How Lewis Hamilton is shaping Ferrari's 2026 F1 car
The gap between the British Grand Prix and Belgian GP provides an ideal moment to take stock of both present and future, especially with one of the biggest technical revolutions in the championship's history on the horizon. These two dimensions inevitably intertwine: the present and future may seem far apart, but they're connected by a common thread of continuity, experience and development.
Advertisement
At Ferrari, this connection manifests in the need to turn around a season that has so far fallen short of expectations, with the awareness that the work done today and in the coming months will lay the groundwork for the 2026 car. Development is not yet in an advanced stage, but it is at a crucial point where basic design choices are being defined.
As with any new venture, the F1 2026 preparations show that now is a time not only to improve the short term but also to begin leaving a mark on the future, both technically and in terms of work methods. Each driver brings a wealth of experience that can be a valuable resource, especially when coming from a team that has remained at the top for years.
Ironing out inconsistencies from current Ferrari car
Hamilton's 2025 season has been inconsistent so far, partly due to a lack of connection with the car. And it's from these limitations - both technical and in terms of feeling - that the seven-time world champion is trying to shape his contribution to the 2026 Ferrari, openly expressing a desire to infuse the project with his own 'DNA'.
Advertisement
Some issues stem from structural features of the car that must be assessed to find performance. Others are more tied to details that surface during adaptation to a new environment. It's a common process, as seen with Carlos Sainz at Williams and Nico Hulkenberg at Sauber, who had requested changes to the power steering and throttle.
Ferrari SF-24 steering wheel
Ferrari SF-24 steering wheel
Power steering is one of the aspects Hamilton has focused on since his first outings with Ferrari. Beyond what emerged after Silverstone - which may be linked to the need to redesign the steering system following a suspension layout change – the Briton has asked for targeted adjustments based on personal needs and adaptation challenges that only become evident through on-track work.
Advertisement
It's important to distinguish between structural problems affecting both drivers and subjective needs related to individual feeling. Steering set-up, in particular, is highly personal: every driver has preferences that tend to become clear especially when changing teams and experiencing different lateral forces on track.
Read Also:
How Ferrari is helping Hamilton settle with Mercedes-inspired steering wheel software
These details add to the inherent challenges of the SF-25, a car often difficult to balance. That's why Charles Leclerc has leaned towards extreme set-up solutions, especially in how he exploits the front end and compensates at the rear. Hamilton has tried various directions to adapt, some more effective than others, and has begun aligning more closely with the Monegasque's choices.
Advertisement
'Charles and the team found a way to make the car work. I tried all the other directions that should theoretically work, but for some reason they didn't. So gradually I've gotten closer and closer to how Charles sets up the car,' said Hamilton. 'Last week [in Austria] was when I got the closest, and our race pace was also the most similar. But it's still difficult. It's a tricky balance, and the driving isn't comfortable.'
Nonetheless, these adjustments have improved his qualifying speed, reducing the gap to his team-mate, while race pace still suffers, particularly as tyre grip drops.
Some issues can't be solved with set-up alone, like the feeling in fast corners, which is an area Hamilton has struggled with all season. It's an instability that must be managed, especially in tight high-speed corners where trust and steering precision are critical.
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari
Unsurprisingly, Hamilton has highlighted stability as an area needing improvement, now and in the future.
Advertisement
'Charles has been working with a car that's a bit more oversteery, and that approach has worked well,' said Ferrari deputy team principal Jerome d'Ambrosio. "Recently, Lewis has moved in that direction and is making it work. I think it's a result of the current regulations. We're seeing instability at corner entry. These cars are nervous, and drivers have to partly learn to live with that."
There are specific technical issues limiting Leclerc as well, such as front-end struggles in slow corners. The longer and more flowing the corner, the more the SF-25 tends to understeer at the front. In sharper corners, some of these issues are masked, as seen in Austria. This makes it difficult to find a balanced compromise.
Finding a bigger operating window
Some aspects can be improved in the short term, but others require time – especially with 2026 in mind. The goal is not necessarily to go in one specific direction but to have more operational flexibility. For instance, since the beginning of the year, Hamilton has pointed out problems with the brakes and engine braking, which he finds too aggressive. At Mercedes, those elements were smoother – a difference not easily fixed via steering wheel settings, especially for a driver who likes to trail brake into corners.
Advertisement
In developing a new car, engineers always seek performance through design to meet set goals for downforce and drag. That's why cars are not built around a specific driver. Instead, the driver's input helps identify areas where more flexibility is needed – broad themes that become guidance based on experience.
