Drivers don't build teams, not Schumacher, not Hamilton.Andi76 wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 06:32Hamilton would not be a loss, to be honest. His behavior to date and public criticism are rather destructive for the team, and he is simply too slow. As for Fred, unfortunately he is failing in his most important task, which is to put together a great team of engineers and improve their efficiency.CHT wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 03:57Luscion wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 03:09
this is an insane take, why in the world would Lewis want Fred gone? they have a past with Lewis racing under him in his early career, he's said Fred is a big reason he's at Ferrari and came out this weekend very clearly defending Fred and saying he wants him at Ferrari. If anything it feels like Ham is pushing for an culture shift for Ferrari so Fred can just do his job instead of being bothered by the top brass
The worst case will be Ferrari getting rid of Fred and then Lewis announced his retirement shortly.
A Mike Elliott saga all over again?
Success in F1 depends on creating a team that is developing the best technologies and
methodologies to design a F1 car. To
make a championship winning car, innovation is key not only on
the car features but even more on technique
to develop at a faster rate and
even more important in pursuing the best
values and the best organization which
bring all the people to contribute on the
project as a collective effort.
In this respect, Ferrari has become worse rather than better. I am absolutely not in favor of constantly changing team bosses, because continuity and stability are important factors in a F1 team without which success is not possible, and it is a huge mistake on Ferrari's part since more than a decade to think that an F1 team works like a soccer team, but unfortunately Fred does not seem to be improving the team in any way in these important areas.
His plan was probably to attract people to Ferrari with a driver like Hamilton, as was the case with Schumacher back then. What he overlooked here is the fact that there was a huge difference between the Hamilton of 2025 and the Schumacher of 1996. While Schumacher was young in 1996, at the peak of his abilities and by far the best driver with a long and bright future ahead of him, as well as being known for his ability to develop the car and the team and someone every engineer wanted to work with, Hamilton was long past his prime, old, with no significant future and never known for his ability to develop cars and teams, which does not make him attract engineers. Ten years ago, at the age of 30, this would have been different due to his success and future prospects, but not in 2025.
But Vasseur is not bringing any improvements to the organizational structure itself either. On the contrary. As an engineer who has never worked on racing cars, he speaks with authority on technical development. Serra is the technical director of CHASSIS and therefore not the technical director per se, which means that there are essentially several technical department heads and no one at the top to set the direction and ensure that everyone is working toward that goal. Only Vasseur is above these "division managers," but he lacks the technical knowledge about race cars, which he has never worked on as an engineer and has not learned. This makes Ferrari's entire technical organization inefficient and slow because it lacks a competent "supreme leader" like Ross Brawn used to be.
The fact that people like Elkann and Vigna are putting pressure on the middle management level of engineers and demanding developments means that Ferrari is repeating the very mistakes it made before 1996 and has been repeating constantly since 2007. Here, too, it would be up to Vasseur to bring about improvement, but he lacks the power and authority that people like Todt, Brawn, and Byrne had in collaboration with Schumacher.
Perhaps Vasseur also needs a little more time to create such structures and organization. Unfortunately, however, it must be said that he has achieved very little in this regard so far, and my optimism that he ever will is limited, because, on the one hand, he lacks the power and, on the other hand, he is unable to break down the old and flawed organizational structures. Maybe because of his lack of Power.
That certainly wasn't the case in the slightest with Sainz. But I do agree to an extent, signing a 40 year-old Hamilton, especially in the state Ferrari are in currently wasn't needed. I do think the hype/media attention that came with him was absolutely something Ferrari didn't need right now - alll it did was overhype them (even more than usual) in pre-season and now the current fallout is even larger than it would have been.CHT wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 08:21I always feel that Ferrari decision to sign LH was a major distraction for the team trying hard to rebuild itself. And now Ferrari engineers have to split their focus to fulfil Charles and Lewis demand whereas in the past, Ferrari could have just focus on Charles as Saintz will be happy to live with anything thrown at him. Hopefully this is just a blip and because their focus is now on 2026.
