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F1 rivals no more? Hamilton and Verstappen get the giggles in Bahrain

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Old F1 rivalries appear to have dissipated in Bahrain after Lewis Hamilton and Max Verstappen got the giggles during Wednesday’s press conference.

Ever since their 2021 title duel, Hamilton vs Verstappen have entered the list of legendary F1 rivalries, comprised of the likes of Ayrton Senna and Alain Prost, James Hunt and Niki Lauda.

As they battled tooth and nail for the 2021 title, frustration often spilled over into the media, most notably at Silverstone. Hamilton collided with the Dutchman, who was taken to hospital for precautionary checks and the Brit went on to win his home race.

Hamilton’s celebrations at the end of the race led to Verstappen calling out his actions as ‘disrespectful’ and ‘unsportsmanlike’. This was one of the many flash points across the season (the less said about Abu Dhabi the better), all of which translated into tense relations on and off the track, not just between the drivers, but also between their respective fanbases.

Nearly five years on from their championship rivalry, much has changed. Hamilton is now a Ferrari driver, Verstappen a four-time champion and the pair can be seen…wait, what? Having a laugh? F1 Twitter, prepare to be stunned.

READ MORE: F1 great Sebastian Vettel reveals incredible plan to team up with Max Verstappen

What were Hamilton and Verstappen laughing about?

At Wednesday’s press conference during the second week of testing in Bahrain, both Hamilton and Verstappen were in attendance, and after images surfaced from the media session, the pair were snapped having a good old giggle.

What about, I hear you ask? Well, your guess is as good as mine. Maybe, they’d just received the news about the vote on Mercedes‘ power unit trick? Or perhaps they’d heard the gargle of the Honda engine attempting to make its way around the circuit. Maybe an invite to model Lewis’ latest lululemon collection? Hmm…maybe not the last one.

Of course, it’s nice to see such titans of the sport in harmony, with this respect having permeated over the past five years as their title fight slipped further into distant memory.

Hamilton praised Verstappen after he clawed his way back into the 2025 title fight, commending his ‘amazing job’ and the ‘phenomenal team’ behind him.

Likewise, Verstappen has extended support during Hamilton’s testing first year at Ferrari, commiserating that it wasn’t ‘nice to see’ and that it ‘hurt his heart’.

Needless to say, if Ferrari and Red Bull return to the top of the competitive order an old rivalry could be reignited, especially with a hungry Hamilton once again in the hunt for a record-breaking eighth world title.

READ MORE: FIA announce outcome of F1 commission meeting as verdict issued over 2026 regulation changes

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Max Verstappen

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He may well have been joking, but with Max Verstappen and F1’s controversial new regulations you can never truly be sure in 2026.

The four-time world champion has been extremely vocal in his criticism of the new regs, which came into force for last weekend’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne. He believes they take the fun out of driving and mean it is now all about ‘management’.

Verstappen started behind the eight ball at Albert Park after crashing in Qualifying, but roared through the field on Sunday to eventually finish P6.

Now the show moves on to Shanghai for the Chinese Grand Prix, and the Dutchman spoke with media at the track on Thursday. Of course the new regs were front and centre again, and Verstappen joked that he has a genius hack to help him work everything out.

When asked if drivers who spend a lot of time in simulators have an advantage when it comes to energy management, he provided a very Verstappen answer.

F1 HEADLINES: Aston Martin short on parts as Alonso preps for Chinese GP nightmare

Max ‘swapped his sim for Mario Kart’

“I found a cheaper solution. I swapped the simulator for my Nintendo Switch and yeah, practicing a bit of Mario Kart, actually,” he joked (we think).

“Finding the mushrooms is going quite well. The blue shell is a bit more difficult, but I’m working on it.”

Verstappen is pretty clear that Red Bull is behind Mercedes and Ferrari right now and on a normal day P5 is the best he can hope for. But he does agree there is the potential for improvement as that new power unit partnership with Ford properly beds in.

“Yeah, I mean, for sure there is a lot of potential. It’s just going to depend, of course, on if we can extract that, I guess, throughout the year. The gap, of course, was quite big and also in the race. I think if I would have started, let’s say, a little bit up front, I think the best that I could have done was one spot higher because we didn’t have the pace of the top four cars.

“We also had a lot of degradation and graining. But yes, we’ll see. We’ll see what happens in the coming races, if we can close that gap a little bit.”

Will Red Bull be closer to the front in China?

Verstappen was also asked if the gap to the front two teams was specific to Melbourne, or whether it will be the same in China.

“Impossible to know. I mean, honestly, it’s such a jungle out there at the moment,” he admitted.

“I think that it’s very hard to really know. I mean, I would hope that it gets a bit closer, not even bigger than the gap that it was in Melbourne, but it’s clear that at the moment we cannot fight with those cars.”

READ MORE: F1 fans fume over TV broadcast change for 2026 season

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F1 stars freak out over spider prank

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You would think that when an F1 driver’s day job is to drive cars at nearly 200mph with walls close by, there isn’t really much you can do to scare them.

But it turns out they are mere mortals like the rest of us, and it only took a prank involving spiders to demonstrate that point.

During the Australian Grand Prix, crafty social media admins at VCARB, Red Bull’s sister team, decided to pick on random people inside the Albert Park paddock in Melbourne with an upgrade to the old trick where your finger gets snapped when you pull out a chewing gum stick.

This trick though involved something that ever so slightly plays on people’s fears a bit more. The VCARB admin would offer ‘an Australian sweet’ to members of the paddock, with the recipient pulling on the lid of the box only for a plastic spider to jump out instead of a sugary delight.