This is where Hamilton is trying to give the 2026 Ferrari his 'DNA', not just technically but also in terms of working methods. Considering the packed calendar, factory drivers often test the following year's car in the simulator relatively late, unless there's a major regulation change. In such cases, feedback arrives earlier, but mostly at a conceptual level.
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari
Lewis Hamilton, Ferrari
'We listen to the drivers' input. Not just one driver, both. It's actually interesting, because during factory meetings, it often turns out the drivers arrive at very similar requests, conceptually, about what they need from the car,' said d'Ambrosio at Silverstone.
Advertisement
'We try to take that into account. Of course, part of development is simply about bringing a package that maximises downforce and performance. But there's also a lot that can be done to give the drivers the right tools and conditions to work, and to make sure they can adapt the car as much as possible to their driving style.
'There are two phases, and I don't think they're entirely separate. Generally, there are overall balances in the car that generate performance. Then there's a second phase involving the details – a phase where you absolutely must listen to the drivers.'
To read more Motorsport.com articles visit our website.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox Sports
18 minutes ago
- Fox Sports
Following Venus Williams' comment on health insurance, here's what to know about athlete coverage
Associated Press Venus Williams' recent singles win at the D.C. Open showcased her longevity and brought attention to health coverage for aging athletes following a joking comment she made in an on-court interview. 'I had to come back for the insurance,' the five-time Wimbledon champion said after Tuesday's match, her first in 16 months. 'They informed me this year that I'm on COBRA, so it's like, I got to get my benefits on.' The 45-year-old Williams, who has won seven major singles titles in her career, became the second-oldest woman to win a tour-level singles match in professional tennis with Tuesday's victory. After losing on Thursday, she acknowledged that her comment on health insurance was a 'fun and funny moment.' The Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act, more commonly referred to as COBRA, allows Americans to stay on their employer's insurance plan for a limited amount of time after leaving their job. It comes with high costs. Williams' comment led to questions about health insurance in the sports world. For most active professional athletes, partially or fully subsidized health insurance is provided by their league or governing body and guaranteed in their collective bargaining agreement. A CBA is an agreement reached between a league and its players that guarantees certain levels of player compensation and benefits, and can be renegotiated every few years. So when athletes are playing, they're usually covered. But Williams, coming back to the sport after a 16-month hiatus, brought to light how long that insurance lasts — or doesn't last — for athletes when they're not playing. Women's Tennis In the WTA, the governing body of the women's tour, players are eligible to enroll in the health insurance plan if they are ranked in the top 500 in singles or top 175 in doubles and have played a minimum of three WTA 250 level or above tournaments that year. If players are in the top 150 in singles or top 50 in doubles, the WTA will pay a portion of the premiums. If a player is no longer eligible under those requirements, they can enroll in COBRA for up to 18 months, which is likely the situation that Williams was referencing. That is also the WTA's only option for retiring players. 'Nobody wants to be on COBRA, right?' Williams said after her second-round loss on Thursday night. 'That remains an issue in my life … Obviously (the interview was) a fun and funny moment, but it's an issue that people are dealing with, so it is serious.' Men's Tennis The ATP provides health insurance to men's tennis players who rank in the top 250 in singles or top 50 in doubles. All other players with a ranking point are given the opportunity to purchase health insurance through the ATP's provider. For retired players, the only option is COBRA for up to three years. Golf As an individual sport without a CBA, golf tours vary. They do have a group insurance plan that is available to active members of the PGA Tour, the PGA Tour Champions (the tour for golfers over 50) and the Korn Ferry Tour (the feeder circuit for the PGA). For players who meet certain 'performance criteria,' including how many tournaments they played and how often they won, the PGA will partially subsidize the plan. In retirement, players are responsible for their own insurance. Some players join the PGA Tour Champions after the PGA Tour and play into their mid-60s, during which they maintain coverage. Top players can receive a subsidy from the PGA in retirement. The LPGA Tour, the women's professional golf tour, started offering its players fully funded health insurance for the first time this year. Before this year, players were given a $4,000 stipend. NBA NBA players have access to one of the most inclusive insurance plans in retirement. If they played at least three years in the league, retired NBA players are eligible for fully-funded health insurance in retirement, and if they played at least 10 years, they will have healthcare covered for their entire family. WNBA WNBA players are fighting