperate rush.”

Toto Wolff responds to questions on Mercedes future
Toto Wolff says it is ‘fair’ to question his future as Mercedes team principal after yet another disappointing weekend for the Silver Arrows in Australia.

Asked if he is still the right man to lead the team forward, Wolff said: “I need to make sure that my contribution is positive.

“I would be the first one to say: ‘If somebody has a better idea, tell me’. I’m interested [in] turning this team around as quickly as possible and I’ll happily give my input on what that would be, or who that could be.

“I look at myself in the mirror every single day about everything I do. If I believe that I should ask the manager question or the trainer question, I think it’s a fair question.

“It’s not what I feel at the moment that I should do. But if you have any ideas about who could turn this around, I would happily listen to them.”

Fernando Alonso hits out after FIA penalty
Fernando Alonso has hit out at suggestions that he drove dangerously while defending against George Russell on the last lap of today’s race in Melbourne.

The Spaniard was later handed a 20-second penalty by the FIA, which saw him slip to eighth in the finishing order, as well as three penalty points.

“I wanted to maximize my exit speed from Turn Six to defend against him,” said Alonso when quizzed on what happened.

“That’s what any racing driver would do, and I didn’t feel it was dangerous. It’s disappointing to get a penalty from the stewards for what was hard but fair racing.

“Still, I’m glad that George is okay. It was not nice to see his car in the middle of the track.”

George Russell speaks out after Fernando Alonso penalty
George Russell has admitted that it was ‘such a shame’ to crash out of the Australian Grand Prix on the final lap in an incident for which Fernando Alonso has since been punished.

Russell said on X, formerly Twitter: “Such a shame to end the race like that. Totally caught out by the car ahead whilst entering the corner, I lost the car and some points for the team.

“Ultimately, we were not fast enough this weekend and we’ll come back stronger.”

Lewis Hamilton digs out Mercedes engineers
Lewis Hamilton has aimed a thinly-veiled dig at Mercedes by suggesting that nothing has changed since last year in a scathing review of their Australian Grand Prix disaster.

Quizzed on the current gulf in class between Mercedes and Red Bull following his battle with Sergio Perez, Hamilton said: “It’s a massive gap. I think they have a second on us, something like that.

“He was on fresh tires but just the way he pulled away down the straight, I was like: ‘Wow’. Same as last year.”

Lewis Hamilton has aimed a thinly-veiled dig at his Mercedes engineers
Lewis Hamilton has aimed a thinly-veiled dig at his Mercedes engineers

The seven-time world champion admits he has never been to Maranello, nor has he spoken Italian since his youth

Sir Lewis Hamilton spoke for the first time today about his planned move to Ferrari in 2025, and, more importantly, his change of heart after renewing his two-year deal with Mercedes just a few months ago.

Lewis Hamilton

“In the summer we signed and obviously I, at the time, saw my future with Mercedes. But an opportunity came up in the new year and I decided to take it,” he told the press in Bahrain.

“It was the hardest decision I have ever had to make in my life after 26 years of Mercedes supporting me and we’ve had this absolutely incredible journey together. We’ve made history and it’s something I’m very proud of.

“But I think ultimately I’m writing my story and I felt it was time to start a new chapter.”

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What does Hamilton hope to achieve with Ferrari?
Although Fernando Alonso wryly underlined his surprise at Lewis’ change of allegiance from Mercedes ambassador to ‘Ferrarista’, Hamilton has been a fan of the Italian team since he was a boy.

“Of course, I think for all drivers growing up, looking at history, they see Michael Schumacher at his best…. Definitely, even as a kid, I used to play Michael in that car, so it’s definitely a dream and I’m very, very excited about it,” he continued.

“I think we probably all sit in our garage and see the screen come up and you see the driver in the red cockpit and you wonder what it would be like to be surrounded by red.

“You go to the Italian Grand Prix and you see the tifosi and it just blows you away.”

Lewis knows he is coming to try and break the 17-year championship drought that has plagued Maranello, but he is ready for the challenge.

“It’s a team that hasn’t had much success recently, since 2007, and I saw it as a big challenge. I’ve had a great relationship and communication with Fred Vasseur since we raced together in F3 and GP2, and I think this really wouldn’t have happened without him, so I’m very grateful and very excited about the work he’s doing there,” Hamilton concluded.

“When he joined Ferrari, I was happy for him and I think the stars aligned.”

