The sweeping curves of Suzuka usually reward the brave, but for Lewis Hamilton and Ferrari, Friday’s opening sessions felt more like a delicate balancing act on a tightrope.
As the sun dipped behind the Japanese venue’s grandstands, the seven-time world champion was left pondering a gap to the front that remains stubbornly wide, due to a car that simply isn’t “quick enough” according to the Briton.
Both Hamilton and teammate Charles Leclerc wrestled with a machine that seemed to lack the bite required to challenge the front-runners.
Hamilton, who ended FP2 in sixth and nearly nine-tenths off Oscar Piastri’s McLaren, was candid about the mountain Ferrari still has to climb.
“I think it’s something similar that we’ve experienced before here,” Hamilton remarked, reflecting on the familiar feeling of chasing a moving target.
“It’s an amazing circuit. The car generally feels okay. It’s just not quick enough at the moment, and I think it’s just balance. We’ve just got to work hard overnight to try and figure out how we can set the car up better.”
The deficit isn't just a matter of handling; the data shows a glaring weakness where it hurts most.
“I mean ultimately, there’s a lot of time on the straights – it’s four-tenths into Turn 1 at the moment compared to the McLaren," Hamilton noted.
"So deployment is part of it, so I’m sure we can do a better job in improving on that. And then I think there’s more performance in the car to extract if we can get the setup right.”
The complex layer of energy management introduced by the 2026 regulations has been well chronicled.
At a high-speed track like Suzuka, this has created a frustrating phenomenon known as "clipping," where the power cuts out at the end of long straights to save energy for the next acceleration phase.
©Ferrari
Hamilton, usually a proponent of the new era, admitted that the technical dance is dampening the thrill of the ride in Japan.
“Super clipping is definitely not great,” he said with a hint of a grimace. “It’s not great that we have to super clip. You arrive in some places and you’re kind of coasting in, because you’ve got no power.
"That’s probably the least enjoyable part of the rule change for this circuit. But otherwise, the car feels really good through the sections, and it’s still awesome to drive.”
Ferrari sporting director Diego Ioverno attempted to steady the ship, suggesting the team isn't necessarily shocked by the Friday form, even if the drivers are searching for that elusive "spark" of confidence.
"I think the gap is more or less where we expect it to be," Ioverno explained, pointing to the need for better tire management and data analysis.
As the lights stay on late in the Ferrari garage tonight, the mission is clear: find the pace to turn "okay" into "competitive" before Saturday's qualifying shootout.
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