for retirement healthcare as part of their new CBA, which they are currently negotiating with the league. Those negotiations have been heated, and the most recent meeting between the two sides last weekend did not result in an agreement. One unique facet of the W's healthcare is that athletes who have spent more than eight years in the league can be reimbursed up to $20,000 a year for costs related to adoption, surrogacy, egg freezing or additional fertility treatments. NFL The NFL has less long-term coverage for retirees than most other team sport leagues — athletes who played in the league for at least three years can remain on the NFL health insurance plan, but only for five years into retirement. NHL NHL players who have played more than 160 games with the league, which is about two seasons, are eligible to buy NHL health insurance for their retirement. The retirement insurance plan is eligible for partial subsidization from the league. MLB Baseball players who spent at least four years in the league have the option to pay premiums to stay on the MLB's healthcare plan indefinitely. Minor League Baseball has its own separate CBA, which also guarantees health insurance for active players. In the minors, however, players who get cut or leave the league lose coverage at the end of that month. ___ AP sports: in this topic


Motor 1
an hour ago
- Motor 1
Perfection on Wheels: Driving the Pagani Huayra R Evo at Monza
Hurry up and wait, they said. Red flags waved up and down the front straight at Autodromo di Monza—Italy's so-called Temple of Speed, the fastest track on the F1 calendar. Reports came back that a driver had speared off track and anxiety poured through the Pagani pit box like a choking fog. "It's okay. In a minute, you go. Just be ready to go," the PR handler insisted. My gloved fingers drummed against my race suit. A few moments became five minutes. Five minutes became 25. My shoulders relaxed. "Don't worry, we'll put you into a different session later," he said. I pulled the HANS off my shoulders, pried the helmet off my head, and did my best to put on an easygoing smile. My confrontation with the 900-horse, 2,300-pound, multimillion-dollar Pagani Huayra R Evo Roadster would wait. But like a whip crack, the unmistakable howl of a Pagani V-12 broke the silence, echoing from beyond Monza's legendary front straight and down to its terminus as the red-flagged car roared back into pit lane. "Okay. Now izzz time to go." An Italian engineer pushed me gently toward the cockpit and suddenly there was no more "Wait!" Only "Andiamo!" In a few frantic seconds, I'd clipped back into my HANS and humped over the Pagani's carbon-weave LMP-style crash structure and into the belly of the thing. Another engineer yanked at the five-point harness then flashed a quick thumbs-up and a smile. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Before me, all possibilities. Greatness and ruin. What a beautiful view. In the Huayra R Evo Roadster —colloquially called "REVO" by Pagani staff—you sit more upright than you'd think, a perfect sightline aimed over the car's narrow sloping nose. The driver-friendly design owes its roots to this Pagani's purpose. Despite its looks, the REVO isn't a race car. Nor is it a road car. This Pagani is destined for track use only, earmarked for the marque's 'Arte in Pista' events. Effectively, these are track days for Pagani's Huayra R (and now REVO) clients, in the vein of Ferrari's Corse Clienti program. But according to one well-heeled Pagani owner I spoke with in a cooldown session between track stints, "These [Pagani events] are the best. The customer service here is… This is ten times the other brands," he said. "I didn't get to have lunch with Enzo, and from what I understand, it wouldn't have been a very pleasant lunch anyway." Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Before me, all possibilities. Greatness and ruin. What a beautiful view. That means Horacio Pagani is there in person, glad-handing attendees like the mayor. The Arte in Pista also provides beautifully catered meals with endless espresso, shuttles to and from the airport and race track and hotel, a pit box stuffed with race engineers, and nothing but the world's greatest tarmac laid like a red carpet in front of your NA V-12 Pagani hypercar. Of course, there are dinners at night, and driving coaches there for one-on-one instruction, an engineer to parse your driving data, and even planned outings for the kids. Horacio reiterated, again and again during the program itself, that these track days are about enjoying family, whether that's biological or fellow Paganisti. I want so badly to be cynical about these sorts of things—the ultra-wealthy enjoying their toys— because they don't cater to my specific dirtbag sensibilities. But I can't. The customers are too joyous, the cars too awesome, the company itself so deeply admirable, I just couldn't help but enjoy the… Pagani-ness of it all. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 At a dinner for Arte in Pista customers the night before the first track sessions, one Huarya R owner from Miami with a similar build to mine (long, lean) recommended some foam under the seat of my race suit, so I'd have enough room to elbow the REVO around Monza without hitting my elbows on the car's crash structure. It proved salient advice. A deep breath and a moment to focus while my hand flicked at the master and ignition switches on the REVO's center console. I craned my head down at the steering wheel, fighting at the HANS straps to recall the starting procedure. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 "START" fired the mighty 6.0-liter V-12 over with a whirr whirr whirr BAM . Then it all went noisy. The uncatalyzed, unmuffled exhaust manifolds absolutely howitzered a racket at the back of the garage, vibrating and resonating in a full basso that played my kneecaps like tuning forks. A flick at the wheel-mounted paddle shifted the REVO into first, and I sat and revved the engine like a buffoon before remembering the car's clutch is engaged and disengaged by a servo on the sequential transmission, which is actuated by a "DRIVE" button on the steering wheel. This setup avoids a typical hand-clutch like you'd find on a similarly gnarly race car, another little touch on this track-special Pagani that's supposed to wrap the most extreme performance in a truly driver-friendly package. For context, the REVO's quickest lap at Monza wouldn't have just kept up with LMP2 the last time WEC ran here, it would've put the REVO on pole. It's that quick. Prototype-quick. In truth, after I wheeled out onto the track and saw Monza's first chicane over the REVO's hood, my mind snapped free of notary mode and left the journalist-observer framework behind. In slower cars, in cheaper cars, on tracks you know, you develop the ability to prod a car quickly up to its limits and record some mental notes about what it likes, what it doesn't like, and what sticks out that's worth relaying to the reader. Not here. Not with 900 NA V-12 horses shouting Vivaldi fortissimo at the grandstands. Not with millions of dollars in crash damage separated from Monza's strangling walls by only my right foot. Mostly, I vacillated between "If you crash this, it better kill you," and "this has to be the greatest thing I've ever driven." Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Of the scheduled 40 minutes at the wheel, I had just a few flying laps to learn the track and the car, owing to the red-flagged session earlier on, so I never settled fully into the car or track. It's not meant as a gripe, but as a disclaimer: If you're shopping for a REVO and landed here, or are just a curious reader, I won't be able to relay much about this Pagani's limit handling or its balance flat-out through Monza's high-speed bends. What I can tell you, emphatically, is that the REVO is perhaps the most awesome piece of rolling machinery on this planet. I've driven every model of Pagani in anger at this point, including a pair of Huayras, the new Utopia (manual transmission, grazie mille), and Horacio's own Zonda F. That final car will always have the largest piece of my heart, but the REVO is something else entirely. No road car can match a race car's sense of immediacy or connection. Equally, race cars aren't always friendly to their drivers. Often, they're an equation on wheels, asking for solutions you aren't naturally inclined to provide. The REVO occupies a special pocket between the two, where it pretends to be a race car, but is wrapped in just enough cotton that you can enjoy stretching its legs with confidence. Through Monza's iconic first chicane, I kept waiting for a hint of push from the nose, equally ready to snatch at the rear end going loose when I trailed that last bit of speed down from more than 190 mph and tossed the REVO's nose toward that first apex. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 What I can tell you, emphatically, is that the REVO is perhaps the most awesome piece of rolling machinery on this planet. All I found was more grip than I'd thought to ask for, every single time I rolled through the curves. As track temps soared near 100 degrees, the tires stuck firm out of every corner exit. My stint wasn't long enough to find out how they'd hold up over the course of a day, but the bespoke Pirelli P Zero slick compound got rave reviews from the Huayra R customer-drivers, and several of Pagani's instructors and test drivers, all of whom are pros. Pirelli developed the compound to bring a smidge of road-tire feel and breakaway character to these mile-wide racing slicks. It's a tough task to balance both, and a tougher task to satisfy whoever's in the driver's seat. But that's the car's mission—flatter everyone, bring them joy. Pagani's Arte In Pista customers run the gamut from former F1 drivers to people who had never driven a car on track before buying their track-special Pagani. That's not hyperbole. In speaking to the customers, both types were equally satisfied with the car. So was I, despite myself. Data showed I was something like 9 seconds a lap slower than the 'pole' time on my final flier, braking many meters sooner than I needed to, and with far less pedal pressure than the pro driver's fastest lap. I committed every sin in the name of abundant caution, giving up entry and apex speed everywhere. About the only things I did right, according to the data analyst, were steering smoothly and getting on throttle quickly and early (which is easier to do when you're parking in the corners). Still, by picking up throttle earlier and earlier on each successive lap and learning to trust where the car would stick, my confidence grew. On the final lap, I was bumping past 300 kph on the front straight. I had so much fun. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 The REVO looks about as thrilling as it does intimidating, but once you're at speed, nothing wants to hurt you. The brakes are slightly boosted, I was told, still with that race-car-like resistance across the pedal's travel that's so critical to modulating your braking efficiently while still offering a granular accuracy. The steering is light, with a hyper-quick rack that makes for economical efforts, especially in Monza's first chicane, which is best taken with a super squared-off approach. In corners, and especially once all that downforce kicks in, weight builds beautifully in the steering effort, perfectly relaying how the car's behaving. Then there's the REVO's excellent visibility, its simple, user-friendly control layout, and the balance of the whole package… I've met Girl Scout Cookie sellers who were less friendly. But, more than anything about the REVO, there's that noise. To be honest, the engine sounds better when you're stood on pit wall than it does from inside the car. Impossibly vicious and harmonic, echoing its siren call from nowhere and RIGHT THERE all at once. Even if you never get the chance to drive one, make it out to your nearest Arte In Pista to hear these things run flat out. Photo by: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 Its 60-degree, 6.0-liter naturally aspirated V-12 is on par with the best-sounding engines I've ever heard. No road car ever built sounds this good. Only golden-era Formula 1 could surpass the Pagani unit for soundtrack bliss. The engine itself is a masterpiece. This unit, designed and built from scratch by HWA, produces a glorious cavalcade of numbers. Nine-hundred horses at 8,750 rpm and 568 pound-feet from 5,800 - 8,200 rpm. Twelve naturally aspirated cylinders. Sixty-degree banking that imparts a natural balance and refinement. But really, it's the sound that impresses me most. From inside the cockpit, it's more like a mechanical thrash, a roar of gnashing whine and frequencies from the six-speed dog-ring sequential 'box. A sintered-metal three-disc clutch reins in all the power. At the REVO's astonishing 9,250-rpm redline, there's this glorious intoxicating metallic shout from all that rotating mass and the wind rushing over the overhead portholes sculpted into the carbon monocoque. It is cacophonous. It is glorious. It is Pagani at its absolute best. 30 Source: Sevian Daupi | Motor1 And that's my takeaway from my brief time meeting the REVO. I spent maybe 15 minutes behind the wheel and the rest of the day listening to it scream down Monza's front straight. When the car was still, I stood by it, mesmerized. I prodded around its beautifully constructed suspension and hunched over to view every last component. I bothered Pagani's engineers about every last detail as the car sat with its carbon clamshell off, exposed, waiting for the next driver. I got just as much joy sharing in the infectious pride of the people who built the car as I did edging up to 200 mph on that front straight. Writing about cars requires a balance wherein you must still be in love with the subject matter and yet be distanced enough from the subject itself. Personally, I'm enamored by Pagani and the things it builds. Professionally, I'm struck by Pagani's adherence to ultimate quality, to blending money-no-object craftsmanship with an artful spirit and cutting-edge composites. These are values worth admiring, and the REVO hasn't fallen short by any metric. It is, simply, a dream on wheels. Perfection. More From Pagani The Pagani Huayra Codalunga Loses Its Roof and Adds a Manual 'No One Showed Interest:' Pagani Customers Don't Want An Electric Hypercar Get the best news, reviews, columns, and more delivered straight to your inbox, daily. back Sign up For more information, read our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use . Share this Story Facebook X LinkedIn Flipboard Reddit WhatsApp E-Mail Got a tip for us? Email: tips@ Join the conversation ( )


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
'22 MPH at 260 pounds': Former Cowboys' 2nd-round pick on fast track to return from injury
Cowboys DE Sam Williams is making waves in his return from injury, claiming he feels stronger and faster than ever heading into camp. Around this time a year ago, Sam Williams, was getting carted off the practice field just a few days into the Dallas Cowboys' 2024 training camp. Williams had suffered a torn ACL and PCL, and just like that, his season was over before it began. Since then, the former 2022 second-round pick has gone through surgery, rehabilitation, and is now back on the field in preparation for the 2025 season. Now entering his fourth year, and the final of his rookie deal, Williams noted to reporters that he is feeling as strong as ever and more explosive. 'I've put in the work, I feel great. Fantastic. No soreness. No aches,' Williams said after Thursday's practice. 'I'm running. I'm hitting 22 miles per hour at 260 pounds. That should tell you everything.' The former Ole Miss Rebel, who had high hopes going into last year's camp, recorded 48 tackles, 15 for loss, 8.5 sacks, and 21 pressures during his first two seasons before injury. Williams will now retake the field looking to add more fuel to a Cowboys' defense that saw a drop-off in production last season compared to the year prior. His physical tools and speed off the edge have been a key aspect of his game. However, with his return comes competition for repetitions. The Cowboys carry a deep rotation of edge rushers that features All-Pro Micah Parsons, veteran free agents Dante Fowler Jr. and Payton Turner, second-year edge rusher Marshawn Kneeland, and to top it off, Dallas used its second-round pick this season on another rusher, Donovan Ezeiruaku. Follow Cowboys Wire on Facebook to join in on the conversation with fellow fans!