
‘I'm absolutely useless' – Lewis Hamilton says Ferrari ‘need to change driver' after Hungarian GP qualifying nightmare
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LEWIS HAMILTON slammed himself as "useless" and told Ferrari to "CHANGE driver" after another nightmare qualifying saw him booted out in 12th.
To make matters worse for the seven-time world champion his teammate Charles Leclerc bagged a shock pole position at the Hungaroring.
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Lewis Hamilton slammed himself as 'useless'
Credit: PA
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Hamilton told Ferrari to 'change driver'
Credit: PA
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Another nightmare qualifying saw him booted out in 12th
Credit: Reuters
Hamilton's Q2 exit comes after the British 40-year-old was axed all the way back in 18th in Q1 at the Belgian Grand Prix last time out.
And today, Rookies Gabriel Bortoleto, Isack Hadjar and Ollie Bearman all finished ahead of the British 40-year-old in Hungary.
Hamilton said 'Everytime, everytime.' on his team radio as the mechanics rolled his car back into the garage.
He added: "It's me every time. I'm useless, absolutely useless.
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"The team have no problem. You've seen the car's on pole so we probably need to change driver."
Told his assessment is obviously not the case, Hamilton replied: "It clearly is. I just drove terribly. It is what it is."
Hamilton has not finished on the podium after 13-races since his move to Ferrari this season, meanwhile his teammate Leclerc is 30-points above him in the driver's standings.
Nobody saw it coming, the first pole of the year for Leclerc, 27, to stun second-place Oscar Piastri and third-place Lando Norris in their lightning quick McLarens.
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Leclerc's stunning lap threw a huge spanner in the works as McLaren had looked on course to line up one-two on the grid after the first two sessions.
But soon they were left scratching their heads and blaming the wind, which in fairness flipped the final session on its head on the outskirts of Budapest.
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Monegasque driver Leclerc even laughed when he was told on the team radio he secured pole, saying: "Whaaaaaaaaat?!"
He added afterwards: 'Today I don't understand anything in Formula 1! Honestly, the whole qualifying has been extremely difficult.
'Honestly, I have no words. It's probably one of the best pole positions that I've ever had, because it's the most unexpected, for sure.'
Piastri and Norris both blamed the wind, with the Brit saying: 'From how our form is, then of course (it's disappointing), but I think Charles did a good job on the last lap.
'He probably risked a little bit more in these conditions. The wind changed a lot and it really seemed to punish us in a bigger way it seems.'
Aussie driver Piastri added: "I think the wind changed a lot. It always sounds so pathetic, blaming things on the wind, but the wind basically did a 180 from Q1 to Q3.'
There was more frustration for Mercedes as Italian 18-year-old Kimi Anontelli was out in Q2, having to settle for 15th on the grid for Sunday's race.
Meanwhile, George Russell gave Toto Wolff's team a glimmer of hope, lining up in fourth-place on the grid for the race while Mac Verstappen who has been struggling all weekend came in eighth.
Red Bull's Yuki Tsundoa was the biggest casualty from the first session as he was eliminated in 16th.
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Lewis Hamilton insisted he "still loves" Formula 1 after his most challenging weekend of his Ferrari career so far at the Hungarian Grand Saturday, Hamilton had said he was "just useless" after the seven-time champion qualified 12th on the grid, while his team-mate Charles Leclerc took Ferrari's first grand prix pole position of the Sunday, Hamilton finished in the same place, while Leclerc, after fighting with the race-winning McLarens for the first two-thirds of the race, faded to fourth place, his car apparently afflicted by a problem in the final said he felt "the same" as he had after qualifying. He said: "There's a lot going on in the background that is not… great, so…" But added: "I'm sure there are positives to take from the weekend and I'm sure there's learnings."As is often the case when Hamilton struggles, not only does his mood plumb the depths, but the F1 rumour mill spins into Hamilton over the hill, some wondered after qualifying? Would he even quit Ferrari at the end of the year, or perhaps even before the end of the season?That one, at least, Hamilton rejected, saying he would be back in the car at the Dutch Grand Prix at the end of August after F1's summer break."I'm looking forward to coming back," he said. "I'll be back, yeah."Anyone who knows Hamilton, and his determination, and refusal to give up, knows the answers to the other questions about his future, performance, in the wake of some upgrades on the Ferrari car at least gives him some room for optimism."Definitely some improvements that have been made on the upgrades," Hamilton said. "Naturally, it's a shame we're not as competitive as the guys at the front, but you've seen Charles has had a really strong run of the last two races."The car is definitely progressing, so we have to keep trying to extract more from it." What does his boss think? Team principal Frederic Vasseur injected some perspective into Hamilton's situation."For sure when you are seven times world champion, your team-mate is in pole position and you are out in Q2, it's a tough situation," Vasseur the race result, Vasseur pointed out that Ferrari had gambled on a one-stop strategy starting on the hard tyre on a track where overtaking is notoriously difficult, and it "didn't work.""I can understand the frustration from Lewis," he said, "but this is normal, and he will come back."Vasseur, who was instrumental in persuading Hamilton to leave Mercedes to join Ferrari for this season, pointed out that the results in Hungary made his driver's weekend look worse than it Hamilton had been 0.247 seconds slower than Leclerc when he was knocked out of qualifying after the second session. 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