Skip to main content

Sign up for free

  • Get quick access to your favorite articles

  • Manage alerts on breaking news and favorite drivers

  • Make your voice heard with article commenting.

Autosport Plus

Discover premium content
Subscribe

Recommended for you

What we learned from the 2026 F1 Chinese GP sprint race and qualifying

Feature
Formula 1
Chinese GP
What we learned from the 2026 F1 Chinese GP sprint race and qualifying

Following Verstappen’s path? The one lesson Antonelli must learn for an F1 title fight

Feature
Formula 1
Chinese GP
Following Verstappen’s path? The one lesson Antonelli must learn for an F1 title fight

MotoGP working on rescheduling Qatar GP

MotoGP
Qatar GP
MotoGP working on rescheduling Qatar GP

WRC Safari Rally Kenya: Solberg and Ogier stop, Katsuta takes lead

WRC
Rally Kenya
WRC Safari Rally Kenya: Solberg and Ogier stop, Katsuta takes lead

Mercedes yet to understand problem that nearly ruined Russell's qualifying

Formula 1
Chinese GP
Mercedes yet to understand problem that nearly ruined Russell's qualifying

Verstappen: Every lap is survival in "undriveable" Red Bull F1 car

Formula 1
Chinese GP
Verstappen: Every lap is survival in "undriveable" Red Bull F1 car

WRC Safari Rally Kenya: Solberg leads, Evans retires as drivers slam “dangerous” decision from rally organisers

WRC
Rally Kenya
WRC Safari Rally Kenya: Solberg leads, Evans retires as drivers slam “dangerous” decision from rally organisers

F1 Chinese GP: Antonelli takes first pole as Russell fights Q3 issue

Formula 1
Chinese GP
F1 Chinese GP: Antonelli takes first pole as Russell fights Q3 issue

Ferrari chairman says Leclerc and Hamilton "need to focus on driving and talk less"

After a double DNF at the Brazil Grand Prix dropped Ferrari to fourth in the F1 world constructors' standings, chairman John Elkann urged Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton to focus on driving and talk less

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari, Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari

Ferrari chairman John Elkann says Charles Leclerc and Lewis Hamilton need to "focus on driving and talk less" in a shock criticism of the Ferrari Formula 1 drivers.

Speaking after a double DNF for Ferrari at the Brazil Grand Prix, which resulted in the Maranello outfit slipping from second to fourth in the constructors' standings, while the Italian manufacturer sealed both WEC manufacturers’ and drivers’ titles in the Bahrain finale, Elkann gave his assessment.  

"We won the endurance world titles in Bahrain, and it was an extraordinary feeling. Winning both the constructors’ and drivers’ championships shows that when Ferrari is united, when everyone works together, we can achieve truly great things," he told Sky Sports Italy.

"Brazil was a big disappointment. Looking at the Formula 1 championship, we can say that we have our mechanics, who are basically winning the championship with their performance and everything that has been done on the pitstops. Our engineers have undoubtedly improved the car. But when it comes to the rest, it is still not up to par.

"And surely we have drivers who need to focus on driving and talk less. We still have important races ahead of us, and it is not impossible to achieve second place [in the constructors]. This is the most important message, because Bahrain itself is the demonstration that, when everyone at Ferrari work together, we win."

Heading into the Brazil GP weekend, Ferrari sat second in the constructors' standings. A mixed sprint qualifying left Leclerc and Hamilton starting the sprint race from eighth and 11th, respectively.

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari

Charles Leclerc, Ferrari

Photo by: Anni Graf - Formula 1 via Getty Images

While the drivers were able to convert this into fifth and seventh-place finishes, it was not enough to keep Mercedes at bay as the Brackley outfit overtook Ferrari in the standings with second and third-place finishes.

Unfortunately for the Scuderia team, the weekend continued to deteriorate. Leclerc started the race from third on the grid but ultimately retired after a clash with Andrea Kimi Antonelli and Oscar Piastri. Hamilton, who started from 13th, also retired due to damage sustained from early collisions with Williams's Carlos Sainz and Alpine's Franco Colapinto.

The double DNF, combined with an impressive drive from Red Bull's Max Verstappen from the pitlane to third, placed Ferrari fourth in the standings by the end of the weekend.

Hamilton was particularly damning in his reflection of the weekend. "It's a nightmare," he told Sky Sports F1 after the race. "I've been living it for a while. The flip between the dream of driving for this amazing team and then the nightmare of the results that we've had.

"The ups and downs. It's challenging. Tomorrow I'll get back up. I'll keep training. I'll keep working with the team. I really wanted to get them good points this weekend but I'll come back as strong as I can in the next race and try to recover."

With three rounds remaining, the battle for second in the constructors' championship is tight with 36 points separating Mercedes, Red Bull and Ferrari.

Read Also:
Previous article Why Antonelli's strongest F1 results have come at tracks he isn't familiar with
Next article McLaren signs De Palo amid driver academy shake-up

Top Comments

Latest news