Max Verstappen has been taking time to test in a different category of motorsport recently in aid of friend Thierry Vermeulen.

Max Verstappen talks all things racing with team-mate Sergio Perez

The Red Bull driver has been assisting Vermeulen in improving the setup of his Emil Frey Racing team machine – which runs in the German GT3 category DTM.

Verstappen has had a marked effect on both car and driver, with the second half of last season seeing Vermeulen pick up seven top ten finishes in ten races – having failed to score any in the first six races of the season.

Although the Dutchman has shared interest in racing in other disciplines, it’s unlikely he prefers to leave F1 for DTM at the first opportunity, instead eyeing a shot at the Le Mans 24-hour race.

Max Verstappen enters his tenth season in Formula 1 this year

Frey-Hilti: Watching him work is extremely fascinating
According to Emil Frey Racing team manager Lorenz Frey-Hilti, Verstappen’s traits have made him a pleasure to work with, even if the move was confusing at first glance.

“Max is very straightforward, a very down-to-earth guy, very nice, with no star quality,” he told German outlet Blick. “Watching him work is extremely fascinating. After one or two laps, he’s already reached top speed and works extremely meticulously. You can feel how immense his passion for racing is.

“There are countless GT3 teams. It was a great honor to be asked [to work with him]. Even if, at the beginning, we didn’t really know what was behind this request.

Max Verstappen won 19 of the 22 grands prix on offer in 2023

“He makes a very tangible contribution to our being faster. Also, because it adapts very well to what Thierry needs. Of course, Thierry is Max’s friend, but Max wants to see performance. As a coach, he gives him strict and clear directives.”

Verstappen starts his quest for a fourth consecutive Formula 1 world championship from the end of this month at the Bahrain Grand Prix, from 29 February – 2 March.

If his RB20 turns out to be as dominant as last year’s car, the rest of the grid could be in for another testing and unexciting season.

Max Verstappen and Lewis Hamilton are two of the biggest stars in F1. They have a combined total of 10 world championships between them and lit the F1 world on fire with their 2021 world championship battle. They started their careers in very different eras, but still, these two generational talents have crossed paths, and treated fans to some brilliant racing action over the years. Their rookie seasons, on the other hand, were extremely contrasting, but unique in their own way.

Verstappen, now 26 years old, made his F1 debut with Toro Rosso back in 2015. Regarded as an exceptional driver who was aggressive and mature beyond his years, Verstappen had relatively less single-seater experience. But his performances, which reminded Franz Tost (former Toro Rosso boss) of Michael Schumacher, convinced Helmut Marko to sign him up for Red Bull’s sister team.

Hamilton, on the other hand, made his debut 8 years ago, in 2007, driving for McLaren. He was a part of their program for quite a long time and took the world of F1 by storm in his debut season by putting up a commendable title fight.

Statistics-wise, their rookie seasons could not have been more different.

Lewis Hamilton vs Max Verstappen – Rookie season

Analyzing Hamilton and Verstappen’s rookie seasons
At first glance, it is evident that Hamilton’s rookie season was miles clear of Verstappen’s in pretty much every aspect. One thing has to be taken into consideration, however. It is the fact that Verstappen was driving for a team that was essentially a backmarker, scraping into the midfield.

The Dutchman’s teammate was Carlos Sainz, and the former was consistently better than him. Sainz finished P15 with 18 points to his name, three places below Verstappen. But just taking into account that Verstappen was driving for a weaker team cannot be done. The magnitude of the waves caused by Hamilton’s rookie season, especially considering the situation he found himself in, made it all that special.

Why Lewis Hamilton’s rookie season was special
Hamilton became the first black driver in the history of F1 when he joined the grid in 2007. He was put up against Fernando Alonso, who had won the 2005 and 2006 titles, as his teammate. The Spanish driver was not easy to deal with, and since McLaren was a race-winning team, there was added pressure on him to perform.

Max Verstappen: F1 – Red Bull Athlete Profile

Despite being a rookie, Hamilton went on to give Alonso a run for his money. They went toe to toe for the title, along with Ferrari’s Kimi Raikkonen. Unfortunately for Hamilton, Raikkonen finished in P1, but the Briton was just one point short of a historic rookie season.

He finished level on points with Alonso, and the Oviedo-born driver, unsettled with Hamilton’s rise in the team, joined Renault the following year. In 2008, Hamilton did not make any mistakes. He won his first world title, the first of seven.

