F1 News, Reports and Race Results

Vasseur isn’t buying the hype – dismisses Hamilton title talk

If the paddock press expected Ferrari team boss Fred Vasseur to join the hype train after Lewis Hamilton’s brilliant win last weekend in Barcelona, they drastically misjudged the Frenchman.

The media circus loves nothing more than a sudden, volatile flip of the script: one weekend, a team is navigating a strategic crisis; the next, they are being measured for championship crowns.

Following Hamilton’s emphatic victory at the Circuit de Catalunya – coupled with a costly retirement for championship leader Kimi Antonelli – everyone immediately wanted to know if Maranello is ready to throw everything behind a title charge.

But Vasseur is flatly refusing to indulge the narrative, meeting the sudden onslaught of media projections with a sharp, calculated reality check.

Perceptions built on sand

The urge to declare an immediate title fight comes down to raw math. Hamilton had already climbed to second in the standings after Monaco, and his triumph in Spain sliced another 25 points off Antonelli’s advantage.

Yet, Vasseur views this sudden burst of optimism as nothing more than short-term memory loss from an industry prone to hyperbole.

Only two weeks ago, the mood around Ferrari was described in starkly different terms. In Monaco, despite rivals labeling the SF-26 the favorite due to its prowess in low-speed corners, the team failed to fully capitalize.

In qualifying, Hamilton and Charles Leclerc locked out the second row behind Antonelli and Max Verstappen. While the Dutchman suffered a catastrophic failure on the grid, the Mercedes driver put on a pacing clinic, leaving Hamilton to cross the line a distant second.

Now, after a successful major upgrade package in Spain and a bit of fortune via a well-timed Virtual Safety Car, the narrative has completely inverted.

Vasseur, however, is not playing along. When pressed on whether Ferrari would now throw its full weight behind Hamilton for a definitive championship assault, he shut the door immediately.

"I'm not sure that I want to reply to this kind of question," Vasseur said. "I had probably the same comments two weeks ago, that everything was a disaster - and now we are speaking about the world championship.

"This is the worst approach that I could have. The approach is to go to Austria exactly with the same approach that I had in Barcelona and not to think about the championship or to project yourself with 25 more wins, [or] what I could do [to push for the title]. I will never do it."

The danger of reading too much into a race win

While onlookers pointed to Ferrari’s seemingly transformed tyre management in Spain as definitive proof of a breakthrough, Vasseur cautioned that treating a single, extreme weekend as a season-long guarantee is a fool's errand.

Barcelona’s punishing track temperatures heavily dictated performance, much like Canada’s wildly different conditions shook up the order several weeks before.

The grid is operating on razor-thin margins, where tyre degradation can fluctuate violently not just from track to track, but from one stint to the next.

"Yes, but this we have to pay attention," Vasseur warned regarding the alleged tyre management breakthrough.

"It's not because you are doing a good weekend that you will blow up everybody every single weekend. You know that the conditions were quite extreme. It was already the case in Canada for different reasons, but the opposite.

“Probably next race in Austria it will be something more average."

For Vasseur, consistency trumps headlines. The performance delta between compounds remains highly volatile across the paddock, meaning anyone mapping out a clear path to the title based on Barcelona is ignoring the operational reality of modern F1.

"We are all really on the edge for degradation," Vasseur concluded. "You can do a good stint and a bad stint with the same car on the same track. We had a difference between cars.

“If you compare the stint in medium and hard, some cars were much more performant in hard. Sometimes much more performant in medium. It's not a given for the rest of the season."

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Phillip van Osten

Motor racing was a backdrop from the outset in Phillip van Osten's life. Born in Southern California, Phillip grew up with the sights and sounds of fast cars thanks to his father, Dick van Osten, an editor and writer for Auto Speed and Sport and Motor Trend. Phillip's passion for racing grew even more when his family moved to Europe and he became acquainted with the extraordinary world of Grand Prix racing. He was an early contributor to the monthly French F1i Magazine, often providing a historic or business perspective on Formula 1's affairs. In 2012, he co-authored along with fellow journalist Pierre Van Vliet the English-language adaptation of a limited edition book devoted to the great Belgian driver Jacky Ickx. He also authored "The American Legacy in Formula 1", a book which recounts the trials and tribulations of American drivers in Grand Prix racing. Phillip is also a commentator for Belgian broadcaster Be.TV for the US Indycar series.

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