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Lewis Hamilton admits being

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F1 icon and seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton has admitted that even though he’s enjoyed his success, he’s still experienced loneliness in his career.

Hamilton has always been frank about his own struggles on and off the racetrack throughout his career, particularly in regards to his mental health.

In 2024, Hamilton revealed to the Sunday Times that he struggled with ‘depression’ from a ‘very early age’ due to the ‘pressure of racing’ and ‘bullying’ at school.

During his F1 career, while he has experienced major highs in the form of 105 race victories, he has also endured severe lows such as his retirement at the 2007 Chinese Grand Prix.

In his rookie season, Hamilton found himself on the cusp of his first world title, but a mistake in the pit lane forced him to retire and leave China without a single point, later admitting he spent three days in his hotel room after the title deciding error.

READ MORE: How Toto Wolff ‘fired’ Lewis Hamilton from Mercedes

Hamilton: It can be lonely at the top

Despite his struggles, Hamilton has always maintained a strong support network in F1, particularly from his family including father Anthony and mother Carmen, who he credited in a recent appearance in a video for Formula 1.

F1’s latest YouTube video, titled ‘So You Think You Know F1 Drivers’, saw Hamilton being asked the question: ‘What’s the hardest lesson that success was taught you?’

To this, Hamilton honestly replied: “Having success is is not all that it’s cracked up to be. It can be lonely at the top, especially when you’re the first.

“It’s nothing without family and without your team and without people that you rally with. And if you can’t share it and be in the moment, then it’s kind of all for nothing.”

Hamilton’s F1 career in stats

Hamilton has the most grand prix victories, pole positions and podiums of any other driver, enjoying a record-breaking career with McLaren and Mercedes, with hopes of more at Ferrari.

  • Total F1 wins: 105 Grand Prix victories
  • Total pole positions: 104 (all‑time F1 record)
  • Total podiums: 203
  • World titles: 7

Hamilton’s 105 Grand Prix wins are split between McLaren and Mercedes, with his Ferrari chapter still winless.

  • McLaren: 21 wins (2007–2012)
  • Mercedes: 84 wins (2013–2024)
  • Ferrari: 0 wins so far (from 2025)

READ MORE: Hamilton’s F1 boss ‘wants an Italian at Ferrari’

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Max Verstappen delivers sensational lap to warm up for iconic Nurburgring showdown:

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Max Verstappen has once again showcased his incredible talents outside F1 with a brilliant testing display as he warms up for that 24 Hours race at the Nurburgring.

The 28-year-old may not be enjoying the new regulations in F1 in 2026, but he is loving every moment of his exploits away from the sport.

The four-time world champion has been racing regularly in NLS combat on the world-famous Nordschleife circuit at the Nurburgring. And on May 16 and 17 he will take on the brutal test that is the 24 Hours race at the German track.

Verstappen has also used his time globe trotting to get in some track time in Japan, taking to the iconic Fuji Speedway circuit driving a GT500 ca for the first time.

Driving a new car was not the only challenge facing Verstappen – the famous Japanese track was soaked in rain when he went out. But the results, as ever, were absolutely sensational for the Dutchman.

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Verstappen reacts to Fuji test

Verstappen said afterwards: “It was getting a bit tricky to push. My first lap, I was like, ‘I can do a bit better than that’ then I did a 42 then it really started raining and then some of those corners were quite tricky. It was getting used to the car, how you go on throttle and braking. The steering is very different and feeling the grip of the tyres.

“You can’t go straight over the rivers (of water) because the corners don’t let you do that. It was a really cool experience. Hopefully next time it is dry.”

Miyake meanwhile admitted: “I was curious to see how different his driving would be if we shared the same car. Although it was unfortunately raining this time, I was able to actually see how good he was, so I was really excited and had a great time.”

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Montoya turned down Ferrari move, because of Michael Schumacher

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Seven-time grand prix winner Juan Pablo Montoya has revealed that he once received an offer to join his fierce F1 rivals, Ferrari.

Montoya competed in F1 between 2001 and 2006, driving for McLaren and Williams during the era of Michael Schumacher’s glory years with Ferrari.

The legendary German racer picked up five of his seven drivers’ titles whilst racing with the Maranello-based squad, who operated under the watchful eye of Ross Brawn during the 2000s.

The Brit followed Schumacher to Ferrari from Benetton in the late 1990s and took up an instrumental role as technical director.

He is now best known for being the mastermind behind the dream team, which consisted of he and Schumacher, as well as Jean Todt and Rory Byrne. Together, they achieved six consecutive constructors’ championships and five back-to-back titles between 1999 and 2004.

Few drivers were willing to challenge Schumacher at the wheel of a Ferrari during that time, but Montoya was always credited for his fearless approach to on-track battles him.

But it turns out it was the German who kept Montoya from ever making a move to Ferrari.