Lewis Hamilton will be 40 years old at the start of his first season with Ferrari, following his seismic decision to move to Maranello at the end of this year.

Not long ago, Hamilton was saying he could not imagine himself racing in F1 past that age. Then again, until very recently, whenever asked about his future, he would say he would be with Mercedes for the rest of his racing life.

Lewis Hamilton officially joins Ferrari in 2025 in shock F1 move away from  Mercedes | The Independent

As Hamilton himself told BBC Sport in an interview at the end of last season: “I think what you’ve got to learn is you should never say never.”

Hamilton’s move to Ferrari has happened quickly. Three weeks ago, the Italian team were in negotiations with Carlos Sainz to extend his contract to continue after this season alongside Charles Leclerc.

But then Ferrari president John Elkann was made aware Hamilton could be available – which, given the seven-time champion had only signed a new two-year Mercedes contract a few months earlier, was news to Elkann.

Talks began soon afterwards and have concluded quickly, leaving Hamilton in the undeniably tricky position of heading into the new season with the world – and his current employers – knowing his heart is now elsewhere.

Mercedes have only known about the situation for the past 36 hours or so, and staff were told on Thursday afternoon – a few hours before the official announcement, and after the news had broken worldwide. They were called to a meeting with team principal Toto Wolff and technical director James Allison.

Lewis Hamilton to move to Ferrari: F1 driver has the chance to do something  extraordinary | UK News | Sky News

Hamilton’s decision has echoes of Fernando Alonso’s choice to join McLaren the first time. That contract was signed in late 2005, for a move in 2007 – Alonso still had a year on his Renault contract to run.

It did not seem to bother either him or his team, with Alonso winning his second consecutive title for the French outfit in 2006 before his departure.

Why has the move happened?
What has happened at Mercedes and with Hamilton to change his mind so soon after apparently committing his future to his current employers, with whom he formed the most successful partnership in F1 history from 2014-20?

Hamilton has spoken in the Mercedes statement announcing the decision of seeking “a new challenge”, and the lure of the Ferrari legend will have been a part of it.

Few drivers can resist when the Prancing Horse, F1’s most famous and evocative team, comes calling.

Lewis Hamilton: Mercedes driver will join Ferrari in 2025 on multi-year  deal - BBC Sport

Money may be a part of the decision – doubtless Hamilton’s Ferrari retainer will be stratospheric. He had lost his status as F1’s best-paid driver following the new deal that secured Max Verstappen to Red Bull until 2027, which is said to be worth somewhere between 50m and 70m euros (£42.7m to £59.7m) a year.

Perhaps longevity, too. Hamilton’s new Mercedes deal was a compromise between the longer-term commitment he was seeking and the shorter one the team wanted to offer. In the end, it is Hamilton who has chosen to exercise his option to exit early. One imagines Ferrari have promised him more time.

But Hamilton already has far more money than he could possibly ever need, and he would command a seat in a top team for as long as he continues to deliver at the highest level and wants to stay in F1.

What he really wants is an eighth world title. He must have concluded Ferrari can help him avenge what he considers the injustice of Abu Dhabi 2021 – when he lost out following the race director’s decision not to follow the rules correctly during a late safety car period – more successfully than Mercedes.

Lewis Hamilton's first words as he explains decision to leave Mercedes team  : PlanetF1

Will Hamilton’s decision pay off?
Right now, there is no way of knowing whether he is right. This is a gamble, much more so than when he moved to Mercedes from McLaren in 2013.

Then, the reasoning was that, as a works team heading into an era of new, high-tech, extremely complicated hybrid engines, Mercedes would inevitably be stronger than McLaren, a customer team.

Hamilton was proved right, and his doubters wrong; but there is less obviously compelling logic this time.

There are plenty of reasons why he should not have taken the plunge. Ferrari have not won a drivers’ title since 2007, when Kimi Raikkonen benefited from Hamilton and McLaren’s implosion at the end of a year dominated by the ‘spygate’ controversy.

Since then, Alonso has taken them closest, when he narrowly missed out in fights with Red Bull’s Sebastian Vettel in 2010 and 2012. But Alonso achieved that almost in spite of Ferrari, whose cars were less than competitive at the time.

Lewis Hamilton to Join Ferrari F1 Team in 2025, Leaving Mercedes - Bloomberg

Hamilton witnessed first-hand Ferrari’s implosions in 2017 and 2018, when they arguably had a faster car than Mercedes for much of the season but fumbled the world championship along with Vettel.