F1 HEADLINES: Mercedes could ‘block’ Horner return, Verstappen rages

Four F1 stars targeted

Four drivers were targeted including Cadillac’s Valtteri Bottas, Racing Bulls’ Arvid Lindblad, Red Bull’s Isack Hadjar and Audi’s Nico Hulkenberg – and there were mixed reactions.

Bottas looks like he can take on anything given his insane Iron Man triathlon escapades, but Lewis Hamilton’s former team-mate is on record for not liking spiders, and his reaction showed it.

After the spider jumps out at him, Bottas wheels away with shock on his face and some profanity too. But he wasn’t alone.

Lindblad jolted saying ‘Jesus Christ’ before reassuringly putting his hand on his stomach, while Hadjar with some Bottas profanity after an initial shock looked annoyed at falling for the practical joke.

Hulkenberg though took the prize for nerves of steel in this case. The German had the slightest jolt with a small ‘woah’, before trying again and acknowledging the prank with a wry smile and a ‘got me there’.

Fans were impressed with the calm and collected Hulkenberg, with one saying: Hulk was ready to eat the damn thing regardless’ and another saying: ‘Hulk wanted to snack it’.

When is the next Formula 1 race?

The next F1 race will be the Chinese Grad Prix that takes place at the Shanghai circuit on Sunday 15, March. The race will be the second of the 2026 season following the Australian Grand Prix in Melbourne at Albert Park on March 8.

George Russell and Mercedes currently lead the world championship after finishing one-two in the first race, marking themselves out as early title favourites.

READ MORE: Honda issue strong statement after Aston Martin DNF at F1 Australian Grand Prix

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Lewis Hamilton will not retire until he races in this location

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Seven-time F1 champion Lewis Hamilton has insisted he will not stop racing in the sport until the jam-packed calendar finds space for one more event in particular.

There are currently 24 race weekends on the F1 2026 calendar, with six sprint races peppered in to please F1 owners Liberty Media, who recently stated that the shorter race format has gone down well with their growing audience.

What’s more, the idea of increasing the sprint’s presence on the F1 calendar even further was recently floated at the F1 Commission meeting in Bahrain, with it being reported that the FIA had taken part in, ‘discussions around the possibility of increasing the sprint events up to 12 based on the demand from fans and promoters.’

But there are many countries who are fiercely campaigning to see their track either return to the calendar of the pinnacle of motorsport or make the case for a brand new event, with a popular destination being Africa, which Hamilton has frequently championed.

F1 HEADLINES: Lewis Hamilton will hold FIA accountable as new Mercedes evidence emerges

Hamilton refuses to leave F1 until he’s competed in ‘African GP’

Speaking during Thursday’s FIA press conference ahead of this weekend’s season-opening Australian Grand Prix, Hamilton was asked where exactly in Africa he would pick to race.

“I’ve had the privilege, I’ve been to 10 countries now in Africa, there’s still so much more for me to see,” he said.

The 41-year-old has been instrumental in the conversation around why Africa doesn’t yet host an F1 race, going on to detail his involvement in hopefully changing this in the years to come in this week’s media session.

“For the past six years, I think, maybe seven, I’ve been fighting in the background to get a grand prix [in Africa]. Sitting with the stakeholders and asking the question, ‘why are we not in Africa? We’re on every other continent, why not Africa?’

“I know they’re really trying. I think they’ve been to quite a few different countries. The ones that I’ve enjoyed the most so far, I loved Kenya, I don’t think we’re going to have a grand prix in Kenya but Rwanda particularly was spectacular. Two places I felt like I could live. South Africa is stunning. I think those are the ones that I think would be good places for us to potentially go to.”

F1 last raced in Africa at the Kyalami circuit for the 1993 South African Grand Prix and the track near Johannesburg did previously hold a spot on the calendar between 1967 and 1985, and again in 1992 and 1993.

Though it has not returned as a grand prix destination since, the facilities have been recently upgraded to align with the FIA’s Grade 1 standards, hinting that a return could be on the cards in the future.

Hamilton is certainly keeping a close eye on the progress of the project, going on to say in this week’s Melbourne press conference that he refuses to retire without racing in Africa, although he is under no illusions that time is ticking.

“I don’t want to leave the sport without having a grand prix there, without getting to race there. So I’m chasing them like, ‘when is it going to be?’ They’re setting certain dates and I’m like, ‘damn, I’m running out of time’,” he admitted.

“I’m going to be here for a while until that happens because that’ll be amazing, given that I’m half African. I’ve got roots from a few different places there, like Togo and Benin. I went to visit Benin last year, Senegal and Nigeria. It’s something I’m really, really proud of. I’m really proud of that part of the world. I think it is the most beautiful part of the world, and I don’t like that the rest of the world owns so much of it and takes so much from it and no one speaks about it.

“I’m really hoping that the people that are running those different countries all unite and come together and take Africa back. That’s what I want to see. Take it back from the French, take it back from the Spanish, take it back from the Portuguese and the British.

“It’s so important for the future of that continent. They have all the resources to be the greatest and most powerful place in the world, and that’s probably why they are being controlled the way they are.”

READ MORE: George Russell has a message for Lewis Hamilton: ‘Shut up and focus’

Having graduated from the University of Sheffield with a 2:1 in Journalism in 2022, Kerry continued her pursuit of finding a full-time position in motorsport through work with the F1 Arcade in London, where she got to meet true fans of the sport and make a live grand prix watch party memorable for them. It was here she realised her background in journalism and love of motorsport could be combined, going on to volunteer with the female-led platform Empoword Journalism. Having completed stints as a screen editor and sports editor, Kerry landed her first F1-specific editorial role with GPFans and has thoroughly enjoyed continuing to work more closely with the sport ever since. The access GPFans offers Kerry has allowed her to interview big names such as Naomi Schiff and David Coulthard and given her experiences she could only have dreamt of as a young F1 fan which she hopes to build on.

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