F1 HEADLINES: Hamilton announces instant Ferrari change as champion sets out retirement terms

Should Ferrari ‘simplify’ F1 politics?

Speaking in a recent episode of the BBC’s F1 Chequered Flag Podcast after the Miami GP, Montoya said: “The crazy thing is when I was in F1, I looked at Ferrari and I never looked at it that way,” referring to the allure that seems to attract so many drivers to the Italian team despite them not winning a title of any kind since 2008.

The Colombian driver-turned-pundit then revealed that Brawn had even gone as far as to extend an offer for him to switch over to Ferrari during his career, but that he had turned it down instantly for one reason.

When asked by 1996 champion Damon Hill why he never felt the pull from Ferrari, Montoya explained: “I don’t know. Ross Brawn once came to me and said, ‘We would love if you ever race for us.’ And I said, ‘No, thank you.’ In hindsight, I go, ‘Oh my god, that was crazy.’

“I remember I came to the Williams meeting, I mean, after the race in Monza, and I told my engineer, [they] said, ‘How was it?’ I said, ‘Well, Ross Brown just said I should go to Ferrari.’ And [they] said, ‘What do you say?’ I said, ‘No, thank you.’ And they all looked at me like, ‘Oh my god, you’re crazy.'”

Montoya was then asked by commentator and co-host Harry Benjamin: “And you don’t regret that?”

To which the former McLaren star replied: “No, I didn’t want to have Michael as a team-mate because I didn’t want to be a second-tier driver.”

Though Montoya’s decline of Brawn’s offer appeared to shock many in F1 at the time, he is far from the only driver to admit that playing second fiddle to Schumacher offered little to no incentive to switch to the Scuderia.

Fellow former McLaren driver David Coulthard has previously spoken of sharing Montoya’s opinion.

Montoya later added that the driver politics in play at Ferrari have made it hard for many stars of the sport to perform within their ranks, suggesting it was time for a change in operations.

“The hard thing, and I think it’s getting a little better, is the amount of politics that are going on,” the 50-year-old said.

“It’s really hard to perform there when there’s so many opinions and so many layers. You know what I mean? I think nowadays big companies have so many layers of opinions and sometimes [to] simplify things makes a big difference.”

READ MORE: Lewis Hamilton merely ‘surviving’ at Ferrari as F1 legend hit by chronic issue

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Lewis Hamilton takes issue with Ferrari F1 preparation:

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Seven-time F1 world champion Lewis Hamilton has hinted that he will be taking a different approach to his preparations at future race weekends.

Hamilton had a poor Miami Grand Prix weekend, only finishing down in seventh in the sprint race, before qualifying and finishing sixth in the main race on Sunday.

That was despite the fact that Ferrari brought 11 upgrades to the Miami International Autordrome, and were hoping to be challenging for the race win alongside McLaren and Mercedes.

Ferrari had a five-week break to try and build on what had been a positive start to the season, with the team having claimed podiums in each of the first three grands prix of the season.

But they only took 22 points from Miami, their lowest total at a grand prix weekend of the season despite there being more points available at the sprint race weekend.

Now, Hamilton has slammed the simulator that he uses back in Maranello, claiming that the work that he did on that during the five-week break was irrelevant once the car actually got out onto the track on Friday.

“I’m going to have a different approach in the next race because the way we’re preparing at the moment is not helping and so we’ll see how that goes for the next race,” Hamilton told media in Miami. “But we’re going to another track with long straights. We’re losing three to four tenths just on straight line speed. So that’s there, and it’s going to be there until we fix it.”

Talking about his simulator work, Hamilton continued: “Ultimately, it’s always correlation. We go on it and then we get to a track and it’s always different when we get to a track. What I mean by it is that I spend time on the simulator. I don’t like simulators in general, but I sat in the simulator every week in the build-up to this race and working on correlation constantly.

“You go on it, you prepare for the track, you drive it and you get the car set up to a certain place and then you come to the track and that set up doesn’t work.”

READ MORE: F1 legend reacts after bizarre microphone sock biting interview

Hamilton searching for first Ferrari grand prix win

There was real hope at Ferrari that their multitude of upgrades would turn them into championship challengers.

But, as a result of other teams’ improvements, Ferrari have actually appeared to have gone backwards, no longer the outright second-fastest team on the grid.

McLaren and Red Bull – mainly Max Verstappen – were providing a real challenge to Ferrari throughout the weekend, while Mercedes remain the outfit to beat.

It means that the illusive first grand prix win in Ferrari red feels further away from Hamilton now than it did at the start of the year, and he will need to be outperforming team-mate Charles Leclerc consistently if he has any chance of getting in the mix for race wins.

Back to the drawing board for Ferrari and, it seems, Hamilton.

F1 HEADLINES: Horner return welcomed as Hamilton flips off rival

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