And he knows full well their difficult recent history. This includes the controversy over whether their engine was illegal in 2019, their subsequent fall from competitiveness in 2020, and their collapse again in 2022 when a promising start for Leclerc seemed to put him in a commanding position in the championship – only for Ferrari’s season to implode in a sequence of operational errors and reliability problems.

A massive coup for Ferrari
The move, therefore, is a massive coup for Ferrari and a huge vote of confidence in their new team principal Frederic Vasseur, who replaced Mattia Binotto at the start of last year charged with turning the team around.

Vasseur was brought in for his long experience as a racing manager, first in the junior categories, and since 2016 in F1, with Renault, then Sauber and now Ferrari.

Vasseur is a no-nonsense, straight-talking guy who gets motorsport – a racer, as they say in F1.

Lewis Hamilton | Formula 1: Lewis Hamilton not agreeing to retire from F1

Hamilton is well aware of the Frenchman’s qualities. They worked together in GP2, what is now called Formula 2, when Hamilton won the title in 2006, before his graduation to F1 with McLaren the following year.

They have remained in contact ever since. Vasseur has a similar relationship with Leclerc, who won the GP3 title with Vasseur’s team in 2016, made his F1 debut under him at Sauber in 2018 and of course now forms a strong partnership at Ferrari.

Vasseur also happens to be a genuinely close friend of Mercedes team principal Toto Wolff, from whom Ferrari have now stolen a driver. F1 can be an incestuous world, but that does not stop this all being a bit awkward for everyone involved.

Ferrari and Mercedes spent last year engaging in a close battle for second behind dominant Red Bull in the constructors’ championship. In the end, Mercedes just pipped their rivals, but there is no doubt it was the Italian team who made the best strides through the year.

Starting the year with an uncompetitive car with vicious handling, they first calmed it down, and then improved its pace, to the extent Leclerc took pole position in three of the last five races of the year.

Ferrari were also the only team other than Red Bull to win a race in 2023, when Sainz triumphed in Singapore from pole. Leclerc would have joined him at the penultimate race of the season in Las Vegas had it not been for an unfortunately timed safety car.

What does it mean for Mercedes?
Mercedes, meanwhile, appear to enter 2024 with more question marks over them. They, too, made progress last season, but the inherent architecture of their flawed car – built to a now-discredited design philosophy – meant it was impossible to draw too many conclusions about where they are.

Have they fully understood the new rules, mastered so well by Red Bull, and will they now be able to return to competitiveness? Or are they still struggling to grasp the fundamentals of the current generation of cars and set for another season trailing in Red Bull’s wake?

Hamilton will already know something about the new Mercedes design, which has so far run only in the simulator. It may have caused him to doubt their ultimate potential.

His departure leaves Mercedes in a difficult spot. From arguably the best line-up in F1 with Hamilton and George Russell, they face having to replace statistically the greatest driver in history at short notice, when all of the established A-listers are committed elsewhere.

There is no doubt about Russell’s quality. On qualifying pace, there has been nothing to choose between him and Hamilton over their two seasons together. Hamilton outscored Russell in the championship last year, but Russell beat Hamilton in 2022.

But what do Mercedes do about a replacement?

Of the recognized best drivers in the field – Hamilton, Verstappen, Alonso, Leclerc, Russell and Lando Norris – only Alonso is not contractually committed for 2025. But it is impossible to imagine Mercedes signing him, after their difficult history when he was team-mates with Hamilton at McLaren-Mercedes in 2007.

Alonso is also 43 this summer. He is showing no signs of slowing down, but Mercedes will surely want to look to the future with their new recruit.

Ferrari will boast stellar line-up
Ferrari, meanwhile, can now claim to have the best line-up on the grid – and perhaps the strongest there has been in F1 since Hamilton and Alonso were partners 17 years ago.

Alongside the most successful driver in history, they have a man in Leclerc who is one of the stars of the new generation. Many, in fact, consider him to be the fastest driver on the grid over one qualifying lap, if still a rough diamond in races.

It is a line-up of huge strength and depth that will cause concern up and down the pit lane, even at Red Bull.

Hamilton will back himself, but Leclerc will be no pushover. Their internal battle will be as intriguing as the external one, as Hamilton and Ferrari – two of the greatest names in F1 history – join forces for the first time in a partnership as compelling as it was until recently unlikely.