I dont think that was the case. Sainz was almost more vocal than Charles. No team other than redbull focuses only on one driver. Sainz and Leclerc were equal in Ferrari. For the hype thing, every year Ferrari hype is huge compared to other teams, it is nothing to do with Lewis. Making a complete new car was the biggest mistake for Ferrari. Their 2024 car was good enough, I am sure they could have make it better this year. Both Leclerc and Hamilton is constantly in argument with their engineers in the radio. It doesnt bode well. I think Ferrari needs to make some changes, I am not talking about the Fred. Maybe driver engineers first, then other stuff.ali623 wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 10:33That certainly wasn't the case in the slightest with Sainz. But I do agree to an extent, signing a 40 year-old Hamilton, especially in the state Ferrari are in currently wasn't needed. I do think the hype/media attention that came with him was absolutely something Ferrari didn't need right now - alll it did was overhype them (even more than usual) in pre-season and now the current fallout is even larger than it would have been.CHT wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 08:21I always feel that Ferrari decision to sign LH was a major distraction for the team trying hard to rebuild itself. And now Ferrari engineers have to split their focus to fulfil Charles and Lewis demand whereas in the past, Ferrari could have just focus on Charles as Saintz will be happy to live with anything thrown at him. Hopefully this is just a blip and because their focus is now on 2026.
The suspension always felt like hoping for a miracle to me, i don't expect a whole lot.Schippke wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 09:24I'm surely not he only one thinking this, but does anybody get the feeling that this apparent 'Suspension Upgrade' isn't going to change much in the end from a pace/position point of view?![]()
We've got several races now where there has been some minor additions to the car, whilst the likes of McLaren, Red Bull and Mercedes are more than likely finalising the last few bits of this current generation of cars before moving completely (if not already) towards 2026... so they can no focus on optimisation and getting the most out of the current packages.
Meanwhile, we're still trying to get this concept right with another couple of races before this apparent upgrade will debut... which will no doubt take a couple of races to get dialled in/setup etc... so in the end we'll probably end up as we are; Nabbing a podium due to the others faltering... all whilst loosing ground for next season?
I don't really buy into the whole 'Fire Vasseur' topic that the media is reporting, but Ferrari themselves aren't doing any favours when the Drivers are craving for upgrades whilst Fred is pulling back and saying the team has to execute a better result... For sure he isn't wrong, but there's 2 different calls between drivers and management, so you can begin to understand the rumour mill firing-up yet again.
Carlos definitely wasn't a quiet guy happy to be here, he made his presence felt and his voice heard.ismail1991 wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 11:13I dont think that was the case. Sainz was almost more vocal than Charles.
Venturiation wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 10:43finally lewis is making changes in the team, 7 years with no title
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Gss79yPWAAA ... name=large
One of the most ridiculous comments I've heard from him...Venturiation wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 10:43finally lewis is making changes in the team, 7 years with no title
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Gss79yPWAAA ... name=large
this is something those annoying superfans to type on twitter. what an embarrassing statement from an ex driver none the less.codetower wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 15:18One of the most ridiculous comments I've heard from him...Venturiation wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 10:43finally lewis is making changes in the team, 7 years with no title
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Gss79yPWAAA ... name=large
It's possible the reason why Vasseur is denying the necessity of upgrades is because he knows the incoming upgrades won't help much. I'd even say that's the probable reason, not just a possible one.Schippke wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 09:24I'm surely not he only one thinking this, but does anybody get the feeling that this apparent 'Suspension Upgrade' isn't going to change much in the end from a pace/position point of view?![]()
We've got several races now where there has been some minor additions to the car, whilst the likes of McLaren, Red Bull and Mercedes are more than likely finalising the last few bits of this current generation of cars before moving completely (if not already) towards 2026... so they can no focus on optimisation and getting the most out of the current packages.
Meanwhile, we're still trying to get this concept right with another couple of races before this apparent upgrade will debut... which will no doubt take a couple of races to get dialled in/setup etc... so in the end we'll probably end up as we are; Nabbing a podium due to the others faltering... all whilst loosing ground for next season?
I don't really buy into the whole 'Fire Vasseur' topic that the media is reporting, but Ferrari themselves aren't doing any favours when the Drivers are craving for upgrades whilst Fred is pulling back and saying the team has to execute a better result... For sure he isn't wrong, but there's 2 different calls between drivers and management, so you can begin to understand the rumour mill firing-up yet again.
Considering their current product how can you expect anything different for 2026?
If you tracked this, the suspension issue has been widely reported to be due to Cardille. He was also the one who apparently pushed Ferrari to stick with the suspension geometry on the SF24, also delaying this year front suspension change a year.
Well I think what he’s saying is that they need to listen to Lewis’ feedback on car design in order to build a competitive car that works in all conditions. Charles can drive around problems very well and perhaps this is taking them down more extreme directions. It doesn’t mean that, if they build a more benign car that’s to Lewis’ liking, they would favour him and it could well be to Charles’ advantage to have such a car anyway.codetower wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 15:18One of the most ridiculous comments I've heard from him...Venturiation wrote: ↑16 Jun 2025, 10:43finally lewis is making changes in the team, 7 years with no title
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/Gss79yPWAAA ... name=large